Rose - Owl Canyon Press

1
Rose
.
“Twisted.” That is the word Rebecca’s mother, Eva, will use to describe
the shoes. It’s a word, an image that will drop into Rebecca’s memory; a
haphazard seed, taking root. “Twisted,” Eva will declare wringing her
hands as if she were squeezing the life out of a wet washcloth. Rebecca
will picture black lace-up oxfords with thick soles and a hard raised heel–
prison shoes.
In her mind, they are contorted, cartoonishly, into
corkscrews.
Rebecca will imagine the girl in the shoes when they were new, shiny.
Or, maybe they had been worn by others before her and were beat.
Perhaps they were too tight and pinched the girl’s toes, or too loose and
caused her to shuffle her indignity across the floor Rebecca will ponder.
Rebecca will see her in a loose, rough cotton shirtwaist with button tabs
where the waistband should be. A dress the color of schoolroom walls,
holding areas, of bus station lavatories–numbing and anonymous. Her
dark hair spread out stark and alarming against the Vaseline green of the
fabric; shocking in its refusal to lie flat and quiet, it coiled and curled
wildly, too obvious, dangerous. She will picture the girl as stocky and
square and sturdy in her shoes. And angry. Her face, Rebecca will
think…her face is…? Familiar.

Rebecca’s mother stands in front of the white porcelain sink in her new
kitchen. The last project Rebecca’s father completed before his addiction
Deborah J. Doucette
to nicotine claimed him. The last time her mother would flirtatiously
wish for something, the last time Joe would take up the challenge. That
was the essence of what they were to each other. Even at the end, Eva
was his princess, his damsel in distress, his girl; Joe was her rescuer
always, her hero.
The white countertops, cabinets, white tile floor–every surface shiny
as a silver dollar–were her mother’s idea; he grumbled that the color was
impractical.
“It’ll look like a goddamn hospital.”
He glowered,
menacingly and threw his tools around, kicked an old cabinet door,
splintering the dry wood, causing his children to scatter like mice to the
four corners of the house. Eva stood by passively, patiently. She cajoled
him, babied him, pampered him, and got her way as usual. It was a lot of
work for Rebecca’s mother, this vision of husbands and wives, this
version of marriage.
She labored much more strenuously plotting,
playacting, and preening than he did at sawing, nailing, and painting. Eva
would sigh in the end, smiling like Mona Lisa.
Oh God…Beauty and the Beast, Rebecca would think mockingly as her
eyes reflexively rolled in their sockets. The beast magically changes into a
prince through Belle’s saintly patience, simpering affection, and blind
love. Rebecca was certain that’s the way Eva saw her role, and what
prompted these tidbits of advice imparted ever since Rebecca could
remember: “Never contradict a boy. Play hard to get. Play dumb.
Always let them win.” Rebecca ignored the advice. She loved racing the
boys at recess when she was a little girl and often won. How the boys felt
about it was of no significance to her whatsoever.
Rebecca hated the games her mother played; “I won’t do it,” she told
her mother, once she was old enough to figure out what was going on.
After a while, she lost patience with Eva. “That is so insulting! Archaic!
Times have changed you know.” Eva would shake her head, lifting one
shoulder in a half-hearted shrug. “Men never change,” she had said.
Now, with the way things have gone in her marriage, Rebecca thinks
10
The Forgotten Roses
maybe Eva was right.
Eva tips her head back as steam rises, billowing up from the pot of
pasta she emptied into a colander. Her short black hair, professionally
coifed once a week and carefully maintained in between, is in some
danger of wilting. With the back of her hand, she pushes at a few curls
that try to relax over her forehead; they won’t dare reappear there. She’s
wearing her house uniform: shapeless worn shift, clean, but irreparably
stained, and canvas sneakers with holes frayed through at the toes, the
bleached-white laces tied into a tight bow and double knotted. This is
what she cooks, cleans, and gardens in. She does laundry in it, mows the
grass in it and wears it while carrying on lengthy, involved telephone
conversations with her sisters. Over the years, her children have given
her designer loungewear, sweat suits, and brand new Keds. No one
knows what becomes of them. Throughout Rebecca’s childhood, they all
thought this getup was the reason she scurried into the bedroom to hide
when anyone knocked at the door.
In truth, Eva had no use for neighbors, distrusted strangers. She had
her family and that was enough, that was everything. Her Anne Klein’s
and Ralph Laurens, her silks and linens, her expensive leather pumps and
matching handbags wait in dark, perfumed closets for bi-weekly shopping
excursions with her sisters, and for lunch at restaurants with invariably
disappointing fare, “I make better at home.”
She tosses the pasta with the tomato sauce begun early this Sunday
morning, simmering for hours with olive oil, garlic, basil, bay leaf,
oregano, meatballs, a few sausages. A ritual that keeps the world, for her
family, turning on its axis. The kitchen workspace is small, two short
steps from the stove on one side to the sink on the other. Stir, taste, lift,
pour, tip back, shake the colander, empty contents into the deep bowl,
two steps back to the stove, ladle in a little sauce, toss. A ballet as old as
generations.
11