Hiccups
by Renée Hartleib
Mela walked to work that Saturday morning, the way she
had for the last
fifteen years: out the front entrance of her apartment
building, down the
street, and right at the corner. Her route was
straightforward and took her
through the city’s south end, past houses she liked to
call monstrosities.
The men in their shirtsleeves were out, hauling old
stereos out of their
basements and setting down boxes of dusty books. Their
earnest looking wives
carefully wrote prices on masking tape. Yard sales
depressed Mela and she
kept her head down as she walked by. All the things
that someone used to
love being given away for dimes and quarters. Strangers
leaving with little
parts of you, zigzagging away like water striders on
top of a lake.
Mela never altered her route to work, not even to
alleviate boredom. It was
the same with meals. She still cooked the same things
her mother had taught
her to cook: pierogi, potato pancakes, kapusta. She
knew, although she didn’
t like to think about it, that this was one of the
things that had driven
Kasia away. Her daughter, who insisted on being called
Catherine now,
thought her boring, useless, and stuck.
The one highlight on her way to work, which Mela
anticipated in the same way
she craved her morning cup of coffee, was the message
in the glass box on
the front lawn of the Unitarian Church. She was not a
religious person or
even someone who would have read her horoscope in the
newspaper, but she had
come to rely on the sign for a daily dose of goodness.
She often repeated
certain ones in order to memorize them and then wrote
them down when she got
to work.
Happiness is a decision we make everyday rather than
something to be
obtained.
Forgiveness does not change the past, but it does
enlarge the future.
“Why do you still work for that man?” her daughter
would ask. Kasia looked
so much like her father, the same sad shaking of the
head when she looked at
Mela; the way Randall had looked at her in the last
months of their
marriage, as if the ways she had disappointed him were
too numerous to
count.
“You could work at the Superstore, Mama. They’re
looking for people. You
could make the same amount of money and not work so
hard. And then you
wouldn’t have to do people’s filthy laundry. And deal
with that crazy man
and his incessant smoking.” Her daughter had started
using big words after
she got accepted to school in Toronto.
Mr. Stanley, her boss, was a difficult person but she’d
learned how to deal
with him. And the work wasn’t that bad. Kasia didn’t
know what hard work
was. Besides Mela couldn’t imagine working anywhere
else. Until that
Saturday, she wouldn’t have even considered it.
She’d had the same job since coming to Halifax fifteen
years ago. This was
after Randall left her and she couldn’t bear to be in
Toronto anymore. A
cousin in Halifax offered a spare room and that was
enough. She packed Kasia
and a few of their things and had the job within a week
of arriving.
“Last girl didn’t work out,” Mr. Stanley said, when he
first met Mela. He
looked at her suspiciously, putting the emphasis on
“girl,” as if her gender
had been the problem. “She was lazy. Sat around reading
trash. Couldn’t fold
clothes worth shit.” He rubbed his bristly chin and
shook his head, as he
sat on what Mela thought of later as his throne- the
green striped lawn
chair with the saggy bottom. Coffee in one hand and his
ever-present
cigarette in the other. If the customers didn’t like
smoke, “screw them,” he
often said. “I’m too old to quit. If they don’t like
it, they can lump it.”
Mr. Stanley had huge pink flabby lips that wrapped
around the cigarette.
Mela imagined soggy filters. She herself didn’t smoke,
but she had gotten
used to it.
She found out quickly that Mr. Stanley was a stickler
for what he called
“fluff.” Fluff accumulated in great quantities in a
laundromat, under the
folding tables and between washers and especially in
front of the dryers.
Mr. Stanley would often shuffle over to her with the
broom and point
wordlessly.
That morning, as she approached the church, she passed
the convenience store
with its permanently overflowing garbage can that
attracted pigeons. Mela
threw her hands up from her sides as she marched by,
forcing the birds to
struggle up and away. Although she liked birds in
general, she couldn’t
stand pigeons. Their murmuring and shuffling. All that
pecking and bobbing.
The tragedy of their colouring and the fact that they
didn’t fly as much as
flutter and stagger. If they could talk, she thought
they’d be saying:
“Sorry miss, didn’t mean to be in your way, I’ll be
moving right along.”
When she got within a block of the church and looked
ahead toward the sign,
she could tell that something was wrong. A few steps
more and she could see
the glass had been shattered. Shards of it lay on the
grass, glinting in the
morning sun. The worst part was that someone had
spelled “fuck you,” in the
white space that usually housed her daily reverie. Mela
felt instantly sick,
but her steps faltered for only a moment. Two things
prevented her from
stopping: fear of being seen as the vandal and not
wanting to be late for
work. She was never late.
Her stomach was in knots the rest of the way there. Who
would do such a
thing? And why? She felt violated in a way that she
hadn’t since the time
she’d been called a “stupid polack,” during her first
year in Canada. A man
who tried to cut in front of her in the grocery line
got in a huff when she
wouldn’t let him. It wasn’t fair. She’d been waiting
twenty minutes and
there was a line-up of people behind her. “How did he
know you were Polish?”
Randall asked her. Can’t you tell? she thought, sure
that her difference was
written all over her.
Mela tried to calm herself by thinking of the nice cup
of tea she would make
herself when she got to work. Mr. Stanley would already
be staked out in his
lawn chair, reading the paper and slurping from his Tim
Horton’s cup. If
there was one thing that she respected about Mr.
Stanley, it was his
punctuality. He might not do much when he was at work,
but he was always on
time.
That Saturday, however, when she pulled on the door, it
was locked. She
peered through the window, one hand cupped around the
side of her face. The
laundromat was dark. Mela disliked it when things
didn’t go as planned. She
thought of those episodes as hindrances to a smooth
life. Jarring bumps on a
nice Sunday drive or the sudden onset of hiccups. She
stood rigidly, looking
up and down the street, willing Mr. Stanley to appear,
his stocky body
shuffling up the street.
She waited for twenty minutes, wondering what she
should do, and felt panic
growing inside her. She paced the sidewalk and heard
Kasia’s voice in her
head: “Why can’t you ever sit still?” Kasia had no
trouble sitting in front
of the TV for hours at a time. Mela had never been able
to do that. She felt
too guilty. If the TV was on, she needed to be ironing
or making soup.
Something. Busyness soothed her.
On the rare occasion when she allowed herself to have a
bath and just relax,
she was surprised when it actually felt good. With the
door shut to the
outside world, Mela sometimes found herself breathing
deeply. It felt
accidental, as if the slosh of the water and the
climbing steam reached
inside her chest and loosened something tight in there.
Yet, each time she dried off, wrapping her bathrobe
around her and opening
the door, relief flooded through her. It was the sounds
of traffic and the
neighbours fighting and the droning, pessimistic murmur
of the news that
made her heart rate accelerate back into the normal
range and her breath
tighten again, high in her chest. This was what she
was used to.
Mela peered around the corner and was considering
walking to the pay phone
down the street, when she heard keys jingle behind her.
A man she’d never
seen before was opening the laundromat door. His dark
hair stood up in tufts
and he balanced a laundry basket under one arm as he
turned the key in the
lock. She approached him wordlessly, walking through
the door after him, her
heart pounding.
“Excuse me,” she said.
He put the basket down on the counter and turned
around. “We’re not open
yet,” he barked.
She stopped and stared at him as he turned back around.
She finally managed
to say, “I work here.”
“Good. You can put my laundry in then. I’m going to get
a coffee.” He walked
back towards her. He wore a filthy looking sweater and
jeans with holes in
both knees. When he got closer she noticed his fly was
undone.
“Who are you?” Her voice sounded high and thin. He
stopped when he was even
with her and rubbed his face where it looked like he
hadn’t shaved in a few
days. She felt his eyes rake over the graying hair she
refused to dye and
the wrinkles around her eyes and the flabby skin of her
upper arms, and
dismiss her. She felt ugly and useless to him and
wanted to back up against
the row of washers behind her. She could smell last
night’s booze and garlic
on his breath.
“Don’t look much like the old man I guess, eh?” he said
and snorted. “That’s
a good thing. Ugly son of a bitch.” He moved towards
the door. “Had a heart
attack last night. He’s in the hospital.” He grinned at
her. “Guess I’m your
boss for awhile.” The door slammed behind him.
Mela felt her breath slowly coming back to her as she
watched Mr. Stanley’s
son cross the street. She tried to get her body to
move. The washers needed
wiping down before anyone came in. She looked towards
the back counter again
and saw his dirty clothes spilling over the top of the
white plastic basket.
The news of the Mr. Stanley’s heart attack wasn’t a
surprise - he wasn’t
exactly healthy - but it was still a shock to find him
suddenly gone, to
have her routine so disrupted. Mela tried to remember
what her boss had said
about his sons. She knew that one worked in Alberta,
one was in jail in PEI,
and one owned his own construction company in town. Was
this the one who’d
been in jail?
Despite the fact that Randall was not at all like the
man who had just been
standing in front of her, there was something about the
two of them that
seemed the same. Mela thought it was something in their
eyes, something dark
beneath the whites, something hidden. In the beginning,
Mela had naively
thought she knew everything about Randall, until she
found a pile of dirty
magazines in the storage cupboard two months after they
were married. They
were in a box with other things that he’d moved from
his old apartment. The
box was labelled “old books.” The box was open already,
as if he’d been
going through it. The magazines were underneath some
battered spy novels
that she didn’t know he read either. He talked about
reading Dostoevsky and
Dickens. She had been impressed.
Mela rifled through the magazines and counted them -
twenty-two, more than a
spontaneous purchase, that was for sure - and she noted
that October 1980
was on top. When she checked the box a week later, June
1979 was on top. It
sickened her to think that Randall had snuck into the
closet sometime during
that week, sometime when she was sleeping or had the
vacuum going or was out
shopping, and looked at those pictures. Were these
women what he thought
about when they made love? She remembered the way he
squeezed his eyes
tightly shut when he was on top of her and she felt the
first surge of
panic. There were a hundred more insecure moments like
this one, culminating
in Randall’s tearful confession three years later, that
he was in love with
someone else. She saw through his tears to his relief
at being rid of her.
Fifteen years was a long time and still Randall came
up, despite her best
efforts. He surfaced and bobbed on the top of her
water, like the pieces of
wood he had loved to carve. After he left, when he told
her that she didn’t
“meet his needs,” that she never had, she took every
stick he’d ever crafted
into something other than what it was - duck’s head,
snake’s body, pig’s
snout - and had a roaring bonfire on the balcony in the
hibachi. It was the
first time in her life that she wasn’t afraid of
anything. Not of dying or
setting the apartment on fire or getting in trouble or
hurting Randall. She
just kept feeding his creations to the flames. She did
this instead of
crying about him. For fifteen years, she had refused to
cry.
Mela tried to calm herself by hanging up her coat and
putting on the kettle.
She wet the cloth to wipe the washers down. She moved
his laundry basket
down to the floor and wiped the counter off as well.
She kept looking
towards the door but after almost half an hour had
passed and he hadn’t
returned, she started to relax.
She was sweeping with her back to the door when she
heard it bang shut. She
jumped and whirled around, but it was only the first
customer of the day, a
lanky blond girl in a tracksuit with her hair pulled
back. She dropped a
stained hockey bag on the floor and walked towards Mela.
“Can I get some quarters?” she asked.
Mela walked behind the counter and tried to open the
till. “It’s locked,”
she said, feeling her face flush.
The girl frowned. “Well, can’t you open it?” She seemed
then to look at Mela
more closely. “You do work here, don’t you?”
“The owner’s sick today. He had a heart attack.” She
guessed that Mr.
Stanley’s son didn’t know that he was supposed to open
the till and Mela
didn’t have a key. It was one of the things that Kasia
had harped on.
“You should be a manager by now. You should be the
co-owner for God’s sake. You’ve worked there long enough. And the man won’t even
give you a key!”
Mela had asked Mr. Stanley once if she could have keys
and he snapped at
her, so she didn’t ask again.
She thought about running down to the corner store for
change or telling the
girl to go find change somewhere else when Mr.
Stanley’s son walked back in.
He had a coffee in one hand and a paper folded in half
under his arm and he
started whistling aimlessly when he saw the blond girl.
“Well, I guess I’ll go somewhere else then,” the girl
said and started to
walk away.
“Wait. He can open it,” Mela said.
The son climbed the three steps to the landing where
the counter was and
leered at the blond girl. “What do you need, baby?” He
spoke too loudly and
smiled at her, his tongue licking at the corner of his
lip.
“A little change would be nice,” she snapped and turned
to Mela. “I thought
you said he had a heart attack.”
The scream of the kettle pierced the air and Mela
quickly unplugged it.
“Lady with an attitude. Gotta love it,” the man said.
He leaned towards her
and tilted his sunglasses down onto his nose. “Didn’t I
see you at the Dome
last night?”
She shook her head and set her mouth in a firm line.
“Can I get some change
or what?”
“I’m sure I saw you,” he said, looking her up and down.
“You were with two
other girls, one in a red dress. Short…”
“I don’t go there, so I don’t know how you could have
seen me. Or maybe you
just can’t see so well with those shades.” She snorted.
Mela stiffened, wanting the girl to stop it, stop
baiting him. She should
just leave, not talk back.
Mr. Stanley’s son ripped off his sunglasses, and Mela
moved out of his way
as he came behind the counter, folding her arms
protectively across her
chest.
“No need to be rude,” he said and yanked on the money
drawer. “How the fuck
does this thing open?”
“You know what?” the girl said, striding away from the
counter. “Forget it.”
Mela watched the girl pick up her hockey bag and leave.
She could feel
herself shaking.
“Goddamn bitch,” the man muttered.
Mela started to walk towards the front of the store
again.
“Well, how the hell do you open this thing?” he yelled
at her retreating
back.
“Your father has a key,” she stammered and started to
straighten the
magazines by the window. She was thinking about how she
could leave, what
she could tell him. Bad period cramps, the flu,
emergency at home. Only
there was nobody at home now but her. She tried to
ignore his swearing as he
went through each key on the chain to open the till.
“Jesus fucking Christ,”
he said when he finally got it open.
“Do I have to do tricks to get you to do my laundry?”
he shouted. “This is a
laundromat isn’t it?” Just then, there was a shrill
ringing and she watched
as he took a cell phone from his jacket pocket.
“Yeah,” he said gruffly.
Mela moved towards his laundry basket. There were
filthy sweat socks and
yellowed underwear and the smell of something fusty and
unpleasant. She held
it away from her as she lifted it up to a washer.
“I’m busy today,” he said. He dropped himself into his
father’s chair and
shoved his feet out in front of him. “Old man nearly
kicked off last night.
I’m minding the store.”
Mela had to walk past him to get money to start the
machine. She gave him a
wide berth. She could feel him looking at her out of
the corner of his eye
as she opened the till and pulled out a roll of
quarters.
“Sorry baby, I’m a working man today.” He slurped his
coffee. “Don’t start,
Becky,” he sighed noisily. “I mean it. Don’t start with
me.”
She felt uncomfortable putting her back to him at the
washer. She half
turned to start loading his clothes and realized he was
off the phone. He
must have hung up. He saw Mela looking at him. “Women,”
he said and belched.
He was holding the phone in his hand still, like he
expected it to ring any
minute. It did.
“Now you’re really irritating me. Do you hear me?” His
voice was getting
louder. Mela knew there was no one in the laudromat,
but she looked around
anyway, a frantic, fruitless searching.
“You’re annoying me, Becky. Do you get it? Or is that
too big a word for
you?”
Mela dumped all his laundry in the washer without
sorting it. She hoped he
hadn’t seen.
“Don’t fucking call me anymore. Do you hear me?” He was
shouting now. “I’m
turning the phone off. I warned you. Bye, bye bitch.”
He laughed and she
heard his phone beep. He dropped it beside him on the
floor with a clatter.
Mela’s hands shook as she put the quarters in the
slots. The lid slipped out
of her hand and slammed down, making her jump. She
walked quickly to the
supply cupboard and took a roll of paper towels and
window cleaner outside
with her. Just being out in the air made her feel
safer. She sprayed the
windows and started to wipe them down, going more
slowly than she normally
would. She watched him through the glass. He finished
his coffee and read
the paper and by the time she was done the windows on
the inside, his head
had rolled to the side and he was snoring.
Mela stayed at the front of the store, shuffling the
magazines into new
piles and willing people who passed by to come in, but
no one did. The
washer had finished its cycle but she didn’t want to
make noise and wake him
up. And then the store phone rang. She watched Mr.
Stanley’s son, who
thankfully didn’t stir, as she crept back to the
counter and picked it up on
the seventh ring. “Hello,” she whispered. At first she
heard nothing, no
noise, only a sort of static, and she remembered that
she hadn’t given the
name of the laundromat. Maybe it was Mr. Stanley
checking up on her from the
hospital.
“Hello,” she said again, a bit louder, staring at the
back of the son’s head
for movement. “Bluenoser Laundromat.” A muffled cry
that sounded like the
low warning rumble before a crack of thunder began and
quickly transitioned
to sobbing and wailing. The sound terrified Mela, made
her breath catch in
her throat, but she pressed the receiver close to her
ear. There was
something familiar. And it was while she had the phone
nestled to her that
she thought she recognized the woman’s crying. For just
a moment, Mela
thought that the woman on the other end of the phone
was herself. That some
other part of her had left the laundromat, gone down
the street, dropped a
quarter into the pay phone and called. Mela felt an
exquisite tremor of
relief pass through her.
The sound on the other end of the phone seemed to wash
away like a wave, and
suddenly Mela was aware that the woman was talking and
it was Mrs. Stanley
and she was saying that her husband was dead. “Put
Nicky on the phone,
Mela.” She mispronounced Mela’s name as she always did
when she called the
laundromat.
Mela put the receiver down, retrieved her coat and
purse from behind the
counter, and walked to the sleeping son. “Your mother’s
on the phone,” she
said loudly and when he jumped from sleep, she turned
and walked out of the
laundromat and started up the hill home. The sun was
shining and she took a
deep breath. She imagined making a pot of coffee when
she got home and
sitting in a patch of sun or reading the novel on her
nightstand that she
never managed to finish.
When she got to the church, she saw that no one had
cleaned up the mess. She
bent down and picked up the largest fragments of glass,
piling them in a
corner of the church steps. Other smaller pieces
crunched under her feet in
the grass. She made another pile for the black magnetic
letters that lay
scattered about. They were slippery in her fingers and
looked bigger up
close than she thought they would be. Each one filled
her palm.
The last thing she did was to take down the message
that had been left on
the board. This gave her the most pleasure and she
smiled as she did it. She
looked at the tidy piles on the church steps and the
clean white slate in
front of her. “There,” she said out loud, wiped her
hands on her slacks, and
kept walking.
Renée Hartleib is a writer living in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Her fiction has
appeared in The Antigonish Review and is forthcoming in The New Quarterly
and Carousel.
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