Love in Complete Sentences - Softcover

Mitchell, Mary

 
9780312656690: Love in Complete Sentences

Inhaltsangabe

Life is a challenge for 36-year-old Kate Cavanaugh, high school guidance counselor to a motley group of at-risk students. Two years after finding her young husband dead in bed beside her, Kate's storybook life has vanished, and she and her two children are still reeling. Her daughter Charlotte, once a sweet girl, has morphed into an angry, tattooed, tongue-studded teen; and Hunter, Kate's four-year-old, keeps his feelings sealed tight inside and an empty ketchup bottle clasped to his heart. When a tragedy occurs at the Alan B. Shepard High School, it's Kate who finds herself in need of counsel and guidance. What she does next catapults her and her family down an unfamiliar road, on a trajectory into space-toward understanding, forgiveness and healing.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Mary E. Mitchell is the author of the novel Starting Out Sideways.  A writer of fiction, non-fiction and essays, she has published her work in The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Boston Herald, The Minnesota Star Tribune, Contrary Magazine, The Writing Self, Family Circle, First for Women, and online at Kaplancollege.com. She is a recipient of the New England PEN Discovery Award for her novel, The Nearness of You. For years she has taught writing at the Joan Brack Adult Learning Center and Bethany Hill School, a living and learning community, both in Framingham, Massachusetts.  She lives with her husband in Massachusetts.

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Love in Complete Sentences

A NovelBy Mary E. Mitchell

St. Martin's Griffin

Copyright © 2010 Mary E. Mitchell
All right reserved.

ISBN: 9780312656690
ONE
 
If You Love Something
 
He died the way lots of people do. He just went to bed and didn’t rise the next morning. He had the thickest head of black hair I’ve ever seen on a forty-two-year-old male. Had he not died, I’d have had a husband in my old age whose hairline hadn’t even receded. Do you know how rare this is? It is a terrible thing to bury a husband who has a full head of hair.
This, of course, is not what the children miss about him. Kyle was one of those perfect daddies, a man whose chest visibly swelled at the sight of his daughter on a soccer field or his infant son chewing on the bumper pad of his crib. My beautiful man, whom I have freely and openly idealized since the day I buried him, knew how to love his children without spoiling them. He did not believe, for example, that Charlotte needed the first-chair violinist from the Boston Symphony Orchestra to teach her violin. But he listened to Charlotte play every week, after every squeaky lesson with Mrs. Otten down the block.
He had had no history of heart trouble. Maybe he was too young for the doctors to go looking. I spent a few months being furious at his doctors, even the podiatrist he’d seen only once, who’d removed his plantar wart. But then I gave it up. There were just too many people to blame. I found it exhausting.
It’s been two years since Kyle died, and I have heeded all the advice of the mothers, aunts, friends, and grief counselors not to make major life changes during those first two years, not to sell the house, for instance, or remarry on the rebound, or dye my wild red hair a surreal shade of silver-blond. There has been some progress. I have more energy and less depression. My children no longer eat microwavable instant dinners. I buy Christmas gifts for others again. That first year, when I’d suddenly discovered on Christmas Day that I hadn’t bought my mother a gift, I’d hastily rewrapped an unopened set of honeysuckle soaps I’d found lying around the house. When my mother ripped off the reindeer wrapping, Charlotte was perched on the armrest of her love seat, ready to disclose my sin. I have a clear memory of the smirk on my twelve-year-old’s face as she ratted me out.
“Nice one, Mom,” she had said. “Regifting your own mother on Christmas.”
It hasn’t been easy raising the children without Kyle. He left me with a daughter poised on the slippery slope of adolescence, her anger erupting as violently as her complexion, her favorite word, on her best days, no. The eye-rolling. The fury. The agony of losing her handsome father, the soccer coach, and being stuck with lame old me. Hunter, Kyle’s and my love child, recklessly conceived at a time when sensible parents knew better, was only two when his daddy died. He was born ten years after Charlotte, but I guess we thought we’d still have plenty of time to raise him. He was not a particularly verbal two-year-old, but he showed signs of his loss in other ways.
From the day the ambulance left with his daddy’s body in it, Hunter developed a deep attachment to ketchup bottles. Empty or full, their undulating shape and smoothness, the colorful labels, their nice narrow necks, so perfect for the grasp of little hands, drew him to them. Our house empty of the sound of a man’s voice, Hunter began toddling around with Heinz as his closest companion, the bottle braced against his heart, as though he were protecting it from something. I thought, perhaps, he’d lose interest in time, but when he’d acquired two or three more plastic squeeze bottles from the bowels of our unattended kitchen cupboard, he began stashing them in an empty Huggies carton, left beside his changing table in his sad yellow-walled nursery. One day Charlotte fixed him up with a handle for his box, cutting a slot in the side and sliding through one of Kyle’s belts. After that Hunter pulled his cache of ketchup bottle behind him wherever he went. He’d stop and settle the carton beside me when I was doing the dishes or on the phone. He’d stand there until he had my attention. His eyes were tired for a two-year-old’s.
*   *   *
Now here I am, waiting in the Guidance Office of the Alan B. Shepard High School, an embarrassing place to find myself, as I work here as a guidance counselor. It would be fine to be seeing Mr. Johnson if Charlotte and I were going over some PSAT scores. But it’s only September, and we’re seeing Tom Johnson because Charlotte, a mere ninth-grader, has been skipping school. Three times already. Plus, she’s had her tongue pierced—not that this is against school policy. It’s just further evidence that I’m a lousy mother of a fourteen-year-old girl. I don’t even know how or where she accomplished her mutilation. Who would send their own child to me to devise a scheme for getting into Harvard?
The counseling offices at Alan Shepard High orbit a small waiting room designed by some genius architect who thought it would be fun to gather all the distraught and embarrassed parents in one space while they waited for appointments to discuss their incorrigible children. Although it’s not necessary to wait on the slippery faux-leather chairs in the full glare of Gladys Panella, our ancient guidance secretary, I have chosen to sit here rather than spend another moment in my own office avoiding phone calls. Gladys nods curtly, looking puzzled. I nod back professionally, but offer nothing. I am restless with my work these days. I find it hard to execute my duties pleasantly.
I cannot stand my job, if the truth be told. I cannot, in good conscience, speak with one more overachieving parent who wants a letter from the Dalai Lama to put in his son’s college admissions packet, one more clueless mother who has not caught on to the fact that the SAT sign-up ended last week. I am deeply resentful of these parents of malleable, compliant children, students who dutifully build latrines in Mexico during their summer vacations in order to boast about it on their college applications, although they do not like poor people and abhor outhouses, even on camping trips.
I hate the suburbs, too, although here I am, living a slow death in one of the fanciest ones outside of Boston. I remain here both for work and for personal reasons, such as access to the schools I want my own children to attend and the pension plan and benefits the Appleton Public Schools provide. I try to hide my loathing for my work by walking into school with a happy smile each morning. No one suspects a woman with wild red hair and a happy smile to be anything but a positive person. Only my children and my neighbor Marge know what a miserable human being I really am, and possibly Jack, the driver’s ed teacher, who says I look demented.
Tom Johnson’s office door opens and he walks toward me with his sheepish fifty-year-old’s smile tucked somewhere between his mustache and goatee. It’s embarrassing for him to be speaking to one of his colleagues about what a disaster her kid is. I feel for Tom, but have always thought he should be more embarrassed about his mustache and...

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