Read Catch Me When I Fall Online

Authors: Westerhof Patricia

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Literary

Catch Me When I Fall (3 page)

•  •  •

In June they saw the doctor—their second visit. “Tests look fine. Keep trying,” the doctor said.

“What if it doesn't happen for us?” Sarah asked Russell over burgers in the Red Deer Grille.

“Remember your vows?” He stuck a straw into his milkshake. “For better or for worse?” She took a bite of her burger and said nothing. “You know,” Russell said, “you have a bit of your mother in you. You think you should be immune from the worse.” He reached over and rubbed her shoulder to ease the criticism. “Besides,” he added, “remember Sarah in the Bible?”

Her other biblical namesake.


She
got pregnant.”

•  •  •

At home, she recorded the weather in her blank book.
High 18. Low 10
. She added a tiny
Russell is home for the summer!
Not a weather report exactly, but he did alter the climate. In a good way.

She fingered the spine of the book and thumbed through the blank pages. The secret code of God. Maybe Russell was right. Maybe she did expect everything to be easy. Maybe she was still expecting God to put the chain back on the sprocket for her. Maybe Marisa had something to teach her about doing the work of the church, even if she was more like a snowplow than an angel of mercy. Who was Sarah, anyway, to know God's plan for the ages? God's plan for her? She closed the book. If there was a plan.

•  •  •

Back in church, they performed the greeting ritual. They were getting better at it. She'd thought the reverend would back down when he saw their lack of enthusiasm Sunday after Sunday, but he hadn't. Now they seemed to be coming around.

He preached about the woman in the parable who loses a coin, sweeps diligently until she finds it back, and throws a party to celebrate. Sarah listened, her hand clasped in Russell's, her eyes on Reverend Dykstra. She felt fragmented. Part of her belonged, part of her didn't. Part of her believed, part of her doubted. She let go of Russell and hunted through her purse for peppermints. A crumpled scrap of paper found her fingers first.
God holds you in the palm of his hand.

At the end of the service Reverend Post got up to give the benediction. He raised his old arms high. “Now may de God uv hope fill yu vith all joy and peace in beliefing, that yu may abound in hope by de power of de Holy Spirit,” he said gravely. “Go in peace to luf and serve de Lord!” Maybe it was his accent, but Sarah heard, “Go in pieces to love and serve the Lord.”

She took her husband's hand and nodded.

Holy Earth

WHEN NO ONE
is looking, I snack in the pantry closet. Thirty-five calories in each square of chocolate, according to the Nutrition Facts on the package. The teal bridesmaid dress I have to wear next month will need alterations, but I snap off another piece.

Jen, Peter's fiancée, asked me to help with the wedding program. Says she wants to get to know me. I haven't agreed yet. Since I was a kid I've assumed anyone romantically interested in my brother must be defective. He's four years older than me and studies graduate-level environmental science at the University of Alberta. When he tells people this, he emphasizes “graduate,” and carefully pronounces every syllable of “environmental,” in case it's a new word for his listener. In case the listener is retarded.

After the wedding they're going to live in married-student housing. Peter will write his thesis and keep publishing his online zine,
Holy Earth!
It's a Christian anti-consumerism zine, kind of like
Adbusters
, only less well written—and more pious and self-important, since the authors feel they have God's stamp of approval. A few weeks ago, I heard Mom talking on the phone to my aunt. “I just hope Jen finishes her degree before she gets pregnant.” Jen is studying nursing. “At least one of them will have a job,” Mom said.

Peter is home this week, trying to get the wedding plans in place. Mom and Peter still aren't talking. At mealtimes, the silence festers like swamp gas. I gobble my food and take quick, furtive breaths between bites. Mom avoids even looking at Peter. Dad picks at his food before he disappears outside for a cigarette.

•  •  •

I gave in and typed up all the materials Peter and Jen want in the program. Sixteen pages. Multiple hymns and Scripture and the Prayer of St. Francis and a poem entitled “Together We Care for the Earth.” A month ago, we all would have overlooked what Mom calls “Peter's quirks.” Mom would have laughed with me, maybe teased Peter about the note he wants on the back:
We are glorifying God by using recycled paper in the program. Please join us for fair trade organic coffee after the ceremony.
But that was before the fight.

The guest list started it all.

“I don't see your oma's name on here,” Mom said. It was Sunday and we were having coffee after church. “Nor your Auntie Trena and Uncle Jan. They'll want to fly out for the wedding.” Auntie Trena is my mom's sister, who lives in St. Catharines, Ontario. Oma moved in with her and Uncle Jan after Opa died three years ago.

“That's the reason they're not on the guest list,” Peter said. “They would
fly
here.” Mom looked confused. I shoved a lemon square in my mouth and took some deep breaths through my nose. “Fossil fuels,” Peter explained. “I'm inviting a couple of guests from other provinces, but they're riding their bikes. My roommate Ron is going to make the wedding a stop on his sea-to-sea trip.”

Mom processes stuff pretty fast. I barely had time to fortify myself with another large square. “My mother is seventy-three years old,” Mom shrieked. “Your Tante Trena weighs two hundred pounds. She hasn't been on a bike since she was eight!”

“I know.” Peter was using his patient voice. “That's why I'm not inviting them. But I'll send them an announcement if you want.”


Verdomme!
” Dad's Dutch is pretty much limited to swear words. He still thinks we haven't figured them out; therefore he's not setting a bad example when he uses them. Mom glowered at him, then rubbed her forehead with her plump fists.

“You can't be serious, Peter. Your own grandmother!”

“You think I want my wedding contributing to the mess our environment's in? I'm doing what's right. You're going to have to accept this.”

•  •  •

I hate conflict. When I was little, I sought out safe and silent places, like the back corner of my closet, or the top of the VanderHeys' silo near our barn. I snuck cookies from the kitchen cupboard and savoured them in private. When I was about eleven, I read that even if you were in a completely soundproofed room, you would still hear noise: the high, tinny drone of your own nervous system. This made sense; in fact, I hypothesized that maybe my nervous system hummed a bit louder than other people's, that it generated a faint and irritating mosquito whine. That's why I felt so much anxiety, I thought, and why I ate a lot—I needed the distraction.

My eating patterns have made me heavy, and every now and then, I try a diet. Until the fight, I was on one. I started it at Christmas, when Peter announced their engagement and Jen asked me to be a bridesmaid. I don't like family events, and the thought of the wedding—all those relatives and their nosy questions—frightened me. “Still living at home, Erin? No boyfriend yet? Any plans to go to university? Not still working at that greenhouse?” If I were slim, I thought, I could get through it.

I tried a diet I saw advertised on the Internet. I spent a lot of money on this powder that was supposed to numb your appetite. You stirred one packet into a glass of water and drank the greyish mixture fifteen minutes before each meal.

When that failed, I found an article in an
O
magazine that advised overweight people to substitute positive self-talk for food, to “celebrate successes” and “take nothing for granted.” I tried it. Every day, at work, in the truck on the way home, even in my bed at night, I listed my accomplishments. Seedlings successfully transplanted. Rows of plants watered. Genial interactions with customers. I recalled kindnesses received. Warm smiles. The occasional compliment. I fingered them all like Smarties. And it worked. As I lost weight, I could imagine myself at Gull Lake this summer in a bikini, my straight blonde hair loose, my body tanned. Maybe someone would want to date me. Maybe I would quit my job and go to college, get a certificate in hospitality or interior decorating.

Now, I've gained back the nine pounds I lost, and more. I avoid looking at the teal bridesmaid dress. And at myself.

•  •  •

Mom has been harassing me. Mom is pretty for a middle-aged, big-boned woman, but when she's upset, she pulls her lips into her mouth and her eyes narrow and her puffy face turns red. All you see is furrowed eyebrows and blotchy folds of skin. “Talk to him, Erin. Maybe he'll listen to you.”

On Monday evening Peter was on the couch copy-editing
Holy Earth!
I sat down on the pump-organ bench.

“Do you remember how Oma had that drawer full of string and thread?” I said. “The leftover pieces from her sewing? She'd check that drawer first before using a new piece off the spool.”

“Yeah. She's always been cheap.” Peter kept his eyes on the copy. He looked awkward, his beefy hand concealing the mouse, his farmer's frame bent over the laptop he had perched on one of his broad thighs. “Comes from living though the war in Holland, I guess.”

“And remember how she resisted the dryer that Opa bought? Only used it in the winter? And she saved dryer lint—she won that contest.”

Peter's left hand travelled to his head, where his thick fingers clenched around clumps of his short hair. He moved the mouse and clicked. He's a lousy copyeditor, and the zine always has mistakes. “Mmm hmm,” he said.

“That contest in the newspaper. That column—it's still running: ‘Tillie's Tips.' Oma won twenty-five bucks for telling people to use dryer lint as tinder in their fireplaces. She framed the column—it was in her kitchen. And she saved her dryer lint in toilet paper rolls and gave it to the youth group at church to use for their camping trips. You remember?”

“So what? She was thrifty. What's your point?” Peter looked up, irritated. He shifted the laptop to his other leg. So many genes in common and so many years of living together and yet he can seldom follow my train of thought.

I was pretty sure I could hear my nervous system humming anxiously by then, so I said, “Nothing. Forget it,” and retreated to my room. But all week I have been thinking about my resourceful Oma. Peter could devote a whole issue of
Holy Earth!
to her. Oma froze her garden vegetables in margarine containers she had washed and stored. Sewed gift bags from old scraps of fabric. She saved candle stubs and showed me how to melt the wax carefully over boiling water in a pie plate and then pour it into juice cans to make new candles. One year we used ice moulds to make fanciful ice-sculpture candles—I gave them to my parents and my teachers as Christmas presents. Another year we cut little pictures out of magazines and Sunday-school papers and attached them to bath soaps with a thin layer of wax. Oma said if I used the soap I would have to remember to rub the non-picture side because the wax side wouldn't lather.

A month after Opa's funeral, just before I graduated from high school, Oma decided to move to Ontario. The arrangements were made quickly, and I cried when we drove her to the airport. “
Schatje
,” Oma said. “You can visit me. These days distance means nothing. Whenever you want to, you come visit me.” She hugged me tight. She smelled like anise cookies.

•  •  •

Peter and Jen don't want to cut anything out of the program. “It's really long,” I pointed out when I showed them the typed pages.

Reverend Dykstra said the same thing when he met with them in our living room last night. “You've invited the whole congregation. What if it's a really hot day? The church isn't air-conditioned.”

“Thank goodness,” said Peter.

“We're only getting married once,” said Jen. “We'll just tell people to talk fast.” She puts her hand in front of her mouth when she giggles. “And sing fast.”

“It's a lot of paper,” Reverend Dykstra tried. Sly man.

“We're using Organically Yours,” Peter said. Reverend Dykstra looked confused. “You know—that printer in Red Deer. A portion of their profits goes toward tree planting.”

I left the room to eat a Coffee Crisp on the back porch, even though it was really chilly. No signs of spring at all yet.

•  •  •

Peter returns to Edmonton tomorrow, thank God. But we have to get through today, and it's Saturday, so I can't even escape to work. Peter is working on an article, seemingly oblivious to Mom clomping around the house like an angry preschooler. I feel suffocated. I also don't want to admit to anyone that my dress no longer fits. What if it can't be altered?

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