ARK
5220 Dexter Ann Arbor Rd.
Ann Arbor, MI 48103
www.dzancbooks.org
The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
ARK. Copyright © 2016, text by Julian Tepper. All rights reserved, except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher: Dzanc Books, 5220 Dexter Ann Arbor Rd., Ann Arbor, MI 48103.
Designed by Steven Seighman
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Tepper, Julian, author.
Title: Ark / Julian Tepper.
Description: First edition. | Ann Arbor, MI : Dzanc Books, 2016.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016009531 | ISBN 9781941088296 (hardcover)
Subjects: LCSH: Family-owned business enterprisesâFiction. | Dysfunctional familiesâFiction. | Domestic fiction. | BISAC: FICTION / Literary.
Classification: LCC PS3620.E67 A89 2016 | DDC 813/.6âdc23
LC record available at
/2016009531
ISBN: 978-1941088296
First U.S. Edition: September 2016
Printed in the United States of America
10Â Â 9Â Â 8Â Â 7Â Â 6Â Â 5Â Â 4Â Â 3Â Â 2Â Â 1
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To my grandfather, Paul
I. LIQUIDATION SALE
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Like every day, Ben Arkin woke this morning at 4 a.m. and went into his office, a small room at the back of his Wooster Street loft cluttered with stacks of newspapers and books, and commenced with his routine.
A new journal rested on the antique desk and Ben turned to the first page, spreading his hand over the smooth paper. He reached for an obituary from his obituary file
âTHOMAS
POSNER,
FIFTY-THREE,
PANCREATIC
CANCERâ
taped the clipping to the journal page, and circled the age with a red marker. After Posner, there was:
Newman, forty-two, car accident
Smith, seventy-six, liver failure
Hicks, sixty-one, aneurysm
Vanderbilt, seventy-two, heart attack
Morris, forty-nine, lung cancer
With each obituary, Ben drew a red loop around the age of the deceased and taped the square of newspaper into the journal. Why, at eighty-three, to see that he had outlived other men gave Ben a good feeling about himself and the day at hand.
Exercise followed. Two sets of ten push-ups, three sets of twelve sit-ups, three sets of eight barbell curls, four sets of ten jumping jacks, one minute of toe touches, five squats. Below the last obit he wrote down his stats. He took pleasure in looking over the numbers. They were proof of effort in his battle against aging. He liked to clear away his long list of enemies and concentrate on the one named aging in particular. Doing this now, he closed his eyes, pressed his hands together before his chest, and hummed aloud a long, deep note.
Moving on, he addressed sleep. Looking at the chart, he saw:
May 1st, 2014 - 7 hours
May 2nd, 2014 - 8.5 hours
May 3rd, 2014 - 7.5 hours
May 4th, 2014 - 8.25 hours
May 5th, 2014 - 7.5 hours
For last night, the sixth of May, Ben, checking his Mickey Mouse watch and doing the math, wrote down eight hours. It pained him to think of all the time he slept away, creating nothing. Yet he knew that his genius depended more than anything on a good night's rest. In fact, on his list of enemies, fatigue directly followed aging. She was a true bitch. But he had methods for fending her off, too. The ten-minute nap was king. Coffee, yes. However, he also liked to run the bristles of a brush along his body, first the palms, then the neck, then the stomach and chest, for this inspired the skin and senses to awaken.
On the next journal page, he listed yesterday's fruit and vegetable consumption, his vitamin intake, as well as the herbs, roots, and powders he had bought in Chinatown and ingested after lunch:
One multivitamin
Two tablespoons of fresh ginger
Handful of goji berries
One stalk of broccoli
Small scoop of cinnamon
One apple
Go to Chinatown, observe the physical toughness of the very oldest Chinese New Yorkers, and soak in that energy. This was Ben's order to himself, and he did it nearly every day for inspiration. In the last year, as well, Ben had begun posting notes around the loft, by the toilet, at the front door. Things like:
Swoop down. Scoop up. Not me. Not yet.
That Pain Is In Your Head.
I Remember.
At the next moment, he prepared a new note,
PICASSO
DIED
YOUNG,
and glued it to the door of his office. Then he read yesterday's newspapers, showered, shaved, and drank two cups of strong black coffee.
By 7:30 a.m., he was in the art studio with his assistant, Jerome, wrapping the edges of a blank six-by-four-foot canvas in dress-tie material. Many of the ties were the first ever made by Ralph Lauren, worn by Ben thirty-five years earlier, when he was still an ad man. The artist, in his white robe, his gray fringe standing on end from nervous stroking and blue eyes pulsating, was using a scalpel to open the stitching and then stapling the material to the edge of the canvas. He gave the impression of an escapee from a mental ward, a subway panhandler, one of the down-and-out forgotten. It was a look he had spent years cultivating.
His wife, Eliza Arkin, stood behind him in leopard-print pajamas. Her haircut was a perfect dark red bob. Her earrings were gold and jade. Although her Parkinson's medication worked mornings, there was still the semi-paralysis to combat, and her nurse, Violet, a short, heavy yet strong Jamaican woman, waited in the nearby doorway. Grinding out a pain-free look on her china doll face, Eliza was thinking of how hideous a thing her husband had made. Of course, having heard him complain many times of how the paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art were hung in such extravagant frames that you couldn't even see the artwork, Eliza knew what this was about. And it wasn't beauty. This was an act of rebellion. But her husband, at eighty-three, was too old to rebel. At his age, and hers, eighty-one, they should be living in Miami Beach, Collins Avenue, in a simple apartment along the beach with a balcony overlooking the Atlantic, not in this factory.
Granted, it gave her enormous satisfaction to tell anyone how she'd paid only one hundred and sixty-three thousand for her SoHo residence in 1976, and that these days it would fetch six million easily. Yet the envy of those passing below her windows didn't justify the trouble of making a home here. In winter, they froze, the draughts terrible. During summer, they spent five figures on air conditioning. The wood floors had a unique octagonal pattern, but they'd had to replace a panel just last month, and it had cost the same as a pair of round-trip plane tickets to Paris. Pipes ran everywhereâalong the walls, across the ceilings, at the backs of closets and the pantry, the laundry room and bathrooms. They could cover them up, but the old pipes would inevitably leak. Then they were cutting into walls, and the bills for reconstruction were astronomical. Worst of all, her husband's art was everywhere. The living room was over two thousand square feet, and there was hardly room for the sofa and televisionâhis paintings and sculptures were packed in, giving her home the feel of a warehouse. Ben rented a warehouse in Jersey City, a six-thousand-square-foot basement space where thousands of his works were stored. And yet, why did he even make any of this art? He had never sold a single piece.
She said to him, “You waste all my money on this nonsense.”
Ben snatched another tie from the box, slashing it up the belly, saying nothing. He'd never believed Beethoven's late-life deafness was anything more than wishful thinking brought to fruition. You had to want to tune out the world that badly. Then you might wake one morning to discover your prayers had been answered. Ben tapped one ear and then the other to test his own. They were big ears.
To support his back, the artist wore a brown weightlifter's belt, and beneath the white robe, on top and bottom, were gray sweats. His feet were bare. He stood with his knuckles propped on his ribs, so that his elbows stuck out wide, muttering under his breath. Now he took a pink tie in his hand. In an adjacent box, awaiting his scalpel, were eight suits handmade on the Savile Row. He hadn't put one on in over fourteen years. The occasion had been his fiftieth wedding anniversary. He saw no reason to hold onto any of them. He would never get dressed up again. He draped the tie along the edge of the canvas, readied the staple gun and released:
Pop!
Eliza's thirteen medications gave her dry mouth, and there was the sound of her tongue sticking and unsticking to the insides of her cheeks. She said, “I've made up my mind, Ben. We'll sell some of my diamonds to the Russian. We can go to Forty-Seventh Street tomorrow and speak with him. He gives the best prices for diamonds. It's what we'll do. And I'm comfortable leaving the diamonds with the Russian. The thing is, he's not going to pay up front.”
Ben's thumb massaged the dimple in his chin.
“â¦you have to let him sell the diamonds first,” Eliza was saying. “He's very good, though. He'll sell them, and then we'll get the money. Probably next week at the earliest.”
“Good,” Ben replied.
“But it's okay to give him a little time. We don't need the money today. All the same, tomorrow we'll go to Forty-Seventh Street.”
Having already given his answer, Ben wouldn't waste physical or mental energy speaking to the same point twice. Instead, he grunted. A grunt, Ben had concluded long ago, did give the body and spirit a worthy lift.
“Then it's settled,” Eliza said. “Tomorrow.”
Eliza went to lie on the sofa at the back of the loft. She spent whole days there, watching cable news on the fourteen-inch television, reading fashion and tabloid magazines, dozing in and out of sleep. At the moment, she was thinking of all the money she would get from selling the diamonds. She felt extremely confident. Why shouldn't she? Ask a man to turn shit into goldâit was doable but hardly easy. She would give the Russian great stuff. Her father, Karl Fischer, had only bought her mother, Ruth, the very best. Karl had done so well for himself. His business? Steel file cabinets. He'd locked down the account with the U.S. Armed Services and it had been big money from there out. Ruth would sit with her daughter on the large brass bedâa pile of diamonds, so bright, so pretty, between themâand Eliza would tell her mother how they were the most beautiful things.
“Never say a word of this to your brothers and sisters, but I'm going to give them all to you one day,” her mother told her.
An eager young girl, enthralled with the stones, Eliza asked, “When?”
“Right after you marry,” her mother replied.
Three years later, Ben did propose to Eliza. She was in love with him. So she thought. A very handsome man, at the time giving full financial support to his mother and three siblings, earning a good salary and clearly on his way to making a heck of a lot more. Yes, both Eliza and her parents felt extremely optimistic about Ben's economic outlook. That said, when Ben first kissed Eliza it was the diamonds that flashed through her mind. Even now, she could recall Ben returning to her lips for a second kiss. A fine kisser, indeed. But she knew the truth of her weakening stomach, her sweaty palms and feet.