anyone would manufacture such a dress in a size 4T was beyond Phoebe. She couldnât imagine anyone ever thinking it appropriate for a child.
âPretty.â Claire patted the black fabric as if it were a stuffed lamb. âPretty. Mine .â
Claire was currently the youngest of three children, soon to be supplanted by another baby. âMineâ was an important word in her vocabulary. She held up her arms, wanting someone to take her shirt off her. Phoebe stripped her down to her little cotton underpants. Amy dropped the dress over her head, did up the buttons, and tied the sash.
âShe looks like a little doll, Mom,â Ellie said.
She did indeed. Claire had Amyâs childhood coloring; she was blonde with very fair skin. The black of the dress made her look as if she was made of alabaster.
âIf Iâd been allowed to wear a dress like that when I was four,â Amy sighed, âI would probably be a nuclear physicist today.â
Phoebe looked up. Amy had pronounced ânuclearâ properly, saying ânu-cle-arâ rather than ânuk-u-larâ as did most of the world. That seemed surprising.
She turned back to Claire, who was now dancing and spinning in front of the mirror. The dress was billowing around her. Phoebe wasnât sure what to do. The idea of wearing such a dress to a Midwestern college-town funeral was absurd. But Claire clearly adored it.
She sighed. âI donât know what to do.â
Amy spoke. âIf we care what people think of us, thenwe donât let her wear it. But if we care about what she thinks of herself, then we do.â
Phoebe stiffened. That was Mother. Mother would have said something like that. Who would have ever thought that she would hear her motherâs voice coming from her sisterâs lips?
And Mother never cared what people thought of her. âThen we let her wear it.â
Â
Joyce protested Claireâs dress the most. âItâs so inappropriate for a child,â she fussed.
Joyce herself was in a plain black business suit with an oxford cloth blouse. Without any accessories she looked unfinished and ill at ease. Joyce and Ian didnât go to church, so their girls didnât have Sunday dresses. Fourteen-year-old Maggie was in a much laundered black cotton skirt and white shirt which made her look more schoolgirlish than her younger cousin Ellie, and Phoebe suspected that Maggie would make Ellie pay for that. Emily, Joyce and Ianâs four-year-old, was in her fatherâs arms sobbing because she didnât have a dress like Claireâs.
Ian had the nerve to suggest that Claire not be allowed to wear her dress. âEmily is so upset that itâs going to make the day difficult for everyone.â
âItâs Motherâs funeral,â Phoebe said tightly. âThe day is going to be difficult whatever a pair of four-year-olds wear. You had your chance. Amy offered to get clothes for Joyce and Maggie and Emily.â
âWe didnât think she was going to make such a production out of it.â
âYou didnât think Amy was going to make a production out of something? For Godâs sake, Ian, how long have you known her?â
They had never bickered like this before. It was because Mother wasnât there. With Mother around there had never been anything to bicker about. If she had approved of the dress, Ian would have never questioned it. If she had sniffed at it, Phoebe would have never allowed Claire to wear it.
They were on their own.
Â
The church was full, and it was a big church, built in the days when people went to church every Sunday. All of Eleanor and Halâs friends came as well as most of the administration. Many of Phoebe and Gilesâs friends from Iowa City came too. Ianâs high school friends and their parents came. It made a difference, all those people coming, showing that they cared.
Amy had no friends there. In fact, Phoebe
Cecilia Peartree
Lynette Sofras
Ric Nero
C. Alexander London
C. S. Harris
Jenn McKinlay
Melissa Leister
Brian Wiprud
Amanda Dresden
Gracia Ford