White Trash in the Snow
by Allison
CHAPTER THREE
Mayor
Saplin hadn’t seen Jerrie Strauss in a dozen years. She didn’t even recognize
the woman when she appeared along with another mom, a teacher, and Cristol’s
entire third grade class (including a kid named Wrangler) for a tour of Azzolla
City Hall. Mayor Saplin greeted everyone, told the moms “call me Rachael,” and
ducked into her office promising, with a wink, to “be right back."
She
reappeared moments later with a tray of “baked this morning” cookies and was
rewarded with smiles from everyone. It was a fun day for the group of eight
year olds who were thrilled to have a break from the classroom. The curious children
asked many questions including, “Are you really Cristol’s mommy?” (answer, yes I am) and “Why do you have so many shoes
under your desk?” (answer, because I’m
out of room in my closet at home). They watched her sign a proclamation for
“Truth and Honesty Week” and a boy loudly observed, “Wow! You write BIG!”
"Why do you write so big?" A little girl asked.
Rachael
saw it as an opportunity to show off her knowledge of American History. “That’s
such a good question!” she said. “My signature is big out of a great respect
for the founding fathers, Abraham Lincoln and George Washington, too, which it
is that, of course, is that which they did when they wrote the most important
document in the whole world.”
The
adults froze. The kids stopped fidgeting.
Jerrie Strauss replayed the words in her head to make sense out
of them; it was a futile endeavor. Mayor Saplin went on, “Can any of you kids tell me - What is it that
is that document – the most important one of any of ‘em, all of ‘em?”
A couple
silent beats went by and she said, “I’ll tell ‘ya. It started when John
Hancock, who didn’t have his glasses because Ben Franklin had stepped on them,
signed his name extra large and…whereas…because, of course, he was a
hard-workin’ patriot – all of ‘em had jobs - and of course, too, they needed to
get the Constitution signed to create jobs. It was all about job creation. And
freedom. And so, we have those great patriotic Americans to thank for our freedom
to own guns, and have jobs, and I’m so grateful to ‘em that I sign my name
really big, too when I’m being like they once were, signing stuff and all. And
they lived on farms also, too.”
From the
twenty or so puzzled looks she got, she decided the US Constitution must be in
the fourth grade history lessons. Rachael beamed, proud of herself for having
been able to remember that much history and give this bunch of little sprouts
an extemporaneous history lesson.
The
teacher made mental notes and used them for weeks thereafter, whenever one
of her colleague’s needed a laugh and asked for a retelling of the mayor’s
revisionist history lesson. In the moment, however, she simply changed the
subject and asked the mayor to explain a bit about how local elections are
conducted.
The moms assumed
the Mayor was having fun, putting out a harmless tale so the teacher could give
the kids the real lesson back at school. They mistakenly thought Rachael saw
them as being some kind of community team. It was a fair assumption; after all,
Rachael had finished her explanation of voting with the admonition, “Voting is
what you do because you want to be a good citizen. Your own moms and dads can
teach you about being good Americans, also, too. These two moms who came with you today are
being good citizens by helping the teacher.” Then she turned to the women, gave
them warm smiles, and said, “It takes everyone workin’ together, raisin’ this
crop of young ‘uns up right.”
“It takes
a village to raise a child,” the second mom offered.
“Yup, so
true,” Rachael said, nodding.
“Have you
read it?” asked the woman.
“Read
what?”
“The
book.”
“What --?”
“– the
one by Hillary Rodham Clinton.”
Rachael
wasn’t sure what book this other mom thought she might have read, but for sure
she hadn’t read it. “I wouldn’t be reading any book by Hillary Clinton. She’s a
liberal.”
“Oh, I
see,” was all the other woman said.
Everyone
let the topic die out. Gone, too, was the feel-good atmosphere that had been permeated with cookies and camaraderie.
Politics had spoiled it. And it wasn’t only the First Lady that had
been judged and found unacceptable – the mayor’s friendly smile and designer
glasses hid the truth. Rachael had been
sizing up the chaperones and found them lacking.
She assumed
that moms who went along on field trips must not have “real jobs.” Though
subconsciously she envied stay-at-home moms and their ability to do what she
wasn’t cut out to do (nurture), she cultivated a disdain for hardworking women
who made motherhood their primary career. A pity, she thought as she
watched the parents help get the children back on the school bus, whatever
God-given talents those women have, they are going to waste. The Bible warns
against burying our talents. Well, they’ll have to answer for that some day. Satisfied that she had put in a hard
morning, she returned to her office, gathered her coat and purse, and headed
off to get a manicure.
“The Big Tease” was Rachael Saplin’s favorite
beauty salon. They specialized in prom styles for every day of the week.A few
weeks after the third grade had been to City Hall, the mayor’s
office received a complaint by the Big Tease owner seeking to have Jerrie
Strauss fined for working out of her own kitchen as a beautician. The letter
demanded that a cease and desist order be issued to stop her from cutting,
coloring, and setting hair in a residential building because it wasn’t zoned
for business and because Ms. Strauss didn’t have the professional licensing
required to cut hair. Rachael thought back on the recent tour. She
pictured the woman’s long, tussled tresses of champagne blonde hair. Oh my,
Rachael thought, that woman is a hairdresser? She needs to update her own style. Then, as often
happened, her thoughts changed tracks. Oh, but at least she works. Bless her
heart.
Feeling
that this was an opportunity to show that she didn’t play favorites, Mayor
Saplin took the complaint to the recently hired city manager and said, “I know
the person who filed this complaint, she’s my friend. But, I want all the facts
and no special treatment.” Ten seconds after leaving his cubicle she was back
with a stronger demand. “Get me an answer today.”
It turned
out to be a frivolous complaint. The city manager’s report stated that Mrs.
Strauss served so few clients her work could be considered a personal service
for friends and family (“That’s no surprise,” Mayor Saplin remarked), which
made it a moot point that Azolla had no licensing or zoning laws. (“Oh, yeah, I
forgot,” Rachael said without embarrassment.)
No
license issues, no zoning issues, Rachael smiled as she penned her name on
letters to both parties with the big, swooping Rs and Ss. While signing the
documents with flair, she was reminded of the bewildered look on the eight year
old when, during the third grade class visit, she’d answered his question about
her extra-large cursive. He was obviously
too young to understand the history lesson she thought. No matter what
she’d told those kids, that signature came from her ego not her patriotism.
The file
was closed and everyone assumed that was the end of it. Then, four days later,
the late morning mail brought the city manager and the mayor handwritten notes
thanking them for their prompt and fair resolution. The signatory, “Mrs. Jerrie
Strauss,” was brief and respectful, and wrote her name without exaggerated
swirls. The manager was in Rachael’s office when the letters came. He opened
his and said, “How nice of her.”
The four
word observation ruffled the mayor’s feathers. A competitor in all things, she
looked again at the card in her hand, appraising it critically. The words,
grammar, penmanship, and signature were confident and moderate, and she knew
her own writing, both mechanically and in content was not at that level – the
level of an in-home hairdresser. An unsuccessful in-home hairdresser!
Rachael
sneered “Who has time to thank public officials for doing their jobs? I could,
too, send hand written notes if I weren’t busy running this town.” She flicked
the card into the trash can by her desk. Then, she began picking up
miscellaneous small items from the desk - a pencil, a pen, another pen – and
threw each one into the trash separately in a childish display of temper. The
stapler made a satisfyingly loud crash as it banged around, metal hitting metal,
and she picked up the electric pencil sharpener next.
Embarrassed
for his boss, the city manager collected up his papers and left the room.
Alone and
angry, Rachael hit the speed-dial for her husband and rummaged through the
trash waiting for the sound of the ringing. Tapping the edge of the card on the
desktop in front of her, she grew impatient.
Tad was
in the garage working on his Arctic Cat and thinking about lunch. He regretted
picking up the phone as soon as he heard her speak. “You know, Tad, I work
hard. Don’t I work hard? And I’d love to be home with the kids! Haven’t I
always said that?”
He
shouldered the phone and grabbed a rag, wiping grease from his hands. “Said
what? What are you talking about, Rachael?”
“Pay
attention Tad! I’m talkin’ about moms who stay home and perhaps work from home
and of course, certainly pal around with other moms who stay home thinkin’ they
are better than us moms who work and also, too, tryin’ to make us feel guilty.”
She jumped up and started pacing back and forth, waving the thank you note like
evidence in the hand of a courtroom attorney and yelling into the phone that
was in her other hand. “God gave me talents! I have a CALLING! I’m the mayor because God put me here. The
haters just make me stronger, Tad. They just make me stronger.”
Tad knew
his wife was hypersensitive about being a working wife and working mom with
young children. He blamed it on the open disapproval of “brothers and sisters
in the Lord” who thought a married woman working outside the home was “a
dishonor to her husband.” If he didn’t flippin’ care, why should they?
The
screeching got louder, “…God opened the door, and I plowed through. I didn’t
blink! I’m doing His work! I don’t have time to write thank-yous and go on
field trips.”
Tad let
her rage, and inserted a “Yes,” an “Uh-huh,” or a “You’re right,” here and
there while checking for a leak in a
hose. It all sounded familiar until she got to the cookies.
“And
those were damn good cookies!”
He
couldn’t help himself, he had to ask. “Rachael, what cookies?”
“The bakery
cookies!” she shouted.
Huffing
and chuffing sounds signaled Tad that it was safer for him to stay quiet. He
checked the oil while she composed herself. When the sounds subsided, he tried
to sound calm and rational, “Rachael, I don’t understand the part about
cookies.”
“Pay attention,
Tad! I told you! They were bakery cookies! The big, soft ones.”
“Hmmm,”
he said, remembering he was hungry. “Sounds yummy.”
“Darned
right. And peanut butter, also!”
He tried enthusiasm.
“Cookies and peanut butter? A winning combination!"
“God,
Tad! Not cookies and peanut butter! Peanut butter cookies!”
“Oh,” he
said, “with that fork criss-cross…”
“Yes!
Yup, yup. Everybody loved ‘em.”
Tad knew
what to do. He was as good with Rachael’s breakdowns as he was fixing his snow
mobile. “Rachael, you have a clear calling,” he looked around for a wrench,
“Your way with people is why God made you the Mayor of Azzolla,” he tightened a
bolt. “Like you said, everybody loves store-bought bakery cookies. Especially
big, soft ones and peanut butter fork-pressed ones.” He jiggled a wire as he
talked. “So, are you bringing some home today? That would be great because
Field finished off the Oreos…”
“God,
Tad, aren’t you listening at all? I'm talking about the tour – Cristol’s classmates –
weeks ago – and those kids ate two cookies each, they’ve got no manners except,
of course, the ones that do, like our Cristol, there are manners there, of course,
and some of the other girls, but most of the boys though, why one of them ate
four! And his mother was right there, but did she say anything? No, not a peep,
so of course there weren’t any left, which is why you didn’t get any.”
Oh, I haven’t been getting any for a long time, Tad thought.
As Tad
half listened and worked on the snow mobile, Rachael switched from defense to
offense and began spewing criticism of a woman named Jerrie Strauss. Tad caught
enough to understand that she was feeling defensive about working and that the
feelings had been stirred up by a chaperone accompanying kids on a field trip.
This chaperone was a stay-at-home mom who ran a business in her home,
volunteered in the classroom, and (this part was a little fuzzy) made cookies
from scratch. There was something about handwriting and cards that wasn’t clear
to him, and then she mentioned Hillary Clinton and he was completely lost. So he went for the time-tested cure-all for the Rachael Heat Saplin
blues: “No one does more than you, Baby. You’re not only Mayor Saplin, you are
Super Mom – correction - Super Christian Mom! No one can take those
titles from you.”
“Tad, you
are so right.” Rachael was appeased. She loved titles.
Tad had
been through this sort of thing many times. He could trace the onset of
Rachael’s manic episodes of insecurity back to Easter Sunday when Cristol was
six. Tad remembered it vividly. That morning, the very young wife of the youth
pastor spotted the Saplins - Tad and Rachael, Field, Cristol and baby Maple –
as they arrived for service. With Bible in hand, a ten-month old bouncing along
on her hip and a toddler clinging to her long skirt, the woman worked her way
across a crowded narthex to greet them. She gave Rachael a big hug and gushing,
announced, “Mrs. Saplin, the MOPS are praying for you.”
Rachael
smiled a polite smile and Tad laughed. “Mops? How about the brooms, don’t they
pray, too?”
Rachael
ignored him. The woman gave a look of tolerance, then said to Rachael. “He’ll
begin to appreciate the Mothers of Preschoolers group soon enough.”
Rachael
didn’t know exactly what that was supposed to imply, but she did understand the
original message - she was receiving “prayer cover” from the church’s young
moms group who called themselves MOPS. How nice of them to be holding her up in
prayer. She was doing God’s work as a
public official, they were her supporters. Rachael basked in feeling of being
so important that the young minister’s wife, so busy with her own small
children, was concerned about what went on at City Hall.
Just
then, the toddler, dressed in a miniature version of the dress her mother was
wearing, started tugging and whining at the young mom who gently said, “Hold still,
Mary Martha; Mommy’s not done.” Looking up again, she told Rachael, “I have
something exciting to share with you.” Her eyes were twinkling.“In my private
prayer time this morning – the wee hours of the morning– God told me He is
going to do a marvelous work in you, Rachael Saplin!”
Rachael
was used to religious talk, she was raised with her mother spouting the lingo
and she now used it around her own house. So Tad and the kids were unfazed by
the message that might sound stranger to a secular person. Though they needed
to find seats in the rapidly filling sanctuary, the Saplins all held back to
let the minister’s partner finish her God-speak to Rachael.
The woman
was in no hurry. Not yet. She smiled at the Saplin children one at a time
starting with Maple, then Cristol, then Field. When she returned her gaze to
Rachael and Tad she said, “Such a lovely family. Despise not God’s gifts!”
Now, that
phrase was odd. What did that mean? Tad’s eyes widened. Rachael’s face froze. Despise? Is this criticism? Rachael
searched for an appropriate response. Clueless as to what Mrs. Youth Minister
was talking about, she followed a strategy that had become almost second
nature: compliment the other person and yourself at the same time; feign
humility while taking credit. “I am just a servant of God. And you all have
servant’s hearts too, prayin’ so hard and all. It seems your prayers surely are
powerful, ‘cause I’m seein’ the Hand of God movin’ and, oh, yeah, through Him,
I’m cleanin’ up the town! Yup, yup, you and the other moms…mops…whatever… are
tearin’ down the forces of evil, certainly, of course, and also it is for sure
because of your prayer power fightin’ those unseen demons that God is moving in
Azzolla! You betcha!”
She
winked, startling the other woman who took a step back, dragging her toddler
with her.
“Well,
got to find some seats.” She began pushing Cristol and Field toward the
sanctuary. “Do keep holdin’ me up in prayer in your nice little meetings” she
said. Then, Rachael reached over and hugged the woman lightly.
The
minister’s wife beamed. Rachael had a gift for making people feel she genuinely
cared about them, and in a shallow way, she really did. Which is why she added
yet another compliment by commenting on the mother-daughter set of Little House
on the Prairie dresses the woman had obviously made for the occasion.
Mayor
Saplin laid her hand on the other woman’s hand (the one not holding a Bible),
and lied. “Such darling dresses! Mary Martha looks so cute today,” she smiled
at the child. “Love the flowered print – isn’t that called calico? Where’d you
get them?” She moved her hand to Cristol’s shoulder, “I’d love to get one for
Cristol.”
Cristol,
with heavy exaggeration, gagged and rolled her eyes at her brother. Field
returned the look.
The
adults ignored the children’s rudeness, but Rachael blanched when the
twenty-year old mother of two said, “You will have to repent before your
daughter can wear anything like this.” Each word drenched with sanctimony, she
continued, “Unlike you, I know I am in God’s grace. My husband and children are
my priorities, they mean more to me than worldly possessions and I am not
seduced by power and fame.” A rosy color began to rise in Rachael’s cheeks as
the boasting and rebuking continued.“ I made these dresses using God given
talents. He blessed me with the ability to sew because I am obedient to His
will. I strive to be a Proverbs 31 woman. I never had a lesson, but I can sew
beautiful dresses like these because His spirit guides me.”
The
self-declared saint bent down and pulled Mary Martha onto her other hip. When
she stood and adjusted the plump little legs to encircle her waist the girl’s
ankle-length skirt gathered high, revealing that the child was not yet out of
diapers. The Proverbs 31 woman smiled again and chirped, “Praise the Lord. He’s
going to do a work in you Rachael Saplin. I’ll save a place for you on Tuesday
mornings!”
“Tuesdays?”
Rachael croaked.
“Tuesday’s
at ten a.m. That’s when us MOPs have fellowship. God said you will be joining
us. Oh, bring the baby. We hire a babysitter and split the cost. The more of
us, the cheaper it is.”
Giving
Rachael a Judas-like peck on the cheek, the minister’s wife wished them all a
“Happy Resurrection Day!” and hustled away.
Under her
breath, Rachael hissed to Tad, “She’s nuts. A genuine fruit loop. What does she
think? I’m not gonna quit a job I was elected to do to stay home and sew stupid
dresses. How lame.”
Tad,
distracted, barely heard her. He was watching the woman work her way through
the crowd, marveling that she could balance unequal, wriggling loads on her
hips, lug a purse, a diaper bag and a very large Bible, all the while wearing
two inch heels and a dress so long that it occasionally became wrapped around
her calves.
Rachael
followed his eyes, “Come on,” she snapped. “I want a seat near the front where
everyone can see we got here today. I’m not doin’ this for naught.”
At the
last second, Tad looked back and saw the Proverbs 31 woman, kids still on her
hips, exchanging an awkward hug with someone who looked a lot like the way he
remembered June Cleaver. “Of course you can borrow the pattern!” one of them
said.
At Easter
dinner with the Heat clan that afternoon, Betty had hardly finished saying
grace when Rachael shared the story of the “snotty woman” who made the “silly
dresses” and had the “whiney kid” attached to her “hillbilly skirt.” Everyone
got a good laugh, and Rachael was temporarily mollified. When she brought it up
again in the car on the way home, however, Tad knew the rebuke from a low level
clergy person’s spouse meant much more than she was letting on.
After
that, Rachael was highly sensitive about her image as a mother; the slightest perceived
criticism would make her crazy.
Tad
recognized all the signs in the Jerrie Strauss episode, and he drew from past experience to handle the crisis at hand. Reassuring his wife of her superiority, generic platitudes were augmented with
some cliché put downs of hairdressers to fit the meltdown at hand.
Rachael
took the bait. Calming down, she said catty things about Jerrie Strauss’
outdated clothing, “last year’s colors, last year’s length,” and her over
bleached tresses worn “too long for almost forty.” (The age was a dig, too.
Rachael knew Jerrie was the same as she was - in her early thirties.)
Tad and
Rachael decided they had nothing in common with this trailer park family other
than Wrangler and Cristol having the same teacher. “It’s a very weak
connection,” Rachael said.
“Thank God,” he said.
“Amen,”
Rachael said.
Able to
finally hang up, Tad rewarded himself for showing restraint by getting a couple
of beers from his secret stash (Rachael, the Christian, didn’t approve of
drinking). He took them in the house to find something to go with them that
could pass for lunch.
Rachael
had also decided to reward herself. She called it a day, and headed home.
6 comments:
Your writing and wit is first rate!
so you've decided to actually write fiction to where none of the story is recognizable? Good.
Oh, your good Allison! Been there, done that right? So similar in the 70's also, too! That pre-church scenario was right on! There were the gals that wanted to go to work to prove their point and those who had to work to make ends meet. Then the ones who volunteered for everything to get out of the house. They liked to make the ones who stayed home feel inadequate if their children took up all their and couldn't be volunteers. Didn't have a second car to run around doing volunteering. If you had a second car, you had to work outside the home! The church was our social media and the older women would pick up the working mothers for "Ladies Aid" etc. Pick them up in their big fancy cars dressed in the latest fashion attire. Drooling babies in the fancy plush car seats with trash, key, coffee holders, extra Kleenex in a cute gizmo that rested over the hump of the car in the front and back. No seat belt laws them and kids bouncy on the fancy plush seats and kicking the back of the drivers seat! By the time we had a second car, the kids were in Jr High and it was fun to drive yourself and leave early to pick up kids for all their activities and containers of cup cakes, oranges, cookies (still warm from the oven) to drop them all off to their activities. Bet Sally (Betty) was the one being picked up by the lady in her fancy car (Mrs Menard) to take Sally to church for Bible Study and the kids went to the nursery while the Mother's were getting their religion! Your chapter was DeJaVu all over again to me!!! Sally is my age. Sunday morning coffee before church was the fashion walk of all the mother-daughter outfits. I can see those miserable men in a dress suit, ties and tight got-to-meeting shoes greeting each other and just waiting to get home, put on the jeans and go work in the garage and relax! Half of these guys had to wear a suit M-F and weren't happy to shave and dress up on their days off!! Can remember shopping for Easter outfits and going broke!
I started reading this at work, but I was already convulsing with laughter at the second paragraph so I better save it for when I get home. Can't wait!!
You know even for fiction this is 99% accurate and true to life. Hehehe. Nice work!
Allison,
I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE THIS STORY! Your sense of humor and the snark in the story had me laughing so hard that my daughter asked me what it was about. I told her to check her laptop and emailed it to her. I found her on the deck later this afternoon reading it to one of her friends over the phone and she could barely talk, she was laughing so hard. They had gone back and read the first couple of chapters so they were up to date on the story line.
Keep up the great work! You really need to submit this to a publisher.
Kate
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