Pommeroy. “You can stay and watch us!”
“Watch out for you is more like it,” Ruth said, pointing to the paint on her shirt. Kitty dropped to her knees again at this joke, laughing and laughing. Kitty always took jokes hard, as if she’d been kicked by them. Gloria waited for Kitty to stop laughing and again helped her to stand. Kitty sighed and touched her hair.
Every object in Mrs. Pommeroy’s kitchen was piled on the kitchen table or hidden beneath sheets. The kitchen chairs were in the living room, tossed on the sofa, out of the way. Ruth got a chair and sat in the middle of the kitchen while the three Pommeroy sisters resumed painting. Mrs. Pommeroy was painting windowsills with a small brush. Gloria was painting a wall with a roller. Kitty was scraping old paint off another wall in absurd, drunken lunges.
“When did you decide to paint your kitchen?” Ruth asked.
“Last night,” Mrs. Pommeroy said.
“Isn’t this a disgusting color, Ruthie?” Kitty asked.
“It’s pretty awful.”
Mrs. Pommeroy stepped back from her windowsill and looked at her work. “It is awful,” she admitted, not unhappily.
“Is that buoy paint?” Ruth guessed. “Are you painting your kitchen with buoy paint?”
“I’m afraid it is buoy paint, honey. Do you recognize the color?”
“I can’t believe it,” Ruth said, because she did recognize the color. Astonishingly, Mrs. Pommeroy was painting her kitchen the exact shade that her dead husband had used to paint his trap buoys—a powerful lime green that chewed at the eyes. Lobstermen always use garish colors on their pot buoys to help them spot the traps against the flat blue of the sea, in any kind of weather. It was thick industrial paint, wholly unsuited to the job at hand.
“Are you afraid of losing your kitchen in the fog?” Ruth asked.
Kitty hit her knees laughing. Gloria frowned and said, “Oh, for Christ’s sake, Kitty. Get a-hold of yourself.” She pulled Kitty up.
Kitty touched her hair and said, “If I had to live in a kitchen this color, I’d vomit all over the place.”
“Are you allowed to use buoy paint indoors?” Ruth asked. “Aren’t you supposed to use indoor paint for indoor painting? Is it going to give you cancer or something?”
“I don’t know,” Mrs. Pommeroy said. “I found all these cans of paint in the toolshed last night, and I thought to myself, better not to waste it! And it reminds me of my husband. When Kitty and Gloria came over for dinner, we started giggling, and the next thing I knew, we were painting the kitchen. What do you think?”
“Honestly?” Ruth asked.
“Never mind,” Mrs. Pommeroy said. “I like it.”
“If I had to live in this kitchen, I’d vomit so much, my head would fall off,” Kitty announced.
“Watch it, Kitty,” Gloria said. “You might have to live in this kitchen soon enough.”
“I will fucking not!”
“Kitty is welcome to stay in this house anytime,” Mrs. Pommeroy said. “You know that, Kitty. You know that, too, Gloria.”
“You’re so mean, Gloria,” said Kitty. “You’re so fucking mean.”
Gloria kept painting her wall, her mouth set, her roller layering clean, even strokes of color.
Ruth asked, “Is Uncle Len throwing you out of your house again, Kitty?”
“Yes,” Gloria said, quietly.
“No!” Kitty said. “No, he’s not throwing me out of the house, Gloria! You’re so fucking mean, Gloria!”
“He says he’ll throw her out of the house if she doesn’t stop drinking,” Gloria said, in the same quiet tone.
“So why doesn’t he stop fucking drinking?” Kitty demanded. “Len tells me I have to stop drinking, but nobody drinks as much as he does.”
“Kitty’s welcome to move in with me,” Mrs. Pommeroy said.
“Why does he still get to be fucking drinking every fucking day?” Kitty shouted.
“Well,” Ruth said, “because he’s a nasty old alcoholic.”
“He’s a prick,” Gloria said.
“He’s got the biggest prick on this island; that’s for sure,” Kitty said.
Gloria kept painting, but Mrs. Pommeroy laughed. From upstairs came the sound of a baby crying.
“Oh, dear,” Mrs. Pommeroy said.
“Now you’ve done it,” Gloria said. “Now you’ve woken up the goddamn baby, Kitty.”
“It wasn’t me!” Kitty shouted, and the baby’s cry became a wail.
“Oh, dear,” Mrs. Pommeroy repeated.
“God, that’s a loud baby,” Ruth said, and Gloria said, “No shit, Ruth.”
“I guess Opal’s home, then?”
“She came home a few days ago, Ruth. I guess she and Robin made up, so that’s good. They’re a family now, and they should be together. I think they’re both pretty mature. They’re both growing up real nice.”
“Truth is,” Gloria said, “her own family got sick of her