Don't Let Me Die In A Motel 6 or One Woman's Struggle Through The Great Recession (6 page)

I guess that “some behavioral problems”
included
:

H
er slugging me in the head.

“Ow!” I groaned,
slumping over my bed
.

“Are you OK?”
Aurora asked solicitously.
“Let me get you some ice.”

“But….” I sputtered,
overcome with the farce of it all.

You’re
the one who hit me!”

She was
a champion verbal abuser
.
She’d
been trained by the best – her Mom.
“You’re
a
fat
, ugly
bitch!” she’
d
scream at me.
“Your sister is right – you waste money
and never save
!
You should get rid of those horses!!”
She knew exactly what missiles to lob to exact the maximum hurt.

She was there to break up our marriage – to triangulate, as Nigel said.
Though he did his best to help.
She insisted on sleeping in our bed –
between us.

“What kind of marriage is this?” I
asked
the family therapist.

“She needs nurturing,” Nigel said.

Then
came The Incident, the demarcation
that plunged us over the DMZ.
I found out that
Nigel had
taken
a shower
with
her
.
Twice.
Ostensibly, to promote family bondin
g.
This was something he
’d
read in a book.


What forty-three year old man takes a shower with a twelve-year old girl
?!”
I screamed.
“This will
never
happen again, do you understand
me
?
Don’t you have an ounce of common sense?!”

He looked at me blankly.
Between his
intellectual hubris
,
immaturity
, and lack of experience in the real world, Nigel’s CPU
was devoid of the
Hey Wait A Minute,
What The Fuck Am I Doing?
chip.

The
general
vibe in our North Bend house, which had
been
pretty
OK
before,
devolved into something
resembling the Syrian riots
.

There was the time I had to grab
Aurora’s
arms and Nigel grab
bed
her legs,
lifting her airborne since
she was hellbent on attacking us.
When she
sang,
ad nauseum
, a little ditty
all the way down
(the very long)
NE 8
th
in Bellevue:
“My Mom is really really cool/My Dad is something of a fool.”
Multiply it by a thousand.
She would take off down the street, running for blocks until Nigel caught her; throw tantrums in the middle of Target
which usually involved hitting and the police.

She grew t
o hate Nigel, and
I
could
understand
why
.
His idea of being “a good parent” was to follow her around, scream at the neighborhood boy (who was
all of
four-feet tall)
who went
into the barn
with her
– to
fe
ed the horses some Mrs. Pasture
s
cookies.
I later
f
orced him to apologize
:
to a sixth-grader.

Nigel’s
OCD
took on the patina of
paranoia, and he started to read our emails; actually stood
against
the closed office door
of our therapist
, listening,
when I
talked to
her
alone
.
He had no clue whatsoever
about dealing
with a pre-pubescent girl.
He commented on
Aurora’s
“budding breasts”;
wanted to know her bra size.
I would creep out
to the drugstore,
smuggling
Kotex
like a drug
mule
, since
she
was mortified he would find out
she’d got
ten
her period
and
email
his
entire
Address Book
.

I was in the middle, and this is no tired cliché:
I was
literally
in the middle.
They would have their
altercations
, Nigel on my right and Aurora on my left, screaming over me and onto me.
I should have listened to my
work
friend Michele,
who
, prior to the adoption,
said
– and knew

“Having
children
changes everything.”

“I don’t think so,” I replied,
as
smugly as Nigel.
But it does.

Of course, life with Aurora was not
100%
awful
.
Between her explosive bou
ts, we managed to have fun.
We would go into the barn and do voices for the horses, sending them to school and appointing them
a lawyer: a
black
lab named Barky P. Esquire.
We would dance together in the kitchen, as my Mom had done
so many times
with me.
I would take her to the movies and to Krispy Kreme for a “girl’s day out.”
Being a girlie girl, she would give me advice
on makeup and hair,
and believe me
, I needed
it
.

One time, on a frozen trip to Leavenworth, she’d taken a pair of my underwear (“pants” in British) and attached them to a st
ick, forming a slick sailboat.
My
later
standup line
at The Comedy Store
?
(“That was fine.
But what
really
hurt was when she entered it in America’s Cup – and won.”)
BA DA BING.
Try the veal
.
I
won’t
be here till Friday.

In fact
,
I was the first one on that
2008
plane
out of Seattle
, minimal luggage in hand.
Destination:
Los Angeles.
Home.

DON’T BE A VICTIM

 

Tom
Wolfe said you can't go home again, but I did and found it strangely changed.
The
outer trappings were
the same:
same old
halted
traffic;
same dusty,
trash-strewn Valley; same sun

glorious sun

spotlighting
this desert
and making it
a place
with
More Stars Than There Are In Heaven
.
Koreans
still
rubbed sho
ulders with African-Americans (
and sometimes shot at them
)
; Latino gardeners staged hunger strikes for the right to rev their leaf blowers; and multimillion
dollar
Venice
townhouses
stood
a stone'
s throw from junkies
who threw
needles over the walls.

I had been gone for five years, and essentially forgotten.
I had missed so many
Hanukkahs
, Birthdays, Fourth
of
Julys
, that I had fallen off the A
-
list and
couldn't crash a
D-
list
party.
My friends were still around but in L.A.,
you rarely saw people even if you lived next door.
It was a silo
ed
society, each container
holding
a house/cocoon with a home theatre, and a similarly insulating SUV.
The sense of what Joan Didion
had
called "a form of secular communion"

driving

barely existed anymore, unless you were running someone off the road.

So back I ca
me, the prodigal daughter,
permitted to
stay in my
sister
’s
7,2
00
square-
foot house for the duration of
two
month
s
.
These
were
her
rules, and
s
he was
Queen o
f
Her Domain.
I tried to be as unobtru
sive as possible, staying in the guest
Blue
Room with its ceiling-mounted TV (what I really wanted
was a light so
I could read).
At night,
I
walked an enormous distance from the bed to the bath
room
(of which there were
four
, to paraphrase Mr. Collins
of
P&P
).

Unlike Nigel,
the first thing
I did was to try to find a job. My ex-boss Dale
put me in touch with
his ex-partner, Doreen, who
had a small FileMaker business.
FileMaker is a client/server database (I know this is fascinating), in which
, once upon a time, I
was
expert.
But
five years away from the software had made me
as clumsy as the S
carecrow
on his way to
Oz.

With typical hubris, I plunged into several of Doreen's projects.
She knew a lot, and was a
n excellent
teacher.
A little erratic, but who wasn't in this town?

I noticed a strange phenomenon.
Every morning, setti
ng out
in my Rent A Wreck
from
Rachel’s
Castle
On the Hill
,
I
had to hold
back
tears.
A great sadness would well up inside me, and not even the estrogen I was taking
– post-hysterectomy

could damp it down.
What was this about?
Was I missing Nigel and
Aurora?
Hell no!
I was in mourning for
WaMu,
my last warm, safe port o' call.
Now I was surfing boardless on a cresting wave, a
n
d where and how it would break was
anybody’s guess.

I
worked hard for Doreen
, trying to untangle the spaghetti code of others, but ended up b
eing hit in the face
by
a
big bowl of
same
.
I had
simply
been
away
too long,
had missed too many
releases
, d
espite my twenty years’
experience.
In short, I

she of the Regents Scholarship and 4.0 average; she who had understood
the
meaning
of
Ulysses

stunk.
I mana
ged to fuck up one database big
time.

"Hello?" I was sitting in the San Francisco airport, en
route
to
Seattle, when Doreen called.
She was pissed.

"This whole project is hosed!
You used the wrong tables and I sent this to the client!
I ju
st hope I don't lose them!
Dale
said you were good

I expected a lot more."

Other books

Elysium by Sylah Sloan
15 Years Later: Wasteland by Nick S. Thomas
The Cheater by R.L. Stine
Silver Wedding by Maeve Binchy
Heiress by Susan May Warren
The Carnelian Legacy by Cheryl Koevoet
Lies in Blood by A. M. Hudson


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024