As the United States of America celebrates two and a half centuries since its founding, one family grapples with its own issues…
Felix and me have been married for five years. We met in the middle of a particularly messy post football match fracas. I was standing on the edge of a fountain defending my honour with a chair leg and he came to my rescue. He was six and a half feet of menace, built like a linebacker and obviously in no mood to take any crap from a crowd of overstimulated college boys. He extracted me from the melee just in time to make ourselves scarce before the boys in blue arrived with riot sticks and short fuses. It seemed entirely natural to hunt up a bar well away from the frat boys and have us a quiet drink.
We must have talked for four or five hours, discovering that a tattoo artist from the boonies and an architect whose partnership in a prestigious practice was still new enough to be making him grin could have so much in common, while being sufficiently different for our discussions to have fire and the sharp edge of two minds sparking off each other.
In the end he slept at mine that night, with his big feet hanging over the end of the sofa.
He pretty much never left, and we married the following spring. Our wedding was quiet and informal and kept deliberately low key because of what people of a delicate disposition refer to as family friction. Which is the sort of understatement that makes thing both less and more complicated than they actually are.
Put bluntly, the two families hate each other.
Only they don’t, what they hate is the idea of each other.
Felix’s family thinks my lot are loud, uneducated rednecks, though most of them are too polite to say so. My lot considers Felix to have sprung from a long line of effete, inbred pseudo-intellectuals none of whom has ever done a hands turn of real work, and they aren’t polite enough to keep their opinions to themselves. Thing is neither lot is completely right or completely wrong.
My lot runs long on tow-headed good ole boys with shoulders like brick walls and apparently indefatigable appetites for beer. I even have cousins called Cletus and Bubba.
Felix’s family, by contrast, is mostly slim, and pale, and as bendy as willow trees. His father is a university professor with soft hands and a wispy beard, and his mom plays violin in a semi-professional string quartet. Felix’s sisters are called Portia and Ophelia.
On the other side of the coin, both lots are hardworking, honest, and morally grounded. It’s just that neither of them can see the common ground for the morass of misunderstanding that divides them.
And that’s our problem in a nutshell.
Things have never descended into open hostility from my side for a couple of very good reasons. One: my mom, who is a community midwife and possessed of a glare that could melt stainless steel, would personally disembowel anyone who caused me grief. Two: none of the cousins fancies taking a pop at Felix because they ain’t entirely sure he don’t bend iron bars with his teeth.
From the other side of the divide, politeness is a given, even if there is a certain hauteur about the relationship.
Which is why we don’t go in for much in the way of family celebrations, spending Christmas with one family and thanksgiving with the other.
This worked fine until we bought the house. It’s nothing fancy, just a suburban arts and crafts villa with blue shutters, a big sheltered yard and a swimming pool. And the yard was nearly our undoing.
Our moms ambushed us. Mine appeared at the play park, where I take our three-year-old twins to burn off some of their innate soddishness, while Felix’s took him to lunch at a wholefood restaurant. Different women, different approaches but the message was substantially the same. July fourth was our ‘turn’. We were, like it or not (to be brutally honest ‘not’), hosting a family day in our big shady yard.
When I got home, trailing two sticky, overstimulated, candy-fuelled, argumentative children in my wake, Felix was already there looking as shell-shocked as I felt. But he gave me a hand with bath and pasta duty before throwing himself theatrically onto the big squishy sofa in our family room.
“My mom came visiting,” he announced.
“Mine too.”
“July fourth?”
I nodded.
“Do you think,” he asked carefully, “this was a coincidence?”
“Nope. This was a coordinated matriarch move.”
“They coordinate?”
“Of course they do. They’re both cut from the same cloth.”
He frowned, but then he thought a bit and his grin spread.
“They really are, ain’t they. I just never thought of it like that before. Well. I’ll be jiggered.”
“It does seem odd. But I’ve noticed it a bit before. It’s subtle but the steel magnolia and momma bear are very far from being above collusion.”
He nodded. “So what do we do?”
“First of all we call out their trickery. Then we give in and host July fourth. With stipulations.”
Fast forward to a steaming hot July day, to icy cold beers and a sandwich bar lunch, and to two families dancing carefully around each other like feral cats on a trash tip. But the atmosphere was at least polite.
Felix and the dads kept close eyes on a gaggle of teenage cousins of both genders, thereby keeping flirtations to an acceptable level of touchy-feely, and preventing showing off from degenerating into dangerous dares.
Felix’s younger sister, Ophelia, merry faced and married to a man who had sense enough to step aside from family judgements, happily herded children and prevented any inter-cousin flare ups. I was grateful and brought her a beer. She smiled.
“This was brave of you.”
“You think we had a choice?”
“Nope. Not if mom got involved.”
“Both moms did. Caught us in a pincer movement.”
“Ouch!” Then she touched my arm. “There is something…”
Before she had chance to say what was bothering her my mom appeared beside us. She looked at Ophelia.
“Portia. How far along is she?”
“Eight months.”
Mom shook her head. “She’s gotten her dates muddled. That girl looks to me like she’s about to give birth.”
My mom has been a midwife for close to forty years, so if she says someone is about to give birth you better believe her.
Ophelia frowned. “That’s what I was thinking. And it would be just like her. I have never met a vaguer human being than my sister. She is kind, sweet and loving, but she drifts through life like a rudderless boat.”
I had more immediate problems. “When you say ‘about to’, mom?”
“This very afternoon if I’m not wrong.”
When it comes to pregnancy and babies wrong is a place Mom doesn’t inhabit, so I braced myself for a bumpy ride.
“What should we do?”
“Right now. Get her to sit in the shade and maybe bring her a cool drink.”
More of this tale by Jane Jago tomorrow…