My father was gentle with me; he was patient. When I could make myself relax, I followed him with a minimum of awkwardness. My feet only had to be smart enough to get us through one dance—the first of the evening, which all the grads had to endure with one of their parents. And it didn’t really matter what condition Dad might be in. Drunk or not, he could make it around a dance floor without stumbling. His feet never slurred.
MY MOTHER CURLED and bowled in the afternoon ladies’ leagues, and she met her neighbours for coffee once a week. But she never spoke about my father’s drunkenness to anyone but me, and she warned me repeatedly not to tell my friends. His drinking was our skeleton in the closet, our mad child hidden in the attic. The bones rattled, the feet banged on the floor above our heads, but if someone else was around, we pretended not to hear. “What goes on in the family stays in the family,” Mom said. “No one wants to hear your troubles.”
No matter how much my father drank or how angry he became, he never hit her or me. He never abused us. She was simply covering up embarrassing behaviour, like the time he woke up in the middle of the night and peed in his shoe. Why tell anyone about that? Or the time he tripped on an imaginary branch on the sidewalk and came home with his nose scraped and bleeding and his glasses broken. Or the nights he spent in jail. She was honest and hardworking, and she wanted, in spite of our family’s poverty, to hold her head up high.
In practical terms, our secret meant that I couldn’t invite my friends home after school or ask them to stay for supper. I couldn’t take my turn at hosting the sleepovers where my high school buddies and I danced to records in our baby-doll pyjamas, sucked back bowls of chips and cheezies, and stayed up all night talking about boys. I couldn’t tell anyone the real reason Mom and I walked everywhere: Dad was too inebriated to drive, or he’d lost his licence. I couldn’t tell my boyfriend why I didn’t ask him to spend Christmas with my family when he was left alone, his parents responding to a relative’s death a thousand miles away. What did I tell him? Another lie.
Having to lie was a burden, but the worst effect of our secret was that it forced me to hide my sadness. On the surface, I was well-adjusted, popular, optimistic. Inside I burned with shame. My father’s drinking was so disgraceful that it couldn’t be talked about. It had to be carried invisibly, like a terrible disease that had no name.
My father never lied about his drinking. What would be the point? But I never heard either of my parents use the word alcoholic. He drank, but he claimed he could hold his liquor. That ability was part of being a man, as was his right to spend his paycheque on anything he wanted. As was his prowess at arm wrestling, shuffleboard and pool. The windowsills in our living room shone with trophies he’d brought home from the bars. They competed for space with the curling trophies he and Mom had won as skips of their own teams, though that game’s prizes were often more practical—matching table lamps, a big wine-coloured ottoman made out of Naugahyde, a set of cutlery, a side of beef.
For Mom, his excess stemmed from selfishness and a lack of affection for us. “He cares more about the Legion,” she’d say. “He’d rather be with a bunch of drunks than with his family.” But if he wasn’t an alcoholic, if he could stop whenever he wanted to, the deficiencies were ours, not his. I wasn’t good enough or pretty enough or smart enough to keep him home. Nor was she. He seemed to be having a good time, at least until he had to face her anger every morning before he left for work. She and I were the ones full of anxiety and despair. We were the ones sitting at home each night, dreading his arrival, hoping we’d be in bed and could pretend to be asleep when he stumbled through the door.
My father’s drinking and the taboos surrounding it drew my mother and me closer together. She told me her troubles because she couldn’t tell anyone else, and she became more and more independent. Sometimes she didn’t keep his supper warm when he was late; sometimes she didn’t tell him we’d be at a movie or a concert at the church. Once my brother had left home, it became easy to believe that she and I were the only ones who lived in the house. My father was an unwelcome, bothersome relative who dropped in from far away, demanding and unannounced. In some ways, I envied the kid I’d been when I’d wanted my father around. Now I was the one who wasn’t there, flying out the front door at the honk of horn, driving around with whoever had a car, meeting the rest of my friends at the A&W and horsing around.
I HADN’T touched my father since our dancing lessons. Part of my clumsiness, my slowness to learn, had come from his sudden, unavoidable closeness. I could smell the beer on his breath, feel the occasional brush of whiskers on my cheek, the heat of his hand holding mine and the weight of his other hand in the small of my back. There had also been a surprising pleasure in being inside the circle of his arms.
During the grad banquet and my speech, my father’s head nodded, and his mouth drooped open. My mother elbowed him now and then so he wouldn’t pass out completely and start to snore. After the plates were cleared away, the tables folded and pushed to the sides of the gym, the band leader in his red jacket and black pants announced “the grad-parents’ waltz,” and my father and I walked to the centre of the floor. It was one of the valedictorian’s duties to lead this dance. For a few minutes we were the only two people in the world. We were standing on an ice floe, cold and drifting, observed by hundreds of eyes. I was so afraid that something awful was about to happen, that my father would fall, that he’d say something loud about how pretty I looked and everyone would hear, that the principal would have to walk across the floor and lead us off. Everything was still. I could see my mother watching from the sidelines. Then the music started; I slid my feet to the practised steps my father had taught me. The other grads and their parents rose from their chairs and swirled around us. For a moment, I lost sight of my mother’s nervous smile. I let myself go limp and moved automatically at the slightest pressure of his hands. We never spoke or stumbled. The song ended, and we had made it through as if we were normal, as if this were an easy, ordinary task. I thanked my father, walked him to my mother at the edge of the onlookers and found my date. We watched my parents dance one waltz; then, her arm in his, my mother led my father to the door to take him home.
Most of the other adults stayed for the first half of the dance, waltzing together or watching their kids’ gyrations from the sidelines. I was ecstatic to be alone with my date for this special night. He was a friend, not a boyfriend, though we danced close, and later, at the wiener roast ten miles south of town, we necked in the front seat of his older brother’s car. Not once in the evening did we mention my father. Not once did we say the word “drunk.” I had started to believe that a glass cocoon lowered around my father after his first few beers. His loudness, his weave and stumble, the sloppiness of his smile were hidden behind the glass as long as my mother and I didn’t talk about him. When we kept quiet, only we could see or hear him. To everyone else, he was invisible.
Except, perhaps, when he and I were dancing. When we glided in our best shoes across the polished gym floor, past my classmates and their parents, all of them watching, all of them thinking for the length of a song that we looked good together, this father, this daughter, moving in slow, perfect time in each other’s arms.
dark water
IN THE PICTURE on my parents’ bedroom wall, my mother’s wedding dress, a rich, dark velvet, flowed from her shoulders to just above her ankles. Though my mother avoided sentimentality and wasn’t prone to saving things with no daily use, she’d kept the dress in the back of her closet. Throughout my childhood, it was the most beautiful article of clothing in the house. On winter afternoons, I’d climb inside the closet and rub my cheek against the velvet. The dress had weight to it, and a soft, deep nap that invited you to touch and hold it like a liquid shadow in your hands.
By 1938, the year my mother and father were married, Saskatchewan had suffered eight years of drought. The fields were blowing away, there were relief lines at the CPR station, yet my mom as a young bride
-to-be, with her mother, caught the train from the country to look for a gown at Kling’s Ladies Wear on Railway Street. Though Mom had gone into Swift Current with her siblings and parents countless times before, this was a special journey—at twenty years old she had never owned a store-bought dress. My grandmother Ford, known for her deftness with a needle and thread, had sewn her three daughters’ clothes, some of them from flour sacks, but for this occasion she’d somehow scraped together enough money, perhaps from the scarce eggs and cream produced in that dry year, to purchase a modestly priced gown. She didn’t know if she and her treadle machine could handle a material fancier than they were used to, and besides, her middle daughter deserved something special.
Mom had sent home the little money she’d earned from helping her future motherin-law do her spring cleaning and cook for the men on the threshing machine bringing in the thin fall crop. To pay for a perm, Grandma contributed a duck and a chicken Mom could sell to the Chinese café in Swift Current. The chicken died on the way, and Emerson, the man who would become my father, gave his betrothed the extra twenty-five cents she’d need to pay the hairdresser to create her curls.
Dust was blowing on my parents’ wedding day. I imagined my mother running her hands over the blue-black velvet, brushing it clean in the foyer of the church before she walked down the aisle. She and Dad were going to live in a small grey shack abandoned by a homesteader. It stood across the road from his parents’ farm. The reception was in their new place, and that morning she’d peeled potatoes and turnips, made stuffing for the turkey and baked three raisin pies. Her older sister had put the roaster in the wood stove just before the wedding started. Grandpa Ford had bought some beer, enough for the ten or so men who’d be crowded into the one-room shack. Just before the wedding party arrived from the church, both the bride’s and the groom’s younger brothers found the stash of bottles in the root cellar and downed every one. It was before my father’s drinking days, so it wasn’t a tragedy for him, but Mom said my grandfather was ready to take his horsewhip to their hides.
Even after I’d left for university, I’d sometimes seek out the dress on my visits home. I was relieved to find it in its old spot, unchanged and darkly beautiful. Running my hands over the spill of velvet in the closet, I pictured the guests shoulder to shoulder, wanting to brush against the bride. My mother was so gorgeous in the pictures, and I hoped she knew it for that one autumn day, because I never heard my dad or anyone but me call her pretty. Though she’d smile when I told her she was a knockout in a new pair of slacks she’d bought for curling or a Christmas sweater, I knew she didn’t believe me. I thought about my father during that long-ago reception, resting his arm around her shoulders, feeling the texture of the cloth, and later sliding his hands over the rich smoothness of her hips and down her legs. The velvet, the colour of pooled ink, must have drawn the moonlight into its folds and dewlaps as it lay draped on a chair by the bed, the couple in one another’s arms, their lives together stretching in front of them full of promise like the gifts they’d unwrapped earlier that day, bright with newness and good cheer in that hand-me-down, make-do time of drought and failure.
The morning after their wedding night, Mom had told me, she shook the dust out of the bedding and hung her dress on a wooden hanger on one of the nails pounded into the wall. She then caught a ride with her older brother to Success to buy a big bottle of formaldehyde from the general store. Back at her new home, in the biggest pot she could find—probably the roaster used to cook the turkey for the reception—she boiled the formaldehyde for hours on the stove. The night before, the shack had been jumping with bedbugs. The deadly home remedy killed the biting insects, and for the next few days, she and my father had to deal only with the dozens of mice that left their small hard droppings on the plates and cookie sheets and chewed the doilies Mom had embroidered for her scanty trousseau.
The velvet must have soaked up the funeral-home scent; it would have overpowered whatever perfume my mother’s neck and shoulders had brushed into the fabric. By the time I buried my face in its softness, that mortuary odour was gone, and the dress had taken on the more delicate smells of time passing: traces of meals cooked on wood stoves and then electric; the musty closeness of mothballs; lilacs bursting with fragrance in the front yard; years of dust from the fields, the gravel roads and the backyard plots of potatoes. No female scent was left from the hours the dress had graced my mother’s body, no smell of my father’s sun-brown hands remained in the fabric, no whiff of the physical love that made my brother and then made me. I returned to the dress in the back of the closet not for its smell but for its texture, for the midnight opulence of its blue. It held the memory of my mother’s young beauty, her hopeful smile in the photographs, her small flight into a life that had to be better than those hard years on the farm.
When she tried the dress on in the store, my mother told me, it was the first time she’d seen herself in a full-length mirror. Turning to the left, then the right, she stood on her toes and looked over her shoulder at the waterfall of velvet spilling down her back, almost touching the floor. She said it was like something from the movies, the watery swirl of Ginger Rogers’ hem as she dipped and spun for Fred Astaire.
LIKE MY MOTHER, I was twenty when I married for the first time. By then, 1968, no bride wore anything but white. Mom and I looked for my bridal gown at the two stores in town that sold them, Christie Grant’s and Yvonne’s Ladies Wear. Yvonne’s was considered an upscale place. When I was twelve, I’d gone there to buy Mom something for Christmas, with money I’d saved from working at the swimming pool. The owner, watching me slide the hangers along the racks to look at blouses, announced in a voice everyone could hear that I didn’t belong there and should leave. I hadn’t been back since.
The dress we chose was a sleeveless, straight gown with a princess waist and a long matching jacket. I thought it elegant in its simplicity, no lace, beads or ruffles. Its material was satin-like and puckered, like the surface of a pool dimpled with raindrops. Although my fiancé and I were paying for our small, no-frills wedding, like her mother my mom insisted on buying my dress. She didn’t have eggs or cream to sell; she used money she’d saved from cleaning houses.
Though Mom was a spit-and-polish housekeeper, no one could make the cellar in our rented house on Herbert Street look clean, and she worried about my white dress brushing the steps and floor every time I needed the toilet. She’d arranged for me to use the Crawfords’ house to change into my finery. Two hours before the wedding, I walked across the street with my dress, wrapped in tissue, draped over my arm. Mr. and Mrs. Crawford met me at the door as if I were an honoured guest. I felt comfortable with them, though my mother had mixed feelings. Ross was a hearty, friendly man, Berta was hardworking and unassuming, and though they had three daughters of their own, they’d helped me with tuition for my first year at university. They’d done it anonymously, through the school principal, but Ross soon told my mom they’d been my benefactors, lending me the $200 she didn’t have. Over the years we lived across from them, they’d watched the effects of my father’s drinking on Mom and me. They’d followed my high school successes in the local paper, gone to my school plays and, without saying so, concluded I was capable of rising above my station.
As landlords, the Crawfords weren’t as generous. When Mom asked them to pay for a gallon of paint so she could brighten up the kitchen, or suggested that a light be installed in the cellar stairwell because she was afraid one of us would stumble in the dark and fall, they expressed anger at her temerity and refused. They ignored the gaps in the fence around the yard, the collapse of the front steps, the thinness of the insulation. It was so cold inside the house that the northern wall in my bedroom was furred with frost on winter mornings.
Standing on the pale carpet in the Crawfords’ upstairs guest room, I stared at my tall, chic self in the mirror on the closet door. The straight lines of my dress and the bun on top of my head that tamed my curls added inches to
my five-foot-three frame. The dress was pristine and cool, as if the fabric had been cut from newly fallen snow. I wore white satin shoes and the string of cultured pearls my fiancé had given me the night before. He was a working-class kid like me, and I knew he’d chosen the most refined thing he could imagine. They’d come in a black velvet box shaped like a flattened scallop shell, and a tiny diamond chip shone in the centre of the clasp.
No one looking at me would have said I didn’t belong in this fancy house, this large, sun-filled room with its tulle curtains and pale-yellow bedspread with four, not two, pillows, an abundance I’d never seen. I floated pearled, pale and untouchable down the hall to the gleaming bathroom, turned a glass doorknob and stood in front of the three-sided mirror above the sink. There were matching white towels and washcloths by the tub and pink roses from the garden on the counter. The soap in its own little dish was shaped like a fully opened rose. I knew Mrs. Crawford had done her best to make her house pretty on my wedding day. I bent to smell the blossoms. For reasons I didn’t understand, the beauty made me feel like weeping, as if I’d inhaled the thorns, not the perfume. I was trying so hard to escape who I was and where I’d come from, to love the man I’d chosen with all my heart. I wanted to fit in, to do what all my friends were doing, to be a “good girl,” not a fallen one.
One reason I was getting married was to break my maidenly state: I was tired of saying “no.” My mother was relieved. She wouldn’t have to worry about an unwed daughter’s pregnancy any more, and she could see that the honour-roll young man I’d met at university had two things strongly in his favour: he wasn’t a drinker, and he had a steady job teaching high school math and physics.
Small Beneath the Sky Page 10