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| History Lesson for Girls Reprinted
from: History Lesson for Girls
Submitted to MyShelf.Com The following
is an excerpt from the book History Lesson for Girls Chapter
One One Day I saw them, our dream horses, and
on that day I pulled over to the side of the road and cried. There they
were, Appaloosas and roans and bays, and I thought I saw, squinting
into the last bit of sunlight, a gray. All the horses moved together,
a makeshift herd -- maybe they'd heard my car, or maybe it was a chill,
the first winter breeze, almost imperceptible on a summer day. So many
years later and now here they were in front of me. The horses trembled,
shifted, and then became calm and separated out again, twelve or twenty
of them, more than enough for the Alison and Kate Horse Training Company. She saved me. That's the first thing
you should know about Kate. It was the year we moved to Weston, the
year my parents went haywire, the year my back started curving out of
control as if it were the life of the party. She was five feet seven
and had long brown hair bleached by the sun, and her father was an Egyptian
emperor. Was he for real? Real enough for a small suburban dynasty.
Real enough to pass on a legacy. I think of Kate all the time. I
think of her like I've got this little silver Egyptian cat in my pocket,
a little silver talisman that won't go away. I think of her, and then
I think of him, too, Tut Hamilton, sham shaman in suburbia. I can't
forget him, any more than I can forget her. The thing is, she saved me that
year, and then it was my turn. That's what friendship is. That's how
to make history. I was thirteen when my parents and
I moved to the fancy town of Mom wanted her studio to be blue,
despite the fact that most painters prefer a room absent of color, a
blank wall, a clean palette. She'd had a vision, you see, a dream of
a blue room. My father offered to paint the room
for her, but she would choose the color, of course. She and I went to
the paint store together. "These men -- they're painting the
world, creating color wheels, color contrasts, color inspirations --
without any real conception, no awareness at all, of what they're doing.
They could be artists -- but no, no
-- instead of using these glorious choices -- all the glory, all the
opportunity, Alison -- they just sit around
drinking coffee out of a thermos and painting houses tan, tan, and tan
again. How dreary . . . " She continued talking as we got
out of our Corolla (it also happened to be tan) and walked the short
distance from the parking lot to the shopping center. I did hope she'd stop, or at least lower her
voice, before we got to the store. She had a way of causing a commotion,
despite her size. She was a tiny, fragile person, swathed in scarves
and perfumes and charms. Men of uncertain age and weight
looked our way as we came in: Scheherazade and the too tall, too bony,
too elbowy stalk, in a back brace, beside her. My mother breezed by their troubling,
huntery expressions, and we settled in before the paint chips. I'd just
turned thirteen, my back was curved, and my parents were curved, too
-- bohemians in Mom, however, was confident. She
hummed with satisfaction, picking out various small, hopeful cards from
the rack, cocking her head, pursing her lips -- rejecting one, then
the other, until she came to her blue. Today they've gotten hold of Weston
and thrown up these monstrous vault homes, decorated with pillars and
neo-this-and-that architectural details, but in 1975 the lovely colonials
were what stood out, the historic touch. Some even had plaques near
the doorways saying things like Paul Revere Slept Here in 1782 or In
1801, Here Stood Weston's First Mill. The split-levels such as ours,
built in the aesthetically challenged sixties, were scattered like tawdry
cousins among these statelier, storied homes. Still, moving to We were all dressed up now, decked
out in zesty Marimekko. And although the first two weeks in Weston passed
in a kind of misty, glorious disappointment, most of all we felt lucky
to be there, in a town of lilacs and curving roads and studio doors
that shut and hillocks and a barn. Dad stood on the ladder. He'd painted
all the edges first, near the ceiling and floors and windows and corners,
and then he'd taken out the roller and started in on wide swaths of
Prussian Wildflower. "A bit dark, isn't it?" "Well, it's what your mother wants.
It'll lighten up as it dries, too, Allie Oop." This cheerfulness was disconcerting.
He'd been duped into thinking he could please my mother. "It looks different from the little
card." "Goddammit," Dad said. A slop of paint had fallen
to the floor. The fact of the matter is, both
my parents were fish out of water in Weston. Mom with her dreams of
being a painter and Dad with his day job and his poetry books, including
the award-winning one, all lined up on the mantel. They were attempting
to piece together a life with art at its center and also (not that I
was fully aware of this at the time) making choices based on what might
be good for me, their daughter. Art geeks, adversaries, people who drove
old cars: They weren't part of the PTA crowd, and they weren't swingers,
either. Mainly they were simply my parents, and it was extraordinarily embarrassing,
but seemed pretty natural, that they were so weird. "Look, you can't tell anything from
the card," he said. "Take a rag to that spot, would you, please?" "Why do they have the cards, then?" "To beguile the willing, Alison." "Why would they do that? They would
never do that." "You don't think so? Think about
the visceral and dark depths of the workingman's resentment, darling,
and you might have another idea." The son of Irish immigrants and
bardic descendant of many a workingman, my father looked like he was
a half second away from falling off the rickety old ladder -- either
him or the tray of Prussian Wildflower. "Do we have any more 7-Up?" Dad concentrated on his next swab
of the roller. His somewhat long and unkempt beard, a poet's beard,
bobbed precariously close to the wall. "Dad?" He grunted. He smoothed the roller
down, then over, making a reverse blue cloud in a white sky. "Try the
garage." Copyright © 2007
Aurelie Sheehan Author
Aurelie Sheehan is the author of the short
story collection Jack Kerouac Is
Pregnant and the novel The
Anxiety of Everyday Objects. The director of the creative
writing program at the For more information, please visit
www.aureliesheehan.com
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