Excerpt
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Prologue
Click.
Silence.
The cell phone heavy in my hand.
“I knew it was something!” My voice is like somebody else’s. I close my eyes, shut out the sky and trees of our backyard that seem to come tumbling down over me; struggle to find myself in this small, dark space. “I knew it.”
And then the tears. I am not crazy. I have not been out of my mind, all these years. My heart cowers in my chest: what does it mean? It’s a new kind of darkness, empty and strange.
“What did he tell you, Lene?” he whispers. “What did you find out?”
But he must know. He stood listening beside me during the phone call, as best he could. I could barely make out the voice at the other end myself, over the buzzing of the cicadas in the trees. The voice. The verdict. The eternal buzzing in the trees.
There is no shade here at the back of our house, only the burning summer heat. I gasp for the hot air, smelling of dry grass.
“What did he say? What did he tell you, Lene?”
Chapter 1
The photograph
There was this photograph, a small piece of paper, which disappeared a long time ago, maybe hiding in a box in my parents’ attic or some old forgotten album.
I don’t know why my mother brought the camera. Maybe she thought to herself: this might be an important moment. One we will need to remember.
Closing my eyes I can still see the photograph’s faded colors, square shape, thin white border. I can see my blonde hair around my pale face and my blue eyes looking right back at me. I’m six years old, lying on a brown leather gurney covered with a narrow strip of hygiene paper. Chin to my chest, I’m smiling at my mother, who holds the camera. My thick winter coverall has been pulled down to my feet, like a molten skin above my heavy boots. My chest is naked. White cords run crisscross over me and onto a machine. The machine is measuring something, I don’t know what, only that I need to lie still.
“That’s good… And a big smile!”
I smile as wide as I can and the camera flash lights up the small examination room. Blinking away the stars in my eyes, I can see Mom putting the camera back in her purse.
“Okay, we’re done with these.” A nurse removes the cords from my chest. They are attached with stickers, pinching my skin. I don’t complain. If I’m good, I will get to choose something from the toy store downtown. Maybe even the white teddy bear I saw in the shop window, the one with the fluffy fur and the black, almost-real eyes.
A doctor comes into the room. “I’m just going to listen,” he says, “if you can sit up.” He presses something cold as ice to my chest. I know what that is, it’s a stethoscope, my mom told me earlier. I’m sitting with my legs over the edge of the gurney, dangling my heavy boots and shivering from the cold. And then I remember. I need to be good. Be still.
He listens and listens, leaning over me. The stethoscope wanders across my chest. He sighs. The stethoscope climbs onto my back.
“Breathe heavily,” he says.
I do. I inhale as heavily as I can. Hea-vi-ly.
“And again.”
I-i-in and out.
“One more time.”
I do as he tells me. I am a good girl.
“Yes, she has a distinct heart murmur,” he says. And then he is silent and listens again. I can see Mom is holding her breath, I don’t think I have ever seen her do that.
I’m just as still as the white teddy bear in the shop window. Later I will be walking through the store, looking at all the dolls and the toys, making up my mind. But it will be the white teddy bear with the black, almost-real eyes. I know it. If only the doctor could be done. He has come here especially for me, from a big hospital, maybe even the biggest in all of Sweden.
My feet are getting warm in the boots. I accidentally squirm and my coverall rustles.
“Shhh,” Mom says.
And then she is silent. Everything is silent. I stay completely still so that the doctor can hear better.
“Okay, we’re done.” He removes the stethoscope from my chest, turning to Mom. “You’ll never have to worry about this ever again. Yes, it’s a harmless heart murmur.” He smiles and looks into my eyes. “Just like your mother’s.”
The words grow and linger in the room, in my mother’s smile, in the sounds of the doctor’s steps toward the door.
You will never have to worry about this ever again.
Ever again.
The opinion of a specialist. A dismissal. I can still feel my mother’s relief, as I examine the photograph in my mind.
You will never have to worry about this ever again.
Chapter 2
“This will be your job,” the guy says coming toward me, carrying a stack of paper and a black marker. He wears the same white collared shirt and blue trousers as the others, and adjusts a red Phillies cap over his dark hair. I don’t catch his name, but it’s clear he’s the boss.
“Okay.” I would like to say something more, but the strange sounds are still new to my mouth. I studied English in school, like all Swedes, but it’s not the same as speaking it in America. Now I will have to get used to hearing the awkwardness of my own voice, pronouncing the words a little askew.
“It will be best if you stand here.” The boss spreads out the sheets on the black granite of the kitchen island.
On them are listed numbers, 1–367. The other guys are already coming in, hollering the numbers of the boxes as they walk past me.
“Twentyseven!”
“Twohundredandfiftyfour!
“Onehundredandfive!”
I grab the marker, it’s all happening so fast, the numbers in a strange language: I need to check them off before the other guys come through the back door.
The boss guy has gone outside to make sure everything runs smoothly by the trucks. Two huge trucks hold everything we own, packed in cardboard boxes and big shapeless packages, even the furniture, the framed pictures, the beds, the bikes, the lawnmower. White, taped packages that have been shipped in a container for two months across the Atlantic. It’s strange to think about: all these objects, the symbols of our lives, in containers among hundreds of other containers, a gigantic multicolored pile of building blocks to our story, on a bobbing ship in the middle of the blue ocean.
“Five!”
“Threehundredandone!”
I only get one chance to hear the number, find it on the lists and check it off, before the guys disappear up the stairs. Anders is up there somewhere, showing them what goes where. They are all muscular guys, about twenty-five years old, and extremely polite.
“Sorry, ma’am.”
I move to the side; this box is so big that two of the guys need to carry it. It looks like it’s one of our armchairs, packed up like an odd-shaped huge birthday present.
“Thank you, ma’am.”
Bright laughter comes through the open doors, along with the buzzing of the cicadas, those odd insects whose sounds enfold our whole house, day and night. The girls stay outdoors like we asked them to, sitting on the front porch playing with their dolls, occasionally peeking in: giggles and light hair, Stina’s curled wheat and Ingrid’s golden red, that disappear the moment I turn around.
Anders comes into the kitchen.
“Are you all right?” he asks. “Is it too much?”
“I’m fine,” I say and smile at him. “We’re here now. Can you believe it?”
“This is it! It’s happening, Lene!” He starts dancing that dance of his, a cross between belly dancing and disco, and I have to laugh.
“Oh yeah, oh yeah,” he sings and his smile brings out all those wonderful wrinkles around his eyes behind his glasses. His dance is a victory dance. We are finally here. It all worked out; he landed his job at SKF North America and we found the house in Radnor available for rent just in time, as well as a school for the girls close by.
“Threehundredandtwo!”
“Ninetysix!”
The guys pass between Anders and me, carrying the boxes, saying, sorry sir, sorry ma’am, and leaving a smell of sweat and dry cardboard. What did they say? I search the lists, the marker in my trembling hand – is it really mine, it seems so far away? The numbers slowly drift away from me. Anders comes close, puts his warm hand over mine, and together we check off the numbers. There and there.
“You’re doing good, Lene.”
“Thanks.” I close my eyes and hold on to his arm, my heart swelling with gratitude for this ability of his, to show up when I need him and help me without a word, even with the smallest tasks. It’s like a dance; the way we synchronize our movements: giving and receiving, my weakness for his strength.
“We’re here,” he says, rocking me gently. “We did it. We’re gonna be alright.”
He moves my hair to the side and kisses my neck. “You and me,” he whispers.
“Always,” I say and I can feel his smile on my neck.
“Sir!” The boss calls from the stairs and Anders lets go of me. He pauses in the hallway and smiles again at me before walking up the stairs.
I hear small steps behind me and turn around. The girls are standing by the swinging door to the dining room.
“Mamma, there’s someone here to see you.”
“Oh?”
Ingrid’s eyes become big, “Yeah, mamma, you know, the owner.”
“Oh, the landlady, Mrs. Mack,” I tell them, “It’s called landlady in English.” My brave girls, they’re learning English at rocket speed these days. “Does she want to come in?”
“No, she just sat down and said something,” Ingrid says. “I didn’t understand.”
“Maybe she’s thirsty. Could you girls please bring her some water?”
“I’ll do it!” Stina grabs a bottle of water from the kitchen counter and is out the door, but Ingrid hesitates.
“You have to come, mamma.” My big nine-year-old. Big and small at the same time.
“Fortyfive!” The guy walks past me carefully, steering blindly behind the big box.
Fortyfive. Check. The black V’s are starting to line up at the edges of the paper sheets. They remind me of the migratory birds I used to see every spring and fall back in Sweden. Ingrid is still waiting for my response.
“I can’t leave the kitchen. I have to be here, it’s my job to check off the boxes. Mrs. Mack will understand. Let her sit and rest for a while on the front porch.”
“But mamma –” Ingrid protests but interrupts herself as the swinging door opens and Stina is back, holding Mrs. Mack’s hand.
“I can see you’re busy.” Mrs. Mack smiles with her white teeth. “I’ll come back tomorrow. I just wanted to make sure everything’s alright.”
“Thanks, yeah, we love the house!” I say, wondering at how all Americans seem to have such perfect teeth.
“I’m happy to hear it,” Mrs. Mack says. “This house was built to hear the laughter of children. After I bought it, during the renovation, I used to imagine a family just like yours living here. You remind me of my daughter.”
“Lucky for us you didn’t sell it.”
“Well, that was the plan, but with the economy going down the drain I thought I’d better rent it out, until things get better. Only in this neighborhood I’ve already seen four houses up for sale.”
Another guy comes through the back door.
“This one is number seven!”
“Well,” Mrs. Mack raises her hand in a see-you-later-gesture. “If you need anything, just let me know, you know I live just down the street.”
“Okay, thank you, I’ll do that,” I say.
Mrs. Mack smiles and walks out the same way she came in, through the dining room, tossing her blonde hair as she walks through the swinging door. They never cease to amaze me, these American women in their fifties looking half their age.
Number seven. I mustn’t forget to check it off. There, on the first page. I notice the girls are still in the kitchen.
“Ingrid, will you please bring Stina back to the porch,” I say. My heart is beating fast. “Please, I’m afraid you’ll get hurt if one of the guys trips over you.”
“Come on Stina,” Ingrid says and pulls her little sister to the swinging door, but Stina pauses in the doorway and holds up her doll, the soft one with dangling legs.
“Look, mamma, how happy she is!”
“Oh?”
“She’s invited to the party!” The doll dances in her hand and the swing door closes behind them. Stina’s small voice skips through the house, because sooon it’s myyy birthday.
“Fortysix and fortyseven!”
Check and check. Black birds.
There is nowhere to sit. My heart beats fast, like it’s trying to say something important. I feel the darkness closing in.
I have to pull myself together. I can’t faint now. I’m just standing here, while all the others are carrying and sweating and running up and down the stairs. I have to do this small job assigned to me. I’m not much older than the guys but I feel like I’m ninety. I close my eyes, hold onto the black granite countertop, the stone cold in my hand. I have to beat the darkness.
Like so many times before.
More and more often, lately.
“Twentyeight!”
“Thirty.”
I need to open my eyes, push through the darkness, find the numbers, keep standing.
Check. And check.
The sweat is running down the guys’ faces. The stairs are narrow and steep, the wooden floors wonderfully creaky and crooked, original from 1909, can you believe it – I can still hear Mrs. Mack’s voice, how proud she was about the restoration – the walls newly painted in beige and light green, the white kitchen brand new, powdery sawdust still in the corners of the cabinets. Every now and then comes the faint smell of ashes from the ornate fireplace in the living room, caught in the summer breeze between our open doors and windows. All the rooms have tall windows to the garden that is filled with the sounds of chirping, buzzing, laughing. The birds, the cicadas, the girls. Maybe I should check on them, in case they’re up to something, like that time they tied themselves to the chairs with their jump ropes. That was in the hotel, where we lived in the weeks before we got access to the house. Now they will have a huge garden and a whole house to fill with laughter, like Mrs. Mack said.
“Fortyeight and Fifty!”
“Fiftyone!”
I find the numbers at the bottom of the first page. Check, check, check. Three more migratory birds bringing me closer to finishing this small task that shouldn’t be that hard. The guys walk past me, grunting under the weight of the boxes. I must focus on this; being here, standing here, not give in to the darkness.
“There’s water here if you need it!” I shout to their backs.
“Thank you, ma’am.” They disappear up the stairs.
I’m actually starting to get used to this new language. Somehow my brain translates immediately, without me having to think about it. It’s only when I’m supposed to say something that it’s hard at times.
One of the guys comes down the stairs and enters the kitchen. He’s black and tall with a friendly face.
“Do you happen to have a Band-Aid, ma’am?” He holds up his hand. “I accidentally cut myself.” He lifts the red-stained tissue and shows me: a red line on his index finger with the blood welling up. Must be the knife they’re using to open the boxes.
“I’m sorry,” I say. “Does it hurt?”
“Not too bad. I’m just afraid it might stain your stuff.”
“It’s supposed to be here somewhere,” I say and open the closest drawer. I quickly find the tin box I prepared back home with Band-Aids, tweezers, pain-killers, allergy tablets.
Anders is on his way into the kitchen, but turns and leans on the wall, his hand pressing his forehead.
“Wait a little, Anders,” I say. “We’ll be done soon.”
“I’m sorry. I can’t help it. It’s the blood.” He is all white, looking like he is going to faint. He takes off his glasses, rubs his temples, and straightens up. “I’ll come back later,” he says and leaves the kitchen.
I can only find pink Band-Aids with Disney princesses on them.
“I’m sorry, these are the only ones I have.” I try not to laugh, but it’s impossible not to.
“Thank you, ma’am.” He also laughs while his big hands unfold the pink package and he wraps Sleeping Beauty around his finger. “I hope Mr. Fogelberg is all right.”
“Yeah sure, he’ll be fine,” I say. “He just can’t stand the sight of blood.” I’m still laughing. “I’m sorry, I can’t help it… it’s just… you… and that.” Laughing and joking like this make me feel like a normal person, I can almost forget the fatigue.
“Yeah.” He laughs, raising his hand, decorated in pink and yellow. “Well, thanks again, ma’am,” he says and goes out the back door to continue to carry boxes. I can hear his deep voice as he shows the others: look what I got, ha, ha, ha, and I smile.
But then I have to grab the countertop again. Not faint. Keep standing up.
I should start unpacking. Frying pans, pots, kitchen knives, plates, cutlery – everything needs to find a new home in these cupboards and drawers. It shouldn’t be a problem fitting it all in this huge kitchen, twice the size of our kitchen back home. I can picture the girls doing homework on the table by the window and me making pancakes on the wide stainless steel gas stove.
But here comes the nausea again, and the exhaustion, and the darkness creeping closer: there is nothing else for me to do but hold onto the countertop. Hold on and smile at the obscure figures walking past me in the fog. “Ninetyfive.”
I can barely see anything, but I need to focus, need to catch the birds, check off, smile, stand up.
“Threehundred.”
Keep standing, check off, smile.
“Twohundredandtwenty.”
Keep standing.
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