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A
BLIND MAN CAN SEE How MUCH I LOVE YOU
Jane
Spencer collects pictures of slim young men. In the bottom drawer of her
desk, between swatches of silk and old business cards for Spencer Interiors,
she has two photos of James Dean, one of a deeply wistful Jeremy Irons
in Brideshead, arm in arm with the boy holding the teddy bear, a sepia
print of Rudolph Valentino in 1923, without burnoose or eyeliner, B. D.
Wong's glossies as Song Liling and as his own lithe, androgynous self,
and Robert Mapplethorpe slipping sweetly out of his jeans in 1972. She
has a pictorial history of Kevin Bacon, master of the transition from
elfin boy to good-looking man without adding bulk or facial hair.
The
summer Jessie Spencer turned five, she played Capture the Flag every day
with the big boys, the almost-six-year-olds who'd gone to kindergarten
a year late. Jane never worried, even in passing, about Jesse's IQ or
her eye-hand coordination or her social skills. Jesse and Jane were a
mutual admiration society of two smart, strong, blue-eyed women, one five
and one thirty-five, both good skaters and good singers and good storytellers.
Jane didn't mention all this to the other mothers at play group, who would
have said it was the same between them and their daughters when Jane could
see it was not, and she didn't mention it to her own sweet, anxious mother,
who would have taken it, understandably, as a reproach. Jane didn't even
mention this closeness to the pediatrician, keeper of every mother's secret
fears and wishes, but it sang her to sleep at night. Jane's reputation
as the play group's good listener was undeserved; the mothers talked about
their knock-kneed girls and backward boys and Jane smiled and her eyes
followed Jesse. She watched her and thought, That smile! Those lashes!
How brave! How determined!
Jane
sometimes worried that Jessie was too much of a tomboy, like Sarah and
Mellie, even faster runners and more brutal partisans; it was nothing
to them to make a smaller boy cry by yanking up his underpants, or to
grind sand into the scalp of the girl who hogged the tire swing. These
two didn't cry, not even when Mellie cut her lip on the edge of the teeter-totter,
not even when Sarah got a splinter the size of a matchstick. But Sarah
and Mellie, in their overalls and dirty baseball jerseys, never had the
boys' heartless prankishness, the little devils dancing in the blacks
of their eyes. Jessie had exactly that, and the other kids knew she wasn't
a tomboy, never strained to be one of the boys. There was no teasing,
no bullying line drawn in the sand. Jane knew that one day soon, in the
cove behind John Lyman School, the boys would pull out their penises and
demonstrate to Jessie that she could not pee standing up, and it would
be terrible for Jessie. Jane was wrong. Jessie watched the boys and practiced
at home, making a funnel with both hands and a baggie. When Andrew and
Franklin went to pee on the far side of the rhododendron, Jessie came
too, unzipping and pushing her hips forward until there was, if not a
fine spray, a decent dribble. The boys thought nothing of it until first
grade, and when they did and the teacher pushed Jessie firmly into the
girls' bathroom, she walked home at recess, horrified by the life ahead,
and Jane could not coax her back for a week.
It
was worse when Jane took her to get a simple navy blue jumper for a friend's
wedding. Jane held it out, pleased that she'd found something in Jessie's
favorite color without a ruffle or a speck of lace, and Jessie stared
at it as if her mother had gone mad, wailing in rage and embarrassment
until Jane drove her to Macy's for a boy's navy blazer with gray pants
and dared the salesperson to comment. They compromised on patent leather
loafers and a white turtleneck. People at the wedding thought only that
Jane was her fashionable self and Jessie adorable. Very Kristy McNichol,
the bride's mother said. Driving home, Jane knew that she had managed
not to see it, as you manage not to see that your neighbor's new baby
has your husband's eyes and nose, until one day you run into them at the
supermarket and you cannot help but see. Jessie slept the whole way home,
smears of buttercream on the white turtleneck, rose petals falling from
her blazer pocket, and Jane cried from Storrs to Durham. She had appreciated
and pitied her mother and adored her father, a short, dapper man who cartwheeled
through the living room at her request and told his own Brooklyn version
of Grimm's Fairy Tales at bedtime. She had liked Jessie's handsome father
enough to think of marrying him until he was revealed to have a wife in
Eau Claire and bad debts in five states. It did not seem possible that
the great joke God would play on her was to take the love of her life,
a wonderfully improved piece of Jane, and say, Oops. Looks like a girl
but it's a boy! Sorry Adjust accordingly. It took Jane all of Jessie's
childhood to figure out what the adjustment might be and to save fifty
thousand dollars to pay for it.
Excerpted
from A Blind Man Can See How Much I Love You by Amy Bloom Copyright©
2000 by Amy Bloom. Excerpted by permission of Random House, a division
of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may
be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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