{"title":"Things of My Mother's","authors":"Jacky Grey","doi":"10.1353/sew.2024.a926961","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Things of My Mother’s <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Jacky Grey (bio) </li> </ul> <p><strong>F</strong>or the few weeks leading up to my ninth birthday, I had scraped enough good behavior together to ask for an ice cream cake. The closest Dairy Queen was twenty miles away.</p> <p>Going to town just to get cake was a big deal. Birthday cakes were usually a box mix with a tub of frosting. Ice cream cakes were special. My brother got one on his last birthday and I had asked ten months ago, if I was good, could I have one on my birthday too? Good behavior was hard. First, it was important to have visibly good behavior. Second, it was important to not be too obvious or it would turn on you. In our house, vanity, a subvariant of pride, was a terrible sin. I spent the day trying to be a half-invisible, half-doting daughter. I dusted rooms that were not on my chore list and quietly refilled my stepmother’s water glass while she was reading on the couch. I didn’t want to mess up somehow and spend my birthday in my room again.</p> <p>The previous year the highlight of my birthday was apologizing to the Manager at Shop-N-Kart and returning a ChapStick. (I <strong>[End Page 253]</strong> swear on my mother’s life I found it on the aisle floor.) My stepmother, disbelieving me, considered it stealing. I spent the rest of the day in my room. My punishment for stealing was isolation and boredom. When Father got home, he creaked up the stairs and sagged on the edge of my bed. I hoped he wouldn’t notice the lump made from the book I had stashed between the bed slats and the mattress. I kept a copy of C.S. Lewis’s <em>The Horse and His Boy</em> in my room for just such occasions, and while this was an allowed book, I was not supposed to be daydreaming and enjoying myself during my bedroom banishment. I did not mind that I had read it many times through. After a short, halfhearted speech about stealing being a sin, Father said he couldn’t let me grow up to be sinful, even on my birthday, so he laid me over his knee.</p> <p>Before my double breathing subsided, Father said he had a present for me. The shock of this slowed my spasms. He stood and stuffed his hand into his pocket. Often after a punishment, Father was gentler, he would hold me in a hug and tell me he loved me. My stomach flipped in hope. Maybe it was a pocketknife like his I had not so secretly coveted. He pulled out a fist and uncurled to reveal a classic, cherry flavored ChapStick. Feigning gratitude at that gift hurt worse than the spanking. I hated pink then and now. I hate the flavor of artificial cherry and distrust those who don’t. He thought it was hilarious and spent the rest of the year telling any poor soul he held captive in an audience how clever he was.</p> <p>I sat as still as I could muster on the ride to Dairy Queen. It felt like anything could topple this dream. My stepmother appreciated manners, and I pleased and thank-you’d enough for a month. The cakes were kept in a refrigerated glass case, the bottom shelf full of Dilly Bars and ice cream sandwiches. The cakes were on the middle shelf, about chest high, and at the front was a white cake with pink frosting piped along its the edges, with Minnie Mouse printed on <strong>[End Page 254]</strong> top. Its clear plastic container reminded me of the coffin in <em>Snow White</em>. Behind Minnie Mouse was another white cake with white frosting and blue piping depicting Thomas, a stupid blue train for little kids, but I would rather have that than the pink one with Minnie on it. I finally asked my stepmother for it, I said I chose it because it was the only chocolate cake. If I could have picked any Disney character, it would have been Aladdin or the Beast.</p> <p>After our trip to town, I couldn’t wait for...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":43824,"journal":{"name":"SEWANEE REVIEW","volume":"157 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"SEWANEE REVIEW","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/sew.2024.a926961","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERARY REVIEWS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Things of My Mother’s
Jacky Grey (bio)
For the few weeks leading up to my ninth birthday, I had scraped enough good behavior together to ask for an ice cream cake. The closest Dairy Queen was twenty miles away.
Going to town just to get cake was a big deal. Birthday cakes were usually a box mix with a tub of frosting. Ice cream cakes were special. My brother got one on his last birthday and I had asked ten months ago, if I was good, could I have one on my birthday too? Good behavior was hard. First, it was important to have visibly good behavior. Second, it was important to not be too obvious or it would turn on you. In our house, vanity, a subvariant of pride, was a terrible sin. I spent the day trying to be a half-invisible, half-doting daughter. I dusted rooms that were not on my chore list and quietly refilled my stepmother’s water glass while she was reading on the couch. I didn’t want to mess up somehow and spend my birthday in my room again.
The previous year the highlight of my birthday was apologizing to the Manager at Shop-N-Kart and returning a ChapStick. (I [End Page 253] swear on my mother’s life I found it on the aisle floor.) My stepmother, disbelieving me, considered it stealing. I spent the rest of the day in my room. My punishment for stealing was isolation and boredom. When Father got home, he creaked up the stairs and sagged on the edge of my bed. I hoped he wouldn’t notice the lump made from the book I had stashed between the bed slats and the mattress. I kept a copy of C.S. Lewis’s The Horse and His Boy in my room for just such occasions, and while this was an allowed book, I was not supposed to be daydreaming and enjoying myself during my bedroom banishment. I did not mind that I had read it many times through. After a short, halfhearted speech about stealing being a sin, Father said he couldn’t let me grow up to be sinful, even on my birthday, so he laid me over his knee.
Before my double breathing subsided, Father said he had a present for me. The shock of this slowed my spasms. He stood and stuffed his hand into his pocket. Often after a punishment, Father was gentler, he would hold me in a hug and tell me he loved me. My stomach flipped in hope. Maybe it was a pocketknife like his I had not so secretly coveted. He pulled out a fist and uncurled to reveal a classic, cherry flavored ChapStick. Feigning gratitude at that gift hurt worse than the spanking. I hated pink then and now. I hate the flavor of artificial cherry and distrust those who don’t. He thought it was hilarious and spent the rest of the year telling any poor soul he held captive in an audience how clever he was.
I sat as still as I could muster on the ride to Dairy Queen. It felt like anything could topple this dream. My stepmother appreciated manners, and I pleased and thank-you’d enough for a month. The cakes were kept in a refrigerated glass case, the bottom shelf full of Dilly Bars and ice cream sandwiches. The cakes were on the middle shelf, about chest high, and at the front was a white cake with pink frosting piped along its the edges, with Minnie Mouse printed on [End Page 254] top. Its clear plastic container reminded me of the coffin in Snow White. Behind Minnie Mouse was another white cake with white frosting and blue piping depicting Thomas, a stupid blue train for little kids, but I would rather have that than the pink one with Minnie on it. I finally asked my stepmother for it, I said I chose it because it was the only chocolate cake. If I could have picked any Disney character, it would have been Aladdin or the Beast.
期刊介绍:
Having never missed an issue in 115 years, the Sewanee Review is the oldest continuously published literary quarterly in the country. Begun in 1892 at the University of the South, it has stood as guardian and steward for the enduring voices of American, British, and Irish literature. Published quarterly, the Review is unique in the field of letters for its rich tradition of literary excellence in general nonfiction, poetry, and fiction, and for its dedication to unvarnished no-nonsense literary criticism. Each volume is a mix of short reviews, omnibus reviews, memoirs, essays in reminiscence and criticism, poetry, and fiction.