The World Without You (31 page)

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Authors: Joshua Henkin

Tags: #Jewish, #Family Life, #Literary, #Fiction

BOOK: The World Without You
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“Mostly I feel numb, but then that’s no surprise.”

“Why not?”

“The girl who goes outside without her winter coat on? Too cool to feel the cold?” It’s why she asked him if she could preside over the memorial. It’s her way of doing penance.

He seats himself in the front row of seats. Then, reconsidering, he move a few rows back, only to change his mind again, and now he’s over at the liquor table, dipping his hand into the cooler of beer. He brings a bottle up, looking at it with surprise, as if he’s caught a fish.

“No alcohol before noontime?”

He laughs. It’s the rule they used to have when the children were growing up. No sweets before noontime. So Lily and her siblings would make a ceremony of standing by the cupboard where the cakes and cookies were housed, counting down until midday.

“Speaking of which, I got you this.” He hands her a package of gummy bears, which he picked up this morning at the candy store in town. “You still like gummy bears, don’t you?”

She nods.

“There was a sign in the store that said ‘Unattended children will be given espresso and a free kitten.’ I thought it was funny. I had half a mind to take it home with me. Back to my days of petty crime.”

“What days of petty crime?”

“Just your typical adolescent things. Stealing road signs and filling my pockets with sweets. The occasional dustup with some neighborhood kid.”


Dustup
?” she says.

“You see all the things you don’t know about me?”

She steps out onto the balcony. The playground and tennis courts are arrayed below her; down the hill is the Childcare Center, where she and Thisbe sat yesterday drinking beers. She wouldn’t mind another beer now. Beer and gummy bears. It would be enough to make her sick. But it would be a good kind of sick, the kind of sick that would distract her from a deeper sickness, from everything that’s about to happen.

The memorial is being held in the center’s ballroom, though it’s not anywhere Lily would want to hold a ball. It’s more like an elementary-school auditorium. Sixty years ago, she wouldn’t have even been permitted inside the building. Before the town took it over, the center was home to the Lenox Brotherhood Club, and the Saturday night dance was the only time women were allowed in. Lily has an image of herself in the 1940s being escorted to a dance by some club member. She’d almost rather go to her brother’s memorial.

Leaning over the railing, she’s startled by the touch of a hand on her shoulder. It’s her father’s hand; he has come outside to join her. He’s drinking a ginger ale, which he offers her a sip of, but she’s still working on her gummy bears.

“You’re looking contemplative,” he says. “What are you thinking about?”

“Nothing,” she says. “Everything. I don’t know.” She glances up at him. “What are
you
thinking about?”

“I was just remembering that after Leo died Mom and I talked about moving to California.”

“Oh, come on. Mom never would have moved to California.”

“Actually, she was the force behind it. She had it in her head that she would close her practice and we’d settle in Berkeley.”

“What in the world would you have done there?”

“Beats me. Become full-time grandparents? Though Thisbe’s parents would have already been there. We’d have felt like hangers-on.” He does a couple of knee bends, and now, with his legs locked, he touches his hands to his toes.

“You’re all movement, Dad, aren’t you?”

“I suppose.”

She recalls Leo’s words, “channeled hyperactivity.” It was how he used to describe their parents. And now he’s gone, unable to see just how hyperactive they’ve become. Her father has taken up running and become devoted to opera; her mother is on the tennis courts even more than she used to be. As a teenager, she’d been ranked in the junior division, and she went on to play women’s varsity at Penn before dropping the team in favor of chemistry lab and, after that, medical school. Now she’s up again at six in the morning, hitting ground strokes in Central Park. It isn’t sport for her, it’s exorcism and absolution, and she takes pleasure in dispensing in straight sets whatever hapless male colleague has the temerity to take her on. And, throughout, she has been keeping up a full schedule of patients. It wouldn’t surprise Lily if in the last year her parents have gotten only a few hours of sleep a night. Though she’s not one to talk. She knows about channeled hyperactivity; she hasn’t been sleeping much herself. “You’d have hated California.”

“You’re right,” he says. “We’d have been back in New York in no time.”

She knows what he’s thinking, because she’s thinking it, too. What if they’d moved to California and her mother had left him? He’d have been alone then, even more alone than he is now, in a state, a part of the country, where he knew hardly anyone. Though maybe if they’d moved to California, had relocated themselves far from where everything had gone wrong, if they’d started over, the way people for generations have started over in California, they might have been able to work things out.

She follows him inside, where he filches another stuffed grape leaf. But this one, too, he takes a bite of before leaving it to bleed across a cocktail napkin.

“You’re breaking into the storehouses,” she says. “Laying waste to the vineyards.”

“I eat when I get nervous.”

“Looks more like you gnaw.”

“In my old age, I’ve started to worry.”

“Your old age, Dad? You’ve been worried as long as I’ve known you. Compared to you, Mom was a stoic.” Nervous Nellie, they used to call him. Dithering David. He was always delaying them on their way to school.
Don’t forget to look both ways. Make sure to cross at the light.
He made them wear bicycle helmets, and this was practically before bicycle helmets were invented. Their mother, on the other hand, was on the front lines with her AIDS patients. She was accidentally pricking herself with needles, saying it was all part of the job.

“Yet it’s on Mom’s behalf that I’m worrying now. She’s terrified things won’t go okay.”

“What does she think will go wrong?”

He shrugs.

“And who is she, anyway, to saddle you with her worries? Don’t you think she’s forfeited that right?”

He doesn’t respond.

“What happened to the man who was boycotting dinner last night—that guy walking around with his ladder and paintbrush?”

“You preferred him?”

“I did.”

What can he tell her? That that man is still there, as surely as is the man who is standing before her asking her to be good to her mother? The truth is, it’s not in him to fight. Perhaps he’s just hardwired that way. Or maybe it’s how he was raised, a boyhood spent alone in the company of his mother, a woman with her own whims and tempers. He mourns for Leo no less than Marilyn does even if he isn’t bellowing it into bullhorns. It’s not in him to write op-eds, just as it’s not in him to rage about Bush, though he hates Bush, too. In a way, he thinks his response is more dignified. Whether or not it is, it’s the only response he knows.

He gets up now and heads across the hall, and Lily, following him, says, “Where are you going, Dad?” but he doesn’t answer her. They pass under the huge ceiling fan, and for a second she feels as if she’s being transported by some gale, her dress billowing as though it’s trying to fly off. But then she’s outside again, on the balcony, and the heat assaults her. Sweat drips down her forearms. A big patch of it blooms across her father’s white shirt; he buttons his jacket to cover it up. “Mom’s afraid of upsetting you.”

“Why? Am I such a loose cannon?” And she wonders: is she? Is she someone people need to steer clear of?

“She’s a little scared of you.”

What’s so scary about her? Much of the time she’s scared herself. Her mother is afraid of her? The woman who chases after drug reps, who brings the pharmaceutical industry to its knees?

“She thinks you don’t suffer fools gladly.”

What fools? she thinks. And whom does she need to suffer? No one besides Noelle. Is that what her mother is worried about? Noelle?

“Go easy on her, okay?”

“Don’t worry,” she says. “I won’t pick a fight.”

They descend the stairs to what looks like an old smoking room, everything upholstered in dark leather. In the corner stands an upright piano, and the walls are lined with black-and-white photographs of old Lenox Brotherhood sports teams. The 1920 Brotherhood Basketball Team. The 1931 Brotherhood Baseball Team. There’s a display of dollhouses behind glass.

“Mom thinks you’re the quickest to defend Thisbe.”

“What’s there to defend?” Lily says. “She’s done nothing wrong.”

“You’ve always been tougher on Mom than on me. Long before any of this ever happened.”

He’s right, she thinks. Maybe it’s because she and her mother are alike. The lanky ones, the two of them, the reddest of the redheads, fueled by their impatience, which darts like a beam of light into every corner of the room. Compared to them, her father was always softer. He used to carpool Lily and her sisters, off to music lessons and tumbling class, on outings to the Cloisters and Wave Hill. When Leo was old enough, he came along, too. Her father liked being the car-pool dad, even in Manhattan, where owning a car wasn’t worth the trouble. He was a frustrated driver, a man who loved to drive in a city with no real roadway; it was the one thing he disliked about New York. In his twenties, he bought a Peugeot convertible in which he drove the women he dated; it was, he said, a test of their will. He did it with Marilyn too; he wasn’t about to marry someone who wouldn’t ride in his convertible. With the children in back, he would make a game out of driving, taking them up Amsterdam Avenue where the traffic lights were staggered, seeing how long he could go without hitting a red light. But he was always safe. When Lily and her sisters were in junior high school and the carpooling stopped, when the only driving he did was late at night, moving the car from one side of the street to the other in deference to the city’s parking restrictions, he would ask if they wanted to come along. “Come on,” he said. “A little alternate-side-of-the-street-parking fun?” When they were small, he took a leave from teaching so he could care for them while their mother did her second residency. In their picture books with the animal figures, they would mistake the mother for the father, the one with the apron standing over the stack of dishes. When they fell and hurt themselves, they instinctively called out, “Daddy!”

Lily takes his hand and they go out front, where the holiday traffic is approaching them.. A car drives past with a bumper sticker that reads
BUSH
IS
LISTENING
.
USE
BIG
WORDS
. And another bumper sticker:
PRACTICE
GENTLE
ACTS
OF
IMPEACHMENT
. They’re in friendly territory, David thinks. He points to Lily’s van parked out front, with its
KERRY
-
EDWARDS
sticker on the window. Back at the house, his and Marilyn’s car is parked, too, with its own
KERRY
-
EDWARDS
bumper sticker.

“I know how to attach myself to losers, don’t I?” Lily says. She’s thinking of the Mets—and now the Nationals—but also of John Kerry. It’s been almost a year since the election, but she can’t get herself to throw that sticker out. The fact is, she’s happy to defend John Kerry. Everyone she knows voted for him, though they did so with the feeling at least he’s better than Bush. She alone was enthusiastic. The long, dour face, the patrician moroseness, the French speaking, the flip-flopping, the polysyllabism: all the things people disliked about Kerry are precisely what drew her to him. There’s a way in which she was a little in love with John Kerry and she remains so to this day.

“You always were a contrarian.”

“I suppose I was.” Oppositional Lily, her friends used to call her. She was captain of her high school parliamentary debate team, which meant one day she argued one side and the next day she argued the other, and if she’d been a student at Princeton in 1979 she would have stood with Sally Frank, suing the all-male eating clubs, taking the case to the New Jersey Supreme Court. But she was twelve in 1979. When she got to Princeton, Cottage Club was about to settle; it held its first coed Bicker when she was a sophomore. She had no interest in bickering Cottage—Cottage was still the old Princeton, even if it had capitulated and gone coed—but she bickered anyway just to prove she could get in, and as soon as she was admitted, she resigned. She clerked on the Supreme Court after graduating from law school, for Justice Scalia. She was the only liberal clerk out of four (most years Scalia didn’t have even one liberal), for a justice she found clever and winning but whom she consistently disagreed with. (She likes to say that if she could have only added the word
not
to all of Scalia’s sentences he would have written an opinion she liked.) She spent the whole year shouting at the other clerks. The combat in the justice’s chambers (“What’s going on in there?” people would ask) and continuing over lunch on the steps of the Court, the beers late at night when the arguing resumed, everyone going home for a few hours of sleep (“No hard feelings,” the clerks would say as they departed), only to begin afresh the following morning— Lily still recalls that as one of the happiest years of her life.

A man comes up the road in sunglasses and a seersucker suit, walking his Newfoundland. From a couple hundred feet away, Lily can already see the spit spraying out of the dog’s mouth, testament to the breed’s affinity for drool, or to her own eyesight, which is still twenty-ten in both eyes. In seventh grade, when Clarissa needed glasses but didn’t want them, she had Lily accompany her to the eye doctor and Lily fed her the answers to the chart while the doctor was looking away.

Owner and dog seem headed toward the Community Center. A dog at a memorial service, Lily thinks. That would have been Leo’s idea of fun. But now the Newfoundland has turned up the block, past the center and into town, his owner pulled after him.

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