Authors: Catherine Armsden
“See what you want to do,” Ron offered, backing away.
Gina moved the head of the enlarger up and down, watching her boyfriend Mark's face shrink and grow until the image filled the paper just right.
“That's a great oneâof Mark?” her father ventured, and she told him yes.
He'd met Mark once and had commented to Gina that he didn't “quite know what to make of him.” Gina was not at all surprised; her father and Mark couldn't have been more different. Mark was one
of the courageous boys who drifted down to the all-girls Andrews from the more prestigious boys prep school up the street. These boys parked themselves on the couches in the girls' dorm common rooms, offering cigarettes while taking inventory of the girls. In pasty Whit's Point, Gina had never met a boy like Mark, with such dark hair and eyes, so witty and self-assured. At prep school, it was
cool
to be smart. When Gina had remarked on this to Cassie, she'd said, “They're smarter and more interesting because they're all rich.” Since starting at Andrews, Cassie had felt insecure about her upbringing “in the sticks,” but by the time Gina got there, Andrews students had long since traded in status symbols for a studied attempt at carefree sloppiness.
Of course, there were still some signifiers of wealth at Andrews: expensive stereo equipment, braces, nose jobs, ski vacations in Vail, and the river of cash flowing into the procurement of alcohol and drugs. What a laugh that her mother had believed her daughters' morality would be better protected at boarding school than in Whit's Point! Most of the supervising adults at Andrews were caring but quite a few spent their free time in much the same way as their students. (Mr. Grand, the history teacher, was known to be sleeping with a senior but at least she was eighteen.) At times Gina found the freedom at school overwhelming; it was a lot to manage work, fun, sleep, and the 24-7 demand for emergency peer counseling that substituted for parenting.
But Gina had never spent a homesick day at Andrews. To be surrounded by so many interesting girls! Like having more sistersâslightly wounded sisters. Daughters of divorce, alcoholism, illness, and death: escapees, all. She loved how the place engaged her every molecule, how revelations seemed to come in the breakfast biscuits, how there was room for her to feel, to express, to create. She loved the three art studiosâthe ceramics room especially, where she worked
until midnight some nights, building her clay ruins.
She loved being out of earshot of her mother.
So when her parents told her in September that she might not be able to return to Andrews for her senior year because of money problems, she secretly cried nearly every night for three months. It was never brought up again until they were driving her back to school after Christmas vacation and she asked from the backseat, “So, am I going to graduate from Andrews or not, do you think?”
“Yes, of course,” her mother said. “You're going to graduate from Andrews.”
That was the end of itâsubject closed, as usual on the topic of money. Gina held in her explosive relief until they'd left her at the dorm, and then she and her roommates gyrated to the Rolling Stones in a four-person bear hug.
Now, she slipped the photograph of Mark into the tray of chemicals. It would always be magic to her the way a blank surface would slowly fill in with life. Peering at Mark's portrait, she thought of the letter she'd just received from him, covered with painstakingly drawn caricatures of his teachers. She plucked the print from the last tray and clothespinned it to the line hanging over the sink. She hoped he'd call.
She sat on the stool poking the tongs at the prints in the tray, tasting the pungent chemicals they soaked in. As her sculptures took shape on the paper, she felt pleased that in two dimensions the piecesâa series of “rooms,” made from raku-fired porcelain slabsâhad lost little of their mystery and power. This was the first body of work she felt was truly hers.
For an instant, she was pulled away by the sound of dinner preparations beyond the darkroom door. But her father switched on the print dryer, and its hum brought her back inside. She left the finished prints in the rinse tray and pulled the stool over to the dryer. When she
and Cassie were little, they'd peel the prints from the hot silver drum quickly to avoid burning their fingers, then make a pile of them, dry and slightly curled like autumn leaves. Now, she picked off a photograph of a group of mostly smiling people posing against a layer of orange day lilies in front of Lily House: her mother, her grandparents, Fran, and a toddlerâprobably Sidâgrinning and straddling a large, spotted dog. The women's skirts were skewed by the wind.
“Oh, take a look at this!” Her father plucked from the belt a photograph of her mother, dressed in an antique gown, standing on the stair at Lily House. “I took this the day I met her. The Historical people hired me, and Mom was the only one tiny enough to fit into Mary Banton's dress. It was raining that day, and muddy in the driveway, so I picked Mom up and carried her across Lily House's threshold. Isn't she a beauty? She was the classiest girl around.”
“Yeah,” Gina said. Her mother looked both regal and sultry, like a very short movie star. She imagined her father, falling in love through his viewfinder. But as always, she felt both mystified and irritated by the adoration in his eyes that she'd come to understand was what stood between him and the imperative to protect his daughters from their mother.
More pictures of Lily House rolled out on the dryer belt: Lily House in all seasons, in the snow and spring, windows lit up at night; it was a photo-worthy house. From looking at the merry faces of the people gathered around it, you could almost believe it had once been the magical place her mother always said it was. Next came a series of recent photographs, clinical portraits of each room from every angle. Rooms of four-posted beds, curvy Victorian couches, caned chairs, clashing oriental rugs and stern portraits everywhere.
When Gina asked about the photos, her father said, “Mom wanted them, to keep track of furniture and paintings and whatnot. She doesn't trust the Historical Society.”
“Why did she sell the house to them, then? I thought she wanted to live in Lily House somedayâshe always worshipped it. Did she sell it because of . . . what happened with Fran?”
“Fran?” Her father cocked his head. “No, I don't think so. I don't think Mom ever wanted to live at Lily House. She likes it here, being on the water.”
Not for the first time lately, Gina had the thought that her father might not just be long-suffering but also oblivious.
Just once, Gina had asked her mother why she'd sold Lily House to the Historical Society, but her mother had changed the subject. Gina figured it was because the sale had to do with the taboo subject of money. “But why'd she'd sell to
them
?” she pressed her father now.
“She wanted to be able to sell it to someone for a better priceâa lot more than what we ended up getting from the Historical people. If she had, we would've gotten our hands on all these
things
in the house.” He pointed at the photograph of Lily House's dining room sideboard. “But we couldn't because the Washington letters never showed up.”
“I don't get it. What do the Washington letters have to do with anything?”
“Your grandpa wrote in his will that if the letters weren't found, Lily House and everything in it had to be sold to the Historical Society so they could protect the hidden letters. If they're even there. Isn't that silly? But remember: don't say anything to anyone about the letters; it's a Banton family secret, like all the others.” His chuckle came out more like a cough.
Gina felt an irrepressible urge to pour all of her questions into the dark room. This must have been what a confessional felt like! “How come Mom never talks about the fact that Bill Holloway was Sid's father?” she blurted.
Her father sighed and shifted his weight. “It's a long story. Mom
will tell you about it sometime.” He shook his head. “Those Bantons. They're quite a bunch.”
It was the only indictment about family Gina had ever heard her father make, and it seemed to include her mother, since she and Sid were the only Bantons left. The safety of the darkroom must have emboldened him, too.
She took another chance. “Don't you think there's something
wrong
with the Bantons?”
“Oh, well, I'm not sure how you mean that . . . Sid's a little light in his loafers; is that what you mean?”
“What? No, I don't mean . . .” Gina felt embarrassed for Sid and angry at the same time. “Who cares about that?”
“Well, maybe you kids don't, but it's a little tough to swallow. For adults. Parents.”
“Like who? He doesn't have parents. Why do you care? He doesn't even talk to us.”
“Oh, I'm not saying I care, particularly. They have a right to the way they want to live, as far as that goes. But it was pretty hard on Mom and Fran.”
Gina thought of all the pain Fran and her mother had caused the family and even though she had no reason to feel protective of her estranged cousin, she couldn't help feeling indignant that he was being implicated in their misery. She felt herself shut down.
The hum of the dryer filled the room as they continued to pick prints off the belt.
After several minutes, her father said, “I didn't mean to sound like I don't approve of how Sid is. It's just that with Sid, it's not so simple. Remember, he's
Sidney Banton.
The last in the famous line of Sidney Bantons. There was a certain expectation. Your mother thinks that was the last straw for Fran. That night she did herself in. Sid told her
about . . .” here, her father dropped his voice, “being a homosexual.”
Gina's jaw was clenched tight. Taking a breath, she aimed to take a good shot at her father. “I was there that day,” she said. “It wasn't because of Sid. Fran and Mom were totally out of control.
Both
of them.” To twist the knife, she added, “Cassie thinks Mom's sick and needs a psychiatrist.”
“Oh?” Her father laughed, infuriating her. “She does, huh? Well, Mom and Fran did always have their problems with each other. And Mom has had her ups and downs, but it's not all
that
bad; is it?”
The intimacy Gina had felt earlier shrunk into the room's yellowed darkness. She was struck with an urge to grab her father and shake him out of his . . . amnesia, or stupor, or whatever it was.
Ron held up a photograph. “Look at this great Chippendale desk. Sidney Banton's very own.”
Gina didn't look.
“Virginia, are you in there?” her mother's voice shot through the darkroom door.
Gina ignored her.
“Virginia?” Eleanor yelled again. “Phone's for you. It's Mark. We're going to eat!”
Gina picked up the phone on her father's worktable. “Hi, Gina Lo-La,” Mark said.
Gina turned her back to the room and moved her lips closer to the receiver to ask him how he was. She'd hoped he'd call, but not now, with her father standing right there.
“Four days into vacation, and I'm already going nuts,” Mark complained. “Rachel has three other pre-pubes here all the time, Martin is king, and Trudy thinks she's my best friend, only hipper.”
Gina remembered being scandalized the first time she'd heard Mark call his parents by their first names. During parents' weekend,
Trudy's skin-tight jeans and silk halter top had made her a standout among the other khakis-and-wool-skirted parents. She'd never met a parent she'd call
sexy.
Her own mother snorted in disgust at the Closeup toothpaste ads and ruined every TV make-out scene with her loud negative commentary about
swapping spit.
In their house, Gina's sexuality slinked off like a guilty dog.
Mark was focused 100 percent on losing his virginity, and Gina was the girl he intended to lose it with. She was flattered; he was handsome and smooth, never fumbling a kiss. She loved lying next to him in the field near school, skin against skin. Peeling off clothes, breaking the rules sneaking into his dorm roomâminutes charged with the exciting danger of getting caught. She thought now of the night last month he'd thrown pebbles at her window, and she'd sneaked out of her dorm to find him huddled against the maple tree. He'd just returned from the funeral of a best friend back home who'd crashed his car. When he laid his head in Gina's lap and cried, she felt more alive and purposeful than she ever had, more connected to everythingâto Mark, to the trees just beginning to push out tiny budsâand grounded by the profoundness of this act of comforting that transcended her middle-of-the-night fatigue, the rules they were breaking, the exam she had the next day.
These feelings, Gina realized, had little to do with wanting to have sex. She had no intention of losing her virginity to Mark. She'd told him so. First of all, she wasn't ready (the reason she gave him), and she wasn't in love with him (the reason she didn't give him), if she even knew what love was. Furthermore, the horniness that peppered his every joke and gesture was a turnoff.
There were plenty of other girls who might have been
ready,
but Mark soldiered on with determination and loyaltyânot her father's hangdog kind of loyalty but the frisky kind. She was
worth
waiting
for! What she was willing to give, she figured, must have been worth what she was not willing to give up.