Excerpt: The Sunshine Coast News
Each afternoon, crows circled the
building like the rings of Saturn or moons of Jupiter.
The birds represented another thing, which made
no sense to Josie, but at least they were consistent
and she remained grateful for this minor favor.
The world had mostly stopped making sense almost
two years ago.
It wasn't a single event that had
knocked Josie's life askew, but a series of small,
seemingly unconnected and random incidents of misfortune.
Josie grew up in a family blessed with good luck.
She took it for granted.
Her father, no matter what downturn
the economy took and how many of his fellow employees
lost theirs, always ended up with a better job than
the one he started with. Her mother, an avid player
of games of chance, never lost money, and when they
needed a little extra cash for a vacation, for piano
lessons or a new car, she won the jackpot bingo
at Our Lady of Perpetual Grace on Friday nights.
Fred and Marlene became best friends
and lovers the very day they met at the student
union during their final year at the University
of Toronto. Marlene quit three months short of a
degree in Roman history and culture to have Josie
and work part-time in telephone sales while Fred
finished his accounting course.
Even now, Marlene could, and did at
Christmas, Thanksgiving and Easter, recite the spiel
for: waterless cookware, encyclopaedias, half a
dozen different magazines, the sharpest knives ever
made, a device to peel and core apples with a single
touch. Marlene sold them all effortlessly and without
regard to their usefulness.
She sold them because she knew how
a woman felt at three o'clock on a Friday afternoon
after a week of cranky kids, dirty laundry and a
tired, indifferent husband. She understood the loneliness
of an older woman with a voice full of sadness.
Not, of course, that any of these things were part
of Marlene's life, but they had been all of her
mother's, so her sympathy and patience were boundless.
Marlene knew to hang up if a man answered,
or a brisk no-nonsense woman, otherwise she listened,
spoke words of encouragement and hope, and mostly
sold whatever she was selling that month. She thought
of these sales as trades - her support and the woman's
subsequent sense of at least temporary wellbeing
in exchange for a few dollars for Marlene and her
family.
The product was irrelevant. In fact,
she sold different products to the same women over
and over again. To Marlene, and to her customers,
it wasn't about the fat-free grill with attached
rotisserie large enough for two whole chickens;
it was about the conversation.
Marlene believed in the value of talk
therapy long before it became universally popular.
It didn't matter where they lived - and they moved
fifteen times before Josie finished high school
- Marlene was at the centre of a circle of bright,
interesting women. Women who talked. Josie learned
everything she knew from those women.
She knew, without ever having her
heart broken, to avoid the boys in tight jeans and
t-shirts who hung around in the parking lot after
school. She knew to find a good hairdresser and
stick with her, no matter how much it cost for a
haircut. She knew how to handle difficult bosses,
the ones who yelled, the ones who schemed, the ones
whose hands landed places they shouldn't.
She knew how to make and keep friends,
to write letters instead of just emails, to phone
the minute she thought of it instead of waiting
for the right time. She knew to put away a little
money for a rainy day, to think before she spoke,
to wait for the right man.
She learned how to cook and sew, to
build bookshelves, to give her car a tune-up. She
learned to fix a leaky toilet and knew to clean
out the furnace for the winter. Even though she'd
never done it, she could tell you how to grow asparagus
and transplant lilac bushes.
She learned how to deflect a jealous
woman's anger, how to recognize a broken heart,
how to prevent a child from drowning. She learned
how to love a man, and how to be loved in return.
She learned to count the stars in the sky, the grains
of sand on a beach, the ants in an anthill. She
learned about lucky numbers and how to pick a winning
horse. Josie grew into adulthood already knowing
things some women never learned.
The oddest thing about all this knowledge
was that once she knew it, and despite the fact
that she never used most of it, Josie never forgot
it. Those women, their voices, had somehow managed
to hardwire her brain with a lifetime's worth of
information.
Josie saved thousands of dollars because
she knew these things. She didn't need to take courses,
she could fix her own car and toilet and bicycle,
and she never fell in love with a man who would
steal her savings.
She knew everything except how to
handle bad luck. She'd never thought of her life
as lucky, after all, she was almost forty and still
unmarried. If that didn't constitute bad luck, she
had no idea what did. She had friends who'd had
two or even three husbands. Josie hadn't found even
one. She'd never been engaged, or truly in love.
Where was the luck in that?
But once her luck changed, she could
look back on her life, on her parents' life, and
see what had always been perfectly obvious to everyone
else. The Harrises were a charmed family.
Josie didn't remember being in a single
fight, not with Fred, not even with Marlene. She
never heard an argument between her parents. Her
friends told stories of their vicious teenage knockdown,
drag-out battles with their mothers. Josie remembered
shopping trips and baking cookies with Marlene,
playing Scrabble and Monopoly with Fred, and walks
in the park with both of them.
The only angry words she heard as
a child were on television and she knew they had
nothing to do with her life. So when bad luck came
knocking, Josie was totally unprepared.
The first incident might have been
a fluke. Josie arrived at Gabe's for her regular
appointment to find her hairdresser had eloped with
a waiter. Not only that, but he was ten years younger
than she was, and handsome, and desperately in love.
They were moving to Mexico, opening a restaurant,
and having babies.
Josie learned all this from the man
who bought Gabe's shop while he butchered her hair
and bitched about Gabe's clients. Josie still hasn't
found anyone to replace Gabe, and she's tried every
good and even indifferent salon in the city, so
now she settles for ten-dollar haircuts at discount
clip joints.
She'd forgiven Gabe, even sent a wedding
present, quickly followed by a baby gift, but her
luck had been swept into the garbage with her hair
that day. Josie simply hadn't recognized it at the
time.
Because it got worse. She got fired
from her job, the best job she'd ever had. Not for
being incompetent—Josie was smart and punctual
and she loved her job (which usually counted for
more than intelligence)—or even for an understandable
mistake, but for being in the wrong place at the
wrong time.
Josie's intuition failed her that
morning. She knew Don Mollard, knew he wasn't at
his best in the mornings, and on the mornings after
his five teenage daughters went home to their mother
he was impossible. He loved those rowdy girls without
a single reservation and couldn't bear to see them
go even for a week at a time. So Josie learned to
stay out of his way on Friday mornings, to give
him time to get used to their absence.
Afterwards, she wondered what had
gotten into her. She walked into his office without
knocking and sat down in the chair across from the
desk. She looked at her list and began.
"We're meeting with Palleson
on Monday. Are the specs ready?"
She hadn't even looked at Don before
she started talking. If she had, she would have
seen the way his cheeks had fallen in on themselves.
She would have noticed his red-rimmed eyes and most
importantly, for she'd seen and recognized it a
hundred times, she would have seen the mark of heartbreak
on his face.
Josie first saw the mark on Phyllis,
her best friend in high school. Josie watched her
fall passionately in love with the president of
the photography club. Phyllis was tall and slim
with beautiful high breasts and the boy took exquisite
photographs of the shadows those breasts cast on
that perfect body. Art, he called it, so Phyllis
couldn't object. In those days, at that high school,
art was incontrovertible, the highest value.
Then he sent the photographs to Playboy
and there was Phyllis, naked, in a magazine her
father and most of his friends bought every month.
For the articles, they said, but Phyllis and everyone
else knew that even in the unlikely event they read
the articles, they'd still spend most of their time
with the pictures. And her face, as well as everything
else, was clear for all to see and recognize.
She left town to spend the rest of
the school year with an aunt but not before Josie
saw what had happened to her. Her face changed overnight.
It wasn't just sadness, though that
was part of it, it was as if the bones had somehow
shifted in her skull. They flattened out, leaving
great planes of unsupported skin, while at the same
time becoming more prominent, so Josie could clearly
see the shape of them. No one else noticed anything
except the sadness. Only Josie saw the heartbreak
and knew Phyllis would never be the same.
And she learned that the two things—heartbreak
and sadness—weren't always equal. Mostly sadness
was simply that. A parent dying, a lover lost, sometimes
only a tragic book or movie. These engendered sadness.
People got over sadness. Only occasionally was the
sorrow so overwhelming that it broke a heart.
And that's what Josie should have
seen on Don's face that Friday morning, what she
would have seen if she'd been paying attention.
But she'd only learned a couple of
months later, long after he'd fired her, why Don's
sorrow had turned to heartbreak overnight. She ran
into him in her neighborhood coffee shop on a snowy
Sunday morning.
"Josie,” he mumbled, “How
are you?”
"Fine,” she said, grabbing
his arm and leading him to a table in the back.
"But you're not. What's up?”
He raised his face to hers and she
gasped. "Don?”
His face, once ruddy and unlined,
now bore all the signs of disaster. Deep crevices
radiated out from his eyes, his nostrils, his mouth,
scoring shadows into his sallow skin. He looked
as if he hadn't slept since Josie had walked out
of his office.
"I haven't,” he said, reading
her mind as if she'd spoken out loud. "Tracy
took the girls away. Their cell phones are disconnected,
there's no forwarding address and I'm losing my
mind worrying about them. I've sold the business,
hired detectives, but they've vanished.”
Josie knew right then that even if
Don did find his daughters, he would never be the
same man she had known.
He'd spend the rest of his life trying
to keep those girls safe, never again leaving them
to go to work, or allowing them to go to school,
instead he'd do whatever it took to keep them in
his sight. He had lost them once and he would never
let it happen again.
So getting fired was her own fault.
Don needed to punish someone for the loss of his
daughters and Josie was there. Wrong place, wrong
time. Sheer stupidity on Josie's part...jinxed by
the hair thing.
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