Snakes
The summer I turned nine I went to
Tallahassee to visit my grandmother for the first and last time. It
was a hot, muggy summer, the kind of weather where you think it’s
going to storm any minute, but it rarely does. That much hasn’t
changed in sixteen years—not the weather, not my sense of
Tallahassee, then and now, as a place where your skin crawls with
the sensation that something urgent is about to happen, but you
never know what, or when. That first summer I flew to visit, I was
skittish as soon as I exited the plane from New Jersey, escorted by
a tight-skirted stewardess who handed me a gold plastic set of
pin-on wings before we walked to the arrivals gate.
My grandmother had me picked up from the airport by
a driver in a company car. The driver worked for a plastics company
that still had my grandfather’s name, though he’d been dead since
before I was born. The driver reminded me a little bit of my
father—he had the same reddish-brown skin, the same big smile—and
while we waited for my luggage to come around the baggage carousel,
he gave me a stick of cinnamon bubble gum that I folded and tucked
into the pocket of my shorts along with the wings, which I could
feel pressing into my leg. My parents, as consolation for shipping
me off to my grandmother while they spent the summer in Brazil
researching indigenous environmental activism, had loaded my
suitcase with books. It was something they did every time they went
somewhere without me. Along with the small paperback dictionary my
parents had given me last summer, I kept a couple of the new books
with me to thumb through on the plane: Introduction to Rites and
Rituals; Talismans: A Photographic Record, Natural Wonders
of the Amazon Rain Forest.
The book on talismans I found particularly
intriguing. I looked at pictures of stones and amulets, brightly
dyed pieces of fabric, small and elaborately carved sculptures, and
wished that I had brought something magical with me. I wondered if
gum or plastic was strong enough to be a talisman; I thought of
fashioning the wings into a protective necklace. My own
interactions with my grandmother had been limited: my mother
avoided family events whenever possible, and at the handful I’d
accompanied her to, my grandmother had barely spoken to me. She was
the only thing in the world I’d ever seen my mother scared of, my
mother who told offhand stories about living through monsoons in
Asia and military coups in Africa and near encounters with
poisonous foot-long centipedes in South America the way other
people’s mothers talked about what they’d had for dinner the night
before. Every time she got off the phone with my grandmother, my
mother drank a glass of wine, followed by three cups of Zen tea. My
father, who almost never yelled, raised his voice at her from
behind their closed bedroom door when she made plans that involved
seeing her mother, telling her she ought to know better by now and
refusing to go with her. They’d fought over sending me to my
grandmother’s in the first place, an argument I’d strained my ears
to hear and silently hoped my father would win.
Usually when my parents traveled, I stayed with my
aunt Claire, my father’s sister, but she’d been in poor health, and
my mother worried that having me for the summer would be too much
for her to keep up with. My father pointed out that I didn’t need
much keeping up with: I read books, I ate when compelled, I
sometimes wrote embellished accounts of my day in a leather-bound
black diary. I was the sort of child who generally had to be
coerced into playing with other children—the kind whose parents
took her to anthropology department cocktail parties so often that
their colleagues referred to me as their youngest graduate
student—but my mother had said it was too much to impose on Aunt
Claire, and anyway, it wasn’t me my grandmother hated, it was her,
to which my father had responded, Give her time. I rolled
the words over and over in my head, willing him to be wrong, but if
I thought my grandmother would like me better when my mother wasn’t
around, our reunion quickly disabused me of the thought.
“Unbelievable,” was the first thing my
grandmother said when she saw me. From the airport to her house, it
had been twenty minutes of loopy, winding roads, packed so densely
with trees that looking out the windows from the backseat of the
car, I could often see nothing but the green canopies that shaded
us. My grandmother’s house was at the end of a circular driveway, a
white wooden old southern masterpiece, with columns on the front
porch and a veranda above it. Coral vines crept gently up its
sides, and although it was only four bedrooms inside, at the time I
thought of it as a mansion: it could have contained at least three
town houses the size of the one I lived in back in Camden. The
driver removed my bags from the trunk and walked me up the stairs
to the front door. Instinctively, I held his hand as he rang the
bell, and squeezed it tighter as the door opened to reveal my
grandmother behind it, squinting at me as if her eyes were playing
tricks on her.
But for the expression on her face, the way her
eyes went from startled to angry as she said Unbelievable,
she looked remarkably like my mother. They had the same delicate
upturned nose and wide brown eyes, and the same fine blond hair,
though my mother generally wore hers loose, and my grandmother’s
was held back in an immaculate twist, and threaded with fine
streaks of gray. She stepped out of the doorway and gestured toward
the driver with one hand, motioning for him to take my suitcase up
the spiral staircase. She ushered me into the house, shutting the
door behind me. She gave me a perfunctory kiss on the top of the
forehead and reached a hand out to tentatively touch one of my
cornrows. She shook her head. “Did your mother do this to
you?”
“My hair?” I asked. I looked down at the polished
hardwood of the floor beneath me. My mother could barely do my hair
herself, and knew I’d never manage to keep it untangled on my own.
It was one of those things white mothers of black children learn
the hard way once and then tend to remember. Just before I’d left,
she had gotten one of her undergraduates to braid my hair in tight
pink-lotioned cornrows, so recent they still itched and pulled at
my scalp.
“Mommy can’t do my hair,” I said. “A girl from her
school did it for her.”
“I swear, even on a different continent, that
woman—When you go upstairs, take them out. You’re a perfectly
decent-looking child, and for whatever reason your mother sends you
here looking like a little hoodlum.”
“I’m wearing pink,” I said, more in my own defense
than in my mother’s. I had dressed myself, and Aunt Claire had
driven me to the airport: my parents had left for Rio the day
before. My grandmother considered my argument, evaluated my
hot-pink shorts as if prepared to object to them as well, but
before she could, my cousin Allison came bounding down the stairs
to hug me, blond pigtails flying behind her. When she threw her
arms around me and kissed me on the cheek, she smelled strongly of
sour-apple Jolly Ranchers and women’s perfume that she later
confessed she’d stolen from her mother.
“I think you look nice,” whispered Allison. She
took me upstairs to the room we were sharing for the summer, and
then spent the next half-hour helping me undo each braid, my hair
spiraling out into tight, disheveled curls. Allison had been my
parent’s ace in the hole, the only thing that kept me from trying
to secretly squeeze myself into one of their suitcases so they’d
have to take me to Brazil with them. Her parents were spending the
summer on a Caribbean cruise, and my uncle had suggested to my
mother that since she’d be at my grandmother’s all summer anyway,
it might be nice for us to spend some time together. Allison was my
playmate at awkward family gatherings, the person I made faces at
across the table at Christmas dinner the one year we’d all gathered
at her parents’ house in Orlando. (It was the last holiday my
mother had agreed to spend with her own mother. I’d heard her on
the phone last Christmas a year later, saying almost angrily,
No, we’re not coming. Last year she said she was dying, and then
she didn’t.)
Allison made those first few weeks at my
grandmother’s house bearable, almost pleasant. I’d never had a
backyard before, but at my grandmother’s we had an acre of
greenery. There was a lawn of impossibly bright grass, landscaped
with flowering hydrangea bushes and neatly clipped ornamental
shrubbery. Half a mile down the block, the manicured lawns of my
grandmother’s neighborhood gave way to almost tropical lushness:
hanging crape myrtles with vivid pink flowers and twisted,
many-stemmed trunks, tall oaks brushed with Spanish moss. When we
followed the gravel path off the main road, we found ourselves at a
lake about a mile wide; it took us the better part of a day to
circle its swampy edges. We shaded ourselves from the thick summer
heat by resting underneath one tree after another. The first time
we went to the lake, our grandmother admonished us never to do it
again, screamed at us that we had worried her by running off and
the lake was a dangerous place for little girls to be alone. It
went in one ear and out the other: we were already in love with
what we’d found there.
It wasn’t that my grandmother didn’t try.
She woke us up one morning with the enthusiastic promise that we’d
be going swimming. She had laid out clothes for us, and though
usually when we went to the pool at home I climbed into the car
wearing nothing but my swim-suit and jellies, I wanted my
grandmother to be happy with me, and wore the yellow sundress she’d
picked out. Allison’s dress was blue, which matched her eyes, and
the bow my grandmother put in her hair after she brushed it. My
grandmother tried to brush my hair, too, but between the muggy,
humid summer air and the ineptitude of my attempts to control it,
it had turned itself into a tangled baby afro, one that Allison’s
fine bristled brush did nothing for. That morning my grandmother
set out to comb it into pigtails, but after I began to cry from the
pain of her yanking on my scalp and demanded hair grease—which of
course she didn’t have—the comb finally snapped and my grandmother
gave up.
“Maybe the water will help,” she said,
defeated.
I didn’t understand why we needed to be so
presentable to go swimming in the first place—not until she turned
into the driveway of a clubhouse that looked like something out of
a fairy tale. Though we were there to swim, it took us two hours to
get anywhere near the pool. My grandmother walked us around the
looping paths of the private lake, encouraging us to feed the ducks
and asserting how pretty the lake was, as if trying to convince us
of something. She took us for brunch in the clubhouse; the tables
were a dark oak and the ceiling above us was decorated with
crisscrossing gold latticework. I made myself dizzy mapping out an
imaginary chart of constellations.
Halfway through our pancakes a woman in the tallest
heels I’d ever seen a person actually walk in came into the room.
“Lydia!” she said when she saw my grandmother. Until then I hadn’t
thought of my grandmother as having a first name. The woman’s skirt
swished from side to side when she walked, and up close, the thin
brown straps of her high-heeled sandals wrapped delicately around
her ankles. She kissed my grandmother on both cheeks and then
turned to us expectantly.
“It is so good to see you out again, Lydia,” she
said. “And who are these little dolls you have with you?”
“Marianne, meet my granddaughters, Allison and
Tara,” my grandmother said evenly.
Marianne’s face flickered for a second, and then
resettled into its previous blank enthusiasm.
“Ta-ra,” she said, stretching it out like it was
two words. “This one must be Amanda’s.”
Amanda was my mother’s name, but the way she said
Amanda, she might have been saying the earthquake or
the flesh-eating disease. Still, I didn’t think much of her
identifying me right away. Of course I was my mother’s daughter: I
had her eyes, her heart-shaped mouth and one-dimpled smile, her
round face, only darker.
“Yes, I remember Amanda,” Marianne went on. “I
guess she never changed, did she?”
“She grew up,” said my grandmother, with a nervous
laugh.
“They all do,” said Marianne, who went on to talk
about her sons, an orthodontist and a deputy mayor. My grandmother
looked uncomfortable, even after Marianne went to sit at her own
table. Though usually she advised us to chew each bite twenty
times, because we were young ladies, not wolves, she rushed us
through the rest of our breakfast, admonishing us that our eggs
were getting cold, even when we could still see the steam rising
from them. After the meal, my grandmother relaxed again, but she
made us walk around the lake for half an hour in order to let our
food digest.
When we finally got to the pool, Allison and I were
done with decorum. We threw our sundresses on the hot concrete and
cannon-balled into the water, ignoring our grandmother’s shouts
that we should be more careful, and who did we think was going to
pick our things up from where we’d left them? We played Marco Polo
while our grandmother sunbathed and read the kind of novel I could
tell from the cover my mother would have called the waste of a
perfectly valuable tree. When we got tired of Marco Polo, we tried
doing handstands in the shallow end, and seeing who could hold her
breath longest; and when that got boring, we played
rock-paper-scissors to see which of us had to get out of the pool
and go ask our grandmother for a penny to dive for. I lost. I
climbed the ladder and saw that my grandmother had been joined by a
woman in sunglasses and a straw hat.
“Grandma,” I called, and both women looked up,
startled. I asked my grandmother for a penny and she rummaged
through her purse to oblige.
“Amanda’s, I take it?” the woman beside her asked.
She said my mother’s name with the same tone as the woman from
breakfast. My grandmother nodded.
“What’s Amanda up to these days?” the woman asked,
pressing her mouth into a thin-lipped smile. She turned away and
reached for her sunscreen, as if already bored by the answer.
“She’s a doctor,” said my grandmother. I opened my
mouth to clarify that she wasn’t a doctor doctor, but my
grandmother shooed me away. I started to run off, then slowed down
behind her, waiting to hear what else she said about my
mother.
“Tara’s adopted,” my grandmother said. “From
Brazil. Amanda’s down there now. She always did have a good
heart.”
Here are some things I didn’t know then:
The summer she was fifteen, my mother was forever banned from the
premises of the Palisade Hills Country Club, after what was later
described to me as “a small vandalism incident,” in protest of the
golf course’s de facto segregation policy. The summer she was
sixteen, my mother, bristling under my grandmother’s restrictions,
ran away from home for several months. While she was gone, my
grandfather died unexpectedly, and no one knew where to reach her
until months after the funeral. My grandmother and my uncles buried
him alone, and never let my mother forget it, because no one ever
let them. Almost two years before I came to visit, a small cyst in
my grandmother’s breast had turned out to be cancerous. My
grandmother underwent a mastectomy, radiation, and reconstructive
surgery, and was only recently back on her feet. My mother had
promised to visit her in the hospital; she didn’t.
When we played in her yard, my grandmother
usually sat on the porch to watch us, but eventually the phone or
some other thing within the house called her away. Allison and I
ran. We went for the trees, for the gravel path, for the wonders of
the neighborhood or the seclusion of the nearby lake. Away from our
grandmother, we mimicked the lives we imagined our parents having
in our absence. We’d pretend to be my parents, carrying Natural
Wonders of the Amazon Rain Forest around the northern
Tallahassee suburbs, fancifully misidentifying dozens of plants,
insects, and reptiles. We’d harass gardeners and mailmen and
occasionally knock on the doors of my grandmother’s increasingly
bemused neighbors, calling ourselves ethnographers and asking them
to tell us about their people. Then we’d pretend to be Allison’s
parents. Those afternoons we stripped to our bathing suits,
slathered ourselves with coconut tanning oil (though I was already
browner than the woman on the bottle), and made over our faces with
Allison’s pilfered makeup kit. She swore her mother had so many
cosmetics bags that she hadn’t even noticed one was missing,
something I found shocking, having a mother who practically
considered ChapStick ornamental.
After our makeovers, Allison and I would climb to
sit beside each other on a branch of the biggest tree above the
lake, pretending it was a ship’s deck, and the water beneath us the
Atlantic Ocean. We imitated the way we’d heard adults talk,
complained about our imaginary jobs, the scandalous behavior of our
friends and coworkers, the way our families drove us crazy, and
about—we never forgot this part—how much we missed our daughters
and wished we’d taken them with us. I liked our pretend cruise ship
days because I imagined us glamorous, like Allison’s parents. When
I pressed her for details about their travels, she’d just shrug,
and say “How do I know? They never take me with them.” I knew
better than to say that my parents never took me with them, either,
but they talked to me enough that I knew all about where they had
been.
When our secret days were finished, we’d
cool off by dipping our bodies in the shallow end of the lake, and
then sneak back into my grandmother’s house, dripping some
combination of muddy lake water and suntan oil and high-end
cosmetics across my grandmother’s floors. On those occasions that
Allison couldn’t manage to charm forgiveness out of her, we
accepted our increasingly restrictive punishments with some
combination of amusement and grim determination: we cleaned
bathroom tile with a toothbrush; we were not allowed to accompany
my grandmother to the city on shopping trips; we ate Brussels
sprouts for dinner for an entire week; we were spanked, which was
new to both of us. My grandmother blamed me more than Allison for
our expeditions.
Though we were equally guilty, I accepted the
blame, knowing that whenever it was possible, whatever punishment
she gave me Allison would take along with me. Once we spent an
entire morning locked in the bathroom. I’d been ordered not to come
out until I had done something with my hair. We thought she was
kidding us at first, because the door only locked from the inside
anyway; but when we stopped laughing and tried to open it, we found
she’d actually taken clothesline and looped it from the doorknob to
the banister in order to shut us in. Originally it was supposed to
be for an hour, but when she told me it wasn’t even really a
punishment, because a girl my age ought to be able to brush her own
hair and it was a travesty that my mother hadn’t taught me, I’d
muttered that she couldn’t even brush my hair, and look how
old she was, and just like that one hour turned into six.
In the bathroom, Allison and I pretended that we’d
been confined to our cruise ship cabins because of stormy
conditions and choppy water. We sang “Kokomo” at the top of our
lungs over and over again, and when that got old we ran the bathtub
full of water and splashed each other until we were soaking,
complaining that the storm was so bad our cabin was flooding. When
my grandmother finally let us out, my hair looked the same as it
had that morning, only damper. Insufficiently chastised, we
collapsed at her feet giggling and shouting Land! Land! What
did it matter, what chores she made us do or how many hours a day
she forbade us to leave the house, when we had each other?
A month into the summer, my grandmother had
a brainstorm. She sat us down in the family room after dinner one
night, and told us that we absolutely must stop disobeying her and
running off, that she’d become very worried about us, and that the
next time we disappeared, she’d have no choice but to call the
police. We nodded our assent, but were doubtful. Our grandmother
had worried about what the neighbors would think when the gardener
took a week off and dandelions had sprouted in her yard; we
could only imagine what she’d do if people spotted a police car in
her driveway. Sensing our skepticism, she leaned forward in her
chair, looking first me and then Allison in the eyes.
“Do you know what’s living in that lake?” our
grandmother asked.
I thought we did. Minnows. Tadpoles. Mosquitoes we
regularly slapped off of ourselves.
“Snakes,” said my grandmother. “Snakes are in that
lake.”
I giggled. We’d seen the occasional small brown
garden snake; my mother had told me before she left that there were
a lot of them where she grew up, and I shouldn’t be alarmed,
because they were perfectly harmless. I repeated this to my
grandmother.
“Tell your mother,” said my grandmother, “that when
you leave a place for twenty years, a lot changes. They’ve got
these pythons that love water. Some idiots imported them as pets,
and now they’re taking over. A Burmese python can grow to be the
size of the both of you put together, and can get you from twenty
feet away. Sometimes they lay eggs in drainpipes, and the baby
python will travel through the sewer pipes and come right in
through a hole in a wall and eat their prey alive. When a python
eats something it eats everything, even the bones. Crushes them
completely. Lately there’ve been a lot of cats and dogs lost, even
a huge Saint Bernard—vanished. I’d hate to lose a granddaughter.
There’d be nothing left of you to find. Tell your mother she has
never had any idea how easy it is for something to be
destroyed.”
Two weeks after that, I fell out of a bunk
bed. My grandmother, sensing she’d gotten to me, had begun
elaborating on the latest exploits of the Burmese python after
dinner every night. A Burmese python had been caught in a child’s
bedroom in Orlando. A Burmese python had eaten an alligator in Lake
Jackson; a tourist had gotten a picture of it happening, before he
ran. A Burmese python came out of the pipes in a Miami kitchen; a
plumber only narrowly escaped with his life, and only because he
was too fat for the snake to get his jaws around. Three cats were
missing from the house at the end of the block: they’d gone out in
the morning as usual and simply never come back.
I consulted the books my parents had left me,
contemplating metallurgy and purification rituals as forms of
protection. Actually undertaking any of them was impossible,
especially when I refused to leave the house. It wasn’t just the
outside world I was newly afraid of: I was haunted by what my
grandmother had said about baby pythons, and imagined one growing
and swelling inside the walls even now. My grandmother had won one
battle—I stayed where she could see me, I tracked no more mud into
her house—but she hadn’t bargained for the way the fear would
overtake me. I was afraid of snakes, yes, but I was also afraid of
open windows, peeling paint, creaking floorboards, sinks, bathtubs,
and toilets. I dropped the talisman I’d made out of the plastic
wings and chewing gum down an open shower drain while trying to
wash myself and hold it under the faucet at the same time. I
refused to pee unless Allison held my hand, panicked when within
ten feet of a wall, and tried my best not to sleep at night. One
night, while trying to keep my body as far from the bedroom wall as
possible, I fell from the top bunk. I hit my head, hard enough that
it smacked sharply against the bare floor and Allison woke up
screaming at the sound.
By the time my grandmother rushed into the room to
see what had happened, Allison had already climbed out of the
bottom bunk to sit beside me. My grandmother ran for her first, and
I told myself, without believing it, that it was because she was
the one who had screamed. Allison extracted herself from my
grandmother’s arms.
“Tara fell,” she shrieked. “She fell off the top of
the bed.”
“Are you hurt?” my grandmother asked.
“I hit my head.”
My grandmother pressed a palm to my forehead.
“You’re not cut,” she said. “Are you dizzy?”
I shook my head no.
“Don’t move your head,” said Allison, who had come
by her medical knowledge through frequent viewings of her mother’s
favorite soap opera. “Grandma, she could have a concussion.”
“The bed is five feet high,” said my grandmother.
“No one has a concussion. And if I take you to the hospital to find
that out officially, they’d need to shave all those knots off the
back of your head to see your scalp. Go back to bed, both of you.
Come get me if you feel funny.”
I didn’t want to get back into the bed. I thought
briefly that if I went to the hospital, my parents might be called
and, upon hearing that the house had been overtaken by enormous
pythons, come and get me out of here, maybe Allison too. But it was
possible that no one would reach my parents. In any case, I
believed my grandmother about the head shaving, and I didn’t want
to be bald. I stayed on the floor, thinking that the ground was a
good safe distance from the walls and whatever might be inhabiting
them. Allison’s voice rescued me from the embarrassment of
admitting I was afraid to get back into my bed. “I think,” she
announced with the authoritative wisdom of someone six months
older, “you have a concussion. You shouldn’t move. I’m going to
sleep next to you so I can check your breathing.”
She pulled the blue blanket off the bottom bunk and
brought it to me. We curled up in the center of the floor, counting
our breaths in whispers until they came almost in unison. I opened
my eyes every few minutes to check the walls for any sign of
movement, and check that Allison was still there. Every fourth or
fifth time, I’d find Allison staring back at me, her two small
fingers reaching out to feel the pulse on my neck.
By the next morning, I was jumpy again. I
kept up my new rituals, persisted in refusing to go outside.
Nightly, Allison persuaded me into our bedroom, letting me sleep in
the bottom bunk with her. When I refused to even do that, she’d
sleep beside me on the floor. I spent most of my days in the center
of the living room. Among its advantages were a wall consisting
almost entirely of plate glass windows, meaning there was one less
direction from which I could be ambushed, and a wall of portraits
that—once I’d read through the last of the books my parents had
sent me with—I began to study in earnest, in order to keep myself
entertained.
There was my grandmother’s whole life, in gilded
frames: the family together, my grandmother younger and undeniably
beautiful, the grandfather I had never met. Pictures of my uncles
as kids, their hair pressed down so flat it looked like they’d been
wearing helmets before the pictures were taken. Uncle Mark and
Uncle Timothy at high school and then college graduations. Wedding
portraits, including one of Allison’s father marrying his first
wife. At the one Christmas dinner we’d spent together, my
grandmother announced the first wife was a better woman than
Allison’s mother would ever be. Allison had run from the room in
tears. Everyone else sat there like they hadn’t heard her. My
mother said later that if they’d all stopped eating every time my
grandmother said something honest but awful, they would have
starved to death before they were ten.
There were no pictures of my mother’s wedding on my
grandmother’s wall. The pictures of her stopped at sixteen. There
was my mother, wispy and young-looking, eyes wide open and
surprised. I imagined her daydreaming before the photo was snapped.
It wasn’t long after that when my mother took off on a road trip
across the country with friends who imagined themselves hippies.
Some of these people were still my mother’s friends, and in one of
their houses I had seen pictures from that summer: my mother
laughing and making faces in the backseat, my mother sleeping on a
beach somewhere. My mother didn’t talk about that summer. While she
was off with her friends, my grandfather was killed when his small
plane encountered a tropical storm and crashed.
In my grandmother’s butterfly theory, my mother was
the moth who flapped her wings in Japan and caused disaster; there
was an inevitable correlation between her being in the wrong place
at the wrong time and my grandfather’s untimely accident. I had
been given this secret knowledge too early to know what to do with
it. I was old enough to know better than to prod my mother with
questions, but too young to understand debt and obligation. Too
young to understand what my mother must have felt during her
mother’s fight with cancer, or to appreciate the uncertainty my
grandmother must have been living with. I was too young to
understand that a python could be not just a threat but a warning,
and too young to understand why this summer, of all summers, I had
been sent off as a flawed peace offering.
Allison got impatient with my refusal to
leave the living room. She tried to reason with me: “If a snake
wanted to eat us, wouldn’t it have done it already? If a starving
python was living in our lake, wouldn’t all the other animals be
dead by now?” I wanted to believe her, but then I pictured myself
being crushed into fine dust inside of something so big that no one
could hear me scream, vanishing without my parents ever knowing
what had happened. When logic failed, Allison retrieved my copy of
Natural Wonders of the Amazon Rain Forest from where it lay
abandoned and pointed out pictures of snake after snake.
“Look,” she said, pointing at a picture of a man
with a large yellow snake wrapped around his shoulders, two women
in the background looking unphased. “All these people who live with
snakes, and they haven’t been eaten. Your parents are with these
snakes right now, and they’re not dead.”
“How do you know?” I asked. They’d told me before
leaving that by a month into the summer, they would be unreachable,
leaving Rio for the dense territory of the rain forest, a place
where they neither sent nor received letters.
Allison gave up on me after that. She stopped
letting me sleep on the bottom bunk; she began to tease me about my
fears. I made a new amulet out of one of Allison’s barrettes and a
friendship bracelet she had given me; Allison demanded the barrette
back and, when I refused, ripped the bracelet in half. My phobia
was taking a greater toll on her than boredom. Being inside meant
she had to spend more time in the direct presence of my
grandmother. My grandmother quizzed Allison incessantly about her
grades, pulled her into the study to review brochures for day
schools she wanted Allison to be prepared to apply to next summer.
Allison’s credentials sorely disappointed her; makeup theft and an
active imagination were apparently not among the early markers of
genius. Her grades were not great, and her school records were
dotted with minor citations: Allison talked back to teachers,
Allison poured glue in someone’s hair, Allison stole the class
turtle to keep as a pet. When I overheard my grandmother grilling
Allison over these infractions, I shimmered with a kind of pride in
her boldness, but Allison’s explanations were alarmingly meek. Even
my grandmother noticed that Allison seemed to get in some sort of
trouble every time her parents left for a vacation, which they did
often, year-round, but Allison refused to admit to the
correlation.
My grandmother scheduled Allison for beginning
piano lessons, and took her for informal conversations with a
French-speaking neighbor. My grandmother didn’t invite me to come,
which saved me the trouble of refusing to leave with her. In any
case, she wouldn’t have had grounds to force me. My mother shared
her views on language and music, if not her approach. I attended
bilingual elementary school, and was in the school orchestra. Had
she asked, my grandmother would have found out that I spoke fluent
Spanish, and played the viola quite nicely.
There was a long time that I didn’t talk
about that summer at all, and then there were times when it was all
I could talk about. It was the sort of thing that made a person
interesting in college: My Youth as Real Live Tragic Mulatta. My
recovery turned my scars into party favors. If you had seen
them—the dot on my leg, the line on my elbow, the water in my eyes
when I talked about Allison—then you had something about me to take
with you. If you knew what was behind it, you had even more. If
you think your family was messed up, people would whisper,
you should talk to that girl. In my first year of law school
I was famous for using myself as the basis for a sample torts
question in study group. People wondered whether being so casual
about it meant that I was screwed up, or that I was OK. I couldn’t
have answered them.
A confession: because I didn’t know the difference
between kinds of intimacy back then, I told each of the first four
men I slept with that he was the only one I’d ever told this story.
Jason was the fourth, and the only one to call me a liar: he’d
already heard the story from my roommate the week before. According
to him, it was part of what made him like me in the first place. I
was so stunned that I kicked him out of bed and didn’t speak to him
again for months. But after he had left and I had given up trying
to sleep, I wondered which part of the story had drawn him to me. I
never asked, but I wondered. I wondered years later, when he called
the Yale housing law clinic on behalf of the New Haven
Register and, upon recognizing my name and voice at the other
end of the line, asked me to dinner. I wondered—it was a tiny flash
in the back of my mind, but yes, I wondered—when he brought me
takeout during finals week at the end of my second year of law
school, and I cracked open the fortune cookie and found an
engagement ring. Was it the part of the story where I was strong
that made me special, or the part where I was weak? It mattered
more than I could say.
This is what I told him: My grandmother, it
seems to me in retrospect, was a woman whose better impulses
frequently led to her worst, the sort of person who would offer you
a genuine favor, then punish you for having the gall not to take
her up on it. The afternoon I ended up in the hospital, I think she
started out meaning to help me.
“Look,” she said, approaching me in the living room
that day, bending down to my level to look me in the eye. “This is
too much. You need to go outside today. I’m taking Allison
swimming. You’ll come with us.”
“I don’t swim anymore,” I said. “Snakes like
water.”
“Be that as it may, they don’t like chlorine. Go
get your swim-suit on.”
“No,” I said. “I don’t want to be eaten.”
“Look,” said my grandmother, exasperated, “it’s
possible that I exaggerated a little, so you would learn a
lesson about running off. There is a Burmese Python, and
they have spotted a few in the Everglades, but no one’s ever heard
of one this far north, and no one’s ever heard of one eating an
entire person, and the only dog missing around here is that Saint
Bernard, who probably ran away because his owner is a fool and a
drunk, and he may not even have stayed missing if she hadn’t
written her own damn phone number wrong on the lost dog poster. Get
dressed.”
“I don’t believe you,” I said.
“Why would I lie to you now?” she asked.
“Why would you lie to me about it in the first
place?” I asked. “Either way, it makes you a liar. Maybe you just
want me to get eaten.”
“Don’t you get smart with me,” said my grandmother.
“I never took lip from your mother and I certainly won’t take it
from you.”
“Daddy says you took everything from my mother,” I
said, more innocently than was honest. There was a thick feeling in
my throat.
My grandmother’s eyes narrowed. She was silent for
some minutes. When she left the room I could hear my breath coming
rapidly in tune with her retreating then returning footsteps. In
the moment I first saw the gleam of metal in her hand, I truly
believed she was going to stab me.
She never said a word. She started snipping
quickly, unevenly, the rhythm of her anger punctuated by the
growing pile of tight black curls on the floor. It didn’t occur to
me to run. It didn’t occur to me that there was anywhere to go. I
don’t know how long Allison had been watching. I only know that
when it was over, and all but half an inch of my
shoulder-length-when-it-lay-flat hair was piled on the floor,
Allison was in the doorway, looking straight at my
grandmother.
She walked over to me and grabbed my hand, dragging
me toward the front door. I didn’t know what to believe about
snakes anymore, but at that moment I would have preferred being
inside a python’s belly to seeing my grandmother look at my
practically bald head like she had proved something to me. I
followed Allison down to our lake, climbed with her to the top of
our tree. We were out of stories, or we were out of words. We
didn’t pretend to be my mother in the Amazon, or hers on a cruise
ship, because we knew what we were right then: people too small to
stop the things we didn’t want to happen from happening anyway. The
bottoms of my jeans and Allison’s thin ankles were muddy then, our
socks wet from a puddle I could not remember having stepped in. I
looked down before I remembered not to. I saw our watery
reflections blending into one on the water’s wet canvas, pink and
peach and beige and denim softly swirling, and wondered how my
grandmother managed to see two of us so clearly.
“I want to go home,” Allison said. “I want us to
run away. I hate that woman.”
“She likes you,” I said.
“If she liked me, she’d like you too. You’re my
best friend.”
“No I’m not,” I said, and realized as I said it
that something about the last few weeks had made it true.
Then I saw Allison’s reflection lift her arms, felt
the weight of her palms on my back, felt myself rock forward. In
those first few seconds, I could feel the fall in my belly, a sharp
reminder of gravity, the constancy of the laws of physics even when
they run counter to everything else we’d have ourselves believe in.
We are safe, with our families, until we are not. On the way down,
I remembered dropping out of the bunk bed, thought about how much
worse the first moment of the fall had been than the actual impact.
I braced myself for the slap of the water, but was still unprepared
for the sting of it against my nostrils, the sharpness of the
underwater rock on which I landed.
I woke up in a hospital room with blue
walls. It was not my mother cradling my head and humming but my
aunt Claire, who, as always, had soft hands and smelled like peach
lotion. She was much thinner than she’d been two months ago: for
the first time I believed she was as sick as my mother had said and
felt the sharp stab of what I could finally name as anger fade a
bit. Aunt Claire apologized to me nonetheless. “If I had known,”
she said over and over again, “what kind of people they were
leaving you with, I would have insisted you stay with me.” Allison
had admitted what she’d done, and my aunt Claire had already
dismissed my grandmother from the premises, told the nurses she was
not allowed in my hospital room, though I couldn’t exactly see her
trying to sneak in.
The department chair had located my parents, who
were on their way home. I spent a few days in the hospital looking,
between the piles of blankets well-intentioned nurses kept putting
on my bed and the scratchy blue paper hospital gown, worse than I
actually felt. Help had arrived quickly enough that there hadn’t
been much water in my lungs. I had scraped up an arm pretty badly,
and knocked myself unconscious with some combination of fear and
impact, but the worst of my injuries was a broken tibia. Once the
wound above it closed and the risk of infection passed, the doctors
told me it would heal normally. Though my leg occasionally
throbbed, and the cast I wore itched like crazy, I reminded myself
that I was lucky. I’d overheard a doctor telling my aunt that if
the rock had hit my head two inches lower, the fall would have
killed me.
Aunt Claire stayed in a Tallahassee hotel until my
parents got back, visiting and reading me kids’ books. I was too
exhausted to pretend I was too old for them. She made me excited
promises about all the things we could do with my hair when it
started to grow back, and was always reluctant to leave me for the
hotel in the evening. I turned nine in the hospital; a nurse baked
me a homemade red velvet cake; the entire pediatric staff sang to
me; Aunt Claire bought me a beautiful set of turquoise-jeweled hair
combs to decorate my shorter hair.
When my mother finally arrived, I heard her before
I saw her. My parents had gotten in at midnight and come straight
to the hospital. It was one in the morning when they got there,
four days after my admittance, and they had to threaten several
overprotective nurses in order to be allowed to wake me. When my
mother saw me, she cried. My father was so wrapped up in hugging me
and so close to crying himself that I don’t know if he even noticed
her tears, but I wished somebody would have held her.
“I’m so sorry, baby,” she said when she had
composed herself. “We never should have left you. Allison is damn
lucky she called the cops, lucky you’re alive, and lucky your
father and I don’t believe in juvenile detention centers, or we’d
be pressing charges against her for pushing you off in the first
place.”
“Maybe it was just an accident,” I said. What I
meant was that Allison might have wanted to go home, more than she
wanted to hurt me. Hadn’t she said so? Hadn’t she confessed, even
before I was awake to accuse her?
My mother waved this possibility off.
“I called my brother,” she said. “They cut their
cruise short in Guam and came back several days ago. She’s got a
lot of problems that have nothing to do with you. She’s very
confused. This is all your grandmother’s doing. I’m sure if she
hadn’t been treating you so badly, Allison wouldn’t have thought
she could do the same. Why didn’t you tell me what was going on in
that house?”
I considered this. I was very
confused.
“You were in Brazil,” I said finally. “What are
they going to do to Allison now?”
“Frankly, that’s her parents’ problem now, not
mine,” said my mother, cradling me closer to her, and stroking my
still naked feeling head. “My only job is to take care of
you.”
But Allison was the other half of the
story; the half I didn’t tell because it didn’t belong to me
anymore. People would ask me sometimes what happened to her. “I’m
sure she grew up,” I would say, and they would nod at my empathy
and rarely point out that growing up did not mean and never
has meant the same thing as getting better. The truth was I
didn’t know much about how Allison was doing. My mother had
deliberately cut off contact with her family after that summer,
deciding the whole lot of them were toxic. I’d heard her though,
talking to my father about the fact that my uncle had decided to
leave Allison with my grandmother for a little while, to straighten
her out. “That’s a mistake,” my mother had said. “What an
unfortunate pair.”
An unfortunate pair. Her words were in the
back of my mind when she called me a few weeks after my law school
graduation. I had been hibernating, wearing headphones and
reviewing for the Connecticut bar, and it was only because she
called three times in a row that I bothered to pick up the
phone.
“Tara,” my mother said, “the first thing I want you
to know is you don’t have to do this.”
“OK...” I said.
“Allison is in the hospital,” she said.
“What’s wrong with her?” It occurred to me,
stupidly, that maybe she needed a kidney.
“She tried to kill herself,” my mother said.
“My God,” I said.
“She’s asked to see you,” my mother said.
“Apparently, her therapist thinks it would be good for her to talk
to you. I’m sure she wants to apologize in person. But I told them,
you have a life, too, and we’ll do this on your schedule, if at
all, OK?”
“I’ll do it,” I said.
My mother paused on the other end of the
line.
“I’ll book us flights,” she said finally.
“I can go by myself,” I said.
“No you can’t,” she said. “I don’t trust those
people with you for a second.”
Her fear was understandable, if belated. The year
after my summer with the unfortunate pair, I didn’t sleep
more than an hour a night. When I said so later, my mother said
that wasn’t biologically possible, and then changed the subject. My
father said it simply wasn’t true, because he didn’t sleep well
that year and he remembers waking up nights, walking down the hall,
and pulling back the blankets in my room to check on me. “You
slept,” he told me, “like an angel.” Perhaps they are right. When I
was very little, my mother used to say there was something of my
grandmother in me, in how I tell stories the way I need them to be
and not the way that they actually happened. In any case, I
remember staring at the ceiling every night for a year, tracing
shadow patterns with my finger. I remember closing my eyes whenever
I heard footsteps outside the door and relaxing every time I
realized it was only my father.
My parents were careful with me like they’d never
been before; I was in college before they were willing to let me
out of their sight for more than a few hours. Even when Aunt Claire
requested my company, to sit beside her bed and read to her those
last few months before she died, they were reluctant to part with
me. That summer was still with me somewhere, and so was Allison,
and my grandmother, but thinking about any of it was like looking
at an old photograph of myself, staring a long time and all the
while trying to figure out whether it was really me in the
picture.
And then there I was in Tallahassee again,
this time in a downtown mental institution, only the kind with a
marble lobby and a fountain on the grounds, so you were supposed to
call it a wellness center. I had waited for my mother’s flight at
the airport and had lunch with her when she landed. Though she
insisted on driving me to see Allison, she announced in the parking
lot that it was probably best if she not come in, and I agreed with
her. The grounds of the wellness center reminded me of the grounds
of the country club so long ago. Everything was flowering, in
obstinate resistance to the severity of its locale.
When I announced who I was and whom I’d come to
see, the woman behind the desk looked at me sharply for a second
but then looked again, nodded, and told me I had my grandmother’s
eyes. A nurse in a powder blue uniform escorted me down the hall to
a waiting area with plush teal chairs. I sat in one of them before
I even took note of who was sitting on the other end of the room.
My grandmother looked older, of course—her hair now gone completely
white, her face creased with wrinkles—but there was no mistaking
her. Her eyes were still as sharp as ever, her mouth still set in a
line of grim determination. Her wardrobe, though, was in a state of
disarray, her silk scarf tossed on the chair beside her, her blouse
and pants wrinkled as though she had been sleeping in them—which, I
supposed, was entirely possible. She looked at me, gave me an
almost smile. I tried to think of a comforting thing to say to her,
the kind of thing you would say to a stranger in similar
circumstances, but nothing came to mind. I focused instead on the
insulting giddiness of the waiting-room magazine covers, their
cheerful refusal to be about anything that mattered.
A nurse punctuated the silence. “Miss Ellis?”
She led me down the hallway and opened the door to
a room, but didn’t enter. I could see her hovering in the entry.
Before I walked through the door, I heard Allison’s voice, still
thick like sweet liquid. “You came.”
She looked worse than I was expecting, but I
already couldn’t remember how I’d pictured her all this time.
Certainly I was never picturing her in a hospital bed, with
bandages and an IV and a red plastic food tray in her lap. She was
thinner now than she had been when I had known her as a child; the
roundness I remembered in her face had given way to something
angular. Her eyes, which I’d remembered as being almost electric
blue, seemed gray in this light, and her long hair was feathered
with split ends. She looked exposed in a flimsy cloth gown; I
wondered if there were levels of crazy here, if some people
qualified to wear real clothes and others didn’t. I closed my eyes,
then opened them again. Allison smiled at me. I smiled back. I
looked around the room, wondering what was coming next. The clock
on the wall ticked loudly, as if counting down for an
explosion.
“What happened?” I asked, which was the most
delicate way I could think of putting the question. Something cold
flashed through her eyes briefly, and then she smiled at me again.
“I got divorced last month,” she said. “But I got divorced once
before, and I didn’t try to kill myself afterward, so I guess
that’s not it, is it?”
“I’m sorry,” I said.
“I probably should have learned my lesson about
marriage the first time.”
“Thanks for the warning.” I nodded at my engagement
ring.
“I bet he’s a nice guy,” Allison said. “Is he a
lawyer too?”
“Jason’s a journalist,” I said. “And I’m not a
lawyer yet. I just graduated.”
“Still, look at you now. I always hoped you were
doing well. Our grandmother would love it.”
The way she said it, it sounded like an accusation
and a compliment at the same time. I waited for her to tell me why
she’d asked me to come. To fill the silence, I told her a little
about school, about Jason, about the sample bar question essays I’d
written out and read into a tape recorder that I played so often I
could hear it in my sleep.
“What are you doing these days?” I asked
finally.
“Other than slitting my wrists?”
I flinched.
“I teach music,” she said. “We tried to make a real
pianist out of me, but I was never quite good enough. My heart
wasn’t in it.”
“ ‘We ’?”
“Grandma and I,” she said. “Grandma more than me.
My parents gave me to her after that summer, you know. They put me
in a place like this for a few weeks, and when I came out they said
they simply lacked the knowledge to deal with a child with
those kinds of issues. They moved to LA the next year.”
“I know,” I said. I had known, but hearing it out
loud still felt like a slap. “I never understood why you told them.
You could have said I’d fallen. I never told them you pushed me. I
never said that. I wouldn’t have.”
“I could have said a lot of things,” said Allison.
“I thought my parents would come get me and yours would come get
you. I thought if anyone got in trouble, it would be our
grandmother.”
“I’m sorry,” I said. “We were kids. We didn’t know
what we were doing.”
“It took me all these years to figure out that she
didn’t know, either. She had the next decade of my life scheduled
before my parents were on the plane. She was so scared to mess up
again that I was barely allowed to leave the house. I think I got
married the first time just to get away from her. She went on and
on about my first husband being trash. Her favorite thing to say
when I messed up was that I took after my mother’s side of the
family, and water seeks its level. I guess it never occurred to her
I hadn’t seen my mother in years, or that it probably didn’t say
much about her that I had decided that moving into a trailer with a
man who sold cheap souvenirs in the Everglades would have been
better than going back to her house.”
“But you went back,” I said.
“I didn’t know where else to go. So I lived with
her until I got married again last year. He was
grandmother-approved, but that didn’t stop him from sleeping with
our next-door neighbor. Maybe I would have been better off staying
in the Everglades. Lots of snakes there, but most of them are
harmless. Sometimes seeing one would startle me, and I would think
of you.”
I closed my eyes. I thought about all the things
I’d accumulated since I’d last seen Allison, and how absolutely
useless they seemed right now.
“Maybe you just need to start over someplace new,”
I said. “Get away from all of this. You could stay with me for a
while when they let you out.”
She parted her lips a little, like she was going to
laugh, but she didn’t. I tried to picture it in my head: the look
on Jason’s face when I told him I was bringing home a suicidal
white woman who had almost killed me once; Jason and I converting
the study into a bedroom for her, getting a piano, her getting
settled in Connecticut. I imagined our kids growing up together,
the way she and I had thought we would.
“Maybe I’d like that,” she said finally. “I never
thought of you getting married without me. Remember, we were going
to be each other’s bridesmaid?”
“I remember,” I said. “I was going to pick mint
green dresses, because that was your favorite color, and you were
going to pick orange, because it was mine. Jason’s sister is being
a pain in the neck and doesn’t want to wear the dress I picked out.
You should be a bridesmaid instead. I’d even change the color for
you.”
“You would,” she said. “But I just wanted to see
you. I just wanted you to see me. Take care of yourself. I really
am glad you’re happy.”
I looked at the clock again, then back at Allison.
It had been an hour; I was ready to go, though still uneasy about
why I’d been sent for in the first place. I reached for her hand
and squeezed it by way of good-bye. She didn’t ask me to stay. I
felt like somebody ought to stop me from walking out, like there
was a rule that you couldn’t leave behind such palpable need.
In the waiting room, my grandmother still sat. I
was struck by how open she looked, the way her grief pulled her out
of herself the way most people’s tucks them in. I felt bigger than
her for the first time in my life, but I couldn’t feel good about
it. I thought of saying something to her, but I didn’t know where
to start, how to explain who I was now, or what she’d had to do
with it.
“I hear you’re really something these days,” she
said when I stopped in front of her. “Congratulations.”
“Thank you,” I said, before I had time to regret
it. I turned my back to leave, waited for her to say something
else. I only heard her breathing.
My mother was still in the car outside.
When I knocked on the window to be let in, she jumped, then seemed
relieved to see it was me.
“I’m sorry you had to do that,” she said as I got
in the car. “You’re a better person than I’d be, in your
shoes.”
“I’m not,” I said. “It wasn’t a big deal. It was a
long time ago.”
“ ‘A long time ago’—Tara, we almost lost you. Maybe
you don’t remember, but to me it’s like yesterday. Like
yesterday.”
“How could you possibly remember?” I said. “You
weren’t there.”
The tone of my own voice surprised me. My mother
looked stung and I was sorry, but not sorry enough to apologize.
She bit back tears.
“Tara, don’t. I mean, not now. Look, I wanted you
to have your own life and me to have mine. I made a mistake,
putting you there that summer. But I loved you, you always knew I
loved you?”
I didn’t think she meant for it to be a question,
so I didn’t answer her directly.
“I didn’t mean it like that.”
I looked out the window, watching people at a park
through the glass. I thought of saying a lot of things that I
didn’t. I didn’t tell her how badly I had wanted her back, not just
that summer, but all the years before it; how those days she had
lain beside me in the hospital bed, for once mine and mine alone,
were among the best of my childhood. I didn’t tell her that every
time I took note of the scar on my elbow, I thought she ought to
thank me for giving her the way out of her mother’s house that
she’d never found for herself, no matter how many times she ran
away. I didn’t tell her how I had learned it wasn’t just snakes
that could eat you alive. I didn’t tell her what I had told no one
in all these years, what I had lied about even to the love of my
life, because saying it out loud would unravel so much. Whatever
motives Allison had for saying so—whatever she thought she saw a
way out of, or more likely, back into, in confession—there had been
no push, no one’s hands on my back. I hadn’t fallen, I’d jumped. It
was shallow water, and though as it turned out I’d been lucky not
to kill myself, at the time it hadn’t seemed like a long way down.
Twenty feet and I would have my parents back, I would have my
mother forever, I would have years before I had to consider the
costs. I’d been, for the second time that summer, less afraid of
the fall than what else I thought awaited me. That afternoon above
the murky water, which I remembered quite clearly, there had been
nothing but me, looking down at my own reflection, and seeing at
last a way toward what I wanted most.