The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake: A Novel

The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake: A Novel Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake: A Novel Read Online Free PDF
Author: Aimee Bender
explain to him about the acidic resentment in the grape jelly.
    I guess, I said. A lot of feelings, I said.
    He drew a few boxes on the yellow legal pad. Is it your feeling? he said.
    I shook my head. I don't know, I said.
    How do you feel? he asked.
    Tired.
    Does it taste tired?
    Some of it, I said.
    Joseph, who was sitting with his textbook at the table, had made himself a piece of toast with butter and jam and sprinkles of sugar. When he wasn't looking I reached over to his plate and tore off a section. I must've made a face right away, because George glanced over, quick. What? he asked, writing Joseph's Toast in the left column in big letters. Oh, I said, dizzy, mouth full. Tell us, said George, pencil ready. I couldn't look at Joseph. I couldn't even eat it very well. The bread felt thickly chewy, like it was hard to chew. A blankness and graininess, something folding in on itself. A sea anemone? I mumbled. Joseph looked up from folding his iced-tea label into a neat square. His eyes traced the door frame. I'm fine! he said, laughing. I feel fine.
    I spit the bread into a napkin.
    Joseph took his plate to the sink.
    We done yet? he said. I promised Patterson we'd crack the racing code.
    All right, said George, standing. He stretched up, and his T-shirt lifted slightly to show a band of skin. Then he smiled at me. Good job, kid, he said.
    After they both left the kitchen, I put the milk and the jam back in the fridge and took out a knife and scraped my tongue lightly with its notched edge to get the taste of Joseph's toast away. When that didn't work, I grabbed a package of swirled sugar cookies from the pantry; the cookies, made by no one, had only the distant regulated hum of flour and butter and chocolate and factories. I ate six. The heat softened outside, and I washed the dishes, cool water running over my hands, returning a shine to the knives and the forks.
    When I was done, I took a board game out of the hall closet and set it up right outside Joseph's room so I could be as close as possible without actually violating the Keep Out sign. Holding on to the muted sound of George's voice through the wood of the door.
    How you doing out there? he called out every now and then.
    Okay, I said, moving a yellow pawn forward four spaces.
    She's nuts, called Joseph, typing. Or it's her bad mood, he said. You've heard of it. It's called moods.
    My stomach clenched. Maybe, I said, quietly, into the piles of fake money I'd been winning in the board game I was playing against myself.
    We'll test her in a better way on the weekend, said George. Outside the house. Hey, Joe, read eight out loud again.
    The weekend? said Joe. It was impossible to miss the tremor in his voice.
    Just for part of Saturday, said George, okay, Rose? A little more information? Saturday at noon?
    Sure, I said, paying myself a million dollars from the stockpile.
    7 One time, a year or so earlier, I had surprised my father with a flair for drawing accurate soccer balls, each hexagon nestled neatly next to its oppositely colored neighboring pentagon. He, a huge soccer fan, had been pleased. He held each one up and hooted as we sat down to watch the game together. Now, this is what I call art! he said, taping it above the TV. But I soon began the less approved-of habit of adding big eyes with long eyelashes and a smiling red mouth inside the white spaces on the ball. Rose--oh, no? said Dad, scratching his chin. I can't help it, I told him, handing over the fifth smiler. They looked too plain, I said.
    I stopped watching sports with him after that, but it was the one time I could remember showing off any particular special skill at all. Feeling so pleased at getting all six sides even with their five-sided neighbors. Making dashes to indicate stitching. I was not, usually, a standout participant, good or bad. I read at an average age. I did fine in school but no one took either parent of mine aside to whisper about my potential--I seemed to be satisfyingly
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