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The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus

Page 8

by Sonya Sones


  I’m in the backyard,

  snapping some Match.com photos

  of Alice wearing glasses

  (going for a more “quirky intellectual” look),

  when she stops posing,

  and says, “Okay. Spill it.”

  “Spill what?” I say.

  “Well,” she says, “it’s obvious

  that you’re upset about something

  and that you don’t want to talk about it.

  But it’s also obvious that if you do talk about it

  you’ll feel a trillion times better.

  So you might as well tell me everything

  right now because I am not going to

  let up on you until you do.”

  I learned long ago

  that sometimes it’s easier

  just to go with the Alice flow—

  so I tell her that Michael spent the weekend

  in Sacramento chaperoning with Brandy.

  And she says, “You mean Tess’s mom?”

  And I say, “Do we know any other Brandys?”

  And she says, “Holly. Get to the point.”

  And when I can’t bring myself to go on,

  she crosses her arms over her chest

  and says, “Oh, don’t be an ass.

  Michael would never be unfaithful to you.”

  And I say, “Who said anything

  about Michael being unfaithful?”

  And she just gives me a look and says,

  “The point is, Michael would never betray you.

  Not even if Brandy threw herself at him.

  Which I’m sure she didn’t.”

  And I say, “What makes you so sure?”

  And she says, “I mean, think about it—

  Brandy runs an animal shelter, for chrissake.

  She’s a Decent. Human. Being.

  Besides, you’ve known her for years.

  Do you really think she’d do that to you?”

  Whoa…Alice is right…

  Brandy’s a sweetheart…

  She’d never try to steal my husband!

  I feel like a boulder’s just

  rolled off of my chest.

  But then Alice says,

  “Besides, I never believed that rumor.”

  And the boulder rolls right back on.

  “What rumor?” I say.

  “Oh, for heaven’s sake,” she says.

  “I thought you were the one who told me.”

  “Told you what?”

  “Well…there’s a totally unfounded rumor

  going around about Brandy and her husband Colin…

  that they’re…that maybe they’re splitting up.

  But I know it’s not true.”

  And I say, “How do you know?”

  And Alice just shrugs and says,

  “I have a sixth sense about these things.”

  And I say, “Wow…that’s comforting…”

  And she says, “I know, right?”

  And I say, “I thought you said I’d feel

  a trillion times better if I told you everything.”

  And Alice flashes me

  a very sheepish grin and says,

  “Don’t you?”

  AFTER ALICE LEAVES

  I’m snipping a bouquet of roses,

  from the bushes that border our backyard,

  trying to shake off my feelings of dread

  about Michael and Brandy,

  when I notice that something is wrong

  with our pepper tree.

  She’s losing more hair

  than me.

  The singed tips

  of her withering leaves

  are curling in on themselves

  like arthritic fingers—

  losing their grip,

  flurrying to the ground,

  mounding ’round her ankles

  in feathery drifts…

  Something is wrong

  with our pepper tree.

  ON THE WAY TO THE FARMERS’ MARKET

  I’m striding down the sidewalk,

  taking a break from stressing

  about my husband being unfaithful

  and my mother being unwell

  and my book being unfinishable,

  contemplating, instead,

  the hearty pot of gumbo

  I’m planning to make for dinner,

  when I see a woman feeding a meter,

  standing with her back to me—

  her skull barren, deforested,

  save for the fresh scar rivering

  along the curve of it like a child’s first

  attempt at cross-stitch, or a zipper meant to keep

  the woman’s thoughts from escaping.

  Then she turns—

  and that’s when I realize

  that the woman whose head I’ve been staring at

  is Beth, a writer friend from a critique group

  that disbanded years ago.

  Beth,

  who’d seemed perfectly healthy when

  we’d bumped into each other two months earlier.

  She’d given me her phone number that day;

  But I never did call…

  We fall into a hug,

  and when we pull apart,

  she says, “I had a seizure. They found a tumor.

  Took them twelve hours to remove it.”

  “Thank God they got it out,” I say.

  Beth smiles wanly.

  “Well, I better get going,” she says.

  “I’m late for my chemo. It makes me violently ill.

  But I’m okay. I’m okay. I’m okay…”

  As if repeating this mantra can somehow make it true.

  “You are okay!” I say,

  with exaggerated conviction.

  Then we exchange good-byes and I rush off

  just as the sun ducks behind a cloud,

  fading everything to a steely gray.

  I won’t

  take the time

  to make that pot of gumbo today.

  I’ll order in from Chang’s instead.

  I have got to finish writing this book.

  While I still can.

  IS IT A BAD SIGN?

  Is it a bad sign

  if the only thing

  that can actually get you

  to sit down

  at your computer

  and write

  is the thought

  of your own

  mortality?

  WHEN I’M WRITING A POEM

  And I finally finally find

  the exact right word—

  I feel as though

  I’ve been trudging though the sand

  all day long

  under a seething sun,

  the soles of my feet

  melting,

  the sweat pouring from me

  like beads of mercury,

  staring out at the sun-starred water,

  scanning for dolphins,

  and, suddenly, I’ve caught sight

  of a sleek gray fin breaking the surface.

  WHEN I’M WRITING A POEM

  And I can’t find the exact right word

  (or even a halfway decent word)

  I feel as though I’m trying

  to light a fire.

  I surround the dry logs

  with crisp fists of newspaper,

  touch a match to them,

  and watch them flare up like greased torches.

  But when the blazing paper turns to cinder,

  I see that the logs are barely smoldering.

  So I crumple up more newspaper, and more—

  a whole Sunday Times worth,

  lighting it and relighting it…

  blowing, stirring, stoking…

  But no matter how fiercely I fan

  those first flickering antlers of flame,

  no matter how hard I coax

  those gasping yellow-gold ghosts,

  the damn fire


  just won’t catch.

  I AM TIRED OF BEING A POET

  Worn out by this business

  of always having to see things

  with “fresh new eyes.”

  Just once I’d like to sit by the fire

  without trying to figure out how to describe it

  in a way that no one else ever has before.

  I’m tired of meter, tired of form,

  tired of rhyme, tired of off-rhyme,

  tired of repetition, tired of metaphors—

  those wild…somethings

  that never fail to fly south for the winter

  just when I need them most.

  I am rife with,

  no…overrun with,

  no…bursting with

  the boredom,

  the monotony,

  the tedium

  of constantly

  having to look up words

  in my thesaurus.

  I’m fed up with allusion,

  alienated by allegory,

  allergic to alliteration.

  But I’m especially tired of similes—

  those sneaky figures of speech

  that ceaselessly elude me,

  just as

  they’re eluding me

  right now

  on this cloudy morning

  that’s like…

  a cloudy morning.

  I’ve had it up to here

  with trying to invent yet another original way

  to say “I’m really sad.”

  I’m not as melancholy as the song

  of the mateless mockingbird,

  I’m just plain miserable—

  miserable

  and sick and tired

  of being a poet.

  AND COME TO THINK OF IT

  I’m sick and tired of being a jealous wife, too—

  a wife who’s been reduced

  to sneaking glances at every “to do” list

  my husband leaves lying around.

  Like the one I saw just now that said:

  “buy new brushes”

  and “pick up canvas”

  and “call B.”

  But what the hell

  am I supposed to think

  when I see something like that?

  I mean, what would you think?

  I’m sick and tired of being a jealous wife—

  a wife who’s been reduced

  to spending her days

  Googling detective agencies

  when what she ought to be doing is writing.

  AND YOU KNOW WHAT?

  I’m sick and tired

  of being

  a daughter, too.

  But I guess I shouldn’t have admitted that.

  It makes me sound

  like a hideously ungrateful wretch.

  Because, I mean, that poor woman,

  who’s been going more and more bonkers

  from those massive steroid injections,

  that poor woman,

  who calls me twenty times a day

  from her hospital bed,

  is the very same woman who taught me

  to tie my shoes and snap my fingers

  and ride a bike,

  who fed me vats of homemade chicken soup,

  and read me Horton Hears a Who!

  till it must have been coming out of her ears,

  and played Go Fish with me

  till we were both

  practically brain-dead.

  That poor woman, who Coppertoned me

  and Calamined me and VapoRubbed me

  in the middle of so many nights—

  she deserves

  better

  than me.

  EVERY TIME MY MOTHER CALLS

  I feel burdened and bitter and

  selfish and saddled and

  surly and rankled and

  ravaged and rattled and

  battered and buried and

  pummeled and tackled and

  testy and trampled and

  needled and shackled and

  seethey and swiney and

  whiny and wilty and

  guilty, guilty,

  guilty, guilty!

  WHEN I GET LIKE THIS:

  Like I’m being sucked into the vortex

  of a vicious downward spiral

  that’s spinning me straight to hell,

  I can’t help wishing

  that someone,

  anyone,

  would just pull me over

  and arrest me

  for being too damn hormonal.

  But then I’d just be

  too damn hormonal

  in jail.

  THOUGH, LET’S FACE IT

  Even if I weren’t hormonal right now,

  (which, of course, I totally am)

  I’d have plenty of reasons

  to be seriously bummed—

  Roxie’s been bearing down on me

  like a guided missile,

  my mother’s so nuts

  she thinks she’s dating Elvis,

  my daughter’s getting ready

  to leave me,

  and I’m pretty sure

  Michael is, too.

  Though Alice insists

  I’m wrong about this.

  But even if Alice is right

  (which I highly doubt),

  I’ve got plenty of reasons

  to be seriously bummed.

  And—

  wait a minute…

  Omigod…

  is that what I think it is?

  A moving truck

  just pulled up next door.

  Nooooooooooooooooooo!

  ANYONE COULD HAVE MOVED INTO THAT HOUSE

  Why couldn’t it have been

  a lovely deaf couple who speak

  to each other in sign language?

  Or maybe

  some nice quiet Tibetan monks

  who meditate 24/7?

  Or a pair

  of retired mimes

  who’ve taken a vow of silence?

  Why did it have to be

  Duncan and Jane

  (a drummer and a trumpet player),

  plus a yappy poodle named Pinkie

  and a tantrum-prone toddler

  named Madison?

  Anyone could have moved into that house.

  ACTUALLY

  Once you get to know her

  Madison’s not so bad.

  In fact, she’s pretty darn lovable

  when she isn’t kicking and screaming.

  I didn’t notice it

  when we went over there

  to bring them some butterscotch brownies

  on the day they moved in,

  but Madison looks

  a lot like Samantha did at that age—

  with that same sweet storm

  of wild brown curls,

  those same

  irresistible peachy cheeks…

  The only problem with this is

  that every time I glance into their yard

  and happen to see Jane

  pulling her daughter in for a nuzzly hug,

  I remember how

  my own two-year-old felt…

  those warm pudgy arms of hers

  circling me like a wreath…

  that soft soft skin

  on her neck…

  I remember how she used to grab hold

  of each of my ears

  then lean in and plant sloppy kisses

  on the tip of my nose…

  And every time

  I remember these things

  my heart shatters

  like a glass bell rung too hard.

  I’M IN A HUGE HURRY

  I’ve got to wrap the nightgown

  I just bought my mom for Mother’s Day,

  then rush to the post office before it closes.

  But I can’t find

  my freaking scissors.

  I never can find them.

  Because Michael�
��s always

  borrowing them for his collages

  and then forgetting to return them.

  I call him on his cell to tell him

  to bring my scissors downstairs—now!

  But it goes to his voice mail.

  So I slam out of my office,

  fume across the yard,

  and mutter my way up the stairs to his studio,

  the thunder

  of Duncan’s warpath drums

  mimicking my mood.

  MICHAEL DOESN’T NOTICE ME COMING

  But I can see,

  through the window,

  that he’s talking to someone

  on the phone—

  to someone

  who’s making him laugh…

  someone who seems to be

  charming the pants right off of him…

 

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