— What else can I do? I asked; I felt like I was begging. — Do you want coffee, mints, magazines, what?
Now they were getting older before my eyes. I thought I could see the translucent white hair of eighty, the slow wither of ninety. I closed my eyes.
— Stop, I said, in a panic. I stepped forward and gripped his shoulder; I could feel the bone.
— Stop what? my father said. — What’s wrong? I have to lie down now. Let go.
He reached forward and carefully peeled my hand from his shoulder.
I began, ridiculously, to cry.
— What’s wrong? my mother said. — It’s nothing new. He’s resting. You know how it is.
— Yes, I said. — But.
— But what? Honey.
They stood, staring at me, somewhat bewildered. I pretended I was sneezing and started to edge my way out.
— Just pick us up at 9:00 AM for the airport, my father said. — Bye.
AT NINE, THEY WERE READY, WAITING WITH THEIR SUITCASES OUTSIDE the hotel, and I picked them up and drove them, slowly, to the airport. I tried to dawdle, go down unnecessary streets, engage them in conversation, but they were already melting from the visit, talking about the movies on the plane and how my father could best nap on the coach seats.
— Just drop us off, my mother said. — So we can go.
I dropped them off by the curb and spent twenty minutes trying to find a place to park. After I found a spot, I hurtled through the airport, looking for them. It felt important to say goodbye, this last minute they would be in this place where I lived. The flatly polite announcer shouted out gate changes. I was the obnoxious linebacker of the airport, knocking past suitcases, tripping over rolling baggage, bumping shoulders with the other passengers. My parents were standing in the security line, clutching their shoes.
— Here you are! I said, breathing hard.
— What are you doing here? my father asked.
— I just wanted — I don’t know. To make sure you were okay.
— We’re okay.
In their trim navy uniforms, the Homeland Security guys glared at me.
— Goodbye, honey, my mother said.
— Well, thank you for everything, my father said.
There was remoteness to their voices; they were moving on. We put our arms around each other, and I could feel their hands gripping my sweater. I stepped back, lifted my sweater off my shoulders, and handed it to them.
— Can you hold this a sec? I asked.
My mother took the sweater. My father grasped a sleeve. I looked at them, standing, holding my sweater. How small they looked, and, simultaneously, looming. Why had I moved away? Why had they not tried to come to see me earlier? Why had my father become ill? Why had I not been good enough to stay, and why had they not found a way to come? How long would we have, on earth, together?
My parents and I stood by the security gate in a sort of polite standoff. Around us was the anxious, determined roar of the airport, the passengers standing on escalators, their faces composed into travel faces, distant and with a sort of grandeur. To my surprise, my parents were assuming this expression too, and suddenly I could recognize it; it was a form of hopefulness.
The Homeland Security crew flanked the entrance to the metal detector.
— Come on through, one announced.
— We have to get going, my mother said. — My feet are getting cold.
They stood, barefoot, each clutching a boarding pass. And my sweater.
— Spit on it, I said.
— What! Your nice sweater? my mother said.
— I have to wash it anyway. Just do it, please.
They looked at each other, bewildered. Who was this weird child they had spawned? Then my mother, slowly, daintily, spit into my sweater. She passed it to my father, who leaned forward and spit, too.
— Okay, I said, somehow relieved. — Thank you.
We kissed again, lips touching cheeks, softly; then we released each other, and they walked through the metal detector, heading toward their gate.
The sweater smelled like them, their peculiar salt, their sweet fragrance. I did not know how long the sweater would smell like them, how long I would remember the way they gingerly walked inside the airport terminal, how long it would take me to drive home, holding onto the wheel, turning through street after street, how long it would take me to go visit them again, how long it would be before they died, and then how long I would own this sweater, how long I would recognize it as a sweater, how long my children would keep it after I was gone. I held onto the steering wheel, and I wondered how long before the tracks from the tires would disappear and it would be as though none of this, none of it, had ever really happened.
Refund
They had no contract. It would be a simple transaction. A sublet in Tribeca for the month of September. Two bedrooms and a terrace: $3,000.
They were almost forty years old, children of responsible middle-class parents, and they had created this mess out of their own desires. Josh and Clarissa had lived for twelve years in a dingy brick high-rise in the Manhattan neighborhood of Tribeca. They had been lonely, met, married, worked at their painting for years, presented their work to a world that was indifferent, floundered in debt, defaulted on student loans, began to lie to their parents about their financial status, and lived in a state of constant fear. They decided once to do miniature medieval paintings that no one would care about but themselves, for the art was just for themselves, anyway, or taking the other tack, decided to do something so deplorable it would have to sell for a truckload of money. They decided to go into pet portraiture, which could fund their real art, and bought ads in local papers — whereupon they found that pet portraiture was a crowded field, and one in which the local masters were competitive and vengeful. In high school, she had wanted to have a painting in the Met. Now she was trying to figure out how to borrow paints from her artist friends and cleverly not give them back.
They lay in bed at five thirty in the morning, listening to their three-year-old son, Sammy, hurtling toward the first sunbeam with the calclass="underline" “Hello. Ready now. Hello.” The wistful, hopeful cry made their blood go cold. One of them stumbled toward the relentless dawn, inevitably tripping over the trucks that Sammy had lined up in hopeful parades, convinced that there was somewhere wonderful to go.
THEIR SUBSIDIZED LOW-RENT APARTMENT WAS LOCATED IN A SEVENTIES high-rise where they had braved the abandoned, crumbling warehouses and hefty rats for a rent so cheap they could not afford to live anywhere else. But then the neighborhood changed. They were on the strip of land known as Tribeca, their building a few blocks south of Canal, six blocks north of the World Trade Center, and now there were lofts selling for $20 million, new restaurants with glossy, slim customers posed as though in liquor ads, movie star neighbors moving in such rarified circles they were never actually seen. The building owners were given government subsidies, which meant the tenants’ rents were low, but the owner had said that he would buy out of the program the next year, and thus turn their low-rent apartments into million-dollar condos and effectively send the one thousand tenants out onto the street. Walking into their own building, they heard shrill arguments about the misbehavior of companion animals, feuds about laundry hoisted prematurely out of the dryer. The residents were on edge because they were doomed; Josh and Clarissa now skulked through their neighborhood with the cowed posture of trespassers.
SOON IT WOULD BE TIME TO SEND THEIR SON TO A PRESCHOOL. IN the park sandbox, mothers talked about Rainbows, the most expensive preschool in the area. Those who had been turned down or could not afford the school spoke of it with a strangled passion. One mother claimed she had stormed out when the director had asked to see her income tax statement during an interview. But another mother, whose son was a student there, leaned toward Clarissa one day after admiring Sammy’s exuberant personality and said, “That’s the only place where they truly treat the children like human beings.”