Happy Friday friends! It's that day after Thanksgiving when people are shopping, traveling, tree trimming, and continuing to clean up the house from yesterday's festivities. Here are two chapters to fit in when you have a moment to relax.
WHITE TRASH IN THE SNOW
by Allison
CHAPTER SIXTY
CHAPTER SIXTY
December's weeks sped by quickly for
the Saplins that year. Like most Americans, they tried to pack too many events,
sweets and presents into too few days. In other ways, they were far from typical.
The Saplins hosted their second annual Open House at the
Governor’s Mansion, with a staff on hand to pass out cookies and hot cider, and
an engorged extended family greeting the mob of walk-through taxpayers tracking
up the temporary runners with slush and dirt from their boots. It was a Monday
night, scheduled to keep the attendance low. Even so, members of the
Saplin/Heat extended family were provided all-expenses paid travel to visit the
capital and see the city decked out for the holidays in exchange for a couple hours
of hosting at the big house. Rachael’s parents, sisters and brother all showed
up with children in tow, as did Tad’s sister and brother. The place was overrun
with nieces and nephews.
The number of family members was obviously more than the
event required, and because the governor expected to be criticized for that in the gossip column “The Nose,” she tried to get out in front of the story. Governor Saplin offered the
reporters a tray of cookies and a justification for the family entourage during the pre-event press
meeting/ She explained that the relatives were needed to augment the numbers
of family members available to greet
members of the public and to reduce the strain on the Governor’s immediate
family. In response to a question about the cost to taxpayers, Governor Saplin
was quoted as saying it “didn’t begin to cover the inconvenience of being away
from their homes during the holiday season, but my family, the Saplins and the
Heats are happy to sacrifice for the people of this great state.”
The explanation served dual purpose, both as a vouchering
entry on forms later completed by office “bean counters” and as the reason
given to the invited relatives. The hidden agenda, of course, was to have so
many Saplins and Heats around that no one, especially reporters, would notice
one Saplin daughter’s absence. And if they did, they might think they had
simply been unable to find her in the crowd. Better yet, some might mistake one
of Tad’s dark-haired nieces for Cristol and mention in their coverage that she was there.
The plan worked. There was one snipey comment in “The
Nose,” but it was about a moving van that had been spotted outside the mansion
several days prior to the open house. An office staffer attached the column to
an email to alert Rachael and Tad to the publically issued conjecture that the
family was moving back to Azzolla. The story was obviously intended to feed the
gossipers and gripers who complained that this governor was out of town too
much; it was a growing concern among taxpayers that neither the governor nor
her family had settled in for four years in the capital. Whether or not that
was true, the van in question was only picking up rented tables.
Her sensitivity to
having anyone watching closely and reporting on what they saw at the house
was heightened. She sent a copy of the gossip blurb attached to an email to mansion staff members. “This is crap.
I hate when they pick on the home, family and the kids. NO ONE on staff is to talk about my kids to the press. NO ONE. Now, go home and have a Merry Christmas." What went unspoken was that Field was coming home under the radar, and she didn't want it making the papers.
Field came home on leave from basic training on December
23rd. He hadn’t seen the family since September. They all said they thought he
had grown. Tad was impressed with his son’s newfound confidence, air of
maturity, and strong handshake. As he reached out and gripped his bicep he was
shocked. “Jesus!” he exclaimed. A bit embarrassed and a bit uncomfortable with
his own son’s superiority, he jokingly barked “Get down and give me fifty.”
Field played along, doing pushup after pushup in rapid, unlabored succession
which only exacerbated Tad’s envy.
“He’s not ours anymore. He belongs to the Army.”
Rachael agreed, “Yep, he’s a soldier, a responsible
citizen, and a handsome young man with the world by the balls.”
As if it were planned they both said, “Don’t screw it up!”
All three laughed,
Looking proudly on as her son and her husband picked up his
baggage and began to walk away, Rachael wondered, “Where had the years gone?
Choices she’d made seemed right at the time, but now she wished she had more
memories of Field - more memories from Field’s transition years from childhood
to manhood.
She was also dealing with the knowledge that this young
man, her son, was not invincible. If she reminded him of that, asked him to be
careful, would he listen? Unlikely.
“God, he’s in your hands,” she silently prayed. “Take care of my only
son.” Only son! God understood so well.
He’d sacrificed His only son for her. For Rachael Saplin alone, Jesus would
have died on the cross. And now she was asking that her son be spared.
“Hey, you guys. Wait for me!” She ran as fast as bunny
boots allowed and fell into step alongside the handsome soldier with Saplin on
his uniform.
That night, Rachael sat on her bed, head bowed in a state
of contemplation. So much had happened in the past year, since the family had
last celebrated their savior’s birth. She had given God the credit for opening
the door and giving her the governorship. But she also knew in her heart that
she had used that position in ways that were selfish and vindictive. She knew
she had taken opportunities to get revenge on those who had crossed her even
though the Bible says vengeance belongs to the Lord. She was conceited- proud
of her accomplishments, proud of being the first woman to govern this state,
proud to be the youngest of them, and proud of her God given good looks. That
was a lot of pride, still, there was more.
Though it was the team of people around her that kept her
administration working, she was proud to have assembled that team. Though she
needed coaching on every major issue, she was proud when she adlibbed an answer
to the press or to a fellow elected official, proud of the cleverly cutting
remarks she could come up with and the wit she displayed. When she was empty of
all other emotion, she maintained pride.
That night she wrote in her journal, “The Bible says “Pride
goeth before the fall.” I better cut back on some pride and start eating humble
pie.” Then she lightened up, and wrote “but I prefer pumpkin or mincemeat. Ha
Ha.” Further down the page, getting serious again, “For certain I’ll be humble
when Cristol has the baby. Can’t be proud when my unmarried seventeen year old
daughter makes me a grandma. Even if nobody knows.”
The line after that began, “Field’s home! So proud to be the Mom of a Soldier!”
CHAPTER SIXTY-ONE
Music filled the kitchen as family members went about their
last minute preparations for Christmas eve with the cousins. Pride was frosting
cookies, struggling to get the sticky white stuff out of the can, licking her
fingers frequently as she slopped it and spread it over the edges of the cutout
trees, stars, bells and candlesticks.
“Whoa, you’re making a mess,” Maple chided Pride as she
walked past the island where the cookie decorating was underway, sugar crystals
crunching under her feet as she headed for the refrigerator. In response, Pride scrunched up her face and
stuck out her tongue. “You better watch out, Maple, or I’ll pull your hair!” To
support her threat she held up a hand and flexed dye-stained fingers.
“ooooooo, I’m so scared,” Maple taunted.
“Shut up, both of you!” Maple and Pride both froze. This
was not their mother’s normal reaction to a little good natured tiff between
siblings.
The stresses of life and season were making Rachael cranky.
The big day was closing in too quickly and she was feeling the co-dependant
pressures of unrealistically high expectations for merriment and a nearly empty
bank account.
Pride looked like she was going to cry. Rachael felt a pang of shame.
“I’m sorry,” she said, and truly meant it. “Though, also, you two should not, ideally, be arguing at Christmas time.”
Pride looked like she was going to cry. Rachael felt a pang of shame.
“I’m sorry,” she said, and truly meant it. “Though, also, you two should not, ideally, be arguing at Christmas time.”
When “Feliz Navidad” played once again in the rotation of
songs Maple had burned onto a cd, Rachael bristled as the foreign-sounding
masculine voice merrily sang words she couldn’t pronounce. “Why do Americans
like that song? English is the official language of the United States. Real
Americans shouldn’t listen to that caribou doo doo.”
Pride giggled, Maple ignored her.
As the song continued, Rachael pictured the singer as
having light brown skin and wearing a mexican sombrero. Muttering to herself,
there were a few phrases Maple picked up, “… singin’ the English part … infuriating…encourages
those illegals…’merican culture…”
“I wanna weesh you a Meeerry Chreestmaas from the bottom of
my harraaart.” On cue, Pride and Maple sang with gusto, mimmicking that horrid
accent! It was enough to make Rachael scream. Needing a break, she grabbed her
jacket and went out for a run. No one
asked where she was going, everyone understood that when Rachael needed to
release pressure, Rachael went running.
Meanwhile, upstairs, the concophony of Christmas sounds had
pushed Cristol over the edge; she couldn’t make herself get out of bed. Hugging
two pillows and curled into a semi-fetal position, she sobbed and sobbed,
eventually falling back asleep. When morning became afternoon, Field got up. He
asked about his sister and found that she had not been seen, but everyone
assumed she was wrapping presents or doing other last minute Christmas “stuff”
in her room. Maybe, as had been the case more often than not in recent weeks,
she simply wanted to be left alone. He went and knocked soundly on her bedroom
door.
Waiting in the hallway, he looked at the bedroom door
postings of the teenage girl Cristol had once been. Cut from magazines,
downloaded from the internet, or hand drawn by herself and friends, signs of a
flirtatious, audacious, adolescent girl were taped together into a the collage
of pictures, slogan’s and cartoonish characters. “You go girl!” partially
covered “Princess Cristol” which overlapped a poster from a concert, whose
upper right corner shared a tack with last year’s Sophomore Dance program (upon
which a bright red lipstick kiss had been planted), and recognizable from under
the bottom right corner, a wrapper from a dark chocolate bar with the letters
“PECIAL” visible. He counted ten advertisements for various high-end bottles of
booze.
Interspersed were various size drawings, many on lined
notebook paper. Field didn’t have a clue what most of them were, and the ones
he thought he could guess, he really didn’t want to confirm. One looked like it represented what Cristol had
bragged about on MySpace last year –
“the biggest shit stash I’ve ever seen.”
Other drawings were equally disconcerting. How could his parents have
walked past this over and over without getting the message?
Wow, where were these thoughts coming from? Had he really changed
that much? A year ago he would have been laughing at this. Six months ago he,
too, had walked right past without noticing. For the first time, he saw that he
hadn’t been the brother he should have been to Cristol.
Last September, when they all met at the mansion to have
the photographer take the picture for the Christmas card, he’d been disgusted
with how tight Cristol’s dress was. He had even said, “You better lose some
weight, Pudgy.” Now he could see how much that must have hurt her. But last September,
he’d been hurting, too. And no one cared.
Even now, if he had anywhere else to spend his leave, he wouldn’t be
here, in this house, standing outside his knocked-up sister’s bedroom door.
He knocked again, this time calling to her. “Cristol, it’s
me. Open up you lazy-head.” In days gone by, he would have called her a much
stronger name.
Still waiting for her to open the door, he almost turned
away. Who could blame her for not wanting to see him? He remembered how he had
ignored her last summer, how her immaturity had irritated him, how annoying he
found her silly friends who hung around the house - feelings of superiority he
was sure he had communicated to the “lowly” kids who weren’t “worthy” of
attention from him and the other soon-to-be-college freshman he’d hung out with
at that time. If he tells her now that he cares about her, why should she
believe him?
At that moment, he knew he had changed. He knew he had
grown up. Last night, his mother saw it in his physique, his father felt it in
his handshake. But it took this experience, these minutes looking inside
himself, for Field Saplin to see it for himself. Field Saplin, the boy, was gone.
Field Saplin, the man, began to turn away. Obviously, his
sister didn’t want to be disturbed. But then, he heard something that made him
turn back. The door slowly began to open. He closed his eyes and held his
breath. It was some internal reflex. He hadn’t planned it, it just happened.
When he opened his eyes, there stood before him a very pregnant girl. Not a woman,
no, not at all. There was no mistaking that this was a child. A child with a
swollen belly.
Rachael and Tad had dropped the news on him the night
before. Actually, it was early morning, after both Pride and Maple had been
unable to keep their eyes open and had both finally gone to bed. He had been
angry. Angry with both of “the knuckleheads.”
When he woke up this morning, he asked himself if perhaps
he had dreamed it. Cristol having a
baby? Unreal. Did not compute. Now, there she was, stepping back to let him in,
closing the door after him. It was not a dream.
Cristol, in her vulnerable maternity, was a pitiful sight.
She looked as if she’d had no sleep. Her hair needed washing. Her clothes were
wrinkled, and her voice was a whisper. “Hi,” was all she offered.
“Hi yourself,” was all she got in return. But it was the
hug that followed that told her everything she needed to know. The powerful,
long hug said she was loved, forgiven, accepted, and maybe even missed. Those
were the best gifts of the season.
3 comments:
Very moving. The passage into adulthood. Too bad Rachael never made the transition.
Thanks Allison,
That was the best description of the thought process of a 'born-again' hypocrite that I've ever read.
Excellent writing as always. Hard to wait for the next installment!!!!
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