May takes the letter from Wanda and turns her back. She opens the envelope and reads: “Dear May, A last letter before I drive home. I looked up some friends of your father’s here, and they asked me to stay for a couple of days to unwind, so here I am. At first I thought he might be in the closet — jump out at me for a joke! Tell Wanda that I’ve lost five pounds. Sweated it away, I guess. I’ve been thinking, honey, and when I come home I want us to get a dog. I think you should have a dog. There are some that hardly shed at all, and maybe some that just plain don’t. It would be good to get a medium-size dog — maybe a terrier, or something like that. I meant to get you a dog years ago, but now I’ve been thinking that I should still do it. When I get back, first thing we’ll go and get you a dog. Love, Mama.”
It is the longest letter May has ever gotten from her mother. She stands in Wanda’s hallway, amazed.
The Parking Lot
Walking across the parking lot, she becomes fascinated by the sameness of the surface: so black and regular. She rubs the tops of her arms — more to protest the cold than to warm herself. When she was a little girl her father rubbed her arms for her. She doesn’t remember complaining about the cold, but her father often stopped, just the same, and rubbed her arms, which hung stiffly at her sides as she walked in a heavy winter coat, always one size too big. He rubbed so hard she was almost lifted off the ground. She gives another rub. Her shoulder bag swings forward and interrupts. She’s awkward. Tired — the end of the day. She has been working here, in this gigantic building, for five months. She used to walk across the parking lot smelling the air, knowing it was almost spring. Now it is autumn. The surface of the parking lot, which she suddenly realizes she has been studying for five months, doesn’t change.
At home, which is a four-room apartment (Do you count the bathroom? She always forgets), she collapses in her favorite chair. Collapse is no exaggeration. After she sits down it takes her at least an hour to get up. He has to bring her a drink, smooth her hair. He hovers over her. He’s always lonesome without her. The other reason he hovers, she knows, is to make her nervous about all the fussing so she will get up. When she gets up she starts their dinner, and she is an excellent cook. He is a good cook too, and has offered to do the cooking, saying that she works hard enough during the day. Secretly, he wants her to continue. He is a good cook, but she is excellent. From her he learned to frequent gourmet shops, to sneer at frozen vegetables. In the morning before she leaves, she writes a note telling him what he needs to buy at the store. Tonight he watches as she squeezes lemon juice over chicken, picks parsley from the herb box and sprinkles it gently over the top. A dash of nutmeg. Her energy comes back to her as she prepares their dinner. She pats his hand, where it rests on the counter. His hand is in her way, but as she begins to feel less tired she becomes more tolerant.
As they eat she explains that tomorrow, Friday, she’ll be late. She’s taking care of Paula’s children tomorrow night so she can have a night out — picking them up at nursery school after work. Paula is a girl she works with. He knows that. He nods vigorously to dismiss the explanation. Actually, he doesn’t like conversation at dinner. The food she prepares is so delicious, so delicate. He doesn’t want to be distracted.
She is always too tired to go out after the day of work, so they stay home at night. He stays in too much. She mentions it to him. Does she want to go out? He misunderstands. She meant that he should go out during the day. He does; he shops for food every day. Yes, but she didn’t mean it so literally; she meant he should do something that wasn’t an errand. It’s such a beautiful time for the park. She is enthusiastic, but wouldn’t want to be sitting in a park in autumn herself. Only work has seemed real to her since she began her job. She feels sorry for him — browsing in aisles of imported food, sitting on a bench by the fountain. The fluorescent lights in her office excite her. The wide, shining hallway gives her a sense of purpose.
By arrangement, they work alternate years. Last year he was a house painter. He was very good at it, and he made quite a bit of money. Before that, she was a waitress at a private club. She got good tips. She had nothing against that job. But this job — it amazes her that she could have been so wrong in thinking that working in an office would be depressing. She likes this even better than waitressing. She was more tired when she was a waitress, she thinks with satisfaction.
She finds herself in the parking lot, a whole day gone. What happened in the period between sitting at the dinner table and now, when she is walking across the parking lot? She’s left work a little early, dutiful about picking up Paula’s children. Usually she has to be alert walking through the parking lot, but tonight she’s left earlier than the other drivers. Other people, already in their cars and as tired as her, back up without looking carefully. She would have been hit last week if she had not shrieked. She was nowhere near the man’s car, but as he pulled out he swung backwards in an arc … she remembers putting her arms out, as though that would stop the car. The cry she gave stopped it.
She parks at the back of the lot because there’s less chance of the car being hit there. They fight for places at the front. Let them. She wonders, as she puts the key in the lock to open the car door, what people do about finding their car when they’re color blind. It’s her car’s color she rivets her eyes to. She moves toward the bright, bright red. There are a lot of VW’s in the lot that look like hers. Sometimes there are three in a row, even back here. They must look in the window, she thinks a little giddily. People keep so much junk in their cars.
Paula’s children are glad to see her. They’ve met her twice before. They’re very glad to see her. Three-and four-year-old children get nervous about any deviation from their routine, even when they’ve been told what to expect. She feels sorry for them — particularly the three-year-old — and kids around with them. It’s only nervousness that makes them so glad she’s there, but she’s flattered anyway.
He entertains the children while she fixes dinner. She makes a formal meal for the four of them, as though they are honored company: beef stroganoff, fresh lima beans, salade niçoise. The children love it. They’ve never eaten by candlelight. The older one is confused and wants to know if it’s Halloween. She went a little light on the burgundy in the sauce because of the children, but compensated for it beautifully with a sprinkle of sage. He looks at her across the table. She can tell by his smile that he’s grateful she didn’t fix fried chicken, or something children supposedly like. The oldest child asks what the salad is. “Salade niçoise,” she tells her, and details the ingredients. He pays as close attention as the child. Being a good cook himself, he appreciates this.
It is Saturday, and his friend Sam is visiting. Sam has separated from his wife and visits more often now. Jim and Sam always invite her to go out with them, but she doesn’t feel like tagging along. They don’t make her feel that way, she makes herself feel that way. By now they’re so used to her staying that they don’t expect an excuse. She’s happy Jim is getting out of the apartment; ever since he quit painting he’s stayed close — just going out for food and sometimes, but not often, a walk before bed. When they leave the apartment it seems suddenly as though space is opening up around her. It’s still such a small apartment, though: you walk into the living room, and if you turn right you’re in the bedroom, and if you turn left there’s a small hallway with a bathroom and a kitchen at the end of it. The kitchen is really too small — the other rooms are an adequate size, except that she feels cramped when anyone besides the two of them are in the apartment. He thinks of moving, somewhere where there will be a larger kitchen, so she can work better. It’s too much trouble to move, so she insists she can move freely in the kitchen. She takes a look at the kitchen; it’s a bright, functional room, much too small. The living room is small, too. And the bedroom. She paces the apartment, then grabs a jacket and goes out, catches a bus and goes shopping. There’s no sense in spending her day off feeling closed in. At the store she buys a little bottle of perfume that the salesgirl tells her smells autumn-y. The salesgirl has long fingernails painted pale orange. Her fingernail polish sparkles as she hands her the bag. Her smile is bright as well.