~This story was
previously published in Colorado Review
(2009)
After Hannah
scraped the decorative border from the nursery walls, she placed an ad in the
university housing office. Summer break had just started, but within days
someone called. Rune was her name. “Like the fortune-telling alphabet,” the
girl said, her voice throaty and low. Hannah imagined thick black bangs veiling
the girl’s eyes, a mouth tense with secret sorrow.
In
person, there was nothing mysterious about her. She came to see the newly
painted room when the neighborhood was silent and shimmering with midday heat.
Clive was at a lunch meeting. Hannah kept glancing over her shoulder as she led
Rune upstairs. Tucked under the girl’s arm was an orange motorcycle helmet. Her
short hair was spiky, inky roots giving way to shades of red. Henna tattoos
snaked from beneath her jacket and encircled her slender fingers in ornate
flourishes. She was remarkably chatty, hurling questions at Hannah in a breathy
contralto. How long was the walk to campus, to the nearest bank and grocery
store? Could she have overnight guests? And could she pay half the rent on the
first and half on the fifteenth, just until school started and her financial
aid kicked in? Hannah’s head started to pound.
When
they reached the room, the girl strode past her, craning her neck at the crown
molding. “Female students only,” Hannah had been careful to note in the ad. No
dirty boxers piled everywhere. And a female tenant felt less intimidating. At
the last minute she’d dragged in a wingchair from Clive’s office and angled it
by the window. A perfect study spot. Any college girl would love it.
“I
guess this’ll work,” Rune said, tossing her helmet on the chair. She sat on the
bed and bounced, as if testing the springs, then gazed at the wedding ring
quilt, her lips curled in a half-smirk. Hannah pictured the quilt stuffed in
the closet, replaced by a threadbare coverlet that smelled faintly tangy and
unwashed.
Rune
flopped back. “Stars and moons would be nice up there. Bishop and I had them.
They glowed in the dark. We made up constellations. Cat eyes in the north, a
witch’s wand in the south.” She rested her cheek on the quilt and stared at Hannah.
“Who’s
Bishop?”
“My
fiancĂ©. Ex-fiancĂ©.” There was the slightest hitch in her voice. She brushed her
arms up and down, as if making angel’s wings in the snow. “He got the apartment.
I got the scooter. He doesn’t know it yet.”
Downstairs,
the front door opened. Clive’s footsteps thumped up the stairs.
“Come
meet Rune,” Hannah called and stepped into the hallway.
He
stopped on the landing. “Who?”
“Our
new tenant.” Like that, she’d committed herself. She hadn’t meant to and
wouldn’t have if not for Clive’s knee-jerk frown. She itched to give him a
little shove.
“Professor
Jacobs, hi.” Rune stood in the doorway, her fists balled in her jacket pockets.
“I didn’t know you lived here.”
“Have
we met?” he said in his lecture voice. He smiled politely.
“I
was in your fall urban myths class.”
Hannah
watched his expression glaze. Students passed through so quickly, he often
complained, that he’d stopped trying to remember their names.
“I’m
sorry,” he said. “You don’t look familiar.”
Rune
waved her hand dismissively. Her tattooed fingers flickered through the air
like butterflies. “I sat way in back.”
He
peered into the room. “Is that my chair?”
“I
left the other one,” Hannah said. Clive stared at her until she looked away.
“I
guess we’ll be seeing more of each other,” he said to Rune and marched down the
hall. His study door clicked shut, an unfriendly, obstinate sound.
***
Later that
evening he leaned against the doorjamb between their bedroom and the master
bathroom while Hannah brushed her teeth. From the bedroom television she could
hear a program blaring about a teen rescued from her family’s handyman, who’d
kept her captive for months. Hannah had been following the story, aching when
the parents pled on the news for their daughter’s safe return.
Behind
her, Clive said through a mouthful of something, “Did you check her credit or
ask for references? Something’s not right about her.”
She
stared at his reflection. He clutched a candy bag to his gut. His face had a
ruddy tinge. She spit out her toothpaste.
“For
God’s sake, she’s a college student. One of your
students.”
“So
she says. What do we know about her, really? She could steal us blind or shoot
us in our sleep. I can’t believe you didn’t think about that.”
He
sounded like his old self, vehement, impassioned, as if a circumscribed sliver
had been dislodged, one that she had been yearning to butt up against. This was
a man who could fend off regret, calm the memories that still ambushed her. She
had been in the home stretch, then suddenly the emergency C-section. A morphine
drip had burned in her arm; restraints had cut into her wrists. So briefly
hers, the boy and the girl, with tiny, bluish nails and fluttering chests.
In
the bathroom mirror she could see the bedroom TV flickering with images, first
a sweet-faced blond girl, then the wild-haired, unwashed handyman turned
kidnapper. Day workers abducted little girls, assistants embezzled from
unsuspecting bosses, children poisoned parents to collect on insurance
policies. Husbands and wives drifted apart, unable to grasp the parameters of
each other’s grief, the private rules of the other’s recovery. They needed this
tattooed girl. Already she was getting them talking again.
“Clive,
don’t you see—”
“Why
would you take such a huge risk?”
“I’m
trying to put us back on track.”
Instantly
his expression went blank. “Right,” he said. “Business as usual.”
He
turned away, shoveling more candy into his mouth. She wiped out the sink and
pretended not to notice.
***
Keeping
her pregnant had been the main problem. Seven months before, during their final
pregnancy try, she had been put on strict bed rest. She couldn’t even sit up to
read or type, and holding things overhead made her arms ache. Clive went out
and bought two flat-screen TVs, one for the bedroom and one for her study. They
hadn’t owned a television in years, since the last one exploded in sparks.
From
the start, most shows bored her, particularly the reality ones with their
trumped-up animosities and alliances. True crime shows, though, were
fascinating. The lengths people went to, only to get caught. Take the novelist
who pushed his wife down the stairs. Years before, another woman, a family
friend, died the same way. The novelist had been the last to see her alive,
too. Such unoriginality and poor planning. Then there was the Naughty Girl
Bandit, who wore a T‑shirt imprinted with the word “Naughty” to rob three banks
in Hannah’s own neighborhood. She slid notes to tellers, once showed a handgun
in her bag. Fairly commonplace, as bank robbers went. But how silly to wear a
memorable shirt and no mask, though her features were blurred in surveillance
tapes. She was sure to be apprehended.
Clive
didn’t approve. “It’s morbid,” he said, “obsessing about the worst parts of
life.” And look how jumpy she had gotten, suspicious of even the grocery store
clerks. But it was exhilarating to be fearful, to feel something other than an
endless cycle of impatience, hope, grief, rage. Even after she was up and out
of bed, she watched crime programs until dawn every night, shivering on her
study couch as she mentally catalogued clues: open window, unlatched door, abandoned car, corpse in a field, a river,
an abandoned water main.
Now
there was Rune. She moved in that weekend, bringing a knapsack, a few boxes,
and her scooter. Their computer and stereo equipment remained untouched, as did
the cash in their wallets. (Hannah counted it every night the first few days,
her cheeks warm with shame.) Rune just wasn’t the criminal type. She lacked an iota of stealth, and her
emotions dwelled close to the surface, as flamboyant as her tattoos. Once she
roused herself (she tended to sleep until noon), she either bounced around the
house with enthusiasm or draped herself across a chair in despair. And there
was that moment on the first day, the battle between hope and futility on her
face as she envisioned the constellations she’d left behind. The need in that
gaze was too unguarded to be feigned.
There
were oddities. Small, silly things disappeared, a magnet from the refrigerator,
a set of rusty keys from the mud room junk drawer, things that Hannah herself
could have misplaced and wouldn’t have noticed missing if not for Rune’s
presence. Her behavior was a little strange, too. Before leaving the house she
peered outside from behind the dining room curtains as if checking for
suspicious characters. She kept her bedroom door shut, and no letters arrived
for her, no bills or catalogues. During the first week, Hannah asked casually
whether she’d had a chance to forward her mail. She kept a P.O. box, Rune said,
because she moved so often. Hannah found herself mulling over these details,
trying to make them mean something.
“It’s
strange, her keeping the door locked, like we might rob her,” she said to Clive
one morning at the end of Rune’s second week. They sat at the kitchen table.
There was a cherry Danish by his elbow. She dug into her grapefruit. They were
supposed to be dieting. A show of solidarity wasn’t too much to ask. “Or she
could be hiding something, drugs maybe.”
“You
wanted a tenant,” he said.
He
stood and nuzzled her ear. She sat up straighter.
“Rune
might come down.”
“So
what? I’m kissing my wife.”
But
he stepped away. She felt cold where he had kissed her, oddly abandoned. They
hadn’t made love since she went on bed rest. Before, they had desired each
other with a deep, satisfying necessity that showed itself with comforting
regularity, like hunger for a scheduled meal. Sex seemed superfluous now,
something other people did, younger people with less to lose.
“I
ran into Kurt,” he said. “You haven’t returned his calls about whether you’re
teaching next semester.”
“It’s
barely June. He doesn’t need an answer yet.”
“You’d
feel better if you were busy again.”
She
whirled around. His arms were crossed, his face stern.
“I’m
busy. I got the spare room ready, for one thing. We need the money, remember?”
“If
that were true, you’d be teaching. That’s not what this is about.”
“Then
what? Tell me what this is about if you know so much.”
Clive
frowned at the doorway. There was Rune, her spiky hair mashed, her drawstring
pajamas askew.
“Am
I interrupting?” she asked.
“Yes,”
he said. “Give us a minute.”
It
wasn’t like him to be so brusque. Hannah said, “It’s fine. You must be hungry.”
The
girl walked in and opened the refrigerator. “Can I drink some juice? I’ll
replace it.”
“No
need,” Hannah said just as Clive said, “Please do.” What was wrong with him?
She nudged his pastry toward Rune. “Have some breakfast,” she said.
Rune
smiled gratefully. Clive frowned.
“So,
you’re a graduate student in my department.” His lecture voice again. “Who’s
your advisor?”
“Actually,”
Rune said, carefully, “I’ll be a sophomore.”
“That
class of mine you said you took. It’s only open to grads.”
“I
audited. I’m thinking about majoring in anthropology.”
“Ah,”
he said and cocked his head, as if about to bury her in questions.
“Clive,
she just got up. Leave her alone.”
The
relief on Rune’s face was reward enough for the annoyance on Clive’s. So what
if the girl seemed jumpy. That just might be her way.
***
Hannah
took to dawdling in her study each morning, half-listening to crime shows while
she reviewed course materials. She could revive her class on the evolution of
marital law. Or there was her seminar on China’s one-child policy. The debates
about fairness and the right to have as many children as you wanted, government
be damned. Those didn’t seem bearable.
More
and more she found herself stretched out on her study couch watching television
as she listened for signs from upstairs that Rune was awake. Sometimes she
waited until Rune came down and then sat with her while she ate. Other times
she knocked on her door. “I’m doing laundry,” she would say. “I could fit some
things if you’d like.” Rune never invited her inside; still, she would say
thanks and bring out some clothes. Hannah rejected her offers to help, which
would have spoiled her sense of purpose. Occasionally, Rune followed her to the
basement and settled in a worn armchair near the washer to tell stories about
traveling the world with her father, who played trombone in the Army marching
band, and her mother, who built a nest egg reading Tarot cards to other
military wives. Or she talked about her plans for the school year, or her job at
a burger joint in Central Square. The dinner crowd tipped better, she said. Hannah
had been there a few times after faculty meetings. It was dark and overheated;
sawdust and peanut hulls scratched underfoot.
“I
could help you get a job at the law school,” she surprised herself by offering
one day. “Clerical work, maybe. Better hours for studying.”
“Are
you a professor too?”
“I’ve
been on sabbatical. We were trying to have a baby,” she found herself saying.
“It didn’t work out.”
“That’s
sad. I’d love a baby someday.” Said with an odd yet touching urgency.
The
tattoos, Rune explained over lunch another day (breakfast for Rune, whose
socked feet had whispered downstairs at one o’clock), caused her broken
engagement. She rolled her sleeves to her shoulders; the tattoos swirled upward
and beyond.
“They’re
not permanent. I had them done in Kenya. Bishop is an anthropology grad
student. Professor Jacobs might know him. He got a fellowship this summer to
study Kenyan wedding rituals. We were supposed to get married there.”
She
thrust her hands across the kitchen table. Up close, the tattoos were lovely, a
rich earthy red, like the Sedona clay Hannah knew from childhood. Terrible for
growing anything but perfect for mud makeup. She and her friends used to make a
sludgy paste and paint each other’s cheeks with flowers and curlicues much like
these. A memory she had planned to share with a daughter.
“They
were only supposed to do my hands and feet for the wedding, but I thought,
when’s the next time I’ll have the guts to tattoo this much of my body? It’ll
fade, right? Bishop went ballistic. Told me I was bastardizing a sacred
tradition. I always take things to extremes, he said. I have no self-control.
He put me on the next plane.”
Hannah
glanced at Rune’s twisted mouth and damp eyes, then tentatively patted her
hands. “Let me make you some pancakes,” she said and stood.
Rune
wiped her eyes and curled her knees to her chin. Hannah could feel her gaze
tracking her around the kitchen. Clive was wrong. She was just a child starved
for attention, a lost soul in need of sympathy.
***
Clive’s
adoption book was the first thing that Hannah was certain disappeared.
He
showed it to her one morning when Rune had been there a month. Hannah was
making breakfast, which she had started doing every day, Belgian waffles and
biscuits heavy with buttermilk and lard, food that could withstand the oven
until Rune got up. For Clive and herself she served protein shakes or oatmeal
topped with Splenda and fruit.
“I
assume that’s not for me,” she heard him say as she checked a frittata in the
oven. She turned. He stood there, smiling slightly, holding out a thick,
spiral-bound book that felt weighty when she took it. It looked like something
he had compiled for a class. Typed on front was “Chinese Adoption.” Inside were
articles about the general pros and cons of adoption as well as about Chinese
adoption, including a list of agencies specializing in the region and a copy of
the voluminous application materials. It must have taken months to compile.
Clive always was a careful researcher.
“Maybe
if you knew more,” he said, “you’d see how this could be good for us. We could
still be a family.”
If
only he would stop looking at her. “Clive, I’m not sure—”
“And
it could be a good seminar topic,” he hurried on. “Kurt agrees. You could ease
back in with the one class.”
“You
talked to Kurt about this?”
“Someone
had to.”
“He’s
my dean, not yours.”
“I
know.” His face reddened, but he kept going. “Look. Teaching makes you happy. I
want you to be happy again.”
How
dare you, she wanted to yell. But the hope on his face.
“Read
it,” he said. “Please.”
She
nodded, not trusting herself to speak. He kissed her and left quickly, as if
she would change her mind if he stayed. At least he still knew her that well.
All
week the book lay by the coffeemaker. Crumbs collected around the borders;
wavery rings from damp glasses marked the cover. Clive glanced over but said
nothing whenever he walked by. Each day he ate his healthy breakfast without
complaint. Instead of candy he snacked on grapes. His resolve almost made her
read the book. But a child in the house, someone else’s child. A breathing,
healthy, growing child.
“Is
this for a class?” Rune asked on Friday when she was pouring herself coffee.
Hannah
tried not to flinch as Rune turned pages. “Something Clive’s working on. He
thought it would be an interesting seminar for when I go back.”
“Is
he kidding? This is probably the last thing you want to think about.” She gave Hannah’s
arm a squeeze. “Guys can be such jerks.”
The
next morning the book was gone, its crumb borders wiped away. Hannah assumed
Clive had taken it (finally, he’d realized his folly) until he came down for
breakfast and saw the empty counter. “So you read it,” he said. “It made you
see, didn’t it, how such an intense process would commit us to a child.”
“I
don’t have it,” she said. “Maybe Rune borrowed it.”
“Borrowed
what?” Rune was standing behind them, fully dressed, her hair spiked with gel.
As if she had armored herself, it occurred to Hannah.
“The
book on the counter is missing, honey,” she said, the endearment slipping out.
She liked the smile it produced from Rune.
“Oh.”
Rune thought a moment. “I haven’t seen it.”
“You
might not have realized what it was,” Clive said.
“I
try not to touch other people’s stuff.”
His
laugh was caustic, totally unlike him. “Except for food.”
“Hey,
I’m happy to get my own.”
“Clive,
what’s wrong with you?” Hannah said. To Rune, she said, “Ignore him.”
“I’m
not doing it, Hannah,” he said. “I’m not fighting with you.”
He
stalked out the back door. She should follow him, apologize. He was grieving,
too, and trying to move forward. But still wanting children, after everything.
It felt like a betrayal.
Rune
sat down. “He doesn’t like me.”
“He’ll
get over it.” Hannah pulled some waffles from the oven and sat to watch Rune
eat.
***
More of
Clive’s things vanished, of no real value except the annoyance their
disappearance caused: a dry-cleaning ticket, a backup flash drive, extra
seminar materials. Whenever something went missing, Hannah hid in her study and
listened to him rush around murmuring, “I was in the car, then I came inside
and put it on the counter….” Once, she heard him say, “Damn that girl!” A swell
of protectiveness almost pushed her out of hiding. Leave her out of this, she
was tempted to say.
But
it could be Rune. Hannah meant to talk to her. The timing just never seemed
right. Rune had become such a comfort, especially with Clive around less and
less. In the weeks since the book disappeared, he left for campus earlier and
returned later, rarely pausing outside her study where she lay on the couch
clicking through channels. (How long had it been since they’d slept in the same
bed?) Often the only traces of him were the candy wrappers that reappeared
around the house.
She
didn’t let them bother her. Instead, she read cookbooks or watched television
(the shows flowing through her now rather than reverberating in her brain) or
spent time with Rune, not even pretending to work anymore. She went hours, at
times, without thinking. Some days after Rune woke up, later and later it
seemed, they chatted until Rune left for her evening shift. Or after work Rune
might show up in Hannah’s study with some pie from the restaurant and they’d
eat and watch TV until the airwaves filled with paid programming. She noted how
Rune asked advice about the smallest things and turned away if Clive walked in.
She imagined the growing list of pilfered items stockpiled in Rune’s closet,
the girl’s sly satisfaction as she listened to Clive search. That’s what you
get for upsetting your wife, she would be thinking. There was comfort in
imagining this girl understood what upset her better than her own husband.
***
She caught
Rune in a lie, a small one, involving a time when she and her mother got lost
in Amsterdam’s red light district looking for somewhere to buy saxophone reeds
for her father. Rune was helping Hannah fold laundry.
“I
thought he played trombone,” Hannah said, placing a towel on Rune’s pile.
Rune’s
face stilled; then she looked puzzled. “Nope, sax. Alto, tenor, bass, you name
it.” Her tone was over-bright, reckless. Hannah hesitated before pulling
another towel from the dryer. She could have misremembered. Such a silly thing
to lie about, and for no apparent reason. Still, part of her whispered, What is true with this girl? and,
louder, She is no substitute.
That
night, while Rune was working, she stood outside the bedroom door and
contemplated picking the lock. She knelt to peer in the large, old-fashioned
keyhole, which revealed only darkness. Tingling with guilt she hurried away,
into their bedroom. This girl trusted her, relied on her, even, and she was
about to invade her privacy. She had no proof, just a sense, probably
misguided, spurred by too much crime TV and her growing anger at Clive. His
disapproval of Rune was palpable. How dare he judge her.
She
started flipping through his closet, snatched a velvety suede jacket, his
favorite, and then she was yanking buttons—tearing
scratching ripping—until her breath came in gasps. Somewhere, a keening
wail. Her own. Her face was wet with snot and tears. She had to get hold of
herself.
After
she stopped panting, she spread the coat on the bed, tried to smooth the ruined
suede that turned his eyes the color of honey. It couldn’t be fixed. She
finally buried it in the trash.
When
Clive noticed the coat missing from his closet the next morning, she told him
the dry cleaner lost it.
“Stop
pretending,” he said. “We both know she’s responsible.”
“That’s
ridiculous,” she snapped and started to walk out.
He
grabbed her arm. “Dammit, Hannah—”
“Stop
blaming me!”
“What’s
happening to us?” he said and let her go.
He
sounded so lost. To feel his solid, heavy warmth against her; to rest her head
in the hollow of his throat. She took his hand, its calloused ridges as
familiar as her own skin.
“Do
you ever wonder what they would have been like?” he asked.
She
dropped his hand. “No. Never.”
“So
now we can’t even talk about them? It’s like you’re pretending they never
existed.”
“They
barely did,” she said and immediately regretted it. What she’d meant to say was
that if she let herself think about them, she couldn’t do anything else. She
had to let them go or they would consume her. But he would never understand,
she could tell by his horrified look. It had been so long since they understood
each other.
***
At the end
of July, when Rune had been there two months, Hannah helped her decorate the
bedroom ceiling. It was the first time Rune invited her inside. The few
scattered possessions made the room look abandoned, like a motel after a hasty
checkout. A book on the end table, an empty glass. Hannah held the stepladder
while Rune dotted the ceiling with star-and-moon stickers. Yellowish-white,
they were barely visible, but Rune assured her they would glow brightly at
night.
“They’ll
look like a tornado in this long sweep,” Rune said. As she reached up, Hannah
noticed how much her tattoos had faded. When Rune paused to rest, Hannah
touched her wrist.
“They’re
almost gone,” she said. Hard to believe so much time had passed. The decision
about whether she would teach in the fall had been made for her. The schedule
had been set, said a message from the dean’s assistant (not from Kurt himself,
which was its own message). A relief, really. Teaching was part of a past that
she was finally letting go.
“I’ll
probably have them redone,” Rune said. “Come with me. You could get some, too.”
“I’m
a little old.”
“You’re
only as old as you let yourself be. That’s what Bishop says.” She climbed down
the ladder. “It’s like I’m giving in to him if I let them fade.”
“Have
you two spoken?”
“He
doesn’t know where I am, the asshole,” she said in a cold, flat voice so unlike
her that Hannah shivered. Rune handed her a packet. “You try,” she said, her
normal voice restored.
“I’m
no artist.” But Hannah climbed the ladder. At the top she reached up with a
sticker. Her C-section scar tugged. Such a small incision required to take
them. She made a circle, added stars for eyes, a mouth of moons, a crescent
nose. When she looked down, Rune was grinning.
“The
Smiley Constellation, discovered by Professor Hannah Arnett,” Rune said and
handed up another packet. The stickers looked fresh and new, like the beginning
of something.
“I’ll
do it,” Hannah said. “I’ll get a tattoo.”
They
went that day, picking a place on Brattle Street near campus. It was
surprisingly peaceful, new age music playing softly, dim lights, blinds pulled
against the afternoon glare. There was a low-slung couch and a coffee table
littered with magazines. They were greeted by a man covered with tattoos and
piercings. When he asked what she was interested in, Hannah impulsively
unzipped her jeans low enough to reveal her scar. Even Rune looked surprised.
“Can
you tattoo this?” Hannah asked. “Real, not hennaed.”
The
man crouched. “May I?” he asked and gently prodded the scar. The coolness of
his fingertips raised goose bumps on her belly. He stood.
“It’ll
hurt a lot,” he said as she zipped up. “I’d have to go extra deep. Scar tissue
doesn’t take ink that well. And it fades pretty fast. You’d need lots of
touch-ups.”
She
must have winced because Rune said, “Start somewhere easier, maybe. See if it’s
worth the effort.”
The
man pointed at the couch. “Think about it while I do her hennas. Let’s take a
look.” He examined Rune’s arms. “Nice, clean work. Easy to trace. Jusneet over
at Cambridge Body Art, right?”
“I
had them done in Africa,” she said.
“Huh.
Looks just like Jusneet’s stuff.” He went to set up.
Rune
sat next to Hannah and flipped through a tattoo design catalog. She looked
absorbed, but Hannah knew with sudden force: She was lying. Now was the time to
confront her. You don’t need to steal from Clive, she could say. I know you
care about me.
Rune
pointed to a Chinese symbol in the catalog. “Naked,” the caption said it meant.
“How about this?”
She
shifted closer. Her narrow shoulder felt fragile against Hannah’s. People lied
all the time, to themselves and others, to hide pain, to seem like more than
what they were. Hannah was as guilty as anyone. Those tiny nails and fluttering
chests would never leave her, no matter what she told herself. But there were
other ways to diminish the ache. She wouldn’t say anything to Rune, she
realized and felt a slight thrill. Not now or ever.
“Maybe
that one,” Hannah said and pointed to a yin-and-yang circle, one-half light,
the other dark. Together, they paged through designs.
***
“Those
aren’t for you,” she said the next morning when Clive tried to take a waffle.
“How
could I forget?” he said. “Egg whites and low fat toast for me.” He took one
anyway, biting it as he walked to the fridge.
He
wasn’t going to rile her. She adjusted her shirt to cover the new tattoo on the
small of her back. It didn’t hurt, but she kept touching it, hoping to evoke
the needle’s exacting intensity, in and out, demanding her attention. Rune got
the same one on her left shin. Definitely worth the effort, they had agreed.
Already Hannah felt different.
Clive
peered in the refrigerator. His stomach strained against his shirt buttons. He
kept glancing over.
“What’s
that?” he asked when she reached for a glass. He walked over and lifted her
shirttail. She went to push him away, but his expression was bemused, playful,
like the man she used to know. He brushed his fingers across the tattoo. A
chill shot through her.
“You
like it?” she asked. God. She sounded like a flirty teenager.
“It’s
sexy.”
He
crouched down, his breath warm on her back. She closed her eyes.
“When
did you get it?”
His
hair, soft beneath her hand. “Yesterday, on a whim. We found this place—”
“We?
As in you and Rune?”
Her
eyes flew open. He stood staring at her. Her back still tingled where he’d
touched her. She opened her mouth to tell him: Touch me again.
“Let
me get this straight,” he said. “There’s no time to work or to read the
research I slaved over so that we could maybe have a shot at staying together,
but there’s more than enough time to pamper some stranger and go off with her
to mutilate your body.”
Maybe
have a shot at staying together? He’d leave her?
“You
said you liked the tattoo,” she said.
“Don’t
change the subject.”
“What’s
our subject, then, Rune? She’s not a stranger, she’s—”
“She’s
a liar, dammit!” He took a step back. “I checked with the registrar,” he said
more quietly. “There’s no record of a ‘Rune Zapata’ ever taking a class.”
“Maybe you spelled her name wrong.”
“A
grad student of Sid’s came by my office yesterday. Bishop Something. They’re
married. She left without a note, nothing, just disappeared. He said she’s
pregnant.”
That
couldn’t be. She looked the same. But some girls hid their bellies until birth.
The constant sleeping, the bounces between lethargy and enthusiasm. They could be
signs. Who knew what was true with this girl? Her breath caught; she heard
herself gasp. The satisfaction on Clive’s face made her want to hit him.
“If
it’s true,” she said, “she needs support. She needs me.”
“She
needs to use you.”
“You’ve
been awful since she moved in.”
“I’m
sorry if I can’t settle for bringing home strays.”
The
bowl slipped—or did she throw it?—and shattered at his feet. They stared at the
mess. She couldn’t get herself to move. Finally, he stepped over the shards and
walked to the door.
“What
about what I want?” he said, so quietly that the effort to hear him felt like
it would split her.
After
he was gone, she cleaned up and walked to the staircase. Upstairs, the shower
was running. She had imagined herself posed this way, one hand on the banister,
her head cocked, listening before she called, “Candace”—or Portia or Rowena or
Kate—“time for school!” She stood there, listening.
***
During the
last pregnancy they had picked out cribs. Clive held the catalogue over her
head while she lay in bed. They kept the doors open so they could call to each
other while he worked on the room. When he was done, he lay beside her, his
hair and arms speckled with paint, and showed her pictures. The bright ochre
walls, the cribs end-to-end, matching rockers framing the window. Beneath the
crown molding, a decorative border of cows leaping over moons, Clive’s surprise
to her. He had been so eager. Careers came and went, books were written anytime
or not at all. A family endured. It hadn’t occurred to her that her body would
fail them. She had never let herself imagine what it would be like, the daily,
crushing weight of knowing that her own deliberate choices—to wait until her
next book was published, until she got tenure, until she lectured at one more conference,
rather than make the time, take the risk, reprioritize—had led her to this
place.
The
extra key to Rune’s room required jiggling before it worked. Down the hall the
shower was still running, but it would stop soon. She walked inside, climbed on
the wingchair to check the closet shelf. Empty. She wasn’t sure what she was
looking for. Not just Clive’s things. Something to prove him wrong about Rune.
She
stepped off the chair and hurried to the dresser. Jumbled clothes in all three
drawers. Crumbled behind the bottom drawer was a tank top with “Naughty”
printed across the chest. Bank robbers. Notes slipped to tellers, guns in
purses. It didn’t mean anything for Rune to have this shirt. Lots of girls did,
at least three in her intro family law class the last semester she taught. And
it wasn’t necessarily hidden. It could have gotten stuck by mistake. But what
if?
Sneezing
from dust, she felt around the box springs cover and found a hole. Clive’s swim
goggles were there, and his reading glasses. Farther back, two manila
envelopes. One was filled with cash, tens and twenties secured with thick
rubber bands. Tips. This was tip money. But so much of it, and such big bills.
The other envelope was sealed, its contents stiff, squarish. Passports, maybe,
fake ID’s. Or pictures of Rune and a man, the two of them hamming it up,
brandishing pistols maybe, or simply smiling and cradling her belly with their
clasped hands.
“What
are you doing in here?”
Hannah
shoved the envelopes under the bed. Behind her, Rune stood in the doorway
wrapped in a towel, her bare arms tensed. Hannah tried to imagine her wearing
the “Naughty” shirt. News reports hadn’t mentioned tattoos. Still, she could
have gotten them afterward, cut and dyed her hair. Appearances were so easily
altered.
“We
should talk,” Hannah said, still crouched awkwardly by the bed.
Rune
grabbed some clothes from an open drawer. “Would you mind?”
Hannah
nodded, mute, and left to wait in the foyer.
When
Rune came down, she was dressed, her bulging backpack slung over her shoulder.
What was inside? Stolen clothes and jewelry? Hannah stepped between her and the
front door. “Do you want to tell me something?”
“You
should have something to say to me. Like an apology.” Rune unzipped her
backpack and pulled out a jeans jacket, which she slipped on despite the heat
outside. The backpack looked deflated, unincriminating.
“You
could have told me the truth about Bishop,” Hannah blurted. “I would have
understood. And I don’t care that you took Clive’s things—”
There
was something in Rune’s face, embarrassment or regret. Too fleeting to be sure.
Then Rune snorted. “You break into my room and call me a criminal.” She pulled out a scrap of paper, scribbled on it.
“That’s my P.O. box. Mail me my deposit. I’ll get my stuff later.” At the door
she paused. “I thought we were friends.”
Hannah
ran outside after her.
“What
about the baby?” she called.
Rune
spun around. “I can’t help it if you can’t have a baby.”
Hannah
stood gasping as Rune sped away on the scooter. Then she watched the empty
street until her breath calmed. She could follow Rune, find out where she went,
what she really did with her time. Her midsection throbbed. From the new
tattoo, the C-section scar? It didn’t matter. Whether the girl was a student or
a bank robber, whether she was pregnant or not—none of that mattered, either.
Imagining her possible incarnations wouldn’t bring her back. But Clive. She
found herself wondering where he was. When he was coming home.
She walked
down the porch steps, across the lawn. The tattoo parlor was a ways, but not
too far to walk. She reached the sidewalk, let herself touch the ridge on her
abdomen. The needle in and out, deeper and deeper, helping the grief settle in
and find its place. Afterward, she would walk back home and lie on the bed to
wait for him. They existed, she would tell him. They did. He might have been a
soccer player or a chemist, she a sculptor or novelist, something creative and
volatile. The needle, its precision. She would coax him to stretch out beside
her and she would take his hand and trace his fingers across the design. The
boy, she would say. The girl. Touch me. Cyclist. Journalist. Concert pianist.
Touch. Her feet stepped forward, tapping out the possibilities. She would round
a corner soon, and the tattoo parlor would be there, waiting for her.
*****
THE
STORY BEHIND THE STORY
I am a true crime junkie. There’s
something soothing about true crime shows and their presumption that a
semblance of justice will be served even for the most baffling crimes. My
addiction intensifies when I’ve got something substantial worrying me. I find
myself wallowing in TV shows involving actual criminal events, the bloodier the
better.
“Bandit” evolved out of one such
phase, during the summer that I was trying to get pregnant. I was in my
mid-thirties and had recently gotten married and switched professions from
financially-secure-but-miserable entertainment lawyer to pennies-in-the-bank-but-infinitely-happier
fiction writer. Having kids was the next logical step. The problem was I wasn’t
sure that I could get pregnant, or that I wanted to. Would I be a good parent?
Would we be able to afford a child? And if I didn’t get pregnant, what next?
Would I move blithely on to something else? Or would being a parent mean so much
to me that I would pursue someone to mother at the expense of everything else
in my life?
The more these fears obsessed me,
the more true crime TV I watched. Then one day I saw a report about the Naughty
Girl Bandit, a young woman wearing a “naughty” t-shirt who waltzed,
undisguised, into banks and robbed them by showing the gun in her purse. I
found myself wondering: who raised that girl? What was she like? What led her
to believe she could so blatantly commit a crime and not get caught? Could
someone with a steady, kind hand and no one else to love change her ways? “Bandit”
spun itself out from there.
*****
ABOUT
COLETTE SARTOR
Colette Sartor’s award-winning work
has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, including FiveChapters, Kenyon Review Online, the Chicago
Tribune, Prairie Schooner, Harvard Review, Press 53 Open Awards Anthology, and Short Stories from Printers
Row. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband, son, and very large German
Shepherd. Visit her at www.colettesartor.com.
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