"I'm not old," Donna said, half whining and half incredulously, and recoiling as her youngest daughter tried to take the plate full of mini quiches right out of her hands. She was quicker, though, and turned her body to keep them out of reach.
Christina rolled her eyes in the same exact way Donna herself had always done with her own mother. Christina had always been the most like her, and she'd probably known what Donna was thinking. Donna glared back, praying she didn't look like her mother but fearing she did, and they both squared their shoulders in the same manner.
Refusing to admit defeat, Christina picked up a basket of muffins. "Aww," she said, tilting her head, "Lemon poppy! Dad's favorite!"
She sounded like she was going to start crying again, which Donna didn't think she could take, so she interrupted her daughter before she could get much further and said, "He would have killed me if I didn't have some lemon poppy muffins at this."
This wasn't strictly true. Ollie had been a practical man, and he probably would have thought that having his favorite food
at his own wake
was a silly thing, but Donna had baked them during a flurry of kitchen work and wasn't prepared to explain why.
At the doorway, Donna closed her eyes and took a deep breath.
Just keep moving
, she told herself.
Just keep moving.
All week she'd had so much to do. Sunup to sundown, calling this person and calling that person. Answering questions and making arrangements. She'd said thank you to everyone who reached out to her, but there was a whole other level to it underneath the basic decency of communication that she wasn't sure that even she was grasping. It was hard to do much thinking. Her brain felt numb.
Through the crowd, she spotted Christina exchanging a glance with her twin brother, Henry. They had their own near-telepathic communication methods, and Donna loved to share examples of it to underline how close a bond they had. She didn't appreciate it being used against her, though it was difficult to keep track of why she was annoyed with them. She'd wanted them to help more during the week, despite the fact that she knew they were all busy, and all lived so far away, but now that they'd arrived she was frustrated when they kept trying to
do
things for her.
A touch at her elbow snapped her out of her mental fog, and brought her back to the moment.
"Oh! Hello!" Donna cried, throwing her arms around Regina Evans, a neighbor from down the street.
"Donna," Regina said, hugging her back. "Lovely wake. Ollie will be missed."
"Thank you," she replied, disentangling herself and nodding. "He was a good man."
"I just wanted to catch you up. You didn't miss much at the executive meeting on Tuesday."
"I missed the meeting?" Donna said, stunned.
"Not to worry, not to worry. No one expected you to be there. Your mailbox ivy resolution passed."
Donna just blinked. She couldn't believe she'd lost so much time. Suddenly it felt like the world had rushed past her when she wasn't looking, and she wondered what else she might have lost track of.
"Yeah," Regina said, nodding, "so we've got Steve purchasing a stock of seeds and some sticks to help them grow upright, and then I'm gonna have Millie and Julieann write up some instructions for planting them around. We should have that all coming around door to door, and by June we'll all have some very pretty flowering growth coming up along the roadside. Should be stunning."
In her proposal, she'd offered to do all of those things, and it was disheartening to be cut out.
Maybe it's a good thing to have that taken off my plate,
she thought, and then, out loud, she said, "Oh, that'll be beautiful."
Regina touched her elbow again, politely, and turned back toward where her husband and son were conversing with others.
Donna wiped the corner of her eyes carefully. Her makeup was waterproof, but one never really knew. Once she started thinking about it, she felt her heart rate racing, so she moved to the side so she could see herself in the mirror next to the closet. Her makeup was fine, though she still hated her dress. It didn't fit her at all. She'd almost had a complete meltdown at the dress shop in town.
Almost all of her kids had made it home for the service. Five out of six were there with her, shaking hands and handing out hugs. Only Laurie, who, technically, was not actually her child but had more or less grown up under her roof, hadn't been able to make the trip, but she and Donna had been able to Facetime a couple times during the week and that had been comforting. Laurie was a good kid even though she persisted in making a living so far away.
Over the course of the afternoon, hundreds of people came through. Most of the neighborhood stopped by to pay their respects, and nearly all of Ollie's coworkers. More family members than she could count. She found herself repeating phrases like "I don't know how I'll get along without him," and "Ollie was my rock," very mechanically. Reflexively.
She was pretty sure these were things widows said. She must have heard them somewhere, on a TV show or something. Everyone seemed to accept her axioms at face value, which was good, because she had been having an increasingly hard time keeping her thoughts straight. Had anyone asked her a question that required more thought than a stock answer, she might have cracked. Twenty-six years of marriage. She'd been with him since she was twenty, more than half of her life, and any attempt to think about what came after Ollie was simply unfathomable.
The doorbell rang late in the afternoon, and Donna frowned. She was sure she'd checked everyone on her mental list of relatives and acquaintances, and even if she'd missed one the service pamphlet was pretty clear to simply come in.
The police officer looked very young, and very flustered, when she opened the door. Increasingly so, as numerous guests in black behind her quieted and turned.
"Good afternoon, ma'am," he said, managing to keep his eyes on Donna's. His older partner was not as discreet, and stared at her cleavage quite openly whenever Donna wasn't looking at him.
Donna straightened her back, making her ample chest quiver, and gave him a bristling glare. "Yes?" she said, impatiently, and immediately regretted her tone.
"Um... there was a noise complaint for this address."
Donna snapped her attention to the younger officer, who was sweating slightly, still keeping his eyes respectfully on approximately the right level without quite meeting her gaze.
"A
noise
complaint?"
"Yes, ma'am, we received an anonymous phone call earlier this afternoon. We're just following up."
She immediately knew who that anonymous caller was, and couldn't stop her physical reaction of turning and glaring around the door frame toward her left hand neighbor's house. Instead of calling
that woman
all the expletives she deserved, though, Donna froze. Her urge to communicate her frustration suffered a very polite evisceration by the good and proper front that she put up in front of guests and friends.
There was an explosive sigh behind her, and Donna glanced over her shoulder. Lennox, Laurie's brother, got up from where he'd just sat down with a plate of food.
In her mind, he and Laurie both were more hers than
that woman
's, and that filled her with a lot of pride.
"I'll go talk to her," he grumbled.
The younger officer held up one hand in a calming manner, in a way Donna was sure he'd been trained to do to calm a crowd. "That won't be necessary," he said. "The complaint was anonymous. Nobody is filing any charges, but we're obligated to make an appearance. I'll make sure the report reflects the nature of the event, and there won't be any citations today."
"Well, that would be wonderful of you," she said, though she was pretty sure she was failing to make her smile as saccharine as she wanted to. She added, "Thank you, officers," and did her absolute best not to slam the door in their leering, staring faces.
***
Three weeks later, Donna really missed her husband for the first time. Sure, she had mourned his premature departure from this mortal plane. She had been cast in the role of a grieving widow, and played the part to a tee. His funeral had been a beautiful occasion. She went to visit his grave every week, on her way to or from church, and made sure to keep it tidy and presentable with fresh flowers.
It was hard to say how much of any of it really penetrated, though, and how much of it was her forward momentum continuing to propel her through her days.
Spring had come late. Their lawn had looked pristine right up until it didn't, and when the time came to mow it Donna had been positive it wouldn't be much of an issue. She could work on her tan while she whistled and bustled around the yard. She'd be done in an hour or two, and be sipping lemonade on her back porch by noon.
That had been the plan but the wretched machine had refused to start, which felt like such a hostile thing for it to do. It wasn't enough that she had to take care of this herself, no; the mower had to go out of its way to confound her.
That induced the first moment of genuine, stomach-wrenching longing, which surprised her. She had often pointed out to Ollie how much she did around the house, how Ollie took her for granted, and how many things were needed to keep a household like theirs running. Ollie, bless his soul, had ascribed to the 'happy wife, happy life' theory of marriage, and had not once in their entire marriage fought back.