SIMONE’S belly grew rounder. Elizabeth had called Veronica the day after the miscarriage scare to tell her that they all loved and supported Simone, but to ask if everyone—Simone, Veronica—was positive that a baby for Simone was really a good idea at this time. What she wanted to ask was, Are you mad? Are you fucking whacked? Veronica had been drinking and burst forth into a weepy diatribe about abortion, which made no sense until it turned out she was talking about her own, the one she had had when she was fifteen at a hospital in San Francisco, where she had to sign court papers claiming to have been raped. So that was that. And now life went on. Rosie seemed a little more cheerful, was growing taller before their very eyes, while Simone grew heavier, rounder—now bleeding, now not.
Now James was the one full of darkness, secrecy. He disappeared into his study every day and handed her pages to read late every afternoon. He was getting ready to send some of his new book off to his agent, and he needed her unconditional approval. But she only loved some of the book and did not know what to do. For the time being, she pretended to love everything he’d written so far. It was a fictionalized account of a woman he had loved for many years in his twenties. It seemed reasonable to Elizabeth that after having her read such an intense and erotic account of another woman, he might expect some reservations on her part, especially when so many of her own lines and foibles had been woven into a character who clamored for spankings and anal sex.
“Why all the butt stuff, darling?” she asked one night. “Couldn’t she be into local politics instead?”
“I just know it to be true.”
“I mean, am I crazy?” Rosie had heard Elizabeth ask Rae over the phone one recent morning, and Rae had said no, no. Rosie listened in silence on the extension. There was some beautiful writing, Elizabeth said, James at his best, fragile and askance, his basic American rube humor mixed in with the sense that everything is interesting if you just come at it from a place of wonder. And then there were parts that were so removed from James’s experiences, as Elizabeth understood them, of being a lover and a man and a son and a father, that the writing came across as vacant and chilling, and she wondered if she even knew him.
“I think it would help if you could actually tell him what you think,” Rae had said.
But it was clear to her that he did not want to hear. He was sullen and defiant.
Rosie, lurking around the house, listening in on the fights, on her mother on the phone, on the silences, felt invisible.
ONE hot summer evening, when Lank and Rae were over for another reading night, Rosie stared at her mother hypnotically until Elizabeth finally looked up, but as she did, Rosie glanced mournfully off into the middle distance.
“Honey, are you okay?” her mother asked. Rosie looked down into her lap. Couldn’t they see that she wasn’t okay, that she was troubled and lonely and still full of secrets? What did she have to do, go hang herself in the upstairs bathroom for them to notice how sad she was?
“I think I’ll go on up to my room,” she said, and got to her feet. She really didn’t even know exactly what was troubling her, whether it was the cheating, or Simone being pregnant, or if it was loneliness, a huge heavy loneliness. She was afraid people would say she was feeling sorry for herself.
“Shall I come upstairs with you for a while?” Rae asked, putting down her book, but Rosie shook her head. She had been noticing all night that Rae liked sitting near Lank on the couch, being quiet, reading, like James and Elizabeth, like the couple that everyone else was except her.
Simone was a couple with her baby.
“You sleepy tonight, baby?” James asked, and she shrugged.
“I think I’ll lie down and rest for a while,” she said, and couldn’t believe it when all the adults nodded, as if this were a perfectly reasonable thing for her to do and not the oddest thing she could think of to say. God! Lie down and rest? A thirteen-year-old, at 9:30?
She lay on the bed, closed her eyes, and pretended she was in a coffin. She was wearing a white satin nightgown and lipstick. Someone had put one perfect red rose on her chest, beneath her crossed hands. People were sobbing—her mother especially, and J. Peter Billings. Their tears dripped onto her pale, peaceful face. The church was filled with tearful kids, from school and the tournaments, dressed in their Sunday best, holding lighted candles, swaying in grief. It was so sad that she started to cry herself and lay there wiping at her eyes for quite some time, feeling like her heart would break.
After a while she got up and put a Eurythmics tape in her boom box and turned it on loud, waiting for someone to come upstairs and yell at her. But James only yelled from downstairs for her to turn it down, and she did.
She stomped around the room for a moment, until she remembered what her mother used to call when she was younger. “There’s the angry clubfoot again,” she had heard her say. It used to really hurt her feelings, but they didn’t care. They never thought of anyone but themselves.
She sat in her room and thought about cleaning it up, but lay down on her bed instead. She imagined various tragedies, saw herself in a hospital bed in traction, her mother and James and Rae and Simone and Hallie in a circle around her, weeping with relief that she was going to live. She saw herself on a gurney in an ambulance, bleeding nearly to death from knife wounds, smiling a tiny battered sliced-up jack-o’-lantern smile at her devastated mother, winking to say, I’ve always loved you, Mom. She saw herself with her eyes swollen shut, purple and black, in the wreckage of a burning car, dragging a small child away in her arms, her legs crushed beneath her, clumsy as a seal on dry land. Then she imagined shielding the small child with her body as the car exploded with thermonuclear intensity, felt and smelled her skin blister. She got up and went to the mirror. It was so hopeless. She was so homely, with horrible ropy hair, teeth as big as shingles, and eyes so blue they appeared crossed. She squinted at her reflection to see what she’d look like with her eyes swollen shut, and she practiced small smiles. Then she opened her eyes and pinched her left cheek. A pink blotch appeared. She pinched it harder, until the skin reddened. Her eyes watered, and her heart stirred with a gasp of tenderness for this girl in the mirror, with all her problems and heartache, her dead daddy, pregnant friend—skinny and lonely as a heron. She stared at her reflection, reaching up to stroke some hair off her forehead and then down the side of her face with the back of her hand, softly, gently. Then, as if in slow motion, without being particularly aware of doing so, she made a fist and hit herself on the cheekbone. Tears sprang to her eyes, and she cried out softly. It took her a moment to catch her breath. Then, closing her left eye, she made a fist, turned it all the way toward her so that the knuckle of her middle finger was aimed right at her, and hit herself again. This time she didn’t make a sound. She could hardly breathe. She touched her cheek gingerly, felt its heat, felt that it was already swelling, looked in the mirror and saw that her left eye was already closing. She looked up on the bookshelf above her, located just the right trophy, got it down, and used the corner of the base to hit herself on the cheekbone one more time.
WHEN she appeared downstairs, holding one side of her face with both hands, she had to pretend to be crying before anyone even looked up. Then everyone bolted to her side.
“Rosie, Rosie! What happened?”
“One of my trophies fell off the shelf,” she said, whimpering. “I knocked against it, and looked up, and it just hit me on the eye.”
“In the eye, or near it, on your face?” James said, trying gently to pull her fingers away so he could have a look. And her mother led her to the couch, where she was made to sit while Lank and Rae prepared an ice pack and a cool drink of water. James sat beside her, holding her with one arm, peering at her with enormous concern.
“Wow,” he said admiringly, his face creased with worry and love. “You’re going to have some shiner.”
HER cheekbone was indeed bruised and somewhat swollen in the morning. She assured her parents that she was really okay, and in fact, she felt more like herself than she’d been in weeks. She felt visible, for one thing, and someone deserving special care. Everyone noticed her, everyone was sympathetic. The boys at the club paid more attention to her than they ever had before, and Rosie dropped her eyes and smiled down at the ground, basking in their concern and admiration.
She felt very powerful, like she was really around, really somewhere, no longer floating, lost and invisible, but back inside her head, grounded, looking out through her eyes, calm, loved. It was great.
There was still some swelling the next morning when she got up, but the bruises were already fading. So she took a ballpoint pen and colored in a circle on the palm of her left hand, then wet it with spit, as if making a paste, and dabbed a little on her face, lightly rouging her cheek in blue.
“Oh, I think it’s worse today,” her mother groaned when Rosie appeared for breakfast. Rosie smiled bravely.
“It feels a little better, though,” she said.
James invited her into town to do errands that morning with the promise of a hot fudge sundae at the other end, and when the man behind the counter at the hardware store looked up at her and whistled, James said, “Yeah, well, you oughta see the other guy.”
The next morning there was only a slight sense of tightness, only the faintest bruise. Rosie sort of wished she could have it forever, or something else like it—a broken leg, for instance. A cast and crutches—people always flocked around the kids who turned up at school on crutches. But still, she felt better than she had in a long time. She and her mother went out to a diner for pie two days later, where they sat in a booth and had to listen to this young mother, maybe eighteen or so, carrying around her squalling baby. “It’s like a teakettle,” Rosie said, and this made Elizabeth laugh, and they looked at each other and shook their heads, and Rosie rolled her eyes, and Elizabeth heaved a sigh, and neither said Simone’s name but they were together in a skeptical, boggled space, and Rosie felt close to her mother again.
THEN James and Elizabeth had a little fight at a tournament.
James had insisted on coming along but could hardly sit still, getting up every twenty minutes or so to check his messages. Elizabeth gave Rosie encouraging looks whenever Rosie looked over. Sometimes James was sitting beside her, watching, pulling for Rosie, other times his seat was empty. Elizabeth was simultaneously annoyed with him and sympathetic. He had not heard from Mel, the producer of his radio essays, in over four days, after having sent him a new piece he hoped to read on the air. He had a short story at The New Yorker that an editor had asked to take a look at two months before and a tentative offer of a film option on his first book, and he went off to call in for messages twice in one hour.
“What time is it?” he asked Elizabeth, when he returned a few minutes later.
“Nearly two.”
“Then I’m not going to hear from New York at all today.”
“Look, as it turns out, at eleven you weren’t going to hear. At one you weren’t going to hear. You’ve spent five hours today waiting to hear, when it was not something that was going to happen.”
“Elizabeth? Give me a break.”
“I hate for you to go through this. It drives me crazy. It’s like Rae waiting to hear from one of her possible fiancés. It saps her of her strength. It keeps her stuck in fantasy. I mean, especially with Mel—he’s a sadist, James. He’s passive aggressive. He’s someone Rae would date! Can you imagine having to wait for one of the men Rae would date to validate you as a writer?”
“This is about trying to earn a living. We have a daughter with a very expensive habit. We have bills.”
“Darling. This is not about Rosie. It’s about your self-esteem. That’s all. We’ll scrape by however things shake down in New York. Do you want to know what I think? I think New York is the mother you wish would approve of you.”
“Spare me the details, darling. Just tell me what to do, O sighted master.”
“Fuck you.”
“Honestly.”
“Just pay attention. Watch tennis. Enjoy my company.”
James closed his eyes and let his chin drop onto his chest. Elizabeth resisted the urge to roll her eyes; he looked like he had just found out he had cancer.
“But, Elizabeth, you know how it is. It’s like a broken tooth my tongue can’t stay away from.”
“I think you try to get New York to love you the way you should have been loved when you were little. But New York is huge and inscrutable and narcissistic; it’s so self-involved that your needs and wants are irrelevant. Your needs and wants are funny to New York. It laughs about them. It laughs itself sick.”
“I know,” he said. “You’re absolutely right.” And then twenty minutes later he went to check his messages again.
ROSIE did not know that this had been going on until later that night, when she listened in on a phone call to Rae. She went to her room, left the door open, and put on a rap tape, too loudly, but Elizabeth just closed the kitchen door without saying anything to her. Rosie sighed and studied her made-up face in the mirror—the blush, the gloppy black dye on already black lashes. She leaned forward and kissed the reflection of her lips, closing her eyes, tilting her head, smiling. Then she wiped the pink lips off the glass, or at any rate rubbed it into a cloudy smear, so it made her think of someone’s lips who is a little drunk and has been kissing, like Simone that night she got pregnant, when she finally emerged from the boat, her lipstick smeary and askew. Her face had been all—what was that word—sultry, all hot and humid like the weather was now. She’d looked like one of the high school girls who sat in cars with older boys and smoked, and she’d looked at Rosie that night like Rosie was her little baby sister, sent by their mom to make her come home. It did not occur to Rosie to go get a sponge and clean the mirror. It did occur to her to smash herself in the eye again. But as she raised the trophy up she stopped and reconsidered. It was too soon to do it again. People might figure it out. She would have to think of something else. In the meantime, she stared at herself with sorrowful eyes, holding the metal trophy, the gold-plated woman about to serve so confidently. She studied the gold-plated woman, her look of triumph, of victory earned honestly; and then she looked back in the mirror, at her own sorry face, the look of sadness, the face of a cheater, and she couldn’t decide if she looked more like Mary, the mother of Jesus, or a baby monkey at the zoo.