Norm yanks her hair, and Sophie kicks his shin. They go on like this until I shout that there is no attic in the sky.
Carlos asks me where Norm’s grandmother lives.
“The dirt,” I say, pressing my hands to my face.
“Ew,” Sophie says. “There are bugs down there.”
I start telling them about my husband. The way they soaked his body with chemicals and then lowered him into the ground. But the children hold their hands to their throats and make gagging noises.
The next day, Carlos comes to school with one of his shoelaces tied around his neck. He is one of the most popular boys, and by naptime the entire class is wearing shoelace nooses.
They trip around the jungle gym at recess. I retrieve their laceless shoes from the yard and toss them in the cubbies.
After lunch, Sophie asks me if she can eat a chocolate bar. I tell her I only hand them out after pop quizzes.
“But I need chocolate to live!” she screams. Sophie starts shaking, rolling her eyes back until I can see only white.
“That is not funny!” I shout. “Not funny at all.”
She is already beginning to giggle.
I get to class late on Friday. My eyes are red and sore from the night before.
When I walk into the room, the students are constructing a new gallows out of real wood and rope.
“It’s for the science fair,” Carlos says.
“What does this have to do with science?” I say.
“I dunno,” says Norm.
“You’re the teacher,” says Sophie. “You tell us.”
It doesn’t seem to matter anymore. I sit at my desk and sip my burnt coffee.
When Sophie volunteers for a test run, I lift her body carefully to the loop. I’m supposed to hold her there while she pretends to die, then lower her safely to the ground.
The children count down their thirty seconds, but I keep holding. I want them to get a little taste of fear. To realize death doesn’t stop when you want it to.
Instead they just laugh as Sophie wiggles her body. The children fall to the floor and kick their legs in the air. Norm tumbles around on the ground like a hyena until he sweeps my legs out from under me.
I’m lying on the carpet, looking up at Sophie. Her face is as blue as a naptime mat.
The other children are standing or sitting around me. Some of them are beginning to cry. Carlos tugs on my skirt. It is almost recess.
Sophie’s body is ticking back and forth, marking the seconds, minutes, hours left to fill before the day is done.
OUR NEW NEIGHBORHOOD
When the incidents start, my husband decides that what our neighborhood needs is a neighborhood watch. “We need to watch our assets as closely as we’re going to watch the twins,” he says, tapping the baby monitor screen. The screen is dark and blue. It shows two pale teddy bears in an otherwise empty crib.
The next morning, I come downstairs and see Donald slinking in the corner with a black trench coat and fedora. “What do you think?” he asks. We’re low on disposable income, and, as usual, he bought a size too large.
“It looks a little conspicuous,” I say.
“That’s the idea, Margot. I want them to know someone is watching.”
My husband buttons the top button of the coat, puts on a pair of sunglasses, and leaves. As I slide the toast into the toaster, I see him out the window. He’s sneaking through the bushes in the neighbor’s backyard.
The reason we’re low on cash is that we poured our savings into buying House 32 in a neighborhood called Middle Pond. Middle Pond is located between West Pond on the west and East Pond on the east. All three are part of North Lake, which is itself a subset of the Ocean Shore suburb.
It looks perfect on paper. It has a stellar school system and all the amenities.
“Normally, I’d say we should wait and see,” the real estate agent had said, “but if you don’t snatch this now, you’ll watch it go bye-bye.”
Donald downloaded an app called HausFlippr that estimates property values in exclusive neighborhoods. Each time the Middle Pond score went up a full point, Donald cooked rib eyes on our new five-burner grill.
He hasn’t cooked rib eyes in months.
Our neighbors aren’t as worried about the declining rating. “My father used to say, ‘markets fluctuate like fishes swim,’” John Jameson says at the neighborhood improvement meeting. It’s our week to host, and I’m placing triangles of cheese beside rectangle crackers. Several of the other wives are insisting on helping me.
“We’ll make sure this is the last time you host until after the miracles pop out,” Janice Jameson says.
“Can I see?” Alice Johansson asks while lifting up the hem of my blouse.
“There’s nothing to see. I’m not even showing.”
In the other room, Donald is raising his voice. “Well my father always said you can never be too careful when it comes to property and prosperity. Plus, I already bought the trench coat.”
The three of us walk back in holding the one tray.
“If it will make you feel better, we’ll take a vote.”
Donald is a tall, muscular man. He knows how to use his body, how to loom. The vote is tight, but Donald stares down enough neighbors to get his budget approved.
“Let’s move on to the question of acceptable dye colors for next month’s Easter egg hunt.”
“I refuse to participate if metallics are allowed again,” Claudia Stetson says. “They hurt my eyes.”
The double-wide crib is temporarily in my office. This means that the baby monitor camera is temporarily in there too. It’s shaped like a purple flower and situated between the plants on the windowsill. The monitor is downstairs in the living room. I’ve adjusted the angle of the camera so that it can see the crib but not my computer screen.
I can never allow Donald to see what I look at online.
The property values in Middle Pond are based on the reputation of the neighborhood, which is determined, in large part, by the official score assigned by the North Lake Committee on Proper Property Standards.
We are never told the qualifying factors. From the way the inspectors inspect, the list is long and varied. They inspect the level of seed in the bird feeders, observe the height of the grass in each lawn, and mark down rule infractions during games of sidewalk hopscotch.
Our neighbors probably thought Donald would get bored after a week or give up when the score increased. But the score keeps declining, and by midmonth Donald has an entire operation set up in our basement.
“Look at those paint stains in the Johanssons’ driveway. And see how the Stetsons keep every curtain drawn?”
I’m maneuvering the laundry basket between his monitors and stacks of notes. He calls me over, makes me watch a time-lapse progression of black cars entering and leaving the Jacobsons’ garage. “I’m going to see if the neighborhood board will increase the watch’s budget. I need at least a dozen cameras. What do you think?”
I want to tell him my bladder hurts, my back aches, and I don’t care about the neighbors’ driveways. I want to tell him he was supposed to be helping me during the pregnancy, not getting in my way. Mostly, I want to tell him he should be looking at me, not the neighbors.
Or that’s what I know I’m supposed to feel. In fact, I don’t mind that Donald isn’t looking at me.
I know every marriage goes through these phases, where you look at the other person and can’t remember what you ever saw in them. I know it will pass, and that the babies will give us something new to look at together. But they aren’t born yet.