Part II: Journeys (Chapter 7)
Journeys
Westbound on the Ohio Turnpike, Exit 10–Cleveland
It’s
getting dark, and you look tired. Maybe we should stop soon. Cleveland.
We
usually go farther than Cleveland.
Hmmm.
Let’s see. We could always hit the National Shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes....
Just
kidding. The Elvis Museum last year was bad enough, but I’m not about to visit
a museum that extols virginity as a virtue.
Maybe
we can make it to Toledo.
*
Remember
the letters I showed you?
The
letters to my mother I found in the attic?
The
ones I never sent?
I
brought them with me.
I
don’t know why I’ve saved them after all these years
I
don’t know why I have never shown them to anyone, especially you.
I
don’t know why I keep reading them over and over....
Oct. 19, 1960
Dear Mama,
Why don’t you write? I never hear from you anymore. Did you remember my birthday? It was last week. I am 10 yrs. old now. Auntie sent me a walking doll with long red hair, just like mine, except Hillary’s hair is straight. Aunt Gwen gave me a teddy bear, it even has a zipper so I can make him fat or skinney. I like him skinney, but when I get mad, I make him fat (ha, ha).
Nana says I should write you a letter even if you don’t write. She says its the polite thing to do. I guess she’s right, but I sure wish you would write back.
I wish you loved me.
YOU DON’T LOVE ME ANYMORE.
I –
*
YOU CAN’T SEND THAT LETTER. I can’t tell you why, you’re too young to
understand, just start over, and write a nice letter. Because I’m your Nana and
I understand what’s best for you. Because your mama needs to hear from her
child and you’re her favorite. Don’t say that, she does love you, it’s just that she’s in a
predicament – oh, just look it up in the dictionary – and she can’t write to
you now. And, honey, don’t mention your birthday. It might make her feel bad,
and we don’t want her feeling bad, now do we? Soon, I promise, just as soon as
she gets better. No, I haven’t heard anything about Ruby. I’m sure she’s okay,
you just have to be patient. Yes, we’ll go and visit her some day, I promise,
even if we have to go all the way to Arkansas. It’s a long drive, you know. But
it’s not the right time, you’ll just have to wait until she’s older. She’s
still just a baby and wouldn’t know you anyway. Now get busy on that letter, or
else.
Oct. 19, 1960
Dear Mama,
How are you? I am fine. School is going good. I’m 10 years old now.
Love your child,
Sam
P.S. Nana says I should send this air mail.
*
Much better, honey, but you’d
better get rid of that P.S. – and do it over neatly.
Don’t you really have any more to say than that?
*
Shel,
can you imagine?
Mother
had forgotten my birthday. I hurt because I wanted the few measly dollars she
usually popped into my birthday envelope, along with one of her silly cards.
But mostly, it was a long rambling letter I wanted, the kind of letter in which
she would mostly talk about Fritz, her German Shepherd. The same dog that
snapped at my butt when I was seven.
Just
before my grandparents drove me back to Iowa for good.
You
don’t love me anymore.
Please hear me, Mama!
I
guess she didn’t really mean to
forget my birthday. Sometimes these things just happened. Most of the time, I
tried to understand.
Really.
But
I also understood that sometimes you had to push the right buttons to get what
you wanted.
And,
then, surely, the money would come.
MAMA?
It’s Sammy. I’m in Sioux City.
Well,
no. No one knows I’m calling, but it’ll be okay. I wanted to write you more,
but Nana made me hurry, so I couldn’t finish the letter. You get it yet?
I’m
glad.
You
still sick?
Well,
Nana says you didn’t feel so good.
Guess
what? I got all kinds of birthday presents –
Two
weeks ago, Mama.
It’s
okay. I know you didn’t mean to....
This
fantasy conversation still plays over and over. But at 10, I was anything but
diplomatic. I didn’t know how to help a wounded person save face.
Instead,
I wrote the letter – I wonder if she
ever kept it?
The
money came, but, somehow, it wasn’t the same: my first hard lesson in the
effects of emotional blackmail.
Before
we left, Shel, I ran across that birthday card and 20-dollar bill – a fortune
back then. I still cannot bring myself to spend that ancient ill-gotten gain. I
can’t even bring myself to pull that card and money out of their yellowing
envelope to look at her handwriting, let alone read the raw edge of her words.
Though she’s been dead all these years – God, it hardly seems 15 years – her
scrawl is engraved in my brain, her act of contrition pinching at my psyche.
Maybe
someday I’ll read parts of her letter to you, but please don’t ask, I don’t
know why I can’t show it to you yet, I just can’t.
I
just can’t look.
Not
before I edit away the ache.
I
just can’t.
You
don’t love me anymore.
*
I loved
her: Mother was the only person in my life who didn’t harp on my weight, at
least until I was older. Then it was different, and the dynamics changed
between us.
But
in those early days, when I was still living with her, she accepted me for who
I was, not as a potential princess who “if only she would lose a little weight,
she would be okay.”
Mother’s
drinking made us comrades, her sitting on the sofa (legs folded under her rear)
with the bottomless bottle of beer, endless cigarette, and crossword puzzle
book, I sitting in the swivel chair next to her (feet on the floor) with the
bottomless box of Cherry Bings, sent Parcel Post by Nana from Sioux City, each
of us glomming and glomming on our secret obsessions until we might burst open.
Both
outcasts in the family.
Just
the same, I feared her.
Not
fear in the sense a person is afraid for her life, but afraid that when I
opened my mouth, I would say something stupid or insulting to her. Afraid that
when she said something to me, I would misunderstand her slurred words and
confirm what my first-grade teacher had already told her: that I was mentally
retarded because I hadn’t learned how to read yet.
A
mute child.
I wanted to ask her questions, but I was afraid to hear the answers – like why I had so many daddies when most of my friends had only one, two at the most.
I made a daddy list:
*
√ Daddy #1, my real daddy, Richard
Kane, The Stranger Daddy
√ Unofficial daddy, Dick Roberts, The
Bad Daddy
√..Daddy #
2, Daddy Platts, The King of Daddies
√..Daddy #
3, Johnny Lawrence, The Saxophone Daddy
√..Daddy #
4, (my favorite), Pappa, My Grandfather Daddy
Nana
used to tell me how lucky I was to have so many daddies.
You
don’t love me anymore, Mama.
*
I know she
loved me, but I never knew what would set her off. It all depended on the booze.
The
Mormon Bible School is a case in point.
Did
I ever tell you about that? When I was in first grade, she knew I was going to
the Bible school every Tuesday afternoon after school and even laughed about it
to Daddy Platts, proclaiming what a clever girl I was.
“Young
Soldiers of Christ,” Mrs. Robertson, the teacher, called us.
A
sweet old lady with a gray bun, luring us into the fold with hot homemade
chocolate chip cookies.
Mother
thought the whole concept funny.
But
when she was annoyed about something (it didn’t matter what – a broken
fingernail, a pimple, an argument with Daddy Platts, the baby’s shitty diaper –
I didn’t even have to be the cause), she would rage about the Bible school,
swearing that “no Goddamn polygamist is going to convert my little girl.” Then
she would huff and snort, making a big deal about going over to Mrs.
Robertson’s and giving her the old “what-fer.”
And
then collapse on the sofa and fall into a dead drunk sleep.
You
don’t love me anymore.
*
The day
Ruby and I were run over by the truck, my whole life changed.
My
corporeal life stayed the same, of course – that is, until Nana and Pappa took
me away – but from that day onward, I have felt this chronic sense of urgency,
a sense that it all could be snatched away at any minute.
Thank
God Ruby was too young to remember.
We
weren’t injured, just a few bumps and bruises, but when you find yourself under
an oversized piece of equipment and looking up at belching exhaust pipes and
greasy metal, well, even at six, you begin to wonder about God and His infinite
wisdom, you wonder if He’s really in
control, or if there’s a Superior Being over Him, making Him dance like a
marionette, just like He pulls our strings to make us behave, and then cuts
them when He’s ready to snatch us away.
It
was sometime in the fall – Ruby was sniffly, and the air had a crisp edge – but
it must have been before my birthday, because I wasn’t yet seven.
Ruby
and I were sitting in an alley, playing with gravel, rolling small stones back
and forth when I felt the bumper quietly nudging my back. I’m sure the driver
had no idea we were there, but who knows? I turned my head and saw a silver
bumper and an orange fender.
I’m
gonna die!
Ruby
was screaming.
My
baby sister’s gonna die!
How
I ended up on my back, I don’t remember, but there I was, looking up at the rolling
underbelly.
I
know you’re going to think I’m crazy, but I remember the front wheel rolling
over my chest, pressing my rib cage against my heart, crushing the breath out
of me. It’s difficult to put that moment into adequate words, but I’ll try.
Nothing like tunnels or bright lights, though – that’s an 80’s and 90’s concept.
Am
I dead?
Suspended
in that nanosecond – or was it a lifetime? – just before the spirit flees the
body for eternity. Not breathing has its own set of rules: no more rush through
my veins, just a “glow,” an aura of being, a warmth without physicality.
No
pain at all.
Words
can’t begin to describe the experience.
I
really believed the decision was mine to make:
To
go or stay?
This
state of pleasure was so seductive.
Later,
the LSD and weed would approximate this feeling, but never to the extent of
that day under the wheel.
Stay!
Go! Stay! Go! Go! Go! GO, GO, GO, GO GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO –
Mother!
I
would never see my mother, ever again.
NO!
The
tire rolled off me, my blood whooshed again, breath returning.
Just
like that –
Look,
I’m telling you how I remember it.
I
make no apologies for my state of mind, past or present –
“STOP!”
Daddy Platts’ voice.
The
truck slowed down but did not stop.
Pounding
on the truck. “Stop it, Goddamn it! My little girls are under your truck!”
Ruby’s
your baby!
I’m
your princess!
My
ponytail caught under the back tire.
By
now, a crowd had gathered; Daddy shouted out directions to the driver, ordering
me not to move at all.
“Good,
good, the baby’s out,” someone said. “And she’s fine.”
Ruby
screamed.
The
crowd applauded.
A
little girl in a lilac dress looked under the truck: “Whatcha doin’ under
there? Are you gonna die?”
I’m
gonna die! I’m gonna die!
It
was then I understood that life held no guarantees, that no one, even a child,
is exempt from the possibility of dying –
That
the choice to stay or go is never really ours.
The
filament of being vibrating, Death nearby, his weapon ready –
“Please
don’t let me die! I don’t wanna die!”
Mama?
Mama? Mama!
And
I thought about everyone else in my family – my Nana and Pappa, Auntie – Ruby.
What
it would be like not to see my family again.
*
Sometimes,
I think I should have died that day – you and Doug would be better off, I’m
sure. Nikki would have remained in the cosmos, a better place than the Circle
of Love.
I
just can’t explain away the slight ripple of fate sparing my life.
What would have Death been like?