She thrust the baby at him. “I just want you to know, Harry,” she said, “that I just ain’t no—”
But he wasn’t listening. He was heading back to the living room with the baby in his arms. “You got to know, Harry,” she said, following after, mumbling, “I want to get dressed up and go out every once in a while, I want, every once in a while—”
A few minutes earlier there had been all that screaming in the living room; now no one was speaking. Vic was standing, and Mr. Wallace was on the floor. On his knees. His forehead was touching the rug, his arms were over his ears. He was not moving.
Harry said, “Hey, did you hit …?” She knew right off how scared he was.
“Uh-uh,” Vic said. “He just crumpled up. You all run out — and he fell down. Like that.”
No one spoke. Vic was scared; she was scared too.
“You didn’t hit him?”
“He just crumpled up.”
Harry walked around Mr. Wallace. His face was no longer red. “Hey, Mr. Wallace?”
A very thin sound rose from the figure on the floor.
“He said telephone,” Vic said. “He said something.”
“He wants to use the telephone,” she said.
“It ain’t connected.”
“Downstairs,” she said. She was shivering. She wished Mr. Wallace would get up off the floor.
Harry was still holding that baby. It was a good baby — it didn’t even cry. But she didn’t want an extra baby anyway.
“Better take him to the phone,” Harry said finally.
She said, “Me?”
“Who’s he going to call?” asked Vic.
“He’s gotta call somebody. Somebody gotta get him …”
Mr. Wallace was rising off the floor. He did not take his arms from his ears. He did not look up. He did not smile — she thought he might; that it might be a joke he had pulled to make them all quiet down.
Vic and Harry were whispering. She led Mr. Wallace down the stairs. When Mr. Phelps opened the door, she said, “Something’s happened to this man …” She couldn’t look at him, and neither could Mr. Phelps, who stepped aside.
At the phone she watched his fingers dialing. But he was not able to speak very well. He handed her the phone — but she didn’t want it either. Mr. and Mrs. Phelps were standing back, watching; when she turned to pass the phone on to them, neither of them stepped forward.
She had to speak into it. “Hello?” she said. “… That was Mr. Wallace. Somebody better come help him … He had some kind of attack.”
The man on the other end asked where she was calling from; in terror, she gave him the address. Had he dialed the police?
She whispered, “Are you the man who’s got a little baby?”
He said that he was.
“Come get it then!” she pleaded. “We don’t want it!” and hung up. She turned to the Phelpses. “Don’t tell Harry—”
But all of a sudden she felt gypped. While she had been holding that baby she should have made Harry promise her something. She should have made him promise to take her out some place nice to eat on Sundays. She should at least have made him promise that! But she had missed her chance. And she was only twenty. Tears came to her eyes again. She could not believe that her good times were all gone.
3
London, November 3
Dear Libby,
Only just a moment ago I opened the envelope from you. I should tell you that I thought I had thrown it away, unopened, months ago. But today it is rainy, and I am about to leave for Italy, and my bags are packed — I am sitting in the hotel lobby, in fact, in the midst of my luggage, waiting before I take a taxi to the airport. Fishing around in my raincoat pocket for my tickets I discovered your letter. I suppose I would have come upon it earlier if it had not been such a fine, dry fall here. Coming upon it another day, I might have thrown it away a second time, despite the numerous forwarding addresses on its face, which give to it an air of earnestness something like your own. It may be that I choose to sit down and answer you now because I am all packed and ready to go. It may be that I have not changed too much, or at all. Nevertheless, I have tried to find enjoyment in traveling, and I think mostly about what I see.
I cannot, of course, come to Rachel’s first birthday celebration, what with four months having elapsed since it was held. However, had I been in America in July, near you and your family, I don’t believe I would have come then either. I am not even sure what to make of your having asked me. Nor am I entirely certain why, once having decided to send me an invitation, you sent only the invitation, and no other word, no further remark.
Sitting here, my first thought as to your motive was not pleasant. I saw you standing above me, saying: We have survived, not you. But I can’t hold that image in my mind — nor the image of you fastening the envelope and slipping it into the box for no other reason than to be arrogant. I may be deceiving myself, but I believe what you hoped was that your invitation would catch up with me and inform me, wherever I was, that Rachel was now one year old, and yours — still and for good. That would have been kindness enough, surely, considering how close I brought all of you to an awful end. But your kindness is even larger, is it not? Knowing you, I think: why wouldn’t it be?
However, if this little card you sent is an invitation to be forgiven — for me to feel free to accept your forgiveness — I must say that I am unable to accept. Because I don’t know that I’m properly penitent. And I feel, perhaps wrongly, that this attitude might qualify your forgiveness.
I can’t bring myself yet to ask forgiveness for that night. If you’ve lived for a long while as an indecisive man, you can’t simply forget, obliterate, bury, your one decisive moment. I can’t — in the name of the future, perhaps — accept forgiveness for my time of strength, even if that time was so very brief, and was followed so quickly and humiliatingly by the dissolution of character, of everything. Others — you — may see my decisiveness — my doing something — anything — that! — as born only of desperation, and therefore without value. I, nevertheless, have to wonder about it a little more. You see, I thought at the time that I was sacrificing myself. Whatever broken explanations I offered to others in the days that followed, whatever — I find I cannot finish this sentence.
The rain has slackened and I must go. I don’t believe that for you and me to correspond, on this matter or others, would be beneficial to either of us. But, of course, you are the one who knows that. I take it now that that was why you thought to have your card say nothing, just the time and the place of the event, and its nature. Thank you. It is only kind of you, Libby, to feel that I would want to know that I am off the hook. But I’m not, I can’t be, I don’t even want to be — not until I make some sense of the larger hook I’m on.
Yours,
Gabe