The baby’s crying woke me. Bob slammed his hand down on the table, swearing. Annie stood up. I hardly had any chips left. I couldn’t understand it. Archie woke up and started crying too. Screaming like a banshee.
Annie and Bob came back into the kitchen with the two of them shrieking in their arms. I gave myself three seconds to beat it out of there.
“We’ll leave you alone now,” I said. “Sleep well, you two.”
I shoved Betty adroitly in front of me, and we split. When we got to the bottom of the stairs, I heard Bob calclass="underline"
“Hey, nice having you guys over!”
“Thanks for everything, Bob.”
The fresh air did me good. I suggested we take a little walk before heading home. She took my arm and nodded her head. There were already a few tiny leaves on the trees. The air shook them. You could smell the young buds in the street, an aroma that got stronger and stronger.
We went up the street in silence. There comes a moment when the silence between two people can have the purity of a diamond. Such was the case then. That’s all you can say about it. The street is no longer a street. The light becomes fragile as a dream. The sidewalks shine. The air crashes in your face. A joy rises in you that has no name-that amazes you. It’s being able to stay calm, to light someone’s cigarette with your back to the wind, without the slightest tremble in your hand to betray you. It was the kind of walk that can fill a lifetime.
On the corner was a garbage can with a rubber tree in it. Though it’d been thrown out, it was still in good shape, with lots of leaves. It was just thirsty. My heart went out to it. It looked like a sad coconut tree, agonizing on an archipelago of trash.
“Can you tell me why people do things like this?” I asked.
“Hey, look, it’s sprouting a new leaf!”
“…and why this crummy old rubber tree tugs so hard at my heartstrings…”
“We could put it downstairs, with the pianos.”
I unwedged the poor thing and took it in my arms. We went home. The leaves clicked like amulets, shiny as mica. Dancing like Christmas Eve. It was a grateful rubber tree-I’d given it another chance.
When I rolled into bed, I looked at the ceiling and smiled.
“What a fabulous day!” I said.
“Yeah.”
“How do you like that-first day open and we sell a piano. It’s a sign…”
“Don’t get carried away.”
“I’m not getting carried away.”
“You talk like it’s something that just happened to us.”
I felt the pavement get slippery. I steered into the parking lane. “What, don’t you think it’s good to have sold a piano?”
She sighed lightly, pulling off her sweater.
“Yes, it’s good.”
18
“Yes, Eddie, I know I’m not talking very loud, but she isn’t very far away. She’s taking a shower.”
“Yeah, okay. Well, what do you want me to do-send it?”
I moved away from the receiver a little, to make sure I still heard her splashing in the bathroom.
“No,” I whispered. “Absolutely not. If it’s not too much trouble, Eddie, I’ve been crossing out the names in the Writer’s Guide. Just mail it out to the next name on the list.”
“Anyway, it’s really too bad…”
“Yeah, well, maybe they’ve all decided to wait till I’m fifty years old.”
“And the pianos? How’s that going?”
“Not bad. We sold a third one yesterday morning.”
We said good-bye and I hung up. It was incredible that they’d turn my book down again, on this of all days. I had trouble getting this dark coincidence out of my mind-I had to shake my head to make it go away. Luckily spring had come and the sky was blue, and luckily Betty didn’t know what was up. I went to see what she was up to-it was already twenty to ten.
She was rubbing some white cream on her behind. I knew what it was-this stuff that takes hours to sink in-every time I get involved with it I have to go wash it off my hands. But girls don’t know what it is to hurry-at least I’ve never known one who did.
“Listen, you do what you want-me, I’m leaving in one minute.”
She rubbed faster.
“Well, all right, but why won’t you tell me what’s going on?
What’s got into you, anyway?”
I’d let them break my legs before she’d get one word out of me. I told her the same story as before.
“Listen,” I sighed. “We live together, you and me, right, and we try to share everything, right? So it should just be enough that I tell you I have something to show you-you should be shifting into high gear.”
“All right, I’ll get a move on it.”
“Shit, I’ll just wait for you in the car.”
I grabbed my jacket and went down. Light breeze, nice blue sky, big sun. My plan was going perfectly, with the precision of an atomic clock. I had planned on her being late, worked it into my split-second calculations. The guy had promised me that it would keep for at least two hours once out of the fridge. I glanced at my watch. We still had forty-five minutes to kill. I pushed my fist on the horn.
At ten o’clock sharp, I saw her bound out onto the sidewalk and we took off. I was playing the game with a master’s touch. I’d washed the car the night before-vacuumed the cushions and emptied the ashtrays. I wanted to assemble the day, piece by piece, nothing left to chance. Had I wanted night to fall just then, or to conjure up a layered sky, I could have done it with ease-I could have done anything I wanted.
I put my shades on to hide my shining eyes. We headed out of town. The area was fairly dry-a desert. I liked that. The earth had a beautiful color to it. It reminded me of the place we’d lived before. The bungalow episode. It seemed like it had been a thousand years since then.
I felt her squirming around next to me. Poor thing. She lit a cigarette, half smiling, half nervous.
“Jesus, this is far. Tell me what it is!”
“Patience,” I said. “Let me handle this…”
It took a while, but eventually she let herself be lulled by the monotony of the countryside, her head turned sideways against the seat. I put on some music, not too loud. There was no one on the road. I drove along at fifty-five, sixty.
We drove up a small hill covered with trees. Trees were rare in these parts-it sort of made you wonder what they were doing there. I didn’t worry about it. Everything I saw made me feel that the place was wonderful, that I was surfacing out of nowhere into somewhere. The road wound up and around. I branched off onto a small dirt road to the right. Betty sat up in her seat. Her eyes opened wide.
“What in the world are we doing here?” she whispered.
I smiled silently. The car jerked its way up the last hundred yards. I stopped under a tree. The light was perfect. I waited for the silence to return.
“Okay,” I said. “Get out.”
“So, this is where you’re going to strangle and rape me?”
“Yeah, I could.”
She opened the door.
“If it’s all the same to you, I’d rather you start by raping me.”
“Yeah, well, I’ll have to think about it.”
We found ourselves at the foot of some sloping land, empty, with gradations of color, from pale yellow to dark red. It was lovely-the last time I’d come, I’d just sat and looked. Betty stood next to me. She whistled.
“Hey, this is really beautiful…”
I savored my triumph. I leaned against the fender of the Mercedes, pinching the end of my nose.
“Come over here,” I said.
I put my arm around her neck.
“Tell me something-you see that old tree there, all the way up on the left, the one with the broken branch?”