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Whatever Happened to Her

by Sarah 

Posted: 17 June 2003
Word Count: 2145
Summary: This is the FIRST HALF of a story about a girl wondering about her mother


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Content Warning
This piece and/or subsequent comments may contain strong language.


My brother tells me that there’s a part of his life which is unaccounted for, vague, delivered to him in colourful versions. For one thing, he doesn’t know where he lived in his first few years, and he never thought to ask my mother.

Some details. Some of the first in the table of contents of this life. Back porch when we were nuclear. Mom, dad, older brother: white Omni in the garage. It’s got a cherry-red carpet interior and I like to sit inside, sweaty in this tin can heated by the sun’s rays, pretend I’m Laura Ingles from Little House on the Prairie. She’s got freckles and her rain-straight hair swings back and forth across her back when she runs—mine is too frizzy to swing. It bounces like a flat tennis ball. The Omni is my cracked wooden wagon and I can see the horses’ bums through the glare of the dirty windshield, tails swatting flies. Lawnmower down the road breaks the illusion.
Laura calls her father, Charles Ingles, Paw. And he calls her Half-Pint. He’s always got sweat stains in the armpits of his shirts. I’ve got a crush on Paw Ingles, except for the cleft in his chin.

Back porch: Irregularly shaped flagstone deck and a brown picnic table. Paint peeling. We can pick copper-coloured paint off the backs of our legs, because the sweat makes everything stick. This is after the back-yard meal of soft hot dogs, charred beef burgers, orange cheezies, watermelon. (Press the watermelon seeds to your forehead and give them the names of the boys you love. The last one to fall off is who you will marry.)
Grace, my mother, is sitting in a blue and white plastic deck chair, flipping through an automobile brochure. Slick automobiles slide oily across slick pages, black and silver mercury. I’m four years old, sitting in her lap and pulling at her moonstone necklace; a delicate silver chain secures the small, smoky-white stones in an upside-down pyramid that lays like a fine pencil tracing over the junction of her collar bones.
‘What’s that for?’ I ask, and bend the brochure towards my face. Grab at it and crinkle the lovely paper.
‘A new car for when you and me and John go away.’
‘Not dad too?’
‘Not dad too.’

My aunts say that when Grace met my dad, she was part of an ecumenical cult. Or, he caught her like a foul ball when she got out of it. They’re not sure. I have a plan at four years old. I will whisper into my parents’ ears, early in the morning. I will tell them to stay together. It’s supposed to be subliminal, so that when they wake up they will feel it viscerally; they’ll want to work things out. I know this at four, that my ghostlike subtlety is the key—make them think it’s their own idea.

This is the panic when Grace leaves the house in the mornings: it’s the same boxlike panic like when the subway stops moving in between stations, and then the lights flicker and the vibrations stop. We’ve got a babysitter named Leia; she’s big and Italian. Through glasses her eyes are like spoonfuls of jell-o and I don’t realize her accent is different than mine until I meet her again, more than ten years later, at Grace’s funeral. Leia makes peanut-butter-on-toast either “lake” or “mountains”. “Lake” means a swirl of the peanut butter with the knife. For “mountains”, she lifts the butter into sharp and jagged, minuscule peaks with the flat surface of the knife. Lakes taste better and I’m biting down into one as Grace tries to make her exit through the front door, without my knowledge.
‘I want to go with you!’ This is our daily struggle.
‘You have to stay with Leia, peanut. I have to go to work.’
‘Let me come too.’ I’m crying now, pulling hard on her arm so her purse slides off her shoulder and hits the floor. ‘I’m glue,’ I say. ‘I stick to you all day.’
And I attach myself to her like a barnacle: head to stomach, limb to limb, feet on feet. With my head in the darkness of her I can smell perfume, a leather belt, the vagina smell I recognise but can’t relate to yet. Tweed itches my cheek; I stick my hand in the pocket where there’s lint and pennies, a flattened piece of gum with the wrapper half worn off.
‘Oh no,’ she cries, ‘I’ve got something glued to me. Guess I’ll just have to keep it all day.’
Some days, I win, and I go to work at the Correctional Services of Canada with Grace, where she takes care of the ex-convicts. I’ve seen them, faded jeans and tattoos, greasy hair. Teeth missing. They’re old but look like little boys, waiting on the metal-framed government chairs. When they come into her office, Grace shoo’s me out, closes the tall door that reaches the ceiling. So I sharpen pencils in the electronic pencil sharpener, shred paper, eat lunch with the girls at Druxy’s Delicatessen. Coca Cola out of the can and salt out of a packet. Dill pickles.

Do pregnant women really crave dill pickles and ice cream?
There’s a picture of Grace in a rocking chair, in a white sun dress spotted with something red; the picture isn’t close enough to make out what the red spots actually are. She’s so beautiful; her stomach is a massive hill covered in red somethings, flowers perhaps? The sun comes through the window, through blue and green bottles on the window sill, and rests on us, curls up with us like a cat. That’s me in there, kicking, driving her to (maybe) eat dill pickles and ice cream.

At the Eaton Centre mall with Grace and my cousin who is very pregnant. Eating in the restaurant with the nautical theme. The pictures on the wall confuse the mood: one tallship, ripped headsails, rough, saturated wood, steely sky and white, torn sea. Waves like ragged peanut-butter mountains. Or a ketch in a blue bay, long, brown legs on deck, white sunlight.
I eat fish n’ chips, peel off the batter and slop it greasily on Grace’s plate. ‘What’s your baby’s name going to be?’ I ask.
My 16-year-old cousin bites her lower lip, looks at Grace.
‘She’s not going to keep this baby, honey.’
‘What’s wrong with it?’
‘Somebody else will take care of it.’
‘Why?’ I’m angry now, upset that I won’t get to hold this baby.
‘She’s not ready to have a baby.’ Grace holds my cousin’s hand when she says this.
And I think, if she’s not ready to have it, how are they going to get it out?

There’s this guy named Stew who has been coming over to our house, eating dinner with Grace and my dad and my brother and I. His skin is darker than ours, and he’s tall, and brings presents for John but not for me. One time it’s moccasin slippers. Another time it’s a soft suede pouch with tassels and beads stitched on like a rainbow. And one time even, Stew takes John for a week and John comes back with photographs of himself on a horse. Stew wears corduroy jeans and tucked-in plaid shirts. His tinted glasses cover half his face.
I’m sitting on the toilet, doing number 2, concentrating on the wallpaper. Small yellow daisies on beige background, marching along in rows that crisscross if you make your eyes go fuzzy. And if your eyes go really wonky, super fuzz, the daisies pop off the wall and you run through them, just like Laura Ingles on the Prairie.
Going with the door open is okay. Looking at the wallpaper and trying to figure out how Stew fits into my brother’s life. I Imagine John eating ice-cream at the Eaton Centre, sitting on the low brick wall that goes around the fountain—the fountain that only sprays sometimes. John is bouncing his small feet off the wall and maybe Stew walks over and gives him a penny to throw in the water, where the other coins wink patiently, like stars. So maybe that’s how they met, I think. And now they are friends; this is why John gets presents and I don’t.
I need to find out.
In the kitchen my father stands in front of the stove, stirring a pot with wieners in it because tonight we’re having cheesedogs. With real Cheeze Whiz. Grace sits on a stool by the stove and they’re talking and I just come right in and say it.
‘Who’s Stew and how come I don’t get presents?’
Grace looks at my father the way I once saw my cousin look at Grace, so I know that it’s his turn to talk.
‘Do I tell her or do you?’ my father says.
‘You.’
‘Stew is John’s dad. Your mom met Stew before she met me and they had John together.’
John is outside playing street hockey with a kid named Zack. I meet him on the porch and through titanic tears I tell him I know who Stew is. He kneels down beside me and tells me he’s still my brother and there’s no difference.

My brother John burdens a rage that is mostly dormant; it hibernates, sticks its slimy, rabid nose out of the hole only sometimes. It’s cultivated by the comings and goings of men. Years after we leave my father, we have a stepfather. A stepfather in a house stuck between Good Neighbours and a Bad Neighbour. Norman-Next-Door is the Bad Neighbour, and will save us, when Grace is almost dead, when John’s little beasty wakes up.
But tonight, I eat contraband raspberries off the bush that crawls through the fence from Norman-Next-Door’s yard into ours. My mother and stepfather chat in our backyard with the Good Neighbours, Don and Debra.
‘My parents couldn’t afford law school,’ says Grace. ‘So I didn’t go. There were five of us, right? What can you do?’
‘You wanted to be a lawyer?’ I ask. I pluck the deep red berries swiftly off the bush—have to snake my arm through a hole in the green chainlink, scraping my skin on hungry thorns. ‘How come you never told me that?’
‘You never asked.’ She bends over to scratch her tiny, bare ankle, and I pull at more berries, wipe the juice on the front of my cotton shorts.
They’re complaining about Norman, about how his house decreases the value of our house. A few months before this, my stepfather, Michael, wrote a letter to our council member, asking how to go about forcing Norman-Next-Door to fix up his house. He insisted, for one thing, that the porch was not even built to regulation. It’s a menace, he claimed.
Michael even put a copy of the letter in Norman’s mailbox, to give him fair warning.
Norman’s porch has no railing and is painted fluorescent orange. The rest of the house is electric blue and seems to lean on our sturdy grey-and-green like a drunk, even though we’re semi-detached. His porch and front lawn are like a storage space for what most people can’t get rid of in a garage sale. A huge, plastic sun hangs in front of his door, and hides half of his front window. A patch of garden, along the wooden base of the porch, is weed, and dead black, sticky stubs of what could have been a young lilac bush. Through the walls I hear the same music Grace listens to: Willie Nelson, Van Morrison, Fleetwood Mac, The Moody Blues. In winter, he shovels exactly half of the narrow walkway we share. Winter.

Christmas—me at 12: One night and I’m sleeping on the couch, because grandma is in my bed. Fleetwood Mac is seeping through the walls from Norman’s; Stevie Nicks sings Landslide. It’s late, maybe 2 a.m., and Grace and one of my aunts talk in the next room, the kitchen. The Christmas tree is on. The living room is lit with quick breaths of red, orange, green blue pink white, and I wish for snow in the morning.
Cigarette smoke sails snakily in from the kitchen, like on a tide. Grace and my aunt are drinking Carlsberg out of green bottles, talking about my brother, who is 16 now.
‘He told me he gets drunk occasionally,’ says Grace. ‘As long as I know when he’s doing it. Or who with.’
‘Oh, he’s a good kid.’
‘I bought him some condoms. I bought a whole box. Do you think that’s too much?’
‘No. Never too much.’
They laugh, smoke.
‘How do you get a witch pregnant?’ says Grace.
My aunt is already laughing like she knows the punch line.
Through a nasal, constricted laugh, Grace delivers: ‘You fuck her!’
Even my teeth are burning.






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Comments by other Members



Becca at 13:27 on 17 June 2003  Report this post
Very lovely writing, very dense, beautiful observations. I really enjoyed it. Have you read 'Reckless Driver' by Lisa Vice?
I know this is only half, so bear with me when I say the only part that slowed down the whole for me was the section that starts, 'They're complaining about Norman,..' Does Norman come in later? Do you need so much about him?
You might have referred to the girl's mother as Grace to put some distance between the two of them, but I did wonder what it would be like if she was called mother, ma, whatever, instead.
Anyway fabulous work, have you thought of sending it out anywhere?

Sarah at 15:05 on 17 June 2003  Report this post
Once again Becca, thank you for your thoughtful comments.

When I wrote this, the character naturally called her mother Grace.. I haven't thought about why until you mentioned it. I think, because the character is coming to terms with her mother as a person, not a mother, she calls her Grace (this will make more sense to you, I think, when you read the next bit). Thank you for pointing it out.

And yes, Norman-next-door is integral to the story, so I needed to illustrate his bad relations with Grace and Michael. I didn't want to put the whole story up together, as it is 5000 words.. a little daunting, and probably would go unread on the site!

You know... I think you might have mentioned Lisa Vice to me once before... it's off to Amazon I go...

Sarah at 16:04 on 17 June 2003  Report this post
If anyone is interested, I posted the second half on the general-everybody bit, or whatever, so if you want to read on...

matheson at 22:10 on 20 June 2003  Report this post
Sarah

There is a great voice here, spacy and curious and compelling. I followed the evolving sense of wonder/anger as your narrator gets older and much of the writing resonated both as beautiful and authentic. The details of “fuzzing” the wallpaper, fantasising about Paw Ingles and eating the raspberries created vivid moment situating the narrative for me and making the whole piece believable.


I felt sometimes you used words which are anachronistically “mature” for your narrator…I know there is a bit of a conceit in any narration of childhood experience but use of words like “subliminal” jarred for me: she would think that it was magic in some way but I balked at subliminal. The voice is somehow both naďf and then sophisticated and it didn’t quite work for me.

The creation of a world made this feel like the first sections of a novella or novel rather than a short story. I am intrigued about Norman saving them, I am interested whether Grace actually bought a car to escape in, I wonder why she needed to escape, I want to know how “dad” felt about Stew and was he a native American. These each seem like the preamble to a different story played out in a world which is richly evoked so (half way through?) I am wondering where this is leading.

The first paragraph probably doesn’t help this. Is this the vague or colourful version. It is more than a table of contents (unless for a novel).

If this were mine (and I recognise it isn’t) I’d say it was a great first draft for something. It is quirky and juicy and it has a voice. I am very interested to see which direction it takes and how it might feel “tightened up” if this is the direction you feel you want to take it.

All the best

John





Sarah at 10:29 on 23 June 2003  Report this post
John, thank you for your comments... oh god, does this read like a first draft? I've been working on this piece for.. a long time...

Many people want it to be longer, but it just ain't (the second half of it is on my writewords page, if you're at all intersted in reading it)...

What I wanted to do, with all of these little bits and bobs, was almost to sculpt the mother, the daughter, and the daughter's slowly developed understanding of her mother as Grace. Does it do that? The ending shows Grace as a contented woman, but this is only a hope of the daughter's.

Nell at 21:17 on 02 July 2003  Report this post
Sarah,

I'm glad the second half is posted, I think I'll go and read on now rather than comment half-way through.

Panther at 21:10 on 23 July 2003  Report this post
Not my type of story that much. But the effort you put into it is clear. It shows.

THIS editor at 22:30 on 24 July 2003  Report this post
Sarah! Please call me at This Magazine right away. We've been trying to call you, but no answer. We've emailed you, but no response. Check your email! We have some fabulous news for you about this story!
My phone number is in the email, and at www.thismagazine.ca.
Julie Crysler
Editor, This Magazine

Becca at 07:01 on 25 July 2003  Report this post
Sarah where are you?

Sarah at 10:53 on 25 July 2003  Report this post
Well I'll be...... FIRST PRIZE in the Great Canadian Literary Hunt!!!!!! I'm stunned...

olebut at 11:12 on 25 July 2003  Report this post
Sarah

fantastic news well done

david

stephanieE at 11:17 on 25 July 2003  Report this post
Sarah - WHAAAAAAAAHEEEEEEEEEEE! many congratulations, and totally deserved, of course... I hope this inspires you to go on and get more of your excellent work out there in front of an eager public...

Shadowgirl at 11:45 on 25 July 2003  Report this post
Well done Sarah - many many congratulations!!

May it lead to still greater things!

Best wishes
Carole

Sarah at 12:02 on 25 July 2003  Report this post
Thanks everyone!

Becca at 13:28 on 25 July 2003  Report this post
Fabulous, Sarah, I'm so pleased! I just know you're going places. How about putting up the news on the Lounge Forum, so everyone can read the story and get excited for you too? If you don't want to, one of us will. Huge Congratulations, girl.

Nell at 15:33 on 25 July 2003  Report this post
Sarah, wonderful fantastic news! Heartfelt congratulations - quickly - post it on a forum so that everyone knows!

Sarah at 16:11 on 25 July 2003  Report this post
Becca and Nell, thank you so much... 'tis a good day.


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