with an airline badge stops in front of them, a scrawny girl at her side. During the handoff, Rosalie maintains her smile, but is unnerved by how strongly the girl resembles a mongoose, with round black eyes and a pointed chin. Her hair is severely parted down the center, and a tight ponytail exposes elfin ears. She is dressed in a blue T-shirt and lightweight olive pants, not the elaborate native costume Rosalie had expected.
Hannah vibrates with excitement like a dog who would bound upon the girl, licking. There is no doubt for her that this will be a great new friend, plain and malleable.
âHi!â she cries. âWelcome to America!â
Rosalie extends a hand and squeezes the girlâs damp, wormlike fingers. In contrast to this diminutive person, her own children are giants. Their faces are assertively sculpted, with patrician brows and jawbones. Itâs striking, seeing these young people together, how God is capable of carving such variety from the same stone. As Rosalie studies the girlâs face, she decides there is a slanted kind of prettiness thereâsomething that flickers in and out, dodging and diving.
In the short-term parking lot, Rosalie gestures to the titanic Grand Caravan, gleaming silver. âHere it is,â she says. The girlâs pointed face shows no change. For a moment, Rosalie sinks with the suspicion that this was all a mistake, that they have gotten a dud, that the next several months will be suffocating. But, no. It is her job to make it work. She is a mother, first and foremost, and this stranger will soon be like her own child. She takes a quick gauge of the girlâs height and weight: borderline. To be safe, she gestures her into the middle booster seat. The girl fidgets but does not resist as Rosalie buckles her in.
On the Hutchinson River Parkway, Rosalie keeps to the center lane, tolerating the maniacs weaving around her. These initial surroundings are disappointing, the cramped multifamily dwellings along the exit lane, the frightful megaliths of Co-op City.
âDonât look!â Hannah says jubilantly to the girl. âThis isnât where we live. Iâll tell you when to look.â
âHow was the flight?â Rosalie attempts in her best motherly tone.
The girlâs voice barely rises above the sound of the car engine, soft and musical. âIt was okay, thank you.â
âYou must be tired.â
âYes.â
The Grand Caravan finally merges onto an emptier highway, wide and clean, edged with lush leafwork, and Rosalie feels a familiar sense of relief, of spatial freedom. As they pull off the exit and drive through the center of Old Cranbury, she prickles with a feeling of pride for this place, its preserved character, the quality of its people.
âThatâs the hardware store,â Hannah says, âand the handbag store, and the health food store, and thereâs where we get our hair cut.â
Rosalie glimpses the girlâs profile as she looks out the window, brightened by the lucid and fair New England sun. She has cleared her own calendar these first few weeks. Sheâll write her âIn the Spectatorsâ Standâ column at night, after the children are asleep. She will devote her daylight hours to acclimating the student to her family and its roster of enriching activities.
âThis is it,â Hannah announces as they pull into the driveway. Rosalie tries to see her home through the girlâs eyes and imagines it looks like paradise. There is a barn-style garage door, borders of neat Belgium block, stone pillars flanking the driveway. The flower boxes are full. She has added these careful details to the property over the years without ever altering the original structure. She is proud not to have wasted money on expansion, even as her family has burgeoned. The boys occupy two bedrooms, and she has transformed an attic storage space into a funky, garret-like room for the girls.
This is