01: The Sound of an Empty Nest
I burn, burn like a wicker cabinet
Chalk white and oh so frail
I see our time has gotten stale
The rhythmic pounding notes of Eve 6 pour down the stairs. A white-water rapid of sonic energy and emotion wash over me as I rest my head on the kitchen counter gathering my strength for the day ahead. I hope I can make it through the day without falling apart.
Jocelyn, my baby girl, is going away today. She's all grown up and won't be sleeping here tonight. Today is the day she transitions from being my little girl to being a young woman sleeping in her own room at UMass Salem some fifty miles south of home.
The tick-tock of the clock is painful
All sane and logical
I want to tear it off the wall
"Damn," I mutter under my breath. I use the back of my hand to wipe at the dampness in the corners of my eyes. "Where did the time go?"
"Hunh? Did you say something, honey?"
"Oh... no. It's nothing." I reply, glancing up from the cool granite of the counter. Bryan's face is slightly scrunched with concern. His nondescript brown hair, somewhat greying at the temples, frames his angular face. Yet, he still looks every bit the athlete he was back in high school and college. I place a reassuring hand on my husband's shoulder. "Just a bit overwhelmed is all."
The corners of his mouth turn up slightly in relief, if not understanding. Faint smile lines starburst out from his cocoa brown eyes, lending him an air of confident maturity.
"We've talked about this, honey. It's not like Josie has died or anything."
Just then, he tightly squints his eyes and tilts his head hard to the left, squashing his ear to his shoulder and forcing the skin of his neck into folds. His tongue shoots out violently from the corner of his mouth as he draws his chin in and downward, all the while, he's making harsh guttural sounds in his throat. This is his
dead possum
impersonation. It isn't very convincing, but it is very good at lightening my mood. He always knows just what to say or do. It's partly why I love him so much and have ever since high school.
"I know... I know."
I give him a playful punch on his left shoulder, signaling that he was successful in cheering me up a bit.
"We only have the one kid Bryan. After today, we'll be solo. Mano a mano. EMPTY... NESTERS..."
I slowly pace out the last two words for added emphasis. "Do you even remember what that was like? Just the two of us?"
"Why yes. Yes, I do," he says, a devilish grin replacing his dead possum impersonation. To drive home his not-so-subtle insinuation, his eyebrows raise and drop three times in quick succession. I simply roll my eyes in response.
"You're such a mess!" As penance for his lewd implication, I give his shoulder a playful slap this time. The strike is more noise maker than anything but it does the job of halting the ridiculous leering and goofy eyebrow dance.
He readjusts the medium size U-Haul box in his arms and strides towards the laundry room. Beyond lay the garage in which sits the dark blue Mercedes SUV that is slowly but surely filling up with boxes and various accouterments testifying to Jocelyn's imminent departure. I run my hands through the waves of my strawberry blonde hair finger combing it together to form a passible, if sloppy, high ponytail. If left to its own devices, my hair would hang down to the middle of my back in all manner of random twists and turns. Bryan liked to say it was my 'strawberry waterfall.' As much as he likes me to wear it down, today it will be best to keep it up off of my neck and out of the way.
I step to the right exiting the kitchen, coming to a stop at the foot of the stairs leading to the second floor of our home. "Jocelyn!" With a hand on the newel post, I crane my head to better direct my voice up the stairwell. "Are you about ready to go yet?"
"What?"
"I said: 'Are you ready to go yet?' It's already past nine. We need to have you on campus so you can unpack and still make it to freshman orientation on time."
"I should be ready soon, mom!" She yells back down to me; her message nearly incomprehensible due to being drowned out by the All American Rejects now blaring from her room.
When all you got to keep is strong
Move along, move along like I know you do
And even when your hope is gone
Move along, move along just to make it through
"There's not much room left in the car. How much do you have left?" I shout.
"Only one box and my pillow."
I'm already tired of yelling back and forth across two stories and trying to compete with her music. I start climbing up the stairs. It's obvious that she's going to need an extra bit of prodding if we're ever going to get on the road in time.
I make my way across the loft and stop just outside my daughter's bedroom. I place one hand each on either side of the doorway and lean forward, projecting my torso into her room. The cluttered mess I'm presented with is completely out of character for Jocelyn. She normally keeps her personal space very neat and tidy. More surprising than the disarray though is that I can't see her. Where could she have gotten?
"Jocelyn." I bark, using my mom voice, ensuring that I can be heard over the ear-splitting music.
When all you got to keep is strong
Move along, move along like I know you do
"What?" Jocelyn's head pops up from behind her queen-sized bed like a prairie dog poking up from its hole to check the surroundings for danger. Her auburn hair, a gorgeous blend of her father's brown and my own strawberry blonde, is plastered across her face obscuring one emerald green eye and the entirety of her small freckled nose. Furrowing her brow, she thins her lips and blows a strong blast of air up out of the corner of her mouth in an unsuccessful attempt to dislodge the wayward lock. Undeterred, she raises both eyebrows and shrugs her slender dancers' shoulders forward in a querying gesture.