THE TABLE WAS SET FOR FOUR. RUBY HAD CHOSEN plates from her university days, a motley but bright assortment of red, yellow and blue. She cut fresh lilacs from her mother’s garden and placed them in a tapered glass vase in the centre of the large oak table. The house smelled of rosemary and thyme, which had been sprinkled liberally over the pissaladière.
“What’s that in the oven? Pizza à la derrière?” her father joked as he joined her in the kitchen. James Edwards was a no-nonsense type much of the time, but indulged in much rib-poking with his two daughters. He had a deep, honey-sweetened voice and frequently burst into song, riffing and scatting away à la Ella: “Doo bop re bop wop doo bop, oh yeah.” Ruby would often sing back an answer, as she did now. “Scooby dooby bop bop, till you drop, drop, whoo hoo, yeah.”
“Atta girl, that’s my Ruby,” her father said and patted her on the back with his big brown hand.
Ruby peered into the oven and poked at the crust with her finger. The scent of olives and roasted tomatoes intermingled with the herbs. Standing, she brushed slender hands down the front of her apron, which was tied around her waist. On the stove a pot was bubbling. Ruby lifted the lid.
“You’ve outdone yourself, my dear,” her mother’s voice chimed in as she too came into the room. “Mushroom soup—and I can smell the sherry, too. Another wonderful round of food. What’s for dessert?”
Ruby opened the door of the fridge and gestured inside. “Grape tarte with crème anglaise,” she said. She had worked hard to create concentric circles of green, purple and red grapes. It was a Sunday afternoon in the spring of 1980 and she had spent the morning preparing lunch.
Ruby’s mom had spent the morning tidying the main floor of their large suburban house. As a finishing touch she had put the last of the white tulips into a pewter vase on the table by the front door.
Ruby’s older sister, Jessie, flounced in from outside, her long curls swirling about her head. Jessie’s hair was light brown and her skin was a shade paler than Ruby’s, but Ruby, along with her jet black hair and darker skin, had her mother’s aquiline nose and thinner lips.
“Ruby, it smells fantastic in here. What did you cook for us?” she said, her hands waving in the air as her sister came to greet her. Jessie surveyed the living room, as if deciding whether to seat herself on the plush coffee-coloured sofa or on the Scandinavian-style chairs. She was taller than Ruby and not so curvy—she had her mother’s angular features.
“I’m not telling. You’ll have to wait and see.”
“Just like you,” muttered Jessie as she sank into the sofa. She stared at a black-and-caramel-coloured African mud cloth that hung on the wall and at the top two rows of the bookshelf that were decorated with African and Inuit masks and sculptures. “Mom and Dad really do have an interesting collection of things,” she said. “I kind of miss it where I am now.” Turning to Ruby, she narrowed her gaze. “So, how’s it going, Sis?”
Ruby sat down in an armchair and sighed. “Okay, I guess. I’m playing at being the official cook in the house. Just reorienting myself and enjoying spring. Do you remember Jackie from high school? She’s pregnant.”
“She’s starting off young,” said Jessie.
“I’m glad she’s doing it, ’cause I’m sure I couldn’t. I’m just not ready to do the settling-down-and-having-kids thing. Don’t know if I ever will be.”
“Why not?” asked Jessie.
“I want to hit the road. I want to travel and see the world first. Anyway, I don’t really believe in marriage.”
Their father stepped into the living room. “Ah, Jessie, here you are.” He gave his daughter a big kiss on the cheek. “Glad to see you. How’s the studying going?”
“Just fine, keeping me busy.”
Ruby jumped up and strode to the dining room. “I’m serving lunch! Come and get it!”
Jessie brought the full soup tureen to the table. She lifted the lid and soaked up the scent of mushrooms, sherry and thyme. “Mmm. This looks great. What else is there?”
“Pissaladière,” said Ruby.
“Wow, we’re getting the special treatment. What’s up?”
Jessie served the soup and everybody sat down to eat. Ruby’s family was not one to mince words and immediately started asking each other, and then Ruby, what the special occasion was. Ruby squirmed in her chair.
“Soup’s delicious, my daughter, but you can’t keep a secret from me. Why all the fuss?”
Finally, she cleared her throat. “Remember Great-uncle William who lived in Berlin in the twenties and thirties? Well, I’ve decided to follow in his footsteps and spend some time there. I want to see different places in the world and I thought Berlin would be a good place to start. I’d like to see where he lived, and find out what kind of life he led.” A note of sarcasm crept into her voice. “I mean, who wants malls and suburbia, anyway? I didn’t save all my money from my work at the bank and at the university library to spend it on nothing right here. I want to get away from home and see new places. Plus, I’d like to travel in other countries and work on my French and Spanish.”
Ruby’s mother was from Montreal, and Ruby had grown up listening to her sing songs and tell little stories in French. Louise Edwards spoke French to her daughters often enough to pique their interest and give them an edge.
Jessie laughed. “Oh, the story of old Uncle William. You’re really taken with that. He went off to be a singer and study music at the Academy in Berlin, and his gay ass was thrilled with the wild and open life he could live there.” Jessie paused. “That didn’t last for long, eh?”
Louise’s singsong voice followed Jessie’s. “It’s wonderful that you have a dream like William did. I really think you should step out into the world any way you want. But . . . I hope it’s not for too long.”
Ruby’s father moved his empty bowl aside and snorted. “That’s a foolish, crazy-minded idea if I ever heard one,” he said. “You need to stay right here and find a permanent job. Look at how hard your sister is working to finish her degree. But she’ll be set once she’s done. Set for life as an architect. I don’t like this idea one bit.”
“Dad, don’t drag me into this,” said Jessie.
Ruby felt her eyes start to tear up. But she had known this would happen and was angry with herself for going soft. She had wanted a family meeting to make her announcement. At least her sister would stand up for her. And her mom, too. Ruby pushed her chair back from the table and began to collect the soup bowls. On her way to the kitchen, she stopped in her tracks and then faced her father.
“Dad, you know I love you, but you are wrong. Sometimes people need a change of scenery and a little freedom.”
“I concur,” said her mother. Ruby’s mom had moved to Toronto in the fifties to teach French and had met her dad at the old Park Plaza Hotel, which was one of the few establishments in the city to serve both Blacks and whites in those days. They met while whooping it up on the dance floor in the hotel’s ballroom. A month later Ruby’s dad proposed, and they’d been together ever since. They had a really hard time at first, with all the prejudice. Her mom even had to go with a white friend to look for an apartment, because landlords wouldn’t rent to mixed couples.
Ruby brought the main course to the table. “Here we go, pizza à la derrière,” she said, and chuckled to lighten the mood.
Jessie patted her sister’s hand when she stopped to serve her portion.
“When Ruby’s got a plan, there’s no stopping her,” said Jessie. “Maybe she wouldn’t be so driven to get away if Dad hadn’t kept shoving so many ads for government jobs her way. Or maybe if she didn’t feel like she had to measure up to me . . . But when I’m done, ha ha, I’ll join Ruby overseas, if she’s still there.”
“I have goals and ambitions, too,” Ruby said. “Just because they don’t have to do with a set career doesn’t mean they’re not as valid.” She spoke a little more about her great-uncle, how she felt he would help guide her way in Berlin.
Her father continued shaking his head in disbelief. The family ate in silence, the girls not daring to provoke their father. Ruby knew she risked her father’s wrath, knew he would not understand. She realized that it was just like she had expected, and that he might never change his mind before she left.
Ruby served dessert while Jessie prepared a pot of tea. Everyone oohed and aahed about the grape tart and then fell into silence again.
Ruby and Jessie were left to tidy up the kitchen. Their parents had always made them do this kind of work together, so they fell easily into step.
“Ruby, you know I’m with you, whatever you decide to do. But maybe you ought to earn some more money before you head off.”
“Well, I’m still working a few days a week at the bank. But even if I got a good job, it would be ages before I could afford to move out, and I don’t want to live with Mom and Dad anymore. I have to get away, Jessie—I’ve started having nightmares again, where someone’s holding me down and I can’t breathe. And they’ve gotten worse. There’s a man actually lying on me, trying to smother me. I end up blacking out in the dream, before waking up. They stopped for a while at university, but as soon as I came back to this house, they returned.”
“That’s awful.”
“I can’t live up to Dad’s expectations the way you do. I have to make a life for myself somewhere else.”
“You’re probably right about it being about Dad, but be careful about running away. I want you to go as much as anyone else, but I think you’ll just carry your fears with you. I know you’ll think I’m crazy, but maybe you should try a little meditation. Maybe that will help keep the dreams away, if you can relax your mind.”
“You’re not crazy, Jessie. But I have a jumpy mind, one that doesn’t calm easily. I don’t think I can make it be still.”
“Well, I mean it about coming over to visit you, wherever you land. You better find a place with enough space for visitors!”
“Oh, I will. And I promise not to bring a German lover back to Canada like Uncle William.”
Jessie’s face lit up “What? I don’t believe you. Nobody told me that!”
“I wrote Aunt Lettie last fall. She’s the family historian so I thought she might know something about him. She was hesitant at first, but she finally sent me copies of some letters to her and to his sister Ella. He told them about the lover he was bringing home.” Ruby’s eyes sparkled as she exposed this little secret to her sister.
“You’re kidding me!” said Jessie, her face even more incredulous. “That’s incredible. Do you have those letters here? I’d love to see them.”
“Yeah, I do. We can look at them later, downstairs.”
Ruby’s mom came into the kitchen, a big smile on her face. “Nice work, girls. Good to see the two of you keeping each other company.”
Ruby’s dad joined them in the kitchen. “Ruby, is there any of that grape tart left? Would you cut me another piece?” Like Ruby, he had a sweet tooth.
Jessie said, “If there’s enough left over, cut another piece for Mom and me, too. And is there any more tea?”
Away from the formality of the dining room table, the family hovered around the kitchen table nattering and joking with each other. Their father finally motioned to Jessie to follow him upstairs, and Ruby wondered what on earth he was up to. After they had been gone for a few minutes, she crept lightly up the stairs and stopped just before her parents’ bedroom. The door was only partially closed. She overheard her father start in on Jessie. “You have to do something about Ruby and this talk about travelling. I want you to convince her to get this cockamamie idea out of her head.”
It was all Ruby could do to stop from barging in on them. There was a long silence before Jessie replied.
“Dad, I can’t believe you’re asking me to do this. Ruby is a grown-up now and she will do whatever she decides to do. Remember that poster I had in my room with that quote from Kahlil Gibran?
Your children are not your children.
They are the sons and daughters of Life’s longing for itself.
They come through you but not from you,
And though they are with you yet they belong not to you.
Jessie had long ago memorized the whole quotation. “Remember now? Well, it’s time for you to let go of Ruby. She’ll be fine. You and Mom taught her well.”
“But I had great hopes for Ruby,” her father said. “I don’t want her to fritter away her time.”
“Just because she’s going to travel for a while doesn’t mean she won’t come back ready to plant her feet on the ground. Anyway, you talk to her. I won’t do your dirty work.”
Ruby ducked into her mother’s sewing room before she could be seen, then snuck down into the kitchen. Her face felt flushed; perhaps realizing that something was wrong, her mother gave her a hug and a peck on the cheek. Ruby stared out the kitchen window at a trail of cream-coloured gauze crossing the skies, brightened up by threads of pink and orange. The day was ending. But spring was in the air, and Ruby could hear the birds twittering in the tree just outside the door. Despite her father’s negative machinations, the breeze carried with it a sense of promise.
Jessie burst into the room. “You won’t believe what Dad—”
“Shhhh,” said Ruby, placing a finger on her lips. “Mom, come quickly, there’s a cardinal on the cherry tree.”
The three women stood shoulder to shoulder at the window. The garden was bursting with white tulips and narcissi of different sizes and shapes, doubles and singles, beginning to fade as the lilacs reached their peak. With the pink blossoms bursting on the cherry tree, the garden seemed like it was right out of a fairy tale. The cardinal was hopping from branch to branch.
“Spring’s coming, Ma. The little ones will soon be leaving the nest.”
“That’s what you should do, Ruby. Go see the world. I know your father disagrees, but there’s nothing special waiting for you here.”
The windows of the kitchen were wide open and they could hear a bird begin its song: sharp, high notes sung in measured sequence. Ruby’s mom laughed and then quietly slipped out the back door, where she stood on the porch with her hands on her hips. She whistled at the bird, repeating the same staccato tones. A call and answer went on between her and the bird, the notes increasing in number with each round. Ruby’s mom would tilt her head and laugh before listening once more. Her laughter became a coda to their song.
Appearing behind them, Ruby’s father said: “Two twittering fools.” Ruby’s father could not stand birds. As a teenager he had worked at a resort where he had to serve rich white folks outside on the patio. One day a number of birds swooped down at his head, and frightened, he dropped the tray on which rested several meals. He was fired, and from that day his fear expanded into outright hatred. Her father gave his wife a hug. “Louise, I’m going downstairs to put some laundry in.”
Louise moved back indoors, cheeks flushed. “My little songbird,” she said to Ruby and Jessie. “We sing to each other every day.”
Ruby reached out and touched her mother’s arm. “That was nice, Mom.” She and Jessie stared at each other for a moment and then they shrugged. “Too bad Dad can’t appreciate the beauty of the bird and its song,” Ruby said. Her sister nodded in agreement. “Okay, guys, I’m going to write out a list of what I need to pack.”
Ruby skipped down the stairs and stepped into the bedroom where she had been staying for the past weeks. Her father was in the far corner of the room, standing over the night table with a book in his hands. He was humming “Stardust” as he read. His daughter moved towards him in a flash.
“Dad, what are you doing in here? What are you looking at?” Ruby peered over her father’s shoulders. “My journal! What are you doing reading that?”
“I was coming in to close the windows. It’s supposed to rain tonight. But I found this lying on the table.”
Ruby reached to grab the journal from his hands, but he raised his arm. Ruby levelled her gaze at him. “This is my personal business. There’s nothing in there that you need to know about.”
“Well, how about I read a snippet. ‘May 1st, 1980. Only a little more time till I fly the coop. I’ll be so happy to be gone from here. Dad is driving me crazy, trying to suffocate me and extinguish all life.’ Ruby, I’m not trying to suffocate you. Look at your mother and all the difficulties she’s had with her health. Think about my worries. I’m just trying to protect you from pain that you don’t need to experience. I’m sorry if I hurt you. Maybe you shouldn’t have left your journal out.”
“I thought I could trust you!” Ruby shouted. “How could you do such a thing? You’re always using Mom as an excuse to be overbearing. I’m not going to live my life waiting to see if something might happen to me. Why are you picking on me? Because I’m the youngest? Because I’m not as smart and stable as Jessie?”
“You’re just as bright as your sister. But you’re more sensitive. I’ve always used kid gloves with you. You’re more like your mother than you know. Why don’t you work for a couple of years, and once you’ve established yourself, then you can take off?”
“Kid gloves? Are you kidding me? More like a straitjacket. I want to travel before I settle down. Can’t you understand that? Now leave me alone. Go!”
Her father turned away in silence and left the room. Ruby threw the journal against the wall. Her father was a loving man, but always imposed his will, and Ruby was tired of being his good little girl, of feeling she had to perform to please him.
Ruby’s sister knocked at the door. “Can I come in?”
“Sure, but I’m in no mood for joking around.”
“Yeah, me neither. I heard the yelling. I’m sorry about Dad.”
“He’s worse than ever lately. I have to get out of here.”
“You’re right to leave, Ruby. But you should cut him some slack. Think about what he’s gone through with Mom.”
“Oh for chrissake, he protects her way too much! She’s not some precious doll. Her illness doesn’t prevent her from having inner strength.”
“But think of all the times she’s been sick. It’s been so disruptive, yet he’s always there for her. He works so hard to maintain a stable life for her.”
“It’s too much. She needs room to breathe, too. He told her not to go back to work, that she didn’t have to teach anymore. But I know he loves and supports her. Jessie, you know I love him. He’s a good man. But I can’t stand the fighting any longer.”
“Sis, it’s automatic with him. Remember, he grew up as the oldest child in a strict, religious household and he had to look after three younger sisters. He’s just doing what he knows best. Besides, he might be worried about you—and me, too? Worried that maybe we’ll become manic like Mom?”
“I know,” Ruby whispered. “I have thought about that and I struggle a little with that myself. But I don’t want to not do things because maybe someday I might get sick. I can’t live my life that way.”
“Oh, Ruby, you’re so brave. And stubborn, too!” Jessie hugged her. “Now let’s see those letters from Uncle William. I’m dying to read them.”
Ruby opened the second drawer of the oak dresser and pulled out a flurry of papers. “Aunt Lettie sent me these. I had to really beg her. Plus, look, look—I have a photo.” The two young women sat down on the bed and peered at the slightly crinkled photograph that Ruby held. There was a dapper young man in what looked like a camel-coloured suit with a snappy light brown hat on his head. His face was cracked open into a wide grin, with dimples marking his lower cheeks.
“Wow, he looks really snazzy,” said Jessie. “You can see how he’d attract someone’s fancy.”
Ruby unfolded a letter, date-marked June 1930. “I’ll read it to you,” she said.
Dearest Ella,
I have been here in Berlin for several months now and I am sorry that I have taken so long to write. Europe and Berlin in particular have been an eye-opener for me. Paris is ablaze with history, and one of my favourite spots to stop and think was Notre-Dame Cathedral. I spent a long time looking at the gargoyles and thinking of the fate of poor Quasimodo. I know that this is no longer news, but Black men are treated with great deference here and much is made of jazz music. There seems to be a club full of American and French folk on almost every corner. Everyone is talking about Josephine Baker. I saw her perform at the Folies-Bergère and you can say that dance breathes fire into her limbs. It is a wonderful place, this City of Light.
Berlin is an odd mixture of carefree and cautious. It is stately and chock full of gardens and parks. My favourite pastime is to take the train to Wannsee and read on the beach by the water.
The National Socialists are waiting everywhere in the shadows; their presence seems to become stronger every day. They are so full of hatred for Jews and Blacks that I am worried that I will not be able to stay if they get into power. This makes my stay bittersweet and I vow to make the most of my days. In any case, my musical studies take up most of my time. My singing voice is getting stronger every day. The hours of leisure that do come my way are spent in museums, clubs and the theatre.
I have a young German friend, Heinrich, who accompanies me most places I go and acts as a guide. There is one place we frequent, known as the Eldorado. My guess is that its mood would be too boisterous for your wise ways.
Hope all is well with you and the family.
Your loving brother, William
Jessie clapped her hands. “Isn’t it amazing that he saw Josephine? I’m so jealous!”
“There’s at least two places for me to look up on my travels,” Ruby said. She lay back on the bed and thought about her uncle. Her eyes strayed to a family picture on the wall. The girls wore matching snowsuits and stood with their dad. Ruby longed to see Berlin and Paris. She longed for the days when their world was simpler, if not perfect.
Ruby’s feet went crunch, crunch, crunch through the snow. She held on to her father’s hand tightly, her fingers and palms covered by hand-woven red wool mittens. In her father’s other fist was the rope for the toboggan that bounced along behind them. The houses had big snow-covered lawns, with little Japanese cherry trees popping up along the boulevard. Ruby loved that the snow was like a blanket, protecting the grounds from the wintry winds. She skipped along the sidewalk, still grasping her father’s hand. “What kind of tree will we get, Daddy? Can we get a big one?”
Her father answered, “We will see, my dear, we will see.”
As they reached the bottom of the street they rounded the corner and then stood in front of a small plaza with a restaurant, a grocery store and a drug store. In the parking lot was a large fenced-in area full of Christmas trees. Ruby marvelled at all the different sizes and types. She pulled off her mittens so she could feel the needles in her hands. “Daddy, how ’bout this one?” she yelped every few minutes. Her father kept looking around. Finally he made a decision, choosing a medium-size balsam fir that was full around the middle and tapered to a perfect tip. He went to get some help, Ruby following behind him.
The man dressed like Santa would not look her father in the eye. Instead, he turned to help someone else who had come after them. Her father waited patiently and then asked for assistance again. And once again, the man turned away to help another customer. Ruby tugged at his hand. “Daddy, ask him to get our tree for us!”
Ruby’s father mumbled something about how not everyone was free in this world and what had happened to the spirit of Christmas?
The man snapped to attention and gave him a dirty look. “Okay, buddy, whaddaya want?”
“I’d like to purchase this tree and I’d like to be treated politely like anyone else while I do so.”
“I wouldn’t have expected you people to be out in this kind of weather. Better get on home.”
Ruby’s father refused to reply. Ruby tugged at his coat. “What does that mean, Daddy? Why do we have to get on home?” She turned to the man. “Mister, you’re not Santa, you’re mean. Santa’s not like that.”
Ruby watched with a kind of horror as the man’s face turned a purply pink. “Get out of here now,” he sputtered.
Ruby’s father said quietly, “Sir, where is your Christmas spirit?” Then put a couple of dollars down on the wooden table, plunked their tree on the toboggan and led Ruby away from the parking lot.
“Ruby, you were right—that was a very mean man. Unfortunately, some people are cruel and don’t like Black people. But don’t you worry. We won’t let him ruin our day.” Then he chased her all the way back up the hill, the toboggan swinging to and fro behind him. Ruby laughed as she watched her father’s glistening brown face bobbing up and down in the sea of white that surrounded them.
Ruby had been lying on top of the bed and now she went to snuggle under the thick, brightly embroidered duvet from Tibet that her mother had bought on one of her shopping sprees. Over the years, Louise Edwards had been prone to bouts of mania and depression, diagnosed as bipolar disorder, but these episodes seemed to be receding as she approached middle age.
One time, Ruby’s mom had lost her wits when her father had been away on a business trip. Jessie had been the one to phone him and whisper that Mama wasn’t well—one moment she would be short-tempered and the next cuddling her girls, laughing and smiling and full of love. You just didn’t know who she was going to be from one minute to the next. She was also spending a lot of money on new decorations for the house. She had bought a huge painting of a nude woman, which she hung in the living room. As soon as Dad arrived home, he took it down and marched it right back to the store where it had been bought. Her mom ended up in the hospital that time. Ruby was ten.
When she went to visit her at the hospital, her mother started wailing that she loved her so much, and then a split second later she ran down the hall screaming and banging on walls. Ruby didn’t know who this woman was; she didn’t recognize her and was afraid of her, of whatever she had become. Ruby sat there nervously waiting for her real mother to return, not knowing what to do. The nurse brought her mom back, but Ruby didn’t want to stay anymore, and the nurse told her that it would be better if she left since her mother needed some rest.
Ruby was relieved to be able to go. This woman wasn’t her mother.
Her father never talked to his daughters about what was wrong. Ruby guessed that he was too proud to admit that she wasn’t perfect. Maybe he was scared, too; he didn’t know how to explain any of it to his daughters and so just kept things hush-hush. Ruby realized that it was probably this same fear that was driving him to keep her so close to home.
When Ruby went back to the kitchen later that afternoon, her mother was busy fixing a salad for dinner. “I thought we could have the rest of the soup with this for dinner,” she said.
Ruby pulled the soup out of the fridge and found a piece of baguette that was left over from lunch. “I’ll make garlic bread,” she said, grabbing a nearby mortar and pestle. As she pounded the garlic, she said: “Are you happy, Mom?”
Ruby’s mother looked at her daughter and sighed. “Is this a roundabout way about asking about me and your father? Right out of left field, eh? Ruby, there are always kinks to work out in a marriage. You can never find that perfect person. Your father may have his faults, but I know he loves me and cares for me. That’s as much as I can ask for.”
“No, Mom, he should treat you more equitably, and he should stop trying to keep me under his wing.”
“Your father has stood by me all these years, even when I wasn’t well. But what you’re really angry about is you, isn’t it? We’ll have to try to talk some sense into him.”
“I don’t know how, but in any case, he won’t stop me from going.” Ruby had begun smearing garlic and butter onto the bread when Jessie walked in.
“I’m starving. Is it almost ready?”
“You still here? Just hang on for ten minutes, and there’ll be food.” Ruby pulled knives, forks and spoons from the drawer.
Her father came in and sat down at his usual place at the end of the table. “Smells yummy—I know there’s good food coming my way.”
The mood in the kitchen was tense, and they sat down to eat in silence. Jessie asked her father if he wanted to say grace.
“Rub a dub dub, thanks for the grub,” he replied. The only time they blessed the table was when they had visitors who were religious. When that happened, the girls would check to make sure everyone’s eyes were closed and smirk at each other across the table. The sisters shared a smile now.
“You may have done all the cooking today,” Jessie teased, “but I sewed up a new dress for Mom at home this morning.”
“I guess we’re even, then.”
Ruby’s father looked up at her. “You’d be even more even with your sister if you worked on getting a good job.”
“James Edwards, don’t you dare ruin this meal.”
“Ruin this meal? How about ruin her life? That’s what she’s trying to do.”
“Dad,” Jessie said, “for crying out loud. She’s only going on a trip.”
“She can go on a trip any old day. I want her to get established first. Besides, I don’t want her to be so far away.”
“That’s it! I’m outta here.” Ruby shoved herself away from the table and went outside to get some air. The flowers in the backyard were fanning themselves in the cool breeze, heads slightly bent. Ruby went over and picked some lilacs from the bush and then snapped two white peonies off their stems. She wondered if the plants felt pain.
Her mother came outside and rubbed her daughter’s shoulder. “I’m sorry, honey. He’s just having such a hard time with this. He doesn’t want to lose you.”
“He’s not losing me, for chrissake, Mom. I’m not disappearing off the face of the earth.”
“Come back inside and eat with us. You’ll be hungry if you don’t finish your food.”
“No, Ma, I’ll eat later. I’m going to my room.” Ruby went down to the basement and found a glass for the flowers. She lay back on her bed and stared at the ceiling, her mind going over the conversation at the table. The more she thought about it, the more she wanted to go immediately to West Berlin. Her uncle had studied at the Academy of Arts there until Hitler’s fascists had chased him out. When he returned to Canada, he and his partner did indeed move in with his sister, Ella. His sister refused to meet his boyfriend but let them set up house together in the basement, which had had its own entrance. Some members of the family said he was a bit of a scoundrel, mooching off them all the time.
Her uncle Walter’s story piqued her imagination. What on earth was a gay African Canadian doing in Nazi Germany in the 1930s? It tickled her that she was the only one in the family destined—chosen?—to follow in his footsteps. She felt compelled by some crazy idea of cosmic karma to see if she could find his old haunts in Berlin.
An hour later there was a knock at her door.
“Who’s there?”
“It’s your broken-down old father. May I come in?”
Ruby sat up in her bed but then slumped back down. He knocked again, and finally she said, “Come on in.”
Her dad sat down at the foot of the bed. Ruby rolled over to face him.
Her father fiddled with his hands for a moment, head down. “Listen, Ruby, this is hard for me to say. I won’t try to stop you from going. I can’t anyway—you have a mind of your own and you’re going to do whatever you want to do. It’s just—I’ve spent so many years looking after you and looking out for you. It’s hard to let go, hard to realize that you have to head off into the world on your own. I still hope you won’t be gone for long and that you’ll focus on a career when you get back. Your family is here, and you are an integral part of it. What are you going to do there in Berlin, after you’ve seen all the sights? But in the meantime, I don’t know what else to say but be well, my dear, and travel safely. Let us know when you’re leaving.”
“Did Mom tell you to say that?”
Her father struggled. “Yes, Ruby, your mother and I had a chat. But this is me. Solo. Here to talk.”
“It’s just so strange . . . don’t you remember when you were young?” Ruby asked.
“I guess different people have different impulses. Mine was to get an education, settle down and raise a family. That’s what my parents taught me. Study hard, work hard, improve your life.”
Ruby looked at her father and realized he had followed the dream of many Black Canadians. She stammered, “Maybe you didn’t go far away, but you still set out on your own. That’s all I’m trying to do.” She quieted her anger and reached out to her father. “Thanks for coming to talk to me, Dad. It means a lot to me.”
Her father opened up his arms and Ruby slid into them for one last bear hug. He hummed a familiar tune that made Ruby smile. Together they sang as they held fast to each other.