December 16 - 25 weeks pregnant. Thumper was as big as cauliflower.
I was meeting Laura to go shopping for Carrie's Christmas party. I
didn't really want to go shopping or to deal with anyone. I had had a
horrible week at work, which was capped by something that happened
yesterday.
Every year, Danny's company had a Christmas open house, also known as the
"kiss the ring" ceremony. Basically, everyone brought their kids in and
they had candy and cookies and someone dressed as Santa. The center of
it all was when the C-level executives all stood in something resembling
a receiving line and met the headquarters employees; hence, 'kissing the
ring.' I had gone once, when we started dating. When I had bitched to
my boss Mike then, he laughed and said, 'enjoy it. She wants to show you
off. Soon, she won't want to see your ugly face.' Danny wasn't in the
receiving line - not yet at least, I believed. But, because of his new
position, I had to be there, to be on board and all that.
Yesterday, when I was leaving, I said to Mike, 'Sorry. This is
political. I won't be long and I'll stay late.' He just looked me up
and down, staring at my stomach (I felt). He smiled and said, 'take your
time.' I felt vulnerable.
The open house itself was fine. Everyone came over to ask how I was
doing. Melissa had brought Ben and Layla. I hadn't seen her for a few
months. We had had plans to go out and Layla got an ear infection. The
next time, Ben had, according to Melissa, 'learned to share at day care.
He was so nice and gave us all a cold!' Then she added, 'welcome to the
rest of your life.' "Hey, Ben. Hey, Layla," I said, leaning down to
give them a kiss, which brought up my reflux. I gagged a little and
Melissa said, 'heartburn?' When I nodded, she ruffled Ben's hair and
smiled. "How's everything?" she said.
"Busy. Ridiculously busy."
"I hear you. You look beautiful." I was wearing a blue dress and 2"
heels. My ankles hurt like hell. I should have worn flats, but I wanted
to look good for Danny.
"I look like I swallowed a basketball," I said.
"Oh, stop. You look gorgeous. Right, Dan?" Danny smiled, put his arm
around me and gave me a kiss. I should have felt better, but I didn't.
'Take your time' was ringing in my ears.
Melissa left to take Ben and Layla to see Santa. Danny said, "Is
everything OK?"
"Fine," I said. "Work. Just work."
"Everything OK?"
"The Namowitz motion," I lied. "The one I was telling you about the
other day?" I knew that would work. He didn't understand what I did,
anymore than I understood what they did here, other than create and sell
drugs. By the way, there was no Namowitz motion. For an added fillip of
reality, I said, "you don't listen, do you?"
He smiled and said, "I try." He did. More than I did then and more than
I did now. He said, "Bruce said to bring you down before the whole
thing." As a result of his promotion, Bruce now was in the line, albeit
at the beginning of it. Old Kremlinologists didn't spend as much time
studying placement as Stone people did with 'kiss the ring.' We went
down the hall to Bruce's office and knocked on the door.
"Mind if we come in?" Danny said.
He saw me, got a huge grin and came around the desk. He looked me up and
down, but in a manner that felt completely different from Mike. He
leaned down and gave a me a hug and kiss. "I heard an ugly rumor about
you..."
I smiled. "It's true. I'm a Yankee fan."
He laughed. "How are you doing? How are you feeling?"
I smiled. "ask Ellen how I'm feeling." Then I added, "I'm doing fine."
No man really cared how I was feeling; I didn't used to, not really.
What was I going to say? I have heartburn? I'm constipated? Oh, and my
ass is bleeding from hemorrhoids? So, I went with 'fine, thanks.'
"You look beautiful, if that's OK to say."
I said, "it's more than OK." It was bullshit, but I needed to hear it.
Danny put his arm around my waist and smiled. "Thank you, Bruce."
"Ellen said to tell you that she loved the article." Since Florida,
Jillian had kept to her word. She had gotten me jobs, non-paying but
jobs nonetheless, writing articles for various on-line papers including
the latest in Huffington Post on voter suppression in Ohio. "I read it,
too. It was great."
Danny said I blushed when I said, "Thank you. It wasn't too dry?"
He laughed. "No, it was just dry enough. Besides, who wants a wet
article?" I rolled my eyes and he said, "Ba-dum dum. Seriously, it was
terrific." He looked at the clock on his desk. "Ah shit, I have to get
downstairs. Let me practice my smile on you two." He pasted on a game
show host smile. "Too fake?"
"Just fake enough," I said with a smile.
He gave me another kiss and turned to Dan, "you're lucky I like her."
Then he turned to me. "Call Ellen and make plans for dinner." I was
responsible for dinner plans now. And birthday presents. And ordering
groceries. "I'll see you downstairs. Take care of Bruce in there." I
looked at him and stuck out my tongue. "Hey, Bruce is a great name.
Bruce Lee. Bruce Springsteen. Jack Bruce." Danny looked confused, so
Bruce said, "the bassist from Cream. God, I'm old." And he left us,
singing, 'Sunshine of Your Love,' as he walked away.
The rest of the open house went well. We went downstairs and 'kissed the
ring.' Everyone told me what a great job Danny was doing, which made me
feel proud. I had really learned to feel proud without qualification.
He was respected at work. He worked hard and they respected him, which
is what he wanted. What I wanted. I couldn't help but notice how,
whenever we talked to someone, he let go of my hand and put his hand
around my waist. He also answered questions that were directed to me,
stopping only if I smiled sweetly and said, 'Danny...'
I went back to the office after an hour and a half and went into Mike's
office. "Sorry about that."
He smiled. "Relax, Jessica. It's fine. We survived in your absence,"
which stung a little. Between that and the garbage cases I had been
assigned lately, I began to wonder if that was the plan. I smiled weakly
and said, 'thanks.' Then, I worked until 8:30, making sure not to leave
until everyone else did. I wasn't going down without a fight.
-----------
Laura and I were meeting on the Upper East Side, near her place. I
needed a dress and, given the UES' reputation as the suburbs in the city,
there were a lot of maternity stores. I had asked her to meet me at
Barnes & Noble Bookstore on 86th and Lex, so I could buy a couple of
books for the trip.
Before I left, Danny said, "Not too many, please. And no hardcovers."
"Why?" I said, giving him a kiss on the nose.
I knew the answer. "Because I'm going to be carrying them."
"You don't have to," I said, as flirtatiously as I could. I didn't feel
flirtatious. I felt bloated and edgy and concerned about my future.
"Please," he scoffed. "Paperbacks, please."
I was standing in Barnes and Noble looking at books, when a guy, in his
early 30s came over. He had dark curly hair and green eyes. He was
wearing a Michigan hoodie and jeans, the requisite uniform of the Upper
East Side. He was cute, not gorgeous but cute. "Hero of the Boer War.
The Orphan Master's Son. Knockemstiff. Interesting choices..."
I smiled and raised an eyebrow. "Interesting? How so?" I brushed my
hair off my face.
He smiled. "Maybe that was the wrong word. Unusual. I mean, most
women..."
I held up, 'Hero of the Boer War,' a biography of young Churchill in the
Boer War. I pointed to the author's name - Candice Millard. "Candice,"
I said. "I'm pretty sure that that's a woman's name. Not all of us read
books with high heels on the cover." I had tried. I thought that maybe
I'd like them now. I didn't. Crap is still crap.
He smiled. He had a terrific smile that made his eyes light up. 'OK,
Jess,' I thought. 'You are very pregnant. And very married.' "You
win," he said. "Knockemstiff is excellent by the way. Have you read..."
"Devil All the Time? The Heavenly Table? I loved them both...."
"I stand corrected. Surprised, pleasantly surprised but corrected," he
said, smiling that smile again. He picked up the last book in my pile.
"'The End of Men?' Uh oh.."
I looked down at my feet and then at him. "It's not like that, at
all..."
He laughed. "I'm just teasing. I'm Mark," he said, offering his hand.
"Jessica," I said. "Nice to meet you." Out of the corner of my eye, I
saw Laura standing about fifteen feet away. She had a huge smile on her
face and was rubbing one finger on the other, in the universal, 'tsk tsk'
gesture. "I apologize but I see my sister over there."
"Well, don't let me keep you," he said. "Very nice to meet you."
I smiled and said, "Nice to meet you too." And I brushed my hair out of
my face. It felt like it kept falling in my face.
As he walked away, he handed me a book. "You should read this," he said.
"It's terrific. Exciting but smart." I looked at the cover. 'Danelaw.'
The blurbs read, 'A taut psychological thriller,' and 'this year's, 'The
Girl on the Train.' 'Eh,' I thought. 'Well, if I don't like it, maybe
Danny will.' I walked over to Laura, who had a huge grin. "What?"
"Jess likes a boy," she sang. "Jess likes a boy..."
"Yes, Jess likes a boy. Her husband."
"Oh, please. You were totally flirting with that guy."
"No, I wasn't." She started pushing her hair behind her ear. She smiled
and then looked down then up. Oh god, I had been flirting. "Oh god..."
Then she took 'Danelaw,' off my pile. "Is this the book he picked?" I
felt mortified and nodded. "Ohmigod, is he going to make you a CD too?"
"Stop it. Anyway, hello?" I said, pointing at my stomach. "He clearly
wasn't interested in me. Not like that anyway."
"I don't know. From where I stood....you look really good, by the way."
"Yeah, well, anyway, I'm married, remember?"
"I know. But I bet it felt really good." It did. I was embarrassed to
say it, but it made feel better about myself. If nothing else, I was
apparently attractive. "So, anyway, what's going on with Tuck and Sam
this week?" Sam was a boy in Tucker's pre-school. Apparently, they had
a fight and Tuck pushed Sam down, which necessitated all the parents
coming in to discuss 'how to handle things better in the future.'
"Eh, it's fine. We had this whole meeting to find out that....they're
three year olds." A woman with a little girl waved at us and came over.
She was about 35, with brown hair, muddy brown eyes and the sort of toned
body that came from way too many hours in the gym. I used to have that
body. She was wearing a 'Soul Cycle' shirt, Alo yoga pants and the same
pair of Adidas Superstar sneakers that every other woman on the UES had.
The kind she'd throw away, still pristine, in two weeks when they stopped
being hip.
"Tina," Laura said, giving her a kiss. "Hi, Penelope." Penelope smiled
and hid behind her mother. "Penelope and Tucker go to preschool
together. Tina, this is my little sister Jessica. Jessica, Tina
Blackwood."
"Hi," I said, sticking out my hand. "Jessica Silverman." She looked me
up and down while she shook my hand. I was glad that I dressed up a
little. I had worn jeans, a blue sweater and booties. I had debated
wearing a skirt, but after yesterday, it felt too open. I bent down, "Hi
Penelope. I'm Tucker's aunt." She kept hiding. Whatever, I thought. I
can't stay down here too long anyway.
"So how far along are you?" When you're pregnant, this is the standard
greeting, especially from other mothers. No 'hello,' just straight to the
point.
"Twenty-five weeks," I said. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Laura
keep a fake smile on her face. If you didn't know her, it looked real.
I knew it wasn't. The left side of her mouth was slightly lower. It was
her tell.
"You look terrific," she said, by rote. "How are you feeling?" I gave
her the quick once-over. She didn't care and would probably tell all the
other mothers whatever I said, so I went with, 'Fine. The usual.'
"That's great," she said. "Is everything OK with Tucker? I heard what
happened."
Penelope piped in, "Tucker hit Sammy!" She smiled and said, "Shhh,
honey."
"It's fine," Laura said. "Boys..."
Tina gave her a tight smile. "Hm. Well, we have to get Penelope's art
class. Very nice to meet you, Jessica. See you at school, Laura."
As she left, Laura said, "Bitch. She's probably already texting her crew
to tell them how I looked like shit." She was wearing jeans and a
sweatshirt. I didn't see what the big deal was, it was the weekend and
we were just going shopping. But I knew enough to know that a woman who
bought her yoga pants at Bergdorf Goodman and not Lululemon or the Gap
would say something.
'Whatever. Her husband's probably cheating on her now," I said, in some
sort of effort to make Laura feel better.
It didn't really work. "Seriously, whatever. I don't want to deal with
her today. Let's go find you a dress. So, who is this again?"
"Jill's friend Carrie."
She smiled a strange smile. "And she invited you why exactly?" I looked
back at her. "I mean, it's cool. I just can't picture you going to
Rachel's party."
I was annoyed. "This isn't a mom and Evelyn thing, is it?" I couldn't
deal with that on top of everything else.
"No no no. Sorry. I just wanted to know." And I explained how Emily
sometimes came in with Sarah and how I think she felt like 'she owed me
one.' All she said was, "Oh, OK." I let it go because I had to.
"How was the reunion?" Laura and Jeremy had just gone to her 20th high
school reunion.
"It was good. Weird to see everyone, y'know. Jamie DiGuardia got really
fat." Jamie was one of those half-skanky girls who was gorgeous - dark
hair, dark eyes, great body - in a scary way. If the wrong guy, which is
to say any of the jocks or dorks, looked at her, she'd growl, "what?" in
a way that drove you away. She and Laura had been friends in junior high
until Jamie suddenly developed at which point she abandoned her. Laura
was crushed, from what I could recall, but my parents were not
disappointed, to say the least.
I laughed, "I could see that. She always struck me as the kind of girl
who got by on metabolism." Jesus, I was a bitch.
Laura looked at me and said, "Meow?"
"Sorry, that came out the wrong way. I meant," and she smirked, "forget
it. Who else did you see?"
"Caryn Zweig." Caryn was the bane of Laura's existence. She had picked
on her from first through twelfth grade. I remembered how, in eighth
grade, Laura went to make plans with her friends to go to the mall and
they all came up with an excuse. My mom took us to the mall and we saw
Caryn standing there with all of Laura's friends. Before Laura could
cry, my mom said, 'we're going to Garden State,' another, bigger and
better mall. Laura cried the whole way there. I was just happy we were
getting to go there; cut me some slack, I was in fourth grade.
"How was that?" I braced for the worst.
She smiled. "Really really weird. She was all friendly, like 'oh, you
work in midtown. So do I. We should totally get lunch. You look
great.' It took me like ten minutes to accept that she wasn't going to
run back and make fun of me."
I almost asked what she looked like now, but realized that that would
make me sound even cattier. However on edge I was, I didn't want to go
over it. "That's great. I mean, it has been twenty years but still
that's great."
We walked up to Madison, talking. Even all these years later, there were
times it still felt strange to be walking with Laura, talking and window
shopping.
We walked past a boutique on Madison and in the window was a blue dress
that fell mid-thigh. It had lace sleeves. I was imagining myself in it
and wondering if I'd ever be able to wear it again. "God, I love that
dress," I said.
Laura looked at it. "That is pretty. Want to see if they have it in
your size?"
"Please. Size whale?"
"Jess," she said, taking my hand. "What's wrong? When did you get so
down on yourself? That's my job."
"Being down on yourself, or on me?" I smiled.
"Serious. What's wrong?"
"Nothing. Work."
"Mom says you've been working too hard."
"I don't like you two talking about me," I said. She thought I was
kidding. I wasn't. "Besides, it's not that. It's like I feel like
they're trying to push me out. They're giving me the shit cases and,
when I was going to Danny's thing yesterday, I told Mike that it wouldn't
take long and he said, 'take your time.'"
She smiled. "Maybe he just meant don't stress yourself?"
"Law firms don't work that way."
She said, "Oh, I forgot. Law firms are like this whole other planet, us
mere non-lawyers don't understand. Up is down. Black is white. Take
your time means you're fired. Laws don't apply there. For every action,
there is not an equal and opposite reaction. Not in law firm world."
In spite of myself, I laughed. "Shut up. I'm just scared. Feel better?
I've worked really hard and I'm scared, OK?" I started to cry. Not tear
up. Cry. "I'm really scared. I'm feeling like, I can't explain it,"
and I just bawled. People were staring at me.
Laura hugged me, tight. "Shhh, Jessica. It's going to be OK. You're
going to be OK. You can be scared. It's OK."
I sniffled into her shoulder. "Are people staring?"
"Who fucking cares? You poor thing. I had no idea," and she steered me
to a bench in front of a store. I stared at the ground and she put her
hand under my chin and pushed up. "What's wrong, Jess?"
"Mom does that...the thing with her hand under my chin."
She smiled. "If you want me to help, don't tell me I'm like mom."
I smiled. "Sorry. Sorry to get snot on your sweatshirt."
"Stop it, Jessie. Tell me what's wrong, for real."
"It's going to sound weird."
"So? You're my little sister. You used to think the people lived in the
TV. Little midget people."
"Shut up. No, I didn't. And if I did, I was like four."
"Yeah, well, what's weird?"
"I feel like my whole world is upside down. Like I spent the first
thirty-three years of my life doing one thing and now it's like totally
something else and I won't be able to deal with it." She was looking at
me now. "OK, see, it's weird. You're totally looking at me like I'm a
freak. I'm sorry that I said anything. Forget about it."
"No. I wasn't looking at you. I mean keep explaining. It's not weird.
I just want to understand."
I tried to figure out how to articulate so that I didn't end up in a room
wearing shoes without laces and a bathrobe without a belt. "OK, it feels
like I'm not who I was. That before I was," and here I stumbled to find
the right words, "one person. I mean I was the same person but
different. I mean, I was married to Dan," or Jess, as the case may be,
"and he was married to me and we did our jobs, but it was different. I
wasn't this other thing. People didn't see me as a woman..."
She laughed, "Uh, I hate to break this to you..."
"That's not what I mean. I mean, it's like no one sees me anymore. They
see my body, my belly, that's it. It's like I went from being the
subject of my sentence to the object."
She smiled. "Subject and object? Will this be on the test?" I thought
of Ms. Brunello, my fourth grade teacher, making us diagram sentences.
"I'm serious," and I went from starting to cry to agitated. "It's like
before I was a person. I worked. I ran. I did things...and now it's
just...."
"I'm pregnant. I'm having a baby. How is the baby? How do you feel?"
"I know. It sounds ridiculous."
She gave a short grunting laugh. "Not really. I totally get it. When I
was pregnant with Tucker, that was the topic of conversation. Even at
work. Even my office." Laura was in public relations. Her whole firm
was women, other than the errant gay man.
"Yeah, well, I just feel like..."
"Everyone is putting you into a box?"
I let out a sigh of relief. "Yeah. That's it. And I don't want to be
in the box." She looked surprised. "I mean," and I put my hand under my
belly. "I do want to be in the box, but I don't want to only be in the
box," and I started to cry again. "I'm afraid that I won't be good at
being in the box." I had never said that out loud. I had been having
nightmares lately. I had a nightmare that I had the baby and that it
knew that I wasn't always its mother. I mean I was, but it knew that I
used to be Dan and Danny used to be me. And it spat out, 'you're not my
mother. You're a freak.' I would wake up with a start and would try not
to wake Danny. Instead, I would stare at the ceiling and silently cry
for an hour, until I fell back asleep. "I can't sleep because of it."
I started bawling into Laura's shoulder again. "Jess, ohmigod, how long
has this been bothering you?"
I sobbed. "I don't know. A few weeks. Month or so? I don't know."
"And you haven't said anything? To anyone" I shook my head 'no',
rubbing more snot onto her sweatshirt. I mumbled, 'sorry.' "Stop
apologizing. You poor poor thing." She meant it to be comforting, but
it just made me feel more weak. "You have to stop beating yourself up.
You are going to be great. You are going to the best mommy ever.
Everyone knows that."
"I'm scared. And I'm scared about my job. I've worked really hard."
She looked me in the eye. "And they know that. And if they don't know
that, someone else will."
"Don't tell me I'll be fine..."
"I'm not mom," she said, with a half-humorous, half-annoyed tone. "But
you will be. You will make partner. There or somewhere else. And
you'll be a great mom. I saw the pictures of you and Sebastian and
Charlotte on Facebook. You're going to be great, Jess. But, you have to
stop beating yourself up, OK?" I nodded and wiped away my tears. "And
the next time something's bothering you, call me. Call Jill. Call
someone. But, you can't keep things in. It's not good for you." Then
she paused. "Mom told me she told you about Uncle Richie."
"You knew about him?"
"Sorta kinda. I mean, I knew he died and I knew it was lymphoma." I was
staring at her, so she said, "she told me about him when I was pregnant."
I laughed. "What is that, her go to story for pregnant women? 'Hey, I
know you're freaking out about everything....'"
She finished the sentence. "How about I tell you about your uncle? Your
dead uncle. Who died when he was just your age?" We both laughed a lot,
then she said, "but she never told me he was like you."
"Yeah, well, how do you say that? 'Oh, by the way, he reminds me of your
sister.'"
"Yeah, well, guess what? She may be grandma, but I'm not going to be
her. I'm not going to let you just tell me everything is OK when it
isn't. I'm serious. I don't care about my sister the partner. I care
about my little sister, my little sister." I started to cry again and
she held me. "Jesus," she said.
I smiled. "Stupid hormones. Thanks."
"That's why I'm here." She smiled. "Is daddy still doing the food
thing?"
"It's cute," I said, laughing and grateful to be doing so.
"It's nauseating," she said. "I mean you think he'd at least make an
effort not to show you're his favorite...."
"That's not true," I said. "He loves us both the same."
She laughed. "Yeah, you keep believing that. Are you OK now?"
"I'm as OK as I'm going to be." I looked at the store window. "I really
do love that dress."
She laughed. "Who'd a thunk it? My little tomboy sister would like lace
so much."
I started to think about everything again and stopped. I was still me.
I liked lace now, but I was still me. So, I just said, "people change.
Think I'll ever be able to wear that dress again?"
She rolled her eyes. "That's better. There's my neurotic little sister.
Yes. I lost the weight. Sammie lost the weight. Michelle lost the
weight. You'll lose it. I'll give you the jog stroller. You'll take my
nephew for a run."
I looked at her. "What makes you so sure it's a nephew?"
"You're carrying all in front. From behind, I couldn't tell you were
pregnant. That's how I was with Tuck, remember?" I didn't remember. I
remembered her being pregnant and yelling at Jeremy. Now I felt bad.
She was paying attention to me and I didn't really care when it was her.
So I lied. "So now you're grandma Rosie?"
She shrugged, "Better than mom."
We came to the first maternity store of three in a two block stretch.
The saleswoman came over. "Hi! How are you doing today? How far along
are you?"
I smiled, figuring this was the one place where the question was sort of
appropriate. "Fine. Five and a half months."
"Well, congratulations!" I wondered if she spoke in exclamation points
all the time. Like, 'yes, honey, I would like Mexican tonight!!!' or
'where is the dry cleaning!!!' "What brings you here today?"
I'm going out for a night of drinking and debauchery. "I need a dress
for a holiday party."
"How fancy?" I smiled, thinking how Danny wasn't even thinking about how
dressy it was. He'd wear a jacket, pants and a button down shirt. I
didn't miss that. I liked being pretty and feminine, especially now,
when I mostly felt bloated and nervous. I just had to smile at the
change in circumstances.
"I don't know. I mean it's a friend's party, not a work thing. But, it
is Saturday night and it is in Chappaqua, so I mean it's probably going
to be pretty nice. And her friends have money, not that I count it.
So," and I started to laugh.
"What's so funny?" Laura said.
Well, your former little brother is now parsing what dress, what
maternity dress, to wear to a party, that's what. And he's, I mean
she's, nervous and excited about it. "Nothing, just thinking of
something. Pregnancy brain," I said, with a smile. That placated her.
"Dressy, not too dressy. Plus, I'm going to Spain next week, so if it
can do double duty, that would be terrific."
The clerk led us over to the rack. "What are you thinking?"
"I don't know," I said, looking at a mix of black and colored dresses.
"You never can go wrong with black, it's very slimming," which got a
laugh, "but I could use some color."
The saleswoman smiled. "Well, let's see. What size were you?"
Maternity stores all measured you by what size you were before, which
made sense but felt cruel. Like 'you used to be a six. Used to be.' I
said, 'six,' and she looked on the rack and said, "what do you think of
this?" She held up a pale mauve dress that came to a couple of inches
above the knee. It had sheer shoulders with beading on them and short
sleeves.
Laura said, "oooh, that's really pretty, Jess. Try it on."
I went into the dressing room and put it on. I looked at myself in the
mirror. It was soft, it was feminine and it showed off my shoulders.
One of the few saving graces of swimming for exercise was that my arms
and shoulders were still toned. It had a peek-a-boo back. It tied at
what used to be my waist and showed off Thumper.
I came out and said, "How do I look?"
Laura said, "oooh, you look so beautiful. I'm so jealous."
I teased her. "You could have another one. Then you can borrow it." She
stuck out her tongue at me. "Let's put this one aside," I said. "Can I
see that black one?" It was a black dress with long lace bell sleeves.
I tried it on.
"You look like a pregnant Morticia." She turned to the saleswoman, who
looked horrified, and just said, "she's my sister. Someone has to say
it." Then she stuck out her tongue and said, "that'll teach you to say I
should have another one. Barbara."
I tried on a third dress. It was blue, knee length with lace sleeves.
It didn't have a tie which I liked. I was happy to be pregnant and was
proud of my bump. I just didn't know why I was supposed to draw
attention to it. It wasn't as dressy as the mauve. I turned to the
saleswoman and Laura. "What do you think?"
"I like the mauve," said Laura. "It looks gorgeous on you."
"What if it's too dressy?"
"I guess. I mean it's not too dressy, but the other one..."
The saleswoman chimed in, "You could totally accessorize the other one
and make it dressy."
I started to think, 'Well, I have the Tiffany heart, which I love. But,
it doesn't really dress it up. Do pearls go with this?' I started to
laugh to myself. This was me now. I was going to text Jill, but decided
to not live my life by committee. Or at least only by small committee.
I went with the mauve.
Laura and I had lunch and just chatted. She told me more about the
preschool moms. "I mean, I work for a living. Sorry, Jeremy's not at
Goldman Sachs like her husband..."
I decided to lighten the mood. "He's having an affair right now...with
the nanny."
Laura laughed. "I've seen the nanny. She's like 55, two hundred pounds
and from Trinidad. Or maybe Barbados. Or one of those places."
I smiled. "Exactly. Right now, while Tina and Penelope are at whatever
class, he's bending the nanny over the couch, pumping away..."
She started laughing and covering her mouth, so as not to make too much
noise. "Ohmigod, Jess, you are disgusting. Now I won't be able to look
at the nanny...."
I kept going. "And then she's going to come home. 'Is that a CUM STAIN
on the rug? How do you expect to get a CUM STAIN out of our Persian rug?
I simply do not understand this. And then she turns to the nanny, 'this
is coming out of YOUR pay!'"
Laura was giggling so hard, tears were coming out. "You are so
disgusting, Jess." I just smiled.
I walked back with her to her place, holding the dress. "Thanks, Laura."
"Promise me you're going to call when something's bothering you."
"I will."
"Promise. Say 'I promise.'"
"I promise. Thanks."
"Stop," she said, hugging me. "I'm your older sister. That's what I do."
"I love you, Lolo." She smiled. I hadn't called her 'Lolo' since I was
a baby and couldn't pronounce 'Laura.'
"I love you too, Teddie."
----------------------------------
Friday December 22 - Thumper was as big as kale. I could work with kale.
It was dirty, it was sour (thanks, heartburn) but, in the end, it was
good for you.
The day had not started off well.
It was 45 degrees and raining, fat intermittent drops.
The train was crowded and we were all crammed in. There were no
available seats. I looked down to see a man sitting with his legs
spread, pushing the woman next to him against the arm at the end of the
row. He just looked at me, like,''you chose to be pregnant.' A woman
sitting with her toddler in a stroller looked with tired eyes at me and
said, 'you want?' I smiled and shook my head. She looked at the guy and
mumbled, 'cabron.' Asshole.
To add insult to injury, I felt a hand grab my ass. This was not the
first time this had happened. As Jessa, I had become inured to the
'misplaced' hand and the 'mistaken' grab on the train. I hated it and,
more importantly, hated that there was little I could do but try and move
away. I fantasized about kicking someone in the groin and screaming but
knew that, on a train, I was trapped and couldn't do anything. If we
were at a station, I could knee someone and try and run but, with each
passing day, that wasn't an option. Today, however, was something
different. I turned around, so that my belly was visible, looked down at
it and then glared at him. The bastard just grinned at me and got off at
the next stop.
Then, I got to work and walked past the coffee maker. In the past
twenty-six weeks, my sense of smell had become acute. Which was great
because, for the first three months, I was constantly nauseous. While
the nausea had passed, the sense of smell remained and today I was
greeted by the smell of coffee. Rich French Roast coffee - coffee I
couldn't have. I sighed and went to work.
It was 11:00 AM. I was in my office, working on a brief, when Mike
knocked on the door. "Busy?"
Uh oh. "Kinda."
He ignored me and sat down. "Mind if I sit?" I looked at him and smiled
as if to say, 'not really a question, is it?'
"What's up?"
"How are you doing?" he said, looking around.
"Fine," I said slowly.
"So where are you going again?" He picked up my stress ball and started
throwing it up in the air.
"Madrid and Barcelona." I watched the ball go up and down, inexplicably
transfixed.
"That's terrific. Pack warm clothes. It gets cold at night."
"Ok.... What's up?"
He looked at my bulletin board. I had the new sonogram up. "Is that the
baby? Can I see it?" I handed it to him. "That is truly amazing. The
detail. You can really see little Michael's face."
"Ha ha. What's up?"
"I was going to ask you the same thing," he said, throwing the ball up
one last time and catching it backhanded.
"Huh? Something wrong with my work?"
"Not at all. But something's up lately. What's up?" He kept staring at
the sonogram then me.
"Just trying to tie stuff up before I go." Will this be over soon, I
thought? I have a lot to do and I don't want to waste too much time.
"I want you to relax while you're away." Now, I was nervous. My
heartburn acted up and I tried to surreptitiously rest my hand on my
stomach. It comforted me. I thought of Thumper and knew that, no matter
what, I had him. Or her. I put my hand under my belly, which Mike
couldn't see because of the desk.
"Ok. I'll have my phone if anyone needs me. And I'll check emails every
couple of hours."
"No you won't," he said. "I said relax, and," then he picked up my phone
and mimed swiping through, "this is not relaxing. It's called a vacation.
Go vacate."
"What if there's an emergency?"
"We're not criminal lawyers. There's no emergencies in real estate
litigation the week between Christmas and New Year's?" He laughed.
"Someone will handle it."
"I'm serious, Mike. I'm working on a lot."
He smiled, "I know. You've billed enough this year. And I want you to
relax. You don't realize it but this is the last relaxing trip you're
going to have for years. After this, it's going to be 'how is the baby?
Is the baby ok? Call your mom and make sure Mikey's OK' then, 'no, I'm
not buying more plastic crap. You have enough plastic crap.' Then, 'do I
hear a party going on?'. This is you and Dan and just you two. Relax.
See the sights. Eat some tapas. I'd say have some sangria but that's
out, right? But relax. You can look at email once a day and unless it
has a 911, you are not to respond." He looked at my eyes, "what's wrong,
Jessica?"
"Nothing."
"Seriously, what? I know that look. Maureen gives it to me all the
time. You say nothing's wrong, I say 'OK' and then six weeks later you
bring it up. What's wrong?"
I took a deep breath and thought about what Jodi said. I had spoken with
Jodi about this. In her old life, 'B.L. before Leo,' she had been an
employment attorney, representing management. When I told her what I was
thinking, she said be forthright. Respectful but forthright. "What's
going on, Mike? I've been getting the shit cases..."
"What?" He started squeezing the stress ball. Hard.
"You've been giving me third year cases to handle. Low grade condo
suits. Anyone could do them."
"Anyone could," he said. "But did you notice the name on those cases?".
I shrugged. They were various entities. "Ok, did you notice the
address?" I looked at one file. It was a very well known address. "You
know who's headquartered there," and he gave the name.
"Yeah. That still doesn't explain why you're giving me scut work."
He let out some air. "All of those entities are owned by the same
person. We are trying to steal that work away from Fried Frank. I
didn't give it to you because it's scut work, Jessica. I gave it to you
because I wanted it done right and efficiently, so they'd see how good we
are."
I felt embarrassed. "Oh," was all I could mumble.
"What did you think?"
"I just thought.... I mean Lindsay."
"Lindsay was a fucking idiot, excuse me. You are not. What? You
thought because I gave you these cases, I was trying to tell you
something? When have I ever not told you something? I remember giving
it to you after that Friesland case..." I just looked at my hands. He
said, "look at me. You are not going anywhere. Even if you want to,
you're not. You think I'm pushing you out because you're having a kid?".
I looked at a spot on the wall behind him. "I'm serious."
"I just..."
"Jesus, Jessica. What the hell do you think of me? Have I ever treated
you any differently than Jeff or Stephen or anyone?"
"No." I took the stress ball from him and started squeezing it, which
made him laugh.
"And I'm not now. You are as valuable a member of this department as
anyone, even Jeanine". He said that last part in a lower voice.
I laughed. "I'm telling."
"Then I will fire you. Seriously though, you are not going anywhere.
I'm not letting you off that easily."
"Sorry, Mike."
"Don't be. But do me a favor. Two favors. Relax and next time, say
something."
"Thanks, Mike."
"Yeah, you're welcome," he said, looking at the sonogram one more time.
"Damn, this is amazing." And he left.
---------------------
Saturday December 23.
"Are you sure this is OK?" I said. We were in the car on the way to the
party. I was wearing the dress with my Tiffany heart and flats. I put
on heels but my legs started to really hurt. I played with the heart.
It reminded me of Danny and made me feel loved. "It's not too dressy?"
He smiled. "You look gorgeous, Jessa." He was wearing, as predicted, a
navy suit with a blue checked shirt and no tie. He looked really
handsome.
"Really? You're sure? It's not too dressy? I won't look ridiculous?" I
kept having to adjust my bra straps. They were digging into my
shoulders. I really needed to get refitted but didn't want to deal yet,
so I just adjusted constantly.
He laughed. "God, pregnancy has made you more neurotic. Which I didn't
think was possible."
"I'm sorry. I just wanted to look pretty for you," I said, reaching over
to his waist, opening the zipper and sticking my hand in. I felt bad.
Sex had become more and more difficult and I felt guilty.
"Stop, Jessa."
That was unexpected. "Seriously? I can't believe you're turning it
down."
He groaned, "I want it more than anything but I need to focus on the
road, Jessa." He touched my belly. "I need to keep you and Thump safe,"
and he touched my belly.
"Fine," I sighed.
We drove the rest of the way listening to the radio. I alternated
touching my belly and flicking the visor up and down, until Danny put his
hand on the visor and said, with a smile, "enough." I started to look at
my phone but the motion of the car gave me a headache - like everything
else these days. I opened the window a crack and let the cool air blow
over my face until we got to Rich and Carrie's.
We walked up to the house and rang the bell. Carrie met us at the door.
She was wearing a black v neck cocktail dress and heels. I breathed a
sigh of relief. "Thanks for coming. Ohmigod, Jess, you look gorgeous."
She kissed both of us.
"Stop, I look like a mauve oompa-loompa. This is for you," I said, as I
handed her a bottle of wine, and, "these are for Rich."
"Oh god, you didn't..." I had bought her husband Rich black and white
cookies from Glaser's, a bakery on the Upper East Side, near their old
apartment. She yelled, "Rich, come here."
As I saw him walking over, I said, "You said that he liked them and I
just thought..."
"You and Jill. I swear. Dan, I love your wife." Which made him smile.
"Rich," she said, handing him the box.
He looked inside the box and grinned from ear to ear. "From Glaser's?
Oh wow....I'm putting these in the downstairs refrigerator."
She rolled her eyes. "Child...what do you say? I swear to god he's like
Noah." Her eight year old.
He gave me a kiss. "Thank you Jessica." He stuck his hand out. "Rich
Fung, Dan. Good to meet you," he said, "let's leave these two." And
they walked off.
Carrie and I walked into the living room. I was on the dressier side,
but not so dressy that I felt awkward. Jill was wearing a black dress
and standing with their old preschool friends, Andrea and Elissa. I
stopped for a second and pretended to get a drink. I watched the way
they interacted. Andrea stood with her hip facing to whomever she was
talking, with her shoulders tensed. Elissa was always standing with one
foot back and Jill was Evelyn, although she'd never admit it. She had an
open, welcoming stance, her arms hanging loosely by her sides but the
look in her eyes told you that she was ready for whatever happened. Jill
saw me and smiled. "Hey sis!" She gave me a kiss and brought me over.
Andrea and Elissa gave me the once over. Andrea was wearing a red v neck
dress with three quarter sleeves and Elissa a pale blue shift, that
complemented her coloring. They were all wearing heels which made me
feel even more oompa-loompa like.
Andrea looked me up and down but, unlike the bat mitzvah, gave me a big
smile. "Look at you. You look absolutely gorgeous. How are you
feeling?"
I smiled and said, "Thank you for lying. Fine. The usual fun stuff."
They all laughed knowingly and she said, 'ah, the fun stuff. How far
along are you?' "Twenty-six weeks."
"Constipated yet?" Andrea asked.
I looked at all of them and they all looked perfectly fine with it so I
said, "Oh god, yes. I feel like..."
"You have your period times ten with the bloating?" Elissa said,
laughing. "I hated that."
"Ohmigod, yes. It is fucking killing me. That and the hemorrhoids," I
said laughing.
Just then, Danny, Rich and Andrea's husband Bryan walked in. Danny was
holding a glass of scotch in one hand, and seltzer in the other.
"Hey, honey," he said, handing me the seltzer. "I thought you might want
a drink." He leaned down and gave me a kiss on the cheek.
"Thanks, honey," I said.
"Bryan, you remember Jessica," Andrea said, with a big smile. He clearly
didn't. "From the bat mitzvah? Jill's sister-in-law?"
He smiled. "Oh yeah," he said, looking through me. "I remember now." I
nervously smoothed my dress and wondered if the shoulders looked ok. I
hoped my bra strap wasn't showing. "Congrats, you two," he said, mostly
to Danny, who smiled and shook his hand.
Jill got up and punched Danny in the arm, then gave him a kiss. "I was
wondering when you'd come over." I looked at him towering over her and
smiled.
"Did you really care?" he half-joked.
"No, but I still wondered." She introduced him again to everybody and
they all just looked him up and down with contempt, which I appreciated.
He laughed, held up his glass and said, "Very nice seeing you all again.
Excuse me." I watched him walk away, him to his room and me in mine.
Jill smiled and said, "1 to 10, how much do you want to kill him?"
I smiled. "3." Then, I saw him come back in and take a piece of tuna
sashimi from the table. No tuna for me - mercury. "Sorry, 4." Which
got a laugh from the women. Then, he took a piece of brie. Not that
either - might not be pasteurized.
"5?" Elissa said, as we watched Danny leave the table. "Anyway, enough
about him. You look gorgeous. I love that dress."
I smiled. "Thank you. Yours too. That is a great color." It reminded
me of the dress that Laura and I saw, the one I wondered whether it would
ever fit me again. "Yours too, Andrea."
She smiled. "Thank you. You really look amazing. You really are
glowing." I looked at Jill, who smiled and gave a slight shrug.
"So, how did Chloe's concert go? How was the solo?" Sarah had told me
how Chloe (Andrea's daughter) had a solo on 'Let It Snow' at the school
concert. I asked partly because I cared (Chloe had come in one more time
and was better without an audience) and partly to keep her off guard.
It worked. "Uh, great. Thanks for asking." I smiled and turned to
Elissa. "How's Matt," her sixteen year old, "doing? How's the driving
coming along?" I didn't mind Elissa actually, but figured I should be
fair to all parties.
"Well, he's driving Mark," her husband, "crazy, thanks for asking," she
laughed. "He's doing fine though. I'm not looking forward to him being
behind the wheel. It's funny. I remember him in one of those little
mechanical cars in the mall and now....it goes fast." I started to tear
up, thinking of Thumper driving. I shook my head, realizing that he
should probably leave my uterus before he got behind the wheel. She
looked at me and smiled. "You have a while yet. But it goes fast,
faster than you think."
Andrea laughed, "The years and the months fly by, but you're going to
learn exactly how long twenty-four hours is." Then they started on
college admissions. Matt was a sophomore in high school.
"So, where is he going to do his volunteer project?" Jill said. She
turned to me. "You have to do a volunteer project now to get into a good
school. It's expected." Oh, I thought.
"He's thinking of doing two weeks in a village in Senegal. They have
them put up solar arrays for power."
"That's terrific," Andrea said. "Sherri Marks' son did something like
that. He dug wells in Ghana, and he just got into Amherst." I smiled,
wondering what the causal link was. Was he mediocre, but Amherst said,
"well, he dug a well, so come on in?' I sat and listened to them for a
while, about the college admissions process and wondered what Thumper
would have to do.
Elissa read my mind. She smiled and said, "By the time yours is ready,
he'll probably have to travel to space to get in," which made me laugh.
Which in turn made me sneeze. Which in turn made me pee. Apparently,
Thumper was putting pressure on my internal organs - including my
bladder.
"Damn it," I said. "I snissed myself." The Bump gave it the cute name
of 'snissing.' On top of everything, I had to wear a panty liner all the
time. Which went along with the dress shields in my bra to prevent
leakage.
Elissa said, "Snissed?"
Jill said that I turned red. "I sneeze..." I said.
And Elissa smiled and sighed. "And then you pee yourself. Snissing.
Real cute. After Lily, I had no bladder control for years." She looked
at me and said, 'sorry.' 'Sisterhood forever,' I thought.
I shrugged. "It's not enough that I spent the first three months
teaching myself to hold back my own hair when I puked..."
Jill smiled. "You get to leak like a sieve. Come on, I'll show you
where the bathroom is," she said. I felt mortified, like a child being
taken to clean herself up.
She showed me where the bathroom was and I said, "I'll be fine. Go back
to your friends. Maybe, I'll get something to eat after." I sat down,
cleaned myself off and put a new pad in my panties.
I walked out of the bathroom and stopped for a second, thinking about
everything. I wondered if all the leakage this was nature's way of
getting me ready to care for an infant. De-sensitizing me to bodily
fluids.
I was just thinking when I heard Yoram say, "I said, 'Ma shlomech ima?"
It meant 'How are you, mommy?' I liked that.
I gave him a kiss. "Oh hi, Yoram. Sorry, I space sometimes."
He laughed, "I went through it twice. Pregnancy brain, she called it.
How are you doing? You eat yet? You should eat something." I smiled
and he took by the arm into the dining room. I looked at the buffet. I
half-heartedly picked up some baby lamb chops and grilled vegetables; I
knew those were safe.
He laughed, picking up some sashimi. "Tuna won't kill you. In Israel,
they eat whatever. And smoke. In the delivery room. The doctors. 'OK,
here it comes,' and then he mimed a doctor looking, then taking a drag
off a cigarette and exhaling, 'it's a girl.'"
I laughed. "Don't make me laugh, Yoram."
He smiled. "Sorry. So how are you doing?"
"I'm doing," I said, with a smile. Yoram brought out the fatalist in me.
"How about you? Did the kids get off OK?" Jill had to grade end of
semester exams, so she sent Sarah and Yoni to Florida for the week
earlier that day.
"Fine," he sighed.
He didn't say that he was worried, but I knew he was. I was worried too,
but I wouldn't let on. Instead, I said, with what I hope he knew was
sincerity. "I spoke to her honor and I laid down the law. I told her
that I better not get any phone calls and she promised...."
He smiled, a sincere smile. "Thanks, Jess," he said, taking me by the
arm. "I'm not looking forward to it, you know."
"I told you. I spoke to her. And I told Sarah to call me if she starts
with her." I was going to be in Spain. Any calls would be on a delay
but he didn't need to know that.
"I know. I know. You really think it'll be OK?" He was never worried.
He wasn't naive about what went on. He just never worried.
"They have to survive driving with Marty..." Which made him laugh.
"Nah, I think so. She knows better now and Sarah knows better."
He gave me another kiss. "Thank you, Jessica. For everything."
I smiled and just said, "Please." I looked toward the family room where
I saw Danny in conversation. "How's he doing in there?"
He smiled. "Why are you worried about him? He's doing fine. When I
left, they were talking about golf..."
I smiled. "Your favorite topic, I know." He mimed pointing a gun at his
head and pulling the trigger.
He said, "It's fine. He's fine. They all talk the same language. How
about you? How's Andrea?" He had a devilish grin.
I swatted him. "Stop. She's my new best friend."
He looked at the women and smiled. "I'm sure."
"The college stuff is giving me a headache though. This one is going to
Ghana to dig wells. This one is going to Senegal to put in solar
arrays...."
"Ma'azeh (what) solar arrays in Senegal?" Clearly, whatever the men were
talking about, it wasn't this.
I smiled. "Elissa's son Matt. That's his project."
"I don't know. We all went to the army and came out. I think I did OK
for myself."
"Imagine what you would have done had you gone to Ghana." I lowered my
voice, "is it just me or is it all bullshit. Like I want to ask a
college admissions counselor if they actually believe this shit..." He
laughed. I continued, "you want to impress me? Go raise money so someone
who knows how to dig a well can dig a well. Or study hydrology, so
you're not in the way when you go to dig your well. Better yet, go help
some poor people in the Bronx."
He smiled and, in a low voice, said, "Brown people there, good. Brown
people here, not so much." I started to giggle and clenched my vagina,
which was surprisingly difficult, but the crisis was averted. "You know
what the sad part is?" I smiled, and he said "you'll do it and I'll do
it." The sad part was he was right. "Anyway, we should probably get
back." He gave me another kiss. "I'm glad you're here."
----------------
We had an early flight on the 24th. I wanted to get to Madrid as early
in the day as possible.
The alarm rang at 5:15. "Fuuuuck," Danny said.
I gave him a peck on the cheek. "You can sleep for another fifteen
minutes, at least. I'll get ready first." He pulled the pillow over his
face and I went to shower. I stood in the shower, letting the water run
over me while I talked to the baby, in a high-pitched sing-song voice.
'Hey, Thump. Guess where you're going today? Spain. Vamos a Espa?a.
We are going to Spain. We are going to have so much fun. You and me and
daddy. I am very excited...." I felt Danny staring at me. "What?"
He smiled. "Nothing. I just love watching you..."
I smiled. "Perv."
"Not even close," he said, wrapping my towel around me as I got out and
giving me a hug from behind. "You are going to be the best mommy." I
smiled, holding back my thoughts. We were going to have a babymoon. A
relaxing, romantic babymoon. Without my neuroses.
I put on a blue dress with black horizontal stripes, and black tights.
For some reason, maternity clothes tended to horizontal stripes, which
made me laugh. I'm not fat enough? You need to make look fatter? I
took a selfie in the mirror. I went to post it to Facebook with the
caption 'babymoon' with little baby emojis and smileys and stopped. I
was a woman, not a fourteen-year old girl. Instead, I went with "Off to
Spain. My belly arrives at 3. I get there at 4."
Danny came up behind me, put his hands under my belly and said, "Look at
you, all dressed up."
"Stop," I said, turning to my arms on his shoulders and kiss him. "I
wanted to look pretty. To feel pretty." I needed to feel pretty.
Otherwise, I'd feel bloated. I hadn't flown pregnant and could only
imagine what that would do to my system.
He kissed me. "You're beautiful. I love you, Jessa. Are you ready?" I
smiled. "Paperbacks, right?" I smiled.
We took a cab to the airport, holding each other's hands. Mercifully,
the security line was short and I didn't have to go through the x-ray
machine. We were walking through the terminal when Danny stopped at the
first class lounge.
"Um, honey, you have to have first class tickets..." He smiled and
showed his phone to the guard, who waved us through. "Danny? What's
up?"
He smiled and said, "Thank Bruce. He gave us some of his miles. Between
his and mine, here we are. Water? Juice? Muffin?"
"Why didn't you tell me? I would've thanked him."
"He wanted it to be a surprise for you." He opened his arms wide.
"Surprise!"
I started to cry. Stupid hormones. "Well, I have to thank him," I said,
taking out my phone.
He put his hand over mine. "No phone. Relax. Doctor's orders."
I smiled. "What doctor?"
"Doctor me." Which was cute. I expected something like 'Dr. Love.'
-----
Our hotel was in the Barceloneta district of Barcelona. Near the beach,
and pretty central. Just walking distance from the train station where we
arrived. Given Thumper, I didn't want to do much walking.
We arrived at night, having taken a train from Madrid. The receptionist,
who was a tired looking Eastern European woman, greeted us as we entered.
I let Danny do the talking. I should have practiced my Spanish, as I
rarely had the chance to speak, but I was tired. Instead I looked
around. The hotel was originally built in the late nineteenth century
(I'd been online and checked) and the style owed a lot to Art Nouveau.
I'd been reading about the Catalan Renaixen?a and Modernisme and was
eager to learn more. In the center of the foyer was a metal cage for the
elevator. The cage was made out of iron, welded into a beautiful pattern
resembling the leafs of flowers.
After we got the keys, I watched Danny wrestle to get the thing down. The
receptionist had to come over and explain the trick. By the time it
reached us Danny didn't look too happy.
As the elevator went up I rested my head on his shoulder, hoping to show
I appreciated his effort.
He sighed. "You couldn't book a regular hotel?"
I had booked the trip. I could have booked a Radisson or a Hilton, which
would have been cheaper and more modern, but I wanted this trip to be
special. I wanted to stay in a classic old world European hotel. I
hadn't planned on the elevator though. "I thought this would be more
romantic." I smiled, looking into his eyes. Which proceeded to roll
like slot machines.
The corridors were mostly quiet. In fact, we didn't see anyone until we
reached our room. Two women, one tall, with long hair and bangs, the
other with short hair dyed red. They smiled and nodded at us as they
opened their door. Danny was struggling with the key in the lock, so the
taller woman leaned over and showed him how you needed to turn the handle
at the same time.
"Thanks," he said with a smile, although I could tell he was frustrated.
"Not a problem." She smiled back, and then was gone. Just strangers
passing in the night.
The room made up for the lack of service. It was beautiful, and decorated
in the same Art Nouveau theme as the rest of the hotel. By the look of
it, they were original features. Danny didn't seem to see any of it and
simply flopped on the bed, turning the widescreen TV on in an almost
seamless movement.
"You OK?"
"Sure, sorry. I just need ten minutes."
I lay down next to him nuzzling myself against his side. Not so easy
these days with Thumper getting in between us. I felt his arm coming
around me. I was only half watching the TV, just enough to notice he'd
settled on a woman's soccer match.
"Who's playing?" I whispered.
Danny leaned forward, squinting. "ENG verses ESP, I'm guessing England
vs Spain."
I drifted off after that. I half remember Danny getting me undressed and
into bed. The next thing I remembered was waking up to the sun coming in
through the window. The clock by the bed said 6:46am, so I just rolled
back asleep.
By the time we got up, the hotel was busy. A new receptionist, this time
a young Spanish woman, greeted us as we came out of the elevator. Danny
went to get some tourist information while I sat and people watched. I
was surprised by how full the hotel was. Most seemed to be young
Europeans and I spent a happy ten minutes trying to guess what country
they were from. I half glanced down at the papers on the table, all were
European, I didn't see any American ones. There was a large picture of
Trump on the front of most of them. I flipped the ones at the top over.
This was a vacation, I didn't want to know.
Danny came and sat next to me. "We've got a table in the restaurant.
It'll be about ten minutes." His demeanor had completely changed from the
night before.
The couple from the night before walked into the restaurant. "Do you
mind if I take that one," the taller one said, pointing to the Guardian.
"I want to read about the football." I hadn't noticed her British accent
the night before.
"Be my guest," I said. The shorter one smiled at me, her eyes looking me
up and down and, for a brief but noticeable second, alighting on my
stomach. I smiled back, having become used to it, and she looked away.
Danny smiled. "I watched the game against Spain yesterday. Your women
did well," he said, putting his arm around me. "Do you know Barcelona?"
"I studied here, why?"
"Anything you'd recommend?" I was slightly annoyed, having planned what
we were going to see. Then, I thought, 'if she studied here.' I
wondered if he was enjoying being able to talk in English with someone
other than me.
She smiled. "Well, if you're interested in football, go see Camp Nou,
where FC Barcelona plays." She took a piece of paper and pen and started
writing one of those impossibly long European numbers. "You can do a
tour..."
Her partner gave me a smile and a quick eye roll and said, "It has the
best views. On a clear day you can see the sea in one direction, and the
mountains in the other."
The taller one smiled and continued, "If you're in luck and they're
playing one of the midtable teams, you may be able to get tickets in the
visitor's section."
"Thanks! Er..." I said.
"Oh, sorry, Liz," I introduced the two of us and then she was off.
The rest of the day was busy. First we walked up Las Ramblas. I was
disappointed as it seemed very touristy. Lots of stalls selling the sort
of cheap crap that gets aimed at gullible American tourists. We had more
luck with the Picasso Museum. Danny smiled. "in context, I totally get
it," he said. "Like the Warhol exhibit at the Tate. Sometimes, you just
need to see the work together to get it."
That led us into the narrow streets of the old medieval town. According
to my Lonely Planet, Barcelona is split into three sections. There's the
old winding streets of the medieval city that makes up the most of the
city center. Then there's the grid system of the later, 19th century
buildings, with its beautiful apartment buildings to the north. Then
there's the more modern city that surrounds that, which grew after the
death of Franco.
We spent most of the day wandering, interspersed with sitting in cafes to
give my feet a rest. I was glad we'd come in winter, I don't know how I
would have coped in the heat.
Sitting in a caf? overlooking one of the beaches, I put my feet up on one
of the chairs. Without asking, Danny started massaging them.
"Oooo, that's good." I slipped down in my chair.
"How about the beach tomorrow?" he said, in a tone that went between
pleading and commanding.
I looked up at the sky. Compared to New York, it wasn't exactly wintery,
but the sun was weak and the sky was equal parts blue and grey cloud. "I
mean, it's not exactly beach weather," and I smiled thinking of Sarah's
bat mitzvah and 'beach party chic,' "but OK. We'll take it easy."
We were wandering around, slightly lost when we came across a little
square near their main modern art gallery, the MACBA. Danny's phone was
struggling to get a signal so I pulled out the little tourist map the
receptionist had given us. Two old women approached me. The first put her
hand on my belly, while the second took my arm. I didn't speak at first,
I couldn't understand what they were saying, but I got that, for the most
part, they were cooing over Thumper. By this point I was used to being
manhandled as a pregnant woman, but this seemed to be invasive by any
standards. I looked over at Danny who caught my eye.
As soon as they caught a look of him, they seemed to evaporate. It took
me only a moment to realise something was up.
"Danny, my purse!" I yelled.
My ears started to ring. I could hear shouting. I remember two blond
girls, Dutch I think, leading me over to a little seat. There was an
older Spanish man talking angrily and before I realized it two cops were
standing over me.
The next hour or so was a nightmare. The cops were friendly enough. They
took mine and Danny's statements. I just kept asking was about my
passport. I wasn't worried about the credit cards - they could be
canceled and new ones sent; besides, Danny still had his wallet. I only
had 50 euros. But, my passport was lost and I started to panic. Why had
I taken my passport? How long would I be stuck? Would Thumper be born
here? Did that mean he or she couldn't be president? Would our health
insurance cover me out here? It took Danny a while to calm me down.
By the time we got back to the hotel, we were exhausted. The American
consulate had been amazing. I'd have my replacement passport in the
morning, but I still felt like something had gone wrong. Our babymoon
was spoiled. Worse yet, I had read about these sorts of things and had
still fallen for it. I had put Thumper in danger. We headed to our room
and ordered up through room service then spent the next few hours
mindlessly watching Spanish soaps and game shows.
Danny fell asleep around ten-ish but I couldn't settle. The day's events
had set Thumper and he was taking his frustration out on my bladder. The
image I had in my head was of a pinata. After the fifth trip to the
toilet, I decided to go explore, hoping to calm both of us down.
I ended up in the bar where I ordered a club soda with lime, wishing I
could have something stronger. There was a pianist in the corner playing
old jazz numbers and, for the first time in hours, I could feel myself
relaxing. Looking around the near empty bar, I spotted one familiar face.
"Hi Liz, would you mind me sitting down?" I felt bad when I noticed she
she was reading.
"Hi, Jessica, isn't it? Please do."
"Sorry, I didn't mean to interrupt your reading."
She looked at her book, "Don't worry. 'Homage to Catalonia.' "I read it
every time I'm here. And, so far, I was just staring at the page. Please
sit, I need the company."
For a few minutes, we both watched the pianist quietly.
"Off on your own tonight?" I asked, realizing it was relatively early.
"No, I just can't sleep. Kate was out like a light, but I was just lying
there. I thought these might help," she held up her book in her right
hand and a glass of whiskey in the left.
I laughed, "Well, at least I can still read." Then I patted my belly.
She laughed as well. "Do you mind me asking what you're doing in
Barcelona? Come to s