Isabel’s Daughter
A Novel
JUDITH RYAN HENDRICKS
For my parents,
Ruth Adrian Huggins
and
Jerald Douglas Huggins
Your absence has gone through me like thread through a needle.
Everything I do is stitched with its color.
—W.S. MERWIN
Contents
Epigraph
PART ONE
santa fe
one
Once in history class I made a time line. It…
two
I read where some famous doctor said that babies…
three
I never confronted her, but she knew. Just like…
four
Rita likes to say that we were predestined to…
PART TWO
florales
five
Florales, New Mexico, was no place to be coming off…
six
Cassie Robert was like nobody else I’d ever encountered. She…
seven
By September I knew I was staying. We never really…
eight
Floyd Chamaco owned Florales Hardware. Tall and bony big knuckled.…
nine
When Amalia invited us to go to the posada with…
ten
We started meeting at Mami’s on Wednesdays after school. That…
eleven
On a glorious Saturday in April, I was working in…
twelve
At lunch the next day, I told Will I had…
thirteen
The next day I took Cassie’s social security check to…
fourteen
Albuquerque was a dusty brown cake baking in the hot…
PART THREE
santa fe
fifteen
Wednesday’s a cool, bright morning. Too bright. Which means I forgot…
sixteen
Camino del Monte Sol is one of the most lusted…
seventeen
Horacio is chopping onions, tears streaming from his eyes. Juana…
eighteen
It’s a rare summer Sunday that Rita and I are…
nineteen
Los Lobos blares out of Horacio’s boom box in the…
twenty
Somebody’s pounding on the door. I roll out of…
twenty-one
By mid-October, I’ve managed to get four interviews.
twenty-two
I try to settle into my new life. A life…
twenty-three
November starts off bitter cold and dry. Clothes have…
twenty-four
Something wakes me after what seems like only a few…
twenty-five
On the morning of December 21 when I open the door…
twenty-six
When I finally fall asleep, I go way under. No…
twenty-seven
My eyes open wide in the dark, and I lie…
epilogue
A full year has passed since the night I saw…
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Other Books by Judith Ryan Hendricks
Cover
Copyright
About the Publisher
PART ONE
santa fe
April 2000
one
The first time I saw my mother was the night she died. The second time was at a party in Santa Fe.
Once in history class I made a time line. It was a thick, straight black line, intersected by crosshatches representing dates and events. The teacher claimed that you could tell by studying it how events were related to each other, the causes and effects.
The problem is, time isn’t a straight line. I think of it more as a huge arc, curving gently into space, keeping not only the future just out of sight, but the past as well. You never really know what might have caused something to happen, and the effects ripple outward in ever widening circles.
Like losing my contact lens, for instance. I was supposed to be off this whole weekend, my last free weekend before the season gets crazy. And then Juana calls on Thursday to tell me Patrice stepped off a curb and broke her ankle and they need me to work a party Friday night.
“Pinnacle Gallery on Canyon Road,” she says. “Lots of people. Big tips.”
Friday morning she calls me again. “Hey, chica. Party is changed to DeGraf’s house—”
“The what house?”
“DeGraf. Mister DeGraf. You know San Tomás?”
As it happens, I do. It’s one of those narrow, unpaved roads that winds south off Canyon Road. I’ve wandered past it lots of Sunday mornings, clutching my coffee from Downtown Subscription and peering in the gallery windows. One time I turned at the corner and walked a little ways, hoping for a glimpse of one of the huge homes behind adobe walls. I got chased by a Doberman for my curiosity, while the owner hollered, “Stand still, miss! He won’t bite you.”
I didn’t trust him or his dog, so I ran like a jackrabbit back out to Canyon, fully expecting to feel the hot breath, the sharp teeth sinking into my leg at any minute. But when I looked around the dog was gone.
It’s late April in Santa Fe, but at 7,000 feet, spring is slow to take hold. In the daytime, fierce winds blow out of the west, and the inside of your nose feels like it’s lined with Cap’n Crunch. At night the air is sharp and cold, still laced with piñon smoke from hundreds of kiva fireplaces.
Tonight I’m racing the clock, and my breath makes little puffs of steam as I half walk, half jog down the narrow sidewalk. My white shirt’s already damp under the arms, I know my tie is crooked, and my hair is about to come loose from its knot.
Worst of all, I’m late. Again. While we were getting ready, Rita knocked a bottle of perfume off the shelf and she tried to catch it before it hit the tile counter, but she just ended up knocking my contact lens off my finger into oblivion, and the bottle smashed all over anyway and then we started yelling at each other and here I am. It’s not my fault, but I don’t imagine Dale will give two hoots about that.
Then as I round a curve I see lights. Farolitos, those little brown paper bags with candles inside that people in this town love so much, line the top of a wall. Except these are probably the new version, electrolitos. Plus lots of little twinkle lights twined in the tree branches. This is it.
The address—505 San Tomás—is spelled out in Mexican tiles over a massive blue door, set into a wall the color of chocolate ice cream. A couple of guys with clipboards and walkie-talkies lounge against the wall smoking and looking bored. I give them my name. Apparently Kirk has neglected to change Patrice’s name to mine on his list, so they have to ring up Dale on his cell phone to be sure I’m not an international jewel thief, before they let me in.
“Kitchen door’s around to the left past the pool,” the older one says. “And stay on the path. Mr. DeGraf don’t like people cutting through the garden.” He flicks his cigarette away.
“Mr. DeGraf probably don’t like cigarette butts all over his yard either.” I smile at him as I step through the gate.
The house is a pueblo-style adobe, fashioned with the rounded corners and soft silhouettes of the Pueblo Indian dwellings, not the more boxy, territorial adobes like the Anglos built later on. It’s a lighter shade of chocolate than the wall, with the traditional blue doors and windows that are supposed to keep out brujas, or witches. I follow the stone walkway past a huge old lilac bush, its branches drooping under the weight of fragrant purple clusters about to explode into bloom, and cut across the patio. A swimming pool sparkles aquamarine in its underwater lights.
The kitchen is in the usual preparty state of controlled chaos. It�
�s small but elegant, with granite countertops and the kind of appliances favored by people who can afford to hire kitchen designers. When the screen door bangs behind me, Dale makes a big show of looking at his Rolex.
“Avery. So glad you could join us.” His dark eyes give me a once-over. “Polished and pulled together as usual, I see.” The guy standing beside him rustles a wrinkled yellow invoice. “Thanks, Tom. Put the wine over there. Under that table.”
I try to secure my hair. “They didn’t have my name on the—”
“Jesus Christ, you reek. What did you do, take a bath in Opium?”
“Eternity. I’m sorry. Rita broke the bottle and it went everywhere, and I didn’t have time to—”
He gives me The Look. “Never mind. Fix your tie and run out to the—shit! Where’s your eyes?”
“My eyes are in my head, Dale. I lost my contact.”
I notice the muscle in his jaw twitching. “Well, try not to look at anybody.”
“Right. In fact, why don’t I just walk around with my eyes closed.”
“Don’t you have some sunglasses?”
“Sure. You can say I’m blind.” My arm sinks up to the elbow in the big, brown backpack and I pull out my Men in Black shades.
“The guesthouse…” Dale shuts his eyes briefly, as if praying for strength. “…is just the other side of the pool. Get six trays of baby rellenos out of the fridge, okay? And try not to make any stops along the way.”
Juana is arranging vegetables into a sunburst of color around a bowl of chili aioli. She rolls her eyes at me as I slip out the door, squeezing against the wall to let two guys with giant arrangements of weird looking flowers pass by. Rita’s right, I need to get another job. The problem is, Dale and Kirk have one of the best catering companies in Santa Fe, and it would be hard to make as much money with anybody else. That’s even assuming I could get on.
I take a big gulp of fresh air. I can get through this. I’ll just have to be on full battle alert all night. And I can’t see a thing with these damn glasses. I take them off, fold them up, and hook them on the second buttonhole of my shirt.
Steam lifts into the air from the pool’s glassy surface, and I find myself wondering how warm they keep it. What it would feel like to glide through the water with crisp strokes, then climb out into the cold air, disappear inside a huge soft towel, and sit in the garden drinking good red wine and listening to the crickets. It’s a pretty stupid fantasy for someone who can’t even swim. My steps crunch in the gravel.
The guesthouse is private, screened from the big house by coyote fencing and a cluster of aspens. When I open the arched door, I hear voices coming from another room, but I ignore them, poking my head into a bathroom and a coat closet before I find the tiny kitchen. In the refrigerator, I pull out six stacked trays of mini chiles rellenos and start to back out. Now the voices are closer.
“…get rid of some of this stuff. It’s like a damn shrine. Or you could set up a collection box and some candles and—”
A man’s laugh. “Come on, admit it. It’s one of his best.”
She sniffs. “If you like that sort of thing. It’s too goopy. Blatantly sentimental.”
“If I didn’t know better, I’d say you were still jealous.”
“My ass.”
They stand side by side in the hall, a man and a woman, oblivious to my presence, absorbed in the outsized oil painting on the wall. I didn’t notice it on my way in and I probably would’ve walked right past it again, but the energy of their focus draws my attention.
It’s a portrait of a woman. Wearing some kind of exotic costume. My gaze climbs from her sandaled brown feet to the long white dress hemmed with a wide geometric border design in black and turquoise. The loose sleeves drape softly just to the elbows, and a black sleeveless tunic clings to the outline of her hip.
Then I get to her face.
I’ve heard the phrase “shock of recognition,” but I never understood what it meant till now. It’s not the simple recognition of a person you might know or a place that looks familiar. It’s the recognition of a truth that shines in your eyes like a bright light, whiting out everything else. It’s that recognition that makes your knees shake and your mouth go dry. The recognition that empties you of yourself.
I take two steps straight backward to stand and stare while my heart bangs against my ribs.
Long dark hair, pulled austerely away from her face, tumbles loose down her back. The mouth—full lower lip and narrow upper lip. The long, straight nose. Eyes—one dark brown, one amber. Her face is a mirror image of my own.
The air feels suddenly thick and shimmery, like heat waves rising from a road. My eyes burn, too big for my head, which in turn is too big for my body, too heavy to hold up.
The conversation beside me has dwindled into silence. Have they stopped talking or am I not hearing? The first sound to cut through is the little plopping noises of baby rellenos hitting the Saltillo tile floor.
“Miss? Are you all right?” His words are muffled but real enough to anchor me and keep me from drifting away. I turn in their general direction just as the trays are lifted from my hands. Concern becomes surprise, and surprise deepens into shock when he gets a straight-on look at me.
“You’d better sit down,” he says.
Then the woman’s voice. “Ho-lee shit.”
A straight wooden chair materializes under me. “Lindsey, get her a brandy. Over there on the desk.” In a minute he’s putting a glass in my hand, guiding it to my mouth. I suck in too much at once and it explodes in my head, making me cough, filling my eyes with tears. He takes the glass away.
Through the blur I see two intact trays of rellenos on the table under the painting. The rest are in a heap on the floor. Oh God. Dale’s going to shit pink fuzz. I have it in my mind that I can salvage some of them, but when I try to get down on the floor, my head swims.
“Better not make any sudden moves just yet.” The woman comes out of the bathroom holding a washcloth. “Put this on the back of your neck, honey.” She’s sort of pretty, with ash blond hair and a smoker’s voice.
I lay the cool cloth on my neck, as directed, and it does make me feel somewhat more in the moment.
“I’m sorry,” I manage.
The man, who’s been watching me intently all this time, suddenly comes to life. “I can’t believe it,” he says. “This is beyond—”
The woman clears her throat noisily. “Well…I think I’ll just go make myself irresistible and find rich husband number three.”
The sound of the door closing behind her is exaggerated in the silence and I sit motionless, eyes fastened on the picture of my mother.
“Where on earth did you come from?” His voice is so soft, I wonder for a minute if I imagined it. I probably look like I don’t remember where I came from, so he offers, “I’m Paul DeGraf.”
I force my eyes away from the portrait to meet his, which are dark and clear like a lake at night. I half expect to see the moon reflected in them. Tall. Or maybe it’s just that he’s standing over me. The way he’s dressed—all in soft tones of gray—gives him the look of a shadow in one of my dreams. My eyes focus naturally on the beautiful silver and bone bolo tie gleaming at the collar of his shirt.
“I’m…Avery James.” My throat is raw, and my eyes are still leaking from the brandy.
“You need some water.” He disappears into the kitchen and I hear cabinet doors opening and shutting, like he can’t find the glasses.
I go back to the portrait, and the details begin to crystallize, to sharpen, to register in my brain. I want to memorize the way her hands rest gracefully on some kind of stone table or half column, the way her pale mouth barely curves up, as if she’s deciding whether or not to smile. The black tunic, elaborately decorated with colorful flowers—beaded or embroidered—very stylized and precise, like some South American wall hanging. It strikes a chord that echoes deep in my memory.
I know that vest. I saw it once, eight years a
go.
Abruptly, the front door flies open, hitting the wall behind it with an angry crack. “Avery, what the hell are you doing out here? It’s a bit early for a break, don’t you—Shit! My rellenos—” Dale looks like he might burst into tears. His hair stands up in that little ridge above his left ear where he runs his fingers through it when he’s upset.
“Dale, I’m sorry—”
“Damn right,” he snaps at me. “You’re about the sorriest thing I know. You’re also fired. Get your lazy ass out of my sight.”
“Fire her, and you won’t be working for me again.” My head whips around. Paul DeGraf stands in the kitchen doorway.
“Paul…I didn’t realize…I hope there’s not a problem.” Dale backpedals with his ever handy, shit-eating smile.
DeGraf doesn’t smile. “She’s sitting down because she fainted.”
“I didn’t faint, for God’s sake.”
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