If the Ice Had Held
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Copyright © Wendy J. Fox, 2019
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical including photocopying recording or any information storage and retrieval system without permission in writing from the Publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Fox, Wendy J., author.
Title: If the ice had held / Wendy J. Fox.
Description: Santa Fe, NM : Santa Fe Writers Project, [2019]
Identifiers: LCCN 2018033010 (print) | LCCN 2018034201 (ebook) |
ISBN 9781939650924 (epub) | ISBN 9781939650931 (mobi) |
ISBN 9781939650948 (pdf) | ISBN 9781939650917 (paperback : alk. paper)
Classification: LCC PS3606.O97 (ebook) | LCC PS3606.O97 I36 2019 (print) |
DDC 813/.6—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018033010
Published by SFWP
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To my sisters.
Contents
Chapter One Kathleen Winter, 1974
Chapter Two Melanie Spring, 2007
Chapter Three Irene Winter, 1974
Chapter Four Melanie Spring, 2007
Chapter Five Kathleen Winter, 1974
Chapter Six Melanie Spring, 2007
Chapter Seven Brian Summer, 2001
Chapter Eight Irene Winter, 1974
Chapter Nine Melanie Spring, 2007
Chapter Ten Brian Summer, 2001
Chapter Eleven Kathleen Winter, 1974
Chapter Twelve Melanie Fall, 1986
Chapter Thirteen Irene Summer, 1974
Chapter Fourteen Melanie Summer, 1987
Chapter Fifteen Jenny Fall, 2005
Chapter Sixteen Irene Summer, 2007
Chapter Seventeen Melanie Summer, 2007
Chapter Eighteen Jenny Winter, 2005
Chapter Nineteen Kathleen Winter, 1974
Chapter Twenty Melanie Summer, 2007
Chapter Twenty-One Lucy Estelle Summer, 1970
Chapter Twenty-Two Melanie Summer, 1988
Chapter Twenty-Three Lucy Estelle Fall, 1970
Chapter Twenty-Four Melanie Fall, 1988
Chapter Twenty-Five Simon Winter, 1974
Chapter Twenty-Six Melanie Spring, 2007
Chapter Twenty-Seven Jenny Winter, 2005
Chapter Twenty-Eight Melanie Winter, 2007
Chapter Twenty-Nine Irene Winter, 1974
Chapter Thirty Melanie Summer, 1988
Chapter Thirty-One Brian Spring, 2007
Chapter Thirty-Two Melanie Summer, 2007
Chapter Thirty-Three Irene Winter, 1974
Chapter Thirty-Four Melanie Summer, 2007
Chapter Thirty-Five Jenny Fall, 1988
Chapter Thirty-Six Melanie Summer, 2007
Chapter Thirty-Seven Kathleen Summer, 1975
Chapter One
Kathleen
Winter, 1974
Kathleen wondered why, if half the human body was really made of water, how water could be so dangerous. Her brother Sammy had split the ice of the river trying to cross, and he floated to the shore—found by a townie cop before he was even missed.
She didn’t understand, if he wasn’t sunk, why the river couldn’t lift him, glide him to the banks until his toes touched gravel and he put his legs down and walked back into the night. Glistening with cold, yes, lips blue, yes, skin brittle to the touch, clothes sopping and the hem of his jeans just starting to freeze, but still with breath, heat from his lungs condensing the air around him.
Instead, the officer heaved him from the water in the dark of the winter evening, Sammy’s teenaged body sharp with ice.
Chapter Two
Melanie
Spring, 2007
The software company in Denver where Melanie worked was in the majority of how start-ups ran—less glamorous than the swanky dot-coms of Silicon Valley, with their organic catering menus, on-site yoga, and complimentary Rolfing massage coupons; and more high-acid paper files sweltering under the heat of a hundred laptops, payroll cobbled out of questionable revenue recognition processes, and strings of code written under the damp pressure of a hangover. Their space was not sky-high and bathed in clean, filtered light, but rather it occupied the ground-floor wing of a crumbling office park where the air-conditioning was troubling and unreliable.
All through her twenties Melanie had bounced back and forth between jobs, and then finally, on the eve of her third decade, she landed this one. Through the issue of a company phone and a five-page document explaining how the 401(k) vested, she transformed into her idea of an adult and had stayed tethered to the company since then. The job gave her enough money to secure and pay a mortgage on a small condo close to downtown, to help her mother, Kathleen, out once in a while, and it gave her enough order to dampen the feeling of spinning she’d always had, even if only for moments.
Since she worked in tech, the model was acquisition, and she was not naïve to this. The model meant that the founders and a few of the earliest employees would cash out, and the rest of them would stay in the office, typing toward a different destiny—same keyboards, same products, just new letterhead that sat in the same place as the old letterhead, in a crumpled box under the printer. Still, when it actually happened, she had no idea the company had been for sale until she was asked to proofread the press release. Like an iffy check, it was postdated by several weeks and gave her a queasy feeling.
“Are there going to be layoffs?” she had asked her boss. She was in a small department where she did marketing and market analysis. She was hired without any training back when the company was not profitable; they’d taken a chance on her, so she felt a kind of loyalty. Still, she had read enough to know how acquisitions went. A team from corporate would make people redundant, and then the rest of the employees would plow through, taking on more and more work and living in terror of their cable bill.
Her boss told her not to talk about it. Her boss told her not to make any stock purchases of the publicly traded parent.
“You could be considered an insider,” her boss had said and raised her eyebrow to a dangerous slope, like they were talking about a real tip, a life-changer.
Melanie did not think their little company being absorbed into a conglomerate would make even a blip in the markets, but she swore to secrecy anyway.
Later, when she was not let go and she told her new co-workers at headquarters in Chicago that she had to look them up, they were shocked. We are on the Fortune 500, they had said. Right, she had said, there are five hundred of those? She wondered if people who had gone to business school memorized this list, like the state capitals or the names of the saints.
Chapter Three
Irene
Winter, 1974
Irene wasn’t sure if she should go to the funeral, but she also couldn’t stay away—she thought that was just like Sammy, pulling at her even after he was gone. It was hard to remain contained. The flowers, the handful of people sweating in their formal clothes that were too warm for the church with the heat cranking, the way there was so much silence because the pastor, or the minister, or whoever he was, didn’t know Sammy, so he just did the usual passages, the ashes and such, and no one from the family got up to speak.
The only other funeral she had been to was her aunt’s and uncle’s, when they were in a car accident with a t
ractor-trailer carrying crates of chickens. They hadn’t even been the vehicle directly involved, they’d only swerved to avoid the wreckage on the highway. She had been very young, but she remembered that after that, she didn’t see her older cousin, Lucy Estelle, as much anymore. At the service, her father, her rigid and snapping father, was like a boy. She had been only ten, but she knew what it meant to see him cry for the first time. It wasn’t even really a funeral, just a memorial at the VFW, but she saw her father bare then, raw from sobbing and from having drunk whiskey all day, and then from sobbing some more. In front of the people who had come to pay their respects to the man and the woman who had taken their last breaths in a crumple of iron while the down from the spilt chickens clung to them like frost, her father had opened. Her father had told the story of him and his brother as young enlisted men, briefly, and then he moved backward—two boys on a farm at the end of a dirt road and how they were so lucky. Your closest sibling is your first friend, he had said, and her father and his brother had stayed that way, the first person to notify of trouble and of joy.
She was fourteen now and so Irene had planned something to say if there were words at Sammy’s funeral. I know you do not know me, she would say to the small group of people who had gathered, mostly family, but I loved your brother, your son. I know you do not know me, but I know how Sammy spoke of every person here, though I am sorry if I might not get your faces. Mikey and Kathleen, your brother loved you. Jeannette and Rose and Darlene and Thomas. Mom and Dad. All he ever wanted was to be with you. I never had jealousy toward other girls, only you all.
If she was very, very brave, she might tell the rest of it—that she was pregnant, that they had planned to marry—but since no space was offered for anyone to speak, she only hitched a ride to the gravesite with someone she didn’t know, keeping her silence through the drive to the cemetery, where she watched Sammy’s casket get lowered into the ground. After, she turned and walked back toward home, the weight of the baby like a penance, like a gift.
* * *
When Kathleen came walking up the hill behind the school towards Irene, it was easy to see how Sammy’s sister was like him. He had been the same—direct about what he wanted.
Kathleen introduced herself and she offered some thanks for coming to the service. Irene was not sure if she was supposed to shake the sister’s hand or cry. Irene took a drag from her cigarette, even though every time she smoked, her stomach turned over. She had tried to stop, but it had been hard with her father puffing in the house, and so she gave up, and she told herself she had bigger things to worry about than cigarettes. There was a knot in her shoulder that ached when she turned her head, and a dull pain in her lower back all of the time. There was her messy room, and the way her body was changing—if she had thought the beginning of adolescence was bad, she felt a fool now, not even on the other side of puberty.
The way she’d prayed for her breasts to bud and her cycle to begin, because she thought these changes would make her a woman—what she didn’t know then was the change that comes when the cycle is interrupted: the blooming of the breasts, the tension at the belly, the smell of everything, and the hunger.
Irene was a freshman and the fact that her body was starting to form a child before she could drive or vote or legally live on her own was not lost on her; she understood she was young, even if she was the oldest that she’d ever been.
The other girl, the sister, Kathleen, was tall, like Sammy, and also resembled him in the face, though Irene was not sure how much she could trust this girl who came to her in the snow, who came to her seeking the part of her brother that Irene carried. She was sure the sister knew, even though they had not yet gotten very far past introductions. Irene put out her hand.
“He mentioned you,” Irene said as the school’s bell rang. She wanted to give something else like, It seemed like he loved you best, or He mentioned what an amazing auntie you would be. Both were true but it was hard to feel like anything was worth telling with him gone.
“We should talk,” Kathleen said, but Irene turned to go back to class.
The sister followed like a dog would, half a length back and a few paces to the side, determined.
The words Irene had inside of her at the funeral had seemed so whole, a little orb, and though she’d been able to imagine saying her piece—I know you do not know me, but I loved your brother, your son—like the child inside her, getting something into the air of the world was harder than thinking about it.
It was stupid of them to get pregnant, and it seemed stupid, now that he was gone, that they’d not just talked to Sammy’s folks, even to the sister, Kathleen, whom he was the closest with. His people wouldn’t have cared, but he was trying to do right first: get a ring on her finger, get a better job than working at the stockyard. She and Sammy were trying to smooth it out, trying to show they could be responsible by making a plan and keeping it before they told their secret.
Now Kathleen was tracking her through the snow, and Irene was sure Sammy’s sister would not give up in trying to know her.
Irene did not want to be known. She’d let Sammy get close to her, and see—just look at what had happened.
Chapter Four
Melanie
Spring, 2007
It was spring in Colorado, and the April temperatures swung in wide, dramatic swaths. Melanie’s potted petunias were wiped out one chilly morning, but by the time she came home, the gerbera daisies were sizzling in the afternoon sun, and she poured an entire can of water across the wilted leaves, hoping.
At work the day after the acquisition announcement, the air-
conditioning would not come on. The administrative assistant called building maintenance, and one of the developers opened up the door to the server room—a frazzled, wheezing center of physical technology linked by frayed cables and tethered to overworked outlets. The door was propped open with old manuals, like C++ for Dummies and Mastering the AS400. There was a fan, ordered specifically for the purpose of cooling the server room, and it was switched on.
Melanie went back to her office, which shared a wall with the parking garage, making it extremely noisy. She followed the business journals, and she knew that the trend was to move everyone into pods or low-walled cubicles. This depressed her because she understood that collaboration was code for you will never take a personal call on the clock again, ever!, and she clung to her private space—sneaking in during a three-day weekend to paint her office walls the same yellow as her childhood bedroom, bringing in an enormous palm that she cultivated in a red ceramic pot, and changing out the overhead fluorescent lights for Repti Glo terrarium bulbs. From the packaging she learned that there were only three elements of light that were required for reptile husbandry: ultraviolet, visible, and infrared. The package read that a combination of different light sources was necessary in most cases.
With the yellow paint and the faintly pink glow of the repti-lights, Melanie felt that she was creating a productive environment. Her palm had healthy green leaves, and her office had a more rarified ambience than those around her. Some of the other spaces attracted miller moths when they migrated from the Kansas plains to the Colorado foothills, but even with the lights blazing, her work area was clear of the dusty wings and cocoon debris, and while she had no intention of actually breeding reptiles, the fact that she could sustain creatures outside of Arthropoda was sometimes a comfort for her when a long night had turned the glow of her champagne walls to the pissy shade of decaying newspaper.
The office was heating up as Melanie worked on an analysis of the industrial marketplace. She was disturbed by how many times the word penetration was used in the report request, alongside the more benign words fastener and HVAC. The report had been assigned to her a few months ago, and now she understood that it was related to the acquisition. There were growth targets to maintain. Markets to penetrate.
She started to sweat. While
she thought, she read The New York Times online. She created a chart (she was very good at charts). What Melanie liked even more than the Times were advice columns; the whole genre was enthralling. In a different life she would like to have this job, offering wisdom on a variety of topics from etiquette to sex. As teenager, she had pored over her horoscopes.
* * *
On Wednesday Melanie flew to San Antonio.
On Thursday she woke up in San Antonio with a headache, her return ticket safely duplicated in her email, and a snoring man in her bed. This wasn’t unusual for her, really, and in software, in technology in general, there was the industry advantage (or disadvantage, depending on how it was sliced) of men outnumbering women by four to one.
Usually they were easy—either introverts or married so long that they had temporarily forgotten how their bodies worked. She spent days on the road with the ones who were her co-workers, hawking a product she did not always understand. They called the software a suite, like in a building; they talked about enablement and velocity and time-to-value.
They all knew many acronyms, and the man lying next to her was no different, even if her skin touched his.
This San Antonio Man had sideswiped her some, a bright spot at an otherwise dull tradeshow. She had broken one of her own rules—never co-workers, never customers. While she felt she had a flexible relationship with consequences, accepting them mostly, she still groaned as she collected her clothes and put them on in the bathroom. She focused on how amazing a cup of coffee and a shower would be.
A month ago, Melanie had been in Chicago, with a man named Brian, who seemed to solidly hate his life. She wasn’t sure if this was worse than the San Antonio Man, who was just starting to hate his.
What some women liked about the kind of job that she had, when they could get them, was that it was a profession similar to being a wife, except it paid. When traveling, she reminded her colleagues to catch every loop on the waist of their trousers with their belts, and she sent them back to their rooms if there was powdered sugar from breakfast donuts sprinkled on their shirts, and she liked, even, doing it cheerfully. She made sure everything ran smoothly. Just saying, sometimes she said, that’s not a good look, and flashed a wide, toothy smile. She offered wet wipes for grubby hands and antacids for rumbling bellies. She scheduled their lunch breaks and made dinner reservations. Her real job was market research and keeping the teams on track with corporate message points, but she had found this was much easier when no one was hungry or had diarrhea.