Read Knitting Under the Influence Online
Authors: Claire Lazebnik
“Not really. But it's never been a problem. We both assume I’ll have him, except for those one-in-a-billion moments when she actually feels some kind of maternal pull. Like tonight. And we both saw how well
that
worked out.”
“So what happened last Halloween?” Sari said. “You said Zack got scared. Did you go around your neighborhood?”
He sat down with a thump on a chair. “We drove over to my parents’ house, actually. I thought I was being so smart—I figured he'd feel safe because he goes over there all the time.”
“So what happened?” Sari sat down, too, across the table from him.
“Well, he started off already a little freaked out just because it was dark out and he didn't like the jack-o’-lanterns on the front porch. But it would have probably been fine, except my father decided it would be hilarious to open the door wearing a gorilla mask.” He grimaced. “It was unbelievable. I mean, I had called ahead just to warn them
not
to pull any surprises on Zack and then he goes and does that.”
“Why?” Sari said. “If you specifically asked him not to?”
“I don't know. Maybe he thought it was funny. Or maybe just
because
I told him not to. He's a sick old bastard.”
Sari tried to remember Jason Smith's father from high school events. She had a vague sense of someone tall with thick gray hair but she wasn't sure she was thinking of the right guy. “That's kind of harsh, isn't, it?”
He shrugged and tipped his chair back. “We've never gotten along very well. I’m this huge disappointment to him. Which he manages to remind me of every chance he gets.” He let the chair fall back into place with a thud. “Actually, now that I think about it, I bet he scared Zack just so he could make him scream and then use that as an example of what a bad parent I am and how I can't control my own kid.”
“He knows Zack has autism, right?”
“I’ve told him, but he doesn't believe it.”
“You're kidding.”
He shook his head. “He thinks all of Zack's problems come from having a mother who's the wage-earner. It screws a kid up if his dad doesn't wear the pants in the family, you know.”
“I’m sorry,” she said. “If that's really the way he sees things—”
He waved his hand dismissively. “I’m used to it. I’ve been a disappointment to the guy since I was born. Why should that change now that I really
am
the biggest loser in town?”
“What makes you such a big loser?”
“Don't make me give you a list, Sari, please,” he said. “It's bad enough having to live with myself, but if you make me tell the one person I—” He stopped. “Not that you won't figure it out soon enough.”
She didn't say anything. She heard a door slam down the hall and thought,
I should get up and say good night and leave this room.
But she didn't move.
“I’m sorry,” he said when a moment had gone by and she still hadn't spoken. “I probably sound like a whiny brat. My father doesn't love me and all that. I’m sorry.”
“No, it's okay,” she said. “I wasn't thinking that. It's just … I’m a little confused. You were so different in high school. You were kind of on top of the world back then.”
He gave a short unpleasant laugh. “I so wasn't. Maybe it looked that way from a distance, but all I remember about those days was how my parents were always screaming at me because I had done badly on a test or the coach hadn't played me or I had forgotten to take out the garbage or something like that. I was always being grounded and threatened with military school.”
“But when you were actually
at
school—” Sari said. “I mean, you owned the place.”
“Hardly.”
There was the sound of a child either laughing or crying coming from another part of the clinic. Sari looked toward the door and said, “I should probably go help Ellen.”
“Don't go yet,” Jason said. “Please.”
“There's always a big mess to clean up.”
“I bet. How'd you end up working here anyway?”
“I went to college here and then graduate school and it just made sense—”
“But I mean, why an autism clinic? Do you have a relative with autism or something?”
He really didn't know? “My brother,” she said.
“You're kidding.”
She just shook her head.
“I didn't know you had an autistic brother.”
“He went to school with us,” she said. “He was there the whole time you were.”
“Really?” Jason said. “You'd think I’d have remembered that. What class was he in?”
“He wasn't exactly in a class. There was this special needs program—”
“Oh, wait, I remember,” he said. “The Resource Room, right?”
“Yeah. Popularly referred to as the Retard Room.”
“Oh, man,” he said. “I remember that, too, now. God, kids can be mean. It scares me for Zack.”
“He'll be okay.”
“I’m sorry,” he said suddenly, and Sari's stomach clenched. But then he said, “It must have been rough for your family to have to deal with the whole autism thing back then. Everything I read says it was like the Middle Ages, just a generation ago. No behavioral interventions, no real understanding, mothers being blamed … It couldn't have been easy.”She didn't say anything. He was one of the reasons it hadn't been easy.
“What's he like now?” Jason asked. “Your brother? Does he live at home? Does he talk? I’m so insanely curious about adults with autism. I’m desperate to know what Zack will be like when he's all grown up.”
“Zack won't be anything like my brother. He's getting the right kind of help. It makes all the difference.” Zack wouldn't be like Charlie because of her, she thought. It was so unfair it took her breath away.
“Is he in an institution?”
“No. He lives with my parents.”
“Does he talk?”
“Yeah. Mostly demands for food and dialogue from movies.”
Jason reached across the table and she was looking around to see what it was he was reaching for, when he put his hand on hers. “Sounds like it's been tough,” he said.
She pulled her hand away with a movement so fast it was almost violent
“I’m sorry,” he said, quickly withdrawing his hand. “Please don't take offense.”
“I’m not offended.” She pushed her chair back. “But I should go help clean up.”
“Don't go.” He scrambled to his feet as she stood up. “Please, Sari. Please don't go. That was stupid of me. I just felt bad for you. That's all. I’m not some guy making moves. You have to know that.”
“I don't know
what
you are,” she said and meant it.
“I wish you were willing to find out. We could go have a drink—”
“I can't. I have to go help the others now.” She felt all roughed up on the inside—like someone had done to her guts what she had done to her hair earlier that evening.
“After?”
“I can't.”
“Are you mad at me?”
“Of course not,” she said dully. “Everything's fine. I just really have to go.” She went to the door. He was closer and got there before she did. He put his hand on the doorknob, and she had to stop and wait.
“Sari,” he said.
“What?”
“Thanks for talking to me.”
She didn't say anything.
He drew nearer. “I’m a pretty lucky guy. Getting some one-on-one time with the cutest warrior goddess in town.”
“Princess,” she said. “I’m supposed to be a princess, not a goddess.”
“I beg to differ,” Jason Smith said, and, leaning forward, kissed her lightly on the lips before she had a chance to stop him. And then he opened the door and gestured her through.
J
ames joined Lucy and David in the lab the day after Halloween to go over the results of the rat kidneys they had removed, dissected, stained, and examined that day.
After they'd finished discussing their findings, he sat back and peered at Lucy. “You okay?” he said. “You've been awfully quiet. Not like you.”
“It's been a lousy day.”
“What happened?”
She didn't answer, so David said, “One of the rats didn't die easily. The guillotine jammed halfway through its neck and it was squirming around, screaming, blood spraying all over the place … It took a while to get the blade out.” He looked at Lucy, but she didn't say anything. He said, “It was a lot to clean up.”
“I’ll bet,” James said. “You guys want to go get a beer?”
“Sounds good to me,” David said.
“Lucy?”
“Yeah, all right.” She stood up. “Let me go wash my hands. For the next ten minutes.”
“Out, damned spot?” David said.
“Something like that.”
At the bar, she ordered her usual scotch, while the guys got beer. She and James sat side by side in the booth. His leg was warm against hers, and he rested his left hand on her thigh when he wasn't using it to gesticulate. He was in an ebullient mood—he had just found out that day that an article of his had been accepted for publication.
“A byline in
Science”
David said. “Pretty impressive, James.”
“There's always someone doing better,” he said. “You guys know Ron Johnson, right?”
“I met him once or twice around the department,” David said.
“Yeah, well, he's getting a book published—and I mean mass market, not some university press.”
“What is it?”
“I can't remember what it's called, but it's some kind of simplified overview of genetics—a real science lite book, with everything dumbed down so idiots can feel like they've mastered a subject they don't actually understand at all and wouldn't be able to in a million years. He'll probably make a fortune on it. Nothing people like more than to buy books that make them think they're not as stupid as they are.” He curled his lip. “Not that Ron's exactly genius material himself.”
“Really?” David said. “I’ve mostly heard good things about him.”
“He's an idiot,” James said. “He's done some decent research in the past, but last year he married this woman who's a religious nut and now he goes to church all the time, sings in the choir, recites his little prayers—the whole thing.”
Lucy said, “Going to church doesn't automatically make you an idiot.”
“It does in my book. A scientist should know better.”
“So long as he's not going around teaching creationism, I don't see what difference it makes.”
“How about the Tooth Fairy?” James said. “What if he were going around saying he believes in the Tooth Fairy? Would you still call him a good scientist?”
“So long as he
was
still a good scientist, sure. There are plenty of intelligent people who believe in God, James.”
“Nope,” James said. “People who believe in God are de facto idiots. Unless they're just claiming to believe in God to promote themselves with the stupid people who really do. In that case, they're politicians.”
David laughed. “Good one,” he said, and he and James high-fived each other.
Lucy just shook her head. “Everyone who disagrees with you is an idiot. Have you noticed that?”
“Actually, I have,” James said. “Sad but true.”
“Isn't it possible—I realize this may blow your mind as a concept—but isn't it possible that not everything is as obvious as you think it is? That maybe there are other ways of thinking than yours, and that some of those other ways might not be entirely idiotic?”
James furrowed his brow exaggeratedly. Then he shook his head. “Nope. I’m right, they're wrong. Case closed.”
“
I
don't always agree with you.”
“That's okay.” He patted her leg. “Everyone makes mistakes, sweetheart.”
She knocked his hand off. “You're an asshole, you know that?”
“Come on, Luce, you hate religion as much as I do. Why are you defending this guy?”
“I don't know,” she said. “Maybe Ron
gets
something out of his religion that we don't understand. It's possible. People's brains work differently. And if it doesn't interfere with his work, then let him have it and don't call him an idiot for it.”
“Even though he
is
one?”
She thumped her scotch glass down. “What about Dickens? What about Einstein? There are lots of wildly brilliant people who've believed in God.”
“They probably just pretended to so they wouldn't piss off the mass population of idiots. We all do what we have to to survive.” He tilted his throat back and drank some beer. “I’m bored with this subject,” he said as he set the bottle back down. “So, David, Lucy tells me you have a girlfriend. Who is she and why aren't you calling her right now and telling her to come join us?”
David shrugged. “We're just dating. It's not a girlfriend thing yet.
“She at UCLA?”
“Yeah.”
“Postdoc?”
“Actually,” David said, “she's an undergraduate.”
James hooted at that. “You're kidding me.”
“A junior.”
“Come on, dude, you can't go fishing in that pond. You start with undergrads, you'll get a taste for them and you won't be able to stop. There are tons of guys like that in the department, dirty old men who like little girls. You don't want to go there.”
“I wasn't planning to,” David said. “This just … you know, happened.” He poked at a drop of beer on the outside of his mug. “Anyway, like I said, it's not all that serious—we've just had dinner a couple of times.”
“What does she want to do when she graduates?” James asked.
“Well, she's premed—”
“A doctor, then,” James said. “And, since she's a girl, I’m guessing either a pediatrician or an OB. That's what they all want to be.”
“Why do you always have to generalize about people?” Lucy said. “I was premed and I didn't want to be a pediatrician or an OB.”
“What did you want to be?” James asked.
“A veterinarian.”
He groaned. “The only medical career that's actually
more
girly than being a pediatrician or an OB. Why'd you have to tell me that? I just lost any respect I ever had for you.”
“In case you hadn't noticed, I didn't actually become one,” Lucy said. “At some point I decided it would be a lot more fun to kill animals than take care of them.”
“Oh, please,” James said. “Would you really rather be spending your days telling old ladies to stop overfeeding their fat little pugs? Killing rats is much more fun than that.”
“I like rats,” said Lucy, who was starting to feel the effect of the scotch she had downed.
“No one likes rats.”
“I do. I had a pet rat once. And a dog. And two cats. And a turtle.”
“That's excessive,” James said.
“Not all at once.”
James stood up abruptly. “I’ve got to hit the John. Be right back.” He left. There was a moment of silence.
“I hate sac'ing rats,” Lucy said.
“Me, too,” said David.
“Let's set them all free,” she said. “Let's go back to the lab and set them all free to live a happy carefree life eating trash and having casual rat sex.”
“You know we can't,” he said. “They'd die within days. And the research we're doing is worth sac'ing a few rats for.”
“Yeah,” she said. “I know that.”
“So we're trapped,” he said.
“Like rats in a cage.”