Tomorrow There Will Be Apricots Read online




  Copyright © 2013 by Jessica Soffer

  All rights reserved

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

  www.hmhbooks.com

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

  Soffer, Jessica.

  Tomorrow there will be apricots : a novel / Jessica Soffer.

  pages cm

  ISBN 978-0-547-75926-5

  I. Title.

  PS3619.O37975T66 2013

  813'.6—dc23

  2012042187

  eISBN 978-0-547-75928-9

  v1.0413

  For my father, who taught me to sit still and imagine.

  For my mother, who taught me to stop sitting around and to put my imagination to words. This book is because of you.

  And for Alex, my heart.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Lorca

  Victoria

  Lorca

  Victoria

  Lorca

  Victoria

  Lorca

  Victoria

  Joseph

  Lorca

  Victoria

  Lorca

  Victoria

  Joseph

  Lorca

  Victoria

  Joseph

  Lorca

  Victoria

  Lorca

  Masgouf

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Lorca

  I WAS PRETENDING to read the paper. I thought that if I didn’t say anything, my mother might stop glaring at me, burning a hole in my face.

  I was home from school. I’d been sent home.

  And though I hadn’t gotten myself caught on purpose, as soon as Principal Hidalgo said “suspended,” my first thought was of my mother waking to the smell of homemade croissants. I’d be in an apron, piling the hot pastries high in a breadbasket, just beside the cranberry-sage brown butter I’d whipped up. I was suddenly happy, hopeful, thinking of the time we could spend together.

  Then I came home. The fact that she refused to look me in the eye made me feel more like a nuisance than a disappointment.

  “Kanetha told your teacher that you looked drugged,” said my mother, biting a nail, then examining it, the picture of calm on the couch, as if we were talking about leftovers. She had a green towel slumped on her head, and her long shiny legs were spotted with freckles I’d never have. I’d never have her perfect eyebrows either. They were like the feathery fins of her famous pan-roasted sea bass.

  I went quiet. She did too. I had to remind myself not to say a word. I talked too much when I was upset. I had a habit of asking her if she loved me. She had a habit of not answering.

  “Kanetha’s a sneak,” I said. “She writes equations on tissues and pretends to blow her nose during tests.”

  More words bristled against my tongue. My mother’s silence baited me. I wanted to tell her that Kanetha didn’t always wear underwear and that she flashed the boys during American History II. Kanetha Jackson, eighth-grade busybody. She said I’d been standing in the stall and not “making.” So she’d kicked open the door with her neon sneaker. I hadn’t even known she was in the bathroom. The stupid thing didn’t lock. She found me with my skirt up, my tights down, my shoeless foot on the toilet seat, the paring knife to my thigh. Her lips were stained with fruit punch.

  I wanted to ask my mother if she knew the paring knife was hers. The Tojiro DP petty knife, her second favorite. I’d taken it off the counter that morning.

  “I wasn’t drugged,” I said. “I’ve never done drugs.”

  I held my breath and looked down at the obituaries. “Mort Kramish, Celebrated Hematologist and Master Pickler, Dies at 79.” Still, silence. I could feel it without looking: my mother’s low, growly simmer. I gave in.

  “I’m fine,” I said, wanting and not wanting her to believe it. “I won’t do it again.” I wanted her to ask me to promise. I waited for it. She swatted the newspaper out of my hands. It cracked as it closed against my knee. She stood up. Her hands were heads of garlic, tight to her sides.

  “I could have left you in New Hampshire, you know. You could have grown up with nothing, no one.”

  She meant that she could have left me with my father. Sometimes, she called him pudding. “He’s as useful as box pudding,” she would say.

  “I’m a good mother,” she said so quietly it was like stirring the air.

  “I know,” I said. “You’re a great mother. That’s not the point.”

  Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop talking.

  I was sorry and I wasn’t. I had the urge to hug her and I didn’t. I told myself to be less selfish. She was so busy. She had a “staff of thirty-five and an untarnished culinary reputation to uphold.”

  The towel sat like a turtle on her head, its feet pushing and bending her ear. She had perfect ankles. Her eyes were the color of ripe pine trees. She made no sound when she cried. Like women in the movies. I was a blubberer. Full of watery snot. Aunt Lou said that when I cried it looked like I was about to throw up.

  I put my hand on my thigh, willing her to forget. The scabs were pomegranate seeds, tiny and engorged.

  “You’ve always been like this,” she said.

  My mother said I was sensitive even as a baby. After every fight, after she’d screamed, thrown a jar of niçoise olives against the wall, or poured—she actually did this once—a full bottle of thyme oil over my father’s head, she’d go to my crib. I’d be on my back. Everything right except for my tiny fingers and toes. They were curled into themselves as tight as fiddleheads. She had to uncoil them, one by one. My nails left mini purple crannies in the fleshy parts of my palms. She didn’t know where that strength came from in such a little thing.

  “I hoped you’d grow out of it,” she said and I wished myself to be small again.

  I could have been more careful. I should have picked a stall that locked.

  Now she went to the freezer and for a second I was bolstered. I thought, She’s about to forgive me. She’s about to take out puff pastry. We’re about to make cinnamon palmiers. Instead, she grabbed a bottle of vodka and put it into her robe pocket. Whenever it seemed like she was going to scream, she didn’t.

  “You have no idea,” she said. “This is so much more than I bargained for.”

  Nausea pulsed in my throat. I’d never meant to be more than she could handle. I did her laundry. I folded her socks into peacocks or hares. Civet of hare. Hare à la royale.

  “I’m sending you to boarding school,” she said. “Principal Hidalgo has a contact. There’s a spot reserved for second semester, which gives you all of December to get your ducks in a row.”

  “No, I—” I started. Already, my mother’s back was to me.

  I wanted to sit down but realized I was already sitting. I couldn’t breathe.

  She grabbed the portable phone from the kitchen counter and dialed like this was all the phone’s fault. She was calling Aunt Lou. She didn’t say a word until she was in the other room. I wanted to tell her I was sorry. I would change. I bit down on my bottom lip until it almost popped. I shuddered. I noticed a spot on the couch that was darkened from where my mother must have been resting her head. I put my face into it. The dusty sweetness of her shampoo.

  “Please keep me.”

  Just then, as if she’d heard me, my mother shouted from the other room, “And don’t even think of hurting yourself while I’m in here.”

  The first time,
I was six. I was making a cake for my mother’s birthday and slipped on some grease when I was putting it in the oven. I seared both hands on the middle rack. For a second, the pain surprised me, took me, lifted me as if by a wave. I trapped the scream in my throat but tears busted out of my face. I was all shock until I heard my mother’s footsteps and realized that I’d put out my hands to do it again, touch the heat again, be lifted again, when the rack collapsed. The undone cake splattered like vomit. There were fresh raspberries in the batter. She came in.

  “Jesus, Lorca,” she said, looking at the mess.

  She acted like I’d gotten peanut butter on her blouse, just “Oh honey, get an ice pack.” She had the obits in one hand, a peeled carrot in the other. I wanted to ask her if she loved me. She yelled for my father. He’d been outside chopping wood. His front was covered in splinters and chips. He made me put my hands on the counter, show him the damage.

  “Hush, baby. Hush-hush,” he said. I didn’t need his sympathy but he needed to give it. His eyes were watery, just looking. “Oh, ouch, baby.”

  My mother was gone.

  “Don’t worry,” I told him. “I promise, don’t worry.”

  He meant well, but I couldn’t have cared less. In a moment, I was running up the stairs, pretending I had to pee, trying to remember how I’d done it. I was aching to burn my skin again. And again.

  After that there were light bulbs, tire spokes, vacuums. There were car doors, glue guns, and broken bottles winking to me from the side of the road. There was the grill in summer that could stay piping hot well after dinner, well after everyone had fallen asleep.

  Back then, I couldn’t say what it was about. I couldn’t wrap my head around the need, the craving. Now I imagine that if my mother had just taken out the ice pack, tucked it into a towel, and held me on her lap, rocking me, whispering in my hair, cooling my fingers, things would have been different. The pain would have subsided normally, been reabsorbed normally. It wouldn’t have remained forever, hovering over me, terrorizing me like an angry wasp, cruising for the exact right second to strike.

  My parents fought like crazy. For the eight years of my life that they lived together in New Hampshire, I remembered their voices going scratchy and dull as the sun rose. The fights weren’t about me. They were about them, each complaining about the other. My mother called my father pappy, not like “father,” but like “old fruit.” My father asked my mother please not to be so cruel. He begged her. I would listen carefully, waiting for them to mention me, to say my name. But they never did.

  “How can you stand such a minuscule life?” she’d say.

  “It’s not minuscule,” he’d answer, trying to whisper. “This is the country. You wanted to live here.”

  “It’s like we don’t even exist out here,” she’d say. “How am I supposed to feel? How am I supposed to survive?”

  In second-grade science, we watched water boil on hot plates. When the steam shot out from the beaker, I leaned forward onto the table. I let the heat lick my neck. It was so strong it made me gag. I nearly fell off my stool, reeling. The long corridor to the principal’s office was quiet but for my footsteps on the nubby gray carpet and the wild sound of my pulse against the burn. I put my fingers to it. Blisters formed like uncooked egg yolks. Soon it would be recess. I walked faster.

  My mother came and got me. She didn’t say a word. I couldn’t shut up.

  I told her someone pushed me from behind.

  Then I told her that I slipped and fell onto it.

  Then I told her that I was reaching for something.

  Then I told her my teacher told me to do it.

  She was walking five steps ahead of me in the parking lot. Her bag was swinging against her legs. I was scrambling to keep up.

  I told her it was an accident and she stopped, turned around, and looked at me. She said, “Ha,” sarcastic, but also like she was expelling a popcorn kernel from her throat, and then she didn’t say another thing.

  If I had a dime for every time I told her that—it was an accident—I could buy all the cheese at Saxelby’s. If anything could have made my mother happy, it would have been that. She liked the smelly kind the best, the kind that made your mouth pucker and buzz.

  One winter morning maybe a year later, I woke to their shouting. I raced into the kitchen. My father’s colorless hands were clenched as he slammed them on the countertop. He hit a green cough drop and it skidded and crashed into a million pieces on the floor.

  “Enough,” he said. “Enough, goddamn it.”

  My mother said my father walked out that time, the final time, because she had spent eight hundred dollars at the French Hen in Manchester—she’d special-ordered lox and toro and paddlefish caviar—and he wanted her to be miserable. And because she wasn’t about to let him have the last word—“No way in hell,” she’d said—she started packing.

  I went deep into the woods behind our house and screamed until I was panting and lightheaded and falling on my knees. The trees were bare above me, reaching like roads on a map. My mother pointed out the redness in my eyes when I came home and I told her I’d been practicing headstands on the moss; the little vessels must have burst.

  She was stuffing our clothing into garbage bags, telling me how she’d been wanting to dye her hair darker but my father had been against it. She pinched her cheeks in the mirror.

  “Definitely,” she said. “I’m definitely going to go dark.”

  I kept thinking that I wished I had a warm cat so it could sit on my lap. My mother was allergic to cats and she hated them. “You can’t even fry them into an appetizer,” she said. “So what’s the use?”

  She called her parents just before we left the house.

  “Daddy,” she said. I’d never heard her use that word before. “I am going to need some money. Lorca and I are making changes. We’ve had enough.”

  We drove to New York City from New Hampshire that day with my mother’s pots and knives and induction pans seat-belted to the back seat, and the garbage bags piled so high in the rear of the car that they blocked the sun.

  I told her, “I have a book report due on Monday.”

  She said, “This isn’t an issue of life and death.”

  I told her she was right, remembering how she’d said “we” to her father. How that had flattered me. How I didn’t want to let her down.

  Outside it was March gray, and the windows were fogging up. As soon as I started writing something in the frost, she switched the defroster on and off a million times. It made a whirring sound as if it were speaking French. She said there was no reason for us to stay in Cow Hampshire. She called it that, Cow Hampshire. It drove my father nuts. He grew up in Cow Hampshire. My mother said she wanted to be in the food world again, where Pizza Hut wasn’t considered gourmet. Find a life again. Put me in a school where all the kids weren’t related and where the parents had teeth. She kept giving me this look with her eyes like we needed to be hopeful but the sides of her mouth were quivering. I could see them.

  “Do you love me?” she asked. “You know, everything’s going to be okay.”

  If I said it wouldn’t, she would turn on me too.

  “Everything’s okay already,” I said, holding my breath so my voice would stop shaking.

  “Everything except your father,” she said. “He’s a wimp. Never fall for a wimp. Love someone stronger, or love no one at all.”

  I nodded.

  I kept the lox and caviar and toro in freezer bags on my lap; they looked like my stomach turned inside out. I pinched the back of my thigh until my face turned hot pink. I could see it in the side mirror. My mother looked straight ahead, her knuckles white, like tapioca pearls, over the wheel.

  “Wimp,” she kept saying. “Goddamn wimp.”

  I missed the rest of third grade.

  We moved in with Aunt Lou, who wasn’t my mother’s real sister, because my mother was adopted and Aunt Lou wasn’t. My mother liked to say that explained everything—even t
hough they grew up in the same house on Long Island with the same mother and father who loaned them money, going to the same schools, eating the same gloppy dinners and Chinese on Sundays.

  Aunt Lou lived on the Upper West Side in a two-bedroom that smelled of supermarket candles and dust. She’d been renting a room to a foreign student, and as it happened, he’d just moved out. I slept where he had, in a small dark room whose rattling window stared into the fluorescent-lit staircase of a building across the way. I found matchbooks and ginger-candy wrappers he’d left behind. Aunt Lou never cleaned. My mother slept in the living room, which was the kitchen, den, foyer, and dining room too.

  Our first night there, I got up at three and went into the living room, where they were still talking, and asked if they were tired. They made a scene of hugging each other.

  “Are you going to mother us already?” Aunt Lou said. “You just got here, for chrissake.”

  They laughed, the two of them. My mother could have said something in my defense. She didn’t. I’d been about to offer to make her an omelette au fromage just the way she liked. I didn’t. I told myself that living there was only temporary.

  In bed, I chewed the sides of my fingernails until I tasted blood. I recited my book report to myself over and over until I fell asleep. Bridge to Terabithia. Leslie was the new kid too. When she drowned, it broke Jesse’s heart.

  That night, they stayed up till dawn, drinking glass after glass of red wine. My mother tried out the same recipe seven different ways, jotting things down and getting pastry flour on her elbows. Aunt Lou gossiped about the wife of her boss and tapped her ashes into the pages of the TV Guide.

  I woke up to the beeping sound of a truck backing up.