Read The Twenty-Seventh City (Bestselling Backlist) Online
Authors: Jonathan Franzen
“I never asked you to spend all day in the kitchen,” he said.
At this, her hands reached into the space around her, closing on invisible things. She caught something finally, and her fists dropped to her knees. “My life is in order, Martin.” She paused. “Sometimes I try to do things to make people happy. I don’t ask that they actually be happy, I only want a little credit for the effort, like any first-class citizen.”
“I’m still not clear on what the issue here is.”
“I’ve been saying for two months that I don’t like that woman, and you come home—you’re always coming home, you notice that? You come home and you act like you’ve just discovered her. Like the world was created on Monday, and you’re the first to notice. She acts like
she’s
the first one. She oh forget it. You’re hopeless.” Barbara’s eyes scanned the kitchen table, her head faintly echoing their movement as they followed the scurrying invisible things. Outside, a dog started barking. “But you know what, Martin?” She looked up with a puzzled smile, her eyes moist and bright. “I really like myself.” It was a different woman speaking now, a Barbara much younger. She smoothed her skirt across her lap, gathering the slack under her thighs. Then she sobbed. “I really love myself.”
Probst no longer felt the least bit sick. When she sobbed, he got erections. “I do, too,” he said.
“No you don’t!” She leaped to her feet and kicked backwards, shoving the chair into a cabinet. “How dare you compare that woman to me?
How dare you compare Luisa?
”
Frightened, he pressed his back against the refrigerator. She was advancing on him with an index finger raised and her head turned to one side, as if he were flames or a bitter wind. “You
better not try it again,” she said. “You better watch out. You better start appreciating that girl because if you don’t I’m getting out of here and I’m taking her with me. I love you, too, but—” She drew back. “Not as much.”
“I’m glad we’re clear on that.”
“You’re going to hold that one against me, aren’t you? I can see it in your face. You’re going to save that.”
“Well, what if I do?” The volume of his voice surprised him. “You know I have a cold. I didn’t come home to fight with you. I won’t fight with you. You play as dirty as you say I do. You tell me to go. What, the pain is too great? Something like that. You’re like your sister. It’s all an act. I won’t try to figure out what you pretend you mean. I won’t play that game. You’re just daring me to go upstairs. I’m damned if I do, damned if I don’t. This
is
your fault. You were just asking for it.”
“Well, for God’s sake, the oracle speaks! The sphinx has spoken!”
“You cunt.”
“Is this dignified?”
He stamped on the floor. “You cunt.”
Something hard, a penny or an acorn, struck the outside of the window above the sink, and Barbara shrieked. She grabbed his arm and half pushed, half pulled him towards the door. “Go, go, get upstairs, go.”
He resisted. “Oh, I’m interrupting something?”
Another object struck the window.
“Go upstairs, come down, and be civil, or—” She looked at her hands. “Or I’m going to stick a knife in you.”
“If I don’t kill you first.”
They looked at each other.
“Go!”
He went. He heard her opening the back door and guessed it was Luisa, coaxed home for his birthday, maybe Duane too, and he bolted up the steps two and three at a time.
Calmer after his shower, he took his time dressing. The registers poured heat into the bedroom and carried a faint smell of childhood, of early winter evenings when he was sent upstairs before the pinochle guests arrived. He felt chastened and young.
He worked on his shoelaces. The floorboards were alive with the sound of news downstairs; he should have been watching it, to stay informed.
When he did go down he found Luisa sitting in the den watching
The $10,000 Pyramid
. From the hall, while the television filled her eyes and ears, he had a moment to observe her unobserved. She was leaning to the left on the sofa, in a shallow slouch, with her right leg partially crossed over the left, held in place by the friction of her black cotton pants, and her left arm folded up between her ribs and the cushion. She seemed to have been arrested in a fall towards the screen. If he startled her, she would assume a more comfortable position. She was wildlife, not a daughter; he was seeing in the flesh, in a natural habitat, some exotic antelope he’d hitherto known only from pictures in
National Geographic
. The studio crowd groaned. She shook her head, once, as if shaking water from her ear. Under the pressure of her unawareness, Probst cleared his throat and saw, as she turned to him, what falseness was expected of him now. He was supposed to act like Dad in a television movie, to let the seriousness show in his face when he said—the significant gesture
—Mind if I watch, too?
He stiffened. “Well!”
“Happy birthday,” she said, without inflection.
“Thank you.” He took the chair across the room from her. “Mind if I watch, too?”
“I was going to turn it off.”
“Yes. It’s a dumb show. Here.” He turned it off. Barbara was blending something in the kitchen.
“Well?” Luisa said. “Are you surprised?”
“Oh, very.” He smiled. “It’s a nice surprise. Is, uh, Duane coming, too?”
“He’s working.”
“Can I get you something to drink?”
“St. Louis Magazine wants him to print some pictures. It’s for their January issue and they’re due tomorrow. He’ll be in the darkroom all night.”
“Oh really. You want a beer or something?”
Her face and bearing underwent a mild death, a loss of vitality characteristic of Barbara. “Not right now, thank you.” Soon, at
any moment, she would leave the room, and with an air of reproach that extended to herself, because she didn’t really want to go.
“So,” Dad said, “he’s working, is he? That’s good to hear.”
She nodded. “He still doesn’t make much money, though.” (Money? Barbara gave her money, and she had a credit card, too.) “I guess I eat too much.”
“Sure, you’re still growing.”
From the smile she gave him he could tell this was a good line, though he couldn’t have said why. He asked her some easy questions about her grades, and calculus, and transportation, enticing questions to lure an antelope closer, to accustom her to a more domestic habitat. She gave him another smile, and he was feeling more and more like Marlin Perkins when Barbara’s voice pealed in the kitchen: “Lu, you want to give me a hand here?”
She was gone like a shot.
Not as much
. For eighteen years, in battles more vicious than tonight’s, Barbara had managed to avoid saying that, and now, needlessly, she’d gone and done it. A sportsmanlike sympathy made him reluctant to damn her for the blunder. But she would do the same to him.
Luisa reappeared. “Mommy says we should go in the living room.”
Probst followed her down the hall. When she turned east he headed north into the kitchen. Barbara was pouring frozen daiquiris. She set the pitcher down and without meeting his eyes kissed him hard, raking his neck with her nails. Into his ear she said, “I want to make love after dinner.”
So did he. He always did. But he hadn’t expected this, he’d expected instructions or an apology. This was a threat. This was the big gun, her attempt to save the evening. And certainly it was attractive bait.
“I wouldn’t want to infect you,” he said.
“Oh, I’m sure it’s the same thing I had.” She spun to the counter where the daiquiris stood. “Do you want to take the brie in?”
There were many presents in the living room by the fire she had made. The uppermost gift, wrapped neatly in newspaper, was obviously books. Probst claimed the last daiquiri on the tray and
sat down. Luisa stood warming her back, her glass already half empty. Barbara sat on the sofa in the watchful pose she used to adopt when they played Charades at parties. The silence was made possible by Luisa, who had graduated into self-consciousness and joined them; not long ago, she would have been chattering. She sipped her tropical drink. Track-mounted lamps cast spots on the primitive still lifes. On Sherwood Drive the Probsts were in the jungle, and the flames and shadows vaulted up the walls and gave them a mystic depth. There had never been a moment like this before. The family had changed, and this could be either. Either the last of the old groupings, the last gathering, or the first of the new ones, the first of many. To Probst it seemed the room hung by a thread, and twisted slowly, the flames slanting and stretching. He was dizzy.
“SO HAPPY BIRTHDAY,” Luisa said, raising her glass.
“Yes, Martin, really,” Barbara loading her words with portent. He felt the concentration of her will on him, the reins of desire and threat. Her feet were on the floor. Her legs were somewhat spread.
“Thank you. Should I open these?”
They indicated that he should. He slid out a shirt box and popped the ribbon. A shirt. He thanked. Luisa went and fetched the pitcher of daiquiris, which Barbara said she’d made because she thought they would feel good on his throat.
“They do,” he said. He placed the books wrapped in newspaper on his lap. “It’s a pair of shoes. No, it’s a lunchbox.” He smiled and read the label.
To Daddy from Luisa and Duane
. Tactful indeed. He’d never even met Duane. He thought of Dr. Thompson; why wasn’t his name here, too? And Pat, for that matter. To Daddy from Pat. He smelled roasting beef.
“Aren’t you going to open it?” Luisa said.
He’d returned it to the pile. “I’m saving it. Best for last.”
“Why don’t you open it, Martin?”
He put it back on his lap. It was pleasant taking orders from her. He often imagined how he could have arranged his life differently, been more of a dog when at home, and lived from her hand. “Well! Thank you.”
“What is it?” Barbara asked, suddenly smoking a cigarette.
Probst slid the books across the floor to her and slit an envelope from New York. The card fell out, a black-and-white Happy Birthday from Ginny and Hal, also Sara and Becky and Jonathan. They’d all signed, which was a nice touch. Ginny usually did things right.
“Have you read these?” Barbara asked Luisa.
“Yes,” Luisa said.
Probst waved his fingers for the books. “Can I see ’em again?”
Barbara slid them back to Probst and said, “For school?”
Paterson
, by William Carlos Williams.
The Winter’s Tale
, by Shakespeare.
“Sort of. I’m writing my poetry paper on Paterson.” Luisa glanced at Probst. “Duane recommended them.”
A receipt fell out of the Shakespeare. Paul’s Books, $3.95, plus $5.95, plus tax. $10.50. The waste of money hurt his throat. He put the newspaper in the fire.
“I thought Daddy would like them.” She turned. “We thought you’d like them.”
“I’m sure I will.”
“The big box is from Audrey,” Barbara said.
“Whose husband is trying to ruin me.”
“What?” Luisa said, while Barbara shook her head and tried to be noticed.
“It’s true,” he said. “Your Uncle Rolf has been doing his best to put me out of business.”
“Why?”
“You’d have to ask your mother about that.” His heart was pounding. As he lifted the next package onto his lap he tried to list reasons for controlling himself. All he came up with, literally the only item, was Barbara’s offer. Her whorish offer.
“So are you home for a while?” he asked Luisa. “Or is this only a visit?”
A dark hole opened across the room. It was Barbara’s mouth.
“I hadn’t really thought about it,” Luisa said, apparently sincere.
“Of course not,” Barbara said.
“Of course not? Maybe you haven’t really thought about where you’ve been sleeping for the last three weeks either.”
“I have, Daddy. You know I have.”
“You know she has.”
“You keep the hell out of this,” he said. The command, with Luisa watching, was like a sock in Barbara’s mouth, and she recoiled. “Have you considered apologizing to us?” he said. “Explaining? Promising not to do it again?”
“This isn’t good and evil, Daddy. This is just what I’m doing right now, all right?”
“No. I don’t know what you mean by that.”
“You’re just worried about how things look. You want things to look a certain way. You never called me, or anything. We’ve been—I’ve been waiting. You should apologize, too. How can I think something’s wrong if you don’t tell me?”
“You should know. I shouldn’t have to tell you. I’m very, very, very disappointed in you.”
“Well, what do you think I came home for today?”
“I have no idea.”
“Because Mommy said you wanted me to. She said you loved me and you missed me. I love you and I miss you. So.”
Why wasn’t she crying?
“I can go if you want me to,” she said. “You want me to go?”
Barbara spoke. “Don’t go. It’s your father who should go.”
“I told you to shut up.”
No answer.
He did want to leave. He was standing up. But Luisa beat him to it. She was already out in the hall, and then she was back, and to Probst’s relief and satisfaction she was screaming at Barbara, her fists clenched and body bent, while Barbara simply sat there. “Why don’t you make him shut up? Why don’t you make him? You let him say these things.
Mommy!
You let him do these things, you let him treat you—” She kicked Barbara in the ankle, and shrank, covering her face. “Oh,” she said. She ran upstairs and her bedroom door slammed.
Doors could be identified by their resonance when slammed; the latches also had specific frequencies.
There was a shriek, Luisa, probably some words overamplified. Her door opened, and after a pause a pile of magazines hit the bottom of the stairs, sliding over one another, rolling and flip
ping, right up to the front door. (Probst had been storing a few things in her room in her absence.) The door slammed again.
Barbara shook her head.
“I’m sorry I told you to shut up,” Probst said. “But you were teaming up on me.”
She continued to shake her head.
He was calm and tired. He headed upstairs to apologize. Barbara spoke: