: Part 3 – Chapter 8
If Only I Had Told Her
Going to the library with Angie to get books made me feel like myself again, and a few days later, I was able to edit the whole first chapter of my novel. Inspired by my own bravery, I approached Mom cautiously about shopping for maternity clothes. She was so enthused that she was unable to keep it from Aunt Angelina. So now itâs a trip for all three of us. Or, I guess, four.
âYou need me to stop you from buying half the store,â she proclaims from the passengerâs seat.
âWhat would it matter if I did?â Mom retorts. âWe want Autumn to be comfortable and confident during this phase of her life. Itâs good to be prepared to dress for any situation that may arise.â
Most of the time, when people argue, they arenât actually arguing about what theyâre arguing about. The real disagreement flits between their words like a persistent dragonfly. Iâm not sure what The Mothers are really arguing about; theyâve always had different ideas about consumerism. That isnât anything new. But thereâs an undercurrent to this discussion that is eluding me.
âI mostly need jeans,â I say from the back seat. âI think most of my T-shirts and sweaters will still work.â I again become aware of the heaviness of my middle, the sense that something is there that wasnât before.
âA dress, pajamas, and some lounge wear too. Maybe a swimsuit?â Mom suggests.
âSheâs due May first,â Aunt Angelina says. âShe will not need a maternity swimsuit. Thatâs where I draw the line.â
Perhaps they are arguing because Mom will be using the little gold credit card that Iâve seen her use for all the other baby-related purchases, the card Dad must have given her in place of him being any kind of real support to me. Angelina probably thinks that letting Dad pay for things is like letting him buy his dereliction of duty.
âMaybe Iâll go to the indoor pool at the Y this winter?â I say because Iâm not sure whose side Iâm on. It doesnât matter what we buy or donât buy with his money; Dadâs always seen his involvement in my life as a sort of gift he bestows on me. Heâll congratulate himself on his generosity no matter what we do with the little gold card.
âWhy not a ski suit?â Angelina asks, throwing up her hands. âAt least it would be seasonally appropriate!â
âI donât think they make maternity ski suits, but we can check,â Mom muses. â Though it may not be the best time for Autumn to take up a winter sport.â
Itâs obvious now, which one of us is pregnant, and the saleslady addresses me directly.
âLooking for anything in particular today?â
âJeans.â All the clothes here look like theyâre for, well, . Like, real moms who got pregnant on purpose. I feel like an imposter with my messy hair and my baggy Pixies T-shirt covering my unbuttoned jeans.
âRight this way,â she says.
Iâm not sure if Iâm imagining the tightness in her smile. Iâve been bracing myself for the disapproval this pregnancy will bring me, for being so young, for not having an engagement ring. So far, itâs not so bad, but maybe that will change when Iâm large enough for strangers to want to touch my belly and give me unsolicited advice, like Angie says they will.
The saleslady leads us to a shelf of pants and points out the changing rooms, but my focus is on the heavy place in my middle that is now fluttering.
I donât know if itâs the baby movingâit could beâbut it also doesnât feel that different from anything Iâve felt in my body before. Itâs disappointing that I canât tell the difference between Finnyâs baby and gas.
My mother has already gathered a pile of pants to try on, not just jeans but khakis and linen palazzo pants. Perhaps I should have sided more with Aunt Angelina.
But I follow her to the dressing room because I need clothes.
I sit facing away from the mirror to pull off my pants. My reflection is disconcerting these days.
As Iâve slept and cried and dragged myself through the past few months, my body has carried on with its new work as if everything was going according to plan. Without asking my opinion, my nipples have become large and dark and my breasts dense and heavy.
And then there is the round swelling, starting at my pelvic bone and sweeping up gently toward my navel.
I should feel affection for it, shouldnât I?
I pull up the jeans and examine the elastic at the waist, stretch it out to see how big of a belly it could accommodate, and let it snap back.
This doesnât feel like my body. It doesnât feel like a baby moving. Itâs hard for me to imagine that this weight, this fluttering, is going to become a child. It seems like Iâll blow up like a balloon, then Iâll deflate, and someone will hand me a baby. Somehow, even though I understand the biology, even though I look at the pictures online, I still canât believe that this is how humans get made, how every human was made. I always imagined that it would feel more magical. If this experience were a novel I was writing, it would be more sci-fi than fantasy or romance.
I always imagined Iâd be certain I was ready when I had a child.
I always imagined Iâd have a husband, a plan.
I bite my cheek to stop his voice.
Mom raps gently on the door. âAutumn, howâs it going?â
âThese jeans are weird,â I say.
âYour body is going to feel strange for a while, kiddo!â Angelina chimes in.
âDo they fit?â Mom asks.
âI guess so?â
I come out and she tugs on the waistband like she did when I was a kid and nods. I try on and accept and reject a few other pairs of pants. A couple of the blouses are okay. Finally, Mom wants me to try on a cocktail dress.
âEvery woman needs a little black dress,â Mom insists.
I look to Angelina for support, but she grimaces.
âYou never know what might come up, kiddo. Itâs not a bad idea to have a dress just in case.â
Iâm about to say, âLike for another funeral?â when I feel Finny in me.
he scolds, and I deserve it. As punishment, I make myself take the hanger from her and go back into the changing room.
As I strip off my T-shirt, I pause, looking in the mirror.
Itâs bigger than it was yesterday, the mound between my hips. I study myself to be certain, because surely things couldnât change that fast?
But itâs somehow true.
More sci-fi than fantasy.
I put my hands on my stomach and wonder how I didnât notice it when I put on the jeans. Should I have? Am I already not paying enough attention? I look away from the strange body in the mirror and pull the black dress over my head. Itâs a stretchy knit that hugs all my curves, the new ones too.
When I look back in the mirror, Iâm surprised by how nice it looks. I feel like a woman in this dress, not a girl. I look like someone who can handle whatâs coming. The bump seems smaller, more reasonable under the cover of black.
And I feel pretty for the first time in a long time.
I wish Finny could see me.
âAutumn?â
âItâs nice,â I tell Mom. âWe should get it.â
On the drive home, the tension between The Mothers is gone. We bought an amount of clothes that everyone felt was reasonable.
I have jeans to wear with my vintage tees, a couple of blouses and a pair of khakis in case I want to look a little nicer, and then thereâs the dress. The dress looks like something I should wear for an important meeting, perhaps with a publisher for my book or, equally probable, a rendezvous with someone from the CIA.
I have the dress as a talisman more than anything, proof that I am an adult woman, more or less.
Even if I donât have Finny to tell me I look beautiful, I can tell myself for him.