Chapter 22 Adelaide
adelaide
A heavy blanket of fatigue, along with a clutter of daily activities—doctors’ appointments, physical therapy sessions, and home nurses, aides, and friends running in and out of the house—made me lose a few days. It might even have been a week. Or more.
But one afternoon, I found myself awake and alone with Hope. “Where did we leave off talking about Joe?”
“You never told me if you saw him again after he left New Orleans.”
The memories came crowding in like animals on Noah’s ark, and then I was sailing into the past.
1943
I received a letter from Joe the Monday after I returned from Wedding Tree.
Lucille had placed it on my bed, where she regularly put my mail, and I found it after work. I stared at it for a while, thinking it must be some kind of a joke. It was too soon for me to have gotten a letter from anywhere out of state, much less from the Pacific.
“What are you waiting for? Open it,” Marge insisted.
My hand shook a little as I pried up the flap, thinking, His lips touched this to seal it. “Dear Addie, I read in a big, masculine scrawl. “Just wanted you to know I take my correspondence promises seriously. Love, Joe.”
“What an odd thing to write!” Marge said, peering over my shoulder.
“He means he’s written to my father,” I said. I turned it over and saw the base’s postmark. He’d mailed the letter before he left.
“You think? Oh, that’s so exciting!” Marge’s smile faded into a pout. “But that means you’ll be engaged before me!”
As far as I was concerned, I was engaged already—but no one, Marge included, considered it official.
The next day, I had another note. Dear Addie, To make sure you don’t forget about me, I left some letters with Carl and asked him to mail one a day to you.
Hopefully this will tide you over until you start getting my letters from overseas. Love, Joe.
After that, I raced home every day at noon to see if the mail had come.
Thanks to the efficiency of the U.S. Postal Service, some days there were no letters; other days there were two.
They were all just a line. “Your kiss haunts my lips.” “You are my everything.” “Your face is like a flower—bright and open and beautiful.”
Oh, be still, my heart! I slept with the letters under my pillow, as if they somehow kept him close to me.
I waited for my parents to mention a letter from Joe.
Given the way they’d reacted to my news about him when I’d last gone home, I figured it was best to let the letter arrive and let them broach the topic with me.
My mother’s letters were full of news about Charlie, telling me how well he was doing, how he was gaining weight, how his color was better.
I heard all about how he was learning to walk with just a cane now instead of crutches, and how he was religiously doing the exercises the army hospital had prescribed.
Charlie wrote me, as well. Long, gushy letters, telling me how much he adored me, how he couldn’t wait for me to get the photography thing out of my system and come home, how he was working half days at his father’s lumberyard.
The store had fallen on lean times, but that was sure to end once the war was over.
In every letter, he begged me to come home for at least a visit.
I dutifully wrote him back, short letters about my job, how much I enjoyed it and how busy I was.
We made plans to go to dinner together when he came to New Orleans in May to attend a lumberyard trade show.
After two weeks, Joe’s stash of pre-written letters ran out. I continued mailing letters to him, but I didn’t get a single letter in response.
And then I missed my period. At first I thought it was just late, but within a week, I started to feel sick. I stayed home from work because I threw up one morning, but later in the day, I was better. The next morning, I threw up again.
I opened the bathroom door to find Marge standing outside it in her robe, her face slathered in cold cream, her eyes round. “Oh my God. You’re pregnant!”
The word squeezed me in a vise of panic. “No. I can’t be.”
“You can’t?” Marge asked. “Or you can’t bear to think about it?”
“But—but we used rubbers!”
“They’re better than nothing, but they’re not foolproof,” Marge said.
I dropped my head and cried.
Marge insisted I see a doctor she knew.
I used an alias—Mrs. Patterson. After a humiliating exam, the doctor confirmed what I already, deep in my heart, knew. “Congratulations, Mrs. Patterson. You’re just a few weeks along, but you’re going to have a baby.”
“What are you going to do?” Marge asked when she came home from work and found me sobbing on the bed.
“I’ll write Joe,” I said. “He’ll know how to make it right.”
Although how, I didn’t know. I only knew that Joe was extraordinary, and he could accomplish extraordinary things.
Maybe he could use his wiles and connections to get transferred back to New Orleans for another training mission so we could quickly marry.
Maybe he’d arrange for me to sneak aboard a transport plane and fly to California so we could marry before he left.
Maybe he’d wire me to take a train to the West Coast and he’d jury-rig a reason to fly back to a base there.
I didn’t know how, but I was sure that Joe would come up with a way to solve this problem.
Why, oh why had I refused to elope? In hindsight, I could see so clearly that getting married wasn’t nearly as important as being married.
Marge wanted me to see a special doctor she’d heard about, but I wouldn’t hear of it.
I refused to consider anything but somehow marrying Joe.
I continued to write him every day, and every day, I rushed home from work and checked the mail.
Nothing—except more letters from Charlie.
One of them said he was coming to New Orleans on the twenty-sixth on business and he wanted to take me to dinner.
I’d known I was pregnant for exactly two weeks when I rushed home to find Joe’s friend Carl in the parlor, his Army hat in hand, his expression grim. He wouldn’t look me in the eye. My heart pounded so hard I thought I would pass out. I knew something was wrong, and I knew it was bad.
“What is it?” I asked.
“I, uh, got some news about Joe.”
The breath left my lungs in a sudden whoosh, and I couldn’t draw another one for the life of me.
His fingers tightened on the brim of his hat. “His plane was shot down over the Pacific.”
The room seemed to spin. “Did he . . . did he bail out?”
Carl swallowed. His voice came out low and tight. “He was part of a formation, and no one saw any parachutes.”
“But still . . . maybe . . . ?”
Carl pressed his lips together and blinked several times. “Addie—officially he’s MIA, but his family’s been told he’s presumed dead.”
“But if he’s MIA, that means there’s a chance . . .”
“What it means, Addie, is that they don’t have a body.” His voice broke on the last word. He glanced up for just a second, just long enough for me to see his eyes. What I saw there killed all hope. “Joe made me promise that if anything happened to him, I would come and tell you.”
“How did you find out?”
“I was on a list he’d left with his aunt.”
I don’t remember much after that. I don’t remember Carl leaving, or going to my room. I remember being sick to my stomach, and Marge trying to get me to eat soup, and being unable to get out of bed the next morning, or the morning after.
I remember Marge coming home from work that day, and holding me while I sobbed.
“Addie, honey—you’ve got to pull yourself together, or Lucille is going to call your parents to come get you.”
That hit me like a pitcher of cold water. “Oh, Marge! What am I going to do?”
“You’re going to get your situation taken care of. This girl at the cannery knows a doctor who took care of her friend who was in a similar situation, and . . .”
“I can’t get rid of Joe’s child!”
“Well, Addie, you can’t have a baby.”
“Yes, I can.”
“Listen to me, sweetie. The paper will fire you when they learn you’re pregnant. And your parents—well, you know your mother.”
The thought rolled another wave of nausea over me. My upright, proper, virtuous mother would be devastated. And my father . . . The shame would likely kill him.
My mind sorted through various scenarios, the way it already had a thousand times.
I could move away, claim to be a widow—war widows were becoming horribly common.
But I wouldn’t receive a widow’s benefits.
How would I explain that? Who would care for my child while I worked?
The lack of money would create suspicions, and suspicions would create whispers.
And oh, dear Lord—it would be so horrid for my child to have the taint of scandal attached to him!
I’d seen what it was like, how cruel life was to kids conceived out of wedlock.
I’d gone to school with a boy whose mother had never married, and he’d been treated as if he had some kind of contagious venereal disease.
Parents had forbidden their children to play with him, so he’d been shunned and taunted.
“We don’t associate with people like that” had been the mysterious explanation, and the dark tone of it had implied it would lower one’s own social standing to befriend him.
The word bastard had clung to him as if it were pasted on his forehead.
He’d been bullied and badgered, and even some of the teachers had treated him with barely disguised disdain.
He’d dropped out in eighth grade, then left town when he was barely fifteen.
Word had it he’d hopped a train and become a hobo.
I didn’t want that kind of life inflicted on my child for my mistakes. I’d have to put my baby up for adoption—although that, too, was unthinkable. There were no options I could live with.