The Inheritance And Other Stories Part 4
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The neighbor's cat came at once, and the ratty old thing let the fortyish man scoop him up and bring him into my living room, where he removed two ticks from behind its ears and then fed it the plum pudding in small bites. When he had done that, he picked it up and stared long into its yellowish eyes before he intoned, "By bread and cream I bind you. Nevermore shalt thou s.h.i.+t upon the threshold of this abode." Then he put the cat gently out the door, observing aloud, "Well, that takes care of the curse you were under."
I stared at him. "I thought my curse had something to do with me working at Sears."
"No. That was just a viciously cruel thing you were doing to yourself, for reasons I will never understand." He must have seen the look on my face, because after a while he said, "I told you, the magic is never quite what you think it to be."
Then he came to sit on the floor beside my easy chair. He put his elbow on my knee and leaned his chin in his hand. "What if I were to tell you, Silver Lady, that I myself have no real magic at all? That, actually, I climbed out my bathroom window and sneaked through the streets in my towel to meet you here? Because I wanted you to see me as special?"
I didn't say anything.
"What if I told you I really work for Boeing, in Personnel?"
I just looked at him, and he lifted his elbow from my knee and turned aside a little. He glanced at his own bare feet, and then over at my machine. He licked his lips and spoke softly. "I could get you a job there. As a word processor, at about eleven dollars an hour."
"Merlin," I said warningly.
"Well, maybe not eleven dollars an hour to start . . ."
I reached out and brushed what hair he had back from his receding hairline. He looked up at me and then smiled the smile where he always looked aside from me. We didn't say anything at all. I took his hand and led him to my room, where we once more disproved Lindholm's Rule of Ten. I fell asleep curled around him, my hand resting comfortably on the curve of his belly. He was incredibly warm and smelled of oranges, cloves, and cinnamon. Misplaced Dreams tea, that's what he smelled like.
And that night I dreamed I wore a peac.o.c.k feather gown and strolled through a misty garden. I had found something I had lost, and I carried it in my hand, but every time I tried to look at it to see what it was, the mist swirled up and hid my hand from me.
In the morning when I woke up, the fortyish man was gone.
It didn't really bother me. I knew that either he would be back or he wouldn't, but either way no one could take from me what I already had, and what I already had was a lot more magic than most people get in their lives. I put on my ratty old bathrobe and my silver ladies and went out into the living room. His sarong sheet was folded up on the easy chair in the living room and the neighbor's cat was asleep on it, his paws tucked under his chin.
And my Muse was there, too, perched on the corner of my desk, one knee under her chin as she painted her toenails. She looked up when I came in and said, "If you're quite finished having a temper tantrum, we'll get on with your career now."
So I sat down at my machine and flicked the switch on and put my fingers on the home row.
Funny thing. The keys weren't even dusty.
Cut.
And here is yet another of my stories that gets a bit too close to the bone.
Some stories, I feel, are written because the writer has a point to make. The writer knows something, or thinks he or she knows something, and intends to inflict that knowledge on the reader. At their worst, those stories turn into polemics or badly disguised fables with the moral shouting at the reader from the final paragraph.
I hope and pray that I do not do that.
Rather, I like to think (and please don't disabuse me of this notion!) that I write stories because I have a question. Not the answer, mind you, but just the question. The question at the core of this story is, Who owns the body? Is my body my own, to modify with tattoos and piercings? May I color my hair or shave it off, enlarge my b.r.e.a.s.t.s, or starve myself into bony submission?
And if the answers to all those questions is, Yes, you may, then at what point is society allowed to interfere with what I do? At what point do those decisions belong solely to me? When I am twenty-one or when I am twelve? May I make those sorts of decisions for my child, for religious or aesthetic reasons? Now we are on shakier ground, are we not? Do you immunize your child, straighten his teeth, correct a club foot, radiate his cancer, and circ.u.mcise him?
Or not?
Patsy sits on a bar stool at my breakfast counter. She is sipping a gla.s.s of soy milk through a straw. I glance at her, then look away at my rainforest cam on the wall screen behind her. My granddaughter had an incisor removed so that she could drink through the straw with her mouth closed. She claims it is more sanitary and less offensive to other people. I don't know. It offends the h.e.l.l out of her grandmother.
"So. SATs next week?" I ask her hopefully.
"Uh-huh," she confirms, and I breathe a small sigh of relief. She had contemplated refusing to take them, on the grounds that any college who wanted to rate her on a single test score was not her kind of place anyway. She swings her feet, kicking the rungs of her stool. "I'm still debating Northwestern versus Peterson University."
I try to recall something about Peterson, but I don't think I've ever heard of it. "Northwestern's good," I hedge. As I set a plate of cookies within her reach, I notice a bulge in the skin on her shoulder blade just above the fabric of her tank top. An irritated peace sign seems to be emblazoned on it. "What's that? New tattoo?"
She glances over her shoulder at it, then shrugs. "No. Raised implant. They put a stainless steel piece under your skin. Works best when there's bone backing it up. Mine didn't come out very good. Grandma, you know I can't eat those things. If the fat doesn't clog up my heart, sugar will send me into a depression and I'll kill myself."
She nudges the plate away. I smile and take one myself. "I think that's a bit of an exaggeration. I've been eating chocolate chip cookies for years."
"Yeah, I know. And Mom, too. Look at her."
"Doesn't it hurt?" I ask, nodding at her implant. I evade the topic of her mom. It is not that I expect my granddaughter to always get on with my daughter. It is that I don't want to be wedged into the middle of it.
My gambit is successful. "This? No. A little slit in the skin, then they free the skin layer from the tissue underneath it, slide in the emblem, put in a couple of st.i.tches. It healed in two days, and now it's permanent. Besides, women have always been willing to suffer for beauty. Inject collagen into your lips. Get breast implants. Have your ribs removed to have a smaller waist."
I give a mock shudder. "I never went in for those sorts of things. I think G.o.d meant us to live in our bodies the way they are."
"Yeah, right." She snorts skeptically and picks up a cookie crumb, then licks it off her finger. I catch a brief glimpse of her tongue stud. "You made Mom wear braces on her teeth for two years. She's always telling me what a pain that was."
"That was different. That was for health as much as for appearances."
"Oh, let's be honest, Gran." Patsy leans forward on her elbow and fixes me with her best piercing glance. "You didn't take her to an orthodontist because you were worried she couldn't chew a steak. She told me the kids at school were calling her *Fang'."
I wince at the memory of my twelve-year-old in tears. It had taken me an hour to get her to tell me why. Katie was never as forthcoming as her own daughter is. "Well, appearance was part of it. It was affecting her self-esteem. But straight teeth are important to lifelong health and-"
"Yeah, but the point it, it was plastic surgery. For the sake of how she looked. And it hurt her."
I feel suddenly defensive. Patsy is going over all this as if it is a well-rehea.r.s.ed argument. "Well, at least it's more constructive than some of the ways you hurt yourself. Tattoos, body piercing, tooth removal. It worries me, frankly, that so many people can damage their bodies for the sake of a fad."
"Hardly a fad, Gran. People have been doing it for thousands of years. It's not just that it looks good, it makes a point about yourself. That you have the will to make yourself who you want to be. Even if it means a little pain."
"Or a lot of infection."
"Not with that new antibiotic. It kills everything."
"That's what worries me," I mutter.
I take another cookie. Nothing betrays my amus.e.m.e.nt as Patsy absentmindedly takes one and dunks it in her milk. She slurps off a bite, then says with a full mouth, "I've been thinking about getting cut myself."
"Cut?" The bottom drops out of my stomach. I'd seen it on the netnews. "Like a joint off your little fingers like that one group of kids did? To express solidarity with one another." An almost worse thought finds me. "Not that facial scarification they do with the razor blades and ash?"
She laughs aloud and my anxiety eases. "No, Granma!" She hops off her stool and grabs her groin. "Cut! Here, you know."
"No, I don't know."
"Circ.u.mcision. Everyone's talking about it. Here." While I am still gaping at her, she takes her net link from her collar and points it at my wall screen. My rainforest cam scene gives way to one of her favorite links. I cringe at what I see. Some net star in a glam pose has her legs spread. Larger than life, she fills my wall. Head thrown back, hair cascading over her shoulders, she is sharing with us her freshly healed female circ.u.mcision. Symmetrical and surgically precise are the cleanly healed cuts, but all I can see is the absence of the flesh that should be there. I turn away, sickened by the slick pink scars, but Patsy stares, fascinated. "Doesn't it look cool? In the interview, she says she did it to get a role. She wanted to show the producer her absolute commitment to the project. But now she loves it. She says she feels cleaner, that she has cut a lot of animal urges out of her life. When she has s.e.x now . . . here, I can just play the interview for you-"
"No, thanks," I say faintly. I tap my master control, and the screen goes completely blank. After what I have just seen, I could not bear the beauty of the rainforest cam with the wet dripping leaves and the calling birds everywhere. I take a breath. "Patsy, you can't be serious."
She clips her link back onto her collar and pops back onto her stool. "You know I am, Granma. At least you aren't going all meltdown like Mom did."
"She knows you want to do this?" I can't grasp any of it, not that some women do this voluntarily, not that Patsy wants to do it, not that Katie knows.
Patsy crunches down the rest of her cookie. "She knows I'm going to do it. Me and Ticia and Samantha. Mary Porter, too. We'll be like a circ.u.mcision group, like some African tribes had. We've grown up together. The ceremony will be a bond between us the rest of our lives."
"Ceremony." I don't know when I stood up. I sit back down. I press my knees together because they are shaking. Not to protect my own genitals.
"Of course. At the full moon. The midwife who does it has this wonderful setting; it's an open field with these big old rocks sticking up out of it, and the river flowing by where you can hear it."
"A midwife does this?"
"Well, she used to be a midwife. Now she says she only does circ.u.mcisions, that this is more symbolic and fulfilling to her than delivering babies. But she is medically trained. Everything will be sterilized, and she uses antibiotics and all that stuff. So it's safe."
I suppose I should be relieved they are not using broken gla.s.s or old razor blades. "I don't get it," I say at last. I peer at my granddaughter. "Is this some sort of religious thing?"
She bursts out laughing. "No!" she sputters at last. "Granma! You know I don't go for that cult stuff. This is just about me taking control of my own life. Saying that s.e.x doesn't run me, that I won't choose a man just because I'm h.o.r.n.y for him, that I'm more than that."
"You're giving up s.e.xual fulfillment for the rest of your life." I state it flatly, wanting her to hear how permanent it is.
"Granma, o.r.g.a.s.m isn't s.e.xual fulfillment. o.r.g.a.s.m isn't that much better than taking a good s.h.i.+t."
I smile in spite of myself. "Then you're sleeping with the wrong boys. Your grandfather-"
She covers her ears in mock horror. "Don't gross me out with old-people s.e.x stories. Ew!" She drops her hands. "s.e.xual fulfillment-that's like code words that say women are about s.e.x. Women need s.e.xual fulfillment, like it's more important than being a fulfilled person."
We are arguing semantics when what I want to tell her is not to let some fanatic cut her sweet young flesh away from her body. Don't let anyone steal that much of you, I want to say. I don't. I suddenly understand how grave this is. If I become too serious, she won't hear me at all. She is poking me, trying to provoke me to act like a parent. I hold myself back from that futile abyss. Reasoning with her won't work. Get her to talk, and maybe she will talk herself out of it.
"Have you any idea how much it's going to hurt? Well, I'm sure she'll use an anesthetic for the surgery, but afterward when you're healing-"
"Duh! That would defeat the whole purpose. No anesthetic. It would go against the traditions of female circ.u.mcision throughout the world. Ticia and Mary and Sam and I will be there for each other. It will be just women sharing their courage with other women."
"Female circ.u.mcision was invented by men!" I retort. "To keep women at home and subservient to them. To take away a precious part of their lives. Patsy, think about this. You're young. Once done, you can't go back."
"Sure you can. At the midwife's site, there's a link to a place that can make you look like you did before. Here." She is fiddling with her net link. I press the Off on my master control again.
"That's appearance, not functionality."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes. And you should know that much before you get into this. I can't understand how that woman can do this to girls." The parent part is getting the better of me. I clamp my lips down.
Patsy shakes her head at me. "Granma! It has always been women doing it to other women, in all the cultures. Look." She reaches over to push my master b.u.t.ton back On. "Here's a link to her website. Go look at it. She has all the historical stuff posted there. You like anthropology. You should be fascinated."
I stare at her, defeated. She is so sure. She argues well, and she is not stupid. She is not even ignorant. She is merely young and in the throes of her time. Patsy will do this if she is not stopped. I don't know how to stop her. Her words come back to me. Women doing it to other women. Women perpetuating this maiming. I try to imagine what she must be like. I can't. "I'd have to meet her," I say to myself.
Patsy brightens. "I hoped you would. Look. On her site, my link is the Moon Sisters. Our pa.s.sword is Luna. Because we chose the full moon. There's pictures of us, and the date and time and place. You're invited. Mary wanted to have a webcam on the ceremony, but we voted her down. This is private. For us. But I'd like you to be there."
"Will your mom be there?"
Again her snort of disbelief. "Mom? Of course not. She gets all worked up whenever I talk about it. She threatened to kill our midwife. Can you believe that? I asked her if she ever bombed abortion clinics when she was a kid. She said it wasn't the same thing at all. Sure it is, I told her. It's all about choice, isn't it? Women making their own s.e.xual choices." Her beeper chimes and she leaps from the stool. "Wow, I've got to get going. Big date with Teddy tonight."
I make my last stand. "How does Teddy feel about this?"
She shakes her head at me. "You just don't get it, Granma. It's not about Teddy. It's my choice. But he's excited. After this, if I have s.e.x with him, he'll know it's not because I'm h.o.r.n.y at the moment, but because I want to give that to him. And I think he's excited because it will be different. Tighter because of how she sews us up. You know men."
She doesn't wait for an answer from me, which is good, because right now I am sure that I don't even know women, let alone men. As soon as she is out the door, I phone Katie. In a moment, I see her in the corner of my wall screen, but she does not meet my eyes. She is looking past me, at something on her own wall screen. I stare for a moment at my beautiful talented daughter. By a supreme effort of will, I don't shriek, "Circ.u.mcision! Patsy! Help!" Instead I say, "Hi, whatchadoing?"
"Sorting beads from the St. Katherine site. It's fascinating. You know my beadmaker from the Charlotte site? Well, I'm finding her work here, too. They're unmistakably hers from the a.n.a.lysis. Which means these people traded over a far greater area than we first supposed."
"Or that the trade network was greater." I have to smile at her. She is so intent, her eyes roving over the screen as she continues working. When she is enraptured in her archaeology like this, she suddenly looks eighteen again. There is that fierceness to her stare. I am so proud of her and all that she is. She nods her agreement. I know she is busy, but this is important. Still, I procrastinate. "Do you ever miss actually handling the beads and the artifacts?"
"Oh. Well, yes, I do. But this is still good. And the native peoples have been much more receptive to our work now that they know all the grave goods will remain in situ and relatively undisturbed. The cameras and the chem scanners can do most of the data gathering for us. But it still takes a human mind to put it all together and figure out what it means. And this way of doing it is better, both for archaeology and anthropology. Sometimes we're too trapped in our own times to see what it all means. Sometimes we're too close, temporally, to understand the culture. By leaving all the artifacts and bones in situ, we make it possible for later anthropologists to take a fresh look at it, with unprejudiced eyes." She glances up at me and our eyes meet. "So. You called."
"Patsy," I say.
She clenches her jaw, takes a breath, and sighs it out. The intent eighteen-year-old anthro student is gone, replaced by a worried, tired mom. "The circ.u.mcision."
"Katie, you have to stop her!"
"I can't."
"You can't?" I am outraged.
She is weary. "Legally, her body is her own. Once a child is over fourteen, a parent cannot interfere in-"
"I don't give a d.a.m.n about legal-" I try to break in, but she continues doggedly.
"-any decision the child makes about her s.e.xuality. Birth control, abortions, adopting out of children, gender rea.s.signment, confidential medical treatment for venereal disease, plastic surgery-it's all covered in that Freedom of Choice Act." She gives me a woeful smile. "I supported that legislation. I never thought it would be construed like this."
"Are you sure it covers things like this?" I ask faintly.
"Too sure. Patsy has forced me to be sure. Shall I forward all the web links to you? She has, in her typical thorough way, researched this completely . . . at least in every way that supports her viewpoint." She shrugs helplessly. "I gave her a set of links to websites that oppose it. I don't know if she looked at them at all. I can't force her."
I realized I have my hand clenched over my mouth. I pull it away. "You seem so calm," I observe in disbelief.
For an instant, her eyes swim with tears. "I'm not. I'm just all screamed out. I'm exhausted, and she has stopped listening to me. What can I do?"
"Stop her. Any way you can."
"Like you stopped Mike from dropping out of school?"
Even after all the years, I feel a pang of pain. I shake my head. "I did everything I could. I'd drop your brother off at the front door, I'd watch him go into the school, and he'd go right out the back door. Battling him was not doing anything for our relations.h.i.+p. I had to let him make that mistake. I stopped yelling at him in an effort to keep the relations.h.i.+p intact. At least, it saved that much."
"Exactly," Katie says. She stares past me at her screen, but I have broken the spell. She can no longer forget her daughter's decision in wonder at some ancient beadmaker's work. "I was quite calm last night. I told her that all I asked was that she always remember the decision was hers and that I completely opposed it. *Fine,' she said. *Fine.' At least this way, she'll come back here after the d.a.m.ned ceremony. If she gets an infection or doesn't stop bleeding, at least I'll know about it and can rush her to the hospital."
The Inheritance And Other Stories Part 4
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The Inheritance And Other Stories Part 4 summary
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