Read Among the Ten Thousand Things Online

Authors: Julia Pierpont

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Family Life, #Coming of Age

Among the Ten Thousand Things (10 page)

They’d reached a good moment, at the museum, though a lot of the warm feelings dissipated once they hit the streets. It was an observably later day than the one they’d stepped out of, and the hurt that for Kay had begun that Sunday, the distance Jack had felt from her ever since, these things were reintroducing themselves now—they both could feel it—as the streets grew more familiar and as they got closer to home.

Where, at home, Deb was packing and Simon was shouting.

“It’s not
fair.
You can’t
do
this to people.”

“Simon, if you get a suitcase together now, Donald can still come over, he just can’t sleep here.” Deb was on her knees, half-engulfed in the hall closet, where they kept luggage and warm but ugly coats. She’d made her first very big decision. Classes, her own and her children’s, had ended, and she would take the three of them to Rhode Island. To Jamestown, and the little house they owned with Gary, which they hadn’t gotten around to renting out this summer.

She’d received a call not an hour before from Susan Haber, the mother of those awful twins. Her girls had brought something home with them, something Kay had written. Disturbing in nature, she’d said. Disturbing how?

“Well, sexual,” Susan had said. “Obviously inappropriate.”

“That doesn’t sound like her.”

The Haber woman had read some excerpts: “Jerry wants Elaine to show it to her. Elaine says, ‘Oh God, I’m so—’ ” Susan coughed, and the words did sound like someone Deb knew.

She’d talked herself into Rhode Island in the (minor) frenzy she’d worked up waiting for Jack and Kay as the time under the TV changed from five to six, and in her head she’d talked everyone else into it too. Izzy had asked where they were summering. So? Here was summer. They’d meant to go every year. So? The last time they’d gone she’d been breastfeeding Kay. But what about the plumbing and pipes and gas or electric (she wasn’t sure if it was gas or electric or if it could be both)? What about the breakers? Well, what about them? I’ll hire someone, I’ll hire someone!

She bought three tickets for the next morning train.

Unlucky for Simon to walk into that, Deb’s electric atmosphere. His day was shitty already. He and Donald had stopped for burgers at the diner down the hill. With classes over, it was more crowded than usual, and they’d had to stand at the counter while Simon tried not to get caught watching Jared and Elena together in a booth that could have seated four, and might have, had the Confucianism presentation not gone so badly. Mr. Dionisio had given them a B, low in the world of oral presentation. It wasn’t the grade, he knew, that bothered Jared, who was already in at Emory, but that the script had come across stiff and embarrassing. Another group had handed in 108 blank pages on their topic, Zen Buddhism, and got an A.

On the train into Manhattan, Simon had for once been appreciative of his friend’s talent at one-sided conversation, which today confined itself mostly to his position on a variety of superhero franchises. Thank fuck that Simon hadn’t said anything yet about what had happened with Elena, who since that Monday had ceased to know him at all. A common thing in high school, selective social amnesia, especially among pretty girls. Donald got off the train two stations early to pick up his copy of
2K
with the plan of meeting back at Simon’s house.

That plan was being challenged now, and he would not give it up. “What do you
mean
? There’s nothing
in
Rhode Island!”

“There’s country there. There’s water and trees.” She pulled a dusty duffel from behind two tubes of Christmas paper. “There are lighthouses. Will this work?”

“You’re not
listening
to me!” He kicked the air behind his mother, which she could not see, and stomped his foot, which she could hear.

“Simon, come on!” She stood to face him, brushing the floor from her clothes.

“I never have
anything.
Don’t you think I’ve been through enough?”

“This is what we’re doing.” She didn’t shout, but she didn’t have to. It was enough of a change just to sound this way, severe.

“Jesus,
fuck.

“Stop.”

“Fuck, it’s not fair,
fuck.

“Stop.”
There, she’d shouted. Also, she’d grabbed him by the arm, very hard, and held it until he pulled away.

“Ouch.”

He went to his room, and when she came in a few minutes later, he was packing. Her voice was changed again, back to soft. “Sweetie? Sy? You can still have Donald over tonight, you know? Just not to stay.”

“It’s fine. I don’t want him to come here.”

“But you two could still—”

“I already told him no, okay?” He was grabbing clothing by the armful and dumping it into the rolly suitcase they’d bought him a few years back. There were still airport tags looped around the handle from the London trip.

“Okay. Well, if you change your mind.”

“I still think this is the stupidest fucking thing.”

She went back out to the living room, to knot toiletries inside produce bags from Fairway, and to watch the clock until Jack and Kay came home, ten minutes later. Deb studied her daughter, who didn’t look at all changed from that morning—those words she’d written nowhere on her face—and she didn’t want to embarrass Kay, didn’t want to broach the subject the wrong way. When she announced her decision, Jack raised every objection she’d rehearsed already.

“What car will you use?”

“We won’t need a car.”

“If there’s an emergency?”

“They have taxis there too.”

“You know how much work that house is going to need?”

“I know, cobwebs! I’ll deal with it.”

“What about the pipes? Something bursts? I’ll stay out of your way here.”

“Sy’s too old for camp and Kay doesn’t really like it, right?”

Kay took her cue: “Not really.”

“And I hate this city,” Deb added, and went to pack her closet.

“You don’t,” he said, following her. In the bedroom he shut the door and asked, “Why?”

“Because, I can’t—it’s too confusing right now.” She swung open the closet, disappearing behind the mirrored door, which reflected the made bed and bookcase behind.


Why
is it confusing?”

“Don’t.”

“I’m just saying the fact that you’re confused, that means something. You don’t think that’s a good sign that means something?”

“I don’t think we can have any kind of signs.”

“But we should deal with this together.”

“If we do that, then I won’t make the right decision.” Knocking the closet further open so that Jack was faced with his own reflection.

“How do you know what’s the right decision?” Jack moved closer in the mirror, saw himself say, “If
being
with me
is going to influence you, how is that wrong?”

“You can’t force me into this.”

“Who’s forcing? At all?” He’d gotten loud again without realizing. Wasn’t he calmer than this? Wasn’t he much, much calmer than he seemed? “Come on, I know. Don’t go. Don’t be out there alone.”

Deb looked at him, her arms full of soft, woven things. “We won’t really be alone. We’ll have Gary.” She hadn’t meant to bring Gary into this. She’d gone off script.

“You don’t know he’s there now.”

“He will be. We spoke,” she said and went back out to the hall.

Jack’s wife and his old college roommate spoke. Another of the small things that alienated him, in increments, from his own life, like coming home to find the furniture rearranged. Like the time the corner bagel shop had closed without warning. The bagel shop had become a hat store had become a place for pet accessories, tiny tubed sweaters and gold leashes.

He was being subtracted from everything, like a character made to look at the world, how life would go on, after he died.

The kitchen table does not disappear because the room is empty and the doors all closed, and other people’s lives go on without you in them.

Fine. Fine except Kay, in the corner, was thinking of things she wanted to say. At the museum she’d faced down the idea that liking her father required treason against her mother. She’d faced it down and found she might not have to feel that anymore. For a moment she’d seen the way out through all that had happened, which was like looking down one end of a bendy straw: tricky. She couldn’t see it anymore—she’d lost it somewhere on the walk home—but it had been there, flashing, when they were with Brown Bear.

It was something her mother couldn’t see and her brother wouldn’t try to, but she was not like Simon, she let things be taken away. Worry bullied her insides until she was back in her room, packing and putting on her PJs. Worry brought out the quiet in her. She lay down on her bed and listened to the sounds her family made.

In the kitchen the stove clicked on. Rice slid in all its pieces from a cardboard box. The printer was running in the back bedroom, and she could hear the cheerful chimes of text messages arriving on the other side of the wall.

Her father, eating in the living room, fork to plate. Hard to get those stubborn bits. Her mother, carrying a sheet of paper to the fridge, snapping it on under a magnet. In Simon’s room there were fewer friends to type to. People were going to bed.

Her mother on the phone with Ommy.

Her father turning pages of newspaper.

Her brother, talking without talking, late into the night.

Kay didn’t think she’d slept at all, only then it was light out, and there was her mother dressed and ready and Simon sitting under a storm cloud in the kitchen.

They were out by the elevator, her father supplying the saddest send-off from the door, when Kay threw down her bag and demanded they stay.

No. She didn’t. But she might have.

That would have been one way for life to go, of the thousands of ways it could splinter and fly off; it might have meant a new branch, or tree, if they hadn’t gone away or if they’d taken Jack with them. If they’d gone the next day, the next week. Even if she’d said something and Deb had not listened to her. That would have meant something too. But Kay, like her mother, was slow to make decisions. She didn’t trust her judgment and was afraid of being wrong.

So Kay was still in the hall, throwing down her bag, even as she was in a taxi, her legs crowding the hump of the middle seat, her mother to one side, printed e-tickets folded carefully around the bar codes, her brother on the other, turned aggressively toward the window. Something pounding on the radio filled the silence and still she was in the hall, saying no, her eyelashes sticking together in points, her crying bringing out that vein in her forehead and her dress gathered up in small fists she pressed into her sides. In the cab they hurtled downtown fast—it felt fast—even as everything outside slowed. They leaned against a long, lurching turn onto Seventh. A man on a street corner stepped off the curb, his coffee cup held up and away like a torch. The cabdriver’s name was Mamadou. And Kay was still in the hall, her brother holding the elevator, her mother bent down in front of her, clutching her mother’s face and saying,
Listen.

They went. They were away two weeks.

Jack went too, a day or three later, though not to where they were. He brought the cat in a carrier to Ruth’s, where it moaned, homesick, and scratched the back wall of the closet, behind the coats.


For eighteen days the apartment sat empty. Fine dusts and pollen collected on the windowpanes and the mirrors stood with no one in them. Nothing in or out of the closed-circuit space. Only the wireless went on, invisibly complicating the air.

Folds in the mostly made beds sank deeper into themselves. Stains stayed stains, in the hampers and dresser drawers. In the kitchen, a milk-clouded spoon fixed to its bowl and magnets drifted down the refrigerator.


Then they came home, to the Ruth-gathered mail rubber-banded on the dining table and to everything—the graduated spines of books, rosettes on the living room rug—that looked suspiciously still.


The third week in July, the AC blew only hot air and they sat in front of fans.


Jack moved into his studio and then to a larger place in Sunnyside, Queens, with enough space for his work to live at home with him and for the kids to visit, when they were willing.


Deb moved, too: the bed to the opposite wall. Pillows at the foot of it.


For eleven August hours, they had the hurricane and bodega bags of ice.


Simon and Kay saw all the summer disaster movies in one trip to the Empire 25.


Jack and Deb stopped being married to each other.


That fall, Kay joined the field hockey team at school and spent the season on the bench beside the cooler, pressing grooves into the foam of her shin guards.

Simon became more and more like (this). He carried his videogames into his room and hooked them up to Jack’s old college television, which he got out of basement storage.


New Year’s, and a new year.

In Sunnyside, Jack began to work with smoke. He hung strips of paper like canopies from the ceiling and set fire to whatever was handy and burned powerfully, learning to make the blued white wisps rise in ways he wanted. He made the Manhattan skyline as it looked from a park on Vernon Boulevard, and the 59th Street bridge, its steel crosshatchings, from underneath like a zipper to the sky. Also the Shea Stadium parking lot and new baseball field, named for a bank. He held the smoking things high to make the darker marks, low and away for the flittering, coffee-stain singes. The kids spent one of their million weekends there, and the sliced hot dog and pasta Jack made for dinner tasted like burning.


Spring came and no one filled the ice trays. The glowing green clock on the oven fell an hour behind.

Isabel Davey’s book came out. The author photo, Izzy in high-contrast black and white, shoulders encased in something boat necked, made it impossible for Deb to find anything to wear the night of the party.

Deb? It’s me. I tried your cell.

It’s in the other room. In my bag.

What are you watching?

Jon Stewart.

Good?

Mmm. I haven’t really been paying attention.

My Internet here is for shit. I can’t stream anything.

You should call someone.

I’ve gotta get the guy in again. But it’s these walls, though. They’re concrete.

Listen. I can’t really talk.

Okay, if it’s a bad time—

That’s not why…Jack, hello? That’s not why.

Okay, yeah. Jeez.


Halloween. Reese’s wrappers and the wicks of silver Kisses papered the streets like leaves. Ruth took Kay to Jack’s opening at a gallery in Brooklyn, where there was only wine to drink and no one their ages.

In the kitchen, the oven clock synced back with time and Simon stood watching his Pop-Tarts revolve in the yellow hum. Deb said, “Maybe you should spend less time at sleepovers,” and Simon said, “Sleepovers, Mom, really?” He laughed and shook his head and said okay. She asked how was Donald anyway, and Simon laughed harder and said, “That fag.” She said, “Well, just please don’t stand so close to the microwave.”

Jack bought himself a Christmas tree and carried it home alone, hand-sized hole clipped into the plastic netting, fingers to blisters by the time he got home (no gloves).


New year. Snowflakes looked like skeletons of something else.

The oven clock became wrong again. Someone finally fixed it, so that the next November it fell an hour ahead. Kay auditioned for the school play, which was
Our
Town.
She read for Emily and was cast as one of the mothers.

Ruth died. Jack went to the funeral, sat at the back and didn’t talk much to anyone. Kay asked what did
levayah
mean and Deb shushed. “It means
to accompany,
” Simon answered, showing her the bright white face of his phone.

Deb woke up earlier and earlier, at six or five-thirty. In the hall she turned the knob to Simon’s room, and if the door was locked she knew he was home. When she washed his hoodies they smelled thickly of spearmint gum, skunk, and burnt leaves.

Nubs of paper towel began showing up in the carpet, wherever Travolta left a mess. Kay filled out an entry form online and eleven weeks later received a forty-eight by seventy-two-inch poster for a television show on the CW, which by that time had been canceled.


It took everyone too long to realize Simon was failing school. “Aren’t your grades slipping?” Deb asked over his report card. “When were my grades ever good?”

Toward the end of his senior year, Jack and Deb agreed to send Simon to a wilderness retreat in Virginia for troubled teens. “We can’t take him if he’s an addict,” the program director said in their overlit Manhattan outpost.

“We think it’s just pot smoking,” Deb answered.

“Still, anything more serious, we’re not equipped for that kind of thing. If you want, there’s a place in Utah—”

Jack said, “Who said addict? It’s just the pot. It’s fine.”

For seven weeks Simon and eight other boys built campfires and ate dehydrated packs of Yankee Noodle Dandy and were called only by their Nature Names, which they were made to choose their first night there. Simon was Wind.


Night drained the bruisy skies. The world blinked and the streetlamps came on. Travolta died, in the bathroom, a few feet from her litter box.


New year new year new year. The ball thrown in the air comes down faster. The numbers grew too big, unhinged from anything that sounded like time or what kept it. Nineteen ninety-eight was a year. 2015, 2020, those were eyesights. Calendars and the
Times
became props from a space opera. Everyone was always putting the date wrong in the upper right-hand corners of things.

Jack had very few, basically zero, New York openings after Stanley gave up the gallery. His art got smaller, actually smaller, with no more room in his Queens apartment, which did not now seem so big, and no room for it either in the world, which had grown enormously. A school in Arizona invited him to teach, and Jack left New York for good. Or forever, anyway.


Doors to new drugstores whooshed open for anybody just passing. No one knew anyone with an address book but still companies somewhere kept making them. Kay was voted Nicest Girl in the yearbook, but all she’d really ever been was Most Quiet. Simon went out of his way to walk on cobblestones because he’d heard they were good for feet, though he forgot it was Jack who’d told him. He crossed the street, hair growing, nails growing, wisdom teeth two months from cresting.

Deb kept teaching at the college, studio and then dance criticism, and started dating another ex-dancer, a physical therapist called Eli, also divorced. She went to the earliest classes at Steps, fastening her hair the way she used to. She leaned close to the locker room mirror to tweeze the short grays that antennaed around her head.

Kay went to a university in California, and when she came back her name was Katherine.

Simon stayed Simon, at a college in the city.


On his faculty ID card, Jack wasn’t smiling. It was a webcam, and he hadn’t even known they were taking it—no flash, no birdie. In the photograph, his face, half under hologram, came out swollen on one side like he’d just had oral surgery. Or squirrelly, which is what he said to the girl who took it, meaning that he looked to be storing nuts for winter.

On Craigslist, fewer people responded to rentals without photos. Simon got a deal on a brownstone apartment in Crown Heights, where each morning sparrows hopped their cotton-ball bodies along the fire escape and would not shut up.

Deb moved into Eli’s Tribeca loft. Because of the market or for other reasons, she didn’t sell the apartment uptown.

In Palo Alto, Katherine got a job at a start-up in a technology research park, which in everyone’s head looked like Six Flags.


They used pens made from recycled water bottles, or they didn’t use pens.

Every screen responded to human touch.

A mole on Deb’s face turned out to be cancer, but only stage one. A little plastic surgery and the scar hardly showed. At the gym, she sat in the sauna, with the warped wooden door that snapped shut behind her, feeling surrounded by dock on all sides.

How does anyone get over anything in places where the weather doesn’t change? If you live someplace where the seasons are all the same, how do you get over any one or thing.

When her kids came to visit she wanted to make them so many dinners. I never washed a vegetable until I fed the two of you.


After a few years, people expressed surprise to learn Jack had ever lived in the city. The lope in his speech revived, a timbre he got not so much from Houston as from growing up around his mother. He looked like a carpenter or a woodsman, in flannel and quilted vests. He’d always dressed that way, but only here did it take the form of function over style. The irony being that in New York he had done the hard labor of a carpenter, a metalworker, even a glassblower from time to time, and here his art grew ever finer and more precise, though now he had more studio space than he could fill.

He whittled figures out of chalk, colors mint and lavender and Pepto pink, sidewalk chalk sold by the bucket at a dollar store in town.


The nice thing about the university health clinic was you could make appointments online without talking to anyone.


Katherine sent Deb an invitation to one of her company’s sites, where users set up virtual houses and decorated virtual rooms with JPEGs of furniture they could never afford in real life. Deb made an account, then did nothing with it. She got their newsletters, though, from Your Virtual Decorator, announcing the week’s most popular chaise longue. They bugled into her inbox at five in the morning, when she was usually already awake. She’d clicked the unsubscribe link at the bottom of the page. She didn’t know how to make them stop.


You could also cancel appointments online, at the university health clinic. Under “Reason for Cancellation,” there was an option for “Illness,” but not “Fear.”

A few days after his sixty-sixth birthday, the associate dean who was also his girlfriend brought Jack a bouquet of silver balloons he could see his face in. They sank from the ceiling and stayed at eye level, hovering in the hall. In the morning, he held them out the window, set them free.


Balloons in bare branches look like foil lungs.

All the weight lost made him look better before it made him look worse.

He seemed to spend a lot of time in the rec room, looking at his hands.

The school updated all its access passes, so you didn’t have to swipe but just hold the card to the thing, and everyone had to take new pictures. On his second ID card, he was smiling but rained on, a little deranged.


Jack found, before he died, among his stack of accordion folders, a portfolio of sketches he didn’t recognize. Two of Katherine, around age ten, and a few innocuous still lifes—a cracked egg with the yolk pooling out of it—from the drawing and painting class Simon had failed in high school.

A deep ache in his bones began to wake him in the night. Blood began showing up in his stool.

You ok?

Aces

You get my message?

Saw you left one

You don’t have to play it. Just happy birthday.

I sent you something in the snailmail

Where?

To your Moms

K cuz I don’t have a doorman

It’s an envelope

My very own envelope

Nothing six figures. Happy belated

Simon I love you

Love you lots


The cane tapping and the wheelie suitcase together sound like a horse-drawn carriage.

Sometimes a memory turned out to be only an old picture from an album, a still his brain had fooled him into believing.

And in movies, why are there dial tones anytime anybody hangs up the phone? Is this magical realism?

In the end, what killed him was a mass in his pelvis, the size of a grape.


The end is never a surprise. People say, Don’t tell me, Don’t spoil it, and then later they say, If only I’d known. Nights in old living rooms, on pullout couches left pushed in, light reflects against the glass where the surprises were. We thought we were living in between-time, after this and before that, but it’s the between-time that lasted.

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