Authors: Jane Smiley
moon is getting farther away from the Earth, and so it has to go farther to get around the
Earth, and so the months are also getting longer. But, interestingly, the days are getting
longer faster than the months are getting longer. A man I knew in Europe has shown this-George Darwin. He's the son of Charles Darwin."
She pretended that she didn't recognize the name.
"Eventually, a day and a month will be the same length, fifty-five days, and then
all the forces will be in balance, and, supposedly, things will stay that way. Personally, I
don't believe that, but--" He shrugged, stood up, and came around the desk. He was
excited. "But, my dear, you are wondering what this means about the origin of the
moon."
"Of course." Margaret had learned that there were many things that Andrew
wondered about that would not cross the mind of anyone else. It was his greatest talent,
wondering about things. He was two men, really. When he was wondering, he was a
likable, congenial, and sociable person. When he had stopped wondering and was
convinced that he knew the answer, he became stubborn and stern.
He guided her to the window. The moon certainly looked farther away now--not
as huge and bright, but more its remote, normal self. "Darwin would say that we have
entered the theater in the middle of the opera. If we had come in toward the beginning,
the moon would be moving faster, it would be much closer and would fill the sky."
Margaret tried to imagine this while Andrew slipped his arm around her waist.
He said, "If the Earth was so hot it was molten, and it was spinning so fast that a
day lasted five hours or so, then what shape might it have been?"
"Kind of an oval?"
"Yes, indeed, more on the order of a cucumber, a very hot, liquid, fiery cucumber.
And what might happen?"
"An end might break off?"
He
nodded.
"And that would be the moon?"
"Darwin said so."
She could tell by the way he pronounced "Darwin" that Early
didn't
say so. She
said, "Why would only one end break off? Why not both?"
Now he kissed her on the forehead. "A very good question, my dear, and a perfect
example of what is wrong with that theory. The fact is, the cucumber would not have
been the final shape. The final shape of the rotating molten Earth would have been a pear.
But,"
he exclaimed, "no one has ever figured out a way to make that pear go fast enough
to split off the moon, and they never will. Guess what has happened in the last ten years."
"What?"
"These ideas have been shot all to hell!" He laughed triumphantly. "Because the
molten rock in the spinning cauldron isn't simple at all! It is not just iron and lead and
gold and platinum and I don't know what all, mixed together and cooling down and
solidifying bit by bit; there's something else in there."
"What is that?" Margaret actually felt herself get a little excited.
"There's uranium and there's radium."
"What are those?"
"Those are unstable elements that, even when they are just sitting there in the
middle of the rock face, are giving off electrons and changing, moment by moment, into
something else. All uranium, for example, will someday be lead." He gave her a satisfied
look, then said, "All lead, they might then conclude, was at one time uranium."
"What does that mean about the moon?"
"Well, the moon has had a lot longer time to get into its present orbit than most
men have thought. Billions of years rather than millions or hundreds of millions.
Something else entirely could have happened. Time is of the essence, my dear, not so
much when times are short, but very much when times are long, longer than anyone in
the history of mankind has ever conceived of." He said this in a ringing voice, hugging
her to him. She waited a moment, then said, "So--how did the moon get to be where it
is?"
"The Earth captured it!"
"Has the Earth ever captured anything else?"
"Possibly. I don't know yet."
"Oh." It seemed as plausible that the Earth could capture something as it did that a
person could claim a stray dog. Mutual attractions, she thought, were mutual attractions,
whether you called them "gravity" or "affinity."
"I often think that I was born to think about the moon. The moon is that large
object in the room that everyone stumbles over and no one thinks about."
He was jolly. He guided her into their bedchamber.
On his side of the bed lay a couple of books by an Englishman named Havelock
Ellis,
The Sexual Impulse in Women
and then another one,
Sexual Selection in Man
. By
happy coincidence, Dr. Ellis had also written a book entitled
A Study of British Genius
.
Andrew kept the first two books to himself, but he read parts of this third book aloud to
Margaret over supper, and in deference to the information in all of these books, he had
shortened his hours at the observatory.
Andrew felt that, although he had not suffered from a delicate childhood, he fit
perfectly into Dr. Ellis's model. "Delicate children were the ones who died in Missouri,"
which illustrated the equally exciting idea of natural selection. It was one thing to be a
hereditary genius like his colleague George Darwin, coddled and cultivated from
childhood in the easy circumstances of bourgeois English life, but to be a hereditary
genius from a world where the easiest thing for any child to do was to succumb was all
the more reason to value one's own genius.
The genius book revealed that genius could be inherited from either the father or
the mother, which got Andrew fired up about their future child. According to Andrew's
reading of Dr. Ellis, any child of theirs had a perfectly acceptable chance of being a
genius. Indeed, if he and she had
both
been geniuses, it was all too possible that the
physical and mental drawbacks of
too much
genius would outweigh the double inherited
dose. Margaret asked him which of his own parents was the genius. All things
considered, Andrew felt that it had been his mother, though it could also be true that her
talents of method, application, and organization (and poker playing, Margaret thought)
had been uniquely capable of meshing with those of his father, who had often played a
game of sums with the boys in which he added up numbers they furnished him in rapidfire shouting matches. His father was good at picking up languages. He could talk to the
Germans in German and the French in French and the Spanish in Spanish. His father's
various talents hadn't been well developed by education, according to Andrew, but "Look
at my brothers and me. Only one tall poppy!" That was the right ratio, in the opinion of
Havelock Ellis. Therefore, Andrew and Margaret were ideally matched--her lack of
genius ("but there is a perfect balance between your womanly nature and your entirely
acceptable level of intellect, my dear") was exactly the leavening their hypothetical son
would require. Or sons. If the ratio in Andrew's own family was four to one, then that
was probably a fairly representative ratio.
However, Dr. Ellis had led to no more interludes of marital relations until the
moon intervened. The moon was a great facilitator of marital relations, since Andrew was
so excited about his new theory that he was almost always in a good and affectionate
mood. And so it was not long after their conversation about the Earth's capturing the
moon that Margaret found herself pregnant again. Mrs. Lear was thrilled. Margaret was
thrilled. Andrew was thrilled. He thought that the naval base was the perfect place to rear
a squadron of boy geniuses--like the Lear boys, only more thoughtful and quieter, not
only rolling firecrackers out of black powder and old newspapers but also reading books.
The first pregnancy, short as it was, had prepared her, and this one seemed all the
more normal for that experience. She was not ill or uncomfortable; the days didn't slow to
a soporific crawl. She pursued her rounds of cooking and shopping and walking and
taking the ferry to San Francisco once a month. Andrew was busy in his office, turning
his moon ideas into a book. It really was astonishing how the city had resurrected itself,
though of course she never passed any of the streets she associated with Mrs. Early or the
fire--Market, Third, Mission, Van Ness--without thinking about the two ladies so
intensely that they seemed to inhabit the whole city at once. If, against Andrew's wishes,
she produced a girl, she intended to name her Anna.
Soon enough, her condition was visible, and, more important, the child had
quickened within, and as she felt every movement--first a fluttering, subsequently more
strenuous but undifferentiated activity, then precisely identifiable kicks and punches--she
allowed herself to make pictures in her mind, as well as baby clothes. In fact, she felt
something that she didn't know how to talk about, especially to the very practical Mrs.
Lear--a sense of awakening. As the child grew in her body and in her mind, there were
other things that awakened with it. She dreamed of her brother Lawrence, holding her
hand and preventing her from stepping in front of a trotting horse pulling a cart, but she
didn't know if such a thing had ever happened. She dreamed that her father was in the
next room, trying to talk to her, but she could barely make out his words, no matter how
hard she tried. Scenes that Lavinia had described to her, of her father gaily roughhousing
with her brothers, recurred to her vividly, as if she had seen them, though she could not
have. This awakening was almost painful, considering, as her mother had always told her,
that what was given could be snatched away--would be snatched away--but she let it
happen. It came to seem the necessary prerequisite for giving birth.
Mrs. Lear made her go to a doctor in Vallejo. He was a young man, about her age,
from Chicago, and his name was Dr. Bernstein. "He's a Jew, then," said Andrew.
"Of course he is," said Mrs. Lear. "Don't you want the best possible care by the
best-educated doctor? Your other alternatives are Dr. Gray, who is nearly seventy; Dr.
Howard, who is not very clean and who has"--she lowered her voice and whispered-"very fat fingers"--Andrew knew better than to ask what she was saying--"and Mrs.
Kimura, the midwife." At first, Andrew accepted Dr. Bernstein as a necessary evil, but
Margaret quite liked him--he was married to a beautiful French woman with her own
healthy and quite stylish children, a boy and twin girls. Margaret saw their Jewishness as
something desirable and cosmopolitan, and then Andrew was won over, because Dr.
Bernstein addressed him as a colleague. They frequently discussed the works of Dr. Ellis,
both about sex and about genius. Margaret was careful to tell Andrew whenever she went
to see Dr. Bernstein, or encountered him anywhere, that he had asked after Andrew.
Andrew agreed that it was good that they had gotten "a true man of science" to usher their
young genius into the world.
It was soothing to talk to Andrew and Dr. Bernstein about the pregnancy and the
birth; it made Margaret feel lifted into a higher, more knowledgeable realm. When
women talked about birth, as they did in her knitting circle, it was always in the direst
terms. Mrs. Tillotson would tell about a woman she knew who had seemed fine until she
got a terrible infection and died within hours, then Mrs. Arness would top that with a
story about a woman she knew who was in labor with her first baby for forty-nine hours,
and the baby was born dead, and the doctor had to use an instrument to "scrape the
remains out of her." And then Mrs. Jones, with a glance at her, would top this story with
one about her cousin who had never gotten out of bed after the birth of her third child--it
had been ten years now--"and the stink! Everything like a sieve in there now!" Mrs. Gess
put a stop to such conversations when she found herself pregnant, too.
The main difficulty seemed to be that Dr. Bernstein was in Vallejo and they were
on the island. Should labor commence, who would take the ferry to whom--she to Dr.
Bernstein, or Dr. Bernstein to her? Privately, she imagined that, in a pinch, Mrs. Lear
would run over and deliver the child, but she never said this to either man of science. She
wavered, and wondered aloud to Mrs. Lear whether perhaps Dr. Howard, who lived on
the island, might suffice. Mrs. Lear sat her down and exclaimed, "After all these months,
Margaret, I cannot believe that you haven't gotten the point of my precautions. I do not
want to scare you, I want to alert you. Your father, and Dr. Howard, and all the old-time
doctors didn't truly understand about cleanliness. They said they did, but they didn't and
they don't. Should you call him, he would come to your house by horse and buggy. He
would harness the horse and drive him and tie him outside your house. No doubt he
would pat the horse and give him a nosebag to occupy him during the birth. After that, he
would pick up his dirty old satchel and carry it into the house. But from the moment he
put the nosebag on the horse to the moment he birthed the baby, would he be absolutely
perfect in his cleanliness? If your labor was not far advanced, would he eat something?