Elegies for Uncanny Girls
Page 1
“An extraordinary book whose time has come—no other book takes on the challenges of womanhood as bravely and passionately as Elegies for Uncanny Girls does. In short, I don’t know of another book in our post-millennial era that captures with such intelligence the ‘uncanny’ sensibilities of ‘girls,’ of all ages.”
Karen Brennan, author of Monsters
“Jennifer Colville’s stories hover somewhere between miracle and metaphor, inhabiting a landscape both foreign and familiar. They are stories of motherhood, daughterhood, sisterhood, and the complexity of occasionally taking on all of these roles at once. Don’t let the title fool you—while Colville’s stories may be elegies, her characters remain wondrously alive.”
B. J. Hollars, author of This Is Only a Test
“Gorgeously terrifying and magically perceptive, Jennifer Colville’s brilliant elegies spark the mind and ignite the senses, exposing the secret, hyperreal experiences of girls and young women negotiating the treacherous terrain of a world where others see them as victims or monsters, virgins, nymphets, or soon-to-be spinsters—where they know themselves as miraculous, beautiful and vast, dangerously potent. For uncanny girls the body is not a limit, but a multiverse of thrilling possibilities!”
Melanie Rae Thon, author of Voice of the River
“In lyrical, playful prose Colville explores our innermost irrational urges and jealousies: family life in all its complexities. The characters in these stories are heartbroken and twitching but ready for more, and it is a delight to watch them tremble, puzzle, hope, forgive.”
Deb Olin Unferth, author of Revolution: The Year I Fell in Love and Went to Join the Sandinistas
“Elegies for Uncanny Girls is a smart exploration of boundaries between place and body, with a particular emphasis on gender identity and female sexuality. Colville’s beautiful work with imagery serves to advance the stories and the characters are engaging and compassionately written. Her subtlety of approach brings a welcome and exciting variation to the genre.”
Bethany Schultz Hurst, author of Miss Lost Nation
Elegies for Uncanny Girls
break away
MICHAEL MARTONE
Elegies for Uncanny Girls
JENNIFER COLVILLE
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS
Bloomington & Indianapolis
This book is a publication of
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS
Office of Scholarly Publishing
Herman B Wells Library 350
1320 East 10th Street
Bloomington, Indiana 47405 USA
iupress.indiana.edu
© 2017 by Jennifer Colville
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses’ Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences – Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48–1992.
Manufactured in the United States of America
Cataloging information is available from the Library of Congress
ISBN 978-0-253-0249-9 (paperback)
ISBN 978-0-253-02436-7 (ebook)
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Contents
Acknowledgments
OTHER MOTHERS
COSTUME
CENTER
CAROLINE
AUDRA
DETAILS
WHEN MAGGIE THINKS OF MATT
JILL, OR THE BIG LITTLE LADY
DORA
WINONA
Credits
Book Club Guide
Acknowledgments
I’d like to give special thanks to Robert and Susan Colville, my first teachers; to Chris and Katy Colville for pushing me in new ways; to my wonderful mentor Melanie Rae Thon—and longtime supporters Michael Martone and Karen Brennan. Thanks to Christine Wald-Hopkins, Gary Libman, Ann Kiley, Meg Files, George Saunders, Ann and Peter Pufall, and Lisa Roberts for encouragement and support. Thanks to my kick-ass workshop mates at Syracuse and Utah (you know who you are). To childhood collaborators and conspirators Robin Breault and Amanda Hunter Johnson, and to Sarah Bull Wald-Hopkins and Amy Buss. Thanks to Sarah Jacobi for taking a chance on these girls, and Betsy Schneider for the use of “Red Wax Lips.” Thanks to my brilliant readers Susan Goslee and Bethany Shultz Hearst; to Peter and Frieda who remind me to dance. And thanks to Miles, for everything.
Elegies for Uncanny Girls
Other Mothers
I bump into the woman as I’m trying to maneuver my stroller out of the way of a man in a suit.
“Sorry,” I say, turning around.
She laughs and lifts up her hands, and I catch sight of fine red seams at her wrist creases, seams that glisten and yawn as her hands tip backward, open to the bone so her hands topple like two people falling in unison over two peaks and finally hang, floppy but suspended behind the upheld stumps.
I’m stuck staring at the flesh inside the stumps. It’s quivering, like the bunched-up petals of a peony, shaking on a wet bush. The bone is a piece of polished ivory set among jewels.
Wow, I think, is she truly avant-garde?
There are others who are like her at this café. Janet the barista, an artist who sometimes attaches labia made of bubblegum to her bare arms and face, à la the feminist artist Hannah Wilke;Jessie the cashier, whose earlobes have been stretched so far that for work the manager makes him tuck them over the tops of his ears as if they’re locks of hair. There are the street kids outside. All blond dreadlocks and metal faces, and the often amputated bodies of the homeless, shifting and shuffling, toting their sleeping bags around like cocoons.
This woman fits in. Though, I’ll admit I’m not sleeping well. It seems logical that my dreams, interrupted at night, have begun making daylight appearances.
Blood rushes to my cheeks. An erection of the face Freud called this, ever so helpfully.
“These coffee shops aren’t built for strollers,” the woman says. In the blink of an eye she’s flipped her hands back up to her wrists, caught them on the stumps like that game in which a ball on a string is swung into its cup.
I’m confused.
But at least my baby is asleep.
I push my stroller up to the bar, where Janet is holding out my Americano. The café is full of the usual slumpy intellectuals, telecommuters, students, and hesitant light. I sit at a long table and when the woman is done ordering she comes and sits down at the far end, ensconcing herself between two piles of books. She smiles and nods again, opens up a computer, and begins to type. The seams at her wrists are barely visible now, slim, red, and glistening.
I pull out my notebook and try to get back to my list of things-to-do-to-get-my-professional-life-in-order-so-I-can-go-back-to-work-once-baby-is-in-daycare, but so far I only have this title. I look back at the woman. Though I’m generally pretty interior, I suddenly want to tell her about my life. Perhaps as an explanation for bumping into her? Perhaps because my weirdness won’t seem so weird in the company of hers? Specifically, I want to tell her that it’s been six months since the birth and I’m still afraid my baby will stop breathing.
I lie awake at night and the protocol from the class I took on infant CPR rolls through my head. The pumping of the rubber baby chest with two fingers, the horrible hollow collapse. I think, what if I should be doing this for my baby right now? I sneak to her crib and hold my finger under her
nose to see if I can feel the push of air, but her nostrils are merely decorative! The whorl on the door of a seashell, two holes in a button. I lean further over her crib, try to hear the whisper of her breath or see the rise and fall of her chest. If I can’t detect either I brush her cheek with the tip of my finger, or jostle her lightly, and then I run and leap under the covers before she calls out for me. I hide there sometimes while she cries.
I want this woman to say, “It will get better.” I want this woman to be grand and all knowing, elevated like a therapist, or a scholar of female experience but not necessarily to have had any experience of her own. I imagine she’ll squint her eyes at something in the air, an abstraction too fine and filmy for anyone else to see. She’ll say, “Women are like Isis and Osiris, dismembered and resurrected. You have to celebrate your mutability, your disorientation of mind and body—have you read Cixous, or Kristeva?” And I will say, “Yes! But can you please explain them to me?”
I look at the woman. She’s wearing vivid red lipstick, and has a scarf tied around her neck in a way that I imagine is very French.
And then she turns to me.
“How old is your baby?” she asks.
“Six months.”
I wait for her to break into profundity.
After a long pause in which I probably look disappointed by the commonness of her question, yet can’t think of anything interesting to say, she asks, “Are you wondering about my wrists?”
I shake my head and she holds one up.
“The hands won’t fall off. But the split does make it harder to hold things.” She extends her arm across the table, holding her wrist out for me to touch.
“They’re hooked on here,” she says, pointing to the space next to her wristbone. “This skin is thicker here. It’s like a mitten clip.”
I run my finger over the hinge, thick as cartilage, a small sturdy bridge of flesh.
When they pulled my baby out with the forceps she was gray and rubbery, and when they laid her down on my chest, only one of her eyes was open, the other swollen shut. Her mouth moved over my nipple, open, close, open, close, nuzzling, testing, trying and failing to make the proper latch.
The woman looks at me kindly, in a way that makes me want to check my blouse for splotches of food. She says, “Are you new to the city?”
“I’ve been here one year,” I say.
“Well that explains it.”
“What?”
“I mean, don’t worry if you don’t exactly feel grounded yet.”
And I want to say, “Are you kidding me? This city is full of romantics! Look at all these millions of people crammed on this tiny piece of land with all its fault lines. Any day now we could fall into the ocean, but what’s a little risk of dying when your art, or science, is going to save the world, when you’re a self-important little person, with your big world inside your head. Can’t you just see everyone’s interior monologues bobbing along like cartoon bubbles, sucking up all the air?”
But I just stare at her, and she clears her throat and goes back to work.
I imagine it’s good I didn’t say this, because truthfully, when we arrived in San Francisco from Ohio we were these people. I’d just finished my PhD, I was ready to lecture at the university, to plunge into my writing career. And my husband Daniel, well, he certainly still is one of these people. He’s off right now with his colleagues consulting and interacting, stimulating his brain. He’s studying genes and growing cell lines, which are his babies outside of marriage. Often in the middle of the night he has to go in to the lab to check on their progress. He wonders, are they warm enough, are they being jiggled properly by the centrifuge?
“Have you made many friends?” the woman suddenly asks.
“Oh, the baristas,” I say, and she laughs. And I laugh too, even though I didn’t mean it as a joke.
“You haven’t met other mothers?” the woman continues, a little sheepishly.
And I would suddenly like to go back to my list, because the answer is, “How can I avoid them?” They are everywhere in this city.
Even now they are circling the café with their small and large strollers, their babies concealed under jackets and in backpacks, rounding corners and emerging onto the sidewalks of my neighborhood where I go to walk off the scary baby thoughts.
There I’d be, pushing my baby down the street, free for a moment among the yellow-green bay leaves, the flower boxes dripping with fuchsia, when another mother would barrel toward me with a baby strapped tight to her belly in a carrier like a huge bandage with no breathing hole.
Or, a baby facing out in a front pack would approach like a prisoner strapped to the front of a ship, its head bobbing forward and back. Its brain, I imagined, sloshing dangerously against its skull.
Or, a woman might walk by with a carriage, and I’d have to avoid eye contact, so as not to be drawn into a conversation only to find a baby wearing a neck brace—for this happened once. The woman looked away for one second and the baby fell off the bed.
And then there’s the issue of mixing things up. Creating composites or superimposing, so that a baby from a distance might appear to have a black eye, or look small and sick like the preemie used to frighten young mothers out of bad behavior, hanging in my OB’s waiting room.
But I don’t say this.
I watch her carefully because now she’s lifting her arm, pushing her chair out, and motioning to the end of the table toward the handles of a small umbrella stroller, handles which, before now, have been concealed by her books.
“I don’t think you noticed,” she says. And as she bends toward the stroller I gather my jacket, my notepad. I start to plan my escape.
She sits quickly back up, and I use all the energy of my dread to fake delight and exclaim, “You have a baby too!”
But the woman has left her baby in the stroller. I settle back down in the chair and watch as she starts tapping her fingers nervously on the café table.
Tapping, and tapping, and staring off into space.
And I see that her eyes are bulging, as if tiny, nearly invisible words in Helvetica are moving across the white spaces—slipping behind the irises as if across a computer screen. I see that she has an interior monologue of the worried sort too.
Her face hangs in that blank look I feel on myself when Daniel knocks on my head and asks, “Is there anyone home?”
“Home?” I asked him the last time he did this. “I’m always at home. Why do you think my brain needs to be somewhere else?”
“You want to make me feel guilty?” he asked.
And I said, “Yes, I do.”
I’ve tried to explain to him about the thoughts and images. I’ve tried to explain that I’m afraid I’m not a good influence, that when I gaze at our baby I see the beginning of my own furrow appear on her forehead, as if the pressure of my gaze has imprinted it there.
I’ve even suggested I work at the café so we have enough money to start daycare. But he reminded me about my PhD, and how I hated working in cafés, and he is right about the working in cafés part. He tickled me and said, “It’s only six more months before you can go back to teaching.”
Six more months.
I think that soon I’ll have to tell him about the large bay windows that take up most of the wall in the two front rooms of our apartment above the Laundromat. The windows don’t have screens, but I have to open them around three in the afternoon, when the October heat is too much, when the machines down below have been running all day, churning and thumping, thickening up the air.
I’ll just tell him how it started with a simple image: me, tripping over a red toy truck, which evolved into my body, stretched out through the air as if diving for a football, except the football was the baby, knocked from my arms and sailing out through the window in slo-mo as I stumble to the sill and look down on a crowd of backs hovering in a circle—a useless human nest.
I’ll tell him how I decided to stand closer and closer to the window wi
th the baby, to challenge the image, to step right into my own shadow in order to make it go away.
This in fact worked for a while, until last week, when the scene changed into a fragment of an image, in which I leaned out the same window, over the same sidewalk, cradling my baby in both arms. And then I opened them.
I should probably tell him I’ve been avoiding the front rooms altogether now. That the baby and I play in the back room where there are bars on the windows. That even when we’re safely out of the house, down on the sidewalk I feel as if I’m leaning out of a window, knees locked, thighs straining against the sill; that the effort to hold her, to keep her safe and to keep my balance, makes me nauseous, makes me feel as if San Francisco has shrunk to the size of a plank, and I’m standing on it, leaning, vertiginous, above the Pacific.
Back in the café a sadness is working its way through the woman’s face, a blue half-shadow, a San Francisco, Humphrey Bogart shadow. The kind that cuts the face in half, confuses it like a shadow cast by the brim of a hat.
“It happened when I had my baby,” she said. “That’s when my wrists split.”
And then it all makes sense. This woman isn’t avant-garde. She isn’t a French feminist. She’s a mother.
“We had the babyproofers come in their white van,” she said. “They installed foam padding on the tops of tables and bookshelves in case I drop her. They put locks on all the cabinets and got rid of our steak knives. They collected and disposed of anything small enough to be a choking hazard. Safety pins, buttons.”
“Buttons?” I ask.
She looks at me suspiciously. “Haven’t you read The Educated Woman’s Guide to Infants: Preventing Death, Dismemberment, and Delayed Development?”
And I say, “I’ve just flipped through.”
“Well, buttons are instruments of death,” she says, eyeing the buttons running up and down my blouse. “They can lodge in your baby’s throat and the Heimlich maneuver won’t do a thing. The air from the pumps will just pass through the holes. You won’t get enough pressure to pop it out.”