“Mom, do you know where my green sweater is?” I asked, rummaging through my closet. My room was in a state of disarray, clothes and hangers thrown haphazardly on the unmade bed, papers and pens strewn over the desk, sunglasses and coins and random knick-knacks stockpiled on the bedside dresser. My red suitcase with the […]
packing process
the dryer
so
Nag?nagging
“Do not take that tone with me, Astrid Foster! I am your mother and I-”
“Yeah, some load of a mother you are,” I spit.
“What did you just say to me?”
The lava bubbled to the surface, and I rose from my knees, throwing the scarf in my hand down forcefully into the suitcase. “Mom, look at yourself. What have you done today? Actually, I can tell you what you did today because it’s what you do every day. You watched dad leave for work at four in the morning and then rolled over and went right back to bed. You got up late and didn’t get dressed because you had no intentions to leave the house. You watched the news for hours and regurgitated it word-for-word over the phone to anyone who would listen because you’re too brain dead to have a single original thought. You shopped around online for picture frames or bookcases or vacation home rentals, and then you’ll pacify dad when he gets home distressed over yet another unjustifiable purchase on the credit card bill. Tonight, you’ll fill up on chocolate and wine, before you pass out on the couch with two empty bottles by the sink.”
My words were venomous. My face felt hot, I’m sure it was bright red. I could feel a pulse in the vein in my neck, like I always do when I let myself explode. If there’s one thing I inherited from the woman standing before me, it was a useless and volatile temper.
“Astrid, you brat. You bitch. I am your mother and you are to respect me.”
“Respect you? Respect you? What’s there to respect, mom? Huh?” I smiled through my seething anger, practically laughing at the impossibility of my fury. I stepped closer to my mother, eager to scale the mountain of grudges I’d been collecting against her since arriving home from college two months prior. “What do you do that’s so respectable? Because I’ll tell you, I’ve been trying to think, and I can’t come up with one fucking thing.”
“Shut up!” My mother cried with equal and opposite fury, Newton’s law. “You know what you can respect? The fact that you’re living under my roof. How about that? And as long as you’re here, I’m the boss. And you’re going to listen to me.”
My frenzied merriment only grew. My smile widened across my face, pinned by my ears. I planted myself right in front of my mother, enjoying my four-inch height advantage as I looked down into her face. “Well, I’m glad you say that, mom, because I’ve been meaning to tell you… I’m not going to Catherine’s house for the weekend. I’m going indefinitely. I’m bringing the blow-up mattress and I’m taking my car, not the train. And I’ll stay there until I can afford someplace else, because I’m sure as shit not staying here even one minute long-”
The slap jerked my head to the side and knocked the words from my mouth. My hand went up to cover where hers had printed itself on my cheek, certain to rise into a swollen red mark in the coming seconds.
I looked at my mother wordlessly. It was not the first time and yet always it was shocking. She looked back with a glare determined to hold her anger, though her lip trembled with blossoming doubt. Regret was written across the wrinkle of her forehead.
I broke our gaze to gather up a final handful of indistinguishable clothes, whatever my eyes landed on throughout the room, and shoved it into my suitcase until it was filled to the brim. I nearly broke the zipper tugging it shut over the jumbled mess inside. Standing it upright, I made for the doorway, where my mother stood motionless. Her eyes were wide and her lips parted to form a small gap, a deep inhale. “Astrid…” She breathed.
“Get out of my way, Mom. Don’t make me push by.” The look in my eyes was an iron branding rod, burning, scarring. We would both be marked by this exchange. She ambled forward into the disastrous room, still decorated chaotically, as if a bomb had gone off. In some ways, it had.
I made my way through the door and down the stairs, lugging my suitcase alongside me. I grabbed my keys from the hook by the door and opened the door to the garage. Just before I let it slam shut behind me, I caught a glimpse of my mother standing at the top of the stairs. Her white robe made her seem like a ghost of a human, empty and distant and sorrowful. My hateful resolve softened ever so slightly at the sight of her there, so pathetic. “I’ll call you when I get there.”
She nodded her silent ascent, her eyes on the stairs before her.
Writing is a passion and a hobby for me. I am a college student at the University of Miami and, although it is not part of my degree, I always find time in my schedule for a creative writing course each semester. I simply love to write and I'm here to get better and share a creative space with beautiful minds :)
“Mom, do you know where my green sweater is?” I asked, rummaging through my closet. My room was in a state of disarray, clothes and hangers thrown haphazardly on the unmade bed, papers and pens strewn over the desk, sunglasses and coins and random knick-knacks stockpiled on the bedside dresser. My red suitcase with the […]
“Mom, do you know where my green sweater is?” I asked, rummaging through my closet. My room was in a state of disarray, clothes and hangers thrown haphazardly on the unmade bed, papers and pens strewn over the desk, sunglasses and coins and random knick-knacks stockpiled on the bedside dresser. My red suitcase with the […]
“Mom, do you know where my green sweater is?” I asked, rummaging through my closet. My room was in a state of disarray, clothes and hangers thrown haphazardly on the unmade bed, papers and pens strewn over the desk, sunglasses and coins and random knick-knacks stockpiled on the bedside dresser. My red suitcase with the […]