The music   ended.  The girls   glared  at  me  as  we  left    the stage—I had
ruined  the performance—but I   could   barely  see them.   Only    one person
in  that    room    felt    real    to  me, and that    was Dad.    I   searched    the audience
and recognized  him easily. He  was standing    in  the back,   the lights  from
the stage   flickering  off his square  glasses.    His expression  was stiff,
impassive,  but I   could   see anger   in  it.
The drive   home    was only    a   mile;   it  felt    like    a   hundred.    I   sat in  the
backseat    and listened    to  my  father  shout.  How could   Mother  have    let
me   sin     so  openly?     Was     this    why     she’d   kept    the     recital     from    him?
Mother  listened    for a   moment, chewing her lip,    then    threw   her hands
in  the air and said    that    she’d   had no  idea    the costume would   be  so
immodest.   “I’m    furious with    Caroline    Moyle!” she said.
I   leaned  forward to  see Mother’s    face,   wanting her to  look    at  me, to
see  the     question    I   was     mentally    asking  her,    because     I   didn’t
understand, not at  all.    I   knew    Mother  wasn’t  furious with    Caroline,
because I   knew    Mother  had seen    the sweatshirt  days    before. She had
even    called  Caroline    and thanked her for choosing    a   costume I   could
wear.   Mother  turned  her head    toward  the window.
I   stared  at  the gray    hairs   on  the back    of  Dad’s   head.   He  was sitting
quietly,    listening   to  Mother, who continued   to  insult  Caroline,   to  say
how shocking    the costumes    were,   how obscene.    Dad nodded  as  we
bumped  up  the icy driveway,   becoming    less    angry   with    every   word
from    Mother.
The rest    of  the night   was taken   up  by  my  father’s    lecture.    He  said
Caroline’s  class   was one of  Satan’s deceptions, like    the public  school,
because  it  claimed     to  be  one     thing   when    really  it  was     another.    It
claimed to  teach   dance,  but instead it  taught  immodesty,  promiscuity.
Satan   was shrewd, Dad said.   By  calling it  “dance,”    he  had convinced
good    Mormons to  accept  the sight   of  their   daughters   jumping about
like    whores  in  the Lord’s  house.  That    fact    offended    Dad more    than
anything    else:   that    such    a   lewd    display had taken   place   in  a   church.
After   he  had worn    himself out and gone    to  bed,    I   crawled under   my
covers  and stared  into    the black.  There   was a   knock   at  my  door.   It  was
Mother. “I  should  have    known   better,”    she said.   “I  should  have    seen
that    class   for what    it  was.”
—MOTHER MUST HAVE FELT guilty after the recital, because in the weeks