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Authors: Mark Merlis

JD

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JD

Mark Merlis

Terrace Books

A trade imprint of the University of Wisconsin Press

Terrace Books, a trade imprint of the University of Wisconsin Press, takes its name from the Memorial Union Terrace, located at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Since its inception in 1907, the Wisconsin Union has provided a venue for students, faculty, staff, and alumni to debate art, music, politics, and the issues of the day. It is a place where theater, music, drama, literature, dance, outdoor activities, and major speakers are made available to the campus and the community. To learn more about the Union, visit
www.union.wisc.edu
.

Publication of this volume has been made possible, in part, through support from the Brittingham Fund.

Terrace Books
A trade imprint of the University of Wisconsin Press
1930 Monroe Street, 3rd Floor
Madison, Wisconsin 53711-2059
uwpress.wisc.edu

3 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden
London WC2E 8LU, United Kingdom
eurospanbookstore.com

Copyright © 2015
Mark Merlis

All rights reserved. Except in the case of brief quotations embedded in critical articles and reviews, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any format or by any means—digital, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—or conveyed via the Internet or a website without written permission of the University of Wisconsin Press. Rights inquiries should be directed to
[email protected]
.

Printed in the United States of America

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Merlis, Mark, author.
JD: a novel / Mark Merlis.
pages         cm
ISBN 978-0-299-30350-1 (cloth: alk. paper)
ISBN 978-0-299-30353-2 (e-book)
I. Title.
PS3563.E7422J37               2015
813′.54—dc23
2014030801

For my brothers, for Patrick Merla, and for Bob.

JD

ONE

D
ead, or almost. A daffodil, brown around the edges and its stem bowing under the weight of the blossom, jailed behind a black iron fence in the tiny garden by St. Anselm's. I walk by here practically every day on my way to Verducci's, and I hadn't seen this flower. Strangely solitary: how often do you see just one daffodil? If it is already fading, probably it has been there all week and I didn't notice. Another couple of days and there would have been nothing to see. I would just have missed spring altogether—the way you can, year after year, on this ark of stone.

As a girl in Baltimore I watched the world open up each spring, the flowers taking their turn in an order as fixed as a royal progress: crocus, daffodil, tulip, violet, dogwood, azalea. Why am I not there, what inertia has held me in New York all these years? Why not a little house back in Roland Park, with a porch from which I can watch spring unfold and—

I am filled with dread. A sudden shadow, the flowers cut off from the sun. I shake it off. I think I know what the shadow is about, the knot inside me. There will be a spring, soon enough, when the flowers will come and I will not see them. I shake it off.

On my way home people glance at me, look quickly away: a dotty old woman holding a dead daffodil. It didn't feel like larceny, freeing a withered flower from its cage. I am going to paint it. Funny, people never paint dead flowers. Why not? A flower is wilted much longer than it's fresh, a patient and untiring model.

I'm going to sit in the room that was my son Mickey's and paint a dead flower. Something I have not shaken off.

I
didn't get rid of Mickey's things all at once.

A few weeks after Mickey was killed, our friend Laurence helped me get a cookbook job. They only needed the jacket and some whimsical sketches for the chapter headings. Minueting chickens for Poultry, a classroom of baby cheeses learning their ABCs: Appenzeller, Brie, Camembert. Just a little commission, but it was the first work I'd had since—

Since Mickey was born. I'd stopped work to have Mickey; he was gone; I was back at work. I suppose Laurence meant to distract me. Instead he had inadvertently reminded me that Mickey's life had been so negligible I could squeeze it between parentheses. I was (except while Mickey lived) an illustrator. It wasn't Laurence's fault: nothing happened then or for months after that didn't remind me Mickey was gone.

And if I didn't forget, still it was a comfort to take up again the steel pen, dip it in the Pelikan black, hold my wrist taut but not tense, and feel the ink flow into the paper, not onto it, into the incision shallow and fine as a capillary I made with each smooth stroke.

I started working at the dining room table, but the light was no good and my husband Jonathan kept interrupting me. A million things: where were his cigarettes, did we have any stamps, he had snarled up his typewriter ribbon again. He wouldn't have interrupted if I had been washing the dishes or cleaning the toilet. On the contrary: in the weeks since we'd heard about Mickey he had scarcely spoken to me, just lurked around the house as if auditioning for the part of Mickey's ghost. But the minute I started drawing he was omnipresent, not just talking to me but
looking
.

I said, “Imagine if I looked over your shoulder while you typed!”

“Wouldn't bother me,” he said. “Is there any coffee left?”

Wouldn't bother him. The man bolted his study door when he worked, and at the end of the day he stuffed his papers into a locked file cabinet. I didn't say this, just angrily gathered up my bristol boards and my pens. And found myself at Mickey's desk.

I hadn't gone into his room much. Jonathan did, practically every day he would go in and close the door and emerge some minutes later. At first I thought he was crying or maybe even praying, if he
remembered how. He told me once that, when his mother died, he was supposed to go to temple every day for eleven months and recite the Kaddish. A six-year-old trudging in before school and praying with the old men who smelled of cigars and death. He lasted just a week or two, until one bright morning he walked right by. Maybe now he was catching up: the unnatural paradox of a father reciting the prayer for his son.

One day I saw, as Jonathan emerged, that he was clutching a hand towel. I wanted to say, You slimy, randy old & Then I thought, it's not a big apartment, we haven't space for a shrine, somebody might as well use the room.

Now I took it over. I started drawing at Mickey's desk, but that wasn't working. I needed a real drawing board. So one afternoon while Jonathan was out I got a neighbor to help me lug the desk down to the street, while the knickknacks that had been on it went to the closet. By next morning the desk had vanished, in that magical New York way, as if elves had got it.

Then I needed a couple of shelves for supplies, and really there wasn't much sentimental value in Mickey's albums, Stones and Buffalo Springfield and the like, or the half-finished plastic model of a ship. The elves got them. The bedspread was dingy and, anyway, bore the logo of the New York Yankees. I got a new cover, corduroy, and while I was at it moved the bed into a corner and got some bolsters and turned it into a daybed. Now I could move the drawing board to face the window, so that I could spend the next thirty years looking at the same impudent and amazingly hardy ailanthus tree. There was no more need for the nightstand, so instead I put in a little coffee table that was, pretty soon, covered with my books and magazines. Then I needed some room in the closet.

So Mickey was gradually erased, the detritus of ongoing life filling in the spaces he had left behind. Within a few months, he lived in the apartment only in memory, Jonathan's and mine. In another few months Jonathan, too, was gone. Now Mickey lives only in me, no one else left to attest that we hadn't just made him up.

M
ore exactly: in me there live three Mickeys. The real one in memory, from the first time I held him in my arms to the last time he eluded my kiss. Then sometimes the completed Mickey: as a sort of
comfortless game I imagine Mickey enduring, coming home from the army, making a life. This Mickey is necessarily indistinct, because I never understood what life he aimed for. The third is & more an unMickey, I suppose. I wonder how it would have been if he had never existed.

Which had been my plan for him.

Jonathan and I were, as we said in those days, shacking up in a one-bedroom on Charles Street—except Jonathan commandeered the bedroom, so what we really had was a studio with an office attached. Jonathan thought lofty thoughts in the bedroom, while I went off to my first grown-up job as editorial assistant at
Epicure
. In the morning I read proof or I helped try out readers' recipes—always eponymous, Veau Truffé Jones, Potage Fink. At lunch I would share the least disastrous experiments with a charming, boozy coworker who had written, I was told, a novel about an acorn pickers' strike in the thirties; now he pecked out imaginary tales of gourmandizing on the boulevards. The afternoons I spent drawing little fillers and cartouches and, one glorious month, the cover. I would come home and cook spaghetti in the little kitchen with, yes, the bathtub in it. Jonathan and I would eat by candlelight and drink muscatel from jelly glasses.

One morning—it would have to have been in August of 1951—I was rewriting an account of some gargantuan ten-course repast served at Delmonico's in the 1890s. We ran this kind of story every couple of months, as if to reassure our readers: and you thought
you
were a piggy! I found myself getting sick to my stomach. It might have been the article, but I worried for a week and then, when my time came and went,
really
worried. A few days later, the confirmation, which back then involved the martyrdom of a rabbit.

So the third, the unMickey, started life as a touch of nausea and matured rapidly into a typewritten lab report that might as well have been headed YOUR LIFE IS OVER. I saw it all right away. Washing dirty diapers in that bathtub in the kitchen, Jonathan's office expropriated so at least we wouldn't have to sleep with the baby. The candles extinguished. Jonathan probably walking out, sooner or later, leaving me to care for the little accident alone. Martha Axelrod, Smith '50, Aid to Dependent Children '52. My life over, my exciting young city life, because maybe one night I'd had too much muscatel and Jonathan
hadn't wanted to wait for the tiresome preparations caution used to entail.

I sat in my cubicle and pictured all this. I, shakily, resolved to take care of the problem. Efface the unMickey. I cannot connect the abstract entity for which I formed this dire plan and the actual Mickey. If I say now that I thought about an abortion, Mickey comes to mind; I picture someone sucking my full-sized beautiful baby out of me and flushing him away. When at the time I was more nearly picturing an intervention as bloodless as tearing up the lab report. I was a sensible girl; it was the sensible thing to do.

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