GeekMom. Downton. You. Me.
I’m dishing Downton Abbey over at GeekMom again. Come obsess with me!
I’m dishing Downton Abbey over at GeekMom again. Come obsess with me!
Scott gave me this mug for Valentine’s Day, and I laughed my head off. Okay, sure, I managed to drink an entire cup of cocoa from it before I noticed it was a new mug and read the message. In my defense, this was at the crack of dawn in a dim room and my brain doesn’t fully engage until after my morning cocoa, which happens to be a special caffeinated kind Scott orders for me because I don’t like coffee. When I did notice, I howled—and he? He fired off a tweet about it, naturally.
When we were first married, we lived in a little apartment in Queens: the top half of a duplex on a quiet street in Astoria. Our landlords, an older Greek couple, lived below. Mr. P. had boundless energy and a flair for drama; my stories about him could fill a book. Mrs. P. was quieter but just as busy, always bustling about, always cooking something or cleaning something or both. She was ten years younger than her husband; theirs was an arranged marriage, they told us proudly the day we met them.
“But you, Melissa,” Mrs. P. used to say, shaking her head ruefully, “you married for love.”
We rented their apartment for five years—it was Jane and Rose’s first home—and they loved us. But when Scott quit his job as a Batman editor at DC Comics in 1998 to work at home as a freelance writer, Mrs. P. was baffled. To her it seemed a crazy decision, throwing all security to the winds. Scott and I were in heaven; we’d both hated the long hours he’d had to be away, between the job and the commute to and from Manhattan. (And that was during DC’s golden era in the 90s; those hours were a cakewalk compared to the late nights routinely expected of DC staffers nowadays, at least in the West Coast offices. In the 90s, when Scott was at DC, Paul Levitz would sometimes walk the halls at 6pm and tell harried editors to go home and be with their families.)
In 1998, our little family was bouncing back from the first harrowing year of Jane’s leukemia treatment. From March through November of 1997, I had lived at the hospital with two-year-old Jane. Our longest stay at home during that stretch was a luxurious ten days. The rest of the time, we were lucky to last more than a weekend at home before Jane’s counts would plummet and she’d spike a fever, landing her back in the hospital. Any temp over 99.5 meant an automatic admission to the cancer ward. Scott would race out of the office at the end of his workday, take the subway home to Astoria, and jump straight in the car to drive out to our hospital on the edge of Nassau County. He’d spend three or four hours with Jane and me, making sure I ate a good dinner (poor Jane couldn’t stomach much), bringing us fresh clothes, reading to his little girl—and then he’d have to drive back to an empty apartment late at night, and get up in the morning and do it all over again. By the spring of ’98, when things had turned around for Jane and she entered the mostly-outpatient phase of her treatment, we were expecting Rose, a late-summer baby, and all we wanted was to spend as much time together as possible.
I turned in my first Martha book that spring, and Scott began to think seriously about leaving DC to go freelance. We spent many a night discussing whether we could make it work. Then my editor called; she wanted to know if there was any way I could take on the Charlotte series as well. It would mean writing two novels a year instead of one; there was no way I could manage it as the sole stay-at-home parent. But with Scott home…it was exactly the impetus we needed. That, and the fact that his bosses at DC offered him a big promotion. As I recall, he was already the second-youngest person ever to make full editor at DC (Paul Levitz was the youngest). Now they wanted to promote him to senior editor. It was kind of a big deal. But it would mean a radically different future for us. A house, yes, and security. But we would spend our days in different worlds.
I know, I know, that’s how it is for most everyone. I have friends whose husbands have to catch 7am trains and don’t return home until well past dinner. I have friends whose spouses spend a lot of time on the road or are deployed to foreign countries. We’re far from the only couple ever to face the choice between time together and financial security. But in 1998, after our little family’s long, hard hospital ordeal, we wanted—needed—to be together. We’d learned that time was short and life was uncertain. We saw other parents lose children after months of terrible struggle. We saw marriages fracture under the strain of trying to hold a brutally heavy load. We’d drawn closer than ever, bearing each other up, making each other laugh.
Scott turned down the promotion and gave his notice. I accepted the Charlotte offer. This was a couple of weeks before Rose was born; I wrote most of the first Charlotte book wearing infant Rose in a sling. Scott was offered a monthly gig writing Gotham Adventures. Money was tight, and space was tighter, but Jane was getting healthier, and we were all together, and we were happy.
“Oh, Melissa,” Mrs. P. would say, always with that shake of the head, “you such a nice girl. You should have your own house.” She knew we had just enough to pay the rent, and that a mortgage was out of our reach—at New York prices, anyway. We hoped to move to a less expensive area, maybe Virginia, after Jane was finished with chemo, but that was a long time away. Her maintenance protocol was two years long. Mrs. P. knew we were a bit cramped in the apartment (in large part because our various publishing jobs had resulted in an already massive library of books and comics) and of course our kids didn’t have a yard to play in. The duplex’s little backyard was entirely devoted to Mr. P’s wonderful fruit trees and vegetable garden. Our landlords shared their bounty with us generously—nearly every week a basket of pears or homemade baklava appeared on the inside steps leading from their floor to ours—but in five years we never actually set foot in the garden we gazed upon from our bedroom window.
“Your husband should give you a house,” Mrs. P. would cluck. “But you—you married for love.”
You bet I did.
I married that boy who made me laugh, and who loved The Lord of the Rings as much as I did, and who was smart enough to keep me on my toes. I was a goner from from the very first rehearsal of Black Comedy junior year where he played my leading man. My roommate cautioned me not to wear my heart on my sleeve but I couldn’t help it; it did the Twist every time he walked into the room.
It still does. We go for a long walk together every weekday morning, just the two of us, and no matter how far we go we haven’t half exhausted our list of things to talk about when we get back home. This morning we were passing a house on the next block when a neighbor called to us, a man we’ve seen a handful of times before but haven’t spoken to beyond wishing each other good morning.
“Excuse me,” the man said. “I just wanted to say. I see you two out walking, and I just had to tell you how sweet it is to see you walk by my house laughing and holding hands. You look so happy together.”
Sometimes we see elderly couples out walking and I get a lump in my throat because I want that to be us, forty years from now. Fifty years from now, with our walkers and canes. Really I don’t think fifty more years will be enough to talk about all the things we want to talk about.
While the Sculpey catfest was going on in the girls’ room, my boys were busy making Valentines.
Be still, my hearts.
To say that the Warriors books are Rose’s favorite books is to understate the intensity of her passion for this series.
She feels about Warriors the way I feel about Anne of Green Gables, Little House, Betsy-Tacy, Lord of the Rings. They are her books, the stories with which she identifies most deeply and passionately. She reads them like I used to read Pern, over and over and over again.
Beanie loves them too and is adept at the arts of pounce and dodge. Rilla, I’m told, is preparing for apprentice training, which will commence on her next birthday.
Do I thrill at the sight of green spikes poking up from the soil because I read The Secret Garden so many times, growing up? Or did I read it so many times because it put into words the thrill I felt in my mother’s garden?
My plan for today was to read and to sew, so naturally I did neither of those things and spent most of the day in the garden. The weather demanded it. Perfect sun, perfect breeze. Rose and I moved a number of nasturtium seedlings from the back yard to the front; I keep trying to fill in a rather stark flowerbed right in front of the house, and nothing works. This is entirely because I am an inconsistent waterer. But also an optimist. This time, as all the times before, I firmly and deeply believe I will follow through and nurture those bitty seedlings to lush abundance.
At least this time, my unmerited faith in myself didn’t cost a penny. I planted a $1.49 packet of seeds in the back garden four years ago and they have multiplied enthusiastically. I’ve tried them in the front before, but it’s a sunbaked flowerbed that really wants to house succulents and cacti. So: I’m both inconsistent and foolish. But hopeful! These nasturtiums are going to be spectacular, I am certain of it!
In the back yard, I pruned a butterfly bush and the big cape honeysuckle to make a sort of archway leading to a nook by the back fence. Rilla and I read Roxaboxen yesterday, and you know what that means. (Hannah’s post reminded me that, like Miss Rumphius a while back, here was another beloved book Rilla hadn’t met yet.) She spent the afternoon painting rocks for edging a little house under the arching branches. I yanked out a mess of bermuda grass. Lots left to do—I completely neglected the garden last summer—but we made good headway today. She’s collecting dishes and stones.
I have only cut out half the squares for our Valentine’s blanket, but I did find the cord for the sewing machine today. Progress!
I’ve been enjoying (and shuddering at) all your snake stories in the comments. I have another one of my own to tell, but it’s long, and I have to scan some pictures. It’s a place story, really, but it’s full of snakes—the story and the place.
Oh, and Rilla finished my game of Oregon Trail for me. I hear my wife died—of snakebite!
I went back and added photos to the rattlesnake post; I hadn’t yet uploaded them from my camera when I wrote it. They aren’t very good photos—I was holding Huck with one arm, jiggling the camera with the other, and gesticulating wildly for everyone to keep perfectly still.
Also too: I forgot to mention that I have a Downton Abbey recap up at GeekMom today. Come gab with me!
Well, today’s big event was the Rattlesnake Encounter, which becomes more epic each time one of us recounts the story. We were walking one of the trails at a local nature preserve—a wonderful place, all chaparral and low hills, where the wind smells like sage. Whenever I’m there (and it had been a long while since our last visit) I wonder why I don’t go every week. It’s my kind of landscape, those rocky, rounded slopes lifting up the blue, blue sky. I stand there like Heidi on her mountain, drawing deep breaths of the fragrant air.
Then something will happen to remind me why I don’t go more often, like OH SAY A RATTLESNAKE WILL APPEAR ON THE TRAIL THREE FEET FROM MY CHILDREN.
Rose and Beanie spotted him at the same time—they were in the lead, fortunately; they’re sharp-eyed lasses and I was distracted by a hot, red-faced, cranky Huck. If this had been the part of the trail where Huck suddenly charged ahead and we larger folk had to scramble to catch up, he’d have been on that snake before any of us saw it. It was lying quite still at first, stretched out across our path. Rose had just enough time to ask “Is it real?” before it twitched, and I took in the triangular head and the rattle and hollered EVERYONE BACK UP IT’S A RATTLER GRAB THE LITTLE ONES!! (I used more exclamation points.)
We edged back a yard and stood watching it. Huck, who’d been begging me to carry him, now clamored to be put down. Not a chance, pal. The rest of us were still and silent. After a long moment, the snake began to move; it slid across the trail into the underbrush.
“This is the best thing that EVER HAPPENED TO ME,” Rose declared.
“I think we’ll just go back the way we came,” I said weakly. Suddenly the trail ahead, curving into a clump of trees, seemed spiked with hazards. Huck was squirming for freedom and there was no way I was putting him back down to run loose on that path.
So we came home and drank a lot of water and ate lunch and played Oregon Trail and weeded a flowerbed and I read two picture books to Rilla.
In Oregon Trail, I lost one of my children to cholera and another to dysentery. Which is ironic, since usually in that game it’s the snakebite that gets you.