Couples (48 page)

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Authors: John Updike

BOOK: Couples
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Innocent of children, Bea seemed strangely young, unsullied. She wore a green wool cape and elfish suède shoes. She held a box of long chartreuse tapers. More than young, she seemed unattached, a puckish interloper meditating theft. Piet approached her warily, accusing, “Candles?”

“Roger likes them,” she said. “I find them eerie, really. I’m afraid of fire.”

“Because you live in a wooden house? We all do.”

“He even likes real candles on the tree, because his family had them. He’s such an old fogey.” Her face, upturned toward him in the claustrophobic brightness, was grave, tense, homely, frightened. Her hairdo pulled her forehead glossily tight. His parents’ house had held prints of Dutch paintings of girls with such high shining brows.

“Speaking of your house—”

Nancy had returned to him and pulled at his thumb with an irritating hand tacky from candy. “Daddy, come look with us.”

“In a second, sweet.”

“Come look with us
now
. Ruthie’s teasing me, she won’t let me
say
anything.” Her face, round as a cookie, was flyspecked with freckles.

“I’ll be right there,” he told her. “You go back and tell Ruthie I said not to act like a big shot. You each are supposed to find your own present for Mommy. Maybe you can find some pretty dish towels.”

Against her better judgment Nancy obeyed and wandered
back to her sister. Piet said to Bea, “Poor child, she should be in bed. Christmas is cruel.”

Having no children, she was blind to their domination, and her eyes expressed admiration of his patience, when in truth he had slighted an exhausted child. Bea prompted him, “Speaking of my house—”

“Yes,” Piet said, and felt himself begin to blush, to become enormously red in this bath of plastic glare, “I’ve been wondering, would you mind, some morning or afternoon, if I came around and inspected the restoring job I did for you four years ago? I experimented, hanging the summer beam from an A-brace in the attic, and I’d like to see if it settled. Has your plaster cracked anywhere?”

Something by the side of his nose, some cruelly illuminated imperfection, held her gaze; she said slowly, “I haven’t noticed any cracking, but you’re welcome to come and look.”

“But would you
like
me to?”

Bea’s face, its almost lashless lids puffily framing her eyes at a slight slant, became even more of a child’s, a child’s piqued by Christmas greed yet hesitant, distrustful of gifts.

“Once,” he prompted, “you would have liked me to.”

“No, I would like you to; it’s just”—she groped, and her eyes, a paler blue than Angela’s, lifted to his—“a house, you know.”

“I know it’s a house. A lovely house. Tell me what would be a good morning?”

“Today’s Thursday. Let’s do it after the weekend. Monday?”

“Tuesday would be better for me. Monday’s my catch-up day. Around ten?”

“Not before. I don’t know what’s the matter with me, I can’t seem to get dressed in the mornings any more.”

“Daddy. She is
being
a
pesty
crybaby and I am
not
being a
big shot
.” Ruth had stormed up to them, trailing tearful Nancy, and Piet was shocked to see that his elder daughter was, though not yet as tall as Bea, of a size that was comparable. While her father had been looking elsewhere she had abandoned the realm of the miniature. In this too strong light he also saw that her heated face, though still a child’s, contained the smoky something, the guarded inwardness, of womanhood.

Bea beside him, as if licensed now to know his thoughts, said proprietarily, “She’ll be large, like Angela.”

At the New Year’s Eve party the Hanemas gave, Foxy asked Piet, “Who is she?”

“Who is who?” They were dancing in the trim colonial living room, which was too small for the purpose. In pushing back the chairs and tables Frank Appleby and Eddie Constantine had scarred the eggshell-white wainscoting. The old pine floorboards creaked under the unaccustomed weight of the swaying couples, and Piet feared they would all be plunged into his cellar. Giving the party had been more Angela’s idea than his; lately she, who used to be more aloof from their friends than he, seemed to enjoy them more. She had even persuaded poor Bernadette Ong to come, alone. John was still in the hospital.

“The woman who’s taken my place,” Foxy said. “Your present mistress.”

“Sweet Fox, there isn’t any.”

“Come off it. I know you. Or has Angela turned into a hot ticket?”

“She
is
more amiable lately. Do you think she has a lover?”

“It’s possible, but I’m not interested. The only person in Tarbox who interests me is you. Why don’t you call me any more?”

“It’s been Christmas. The children have all been home from school.”

“Phooey to the children. They didn’t bother you all summer.”

“There’s one more now.” He feared he had hurt her, hit out roughly. He petted her wooden back and said teasingly, “Don’t you really like any of our friends? You used to love Angela.”

“That was on the way to loving you. Now I can’t stand her. Why should she own you? She doesn’t make you happy.”

“You’re a hard woman.”

“Yes.”

Demurely she lowered her lids and danced. Her body, its placid flats and awkward stiffness, was obscurely his, a possession difficult to value now that the bulge, the big jewel, of her belly was gone.

He said at last, “I think we
should
talk. It would be nice to see you.” Betrayal upon betrayal. Dovetailing, rising like staging.

“I’m home all the time.”

“Is Ken going back to work Monday?”

“He never stops working. He went to Boston every day of his vacation except Christmas.”

“Maybe he’s seeing a woman.”

“I wish he would. I deserve it. But I’m afraid he’s seeing a cell. He’s beginning modestly.”

He laughed and without bringing her visibly closer to him tightened the muscles of his arms for her to feel as an embrace. If Piet had a weakness, it was for feminine irony. “I’m
dying to see you,” he said, “but I’m afraid of being disappointing. Don’t expect too much. We’ll just talk.”

“Of course, what else? You can’t fuck a young mother.”

“I think you enjoy misunderstanding me about that. I love your baby.”

“I don’t doubt it. It’s me you don’t love.”

“But I do, I do, too much I do. I was in you so deep, loved you so terribly, I’m scared of getting back in. I think we were given it once and to do it all over again would be tempting fate. I think we’ve used up our luck. It’s
because
I love you, be
cause
I don’t want you to be hurt.”

“All right, shut up for now. Freddy and Georgene are both looking.”

The music, Della Reese, stopped. Piet pushed away from Foxy, relieved to be off, though she did look, standing deserted in a bouffant knee-length dress the milky green of cut flower stems, like the awkward proper girl from Maryland, leggy and young, she had often described to him, and he had never quite believed in.

He heard from the kitchen Bea’s clear plaintive voice rising and falling within some anecdote, calling him. But in the narrow front hallway Bernadette Ong’s broad shoulders blocked him. “Piet,” she said plangently. “When do I get my duty dance?”

He took a grave tone. “Bernadette. How is John doing? When is he coming home?”

She was tipsy, for she took a step and her pelvis bumped him. Her breath smelled brassy. “Who knows? The doctors can’t agree. One says soon, the other says maybe. With the government insurance covering, they may keep him there forever.”

“How does he feel?”

“He doesn’t care. He has his books. He talks to Cambridge on the phone now.”

“That’s good news, isn’t it?” Piet edged toward the stairs.

She stepped again and barred him from touching the newel. “Maybe yes, maybe no. I don’t want him back in the house the way he was, up all night fighting for breath and scaring the boys half to death.”

“Jesus. Is that how it was?”

Bernadette, her body wrapped in silk, a toy gold cross pasted between her breasts, heard a frug record put on the phonograph and held wide her arms; Piet saw her dying husband in her like a larva in a cocoon. Nervously acrobatic, he slid past her and up a step of the stairs. “I’ll be down in two seconds,” he said, and needlessly lied, since she would assume he must go to the toilet, “I thought I heard a child cry.”

Upstairs, captive to his lie, he turned away from the lit bathroom into the breathing darkness where his daughters lay asleep. Downstairs the voices of Angela and Bea alternated and chimed together. His wife and his mistress. In bed Bea had enraptured him, her skin sugary, granular, the soles of her feet cold, the grip of her vagina liquid and slim, a sly narrowness giving on a vastness where his drumming seed quite sank from sight. Her puffy eyelids shut, she sucked his fingers blindly, and was thus entered twice. She seemed to float on her bed at a level of bliss little altered by his coming and going and thus worked upon him a challenge; at last she confessed he was hurting her and curled one finger around the back of his ear to thank him. She was his smallest woman, his most passive, and his most remote, in these mournful throes, from speech or any question. He had felt himself as all answer. When the time for him to leave at last was acknowledged she wrapped herself quickly in a bathrobe
showing, in the split second of standing, that her breasts and buttocks hung like liquid caught in too thin a skin. Ectoplasm.

He crouched where his two daughters’ breathing intersected. Nancy’s was moist and scarcely audible. Might fall through into silence. The frail web of atoms spinning. The hamster in his heavenly wheel. There. It. Is. Ruth’s deeper, renewed itself with assurance, approached the powerful onward drag of an adult. The hauling of a boat upriver. Full steam. Boys soon. Bathroom jokes, Nancy Drew, drawings attempting bosoms: teen-age. The time she was Helen Keller for a school project, bumping through the bright house blindfold, couldn’t get her to take it off. Frightening herself. Must do. So brave in choir, bored. Her breathing stuttered, doubled tempo. A dream. His leaving. He crouched deeper between their beds and held her damp square hand. Her breathing eased. Her head changed position. Sleeping beauty. Poison apple. I am your only lover. All who follow echo me. Shadows. Sleep. The music downstairs stopped. Frug, nobody could do it yet, too old to learn. Nancy’s breathing eluded his listening. Instead a most gentle of presences tapped at the window whose mullions were crosses. Snow. A few dry flakes, a flurry. This winter’s shy first. The greenhouse at home banked deep in snow. A rusty warmth of happiness suffused him, joy in being rectangularly enclosed, alive with flowers growing, captive together, his mother at the far end tying ribbons tight with needling fingers, school vacation on, all need to adventure suspended.

Distantly, a gun was fired. Downstairs, his friends, voice by voice, launched “Auld Lang Syne.” Though his place as host was with them, Piet remained where he was, crouching above the ascending din until it subsided, and he could again pick up
the fragile thread of Nancy’s breathing, and the witnessing whisper of the snow.

The visit to Foxy proved disappointing. It was a blowy ear-achy winter Monday; the truck rattled bitterly as he drove down the beach road and the radio through its static told of Pope Paul being nearly trampled in Jerusalem. The house was cold; Foxy was wearing a heavy sweater and a flannel nightie and furry slippers. She moved and spoke briskly, angrily, as if to keep warm. The offending marshes, which permitted the wind to sweep through the walls he had woven for her, were scarred by lines of salty gray ice rubble rimming the tidal channels. Gusts visibly walked on the water. She asked, “Would you like some hot coffee?”

“Yes, please.”

“I’m freezing, aren’t you?”

“Is the thermostat up?”

“The furnace is on all the time. Can’t you hear it roaring? I’m scared it’s going to explode.”

“It won’t.”

“A friend of Ken’s who’s built his own house on the Cape thinks we were crazy not to excavate a full cellar under the living room.”

“It would have meant at least another two thousand.”

“It would have been worth it. Look at all the gas I burn buzzing around Tarbox visiting people to keep warm. Janet one day, Carol the next. I know all the dirt.”

“What is the dirt?”

“There isn’t much. I think we’re all tired. Janet was very curious about Ken’s boyhood and Carol thinks you’re seeing Bea Guerin.”

“How sweet of Carol.”

“Come into the kitchen for the coffee. It’s not so bad there.”

“I wonder if wooden-framed storm windows on the marsh side wouldn’t help. They have more substance than the aluminum combinations. Or what about shuttering them straight across with the boards that were there?”

“What would happen to Angela’s view?”

This humorousness remembered the times she had lain in his arms remarking on her double theft, of Angela’s man and Angela’s house. In the less chilly kitchen, where the Whitmans had reinstated the electric heater, she said, “You’d laugh to see me at night, Ken on one side and Toby on the other. It’s the only way I can keep warm.”

Though he knew that her description was intended to pique his jealousy, he did feel jealous, picturing her asleep between her husband and son, her fanning spread of moonlit hair tangent to them both. Knowing that his interest in her child irked her, he asked, “How
is
the young master?”

“Strapping. He’s two months old now and looks like Ken’s father. That same judicial grimace.”

“Two months,” Piet said. He was wearing workboots and a lumberjack shirt underneath his apricot windbreaker. She gave him coffee in a mug, without a saucer, as if to a handyman. He felt tongue-tied and coarse, and found her large brown eyes uncomfortably alert. Listening for the phone, another lover? Of course not, she had a child. The mother in her den.

She looked at him intently. The unbiased winter light showed a small sty distorting the shape of her left eyelid. She said, “Two months is more than six weeks.”

He groped for the significance of six weeks. “Oh. Terrific. But—do you want to? With me, I mean.”

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