Page 2 of Tiny Imperfections


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Fairchild has been waiting years for a family as touched by perfection as yours to attend our school. Please let me know how I can best serve what I can only imagine will be endless, relentless needs and wants every step of Harrison’s educational path.

With complete ambivalence that you know Beatrice,

Josie Bordelon

DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS

FAIRCHILD COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL

“I’ve never worked in a school, but I’m pretty sure you’ll get fired if you swear in a work e-mail.” I didn’t even notice Etta hop off the carpet to come snoop over my shoulder. “And you should have a comma after...”

DE-LEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE-TE.

Grammar show-off.

Etta certainly did not get her punctuality from me, but her sarcasm—100 percent Bordelon.

As director of admissions this has become my free therapy to keep all the over-the-top parents from chipping away at my sanity. I say my piece and I erase. Then I move on.

“I’m having a hard time rallying for the ridiculousness of the entitled this year. I just want to find some old-school families who parent like it’s 1986: roof, food, clothes, water, manners, and if you don’t get good grades your ass will get whooped ’cause you gotta earn your keep. I’m looking for black-to-basics parenting.” That’s my knee-jerk reaction. When I grow weary of the rich, I fall back on my Nawlins Ninth Ward background. Or really Aunt Viv’s, since I can only kinda claim my Southern black Baptist roots.

“You’re not helping the cause with that e-mail.” Etta points to my now-empty screen.

“Yeah, I know, but sometimes it feels good to type the conversation that’s going on in my head instead of official director of admissions missives. If only once I could push send on my real thoughts, maybe I could save a privileged child from a life of indulgence and complete cluelessness about the other 99.9 percent of the world. It could be my own act of social justice—to help a rich kid lead a normal life. It’s got potential, don’t you think?”

“Nope, not at all.”

“I’d give my firstborn for the chance to point out to one parent, any parent, when they’re in the early stages of ruining their child.”

“I’m your firstborn.”

“Right, and if I give you away before next August someone else can pay your college tuition.” I blow Etta a kiss with a wink. She knows I’d never abandon her; we’d be lost without each other.

“Tell me again why you work in a school? Seems to me at forty you should like what you do. Especially since I’ll be gone next year and the only reason you’ll have to come to Fairchild is to work hard and watch Headmistress Gooding take all the credit.” Etta raises her eyebrows at me.

“Clearly I work here for the fame, money, close relationship with my boss, and, of course, the lice. And because I’ll still have to feed you in college—it’s called a meal plan. And I do like what I do, sortof, mostly, kind of.” Etta turns and pretends to barf in my wastebasket. “And I’m not forty.”

“Yet.”

Daughters are the worst.

With one Josie minute to spare to get Etta to ballet, I chop out the e-mail that will allow me to pay the bills and keep my kid in leotards.

FROM:Josephine Bordelon—[email protected]

DATE:September 24, 2018

CC:

BCC:

SUBJECT:RE: Introduction to our son, Harrison Rutherford Lawton

TO:Meredith Lawton

Dear Meredith,

Thank you so much for applying your son, Harrison, to Fairchild Country Day School. We look forward to seeing your family at the first tour.