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Precious
Girls
by
Antonio Aiello
Mother told me she wanted to die. I've been married twice,
she said. One husband was an asshole. The other was your father.
Guess which one I loved? Then she sold her Buick. She hired
round-the-clock hospice nurses. She wrote out thousand-dollar
checks for each of my three kids and sent them in Monet thank
you cards. No note, just her signature. She said she was ready
to die. But I knew she wasn't.
It was late in the afternoon when I let myself into Mother's
studio apartment—the same one she moved into after her
second husband ended his addiction to prescription pills by
taking two dozen Vicodin with half a liter of Crown Royal.
The apartment was dark except for the iridescent flicker of
a television and a white band of light seeping out from underneath
the bathroom door. I dropped my purse on the coffee table
and switched on the lamp by the blue velvet sofa, the only
piece of furniture she held onto from our old house on Lynwood
Street. On the wall behind the sofa were dozens of pictures
of my half-sister Nikki and me when we were kids. There
I was taking a bubble bath; there was Nikki running through
the sprinklers in a pink tutu and ballet slippers.
Are you tinkling?
The respirator at the foot of her bed crackled and hummed
to life.
I brought you some prime rib from the club. I dropped the
doggie bag on the dining room table and walked into her sleep
alcove. I followed the respirator's clear plastic tube down
the side of her rented hospital bed, over the swivel-top nightstand
with its city of ointments and remote controls, prescription
bottles and empty pillbox organizers.
Mother? I tapped softly on the door. When she didn't answer,
I turned the glass knob and stepped into the white glow of
her bathroom. There she was on the toilet. Her head was resting
against the vanity and her purple nightgown was pulled up
around her waist. She was a heap of periwinkle and ivory spilling
off the toilet seat. Both hands dangled at her side, hovering
just inches above the tile floor wet with scotch and littered
with little pills and the tiny shards of a broken crystal
tumbler. This wasn't the first time I'd found her like this.
Mother popped pills. Ambien for insomnia, Lipitor for cholesterol,
Advil gel caps for inflamed joints; there was Valium for her
nerves and Prozac for her moods. She took Ex-Lax for constipation
and calcium supplements to prevent osteoporosis. Then there
were her pain pills: Vicodin, Darvon, Demerol.
I knelt down and ran my hand across the soft creases in her
forehead and down the smooth slope of her cheek. For her sixtieth
birthday, she bought herself a facelift and chin-tuck. Twenty
years later, her skin was wrinkled again but soft and silky.
I always wanted skin like hers. Even passed out on the toilet,
she looked good for her age.
Mother?
I pinched the respirator tube and stopped the flow of oxygen.
She coughed. Her lips curled down. She lifted her head off
the vanity and it bobbed unsteadily on her neck. I reached
out to help her.
God damnit, Nikki. She swatted at my hands.
It's not Nikki. It's Sue Anne.
She stared at my feet. Of course you're Sue Anne. Who else
would wear pumps with that sundress? She looked up at me then,
her eyes softening into glassy amber pools. She ran her hand
down my dress.
Silk the color of honey. Is it new?
It was a good girl present to myself for putting up with you.
Mother smiled. She lifted her arms above her head and fingered
the storm of gray roots and brown tips. What do you think
of my hair? Such a mess and I have so much to do before Douglas'
party. She looked at the door. Is Douglas back from the office?
Douglas was Mother's second husband and Nikki's father. When
I was two, Mother knocked out her right incisor jumping off
the high dive at the country club. Douglas was the dentist
who made her a new tooth. It was love at first sight. That's
what Mother always said. My dad moved out of the house and
within a year, Douglas moved in.
Douglas is dead.
Mother leaned forward and reached for her underwear, a beige
puddle pooled around her alabaster ankles and varicose veins.
She stopped halfway down and looked up at me. She reached
out with both hands—aged and weathered, smoker's hands,
the hands of an eighty-year old woman—and cradled my
face.
Oh, Suzie.
She leaned toward me like she wanted a hug. Her eyes rolled
back and she folded forward into my arms and passed out. I
waited a minute to see if she would wake up and then I smacked
her—gently, of course—the way people do in the
movies. She didn't wake. I leaned her back against the water
tank and propped her head on the vanity the way I had found
her. I ran some cold water on my hand and splashed a little
on her face. Nothing. Mother wasn't tall. Petite is
what she liked to call herself. But over the last year, she'd
gained a little weight and I knew I couldn't lift her on my
own. I made sure she was stable enough not to fall forward
again and then I went into the living room to call for help.
I didn't know who to call: ambulance, Daddy's nurse or my
half-sister Nikki. I was supposed to play bridge with a group
of girls at the country club later. Now I'd have to cancel.
The setting sun had left a thin ribbon of orange stretched
tight across the horizon. I dialed Nikki.
My kids liked to tease me about how my life in Wichita was
more complicated than a soap opera. Nikki didn't help. L.A.
house wife, EST disciple, born-again Christian, two marriages—two
kids from each, all four living on their own and not talking
to her—two terriers that never stopped yapping, too-slow
metabolism, and a fashion sense too dependant on velour exercise
suits: that was Nikki. She had mother's hairstyle, a Dorothy
Hamill cut. At fifty-five, she had come back to Wichita for
a certificate degree in adolescent counseling—Mother
paid for her moving expenses—and then legally changed
her name from Nicole to Ninon. Said she needed a fresh start.
We weren't even French.
I was first to move back to Wichita. When Daddy's fourth wife—Mother
was his first—passed away from breast cancer, I came
home for the funeral. He was a train wreck waiting to happen.
Every morning he got up, piled his clothes at the foot of
his bed, walked bare-ass through the living room, past the
nurse's den, into the kitchen and out the back door to pee
on the neighbor's rose bushes. The night after the funeral,
I walked into Daddy's den and found his nurse sitting on his
lap with her blouse unbuttoned. She was running her hands
through his hair. Scalp massage, she said to me real business-like.
I could tell he was terrified. I didn't know if he was afraid
of what I might do to him or what was happening on his lap.
I fired the nurse. Wife number five? Not on my watch. I decided
I would take care of him.
Nikki's line rang and rang and when I was about to hang up
and call Daddy's Nurse, Nikki finally answered.
Suzie! I was just thinking about you.
The false joy in her voice struck a nerve and I was sorry
I called.
Mother's passed out in the bathroom again.
No! Nikki said. Her little terriers erupted in the background
and washed out the rest of what she said.
I can't hear you over all that racket.
There's a squirrel on the porch. Hold on, Suzie. Brittany,
Christy! Mommy's on the phone. No! Down!
Right around the time Nikki and I moved back to Wichita, Mother
diagnosed herself with terminal emphysema. Her doctor said
she wasn't dying. That didn't stop her from hiring hospice
care and ordering a marble marker for her spot in the Davidson
mausoleum. That's my inheritance, was Nikki's reaction
when I told her how much everything cost. Nikki fired the
nurses. She told Mother we would take care of her ourselves.
Then she called and insisted that I take part in her plan.
What Plan? I said. And she said, I can't tell you unless you
say you'll do it with me. I said, Do what with you? And she
said, I can't tell you unless… We went around and around
like that until I finally hung up on her.
Brittany! Outside! I heard the sound of newspaper whacking
fur.
Those dogs. It's Douglas' birthday, you know. Nikki was out
of breath. Mother called me last night.
You should get them fixed.
She'd been drinking.
Why didn't you call?
She told me not. You know how she is when she drinks.
Did you go over there?
No!
What did you give her?
Vicodin.
So you did go over there.
Nikki fell silent.
I could just smack you. How much did you give her?
There's no reason to be hurtful.
I slammed the phone down. I tapped out a cigarette and lit
up. The phone rang. I took a drag off my cigarette and picked
up. Are you coming over or what?
Are you smoking, Suzie?
I hung up the phone again.
Smoking wasn't allowed at Mother's because of her oxygen—fire
hazard. The first week we had the respirator hooked up, I
caught Mother a dozen times sitting up in bed, oxygen tube
clipped under her nose and a Menthol 100 smoldering away between
her lips as she watched Judge Judy.
The phone rang again. I finished my cigarette and went into
the kitchen. I grabbed the 409 and a roll of paper towels,
and as I passed back through the living room, I picked up
the receiver.
Suzie! Suzie!
And I set it down on the table.
I went into Mother's sleep alcove to tidy up. Since Nikki
had fired the nurses, no one cleaned up anymore except for
me. Collected around the empty prescription bottles on Mother's
swivel-stand were cotton handkerchiefs crusted with spittle,
crumbs from breakfast muffins Nikki had brought earlier that
week, and Princess Di's biography covered with half-a-dozen
crescent stains from juice glasses.
The photograph of Nikki and me I liked to keep on the swivel-stand
was face down again. Such a darling picture. Nikki and I are
dressed in bathing suits for one of Douglas' private little
beauty pageants. We have tinfoil tiaras and little high heels.
I was eleven and Nikki eight. Douglas had crowned me Miss
Bubble Bath. What a hoot, Mother's friends had said. Miss
Bubble Bath, where'd he come up with that? The picture was
taken in our old living room on Lynwood Street, the curtains
drawn tight, on a Saturday morning while Mother played tennis
at the club.
Douglas was a dentist, but he liked to think of himself as
an amateur photographer. It started with him taking
pictures to document his patients' oral disorders: sores rotting
away cheeks and gums, cavity-riddled teeth and hairy tongues.
He had lights and tripods and different format cameras. Nikki
and I were his favorite subjects, his girls. The two of us
would be twirling our hula-hoops in the driveway and Douglas
would appear, a Contaflex dangling around his neck. He would
circle around us and then glance up into the sky as if spotting
an airplane. Then he'd say something like: The light's a perfect
5.6. You girls keep swinging your hips while I get a few shots
off.
I sprayed 409 on Mother's nightstand and wiped it clean. I
set the picture up right again, facing the bed so Mother could
see it from her pillow. I arranged her remote controls and
took her empty pill organizers and prescription bottles into
the kitchen. I cleaned the cover of Lady Di's biography and
put it on the writing desk in the living room. After eating,
Mother liked to be read to. She liked poetry best. I have
longed to move away from the hissing of the spent lie / and
the old terror's continual cry... Biographies were my
idea. Zelda, Joan Crawford, Jackie O. The lives people lead.
As I stripped her bed, I found more tissues and crumbs and
a hidden cache of Vicodin tucked away in one of the pillowcases.
When I pulled the sheets out from against the wall, I found
her stash of Douglas photographs. The Polaroid on top had
been rubbed raw and smudged with Mother's fingerprints. There
was Douglas lounging in bed. No Shirt. Just pajama pants.
He had a smirk on his face like he was some kind of dentist
playboy. There were half-a-dozen other prints: the Chamber
of Commerce portrait Mother used for his obituary, the four
of us on our last Christmas before I smacked Douglas so hard
he fell down the stairs; before I moved in with Daddy.
Mother's respirator crackled and hummed to life. My heart
skipped a beat. I felt like I was fourteen again and I had
just heard the whine of floorboards outside my room.
Mother?
Her eyes were still closed when I peeked in on her in the
bathroom. She hadn't moved. I took the stack of photos and
put them next to my purse on the dining room table. Buried
in the linen closet I found a set of daisy-white linens. They
were soft and crisp like a man's shirt just back from the
cleaners. When I finished her bed, the sheets were tight and
smooth and wrinkle-free. I folded a corner back so Mother
could slide right in. Everything looked clean and neat. Peaceful.
I was about to have a good-girl cigarette when I heard Mother
cough. I walked into the bathroom and found her staring at
her ankles, wheezing. She looked up as if seeing me for the
first time that day.
Isn't that the most darling sundress? She looked down at my
feet and coughed. No shoes?
I took a towel and brushed aside the crystal and pills on
the floor. I wet a washcloth and rinsed her face, her hands,
her arms and legs. As I did this she closed her eyes as if
luxuriating in a warm bath. When I'd finished, she opened
her eyes and studied me a moment as if she was deciding whether
or not she could trust me. Then she reached out and took my
hands in hers and let out a deep sigh. I pulled her gently
off the toilet seat. We struggled a little as she steadied
herself. Then we took baby steps toward the door. As I guided
her out of the bathroom she glided her shaky hand along the
wall for balance. When we reached the door, the plastic respirator
tube caught on the doorknob. Mother's head jerked back and
she stopped walking. We stood there holding hands in the doorway.
I unhooked the tube. I walked her to her bed, sat her down
and helped get her legs under the covers. After I pulled the
comforter up to her chest, she patted and smoothed out all
the wrinkles. She smiled and then surveyed the alcove. Her
glance lingered over the clean swivel stand. Her lips curled
down.
I should probably get a new frame for that picture, the way
it's always falling over. I just love that picture. Miss Bubble
Bath. What a hoot.
We stared at each other a moment and I thought she might say
something.
Oh, look, she said, Wheel of Fortune is on. Turn
up the volume, Suzie.
I stepped in front of the television and my body cast a long,
dark shadow across the bed. I couldn't help myself.
Fluoride
and scotch. I teased. That's what it smelled like when he
was working on me in that dentist chair of his.
Mother shifted to the side like she was engrossed in Wheel
of Fortune. A scotch would be lovely, and maybe something
for my head. I have such a terrible headache.
It's called a hangover, I said. Isn't there anything else
you want to say?
Oh, Suzzie. I'm so sorry for being such an awful mother. There,
I said it. Now can we talk about my head?
You're the one giving me a headache, I said.
I turned around and went into the living room. I dug through
my purse until I came up with a couple of Extra Strength Tylenol.
I went back in to Mother. I set the Tylenol on the swivel
stand. She sized up the pills and groaned. She turned
on her side and began rooting around in the pillowcase. I
let her look. When she didn't find her stash, she sat up and
straightened out her pillow. She patted down her blanket.
I'll just wait until Nikki gets here. She closed her eyes
and that was that. I was excused. I stood in the archway and
waited for her to say something else. She didn't. Then I turned
off the television, knelt down at the foot of her bed, and
turned off the respirator.
Outside the night sky had turned black and bottomless. I sat
down at the dining room table and lit another cigarette. I
looked over to Mother's sleep alcove. She had fallen asleep
again and was breathing fine without her respirator.
When I moved back to Wichita, I had this romantic idea that
the three of us would be best friends. We had survived Douglas,
had lived our own lives and all ended up in the same place:
Wichita. This should have made us close again. I pictured
the three of us playing bridge and going out for girls only
lunches at the club. Time heals, I thought. Nikki and I would
work out together; I would help her loose weight. Together
we would break her addiction to sweat suits. We would sit
around and do each other's nails. We were going to have closure.
I took a drag off my cigarette. Ash dangled off the end and
sprinkled the table. I picked up Mother's stack of Douglas
photos, pulled the Polaroid off the top and tapped cigarette
ash onto his bare chest. You're not my daughter. He said that
to me once. I was fifteen. He was adjusting my braces. I lined
the pictures up on the table in front of me. There he was:
Douglas the dentist; Douglas the family man on Christmas with
his girls; Douglas the goddamn playboy. I took the last
drag off my cigarette and rubbed it into his bare chest. The
plastic blistered and Douglas melted into a swirl of smoke.
I ran my thumb over the blackened plastic. I lit up another
cigarette and began to singe him away one photograph at a
time.
I was burning the Christmas picture when the apartment door
slammed open and Nikki walked in.
What's that awful smell?
Nikki had on a baby blue velour exercise suit that made her
look pale. She dropped her beat up black leather purse onto
the couch. She walked over to where I was sitting at the dining
room table and kissed the top of my head.
Look who made it.
She took the cigarette out of my hand and went into the kitchen.
I heard her turn on the faucet. Nikki came back in and picked
up one of the Polaroids I had singed.
You are going to be in so much trouble.
With who? I tapped out another cigarette.
She wiped off the ash and shook her head like she was really
disappointed in me. She plucked the cigarette from my fingers
before I could light it and threw it on the table.
You had no right, she said.
Please.
Nikki coughed out a laugh like I was blind or an idiot. She
gathered the pictures from the table and flipped through them.
Her hands shook. She threw the whole stack back on the table.
Burn them if that's going to make you feel better.
Burn one with me.
She held up her hands. Don't get into this with me now. She
started toward the sleep alcove and then stopped. You don't
get it.
Then explain it to me.
Who went away and lived with their daddy?
That's not fair.
Who's talking fair? She turned around and walked to the sleep
alcove and switched on the respirator. Mother was asleep with
the covers pushed down around her waist. Nikki stood in the
archway watching her sleep.
I tapped out a cigarette and lit up. I looked at that wall
of photographs hanging over mother's couch. There I was at
thirteen, sitting on my bedroom floor in a formal dress, pulling
on stockings before my first cotillion. There was Nikki sunbathing
by herself in the back yard, smiling uncomfortably at the
camera. My eye settled on a picture of Nikki and me sitting
with Douglas on the front steps outside the Lynwood house.
Douglas sat in-between us. I had passed by this picture a
thousand times and never seen it. I was fifteen and it was
the summer before I moved in with Daddy. Nikki and I were
both tan from swimming at the club. Mother must have taken
the picture. One of Douglas's hands was on my knee, real casual
as if it just happened to fall there. He had his arm wrapped
around Nikki and she was leaning into him. I took a long drag
off my cigarette and then went into the kitchen and put it
out in the sink.
I walked to the sleep alcove and stood next to Nikki and watched
Mother. Nikki and I didn't say a word. Not about Douglas.
Not about the pictures. Not about Mother and what she tried
to do last night. When I put my arm around her, Nikki's shoulders
stiffened and she tried to nudge me away. I held on and pulled
her close. Slowly the tension in her body eased. I kept my
arm around her and as we stood there watching Mother sleep,
Nikki's weight shifted a little. Then I felt her body leaning
into mine. I leaned into her too and we stood like that for
a long time. I knew this moment was only temporary. It wasn't
going to erase all the anger. It wasn't going to fix either
one of us or make us whole again. But it was the closest we
had been since we were kids and I was okay with that.
I'd like to get her into a clean nightgown before she wakes
up, Nikki said. Will you give me a hand?
I opened Mother's closet and pushed through her old dresses
and housecoats and found a pretty nightgown, a pink one Nikki
and I got her for her last birthday. I always thought she
looked good in pink. Nikki and I rolled the sheets down to
the foot of the bed. Once we had her gown off, Nikki rubbed
her legs and arms and hands with lotion. When we were finished
and pulling the sheet up around her waist, Mother woke up.
Oh, Nikki, she said. And Suzie, too. How lovely.
Nikki kissed Mother on the forehead.
Maybe Suzie will put some pudding on the stove for you. Wouldn't
you like that, Mother?
That would be lovely. Mother smiled.
I left Nikki sitting on the bed with Mother. I grabbed one
of the dining room chairs and dragged it into the kitchen
where I had put all of Mother's medications in the cabinet
above the refrigerator. I pulled down her Vicodin and Darvon
and Demerol. Where did she get all of these prescriptions?
I went into the living room and set them on the coffee table.
Nikki came in and sat down across from me.
Mother and I decided she's going to take more pills.
Behind Nikki was that wall of photographs.
They're all here. I said. I got them all down.
She took the bottles of Darvon and Demerol and went into the
kitchen.
I poured Mother a tall scotch, neat, and in a crystal tumbler
just the way she liked it. I grabbed Princess Di's biography
off the writing desk. Nikki sat at Mother's side and I sat
in the reading chair by the bed. Mother simply glowed in her
pink nightie. Her skin was so beautiful. While Nikki counted
out pills, I handed mother her drink and opened up Princess
Di's biography to where we left off the week before.
Open up, Nikki said. Mother opened her mouth and Nikki placed
five pills on her tongue. She had more in lap. Suzie is going
to read to us while you fall asleep.
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