by Darien Gee
Julia bets he would, too. Mark has a sweet tooth, even though he’s been on a bit of a health kick lately. She tucks a stray strand of Gracie’s mousy brown hair behind her ear, so different from Julia’s flyaway strawberry-blond curls. “We’ll put it aside for him,” Julia says, even though she was hoping to have the last piece for herself. She reaches for the used plastic wrap but Gracie gets to it first.
Julia watches as Gracie tries to extricate the wrap from itself. She waits for the tantrum, for the meltdown that sometimes happens at this time of day, but Gracie manages to pull the plastic wrap apart and lay it over the single slice of bread, carefully tucking it under the scalloped edges of the plate.
“I did it!” Gracie looks at her handiwork, proud. “So now what?”
Julia notices a blue streak of dried paint on the back of Gracie’s hand and gives it a rub. “What do you mean, now what?”
Gracie holds up the note and the instructions. “Is this a recipe? It looks like a recipe. Are we supposed to do something? I can mix. I’m great at mixing!” The sugar from the bread has clearly entered Gracie’s bloodstream.
Julia turns to look at the Ziploc bag slouching on the counter. She has figured out that it’s basically fermenting batter, but the mere thought of baking and what it entails exhausts her. “Yes, you are great at mixing, Gracie,” Julia concedes. “It’s just that … well, someone gave this to us to be nice. They don’t expect us to actually do it. I’m not sure I even have the ingredients.”
“We could buy them.”
Julia gives her daughter a small smile. “I don’t think so, Gracie girl.” Her voice is apologetic but firm. “Would you like to watch a little television while I get dinner ready?”
Gracie slides off the stool. “I think Clifford is on,” she tells Julia, then runs off.
The microwave dings. It’s a reminder ding, a clever feature the manufacturer came up with. Or maybe all microwaves have reminder dings now—Julia has no idea. Their previous microwave caught fire when she placed a box of dry macaroni and cheese inside and set the cook time for an hour. Black smoke billowed out and the fire alarm shrieked. Gracie was barely a month old. She was startled but didn’t cry, even when Julia broke down and Mark frantically ran about, fire extinguisher in hand as he tried to air out the house.
The microwave dings again. Julia opens the door and sees her cup of coffee. She takes a sip and finds that it’s lukewarm and stale. She puts it back in for another minute then stares at the last piece of bread, wondering if Mark will care if she eats it.
He probably won’t. He’s deferred to her for the past five years, too tired to argue, too tired to try. She can’t say she blames him. She doesn’t know what to do to make things better, either.
Her coffee is now hot and she pulls back the plastic wrap to finish off the last piece. The evidence is still between her fingers when Gracie walks in holding a piece of pink construction paper.
Her daughter looks shocked, as if Julia has just committed a cardinal sin. “Mama! That was for Daddy!”
Julia feels guilty, and then defensive, but it’s pointless either way. First, Gracie is five. She has the clear advantage in this situation, as Julia can’t bear to see her daughter distraught. Second, Gracie was born after everything happened. She doesn’t know a life other than the one she’s living now, where the worst thing that can happen is Julia eating the last piece of Amish Friendship Bread.
Julia tries for an apology. “I’m sorry, Gracie. I was just really hungry.”
“But I wanted Daddy to try it.” Gracie is near tears.
“Well, we could make him a smoothie or maybe some fruit salad …” She has none of these ingredients but offers it up anyway.
“No, I know he’d like this best. I even made a card for him.” Gracie holds up the paper in her hand. On it she’s laboriously copied the five words from the yellow sticky note.
I HOPE YOU ENJOY IT.
Julia feels a lump in her throat. Her daughter’s neat, careful handwriting looks like that of an eight-year-old. Julia knows this because that’s how long it took for Josh, a leftie, to master printing. His teacher had suspected developmental dyslexia, and Julia had to fight to keep him out of special ed, not wanting him to be labeled for life. In the end, she had been right. While Josh’s handwriting would never be called a thing of beauty—his letters were always sloped, almost kissing the line—he had ended up one of the brightest kids in his class.
As Julia gazes at Gracie’s tear-stained face, she knows there’s only one solution. She reaches for the instructions for Amish Friendship Bread and sticks it on the refrigerator with a magnet. She steps back, resigned, then puts the Ziploc bag safely to one side as she pulls her daughter into her arms for a tight hug.
“Hold on to your note, Gracie. We’ll be baking in ten days.”
• • •
Mark doesn’t want to go home.
That’s not entirely true, actually. He wants to go home, but he doesn’t want to get into another fight with Julia or hear about what an awful day she’s had. Sometimes she’ll just look at him in stony silence, indifferent to his questions, a wall.
But it’s the sighs that get to him the most. He’ll take silence over sighs any day. The sun can be shining, the house spic-and-span (seeing how he stays up late every night cleaning it), Gracie healthy and full of joy, and still it’s not enough.
He sits in his car in the parking lot, unsure of what to do. He doubts Julia has come up with a game plan for dinner. She’ll probably ask him to get some takeout or heat up leftovers while she goes into the bedroom for a rest.
A rest from what? Gracie’s in kindergarten at the Montessori school, gone for a seven-hour stretch of time. Julia doesn’t work anymore, doesn’t have to do anything. She picks up Gracie from school and that’s pretty much it. Mark does everything else, filling in the gaps wherever he can.
There’s a rap on his window and he jumps. The smiling face of Vivian McNeilly is looking at him. Vivian is an interior designer with Gunther & Evarts Architects, in charge of all their high-end commercial and residential projects. She motions for him to lower his window.
Mark presses the button but nothing happens. It takes him a second to realize that the engine’s not on. He fumbles for his keys and turns the ignition, feeling like an idiot when the window finally descends with a hum.
“Am I interrupting anything?” Vivian is all smiles. She has a lilting voice, something Mark has always noticed and appreciated for its ability to charm a client. “You look like you’re deep in thought.”
“What? No. I’m just debating whether or not to go to the gym.” What a dumb thing to say, especially since he already worked out before going to the office this morning. Mark wishes he could take it back.
But Vivian nods solemnly as if this is the most intriguing thing she’s heard all day. She’s worked for them for a year and he’s never felt uncomfortable around her, but suddenly he’s picking up a vibe he hasn’t felt in months.
Years.
“Where do you work out? I ask because I usually run through Avalon Park after work, but I was thinking about picking up a gym membership somewhere.” She leans forward, just a bit, and he catches a whiff of perfume.
Mark knows where this is going and that he should just nip it in the bud, but he finds himself contemplating Vivian instead. She makes it look effortless—the wavy auburn locks that fall just past her shoulders, her fitted suit and heels, the way she leans comfortably against the door of his car. She can’t be a day over thirty but she holds herself like a woman who’s seen the world. She’s bright and single, much too young to be living in a small town like Avalon. Before he can stop himself, Mark says, “I go to a gym in Freeport. Fitness Lifestyles. It’s a really great facility—they’ve got an indoor pool and everything.”
Why is he telling her this?
“That sounds great,” Vivian says. She is beaming and Mark’s not sure what just happened. “So I’ll follow you there? I have my
running gear with me. Maybe we could grab a quick workout after I sign up?”
He’s in dangerous waters. Sink or swim.
“Maybe some other time,” he says, and offers a conciliatory smile. His palms are sweating as he grips the steering wheel. “See you tomorrow.” He manages a wave before putting the car into drive and gunning it out of the parking lot.
Julia stands over the kitchen sink, her hands soapy as she washes each dish and puts it onto the wooden rack to dry. Mark is getting Gracie ready for bed.
This time, the evening time, is the only time Julia feels sane. Safe. She can finally breathe, can finally let herself exhale without fear that the ax is going to fall and destroy what’s left of her life. Whatever has happened during the day is over, gone and done with. Her husband is here, her daughter is here. They are all in the same house, under the same roof. Even if they pass each other silently in the hallway, at least they are together.
All that’s left to do is finish washing the dishes, then she’ll wipe down the table, shower, and crawl into bed. She won’t bother with a book or television, as Mark likes to do, but fall straight into a dreamless sleep, her mind and heart finally at rest.
Julia reaches for the next dish. The unfamiliar weight in her hand makes her look down and she sees that it’s the scalloped plate that was left on their porch, a few crumbs still on it. She takes a moment to admire the red roses, the pale blue and violet pansies dotting the dish. When she and Mark had married, they were poor and young. It seemed like a waste to register for china, an extravagance. Plus, they had joked, the children would probably break it. They rolled their eyes, imagining the messes to be made by their future progeny. Already Mark and Julia were making plans for these children, letting their decisions revolve around these little beings that had yet to be conceived.
“Can we register for Tupperware?” Mark had asked, and Julia had only giggled.
Julia runs a soapy hand over the smooth plate, wistful and sad for what could have been. When she turns the plate over in her hand, she sees a printed stamp on the back side.
FINE BONE CHINA
SHELLEY
ENGLAND
But that’s not what makes her suck in her breath, almost drop the plate into the water. There’s a pattern number, and then the name of the pattern right above it.
Rose … Pansy …
And then the last one, on a line of its own.
Forget-Me-Not.
CHAPTER 2
“Heads, it’s a girl. Tails, it’s a boy.” A shiny quarter sails through the sky and Livvy catches it with a laugh. She gives her coworker a nudge. “Come on. Guess!”
Edie takes a bite of her sandwich. “While I appreciate your highly scientific method for determining the sex of my unborn child, I think I’ll pass. Besides, I don’t know for sure that I’m even pregnant. I’m just late.”
“Edie, come on! I don’t know what you’re waiting for.”
Edie’s blue eyes sparkle behind a pair of rectangular glasses. “My period, maybe?”
Livvy slaps the quarter onto the table. “Heads. You’re having a girl.” She reaches for her own lunch, a cold pasta salad tossed in a low-fat Italian dressing. She can’t understand Edie’s nonchalance about this. If Livvy were late, she’d be in the drugstore buying every pregnancy kit available to man. Or, in this case, woman.
She hasn’t told anyone that she and Tom have started trying, just in case it doesn’t happen. Livvy’s thirty-seven, not exactly over the hill, but Tom is convinced that the longer they wait, the greater the chance that something could go wrong. He knows two people who know other people who have children with Down syndrome. Livvy feels her indignation rise. You can’t really control these things, and even though she’s not a religious person she believes all things happen for a reason. Even the unthinkable, which she’s witnessed firsthand. She just nods her head when Tom suggests forgoing birth control to “see what happens.”
Now, six months into it, she’s warming up to the idea of getting pregnant and becoming a mother—more than she’s willing to admit. She doesn’t want to jinx it, but her thoughts always go to Josh, her nephew, when the pregnancy test reveals a single, sad line. She tries to cheer herself by remembering how he used to say that she was fun to be with, that she was a cool aunt. Does that mean she’d make a cool mom, too? Livvy hopes so.
“Why don’t you get a test and find out?” she presses Edie. Her excitement grows as she considers the possibilities on Edie’s behalf. Maybe Edie is worried that her boyfriend, the town’s new GP, will freak out or break up with her. “I’m happy to go with you to buy a test,” Livvy offers.
Edie shakes her head. “Thanks, but I prefer to keep my ten dollars where it belongs.”
“In your wallet?” Livvy guesses.
“In my bank account. Earning interest.” Edie finishes her sandwich and crumples up the wax paper, tossing it into the trash can a few feet away. She misses. “I need to go back inside. I have to finish a story on another shared water well that’s run dry.” She gets up to retrieve her trash.
“Am I going to hear about this on the six o’clock news?” Livvy teases.
“No, but it’ll be in the Gazette tomorrow. Front page. Six homes are affected, Livvy. Not everyone is on county water, you know.”
Livvy is sensing that Edie doesn’t think she knows any better, and she hates that. Why do some people look at her and assume one thing about her when the opposite is true? She was just joking, for God’s sake. “Edie, I was born and raised in Avalon. I think I know about these things.” Thank you very much.
Edie frowns. “Then you know how expensive it will be for these families to tap into the county line. Plus some of them are without running water as we speak.”
The last thing Livvy needs is a lecture. In fact, Edie is acting a bit like Julia right now, and Livvy definitely doesn’t need another older sister in her life. She stares down at her pasta salad, her appetite lost.
Edie can tell by the way Livvy is suddenly engrossed in her lunch that she’s been too critical. Livvy’s not a reporter, she’s in advertising sales, and Edie needs to give her a break if she expects to have any friends in this town of 4,243 people. Her boyfriend, Richard aka Dr. Richard, really wants Edie to give Avalon a chance and Edie wants to, but it’s not easy. That’s the part Richard doesn’t understand, because he gets along with everyone and everyone gets along with him. But Edie isn’t Richard, and she knows she can come off a bit prickly sometimes. Okay, a lot of the time. It’s just that some of the things that people like to talk about seem pointless and frivolous to Edie. How can hair coloring or the price of pork compare to the fact that there is so much poverty and disease in the world?
Edie’s not a bleeding heart liberal by definition (well, by her definition, at least). Others, she knows, may disagree. She just knows from having lived overseas that it doesn’t take much to make a big difference, and she wants to be a part of that change. The lightweight conversations of everyday life often drive Edie to distraction and, try as she might, it’s only a matter of time before her polite head-nodding becomes tiresome and she says what’s on her mind. A few seconds after that, the room will empty as people suddenly remember they have some place to be, or, like Livvy, clam up and stop talking altogether.
“Look,” Richard told her one night when she suggested they finagle their way out of yet another dinner at the home of one of his grateful patients. Patients were always inviting them over, in part because they were still new in town and in part because Everybody Loves Richard. “I know it’s painful, but it doesn’t have to be. These are good people and this is how they show their gratitude. And,” he continued firmly as Edie opened her mouth in response, “they are not going to box up this food and ship it to Africa to feed people in need, so don’t go there.”
“I wasn’t going to suggest that,” she had retorted, a little stung.
“Of course you weren’t,” Richard said with a grin. They both knew it would have been some
thing else, like cutting a household food budget in half and donating the difference, or volunteering their time in a soup kitchen instead of spending two or three hours in their own. “But these people are now our neighbors, and if you give them a chance, they might even become good friends.”
Good friends. Edie somehow doubts this, but there’s no question that coming to Avalon was a smart move, if for the cost of living alone. Chain restaurants and fast-food joints don’t bother with a market this size, and there are no large shopping malls. There is a movie theater, a bowling alley, a park, a handful of restaurants, a couple of bars. Even if you wanted to spend some money there’s nowhere to spend it. Housing prices are insanely low. Unlike other parts of America, Avalon is a place where you can actually afford to raise a family.
Longtime residents, or Avalonians, don’t use street names but refer to places by how they’re situated to other places. “Over by the bank,” “next to the library,” or “behind the Pick and Save.” Edie likes this sort of navigation, of how each place seems to point to another, like clues in a treasure hunt. Her stories for the Gazette have evolved in this way—the women of the local sewing circle heaped praises on the local butcher who was also the star of two stage productions by the Avalon Theatre Company (Hairspray and You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown). A small theater is home to the robotics club run by two fifth graders. One of the fifth graders was musing aloud as to the uncanny lucky streak of longtime bingo champion Harold Sibley whom, Edie discovered, was winning all the bingo games on Thursday nights at St. Mary’s because his mistress was calling out the winning numbers. Lead after lead, almost seventy stories in total. Not exactly hard-hitting news. At first Edie figured she just hadn’t found the “real” stories of Avalon, but it’s becoming clear to her that maybe this is as good as it’s going to get, that Avalon isn’t more than what it seems to be—a small, simple river town in northern Illinois.