I know that he's speaking the truth. In two or three meals, Mrs. Berner, Aurelia Berner, will do whatever I tell her because she trusts me and because she's lonely and wants to keep me as her friend or maybe as a fill-in for the kids who left for California. And I think that if it weren't me, it would certainly be someone else taking her money. And it isn't her money anyhow. It would be her money if she knew what her home was worth and she doesn't, so why should she make a fortune off a house and property she can't even use anymore?
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Each time I visit
the Berners
I take something else, two of the snow globes, an old copy of
Robinson Crusoe,
a porcelain doll. I take three more perfume bottles. As we walk in the house I sometimes run my hand over the place where I took an object or two. I wonder where she keeps her cash, the money she probably pays a neighbor kid to do her grocery shopping.
I ask her once if she needs someone to do her grocery shopping.
I pick up a load of groceries for her and when I return with them I tell her they cost twice as much as they did. I want her to question me, to ask for a receipt. Instead she hands me fifty bucks for some cold cuts and fruit, bread, vegetables for a salad, and a few boxes of rice.
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Old man Berner marks
me some trails
he hiked when he could walk and tells me what I'll see: “Thick red spruce and those nice fir trees in the highlands and lower down the sugar maples we get our syrup from, and beech and yellow birch, and animals, Randall, that you can't see anywhere else: Indian bats, grouses and loons, worm snakes and bog turtles, and turkey vultures.” He reminds me a little of a turkey vulture, though I don't tell him that.
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After a month or
so,
Eddie calls me in my room. “Did you get the check I sent?” he asks. My room looks like an antique shop. My place is filled with beautiful items taken from the Berners' house. I've dusted them all. I collected enough money from two things I sold to buy a secondhand TV and an electric razor. Soon I will have a great deal more than that. Eddie will pay me 3 percent of the profits, which could bring me about eight thousand dollars.
“They want out of there, Eddie. They're ready to sign whatever I bring over.”
“Get her to sign and then give her the check. Make it fair. Ninety thousand just like we talked about. We're not in the business of ripping people off. We can't get that reputation.”
It is clear he's convincing himself here and that he'd want to pay less. If he could get away with it, Eddie would buy their land for twenty-four dollars like the deal Peter Stuyvesant worked out for Manhattan.
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The next weeks
are freezing cold, the roads iced solid and scary to drive on. The winds whip harshly through whatever I put on. The snows come strong out of nowhere and I am forever scraping ice from my windows, knocking it out from under my boots. On my way home from the Berners' one night I am stuck in a whiteout, white all around me, and I cannot tell which direction is forward. There aren't any sounds. My tires are high off the road in a snow cloud. I slow to about five miles an hour and then I cut the engine. I step out of the car and let the snow fall on me and for just a moment I feel like a six-year-old.
When I get back in and start driving again, it takes me two hours to go a distance that should take twenty minutes.
At night I watch TV just to hear the voices. I take long walks and then I turn on the news. There's a small mention of the man who killed the old couple in Utica. He claims he never meant to kill them. He meant to rob them but the old guy pulled out a knife. The reporter said the knife was the old man's Swiss Army knife and the blade was smaller than four inches.
On the night of a particularly loud and icy storm, I barricade myself in blankets against the sounds outside. I wear layers of sweaters and shirts. Before I go to sleep my phone rings.
“Randall?”
It's Mrs. Berner.
“There are two windows I can't get closed. They're wide open and the heat's going right through them. I'm afraid he'll . . . I'm afraid Mr. Berner will freeze if we don't get the windows closed.”
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They are hard to
close
even for me. I pull and pull and then I begin banging on them. I pour steaming water in the openings and then smear butter in the hinges. The cold air washes in against my face. Finally one budges and in another few minutes I've got the other closed.
Mrs. Berner gasps. And then she gives me a beautiful smile. We sit in her kitchen and drink hot chocolate, and the sound of old Roury Berner snoring, loud and steady, comforts us both, like the sound of the logs crackling in the wood-burning stove.
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Sunday the sun comes
out strong.
The ground begins to thaw. I eat turkey at the Berners'. Mr. Berner eats a few bites of dinner with us and then heads back to bed.
“I guess we've been pressing our good luck,” Mrs. Berner says. “He's getting worse living here. He's going downhill.”
After dinner I bring out the papers. Mrs. Berner looks them over closely. She shuts me out for a while and I think for a moment she might lose her nerve and decide to stay. But then she looks up at me and smiles.
“You might want to think about this awhile.”
“I have,” she says. “Where do I sign?”
I show her.
“Now I give you this check for ninety thousand. You fill out a check for two thousand and make it out to me. That's a transaction fee.”
“Transaction fee. Okay.”
“That leaves you with eighty-eight thousand.”
“That's plenty.”
And then we have nothing to say to each other. I drink my hot chocolate and she drinks hers.
Half an hour later I pull my coat on to leave.
“Randall,” she says before I'm out the door.
“Yes,” I say.
“We want you to have those things. I wanted you to know that.”
“What?”
“The things you've been taking. We want you to enjoy them.”
I feel dizzy suddenly. I can hear Mr. Berner coughing.
“You're welcome to have anything of ours you want. We don't have anyone to give things to anymore. You know what that's like?”
“Thank you,” I say.
“I picture our things in your little apartment over the general store. I picture you taking them into your home when you buy one. You'll have a nice home, one day. Maybe you'll choose to stay around here. We'd like you to. We'd like you to think of us as your family.”
“Thank you,” I say. I tell her I'll help her move.
“You're not who you think you are,” she says before I can get away. “Give it time. I know. You'll find your peace.”
The door is open, but I stand still and seen before her, unable to move, overcome with a feeling I cannot nameâthe sense of being followed.
“You think you're stealing, but it's
yours,
don't you see? Always was. You're
forgiven,
Randall. Money shouldn't divide. The past is over and done.”
It's clear from her eyes she's talking about someone else, someone she blames herself for losing years ago, but I pretend she's talking to me.
“We love you very much,” she says.
“I know that,” I say.
I
rode up to the snow-blessed hills
of Vermont on a ski trip for singles. I did. Two overheated buses full of women and men between the ages of twenty-two and thirty drinking flavored vodka from plastic martini glasses, and trying to mask their awkwardness. My college roommate, Amanda, dragged me along, in part for company, but mostly to extract me from the ditch I'd dropped into since things ended with Mitchell. I was permitted to mention Mitchell onceâfor under ten minutesâAmanda said. The subject was otherwise off-limits.
“Deal,” I said.
“Let's see,” Amanda said.
There were a few more women on the trip than men, not by design, but two of the men had called in sick at the last moment and anotherâthe one I decided I would have hooked up withâwas in Florida arranging his grandfather's funeral.
A broadsheet was circulating with miniprofiles of all of us, and pictures of everyone but me (I'd signed on too late). Amanda quickly sized up the talentâdentist, doctor, actor, shrink . . . software engineer, sports agent, magazine editor . . . and she picked out two lawyers, Kevin and Roland, who worked for the same public interest firm and were sitting two rows back from us. Kevin's hair was thinning and his gray eyes were slightly amused. Roland, who wore a pale blue ski cap, had a wide smile, the patchy beginnings of a beard, and attractive lines around his mouth. They seemed charming enough in our initial conversation, and if I pretended I was someone else, I could get through this, I thought.
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We were booked into
a fairly large bed-and-breakfastâeight rooms, and Amanda arranged it so our room was next to the lawyers. It was around nine when we arrived. Killington, Vermont. We went straight out for dinner. There were other singles at our table, all perfectly harmless, but after they cleared the salads, we confined our conversation to the four of us. The lawyers were telling stories of spectacular ski accidents from their childhoods. Roland used to race. He'd had a nearly fatal collision with a tree when he was seventeen and lay in a coma for a week. They were certain he would die or end up a vegetable. “I think my brother had already made plans to move into my room.”
He closed and opened his eyes as though reenacting it for us.
“Then one day I just woke up.”
“He transmogrified,” Kevin said.
We waited for an explanation.
For around half a yearâwhile he convalesced from his broken leg and two broken ribsâall the murkiness and “fuckedupness” in his adolescent life disappeared, he said. His grades improved. He wrote a play (loosely based on his hospital stay) that earned him raves in the school newspaper, and he learned how to play the French horn. He read
War and Peace
.
“It was as though I'd cleared out all the clutter in my brain and I suddenly had room for everything I'd wanted to do. It lasted until the summer after graduation.”
Kevin refilled everyone's wineglasses. We looked at Roland now, who seemed uncomfortable with the attention he'd drawn.
“Then I went back to ripping off convenience stores,” he said. I believed him until the corner of his mouth turned up in a smile.
“He was a God as a racer,” Kevin said.
“I'm far more restrained these days,” he said.
“His restraint would make your hair stand on end,” Kevin said. “I'm Mister Leisure out there. I snowboard with the high-school dudes.”
“How old are you?” Amanda asked him.
“Thirty.”
“Have you ever been married?”
Amanda was a financial analyst and accustomed to gathering information before committing her clients' resources. I shot her a look.
“Yes,” he said.
“Somehow I knew it,” Amanda said.
“She died,” Kevin said. “Not from skiing.”
“I'm so sorry. How did she die?” Amanda asked.
“She had an aneurysm,” he said. “Listen, I don't want to depress everyone. It was a while ago.”
“Two years,” Roland said.
“You poor, poor thing.” Amanda leaned toward Kevin with increased interest. “My uncle had cancer. He's better now. They got to him early, I guess. How old was she?”
“Twenty-six.”
“My God, that's so
young
.”
“It is.” He fidgeted with the clasp on his leather watchband. “Anyway, how long have you guys lived in the city?”
“My whole life,” I said.
“Five years,” Amanda said, about herself. Then she told them about my childhood. It was a sweet gesture, I suppose, though she mangled several details and made me sound fairly disturbed (and my father sound like a polygamist). While she was talking, I started to picture Kevin's young wife a day before her death, booking a vacation she'd never take, or buying groceries she'd never eat, and then I remembered Mitchell and I realized he was at a secure distance now, and I felt calm, because when you got right down to it, what had happened to me? Nothing life-threatening. No coma, no aneurysm.
I poured myself another glass of wine. Then two more, and we had shots of vodka after that, which Amanda said should be our last.
We started telling jokes. Or maybe I just did. I told them the one about the city boy moving upstate. He gets invited to a party by his downstairs neighbor.
“What'll it be like?”
“Oh, it's going to be wild,” the guy says. “There's going to be some
drinking,
there's gonna be some fuckin'; they'll be some fightin', and maybe a little dancin'.”
“Who all's coming?” the city boy asks.
“Oh, it's just going to be you and me.”
I'm not sure why I told that one, or why I thought it was so funny. But the men laughed and Amanda didn't.
“So the first guy gets raped,” she said.
“No,” I said. “That's not it at all.”
“So then what is it?”
“It's about false advertising,” I said.
Roland raised his glass. “And that underneath it all we just want to drink, fuck, fight, and dance.”
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The night he broke
up with me,
Mitchell and I decided to sleep together one final time, and when he slipped out the front door in the morning, I felt surprisingly intact. I had the typical what-did-you-do-over-the-weekend conversations at the media distribution company where I work, accomplished a few basic tasks, and I thought,
Maybe this'll be easy
. And then I thought,
What does it mean if it's easy?
And then I started to call Mitchell to ask him what it meant. But I remembered the rule we made about not calling and so I hung up.