CHRISTINE SCHUTT
Springerle
Her arms belonged to a Hattie, potato-white, fat-puckered,
floury, fat arms, which, when she lifted them to put away the jam, smelled
sour. Hattie was a sour-smelling cook, finished work and in a coatno
sweater! Ugly boots and too-small scarf despite the cold. Outside in a
running car Hattie's husband was waiting. He was the one to drive her.
These were the baking days, those sighing daysless light and nearing
holidayswhen he brought Hattie here in the morning gloom and took
her home, darkling.
Hard to see under the bill of his cap, a farmer's
cap, and he, a farmer, smelling of mucked stalls and cheese. We had smelled
him before. Mr. Rassmussen, Elmer Rassmussen as he was called by Nonna,
whose house it was where Hattie baked. "Mr. Rassmussen is here!"
from us in the mud room stalling for the cookies to cool, the awful sounding
cookies that tasted so good: Springerle. "Does Mr. Rassmussen
get any?"
Hattie says, "He has his heart to think about."
Phony eggs and no bacon are what he has for breakfast now, poor man! They
sold their chickenswhat's the use? Hardscrabble is the word
we think of, and the corn stalks' yellow clatter in the wind when the
wind blats through, as it mostly does, in our country in the dead of
winter. What a phrase! Don't use it. The dead go nowhere; we have
dug them up.
(Mother has some babies in the ground, but I think
they do not sleep.)
Hattie says, "Be careful you don't burn your
tongues," and she shuffs to the car in her furry-cuffed boots. The
path is all ice and she is stooped against falling.
The thought of her bare arms beneath her harsh coat
makes us itch. Let's never be poor!
~
Poor Hattie was farm-poor and ugly, ugly and poor
as the old women Nonna visited. Nonna took us to Miss Pearl's. "No
thank you," we said to her awful cookies, polite girls and sisters,
born years apart but matching. Miss Pearl, the dressmaker, pinned us for
approaching birthdays that to us seemed far away. March could not have
been as close as Nonna thought. All was drift or else instructions. Moments
of clarity and surprise, I remember, bright hurts.
(My mother's face in a mirror we once shared first
informed me of beauty.)
Frannie is oldest; I am youngest. A sister in-between
would be niceFrannie says. Frannie says it is sad about our brothers.
~
"Where were you girls?" from Nonna
readying for Christmas, needling sequins to a camel for a saddle. The
camel is for the three wise men. Across the desert! Under the stars!
Nonna didn't know about the dog, how he had plashed
across the river and come home steaming. She didn't know how long we had
played outside but that Hattie was here, yes; Nonna said she could smell
it, and we could, too: the onion odor of the woman mixed with butter and
almond. The coarse stink of onion grass and her rushed and dingy hairdo.
(Mother, I remember, unbuttoning even as she ran
up the stairs, crying, "I can't stand myself!")
~
One day the pocky rain beat away the snow.
We made toffee without Hattie in the kitchen or Nonna
to boss us. The toffee was oversweet and hot and dripped off a stickfrom
the garden? Impossible! Then our birthdays passed and we were in the garden.
We were shoeless, sockless and putting on a play that Frannie had directed
because it was her idea in the first place.
Frannie's flaxen braids went past her waist so she
could sit on them and play Rapunzel.
(Did I mention that our mother was an actress?)
Hattie was not a woman of expression or patience,
but she played our audience and gruffed, "What made you think of
this?"
Sometimes her surprise surprised us as when we piled
what we picked out, orange rinds from her marmalade, for instance, which
she then scolded us to eat. But who likes bitter rind in jelly?
And why not swig vanilla? The way it smelled,
we thought it would be sweet!
(She gets it from her mother they say about
me.)
Frannie is Frannie and good, smart, responsible,
those stout terms grown-ups use on us wearing their accurate faces. Hattie
does not have so many faces. With her it's glum or smile . . . and she
looks like . . . Eleanor Roosevelt! Hattie, apron off and in her everyday
clothes, looks like Eleanor Roosevelt, top-heavy, jowled, a preposterous
hat. Her teeth, tooHattie'sare made out of wood and wooden-yellow.
Nonna says to us, "Be thankful for what you've
got."
"I am!" Frannie says, and I say,"We
are!"
We are, we are, we are, we are everywhere running
through the house, shooed out of rooms. Go outside or watch TV!
In the old war footage the women wear scarves and
rush across rubble.
"Aren't you glad you weren't born then?"
Nonna asks because she was alive then. She lived through
the war although not as meanly; nevertheless, she says, "Really,
aren't you glad you weren't born then? Aren't you lucky?"
"We are!" but we like to pretend
we are the dispossessed, and we pick at Hattie's coffeecake to make it
last the war. The snow falls sideways; even what was close outdoors is
blurred in so much weather. Will Mr. Rassmussen drive through it? The
whiteness blows across the fields.
(I miss my mother.)
~
Stranded in the country! If the sander couldn't get
through to us, how could Mr. Rassmussen. Hattie said, "His heart
is old . . . I hope he knows enough to stay at home." By then the
phones were down and the deep house groaned. The sound was the sound of
ice settling over the lake, and we ran away from what we heard, ran throat-hurt
through our Nonna's house. The magical house, the big house, the house
I wanted as my own. The doors, when opened, huffed attic air, and we danced
across the ballroom and slid to the windows and saw snow blind close trees.
Who could get near us?
(In another house I put my mouth over Mother's and
cried down to a baby, Can you hear me?)
~
Hattie is shouting at the phone so Mr. Rassmussen
can hear. "See how the roads are tomorrow. Don't drive!" This
big, ugly woman is in tears. Thirty-five years and she can count on one
hand the nights apart with Mr. Rassmussen. They met when they were not
much older than we are. Their daddies farmed. But it's never been dull.
Farm life is full of incident: bladed equipment, animals, blood.
Tonight it's the story of the fox! Found midwinter,
his flattened, frozen carcass breaks in half when PJ bats with it. That
PJ! He came to collect Hattie once and walked in, calling, "Ma!"
There wasn't but the one car, and Hattie beettling to it.
Out here the land is vacant. The small fields look
sad.
~
We should have a fire and sit close, knee to knee,
feet to the flameslet the heat stun us! We should get warm enough
to wander. Nonna's house is very large and unlived in without kids. Nonna
says she loves to have us visit. "You have no idea,"
she says. We roam and look into and open; we make the house ours and use
different tubs; we strike fires in comfortable rooms because Frannie is
old enough now; she can use matches. She lights the library fire and we
laze and watch TV until we leave the dazing fire to lean against the windows
in the sun room with the parrots. How cool it is, but what is that we
smell? What is Hattie making?
Hattie says, "Now you're in the kitchen, you
can help."
We stand beating and beating the frosting; it catches
on our arms, so that we lick at ourselves until the frosting peaks, and
we can make a road down the middle. We're done! Done and dumbed with sugar
and listeningshhhhh.
The plough makes cow noises as it slogs up the hill;
and somewhere men in clouds of snow are tossing sand and shoveling. Mr.
Rassmussen, we hope, stays in; such strenuous work could kill himhis
heart. His heart and his back! Hattie hopes the man is smart enough
to make PJ do it. PJ is young. PJ is not much older than we are; but he
smells like a man to us, rust-red and dense from his sweaty exertions.
Unshaved, unwashed, uncouth. Uncouth? Frannie's word. She can be
a show off, Frannie can. She can smarm her way into something sweet. Hattie
simply forgets what time it isalmost dinner!and she tells
us stories. That day PJ and his older brothers went shirtless near the
forage blower and came out bloodied with their own blood or something
else's. Hattie's stories. The sick-making smell of skunk and the mutt's
whining home from it. Who dared go near him? Even when he smelled of himself
or of the sharp and marshy water he swam in, that mutt was not a dog to
get close to. The rats in her barn sleeked through the sileage, fearless.
Hattie's stories. Cows and horses, litters of kittens found egged in strawed
places, this was how she lived. She left out sadness.
~
This happened in the middle of summer in the middle
of another play of Frannie's devising. My part was small, but it called
for me to swing the hammock until Frannie fell out. Of course, she fell
too hard; but it was not, Nonna assured me, my fault.
Hattie said, "It's yews."
I hated Hattie then.
Frannie had her cast signed so many times it looked
dirtyit was dirty! but she wrapped her arm in plastic and held it
in the air when she swam, and she screamed if she thought I had splashed
her. "Get a towel!"
(Mother used a hanger and scratched her own back
bloody; I saw.)
Someone's coming; headlights rove over the snow,
and Hattie hopes it is not who she thinks it is, but his headlights show
in the falling: Mr. Rassmussen. The rest is darkness.
(They say our mother is happier where she is.)
~
"Lick," Hattie saying. "Lick
the spoon."
Forked butter in a cup of sugar, I could eat it all.
"Lick the bowl, too. You can use your
fingers."
~
What did Hattie know then that we did not?
(Mother had her secrets; she had more than most.)
The passenger door was ledged with snow that sighed
over Hattie when she closed it.
~
Come back!
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