~This piece
was originally published in slightly different form in Midwestern Gothic (2012).
So
this was what it was. Champagne gold read
the label on the box. Anne Marie looked at the silver-colored pot in her hand,
its contents like a dessert, a blondish mousse in a miniature ramekin. Against
the lip of the pot’s smooth white insides the champagne gold seemed dark, but
impossibly pale for its intent.
Was
her face champagne gold? Champagne
gold where it wasn’t port wine?
Fifteen minutes ago her mother had
returned from shopping in Traverse City. Among the bags she brought home was a
tiny unmarked vellum one in which was nestled a tinier box (in which, Anne
Marie knew now, had been nestled the still tinier pot of this mousse-like
makeup).
"I
found it at Macy’s," her mother told her.
Anne
Marie had smiled and said thank you and asked if she should wait until tomorrow
to open it.
"No.
It’s not a birthday present. But listen, Anne Marie, don’t be mad."
And
Anne Marie had wondered what she meant. The package looked like it could hold a
pair of earrings, or a lip balm, maybe.
"Don’t
be mad," her mother said again. "It’s just…I saw it, okay? I ran
across it. And I thought of you. You’ll be thirty-nine tomorrow, honey. I mean,
thirty-nine. That’s almost
middle-aged."
Maybe
not a lip balm, but earrings, perhaps, or a brooch.
"It’s
not a birthday present. It’s just that it seemed…it seemed time. All right? Now I’m going out again for a bit."
When
her mother gathered up her things to leave, Anne Marie had the sense she was
being given privacy. She’d need the whole house to herself, apparently, to open
the tiny package—and then she’d wondered, panic traveling up from the middle of
her chest, what kind of sex thing could be so small. Was her mother giving her
a filthy toy? Or birth control? Oh Lord, it made sense: "Don’t be
mad," "You’ll be thirty-nine tomorrow," "It seemed
time."
"No,
Mom!" Anne Marie had shouted.
"Don’t
be mad. I’ll be back in a couple of hours," her mother said, and shut the
door behind her.