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The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus

Page 15

by Sonya Sones


  for like the ninety-millionth

  incredibly annoying time,

  even when I’m not doing it.

  Someone

  so brand-spankingly new

  that he doesn’t find

  a single thing about me

  incredibly annoying yet.

  Or even a tiny bit annoying.

  I want to be with someone

  unannoyable.

  I WANT A NEW HUSBAND

  Someone who’s not still laboring,

  after all these years,

  under the false assumption

  that he could get me to change

  if only he could come up with

  the exact right combination of words.

  Someone who can comprehend the fact

  that just because I don’t agree

  with what he’s saying,

  that doesn’t mean

  I haven’t heard

  what he’s said—

  like if I’d really

  been listening to him

  there’d be no way I could disagree.

  I want a husband

  with whom I have

  no disagreements.

  I WANT A NEW HUSBAND

  Someone who won’t insist

  on going on and on and on and on

  and on and on when we’re fighting,

  till each word he flings at me

  feels like a poisoned dart

  piercing my skin.

  Someone who never says,

  “You’re angrier than I am.”

  whenever I get angry,

  who never says,

  “I would never do that to you.”

  whenever I do that to him,

  who never says, “No one but you

  has ever complained about that.”

  whenever I complain about that.

  I want

  to be with someone

  about whom I have no complaints.

  FIREWOOD

  I brace for the first thwacks

  as Michael raises his ax

  to fell what’s left of our pepper tree.

  I feel the sharp cracks

  as he splits her bare grayed limbs

  into logs.

  Together we stack them

  on the covered porch by our front door,

  the two of us grim as reapers.

  Our pepper tree

  will never offer shade again,

  never give shelter,

  never spread wide her arms,

  inviting our daughter

  to climb up into her lap.

  OUR BACKYARD LOOKS SO BARREN NOW

  As barren as me.

  And so empty—

  like a well drained of its water.

  I stand in my bedroom,

  looking out through

  the open French door

  at the terrible gap

  where our pepper tree

  once stood.

  It’s as though our garden

  has had its two front teeth

  knocked out.

  THEN–PINKIE STARTS YAPPING

  I glance next door

  and see Jane step into their yard.

  She’s got a whining Madison

  perched on her very pregnant belly.

  The little girl rubs her eyes,

  then notices that our tree is gone.

  She points at the stump

  and bursts into tears.

  “What happened?” she wails.

  “What happened?”

  Jane tells her our tree got sick.

  So sick that we had to cut it down.

  This does not go over well

  with the overtired toddler.

  She starts flailing her arms

  and kicking her chubby little feet.

  Jane tries to sooth

  her scarlet-faced, frenzied moppet.

  But Madison will not be stopped.

  She screams and screams and screams.

  What happened? I think to myself.

  What happened…?

  ANOTHER CALL FROM SAMANTHA

  Michael and I

  each grab an extension

  and hang on to them like life preservers.

  She tells us

  that there’s a thunderstorm—

  right now, right outside her window.

  “It’s awesome!” she says.

  Then she holds the phone out

  so that we can hear the rumble rocking the air.

  She holds the phone out

  so that we

  can be there…

  I don’t get it.

  Why do I feel so homesick

  when she’s the one so far from home?

  A CHAT WITH DR. HACK

  “Why don’t you give me the good news first?” I say.

  I’m trying for sarcasm, but it seems

  he’s mistaken it for an affectionate jibe

  because there’s that chuckle of his—

  the one that makes me feel as if

  my skin’s being rubbed off with a grater.

  He says he’s got lots of good news today:

  my mother’s polymyositis

  appears to be in remission.

  And now that he’s managed

  to wean her off the steroids,

  she’s finally stopped hallucinating.

  I hug Secret to my chest.

  For a split second I feel as weightless

  as an astronaut in deep space.

  But then Hack nails me with the bad news:

  he says the withdrawal from the steroids

  seems to have brought on an agitated depression.

  So he’s started my mother on Prozac,

  because she’s refusing to go to rehab

  and she’s hardly eating.

  Though, he says, the good news is

  that she was twenty pounds overweight

  when she was admitted.

  So,

  chuckle, chuckle, chuckle,

  grate, grate, grate,

  a little weight loss

  might actually be

  just what the doctor ordered.

  “Oh, and when I saw her today,” he adds,

  “she did mention suicide—but only in passing.

  We’re keeping an extra close eye on her, though.”

  UNITED FLIGHT #3534

  I’m hurtling toward Cleveland

  at five hundred miles per hour.

  A few minutes ago,

  right before the plane took off,

  Laura’s mother

  called me on my cell.

  “I seem to have started a trend,” she said.

  “Now Wendy’s parents are getting divorced!”

  Which is why

  as I sit here gripping the armrests,

  listening to a trio of howling babies

  bawling with utter abandon,

  I’m thinking how good

  it would feel to toss back my head,

  fling open my mouth,

  and join them.

  THE VISIT

  I show up at the hospital

  armed with a bouquet of yellow tulips,

  a stack of cooking magazines,

  and a batch of Sam’s defrosted brownies.

  I peek into my mother’s room

  and feel my stomach tighten.

  That woman in there looks like

  someone else’s mother—

  her cheeks are withered apples,

  her eyes frightened and much bigger

  than they should be.

  Even her nose seems to have grown.

  She’s sitting up in bed,

  wringing her hands,

  her hair

  a tangled gray tornado.

  As soon as she sees me,

  she starts moaning my name.

  Then she bursts into tears.

  So I do, too.

  But when I wrap my arms around her,

  she quiets like a small child.<
br />
  “I’m so glad you’re here,” she whispers.

  “I am, too,” I whisper back.

  Then I offer her a butterscotch brownie,

  which she politely declines.

  I arrange the tulips in a pitcher,

  find her brush, and try to tame her hair.

  “Tell me how you’ve been,” she says.

  A wave of relief washes over me—

  and suddenly I want to tell her everything.

  I’d climb right into her lap if I could.

  But as soon as I start pouring it all out,

  telling her about my troubles with Michael—

  she interrupts me.

  “Now tell me about the brownies.”

  So I begin to tell her that Samantha

  baked them especially for her—

  but she interrupts me again.

  “Now tell me how you’ve been.”

  So I start talking about how worried I am

  that I’ll never be able to finish my book—

  but she interrupts me again.

  “Now tell me about the brownies.”

  So I try one more time,

  but I’ve barely begun—

  when she interrupts me again.

  “Now tell me how you’ve been.”

  And all the while

  the woman in the next bed

  is quietly chanting,

  “Help me, God. Help me, God…”

  Help me, God.

  MY MOTHER FINALLY NODS OFF

  I rush out into the hall to escape the chanting,

  and somehow manage to trip a man

  wearing sky-blue scrubs,

  whose stethoscope goes flying

  as he crashes to the floor.

  “Omigosh,” I say. “I am so sorry!”

  I reach down to help him up

  and when our fingers touch,

  a strange shiver runs through me—

  like I’m a character in a tacky romance novel.

  The man flashes me a dizzying grin,

  and I notice that he’s tall and pale and lean—

  handsome in a vampirey kind of way,

  with incisors that almost make me wish

  he’d bite my neck.

  I take in his graceful forearms,

  his mile-wide shoulders,

  his utter and complete silver-foxiness.

  And when he locks his George-Clooney eyes

  to mine—I’m thirteen again.

  I can feel my cheeks flushing,

  my pulse quickening.

  “Is there…a doctor in the house?” I ask lamely.

  And when he starts chuckling

  I nearly keel over:

  it’s Dr. Hack!

  THAT’S THE BAD NEWS

  And

  it’s also

  the good news.

  Because now that I know who he is

  I won’t even be tempted

  to jeopardize my marriage.

  Not that he’d ever be interested in me.

  I mean, I’m not exactly having

  a good hair day.

  And he must be

  at least ten years younger

  than I am.

  But when he takes my hand in his to shake it,

  he seems to hold onto it

  a beat longer than he should.

  “And whom do I have the pleasure

  of being tripped by?” he purrs.

  “I’m…I’m Holly…Myra’s daughter.”

  His smoldery eyes widen.

  “And I’m Dr. Hack!” he says.

  “I had no idea you were…coming.”

  I wish I could think of a clever reply

  but I’m too busy trying not to faint—

  because now his eyes have begun to wander

  and I can feel the heat of them

  roaming over every curve

  of my body.

  Or maybe

  I’m just having

  one heck of a hot flash.

  I’M BLUSHING IN PLACES I’VE NEVER BLUSHED BEFORE

  No one has looked at me like this

  in a very long time.

  I’d given up hope

  that anyone ever would again.

  Is he interested in me?

  He can’t be…Can he?

  Aw come on, Holly. Don’t be an idiot.

  This whole thing is all in your head…

  But then he bats his ludicrously long lashes

  and says, “It’s so amazing to finally see

  the face that goes with the voice.”

  “It sure is, doctor…” I murmur.

  “Please, Holly,” he says,

  with a smile that turns my legs to linguine,

  “call me Griffin.”

  “Griffin…” I repeat, as if in a trance.

  What is going on here?

  Is this guy some kind of hypnotist?

  If he snaps his fingers

  will I start unbuttoning my blouse?

  How can I be swooning

  for a man I detest?

  How can I be drooling

  for such a complete idiot?

  How can I be besotted with a man

  who has proven himself to have

  about as much bedside manner

  as an alarm clock?

  I HAVE GOT TO GET A GRIP

  But it’s like Griffin

  is a thousand-watt bulb,

  and I’m a moth with a death wish.

  I watch, transfixed,

  as he lets his thumb drift across

  his lower lip—

  exactly the same way

  I saw Brad Pitt do it once on TV

  when he was flirting with Barbara Walters…

  My own lips begin to tremble…

  Goosebumps rise on my arms…

  My wedding band throbs on my finger…

  Then, Griffin says,

  “Why don’t we go up to my office,

  where we can…talk?”

  Is it just my imagination,

  or by “talk” does he mean

  “have mind-bogglingly hot sex?”

  Of course it’s my imagination.

  Though I take a quick step back,

  just in case.

  And trying hard to remain strong,

  I say, “We do need to talk.

  About my mother!”

  But when he rests his hand

  on the small of my back

  and guides me toward the open elevator,

  I can feel my resolve

  melting faster than butter

  on hot toast.

  GRIFFIN PRESSES THE BUTTON FOR THE FIFTH FLOOR

  And even though

  both of us see a nurse

  dashing down the hall

  to try to get here before the doors close,

  neither one of us

  makes a move

  to press the button

  that would hold them open.

  I FEEL AS IF I’M IN A DREAM

  The doors slip closed,

  like the velvet curtains

  of a confessional.

  We

  are completely

  alone.

  As we begin

  our ascent,

  Griffin turns to gaze at me.

  I don’t know

  which is rising faster—

  the elevator or my blood pressure.

  We pass the second floor…

  the third floor…

  the fourth floor…

  And then, without warning, we jolt

  to a halt between the fourth

  and fifth floors!

  I GASP AND STIFLE A SCREAM

  My knees

  nearly buckle

  as a slow smile

  spreads across Griffin’s face—

  a smile

  that somehow makes me feel

  like he’s the wolf

  and I’m Little Red Riding Hood.

  Or maybe I’m the w
olf!

  Or…shit! Maybe I’m the grandmother…

  Oh, I don’t know.

  It’s all so confusing…

  Griffin strokes his chin, studying me.

  Then he cocks his head to the side,

  points a slender finger at me, and asks,

  “Is someone a little claustrophobic…?”

  And a split

  second later—

  the lights flicker,

  sizzle,

  and go out!

  “SOMEONE” IS A LOT CLAUSTROPHOBIC!

  But that’s the least of my troubles.

  I am so lit with terror and temptation,

  I’m surprised I’m not glowing in the dark.

  “I’m…fine,” I manage to squeak.

  A faint red emergency button

 

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