The Doll Child
The wealthiest family in the town once
had a beautiful, precious daughter whose dimpled smile could melt the hardest
hearts. For a while, it seemed as if they had everything, until little Hanna grew
quiet, then pale, then deathly ill. They quickly conceived another daughter, but
it was soon apparent their good fortune had deserted them. Lisette was not the bone
marrow match they had hoped for and their hearts were left empty.
In
their grief, the family even considered cloning. But their local Lutheran
pastor told them it was morally out of the question – even for the very rich.
But still, they didn't give up.
As
their second daughter grew, her hungry cries were lost in the dusty corners of
the empty, quiet house. And by the time Lisette turned two, the couple were
still so absent in their misery, they searched their daughter’s face for
anything that could remind them of their dear departed Hanna but the fact that
Hanna’s clothes sat so well on her sister while Lisette seemed determined to be
different in every possible way only seemed to compound their grief. The only similarity
was the colour of Lisette’s hair – and even though it was dead straight, it
gave them the seed of an idea. They knew their money could be used to ease
their sorrow and in the end, it was simple. They waited another two years then flew
to Norway to visit the best doll maker in the world.
“It’s
like going to see Santa Claus,” the wife said.
“Yes,”
said her husband. He squeezed his wife’s hand and looked at the snow on the
ground, lying cold and in patches on the dead grass beside the runway. “It
won’t be long now.”
“How
tall do you think she will be?” asked the wife.
“Ssh.
She will be perfect,” the husband said. “The doll maker is the very best. This
is my promise, woman.”
“Can
I play with her?” their daughter asked.
The
husband and wife exchanged glances.
“Perhaps,”
said the wife. “But you must be very careful. She will be breakable …”
“Ssh.
Ssh now, my dear,” he said to his wife.
“What’s
wrong, Mamma?” But the child knew she wouldn't get an answer. The wife just
stroked Lisette’s long, straight hair, washed clean as instructed.
“It
might still be possible …” the wife started to say.
“Ssh,
my dear. We shall see what the doll maker says,” said the husband. “He might
need all of it. There is the curling, remember?”
The child didn't remember much of
the trip to the doll maker. She remembers looking for God in the clouds. Then the
boredom of waiting, her parents’ hushed anguish and how she screamed and
struggled when they cut her hair.
“Oh, stop it now, Lisette,” her father said. “It will grow for God’s sake.”
“Oh, stop it now, Lisette,” her father said. “It will grow for God’s sake.”
“Soon,
little one,” said the doll maker. “Tomorrow, or possibly the day after, you
will meet your beautiful sister.”
So Lisette grew up in her sister’s
shadow, enduring the silent stares, the constant, dimpled smile revealing
perfect baby teeth, rosy cheeks and a slick of saliva on her tongue. She went
off to school at seven, while her sister stayed behind and watched her leave
from the bay window. Lisette even turned to give her a wave; Hanna smiled, but
did not wave back.
After
school, Lisette took her sister outside to play while Nanny was asleep. Hanna
was too light to play on the seesaw, so Lisette put a rucksack on her sister
and filled it with rocks.
I could throw her in the pond, she
thought. And she would sink to the bottom
and Mamma and Papa would be sad again.
“Seesaw,
Margery Daw…”
When
Hanna fell off and broke her head, large eyes wide open, Lisette ran into her
room and pretended to play with her other dolls.
But
she remembers the slap across the face, her mother’s face ashen with revisited
grief, which is the worst kind of all.
She
remembers how the woman scooped the sister up, cradled her and stroked her
broken head, gently lifted the backpack off and dropped it to the ground.
She
remembers how the woman’s tears fell on the sister’s face, and how they both
expected this to revive her. But, of course, it didn't because, after all,
there are some things money cannot buy.
And
she remembers how their precious Hanna, with slightly over-sized eyes, puckered
lips and real human hair sat at the bay window for years watching children play
in the park across the street. In fact, the town’s children grew so accustomed
to her presence at the window that they no longer saw her there, the smiling figure
that watched her little sister grow up, so full of life, to accept a bouquet
from a nervous boy before the school prom, then walk out the door for the last
time wearing a white lace gown into a life which the doll would never have
because money can buy most things. It can replace a lost child, and it can make
time stand still, if only for a short time before life marches on to the
soundless drum of our own mortal heartbeat.
copyright Kerri Harris 2013
No comments:
Post a Comment