Some years
ago my husband and I were living on the Texas Gulf coast in a small fishing
village located on a series of canals.
It had a diverse population of about two thousand souls--from
millionaires with boats so big they had to moor them at the Galveston marina,
to college students who traversed the canals with kayaks and canoes. The only things they had in common was a
desire to live on the water and to maintain their much vaunted Texas
independence. Most of us were something
in the middle, though, and the general atmosphere was one of friendliness and
tolerance. We had a city government with
a mayor and aldermen and a substantial police force, which gave our place the
reputation of being the “safest little city in Texas.” Furthermore, the flat, featureless land that
led to the wetlands and from there to the Gulf seemed to give a promise of the
ordinary, the expected. There seemed
never to be anything ‘round the bend since there were no bends.
Within six
months of our arriving there, we went as guests of our new friends, Marge and
Harry Mason, to the Third Friday Dinner Club, held at the local Community
Center. It was crowded and noisy, not
exactly my cup of tea, so ultimately we never joined the group. That evening, however, as I examined our
neighbors at the long table where we were sitting, I noticed a couple at the
end, who were distinctive in looks. He
was remarkably handsome, dark-haired, of medium build but strong-looking, as if
he worked out. His name tag said, “David
Meador.” Next to him, wearing a label
that announced, “Robbie Meador,” sat an unusual looking woman. My first impression was that they didn’t
quite seem to match up as a couple. She
was as tall as he, sitting down, partly because of her rather out-of-date
hairdo, a Gibson Girl, the platinum hair smoothed into a high, immaculate
coif. Her face was very carefully made
up and her arched brows gave her a wide-awake look. Even so, I thought her face had a mask-like
quality. I guessed them both to be in
their mid-thirties. At some point we
formally met the couple, and I was struck by David’s animated personality. He seemed to “carry” them as a couple. Robbie was nearly mute, though she smiled
pleasantly.
They stood
to go to the buffet line and I could see that Robbie Meador was wearing a pair
of off-white silk slacks that matched her tunic. Her jewelry was impressive, if overdone,
many gold chains and diamond earrings.
Asking our hosts about them, I found that Robbie worked, not
surprisingly, as a jewelry clerk at a large department store. David was an English teacher at the community
college, about ten miles away, where I had applied to teach part time, also
English. I suspected I might run into
him occasionally. They were a few people
in front of us, but I couldn’t help but notice how David carried on
conversations with those around him while Robbie stood like a stump–or should I
say, a kind of mannequin.
I thought no
more about the Meadors until a couple of weeks later when I was at the college
after completing my classes for the day and returning to my car. It was a warm day, but the usual breeze made
it quite pleasant to walk the grounds, well kept and blooming with plumeria and
hibiscus. Beside the many kinds of palm
trees, the scrub oaks and water maples provided much needed shade. I decided to stretch my legs and take the
long way around to my car, going behind the Science building at the far edge of
the campus.
Following
the walk, I came upon a grouping of benches at a small fountain and although he
didn’t see me at first, I saw David Meador with his arm around the back of a
bench where he and a young woman sat. I
recognized her as another adjunct teacher.
We had been in the same earlier orientation and she had remarked this
was her second term of teaching part time.
David’s face
was turned toward the teacher, whose name I couldn’t recall, though I
remembered her petite beauty. She looked
to be in her late twenties with a sweet face and short brown hair worn in
casual waves. He seemed to be in an
intimate conversation, teasing and animated, so I walked on without
acknowledging him, slightly embarrassed, as if I had gone out of my way to spy
on him. But he had seen me and called
out a hello. I waved and smiled and
continued on my way. Thereafter while at
the college, I looked particularly to see if David and the little adjunct were
seen together again. Once, I saw him
with his arms braced against a wall, enclosing her, if you will, while they
spoke. But he broke away suddenly, and
she turned away, looking unhappy. I
still didn’t know her name.
Robbie, on
the other hand, seemed to move openly in my world, both of us attending the
evening garden club, and a morning exercise class. We both worked, along with many others, on
the community Fall Cleanup. On that
occasion, she even gave me a ride home from the dumpster where I had deposited
some sacks of roadside junk. The day was
again very hot, and she was kind enough to offer me a lift to my home down the
long canal. She, herself, lived on
another canal two streets away. Again, I
was struck by her careful makeup and clothing even on a work project. She wore jeans, but they were beaded at the
cuff and she had ropes of coral around her neck. She really was an amazing looking woman. I thought at the time about her husband and
his apparent dallying with the adjunct.
Time went on
in the fishing village until the end of the semester and the garden club
Christmas Party. Spouses, mainly the
guys, since few men attended the club, were invited, and we all went out for
dinner at a nice restaurant first, then back to the clubhouse to exchange
Christmas ornaments (a tradition) and play some games. I happened to be in the restroom at the same
time as Robbie, and when I commented on how enjoyable the evening was, she
agreed but as was her style, said very little else
David was on
hand at the party, looking his usual striking self in black trousers and a
white Mexican wedding shirt. He, like
Robbie, was also wearing some gold around his neck, but hers was even more
magnificent than usual. Her dress was
pale beige and sparkled with stones. It
exactly matched her hair, and the knot at her crown, on this occasion, was
pierced by a rhinestone-studded hair ornament. Although David couldn’t be called attentive, I
could detect no tension in their relationship, and decided I had read into
David’s encounters at the college more than was warranted. Robbie, as I surreptitiously looked her over,
seemed to be a little too solemn for the occasion, her carefully made-up eyes a
little puffy. From tears? I wondered.
I left off
teaching spring semester as we had some traveling to do, which would take me
away from home for several weeks at a time.
While at home, however, I continued my activities with my friends,
occasionally seeing Robbie and sometimes her and David together at functions or
meetings. Then one late afternoon in
March, I got a phone call from my friend Marge, who sounded very excited. I took the phone outside on the deck and sat
down to enjoy a long chat.
“Do I have
something to tell you,” she repeated, almost gasping. “Harry was on his way home when he saw two
police cars and an ambulance in front of the Meadors’s home.
He stopped to see what was going on, and being an alderman the police
let him in.” She paused dramatically.
“And . . .”
I coaxed.
“Oh, it’s
terrible. He saw a body with a sheet
thrown over it. Robbie was dead and had
just been cut down from the rope still dangling from a beam.”
At that
moment, a group of seagulls discovered a neighbor across the canal cleaning
fish on his dock and swooped in, setting up their raucous, hyena-like
cries. The sound of the laughing gulls
was not only noisy but seemed irreverent, considering the news I was trying to
absorb. I moved indoors. “Robbie is dead? How did it happen?”
David,
apparently, had called the police to break into the house after getting a phone
call from Robbie threatening suicide.
The police chief told Harry that David had moved out and was living in
an apartment in another town. He’d left
Robbie for someone else, which triggered the event. But even more shocking to the little group at
the scene, and later to those who heard the news second hand, was the
unmistakable fact that Robbie was a man.
“A man
turned into a woman–a sex change, you mean?” I asked, incredulous.
“No. I mean a man, no more, no less.”
News of this
spread quickly through the community, and the reactions were mixed. My husband believed he knew it all
along. Friends and neighbors of the
couple expressed shock and disbelief, sorrow, and some even anger, feeling it
unfair they’d been duped into accepting Robert (for that was his name) as a
woman, and I must admit I felt a flash of resentment myself. After all, hadn’t he used the ladies rest
room as if he had every right to be there?
And with women present. The whole
subterfuge seemed ridiculously sneaky and unnecessary. Why couldn’t Robbie have either come out of
the closet openly or gone for the sex change?
How difficult for me to accept that for Robbie life without David was
hopeless. Did she–he, rather, believe he
was trapped into loneliness forever, never to find someone who would accept the
pretense? I didn’t know and couldn’t
guess, and it all seemed terribly sad and a waste.
We didn’t
attend the funeral, since we were not intimates of the couple, and we also
didn’t want to face David, who was acting the part of chief mourner. He’d moved back into the house, but soon we
heard he’d put it up for sale. Within a
few months he’d moved out of the area and, I understood, would be teaching
elsewhere. I later heard at the college
he and the adjunct had gotten married and were living north of Houston. As far as I could tell, the names of David
and Robbie were never mentioned again among the residents of the fishing
village.
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