gets herself in trouble.”
While their mothers adored her, the kids themselves saw her as a nerd with no sense of humor. No
wonder she wasn’t very popular in high school. Once a classmate told her, “You know what your
problem is? You take life so seriously. You’re fucking boring!”
She listened carefully and said she would think about that.
Even her hairstyle hadn’t changed much over the years—long, straight, honey-blond hair that she pulled
into an unrelenting bun or braided down her back. She wore little makeup, just a touch of reddish brown
lipstick and a moss green eyeliner, which according to her daughter did more to hide than to bring out the
gray-blue of her eyes.
In any event, she never managed to draw two perfectly curved lines with the
eyeliner and often went out with the line on one eyelid looking thicker than that on the other.
Ella suspected that there must be something wrong with her. She was either too intrusive and pushy
(with regard to Jeannette’s marriage plans) or too passive and docile (with regard to her husband’s
flings). There was an Ella-the-control-freak and an Ella-the-hopelessly-meek. She could never tell which
one was about to emerge, or when.
And then there was a third Ella, observing everything quietly, waiting for her time to come. It was this
Ella who told her she was calm to the point of numbness but that underneath there was a strangled self,
harboring a fast freshet of anger and rebellion. If she kept going like this, the third Ella warned, she was
bound to explode someday. It was just a matter of time.
Contemplating these issues on the last day of May, Ella did something she hadn’t done in a long while.
She prayed. She asked God to either provide her with a love that would absorb her whole being or else
make her tough and careless enough not to mind the absence of love in her life.
“Whichever
one You choose, please be quick,” she added as an afterthought. “You might have
forgotten, but I’m already forty. And as You can see, I don’t carry my years well.”