She looked straight ahead and spoke in a loud, clear voice. “Your father had many friends. From the army, from his job, people he helped along the way. You only knew part of the story. There’s more to a salmon than the fin.”
In the shade of new leaves, we put him in the ground and covered him with dirt. Robins and thrushes sang in the bushes. Behind her black veil, my mother did not weep, but stood in the sunshine, stoic as a soldier. Seeing her there, I could not help but hate him for doing this to her, to the girls, to our friends and family, and to me. We did not speak of him as I drove my mother and sisters back to the house to receive condolences.
Women from church welcomed us in hushed tones. The house felt more cool and quiet than it did in the dead of night. On the dining room table lay tokens of community spirit—the noodle casseroles, pigs in blankets, cold fried chicken, egg salad, potato salad, Jell-O salad with shaved carrots, and a half-dozen pies. On the sideboard, new mixers and bottles of soda stood next to gin and scotch and rum and a tub of ice. Flowers from the funeral home perfumed the air, and the percolator bubbled madly. My mother chatted with her neighbors, asking about each dish and making gracious compliments to the particular cooks. Mary sat at one end of the sofa, picking at the lint on her skirt, and Elizabeth perched on the opposite end, watching the front door for visitors. An hour after we arrived, the first guests showed up—men who had worked with my father, stiff and formal in their good suits. One by one, they pressed envelopes filled with money into my mother’s palm and gave her awkward hugs. My mother’s friend Charlie flew in from Philadelphia, but he had missed the interment. He looked askance at me when I took his hat, as if I were a stranger. A couple of old soldiers dropped by, specters from a past that no one else knew. They huddled in the corner, lamenting good ole Billy.
I soon tired of them all, for the reception reminded me of those post-recital gatherings, only more somber and pointless. Out on the porch, I took off my black jacket, loosened my necktie, and nursed a rum and Coke. The greened trees rustled in the intermittent breeze, and the sunshine gently warmed the meandering afternoon. From the house, the guests produced a murmur that rose and fell consistent as the ocean, and every so often, a quick peal of laughter rose to remind us that no one is irreplaceable. I lit a Camel and stared at the new grass.
She appeared at my side, redolent of jasmine, her scent betraying her stealth. A quick sideways glance and an even briefer smile, then we both resumed our inspection of the lawn and the dark woods beyond. Her black dress was trimmed at the collar and cuffs in white, for she followed the smart fashion, twice removed from the haute couture of Mrs. Kennedy. But Tess Wodehouse managed to copy the style without looking foolish. Perhaps it was her quiet poise as we stood at the rail. Any other girl my age would have felt the necessity to speak, but she left it to me to decide the moment for conversation.
“It was nice of you to come. I haven’t seen you since when? Grade school?”
“I’m so sorry, Henry.”
I flicked my cigarette into the yard and took a sip from my drink.
“I heard you once at a recital downtown,” she said, “four or five years ago. There was a big to-do afterward with a ranting lady in a red coat. Remember how gently your father treated her? As if she weren’t crazy at all, but a person whose memory had come undone. I think my daddy would have told her to buzz off, and my mother probably’d have punched her on the nose. I admired your father that night.”
While I remembered the woman in red, I had not remembered Tess from that night, had not seen or thought of her in ages. In my mind, she was still a little tomboy. I set down my glass and invited her, with a sweeping gesture, to a nearby chair. With a demure and becoming grace, she took the seat next to me, our knees nearly touching, and I stared at her as if in a trance. She was the girl who had wet her pants in second grade, the girl who had beaten me at the fifty-yard dash in sixth grade. When I went off to the public high school in town, she took the bus to the Catholic girls’ school in the other direction. Vanished. Those intervening years had shaped her into a beautiful young woman.
“Do you still play piano?” she asked. “I hear you’re up in the city at college. Are you studying music?”
“Composition,” I told her. “For orchestra and chamber music. I gave up performing the piano. Couldn’t ever get comfortable in front of people. You?”
“I’m nearly finished for my LPN—licensed practical nurse. But I’d like to get a master’s in social work, too. All depends.”
“Depends on what?”
She looked away, toward the door. “On whether I get married or not. Depends on my boyfriend, I guess.”
“You don’t sound too enthusiastic.”
She leaned to me, her face inches from mine, and mouthed the words: I’m not.
“Why is that?” I whispered back.