Click
Hey, guys, Cat FX here. Sorry if my voice sounds funnyāmy allergies are going full blast this morning.
Also, I couldnāt sleep. So I spent the night thinking what I wanted to say to you, and here it is: Itās really important not to overdo stuff, okay? Yes, I know itās exciting when you have all these shiny new products to play with, and you want to use everything all at once. But trust me on this, itās better to go slowly, adding layer on top of layer, building your character from the inside out. Know what I mean?
Alsoāand guys, I canāt stress this enoughātry not to be too obvious. Have fun with these techniques. Experiment, take risks, but always leave room for a bit of mystery.
Tonight my face was Seafoam Blue.
Not my whole face. Just a light swish across my forehead, the tops of my cheekbones, and around my chin.
The trick was to go slowly, like Cat FX said, applying layer on top of layer. Better to add than to subtract. Build the character from the inside out.
And to be who I imaginedāmy mental mermaidāI couldnāt just slather on a ton of blue pigment. My mermaidās superpower was a kind of camouflage: blending into her surroundings. Slipping undetected through sunken ships. Escaping deadly sea monsters. Coming up for air when necessary.
The other thing Iād decided was that she was a collector. So when she won a battle, or discovered buried treasure, she would always decorate herself with souvenirs. To never forget what sheād been through, what sheād seen. To make it part of herself forever.
Which was why I was gluing a plastic pearl to my eyebrow when I heard the GRRRRUUUNNNCCCHHH.
My stomach clenched.
Weād been living here for almost three months, and I still couldnāt get used to the awful grinding sound of the garage door.
But at least it gave me warning. Before Mom could get all the way upstairs, I tossed the jar of Seafoam Blue face pigment, the eye shadow in Cyber Purple, the waterproof eyebrow pencil in Medium Brown, and the spidery false eyelashes into my secret makeup kit. Then I slid it under my bed, all the way to the farthest corner, tossing in an old sneaker to hide it.
The shoebox marked M stayed on my desk. Visible.
I checked the clock. Only 8:35.
Mom clomped up the stairs in her thick-soled Jungle Mocs, which Iām pretty sure is the official footwear of ER nurses when they arenāt wearing sneakers. Just in time, I beat her to the door of my bedroom.
āHey, honeybee,ā she called as she reached the top step. In her wrinkled spearmint-green scrubs, she looked droopy, like a plant you forgot to water.
When she smiled, you could see how hard her face was working. āIs that the mermaid?ā she asked, lightly touching my cheek.
āYeah,ā I said. Mom could always tell the effect I was going for, even when I was in the middle of a character. āAlthough Iām not totally sure about the color.ā
āYouāre not? Whatās wrong with it?ā
āI donāt know. The Seafoam Blue seems wrong. Too greenish, maybe? And Iām not getting that shimmery underwater effect. I followed all the directions, butā¦ā I shrugged. āItās not how I thought.ā
āWell, I think it looks really great so far. And I love that eyebrow pearl.ā She pushed her too-long bangs out of her eyes. āYou finished your homework, Wren?ā
āYep. An hour ago.ā
She looked past me, into my room. Could she see the makeup kit under my bed? No, that was impossible. But of course she could see the shoebox marked Māon my desk, like usual.
āAnd did your friend Poppy come over after school?ā Mom always called her āyour friend Poppy,ā like she thought she needed to remind me that everything was different now: I had a real friend.
āMom, Poppy has soccer. Remember I told you?ā At least twice. No, more than that. āAnd why are you home so early?ā Again.
āAnother mix-up with scheduling. My supervisor keeps overstaffing.ā Mom leaned against my door and shut her eyes.
For a few seconds I just watched her. With all the changes in her schedule, I knew she hadnāt been sleeping well. Not during the night, anyway.
So it didnāt shock me to see her so tired. Still, it was a little awkward, both of us just standing there, not talking. Not moving.
āMom,ā I said.
Her eyes fluttered open. When she took a step, her knee buckled, or something. She grabbed the doorknob to keep from falling.
āYou okay?ā I said quickly.
āIām fine.ā A small wince. āJust my stupid knee acting up again. Donāt worry about it, Wren. I have an early shift tomorrow, so I think Iāll just take some Advil and get into bed. Will you please walk Lulu so she can pee?ā
Lulu was our three-legged French bulldog. She peed sixteen times a day, and thatās no exaggeration.
āSure,ā I told her. āGo rest, Mom. And put a pillow under your knee.ā
āHey, Iāll be the nurse around here, not you.ā She threw me a little smile as she disappeared into her bedroom.
I waited, and then I heard it: Click.
One day while I was at school, Mom had a lock put on her door. To keep the cat off her bed, sheād explained. Although, really, that made no sense, because our one-eyed cat, Cyrus, was too old to jump that high anyway.
And now, every time I heard that soundāclickāmy heart flipped over, but I couldnāt say why.
I returned to the mirror propped up on my desk, in front of the shoebox. The mermaid looked blurry now, out of focus, the Seafoam fading into boring pink skin.
And the funny thing about makeup effects? They were all just technique, Cat FX said, not magic. But sometimes if you stopped in the middle, it was like you were breaking a spellāand no matter how hard you tried, you couldnāt get it back.
I wiped my face and went downstairs to get Luluās leash.
Changes
There are two kinds of makeup effects: the kind that conceal and the kind that reveal.
As a makeup artist, Iām not about concealing. And I truly believe thereās no such thing as a facial flaw or imperfection.
What Iām aboutāwhat Iām all aboutāis revealing something true. Something deep inside, that maybe you didnāt even know existed. But that you need to share with the world.
The day Dad left us, just a little over nine months ago, it all happened fast. One gray Saturday morning in February, when we were still living in the house in Abingdon, I woke up to the sound of loud arguing in the kitchen. Yelling, actually, which happened a lot those days, followed by a car zooming out of our driveway.
At breakfast Mom was drinking coffee in her favorite red mug and reading her phone. Just like she did every regular morning.
āWhereās Dad?ā I asked.
āTaking a Lyft to the airport,ā Mom said, still reading. āIām sure heāll call you as soon as he can.ā
Were her hands shaking? Her face looked pale. Although she was looking down at her phone, so it was hard to be sure.
āWhatās going on?ā My voice sounded like a five-year-oldās, like a squeaky little mouse.
Mom looked up to give me a small, pinched smile. āWeāll talk about it, Rennie. But later, becauseā¦ā Her voice trailed off.
āYou had a fight? With Dad?ā
She didnāt answer that specific question. Instead she stood and kissed my forehead. āI donāt want you to worry, sweetheart, okay? Everything will be fine, I promise.ā
Then she put her mug in the sink and left the kitchen.
I waited at the table, but she didnāt come back. In fact, I could hear her upstairs in her bedroom, opening and shutting dresser drawers, like she was searching for something, or maybe throwing things away. Pretty soon I figured out that she wanted to be alone, and that I shouldnāt knock on her door to ask more questions.
I told myself that if something really serious or important had happened, Mom would just come right out and tell meāwouldnāt she? And wouldnāt Dad, too? Besides, Dad traveled a lot for his job selling software to companies, so it wasnāt completely strange that heād taken a plane on a weekend morning. Although it was strange that he hadnāt said goodbye; heād never left without an early morning hug at the very least.
A few hours later my phone rang. And that was when my stomach knotted, because if my sort-of-friend Annika wanted to talk, she always texted. Mom did too, when she was at the hospital. So for a second I didnāt even recognize my ringtone. That it belonged to me, I mean.
But it was Dad; heād just landed at JFK, and was in a taxi on the way to Brooklyn.
āSo Mom told you?ā he asked.
āNot really,ā I said. āI think sheās too upset. Dad, whatās going on?ā
He paused. āItās not something we should discuss over the phone.ā
Now my heart was banging. āOkay. So when exactly will weāā
āRennie, Mom will talk to you and so will I, but in person. And Iāll see you very, very soon. We both canāt wait for you to visit, jellybean. Weāll show you around the city and have lots of fun.ā
He was using so many strange words that bounced off my brain like hailstones: āVisit.ā āSoon.ā āCity.ā āFun.ā But I picked just one.
āWhoās āweā?ā I asked.
āMe and Vanessa.ā The bad cell service made his voice sound whooshy, like he was going through a fun-house tunnel. Maybe he was. āThe woman I met at that software convention in October. I think I mentioned we did a panel togetherā¦?ā
āNo.ā
āWell, Iām sure I did, jellybean.ā Now I heard a sound like bubble wrap popping. And then: āWeāll talk more later, in person. I love you very much. Always have and always will.ā
I was too shocked to answer. Had Dad ever told me about any Vanessa? I was pretty sure if heād said something like, Hey, jellybean, Iāve been hanging out with a woman WHO IS NOT MOM, Iād have processed that information. Although maybe heād said it in a way I didnāt get. Or maybe I wasnāt really listening.
āAll right, gotta go now,ā Dad said. āI love you, Rennie.ā
āI love you too,ā I said. There was more crackling on the line, so I couldnāt tell if heād even heard it. But then my phone beeped, which meant the conversation was dropped anyway.
Mom was normalish for around a week. I say ish...