Occasionally, usually when she had to borrow money to buy Milena something “all the other kids have,” Neda wished she had Marković’s private phone number so she could send him a picture of his daughter. Maybe the snapshot from her first day of school, with her famous broad toothless smile. Milena thought she looked scary when she smiled that way, and she absolutely loved it.
School was a new expense, which Neda’s underpaid jobs in boutiques and corner stores, or the occasional instruction of German, couldn’t cover. Employers were afraid of single mothers, and the school was full of children with parents who thought that jealousy-inducing clothes and gadgets were important enough to sacrifice a good part of a family’s budget for them. Neda’s little house stood like a relic from an ancient time among the modern buildings springing up around Lekino Brdo like mushrooms in the forest. Selling it would resolve some of her financial problems, but her father, who grew more senile by the day, refused to do so, passionately talking about his intention to plant an apricot tree, the one he had actually planted forty years ago. Neda didn’t argue with him. She didn’t want to point out that her father was incapable of proper reasoning. Besides, it was the last house on the street with climbing roses hanging over the fence — living proof that, in spite of everything, she and her world were something separate, something special.
Last year, Marković had founded the Vimark TV station and he became a media personality. Thanks to his new public face, Neda developed extensive knowledge about his family — the photogenic TV hostess who was not the first Mrs. Marković, the daughter who studied design in Italy, and the son who owned his own business of an undefined nature.
“Mommy, my friend Sara says that in Greece — they
The girl stirred her cornflakes around in the bowl, while they waited for the arrival of their neighbor, who took Milena to school every day along with her son. She was late, so Neda was late for work. She hoped her boss wouldn’t threaten to fire her again. She desperately needed money to pay the bills, which were piling up quickly.
“Did you put on new panties?” Neda asked, looking at her watch. She still couldn’t forget the shame she had felt when Milena went to an unexpected annual physical at school wearing old, faded underpants.
“Yes, but I wish you would buy me the ones with little frills like Sara has. Do you know what I would wish for if I visited the stone woman?”
Neda hoped Milena wouldn’t wish for knowledge of her father. For her, Daddy was someone who lived far away and,
“What would you wish for?”
“A pot of gold,” Milena said.
Neda wasn’t sure she liked this answer any better.
“So what would you do with all that gold?”
“I would buy…” Milena paused, considering her options.
“What?”
There was a sly look in the girl’s eyes — the very same black, opaque eyes of her father.
“Everything!”
Neda felt guilt overwhelming her. Milena wore cheap clothes bought in thrift stores. She couldn’t afford fancy sneakers or other luxurious objects important to the children of the new age. Neda always wanted to explain to her daughter that having material possessions was not the most important aspect of life, that it was sometimes better to be different from everybody else, to be unique and special, but she warned herself that it was too early to introduce that kind of thinking.
Milena’s tattoo was not a butterfly, a heart, or the name of a boy she was in love with. No. Above her shoulder blades spread a pair of midnight-black wings.