An eagle. A loner. Ready to fly away. She frowned a little, wishing she could disagree. Her life had left markers all over the world, but very few at home. No one’s totem would include her except this family’s, and while that was what she’d always wanted—to be totally free and independent—it felt lonely just now. “Meredith would be a lioness who cares for everyone and keeps the pride together. ”
“What would you be, Mom?” Meredith asked.
Mom shrugged. “I would not be there, I think. ”
“You think you left no mark on us?” Nina asked.
“Not one that begs to be remembered. ”
“Dad loved you for more than fifty years,” Meredith said. “That’s not nothing. ”
Mom took a sip of her iced tea and stared out the window at the rain.
The waitress returned with their food. Nina got up quickly and whispered a request, and then sat down again. As they ate the delicious halibut and fries, they talked about the day in Ketchikan—the gold nugget jewelry in the windows of the shops, the ornate First Nations tribal art, the Cowichan sweaters the locals wore, and the bald eagle they’d seen perched on a totem pole in town. It was a conversation that could have been had by any family on vacation in town, but to Nina it felt almost magical. As her mother spoke about things that interested her, she seemed to soften. It was as if every ordinary word loosened something in her until by the end of the meal she was smiling.
The waitress returned and cleared their plates. Instead of placing the bill on the wooden table, she set a piece of birthday cake in front of Mom. Its lit candle danced above the buttercream frosting.
“Happy birthday, Mom,” Meredith and Nina said together.
Mom stared down at the candle.
“We always wanted to have a birthday party for you,” Meredith said. She reached out and put her hand on Mom’s.
“I have made so many mistakes,” Mom said softly.
“Everyone makes mistakes,” Meredith said.
“No. I . . . I didn’t mean to be that way . . . I wanted to tell you . . . but I couldn’t even look at you, I was so ashamed. ”
“You’re looking at us now,” Nina said, although it wasn’t strictly true. Mom was actually staring at the candle. “You want to tell us your story. You always wanted to. That’s why you started the fairy tale. ”
Mom shook her head.
“You’re Vera,” Nina said quietly.
“No,” Mom said, “that girl is not who I am. ”
“But she’s who you were,” Nina said, hating herself for saying it, but unable to stop.
“You are a dog with a bone, Nina. ” She sighed. “Yes. Long ago I was Veronika Petronova Marchenko. ”
“Why—”
“Enough,” Mom said sharply. “This is my first birthday party with my daughters. There will be time later for the rest of it. ”
Twenty-one
At dinner, they talked about ordinary things. They drank wine and toasted again to Mom’s eighty-first birthday. After a delicious meal, they wandered through the Vegas-like glitter of the giant ship and found their way to a theater, where a man in an orange sequined jumpsuit was performing magic. He made his barely clad assistant disappear, gave her paper roses that turned into white doves and flew away, and cut her in several pieces and then put her back together.
Mom clapped enthusiastically at each new trick, smiled like a little kid.
Meredith could hardly take her eyes off her mother. She looked bright and almost happy; for the first time, Meredith understood how cold her mother’s beauty had always been before. Her beauty was different tonight: softer, warmer.
When the show was over, they walked back to their staterooms. In the crowded hallways, amid all the chatter of their fellow passengers and the ringing of the casino bells, they were strangely silent. Something had changed today, with that little burning candle on a piece of chocolate cake, but Meredith didn’t know quite what had changed or how they would be reshaped by it. All she knew was that she had lost the ability to stay separate now. For more than twenty-five years, she’d kept up her side of the wall, too. She had refused to really see or need her mother, and in that distance, she’d found strength. At least a facsimile of strength. Now she had almost none of that left. Truthfully, she was glad it was too late to hear more of the story tonight.
At their door, Nina stopped. “I had a great day, Mom. Happy birthday. ” She moved forward awkwardly, pulled Mom into an embrace that was over before Mom could lift her own arms.
Meredith wanted to follow suit, but when she looked in her mother’s blue eyes, she felt too vulnerable to make a move. “I . . . uh . . . I know you must be tired,” Meredith said, smiling nervously. “We should go to bed and get up early. Tomorrow we’ll be cruising Glacier Bay. It’s supposed to be spectacular. ”