34. Chapter 32: A Brawling Woman in a Wide House

Educated:A Memoir / 你当像鸟飞往你的山

1When I next returned to Bucks Peak, it was autumn and Grandma-down- the-hill was dying. For nine years she had battled the cancer in her bone marrow; now the contest was ending. I had just learned that Id won a place at Cambridge to study for a PhD when Mother wrote to me. Grandma is in the hospital again,” she said. Come quick. I think this will be the last time.”

2When I landed in Salt Lake, Grandma was drifting in and out of consciousness. Drew met me at the airport. We were more than friends by then, and Drew said he would drive me to Idaho, to the hospital in town.

3I hadn’t been back there since Id taken Shawn years before, and as I walked down its white, antiseptic hallway, it was difficult not to think of him. We found Grandmas room. Grandpa was seated at her bedside, holding her speckled hand. Her eyes were open and she looked at me. Its my little Tara, come all the way from England,” she said, then her eyes closed. Grandpa squeezed her hand but she was asleep. A nurse told us she would likely sleep for hours.

4Drew said he would drive me to Bucks Peak. I agreed, and it wasn’t until the mountain came into view that I wondered whether Id made a mistake.

5Drew had heard my stories, but still there was a risk in bringing him here: this was not a story, and I doubted whether anyone would play the part I had written for them.

6The house was in chaos. There were women everywhere, some taking orders over the phone, others mixing oils or straining tinctures. There was a new annex on the south side of the house, where younger women were filling bottles and packaging orders for shipment. I left Drew in the living room and went to the bathroom, which was the only room in the house that still looked the way I remembered it. When I came out I walked straight into a thin old woman with wiry hair and large, square glasses.

7This bathroom is for senior management only,” she said. Bottle fillers must use the bathroom in the annex.”

8I dont work here,” I said.

9She stared at me. Of course I worked here. Everyone worked here.

10This bathroom is for senior management,” she repeated, straightening to her full height. “You are not allowed to leave the annex.” She walked away before I could reply.

11I still hadn’t seen either of my parents. I weaved my way back through the house and found Drew on the sofa, listening to a woman explain that aspirin can cause infertility. I grasped his hand and pulled him behind me, cutting a path through the strangers.

12Is this place for real?” he said.

13I found Mother in a windowless room in the basement. I had the impression that she was hiding there. I introduced her to Drew and she smiled warmly. “Wheres Dad?” I said. I suspected that he was sick in bed, as he had been prone to pulmonary illnesses since the explosion had charred his lungs.

14Im sure hes in the fray,” she said, rolling her eyes at the ceiling, which thrummed with the thudding of feet.

15Mother came with us upstairs. The moment she appeared on the landing, she was hailed by several of her employees with questions from clients.

16Everyone seemed to want her opinionabout their burns, their heart tremors, their underweight infants. She waved them off and pressed forward. The impression she gave as she moved through her own house was of a celebrity in a crowded restaurant, trying not to be recognized.

17My fathers desk was the size of a car. It was parked in the center of the chaos. He was on the phone, which hed wedged between his cheek and shoulder so it wouldn’t slip through his waxy hands. “Doctors cant help with them diabetes,” he said, much too loudly. “But the Lord can!” I looked sideways at Drew, who was smiling. Dad hung up and turned toward us. He greeted Drew with a large grin. He radiated energy, feeding off the general bedlam of the house. Drew said he was impressed with the business, and Dad seemed to grow six inches. Weve been blessed for doing the Lords work,” he said.

18The phone rang again. There were at least three employees tasked with answering it, but Dad leapt for the receiver as if hed been waiting for an important call. Id never seen him so full of life.

19The power of God on earth,” he shouted into the mouthpiece. Thats what these oils are: Gods pharmacy!”

20The noise in the house was disorienting, so I took Drew up the mountain.

21We strolled through fields of wild wheat and from there into the skirt of pines at the mountain base. The fall colors were soothing and we stayed for hours, gazing down at the quiet valley. It was late afternoon when we finally made our way back to the house and Drew left for Salt Lake City.

22I entered the Chapel through the French doors and was surprised by the silence. The house was empty, every phone disconnected, every workstation abandoned. Mother sat alone in the center of the room.

23The hospital called,” she said. Grandmas gone.” —

24MY FATHER LOST HIS appetite for the business. He started getting out of bed later and later, and when he did, it seemed it was only to insult or accuse.

25He shouted at Shawn about the junkyard and lectured Mother about her management of the employees. He snapped at Audrey when she tried to make him lunch, and barked at me for typing too loudly. It was as if he wanted to fight, to punish himself for the old womans death. Or perhaps the punishment was for her life, for the conflict that had been between them, which had only ended now she was dead.

26The house slowly filled again. The phones were reconnected, and women materialized to answer them. Dads desk remained empty. He spent his days in bed, gazing up at the stucco ceiling. I brought him supper, as I had as a child, and wondered now, as Id wondered then, whether he knew I was there.

27Mother moved about the house with the vitality of ten people, mixing tinctures and essential oils, directing her employees between making funeral arrangements and cooking for every cousin and aunt who dropped in unannounced to reminisce about Grandma. As often as not Id find her in an apron, hovering over a roast with a phone in each hand, one a client, the other an uncle or friend calling to offer condolences. Through all this my father remained in bed.

28Dad spoke at the funeral. His speech was a twenty-minute sermon on Gods promises to Abraham. He mentioned my grandmother twice. To strangers it must have seemed he was hardly affected by the loss of his mother, but we knew better, we who could see the devastation.

29When we arrived home from the service, Dad was incensed that lunch wasn’t ready. Mother scrambled to serve the stew shed left to slow-cook, but after the meal Dad seemed equally frustrated by the dishes, which Mother hurriedly cleaned, and then by his grandchildren, who played noisily while Mother dashed about trying to hush them.

30That evening, when the house was empty and quiet, I listened from the living room as my parents argued in the kitchen.

31The least you could do,” Mother said, “is fill out these thank-you cards.

32It was your mother, after all.

33Thats wifely work,” Dad said. Ive never heard of a man writing cards.”

34He had said the exact wrong thing. For ten years, Mother had been the primary breadwinner, while continuing to cook meals, clean the house, do the laundry, and I had never once heard her express anything like resentment. Until now.

35Then you should do the husbands work,” she said, her voice raised.

36Soon they were both shouting. Dad tried to corral her, to subdue her with a show of anger, the way he always had, but this only made her more stubborn. Eventually she tossed the cards on the table and said, “Fill them out or dont. But if you dont, no one will.” Then she marched downstairs.

37Dad followed, and for an hour their shouts rose up through the floor. Id never heard my parents shout like thatat least, not my mother. Id never seen her refuse to give way.

38The next morning I found Dad in the kitchen, dumping flour into a glue- like substance I assumed was supposed to be pancake batter. When he saw me, he dropped the flour and sat at the table. “Youre a woman, ain’tcha?” he said. “Well, this heres a kitchen.” We stared at each other and I contemplated the distance that had sprung up between ushow natural those words sounded to his ears, how grating to mine.

39It wasn’t like Mother to leave Dad to make his own breakfast. I thought she might be ill and went downstairs to check on her. Id barely made it to the landing when I heard it: deep sobs coming from the bathroom, muffled by the steady drone of a blow-dryer. I stood outside the door and listened for more than a minute, paralyzed. Would she want me to leave, to pretend I hadn’t heard? I waited for her to catch her breath, but her sobs only grew more desperate.

40I knocked. Its me,” I said.

41The door opened, a sliver at first, then wider, and there was my mother, her skin glistening from the shower, wrapped in a towel that was too small to cover her. I had never seen my mother this way, and instinctively I closed my eyes. The world went black. I heard a thud, the cracking of plastic, and opened my eyes. Mother had dropped the blow-dryer and it had struck the floor, its roar now doubled as it rebounded off the exposed concrete. I looked at her, and as I did she pulled me to her and held me. The wet from her body seeped into my clothes, and I felt droplets slide from her hair and onto my shoulder.