Kyon
natters softly. His mouthful of little songs wakes Cho because it’s the
sound of her son. She opens her eyes and gazes into his copper-coin face,
her devotion the precise size and density of a four-year old boy.
Uncurling from around Kyon, Cho flounders out from between lightly
starched sheets – up and getting ready. Cho brushes the black wave of her
hair and then slips into a cream colored camisole and nylons her skinny
legs. A simple blue dress with long sleeves unifies her style into one
appeal.
Finding
matching socks for Kyon has eaten up years of Cho’s life. Every morning
her hands become frenzied shovels scattering socks and misplaced toys in
the dresser drawers until she finds a pair of matching socks and shoes.
Then it’s, “Make the ears. Crisscross. Into the bunny hole. Pull them
tight.” until finally, Kyon is socked and shoed and ready for daycare.
She
collects her bags and then out through her brownstone door steps into the
winter street. The sleet stopped in the small of the night but the morning
is still shockingly cold. Cho’s scarf frames her quiet face, her wool coat
an ocean in which both she and Kyon swim. They wait on the corner to hail
a cab, every freezing minute stretching into the space of
two.
The
City is in Cho’s ears and the morning is all bang, bang, boom. Her
impractical shoes make the shuttling of Kyon from taxi to the Tiny Years
Daycare Center a teetering task. Kyon prattles all the while, his voice
audible but not his words. Cho hands Kyon to an old woman with large ears,
black eyes, and a “Hello. My name is…” sticker, but there’s no name
written on the tag so it’s just “Hello. My name is… nothing.” Nevertheless, Cho trusts the
nameless old woman to keep Kyon from a thousand accidents.
Cho
jumps back into the taxi, her hair splashed across the back of the seat.
She reaches for her scarf, bracelets sliding down her arm, and realizes
it’s no longer there. How many scarves has she lost conveying Kyon from
taxi to daycare, how many gloves, how many umbrellas, how many
earrings? Really, I must be more careful,
she thinks. But this is the last thought of Kyon she permits herself
for the remains of the workday, rather, she concentrates on transforming
herself into the dragon-lady of corporate advertising: frigid, bitchy and
ready, if necessary, to use a Samurai sword to get her way. It’s not a
role of Cho’s choosing, but it is a stereotype her boss expects her to
fulfill. It is, after all, why he hired her – he likes Lucy
Liu.
Stilettos
punctuate Cho’s every move on the thirty-ninth floor of The Rockefeller
Center with a fashionable snick. She fires the man with horse teeth.
Snick. She lands a multimillion dollar account. Snick. She moves the
deadline up three days. Snick. She abruptly answers her own phone because
she fired her horse-tooth assistant. Snick.
“Cho
Nahm speaking.”
“Ms.
Nahm?”
“Yes?”
“This
is Mi-Sook at the Tiny Years Daycare Center. I’m sorry. Kyon is
crying.”
“I
don’t understand.”
Snick.
“Kyon
won’t stop crying.”
“You
called me because my son is crying?” Snick! Snick!
“I’m
sorry, Ms. Nahm. Kyon has been crying for three hours. I’m sorry. I can’t
make him happy. So sorry.”
“Are
you asking me to come and pick him up?”
“Yes
ma’am. I’m so sorry.”
Click.
Snick.
Cho
leaves the office in a flurry of snicks. And for nine blocks in the back
of a yellow taxi, she is two schools of thought – corporate executive
versus devoted mother. The corporate executive orders the cabbie to stop,
the devoted mother asks the driver to keep the meter running while she
gets her son. Cho enters the daycare center and the sound is suddenly
overwhelming, like Grand Central Station, but diminutive. And there, there
in the middle of it all is Kyon crying. He looks like an exhausted
swimmer, red and drenched. Kyon’s relief gathers itself in his expression
as soon as he sees Cho, who swoops down to hover like a hen nestling her
egg. Together they become the still in the center of the room. Cho gathers
the familiar shape of Kyon to herself, pressing kisses into the bend of
his neck. She slowly pivots on her pointed heel to face Mi-Sook who bows,
hair draping. Then Mi-Sook tilts her head upward and unexpectedly the
bright look of discovery makes a sunrise of her
face.
“His
shoes are on the wrong feet.”
Cho
looks at her blankly. Mi-Sook doesn’t have the confidence to repeat
herself, so she gingerly approaches Kyon’s feet, every mannerism a bowing
apology. Quick, quick she unties one shoe, then the other. She juggles
them to opposite hands and then quick, quick she ties one shoe, then the
other. She looks up for approval. When Cho utters, “thank you,” it also
means “I hate you.” And,
“Write your name on the nametag, stupid bitch.”
Leaning
against the cold cab window on the way home, Cho watches narrow alleys and
the lights on in every apartment pass. She hides from the driver’s
rearview eyes behind a curtain of hair and listens to Kyon breathing as a
child will do just before falling asleep, deeply. The cab slows, stops,
and then idles in front of Cho’s brownstone. The porcelain sky shatters
just then and sleet clatters on the sheets of sidewalk ice and car glass.
Cho collects her bags, her son, and dashes to the door, splattering slush
up the back of her legs.
Cho’s
coat on a chair, shoes slipped off, heavy wet nylons piled on the first
step to upstairs. Kyon’s quilted coat drenched, little hat hung, and
yawning. And then Cho notices a vacancy on her wrist – her bracelets
missing. She rushes outside in her bare feet hoping to find the bracelets
between the front door and where the taxi was parked. She tips on her toes
searching in the pelting sleet, but the bracelets are not to be found. Cho
returns to the house and sits silent, rubbing warmth back into her feet.
She contemplates the significance of the missing bracelets, inventing
meaning when it doesn’t become evident. Cho begins to feel that Kyon has
ruined her life. His neediness, his mismatched socks, his culpability in
her disappearing accessories. The sharp-edged toys on the kitchen floor,
the sleeplessness, the forever sticky face and fingers – all of it making
her forget who she is and what she ever wanted.
Cho’s
eyes become a mystery to Kyon. Sensing an atmospheric change, he hoards
himself – mouth closed in fear, chin trembling. In a quiet yet quick
explosion of movement, Cho collects Kyon’s wet shoes and moves to him
kneeling. Without words, she positions him on the floor, his soles
directed at her. And then, like so many times before, she purposefully
jams Kyon’s shoes on the wrong feet. She yanks the laces tight while Kyon
mouths the words, “Make the ears. Crisscross. Into the bunny hole. Pull
them tight.”
The
truth about love is that it isn’t always good. And the particular places
from which Cho’s fury erupt, makes her immune to Kyon’s painful pleading.
All Kyon understands is that his feet hurt and somehow, it’s his fault.