JENNIFER DICKINSON
Violet, from The Night Edith Didn't Die
I've been going to the beach nearly every day since
I was born. Until three weeks ago. That's when my best friend, Violet
Frank, was found strangled in the sea grass near my house. I used to
go to the beach even in winter, which you know in Florida isn't really
the winter, just more like spring with a bad cold.
After Violet's funeral, my parents sent me to live
with my Aunt Tammy in Georgia.
"Just for the summer—until you feel like
yourself again," Mom said. My father said nothing. He never does.
The first night at my aunt's house, I lay in bed
thinking about As You Like It, the first play by Shakespeare
I'd ever read. I loved the part when the Duke banished Rosalind, and
Celia said to him, "I cannot live out of her company." When
we read it two years ago, I told Violet I felt this way about her and
she said, "Me, too."
Instead of crying like a giant slobbering baby,
I got out the packet of exams from my suitcase. They'd come with a note
attached telling me I could turn them in when I returned for tenth grade.
On the front page of Ms. Viceroy's English exam,
she'd written in curly purple:
"Dear Edith, I've really enjoyed having you
in my class. Though you were quiet, your written work was always exceptional
and I expect this essay will reflect your industrious efforts this year.
P.S. I am so sorry about Violet."
I'd kind of hoped she would have told me to call
her if I felt like it. Ms. Isabelle Viceroy was the only teacher at Dale
Brennick Academy who seemed real. She was only twenty-five. She had dirty
fingernails. And she kept cigarettes in her top drawer.
Once she said to me, "I know you think the
girls here are a bunch of coquettes."
I had to look it up, but "coquette" described
Dale Brennick's girls perfectly. They were always pawing each other's
new leather miniskirts and moaning, "You look prettier than me today!" Or
they whined into the locker room mirrors that their boobs were lopsided.
It was absolutely sickening.
Violet and I got teased for our vintage beaded dresses
and antique rhinestone pins.
"Prom today?" was the standard coquette
joke when we wore one of them. Then they'd all burst out laughing at
their stunning wit.
I wanted to confide in Ms. Viceroy because she seemed
like the one person who might be able to understand me. And I needed
to talk about Violet because with each day that passed, I felt like I
was losing particles of her. I began writing in an empty notebook I found
in one of my aunt's closets, and I spent the next few days sprawled across
her olive-green carpet, a cigarette in one hand and a pen in the other.
~
Dear Ms. Viceroy,
I have decided not to give an example of tragedy
from Oedipus Rex or Othello or anything else we have
read this year.
Instead, I will give an example from my own life,
which I think is far more pertinent to grasping "a dramatic, unhappy,
often disastrous event." I think the type of tragedy my story illuminates
best is Complex, though it is most certainly Pathetic, too.
Finally, I'm really looking forward to your advanced
class next year. I heard we get to read The Bell Jar, which
I admit I've already read four times. This is what I was doing when you
complained I wasn't contributing to class discussions.
Yours truly,
Edith Rug
~
Violet Elizabeth Frank and I met in the second grade
when our mothers were late to pick us up from school. Violet had just
started at St. Paul's Elementary and all the girls were enchanted by
her silky black hair and English accent.
I found her jumping alone in a mud puddle. Usually
she was surrounded by other girls and I couldn't believe my luck. The
minute I saw her, I jumped in the puddle, too. My mom was strict about
cleanliness—she nearly fainted when we tracked sand in the house—but
at Violet's side, being clean didn't seem very important.
When Violet saw her mother's car pull into the parking
lot, she turned to me and stuck out her hand. "Edith Rug, would
you like to be my friend? My best friend?"
I couldn't believe she knew my name. Some of the
girls in my class didn't even know it. I was always in the background,
hoping someone would remember I was there.
I put my messy hand into hers. "Of course," I
said. Then I whispered, "Are you a princess?"
All I knew about England was that Princess Diana
was one of my mother's idols. I figured every girl that lived there must
have some connection to the Royal Family.
"Why yes. I am . . . Princess Puddle. And you
are Madam Mud."
She touched a finger to my forehead, and all the
way down to my toes I felt a rush of excitement—like when you're
called on in class after you've been daydreaming and you actually know the
answer. I'd never felt that before. I was the kind of girl who laughed
at her own jokes because no one else did. Our P.E. teacher didn't even
make me play anymore, allowing me to sit in the grass and write little
stories in my notebook.
After Violet introduced me as her new best friend,
her mother told me not to call her Mrs. Frank.
"Makes me sound like a bloody grandma," she
said. "Call me Liza."
She wore a long, flowy golden skirt and her hair
was pulled back in a scarf. Like Violet, she shook my hand. She said
she was late because she'd been baking bread and hadn't expected to take
so long.
"Maple pecan, Mummy?" Violet asked, standing
on her tiptoes.
When her mother nodded, Violet clapped her hands. "It's
divine with orange marmalade."
"Edith, I'll put an extra slice in Violet's
lunch tomorrow just for you," Liza smiled.
When my mother arrived a minute later, her blondish
brown hair stuck out in all directions. She wore a long plaid dress and
brown flats and after looking me over, she exclaimed, "Honey, you're
so dirty! Edith, you know you aren't supposed to play in the mud!"
Then she apologized for being "delayed." I
knew she was only saying this because other people were around. She always
fell asleep watching TV, and I was used to the imprints from the sofa
cushions on her cheeks.
Liza introduced herself to my mother but instead
of doing the same, my mother rubbed at a patch of dirt on my collar.
Liza offered to take our picture. "I'm starting
a little photo project of our life in the U.S."
"What brought you here?" My mom asked.
"My husband desperately missed the sunshine
and his family. I absolutely love your drugstores. I can fill up on nappies
and get my favorite lipstick at the same time. Now, you two get together.
This is the first time Violet has introduced me to anyone at her school."
My mother objected, complaining that she looked
awful, but Liza insisted.
I still have both the pictures she took that day.
The first one is of my mother and me and I look miserable. Mom stood
behind me, clutching both of my arms, her sleep wrinkles still visible.
I remember I wanted to lean down and bite one of her knuckles.
That picture was stuck inside the back of a drawer
and I only found it last week when I was digging around for pictures
of Violet to bring with me to Georgia.
But the picture of me and Violet has lived in a
frame on my desk since my eighth birthday when Violet gave it to me.
We are the cutest things in the whole world. Violet's
dark hair is braided, or "plaited" as she always called it.
Mine's in a side ponytail, which is the retarded way I wore it back then.
Our faces and shirts are streaked with dirt, our knees are black.
I look at that picture as the beginning of my being
happy. I look at it as the moment my life became worth remembering.
~
The beach became our special place. We sat on towels
after school and told each other our deepest, darkest secrets. And our
secrets were never just about which boy we liked, though Violet always
liked more than one.
She worried when her parents fought. I worried because
my parents didn't talk. She knew I couldn't stand to be alone with my
mother. And I knew she'd overheard her father telling her mother he wasn't having
an affair, even though Liza had found a lipstick in his car that wasn't
hers.
All of these things we kept locked up inside of
us along with details like my tendency to suck lemons to keep from crying
or her hatred of sand.
Violet hated sand more than she hated broken glass
in the street. Or spiders. She couldn't understand why I liked making
sand angels and she always insisted on wearing her shoes when we took
walks. She said wet sand made her toenails itch.
But she loved the ocean. She always wanted to swim
out until her feet couldn't touch the bottom. Doing this always scared
me, but I never told her.
My dad rode waves with us most weekends in the summer
until I turned eleven. The day Violet told me she'd noticed he'd stopped
coming, a fact I was trying to ignore, my older sister Hattie was stretched
out beside us.
"He's afraid of your breasts," Hattie announced.
I told her she was being gross.
"We don't really have breasts," Violet
said.
"Edith does," Hattie said.
I felt both of their eyes on my body.
"It was the same with me," she sighed. "He
stopped going to the beach with me once I got breasts."
That's when I officially began to detest the growing
mounds on my chest.
When I got to high school, I wore two sports bras
and tried not to lean over for fear the boys would see down my shirt.
Still they met my eyes in the hallways, glancing
down and licking their lips—even though they called me and Violet
lesbian whores and wrote "Pussy Licker" on our lockers.
Violet laughed, called them androids. Of
course it was much easier for her because her body wasn't an issue. At
least it wasn't until a few weeks ago.
The newspaper showed pictures of the other two girls
Stephen Amos killed. Melanie Dupont and Amanda Jackson-Falls were both
short, with wide, bright eyes, and dark hair. The paper said all three
had "boyish figures." And when they found Violet, sand covered
her from head to toe.
~
At the beginning of ninth grade, we met Trance at
Einstein's, a dance club we'd started going to on weekends. Violet and
I loved Einstein's because it was as different an environment from Dale
Brennick Academy as we could find. Smoky, red-lit, filled with boys who
pierced their ears and wore pastel polyester suits, we'd decided it was
our heaven. Violet bummed a cigarette off Trance one night and from then
on they were inseparable.
Trance didn't go to Dale Brennick Academy. Trance
hardly went to school at all. She had b.o. and she was loud and she bragged
to anyone who would listen that she'd been allowed to pick her own name
when she was four.
More importantly, she could drive, which meant when
Liza and Violet had one of their plate-throwing, door-slamming fights,
Violet had someone to whisk her away from the crime scene. Liza referred
to Trance as "Violet's horribly rude mate." I referred to her
as the green-headed monster who stole my best friend.
Since Alan, Violet's father, had left nine months
earlier, Violet liked any reason to yell at her mom. Violet believed
Alan left because her mom was always accusing him of cheating on her,
and I always defended Liza because I loved her so much.
But soon it didn't matter what I said because I
was never around. I became less of an afterthought to Violet's plans
and more like a very distant memory. She talked to me at school, where
I was her only friend, but on weekends I didn't exist.
Then one Saturday in April, Violet called to ask
me to go shopping with her. I hadn't forgotten her birthday was less
than a month away, but I figured she'd skip the annual hunt for the perfect
outfit.
Birthdays were a big deal at Violet's. They always
took place in the Franks' backyard, which was like a tropical island
with all of Liza's neon-colored plants. Over the years they'd hired belly
dancers, face painters, astrologists, magicians. And Liza always made
something exotic for dessert—sticky toffee pudding cake, strawberry
starfruit pie.
I assumed that since Trance had come into the picture,
this would all seem stupid to Violet.
But Violet informed me they'd been planning it for
weeks.
"It's going to be a fifties prom theme," she
said.
"Trance is going to wear a dress?"
I'd never seen Trance out of her black velvet jeans
and combat boots.
Violet paused. I could almost feel her roll her eyes. "She's wearing an
army uniform."
I tried not to laugh.
"Well, Edith, do you want to go or not?"
Of course I did. Any excuse to be near Violet.
~
Trance drove us to our favorite vintage dress store,
Old Habits Die Hard. Because it was expensive, we only went there for
special occasions. The owner, Marjorie, shopped rich people's estate
sales and always had the coolest stuff. Violet announced what she wanted
the second we walked in.
"Something poofy and completely girly," she
said. "Something that will make me feel like a princess."
I hadn't heard Violet call herself a princess in
years. And I was especially shocked to hear her say it in front of Trance,
who was slumped in a chair, her eyes closed and her mouth set in a smirk.
Marjorie took off her cat eyeglasses and let them
dangle from the chain around her neck.
"Well, then, I think you should try this one.
I just found it and I was going to give it to my daughter, but I think
it could be the perfect thing."
Marjorie, like Liza, was another person I wished
could trade places with my mother. Her daughter, Maggie, sometimes worked
with her and they were always huddled together at the front counter,
trying on costume jewelry and singing along to the radio.
The dress Marjorie brought out was pink, and after
Violet looked it over she turned to me.
"I don't know about the designs on the front.
Edith, what do you think?"
Trance opened her eyes. "I hate it," she
said and closed them again.
"Try it on," I said.
I thought the sequined flowers were kind of tacky,
too, but I didn't want Trance to be right. And she wasn't. When Violet
whirled around in the dress, we giggled and clapped our hands like the
old days.
"That's the one," I said.
"Violet, why do you give a shit what Edith likes?
It's our party."
Marjorie looked Trance over very slowly, in a way
I loved.
"Are you looking for a dress, too?" She
asked.
"No, I'm not," Trance snapped. "Violet,
I'm getting cigarettes."
When she was gone, Marjorie disappeared, saying, "I
think I have a pair of shoes that will match the birds of paradise perfectly."
I went to the mirror and stood beside Violet. I
wanted to say so much. Somehow the dress had melted the wall—just
a little—that had been growing between us ever since Trance entered
the picture. And I was hopeful things could go back to the way they used
to be. Maybe they would have, but I'll never know.
"I think you look great," I said.
"Elegant," she corrected. "I'll look
elegant on my fifteenth birthday."
Even though she didn't have much of an English accent
anymore, she still liked the idea of being refined.
~
When Liza gave me the dress after the funeral, she
said, "He tore it off her like a bow from a present." Liza
had cleaned it and tried to sew up the holes, using safety pins on one
of the sleeves.
I refuse to take it off. Well, except when I take
a shower. My mom said Liza had "positively lost her mind" giving
it to me, and she begged me to get rid of it. She told my father, "It's
depressing how she wears that death dress." It's probably
why they sent me to Georgia for the summer.
I tried to explain it's like Jackie Kennedy, another
one of my mother's idols. The girls in History thought it was so disgusting
when Jackie wouldn't take off her blood-spotted pink suit after John
was assassinated. But Violet said it was how Jackie showed the world
she loved him.
Now I'm showing the world how much I love Violet.
Her dress is tight on me and I avoid mirrors because I'm sure I don't
look the least bit elegant, especially since I started cutting my hair.
But wearing it comforts me when I wake up from my nightmares. I find
her on the beach, our beach, her mouth stuffed full of sand.
~
Ms. Viceroy, not even Oedipus' gouged-out eyes can
compare with what I have experienced. I didn't just lose my friend. I
lost myself. I'm back to writing in a notebook like those pathetic days
in P.E., but instead of making up stories, I'm writing about Violet.
And now I know what it's like to laugh until my belly feels like it's
going to break. Now I know I'll never laugh that way again.
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