Read You Are Not A Stranger Here Online
Authors: Adam Haslett
Tags: #Reading Group Guide, #Juvenile Fiction, #Literary, #Short Stories (Single Author), #General, #Short Stories, #Fiction, #Fiction - General
Toward the end of her stay, Will had an appointment alone with her psychiatrist. Elizabeth behaved badly, listening at the door. "A mild imbalance," the man said. She has never known if he was merely a sexist who thought her hysterical or a kind man who understood what Will meant to her, perhaps even a man who let his kindness supervene his judgment. When Will asked him if they should still get married, the doctor asked if he loved his fiancee. Elizabeth never felt as safe as she did when she heard Will say, "Yes," without stopping to consider. "Then you should marry her," the doctor replied. After the wedding, they took her parents' summer home in the town next to Plymouth, an old saltbox by the river, where her grandparents had lived all their lives. Just for a year, it was said, while Will finished his degree. No rent for them to pay, and he only needed to be in Cambridge twice a week. She can remember her dislike of the idea of living, however briefly, 200
in that house, away from the city, in a place she'd spent months of her childhood, a house one branch or another of her family had lived in or owned for more than three centuries. The weight of the past felt so heavy there, it was hard to imagine a future. Will set his desk up in the parlor, next to the four-foot-high mahogany radio in whose bottom cabinets the old 78s of Beethoven and Mahler gathered their dust. Trying to read a book on the sofa in the afternoon, she had to work hard to forget the sight of her grandmother sitting in the chair opposite, napping through a summer rainstorm.
Before they were married they had talked about having children; they both wanted them. A bit of a strain, don't you think? her mother said when she brought up the idea, their life together having just begun, no job for Will yet. But Will didn't see any reason to wait. They were happy when she got pregnant. More than the wedding vows this meant permanence--a future they could predict.
"Beautiful morning," Mrs. Johnson says, poking her head in the door. She has been the director of Plymouth Brewster all the years Elizabeth has been here. A gentle redheaded woman who sits with Elizabeth and discusses the books she is reading. "Don't forget you've got a visitor this afternoon."
Elizabeth smiles and Mrs. Johnson passes on and Elizabeth gazes again over the harbor. She sees people, tiny at this distance, heading out along the breakwater, leaning into the wind as they go. Yachts bob in the marina, their chrome masts ticking back and forth like the arms of metronomes. Sun glistens on the water. The scene is alive with motion. 201
Nearly four hundred years since our family arrived on this shore, Hester begins, her voice cleaner and more vibrant this morning.
"Here we go," Elizabeth says, taking a seat in her chair,
"sing your little song." It's better when she's able to affect nonchalance. Signs of care are like flesh exposed to her companion's arrows. And what a beautiful season of suffering it has been. What principled wars. What tidy profit. And the machines, they are enough to take your breath away. And all the limbs and eyes and organs of the children bled and severed for progress. And the raped slaves and the heads of boy soldiers crushed like eggs. Why, the minister might even allow us a dance. Perhaps to celebrate you, Elizabeth, a flower grown from the seed of all this. What have you done to correct it? Do you suppose the divines would have liked your country club, Daddy coming down the back nine, dark hands fixing Mommy a cocktail? Jitterbug.
"Lousy historian," Elizabeth mutters, trying to maintain the dismissive upper hand. "You're confusing all sorts of things." It's been years since she's had to argue like this. She has the energy, for now.
I'd forgotten, Hester says. You always believed books and their facts could save you. Haven't done so well by them, have you?
Elizabeth laughs. "If I'd only known what a harsh woman you were."
What? You would have refused my help?
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"Is that what you gave me?"
And then the memory is there, the morning her contractions began: second day of the blizzard, 1978, the roads covered in ice and buried, the police saying no one was to drive, the hospital telling them they weren't sure when they could send an ambulance. She lay upstairs in her grandparents' old room, in the front of the house.
For hours she did her breathing as best she could, laboring there on the high bed, clutching Will's hand. When the contractions got worse, her mother tended her, told her she had to be brave. Elizabeth begged for the doctor or drugs--something to blunt the vicious pain in her abdomen. In the moments of reprieve, she'd open her eyes and from the walls of the bedroom see the dead generations staring down at her: daguerreotypes of gaunt women and simian-faced men, stiff as iron in Sunday black, posed as if to meet their maker. As children visiting their grandparents, Elizabeth and her brother scared each other telling stories of the people who'd died in these rooms. The pictures seemed alive now, the ancestors' rectitude offended by her abjection. She bit her pillow and sweated. Hours passed and still no doctor. She heard Will and her parents whispering in the other room, saying, how could they move her now that she was so far along and the roads so dangerous? At six the power went out, leaving the house in darkness. For a few minutes, all that remained of the world was the seizing pain and the rush of the wind lashing the trees in the front yard. Her father lit candles, put batteries in the radio. It kept snowing. From downstairs, she could hear the news saying 203
hundreds of people were stranded in cars on the highway and then the voice of the announcer telling citizens to remain in their homes.
Her mother gave her water and wiped down her face and chest. The pictures flickered in the shadows. Past one in the morning, in the fifteenth hour, long after she'd started to push, her mother left for a moment to find more towels. Elizabeth lay on the soaked mattress alone, Will in the kitchen boiling water on the gas stove, her father yelling on the phone to the hospital, snow pressing against the glass, the flesh between her legs ripping. She felt blood leaking onto her thighs. Something started hammering at her temples. Her heart kicked. She thought she would die.
It was then she looked up in the candlelight and for the first time saw Hester standing in the far corner of that ancient, crooked, low-ceilinged room. She stood silent in her black dress and hooded cape, a woman of thirty with a face of fifty, plain featured, eyes of mild gray. Naive about nothing. A woman who had lain in this room on a winter night some centuries ago, Elizabeth understood, her husband at a trading post on the Connecticut River, her sister there to tend her, three younger children instructed not to cry, crying in the other room, twenty hours before she expired. A woman Elizabeth need give no explanation, her life reduced to a line in a letter written from one man to another. A line Elizabeth had always remembered from a summer past when her grandfather read them papers their ancestors had left in the house:
Sad past words to report Hester has died giving me a boy.
Elizabeth stared at the dark figure in the corner and 204
would have cried out were it not for her worry that Will and her parents would think her crazy. Slowly and without a word, Hester walked to the bed. She placed a cold hand on Elizabeth's brow. Elizabeth closed her eyes. She sensed Hester's hands between her legs, holding the baby's head. She gave a final push. When she opened her eyes and strained upright, she saw the blue child. The umbilical cord had wrapped itself twice around his neck in her womb, pulling against his tiny throat, strangling him as he was born.
Will was the first to enter. In the instant before reason or compassion or duty retrieved him from the doubt of her sanity he must always have harbored, he stared at her as if at a murderer. In a rush, she explained how it happened, because what choice did she have then? How a woman had come and delivered the child, how the cord must have been coiled like that for weeks, and her parents wept and Will held his head in his hands. In the early morning, a nurse arrived and cut the boy loose.
"It's not help you gave me," Elizabeth says aloud from her chair by the window. "It's not help you gave."
She is thankful that for now there is no reply. Thankful too that the colors in her room beat once again with the pulse of life, the air and the blue ocean quickening to a new birth. Sedation's cloud is lifted. And Ted, Ted will be here soon.
T H AT A F T E R N O O N S H E hears his voice coming up the stairwell from the front desk. Judith, the nurse, has bought her the 205
Pepperidge Farm cookies she asked for and she's saved juice from lunch along with two glasses.
Soon, he knocks on the open door. "Hey there, Mrs. Maynard."
For years Mrs. Johnson has sent along the facility's information to the high school volunteer program, inviting students to sign up for regular visits with an appropriate resident. Every autumn one or two come, but Elizabeth has never been lucky enough to have someone assigned to her. Until now. He's wearing a blue ski jacket she hasn't seen on him before. His curly brown hair hangs down over the jacket's high, puffy collar. The centers of his cheeks are red from the cold.
"You're beautiful," she says.
He glances back along the corridor, then down at the floor. "That's cool," he mutters.
"I got us come cookies. Would you like one?"
He steps into the room, shrugging off his knapsack. She holds the plate up and he takes three Milanos.
"Wow," he says, "you got a lot of my pictures up here. Did you have all these up last week?"
"I took down some of their dreadful watercolors so I have more room now. I like the portraits. They're very good."
"How was your week?" he asks.
Weirdly, the little brochure Ted got when he signed up for the volunteer program said this was the sort of question you weren't supposed to ask the residents, because usually their weeks did not vary and it was best to focus on positive things. Ted has decided this is a crock of shit and figures this woman has lived through a week as sure as anyone else. 206
"Oh, it was just
riveting,
" Elizabeth says with a big smile.
"Gladys Stein nearly expired in the midst of a bridge tournament. She was upset with Dickie Minter telling stories about Mussolini."
He's learned it's okay to laugh at this stuff even if he doesn't get it.
"And the food?" he asks.
"Factory fresh."
They chuckle together, friends enjoying their joke.
"I kinda had this idea," Ted says. "I was thinking instead of me drawing today, we could go for a drive. Would you be into that?"
Since her parents died, Elizabeth's old friend Ginny is the only one who takes her out, down to Plymouth Harbor or for a walk on Duxbury Beach, no more than twice a year.
"That would be wonderful," she says.
Donning the fur coat and hat her grandmother gave her as a wedding present, she leads Ted down to Mrs. Johnson's office. There are only voluntary residents at Plymouth Brewster; it is no mental hospital with locked wards, but a place where people come to live structured lives. Elizabeth has never been much trouble to anyone at the facility. As long as they are back before dinner, Mrs. Johnson says, it would be fine.
" I U S E D T O drive a station wagon like this," she remarks as they pull onto a highway she has not seen before. "Has this road been here a long time?"
"I guess like, yeah, since before I was born."
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Elizabeth laughs. "Ginny doesn't want to upset me, you see. They tell her familiarity is a good thing, so she takes me on the old roads. It would make sense if I were senile, I suppose, but really it is quite interesting to see this road."
Soon they will pave it all, every marsh and fen. The animals will die and we will die with them. How much must be destroyed before people are satisfied?
She is quite an environmentalist for a seventeenth-century woman, Elizabeth thinks, but a hypocrite too, she tries telling herself: remember the diseases you brought, dear, remember the dead natives.
You think you haven't profited from that? Hester stabs back.
"I was thinking maybe you could help me out with something," Ted says. Elizabeth looks across the seat at him. His hair is a mess. He hunches forward over the steering wheel, racked with a worry she finds adorable. She is here in the car with him. No slowing paste in the brain. Seconds come one after the other.
"By all means," she says. "What can I do?"
"Well see, there's this person--she's a girl. She goes to my school. And somebody told me it was her birthday soon . . ."
"You want to buy her something."
"Yeah," Ted says, relieved. "Yeah, exactly. But what?"
"I'm charmed that you would ask my advice," she says. They pull off the first exit and into the parking lot of a giant mall, another place not ten miles from the Plymouth Brewster Elizabeth has never seen.
"We will find you the perfect gift," she says, stepping 208
from the car. "My mother was a great shopper. We would take the train down to New York and spend the afternoon picking out dresses at Bergdorf's and then we'd have tea at the Plaza and stay the night there and examine shoes in the morning."
She barely recognizes the playful tone she hears in her voice.
"I know a good piece of merchandise when I see it."
"Cool."
Elizabeth is able to dispense with the entirety of a store named T. J. Maxx in under five minutes. "Not us," she says, gliding into the sunlit atrium, amazed at how easy it is to be here among people.
"What's her name?"
"Lauren. But she's not exactly, at the moment, you know, like my girlfriend."
"Ah-hah, I see. Yes. This information is helpful. Here we are, good old Lord & Taylor, I think this will do nicely."
"Oh, yeah, and her family--they're rich. But what's cool is she didn't take a car from her parents, even though her stupid brother drives an SUV."
"And does she live in a grand house?"
"Yeah, it's pretty big. Down at the end of Winthrop Street, kinda near your old place. I've only driven by it a couple times."