The Wintering (36 page)

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Authors: Joan Williams

BOOK: The Wintering
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Lilylike, or as if all their necks had been simultaneously broken, they bowed their heads. Mallory intoned, Give us grateful hearts Our Father—

—and for what? he wondered. A daughter who had left home and was probably living with an old man, and for his so long not knowing what to do about much of anything. Had he failed Amy that she needed this love?

For these and all thy blessings, Mallory said.

—he probably meant to be nice telling her how beautiful all her ceramic things were. She should be grateful he liked to try making everyday living livelier, dancing and carrying on. Why not? Edith thought. She could have had a little drink with him on his birthday, though his blood pressure must be up, he looked so hot and tired. Oh, Amy.

Mindful of the needs of others …

Lord, she ought to have put a top on those potatoes, Dea thought. They were getting cold. She had always thought Amy's unpredictability had come from Edith's side, but uptown the other morning, she was not sure that what Bubba had on his breath was mouthwash. He wouldn't take after Mallory and Poppa, would he?

For we ask it in Jesus' name.…

Shootfire, that roast is cooking away, Joe thought. That cuss Almoner was almost as old as he was. Amy's had everything in the world money could buy. What in the world did she want from him? Though if you studied Mallory long enough, you might finally figure it out.

Amen. All spoke with finality. Like children saving dessert, they saved until last their most favored topic of conversation. Not until Dea brought in the cake was Amy mentioned. “I'm sure Amy's looking for another job, though,” Edith said, as Mallory blew out the candles. “I want just a sliver of cake. I mean it.”

“Of course, if she didn't have any money,” Dea mused, “she would have to come home.”

When Edith said, “You could take back her stocks, couldn't you?” Dea nodded her head in satisfaction toward Joe, meaning, she had told him.

“What good would that do?” Mallory said.

“Of course!” Dea said, thinking she understood. “She might take it from—Get it someplace else, or something.”

They definitely know, Edith said to herself morosely.

Dea would tell him everything later, and Joe settled to football on television, while Mallory went to the bedroom to nap and the women cleared the table. Joe loved fall. Every year now though, when the leaves fell, he thought of friends who were gone, and every six months or so there was another.

“He's up there!” Dea cried, in a whisper, the minute the door shut her and Edith into the kitchen. “Amelia told me.”

“Let me set these plates down,” Edith said, needing a moment. Instead of asking, Who? she said flatly, “Mr. Almoner.”

“You don't sound surprised,” Dea said.

“I'm not.” Edith, weary of pretense, thought the moment she had sent him the letter had been like the one at the end of the day when she got her girdle off.

“We should have known she'd write him,” Dea said, rinsing dishes.

“Maybe she didn't.” Edith lacked courage. “Maybe someone else told him, a well-wisher. I don't blame Amy for wanting a different life from ours, Dea.”

“My life's not yours,” Dea said quickly. “You've had a maid as long as I can remember.”

“Money's not everything,” Edith said.

“That's what people who have it always say. Let me try having it, then I'll tell you whether it is or not,” Dea said, drying her hands.

“We need to try to understand what she's doing,” Edith said, reaching for a dishcloth.

“You just said she wasn't doing anything!”

“Doing
being
there,” Edith said, gazing at a dish. “She's trying to find herself.”

“Is this some kind of psychology mess?” Dea said suspiciously. “If it is, I just don't believe in it. All it does is excuse people. Only yesterday, Rod Randolph blamed all his alcoholism on his mother's not loving him when he was a child. Would I be to blame?”

“Who?” Edith said.

“Don't you see The Doctor's Hour on television every day? At two, this town comes to a standstill. It's as real as life.”

That's too real for me, Edith thought. It was enough to have cried herself silly over Almoner's books, which she had just read. She could not imagine anyone going through what he must have to write them. She guessed she'd just have to stick to ceramics. A band on television beat happily, saluting the glorious afternoon. Through covert fields opposite, a boy trailed, carrying a gun, and a spotted dog leapt after him. The opened cotton was blindingly white. Dea swirled around dishwater blue as the fall sky and said, “We got by without all that psychology mess. When we did something wrong, we got blistered. And look at us.”

“Yes,” Edith said, holding up a dry dish. “Look at us.”

“Boys,” Dea said, gazing out of the window and thinking of Bubba (Edith wondered if she had said “boys” pointedly), “boys might need to run wild a little before settling down. It sometimes shows up later if they don't,” though she had thought it so nice to have Bubba graduate from the university and immediately settle down with a sweet little girl. Stirring up dust, crowded cars were passing along the road, and Dea drained the sink, thinking, If the Negroes were coming from church, it was late. “Seems like we been in the kitchen all day,” she said. She and Edith stood on the back porch and hung out damp aprons as ceremoniously as flags.

“You don't think then, it's all right for them to meet?” Edith said.

“No sir-ree bobbed-tailed cat, I don't.” Dea knew she could change in some respects, but not all.

“It's—” Edith began.

“An old man and a young girl!” Dea cried, as if presenting on cue what she saw.

Joe swung open the door and said, “Half-time. Got anything to eat?”

Dismay already reflected on the women's faces only deepened. Joe had waked Mallory calling, “Want a snack and to see the rest of the game!” Mallory called back that he wouldn't mind a roastbeef sandwich.

“I just been wondering,” Joe said. “Is Amy safe up yonder?” Night and the roads seemed to him no longer safe even at home.

Her baby. How could she have kept her safe? “You talking about physically safe?” Edith said.

Dea banged a glass to the table, while Joe stared. “Edith's gone stark raving mad off on some psychology mess,” Dea said. “What kind of safe do you think?”

“I thought you meant safe,” Edith said, backing down. “I'm sure she takes taxis if she goes out at night alone.”

“Well, I can't imagine her not having that much sense.” But Dea could not help adding, “Whatever other kind she's got.”

Joe would have expected a little fireworks, but the women, in resignation, only put back on their wet aprons. Dea picked up a stack of dried plates. Edith, feeling suddenly ravenous, began to cut the cake and nibble. Mallory had his shoes finally tied and came in and began to take up ice. The afternoon lengthened and soon it was dark.

In softened ground and among peat-moss bags, a man knelt setting out white and yellow clumps of chrysanthemums. They seemed to blossom mindlessly, their shaggy heads bending. His shoulders sagged and sadly he mounded dirt about their roots, as if burying something which had breathed. Killing frost seemed imminently in the air. Only temporarily would his arrangement ease the monotony of the jaundice-colored building rising above him. The sun was a flamboyant gold seal directly overhead. Trees were wildly aflame in a park opposite, and there old people sat warming their knees. A young woman, leaping up the front steps, was about to pause and admire his flowers, then went on. His handiwork, the gardener thought, would last about as long as her smile had.

Amy had wanted to make him happy about his flowers, he looked so downcast, but had been afraid to stop. Her buoyancy was too unusual, she was afraid of losing momentum, and so had plunged ahead toward the door. She felt, for once, absolutely come together, complete as a pie whose cut wedges, put back, make it perfectly round again. Her feeling might have been because of the day, which was gorgeous. Crossing the park and hearing music from a merry-go-round, she had first seen the possibility of believing in herself. Even stared at on the subway intrusively she had not minded, but had merely stared back levelly. Outside, a young nurse had given her a look confirming the chicness of the new suit. Amy had found it with a sense of miracle, along with the right accessories. She touched a silk scarf adroitly knotted at her neck and came with confidence out of a revolving quadrant of the door. Then she was brought up short by the uninterruptedly bland and curry-colored interior and by the stilted smell of food cooked and kept too long over steam. Oval aluminum carts were depressingly the size of babies' caskets, being pushed on squeakless tires down a corridor straight ahead.

The eyebrows of the receptionist were querying and rose as she glanced at Amy's clothes. “Almoner,” she repeated, then scooted her chair backward to look through index cards. Rolling back to the desk with a suspicious look, she was aware that well-dressed but aberrant people were quite common in private hospitals. “We have no such person,” she announced coldly.

Amy turned wordlessly to recross the bland expanse of carpet. Feeling alive with good will and the right intentions, she had hoped to make up for other lapses by visiting, and perhaps it was right she was not to be allowed to. Set adrift, wondering if she had misunderstood the address, she was called from the door by Alex, who got off the elevator. When he had led her toward a colorless plastic couch, he handed her a package. “This arrived at the publishing house for you, in care of Jeff.” Seeing her puzzlement, he added, “Maybe he left it to be sent, and someone forgot until now.”

“It seems strange he wouldn't have brought it himself.” She held it tightly to open when she was alone. “But the receptionist said he wasn't here.”

“I put him in under an assumed name,” Alex said, “though I'm afraid even the doctor didn't recognize his real one.”

Amy wondered what everything was for, and turned her head to watch a man merely mopping the empty hall at its far end. Keeping slightly turned from Alex and plucking string on the package, she wondered if he thought it her fault Jeff was here. She said, “I'm so unhappy about Jeff. And is he unhappy? Permanently, I mean?”

In conservative grey, Alex's long legs were stretched ahead of him. He stared down at them. “I don't think fixedly unhappy,” he said presently. “That's not his habit, as you know. And I hope you do know that happiness comes from determining on it.” He glanced at her slyly. “Though, perhaps, you are still young enough to believe it's something to be found?”

“I've been looking.” Amy had spoken off guard and in embarrassment added, “I mean, I've tried to be happy.”

However, Alex had not been fooled and gazed at her kindly. “Maybe I shouldn't discourage you. Keep on looking, then. Maybe you'll find it.”

“Why should I?” she said. “I don't deserve anything special. Someone like Jeff does.” And she sat still, realizing it had been childish to go off looking, that you could not find happiness as you found Easter eggs. Today, coming through the park, she had seen children with pirates' flags and briefly searched beneath rocks with them, for gold. Now she gazed down the hall and sighed, looking at the man wringing out his mop.

“If you want to see Jeff, you'll have to hurry. Visiting hours are almost over.”

At the elevator, Alex said, “He's sedated and very groggy. I didn't know what to do when I found him, except bring him here,” and had he fallen short, he seemed to be asking. “I've never dealt much with people in his condition.”

For the moment, Amy felt older and wiser in the ways of the world. She felt capable, as Alex stood looking uncertain. Not trying to excuse himself, he said, “It may be good that I did bring him. He's not at all well. Liquor has this effect on him partially because of medicine he's taking. The doctor didn't feel he drinks all that abysmally much.”

“If only I hadn't left him.” Amy tucked her hand into Alex's and they shook firmly.

“Call me if you need anything,” he said.

“Do you think he'll be out of here soon?”

“I hope so, and it's important this doesn't happen again. Do you mind my asking, has he asked you to marry him?”

“In a way, he has. I haven't thought about it, but I have to. I know he wants me able to make up my mind. Do you think I should marry him?”

“I would,” Alex said, “be very tempted if I were you.”

Having rung for the elevator, he walked away. On the other side of the glass front door, Alex stopped and tipped his hat and gave a little send-off wave of his hand as if saying bon voyage or good luck. Touched, Amy nodded. She watched him go, recognizing he was on her side.

In the elevator Amy unwrapped the package, and she held it open against her going down the corridor in search of Jeff's room. There, white blinds had been drawn against the day, and with his silverish hair and pale face, a sheet drawn to his chin, he seemed a waxen figure on display. Only on the windowsill were there moving gold glimmers, for there the sun edged in. The room, heavily accented by some dulling drug, made her think of bees droning, of clover, of the sluggishness of midday on a Southern summer afternoon. The remoteness and secretiveness of their meetings in the woods came back to her also in this darkened room. Uncertainly by the bed, she repeated his name until he opened his eyes.

“I was dreaming. I thought in the dream, you called.”

“I'm here,” she said.

“Amy.”

“Yes.”

“You had begun to grow up, but not in the way I meant. More and more, you were becoming secretive. I'd urged you to be frank.” He spoke haltingly, from the drug. “I suspect a young man. You should have told me.”

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