C-4,” said McNally. “Allegedly.”
I crossed my arms, still looking him dead in the eye. “I’d resigned from the school by then. Being a teacher… well, let’s just say secondary school education wasn’t exactly my calling.”
“Uh-huh.” He smiled, tapping the upper-right corner of my résumé slowly with the side of his index fingertip. “And you want to be a restaurant critic?”
“Damn straight,” I said, thinking of Parrish and India.
No crime beats, nothing stupid or dangerous. I was a mother, for chrissake.
“You have someplace in mind, to start?” he asked.
“Daddy Bruce’s Bar-B-Que, out on Arapahoe.”
He liked that. “These pieces go about seven hundred and fifty words.”
“Great.”
“By Tuesday?”
I nodded.
He leaned back again, fingers steepled in front of his mouth.
I waited.
“On spec,” he said.
“Oh joy, oh rapture unforeseen.”
“You don’t sound surprised.”
I shrugged again. “This isn’t the first time I’ve worked for an erstwhile hippie free weekly.”
McNally cackled.
Yeah, dude, you like me already.
I crossed my arms. “And what do you pay if you actually have the wit to appreciate my deathless prose?”
“Forty bucks. And we’ll reimburse for the meal.”
“Look at me,” I replied, “living the goddamn dream.”
I woke up the next morning to sunshine, birdsong, and my mother bringing me breakfast in bed.
“Happy birthday, dear Madeline,” she said, carrying in a tray on which she’d arranged a croissant, a linen napkin, a butter plate, and a bud vase filled with sprigs of forsythia that I was pretty sure our neighbors wouldn’t begrudge me, considering.
“Oh, Mom, how glorious!”
“I would’ve made you coffee, but I have no idea how to work that ridiculous contraption in your kitchen.”
She brought in a box of presents and then the girls, so they could cavort on the duvet next to me while I opened everything.
For lunch, I pitched the idea of barbecue.
It was so warm and sunny out that we decided to put Parrish and India in their little red wagon and walk to Daddy Bruce’s, before Mom hit the road again for California.
The sky overhead was pristine and deep and cloudless, its hue so rich I pointed up and said to Mom, “If egg yolks were blue instead of yellow, that’s what they’d look like.”
We smelled the place blocks before we could see it, the dry mountain air perfumed with meat-rich smoke. Daddy Bruce’s tiny white shack was banked with cords of split hardwood and set in the middle of a parking lot beside one tree that was just starting to leaf out.
Squint and this was rural-route backwoods: Carolina, Alabama, East Texas. Some green crossroads place where the first drops of afternoon rain sizzled to steamy nothing on hot metal roofs and pairs of old hounds drowsed in the shade of every sagging roadside porch.
I parked the red wagon and hoisted Parrish to my hip as Mom reached down for India.
There were two four-top tables, two bar stools, and a battered upright piano crowded inside, all four walls fluttering with thumb-tacked-up Bible verses and newspaper clippings in the front door’s draft.
The man himself smiled from behind the back counter at all of us—grease-spattered white sleeves rolled to his elbows, baggy trousers belted with packing twine. I perused the menu and then asked for a pair of three-meat plates with coleslaw and beans.
“Now, aren’t those the two prettiest little girls,” said Daddy Bruce, grinning at Parrish and India in turn. “Are they twins?”
I nodded, smiling back at him. “We just celebrated their first birthday.”
“You have your hands full, young lady,” he said. “I’ll bring everything over when it’s ready, all right?”
I thanked him profusely, shifting Parrish to my other hip as she crowed “Meow!” and grabbed at my hair.
“And whatever you’d care to drink, please just help yourself from that there,” he said, laughing, as he pointed toward a grimy Styrofoam cooler on the floor beside the piano.
Then he picked up a cleaver and went to work on ribs and chicken and a big hunk of brisket.
I walked back toward the table Mom had chosen, stopping off at the drinks cooler. “Do you want anything?”
“I’m fine,” she said.
I grabbed a couple of Sprites anyway. “Hey, live large. I’m getting reimbursed.”
When I’d settled into a chair with Parrish on my lap, I opened both sodas and handed one to Mom.
“To the revolution,” I said, raising mine in the air.
“Wherever it may be,” my mother replied, clinking my Sprite with hers.
As we each took a sip, Daddy B came out from behind the counter with our meat-laden paper plates held high.
“I hope you all enjoy your meal,” he said, depositing them on the table before us.
“Oh, this looks wonderful,” said Mom, smiling up at him.
I thanked him, too, as Parrish reached out to grab a slice of Wonder Bread, toppling a rib off my groaning plate.
Mom sampled a bite of brisket, then put her fork down and looked at me, suddenly serious. “Madeline, there’s something I’ve been meaning to tell you.”
She cleared her throat.
I pulled Parrish tighter against my belly, the rib I was about to take a bite out of paused in midair. “Is everything okay?”
“Well,” she said, “I got married. Three months ago.”
India slapped her hands into Mom’s baked beans and started paddling around in them. Neither of us moved to stop her.
“Um,” I said. “Wow.”
Mom’s fourth marriage, commenced on a Valentine’s Day, had lasted all of ten months. Considering it was to this straight preppy Republican guy who lived in the most uptight and schmancy part of Maine, we offspring had been stunned the union endured through the subsequent Fourth of July.
After that divorce she’d often joked that she should found Marriage Anonymous, so that if she ever again felt a wedding coming on she could call a friend to talk her out of it.
But she’d never gotten married secretly before. And her waiting three months for the big reveal didn’t exactly make me want to know who Bachelor Number Five was.
I put the rib down, untouched. “To whom?”
“Bill Garrison.”
Bill Garrison: my mother’s death-row pen pal, currently residing at San Quentin. He’d spent the last twelve years appealing his conviction for the murder of two pawnbrokers in Joshua Tree, California—an event the biker friend who’d testified against him at trial claimed had been inspired by Garrison’s lack of funds to cover the eight hundred bucks he owed some local meth wholesalers.
On the bright side, my siblings and I wouldn’t have to worry about generating the usual awkward new-stepdad small talk, come Thanksgiving or Christmas.
But an appropriate response for my mother here and now wasn’t exactly something Emily Post could help me with.
I wondered why Mom never seemed to marry anyone cool.
Like, say, Daddy Bruce, who’d just plopped himself down at the piano and started in on the keys with some serious boogie-woogie chops.
Sure, the man’s wardrobe could use an upgrade, Mom had never dated anyone black, and he had to be closing in on eighty—but he was charming, gainfully employed, probably not a predicate felon, and God knows he could cook.
“Mazel tov,” I said anyway, toasting her with my bottle of Sprite and all the enthusiasm I could fake. “And may you both enjoy every happiness.”
“We’ve already had two conjugal visits,” she confided, giggling. “And since he’s been in jail for twelve years, I know he doesn’t have AIDS.”
I bit my tongue, literally, at that sheer departure from logic—then scootched my plastic fork under the coleslaw, circumventing a sudden and overwhelming desire to stab its tines into my right eyeball, repeatedly.
But then I looked up at her, and realized how relieved she was to have let me in on her secret.
My mother was beaming, damn it—as truly happy as I’d seen her since the death three years earlier of her greatest love, Bonwit.
And, okay, Bonwit had been a total asshole, but still… Who the hell was I to take potshots at my mother’s joy?
I reached across the table to squeeze her hand. “Good for you, Mom.”
Admittedly, I was still a teensy bit bummed that her first après-Bonwit marriage—to the guy from Maine, who always urged us to order shrimp cocktails when he took us out for dinner—had lasted a mere ten months.
Mom walked out without taking a dime from this man. She’d even given the chunky-sapphire engagement ring back.
When the guy’s mother died several months later, his cut of the familial chemical-dynasty inheritance had been $187 million. After taxes.
Oh fucking well.
I pulled a notepad and pencil out of the diaper bag by my feet and stood up. “You got the girls for a minute, Mom? I need to get a couple of quotes from Mr. Bruce.”
Just after I’d hugged Mom good-bye on our front porch, she reached into her bag and pulled out a check.
“When you guys were little,” she said, handing it to me, “Mummie and Daddy started giving me an allowance of a hundred dollars a month. I’d like to do the same for you. Maybe you can use it for a little babysitting while you’re doing this newspaper job, or so you and Dean can go out for dinner.”
I kissed her cheek and hugged her again. “You’re amazing, Mom. Thank you.”
“I remember how it was,” she said. “Having a little something of your own really matters.”
Before I tucked the girls into their cribs that night, I gave them each an extra kiss. “That’s from your dad,” I said. “He is apparently having too much fun partying in expense-account New Orleans to remember his wife’s birthday, and that, as such, it might have been a good idea to call home.”
India murmured and shifted onto her side, her eyes already closed.
I was officially an ancient thirty-two-year-old with an AWOL husband and a brand-new stepfather on death row, but my little daughters totally fucking rocked.
And I figured I might as well write up the Daddy Bruce piece, since there was nothing decent on TV and the girls were asleep.
My friend Melissa, back in New York, insisted that placentas were composed pretty much entirely of maternal brain cells, “which is why we’ve all gotten so goddamn stupid now that we’ve given birth.”
Her point was borne home to me once more when I sat down in front of the computer in our laundry room closet and tried to start writing about lunch.
I had vestigial inklings of how to write an article, don’t get me wrong. It was just that all the little gobbets of quotable triviana orbited my head like some Elmer Fudd halo of stars and bluebirds, chirping and whirling in the wake of Bugs Bunny’s sledgehammer.
I stared at the blinky cursor, thinking about how Carolina-style barbecue was vinegar-rather than tomato-based… how Daddy Bruce helped his father (Daddy-Daddy?) dish up several thousand free meals in Denver, every Thanksgiving… how I’d found his culinary artistry more uplifting than a truckload of Prozac…
And then I just started typing and free-associating: Melville’s Ishmael blathering about his “hypos,” Robert Johnson’s rosy-crossroads fixation (hat tip to Henry Miller best left only implied), nation sacks and John-the-Conqueror root, hardwood smoke and blue-tick hounds, Delta diasporas and the Great Migration, alienation and Angola and Alan Lomax and our collective yearning for authenticity… I mean, fuck it, why let a good liberal-arts education go to waste?
By the time I was ready for bed, I had my word count—and at least a hint of my mojo back.