Sitting at her kitchen table, Bernice imagined a series of houses cracking open like Russian dolls, smaller and smaller until the last revealed itself as a tiny pink stucco matchbox.
“What would I do there?” she said.
“Relax?”
“What about the store?”
“Oh, haven't you been doing that long enough?” “And where would I put my things ⦠in this ⦠coach house?”
“Well, of course you'd have to downsize,” Wanda said.
This new word chafed Bernice like ill-fitting slacks.
Downsize
seemed so smug and perniciously simple, as if the physical evidence of one's life, and the space it occupied, could be erased just like that.
“I couldn't. Why would I leave? I'm comfortable here, and there's so much to do,” Bernice glanced about her apartment, eyes landing on just a few of her beloved things. Wanda called her stubborn and Bernice said she'd think about it, immediately steering the conversation to the custom walnut deck for which Wanda was suing a contractor for poor workmanship, a saga her sister would never resist retelling.
On May 14, 1978, while sorting laundry in the basement of their building, Bernice had found a dry-cleaning ticket in the pocket of her husband's trousers. She stopped into the cleaners on her way
to work the next day and exchanged the ticket for a green evening dress with a mink collar, almost twice her size. She laid the dress over the kitchen table that evening and waited in the living room doing a crossword. Gus came home from work and entered the kitchen. She heard his keys on the counter. She heard the icebox open and close. Then, without a word, he left their small apartment. She waited up, but he did not return, that night or any other.
Some weeks later she quit Woodward's after twenty years there and set up a thrift shop just three blocks away in the basement of New Westminster United. She began by handing out the sweaters and slacks Gus had left swinging in their closet to some old down-on-their-luck drunks and went from there. Shortly after she left Woodward's, the department store slid into decline, and she liked to imagine it was due to her absence, though it was probably the malls and ever-bigger stores she'd heard were going up all over. Woodward's finally declared bankruptcy in 1993, and with it died the last reason for decent people to come down to this neighbourhood, once the teeming commercial hub of the city, now staggering deeper and deeper into the woods of poverty, neglect and despair. All the old businesses on Bernice's block had long vanished, swapped for cheque-cashing places, pawn shops and convenience stores. Over the years, through her thrift-store window, she'd watched the crippled loggers, hobos and drunksâbattered leftovers of the city's industrial heritageâjoined by the heroin junkies, who were joined by the crack addicts and then by those suffering every other variant of destitution. It became a neighbourhood at which people in their downtown-bound cars gawked like they were on safari. She'd seen social services come and go like occupying armies, stuffing her mailbox with their optimistic,
densely acronymed brochures. Most of them seemed out to get the poor wretched people more money, which to Bernice was much like heaving a thirsty man overboard, but she tried not to judge the social workers either. They were all trying their best.
The decline had only deepened the need for her services, and Bernice had to find volunteers like Tuan just to keep clothes on the racks. Busy as it was, the store only narrowly broke even. “As long as you need it,” Bernice would say to her pitiful customers, punching
No Sale,
a button more worn than any other on the register.
That afternoon she and Tuan were organizing the shoe racks, combing them for singlesâwhat she called shoes without a mate.
“I'm leaving the store. For good,” she said, trying the words out, listening to how they sounded amidst the shelves of used cookbooks and the mannequins in the display window.
“Thank you,” he said, relacing a pair of brittle, yellowed boat shoes. Tuan was volunteering at the store while the pastor and his wife helped him with his immigration application. Bernice never tried to correct his English because she didn't want to offend him. The pastor once said Tuan had a master's degree in philosophy, so she figured he'd pick it up soon enough. Anyway, she liked small talk kept to a minimum.
“This ones is stink,” Tuan said, pinching his nose, dangling a pair of steel-toed boots like roadkill before venturing out back to toss them in the dumpster.
Alone, she surveyed the store. There was, as always, much to do: organizing, pricing, sorting, displaying. This was no junk shop. When second-hand things were presented well, with careâtechniques for which she'd learned at Woodward'sâclothes folded or carefully hung, books categorized and alphabetized,
knick-knacks arranged attractively, they became items folks could picture in their homes, welcome into their lives.
“Donation!” she heard Tuan yelp from out back.
Lately, more donations were arriving than she knew what to do with, the two storerooms nearly to the roof with them. The rear doors of the church opened to a squalid alley where they pulled up in all sorts of vehicles to pop their trunks, lift their hatchbacks, say
this can go, and this, and this,
handing Tuan and Bernice their garbage bags and boxes. The donors were always pleasant but seemed uneasy, uttering few words. Perhaps they were ashamed of their surplus, Bernice had often thought, the sheer weight of it.
Today it was a tall, stately woman, definitely a women's ten in shoes, with sunglasses nested in her hair and cheekbones that rose neatly on her porcelain face. From her silver vehicle climbed down an unsteady, moon-faced girl in a princess dress. Flakes of sun leapt from her plastic tiara.
“Give the bag to the nice lady like we talked about,” the woman said to the girl, who took careful steps toward Bernice as though approaching a windy cliff. Bernice had been witness to these lessons in charity before, parents sandbagging Christian values nice and early in hopes they wouldn't be washed out in the tsunami of adolescence. In the girl's eyes, Bernice knew, she probably seemed something closer to witch than saint.
“These are my clothes,” the princess said.
“They don't fit you anymore, Cricket,” her mother said.
“What if I shrink?” the girl bleated, pressing the bag to her bulbous, sequined belly.
“Now that's enough of this,” her mother said, checking a thin gold watch riding the underside of her wrist. “Let's get
moving.” She reached into the back seat and set the last of their unwanted stuff at Tuan's feet. “Now,” she ordered, and Bernice caught a whiff of the woman's minty gum.
“Will you promise to take care of my clothes?” the princess asked Bernice.
“Oh, certainly,” Bernice said, keeping to herself the fact that other kids would likely soon be wearing her clothes, possibly muck-seeking children who might not take care of them at all. The girl knotted her glassy lips and handed over the bag.
As she watched them drive off, Bernice envied the rush of benevolence and general lightness these donors must feel returning to their homes, suddenly unburdened, free from what they no longer wanted or needed. She and Tuan dragged the donations into the storage room, where they could be gone through, appraised. Few of Bernice's customers had kids, so the princess's clothes would go to a shelter for battered women and their children a few blocks over.
Opening the boxes and bags was always thrilling, like the unsealing of mummies' tombs or the vaults of gangsters. As a girl, she'd dreamed of becoming an archaeologist until she discovered how many years of schooling were required and turned her ambitions toward more modest, attainable goals.
The most startling treasures she unearthed were the brand new or the valuable: clothing still tagged or wrapped in tissue paper; unopened specialty appliances like rice cookers or fruit dehydrators; futuristic basketball shoes, their jumping springs never tested; designer labels she vaguely recognized from billboards. Once there were sixteen mason jars full of change, mostly silver, that she'd dumped into the church collection bucket
upstairs; and always plenty of new dishes and kitchenware still stickered with prices of magnitudes that never failed to astonish her. Could they all be unwanted gifts? If not, how could someone pay so much for things they didn't need? And if they had once needed them, what had happened in between?
Equally baffling were the odd and used-up things the donors somehow imagined the poor could actually use: cracked helmets, expired urine-smelling vitamins, tiny musical instruments, perfumed negligees, mute synthesizers, their keys greyed with skin cells, couches shot through with black mould, long-expired canned goods, sacks of wormy flour, bloodstained sheets, broken crutches, ten-year-old phonebooks. She'd once got a silk parachutist's jumpsuit decorated with fluorescent polygons, and Bernice and Tuan roared at the thought of one of her customers sporting it to collect bottles then falling asleep in a park like an off-duty superhero. But it disturbed her, the way people failed to distinguish what was useful from what wasn't. The ability to do so seemed to her an inseparable part of getting by in this world.
She tore into the princess's mother's boxes, and under some musty, purple fitted sheets, inside a faux-rosewood case, she found a velvet pouch of collector's souvenir spoons. Shuffling them, she picked out the only one she didn't already have, its handle grazed upon by a gilded buffalo. She fogged it with a breath, polished it on her slacks, then held it up.
“Manitoba,” she read, feeling how the word made her mouth go as hollow as a birdhouse, then set the spoon aside. Later, she dropped it into the pocket of her camel pea coat before turning off the lights, locking up and walking for the bus.
Her apartment was half dwelling, half museum. She'd assembled her collection over the years, piece by piece, each object assigned its own special place within the whole. Something rested on every available surfaceâwide-eyed dolls, ceramic candy dishes, commemorative platters, a wooden Indian, plants both real and fake, three Bakelite radios, a stuffed squirrel, bottles and containers from products long discontinued. There were exactly ten decorative lamps in her bedroom alone, and every square inch of the apartment's floor not obscured by furniture was layered with a thick icing of ornamental rugs. On her walls, paintings and hangings shouldered for spaceâvelvet landscapes, nets of macramé, portraits of winsome children. This collection was not random; there were some themes: near the living room window lived a sanctuary of owl-related itemsâowl ashtrays, tiny china owl figurines, a hooting clockâand in the bathroom a nautical motifâa tugboat soap dish, anchor-embroidered towels, a miniature ship's wheel for the toilet flusher.
It wasn't that these things were valuable. Most were just plain strangeâtacky memorabilia and dead concepts of beauty to which Bernice had taken an unexplainable liking. Perhaps it was their very oddity she found so reassuring. Here in her apartment, she gave room to the rescued, the unlikely. They were evidence that not everything was used up and wasted, pitched away and ruined, a reminder that people made things and those things could be, if properly cared for, kept, possibly forever. She was, however, running out of space.
She clicked on some lamps in the living room and laid her coat over the arm of a chair. Then she set about hanging the
Manitoba spoon above her kitchen table in the decorative display rack. Donated years ago, perhaps her favourite artifact of all, the display rack was solid wood, probably maple, shaped like a shield, housing nearly one hundred spoons in total, all dangling from their hilts in fine array. She had spoons from countries the world over, others commemorating great events like the Queen's visits to Canada or Expo â86. At first she'd felt selfish bringing the spoons home from the thrift store, or any of the other donations she fancied, as if she were stealing from or somehow depriving the poor. But little good some sterling spoons or knick-knacks would do them; most of those poor folks didn't have homes, and certainly not spoon racks. It was the sad truth that the nice things would simply be wasted on them, and besides, there would always be more donations.
She sat at the table with a mug of tea and admired how the new spoon greatly altered the overall appearance of the rack, how the whole room sung with newness. She'd never been to Manitoba, but Gus had ended up in Winnipeg for a few years when he first immigrated from Lisbon, before the extreme weather and dearth of good work drove him west. She'd noticed him at Woodward's in the food floor's noisy cafeteria: a short, rigid man with a fanning black moustache that put Bernice in mind of a cartoon walrus or a Russian spy. The makeup girls said he drove one of the taxis that queued for blocks out front of the store. Each day, over the sandwich her mother insisted on tucking into her coat pocket, Bernice watched him devour a whole fishâone he brought each morning and somehow convinced the guys at the lunch counter to cook for him speciallyâwith a green cloth napkin sprouting from his collar. In him she'd glimpsed the same stormy assemblage of
charm, absurdity and selfishness she'd loved in her father. Their few instances of eye contact eventually drew Gus up the escalator, into the women's shoe department. He came every day for a month.
“One time, you don't even have to say nothing,” he said, fists over his chest like he was staunching a fatal wound.
“You are much too short,” she said with the playful abrasion she'd picked up from Carol, her supervisor, not intended to discourage.
“Okay, okay, I'm going â¦,” he said.
Left to herself, Bernice despaired she'd pushed too far, and continued to arrange a display of powder-blue baby shoes that were already quite orderly.
Ten minutes later he was back. “I'm ready now for you, yes?” he said, clip-clopping in a pair of size-thirteen Italian pumps that nearly brought him to her eye level.