|
ANGELA DAVIS-GARDNER
The True Daughter
This is what my mother told me, after the divorce:
During the time when she and my father were married
and my brother and I were growing up, she was living a fantasy. She had
an imagined family with whom she lived day after day, a husband who loved
her, appreciative children. For all those years when she was cooking,
planting hyacinths, driving me to swimming lessons and my brother to
violin, we were living side by side with a shadow family.
There was another girl beside me, just out of sight.
Now it seems that if I'd turned quickly enough I could have seen her,
but it doesn't matter, I know her, I knew her then, this other girl who
slept in my room. She rose to the alarm without complaint, helped with
breakfast and the washing up, walked down the hill on time for the school
bus, confident, responsible, in her bookbag her homework all in order,
concatenations of 5 apples 7 oranges 8 pears on trains approaching in
opposite directions at different speeds cleverly and neatly completed,
the pages numbered and named, while I was still wildly searching for
shoes, books, glasses, late, late, late, so that my mother, with no more
protest than a sigh, had to take me to school, and all along the way
perhaps thinking of the true daughter, already in homeroom at her desk,
reviewing her books, such excellent posture, knees and ankles together,
a pretty girl but not too pretty, not in the way that made men turn in
the street; no, it was wholesomeness that made her attractive, and her
sterling character, and she did not inspire in my father extraordinary
love and rage; furthermore, she was an honor student, a girl scout, a
home ec standout, and later a scholarship winner who wrote home from
college every week and always remembered her mother's birthday, wasn't
vain, didn't charge clothes for herself without permission, was shorter
than I, brownhaired, browneyed like her mother, smaller breasts than
mine, a reasonable figure, nothing to get worked up over, no salivation
from men wielding jackhammers, boys cutting meat in delicatessens, a
sensible girl, feet on the ground, no cause for alarm about pregnancies,
alcohol, drugs, commitments to the psychiatric ward, no sit-ins or protest
marches; but not dull either, mind you, a keen interest in birds, history,
gardening, needlepoint, and the cathedrals of Paris, which she and her
lawyer husband recently went to view on their 25th wedding anniversary
and sent cards home to Mother and to their children who are such fine
grandchildren, well raised, unspoiled, love their Granny, and when Mother
is a little older, they've told her, this daughter and her lawyer husband,
she is welcome at their grand house in Atlanta (near the Piedmont Driving
Club; he's old money) where there is a separate apartment waiting just
for her, tastefully furnished and spacious, bookcases, even a fireplace,
and a sunny window for her violets.
The apartment is just in case Dad—the fantasy
Dad—dies first. But he's still going strong, takes care of himself,
you see, physically fit, never drinks, he's a handsome man, not as handsome
perhaps as my real father but handsome is as handsome does and this man
is no philanderer, he cherishes Mother, has ever been kind, gentle, never
made her cry; a domestic sort, he calls himself, a homebody, modest,
conservative in dress, no bow ties or odd shoes, only four-in-hands and
wingtips; mad about his wife, really, but in a private way, only in the
sanctity of their bedroom where all is gentility, no unusual demands,
no garter belts or hint of the cathouse ever. He's churchgoing, maybe
a little more religion than she'd like but she keeps this to herself,
it makes him steady, a sober, astute man who never spoiled the daughter
nor could he be taken in by her, and who had man-to-man talks with the
son, on whom he's never used the belt, but has always taught by his good
example.
The imagined son is taller than the daughter, brawny,
resolute; his chin is cleft. He's no sissy, in spite of hours closeted
with the violin; no pansy as the psychologists predicted, and he was
not ever locked in his room drawing pictures of a man being hanged, a
man who closely resembled our real father. This son was an athlete early
on, lifting weights, jumping rope like a little boxer, so that he was
never the bullies' target and he could always stand up to his sister,
who no longer had any cause to gloat for he had friends galore, always
with a gang, the in crowd, and by high school—where he lettered
in football, basketball, and tennis—he was voted Most Popular and
Most Likely to Succeed. He was smarter than the daughter, too, by a long
shot: IQ off the charts, straight A's, honor roll; in college, dean's
list, valedictorian, even a Rhodes Scholarship, if he'd chosen. But he's
no pantywaist intellectual, no mealymouthed college professor, and though
there was a time of indecision—so many talents, which route to
take?—he did not need years of prolonged counseling, but confided
in his mother, who tactfully ventured few opinions, but was glad, secretly,
she knew it was the right thing because he was always drawn to helping
others, when he decided on med school and now he's a respected neurologist
who travels all over creation giving papers and of course he insists
on his mother having the finest medical care, Duke, Mayo, wherever she
needs to be, he knows all the right men.
When Mother died, eleven years after the divorce,
my brother was in a rehab drying out. She and I were alone in the hospital
room. Her eyes were closed; an IV dripped morphine into a bruised and
withered arm. I sat beside her, watching her small, pinched face against
the pillow, a woman I never knew, who never knew me. Finally I bent down
and whispered the question I'd hoarded all these years: "Was there
nothing in me that you loved?" Her eyes moved behind closed lids
but she did not speak, she could not, already she was moving down the
dark river, in the process of becoming a shade, and I thought, as the
light seeped from the room and our forms grew indistinct, that worse
than any answer is never to ask the question, for after our long silence
we were nothing to each other, only two solitary figures in an unfamiliar
room.
|
|