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Authors: Allegra Goodman

Kaaterskill Falls (35 page)

BOOK: Kaaterskill Falls
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S
HE
wakes up many times on Wednesday night, and once she wakes shivering, the blanket having slipped onto the floor. Drowsily, reaching for the blanket and pulling it over her, Elizabeth searches for and remembers the events of the day, and what is worrying her. Her dread of the next day’s audience with the Rav brings back a long-forgotten memory of the night before a contest at school when she woke up shivering in the dark, thinking of the teachers waiting for her to recite a pasuk from
B’reishit.
That’s what it’s like, isn’t it? Like school. Like her daughters in the corridors. She has been called out of school to explain herself.

All the next day on her stool behind the Dutch door, Elizabeth rings up groceries for her customers. The young mothers pushing strollers with ungainly babies, some of them sprawled in sleep, some awake and screaming. The older women, who come in pairs, clutching their square-cornered, short-handled pocketbooks, and ordering her about peremptorily. She is nervous even as she marshals her defense. She hasn’t done anything wrong, she tells herself. But her conscience is troubled. She knows that there is something wrong, if not in what she has done, then in the way she has done it. She feels guilty, as if now at last she is being held accountable for thoughts and feelings that have become strong and disrespectful, perhaps even opportunistic. Stop, she tells herself. Stop imagining the meeting this way—as if it were a court-martial, for heaven’s sake. She tries to shake off these thoughts as she closes up early and puts out her handwritten note,
Closed at two today.
She smooths the back of her skirt where it always creases from the stool. It is ten to two.

Heart pounding, she climbs the hill past scraggly blueberry bushes and ragweed and approaches the Rav’s house with its glassed-in porch. Silently, Rachel Kirshner shows her into the Rav’s library and leaves her there in the dark, book-lined room, almost exactly like the library in the city. The furniture is the same, the desk placed in the center of the room with the large table behind it. But instead of the old Rav, the middle-aged Rav Isaiah looks up from his desk, a much younger face. “Good afternoon,” Isaiah says. “Where is Mr. Shulman?”

“He is in the city,” Elizabeth answers, steadying her voice.

“I see,” the Rav says mildly enough. Clearly, he won’t refuse to talk directly to women as his father had. “Please come sit down.”

She takes a red leather chair near the desk.

“Mrs. Shulman,” the Rav says, “I have some questions about the store.” He pauses there.

Elizabeth says nothing. Instinctually she holds back. She needs to see where he’s going.

The Rav keeps waiting. He waits until he makes her silence uncomfortable. Until it seems there in the library that she is keeping something from him.

“What has disturbed us,” he says at last, “is that there are reports you have been selling food that is not sanctioned by our community.” He leans toward her across his desk.

She has never seen him this close. Behind his glasses his eyes are warm brown, not black. His hair is threaded with white.

“What are you asking me?” she inquires respectfully, but with precision, as if she were in court.

“I am concerned,” Isaiah says, “that you have been pushing your letter of permission from the Rav,
zichrono tzaddik livracha
, farther than it was meant to go. Bringing up food from outside, catering events—if in fact you have been doing these things. These were not provided for in the original license. And what I am asking, first of all, is, were you doing this? Bringing up food with other hechshers.”

She stiffens slightly. “Yes,” she says.

“And did you bring up food for a party?”

“Yes,” she says.

He knits his fingers and rests his two hands together on the desk. “Well,” he says, “of course, you understand that this is well beyond the scope of the permission given to you.”

“But it wasn’t forbidden,” Elizabeth says. “It wasn’t clear—”

“If it wasn’t clear, then you should have asked,” the Rav reminds her. “Unfortunately you did not ask. You took it upon yourself to interpret his permission as you wished. Then you sent me a request to renew your license. Now”—he picks up her letter. There is a hard quietness about him as he sits there in front of her and silently reads her request to reopen the store next summer. “I am in a position,” he says, “—have a responsibility—to uphold the halachic standards of
this community, and I don’t think I can renew a license that has not been honored. It may be true that you did not violate the arrangement, such as it was. But it is clear that you did not honor it either.” He puts the letter down, simply places it, her store, her idea, on the desk.

“No,” Elizabeth says, “I don’t think that’s entirely true, because the work I did was good work, and I did it in the way I had presented it to him—”

“A license from the Rav is not a blank check.” Rav Isaiah speaks more quickly than before. “And the Rav’s signature is not to be misapplied. His name on a document is a matter of trust—”

“And trust in me?” Elizabeth asks. “Is it an agreement if only one party determines what kind of trust it is, if only one side writes it and signs it, gives it and takes it away?” As soon as she speaks she regrets her words, but she could not help herself. She sees that the Rav is angry, but she is angry too.

Rav Isaiah looks at the frank-faced woman across his desk. One thought galls him; one thing enrages him. She would never have spoken to his father this way. She would never have dared. He takes a breath; he collects himself before he speaks. “I can’t allow this to continue,” he says. “You are not honoring your commitment. You will have to close the store.”

“Let me explain the situation,” Elizabeth says, her face reddening.

“I think I understand the situation quite well,” the Rav tells her. “It will have to stop. Immediately.”

Then Elizabeth can say nothing. He has made his decision, and there is nothing else to say.

S
HE
walks back to Hamilton’s store. She strides down his narrow aisle to her Dutch door in back. James Boyd has already arrived with the week’s delivery. He and Ira are unloading the truck together, stacking boxes and carrying two at a time up Hamilton’s back steps.

“Hello,” Elizabeth hears James calling. “Hello, anybody home?” They walk into the little storeroom where Elizabeth stands among the boxes and the freezer cases.

“I’m sorry,” Elizabeth says, “I’m going to need your help packing
up these things. I’m going to have to return them to the city—and the ones you’ve just brought too.”

“Now, wait a second,” James says.

“Of course, I’ll pay you anyway,” she tells him.

“Hold on—we drive to the city and pick up this load and now you say you don’t want the stuff?”

Pale, Elizabeth stands before them. “I’m going to have to close the store,” she says.

“I don’t understand,” James says.

“Well …” She hesitates. She doesn’t know how to put it. “I had permission. I had a sort of a license, and I don’t have it anymore.”

“You lost your license? I didn’t know you needed a license to sell frozen chicken breasts,” says Boyd. “And why didn’t you tell us this before?”

“It just happened. This afternoon,” Elizabeth says. “You were already on the road.”

“Can I put this stuff down?” Ira asks from behind.

“Look, if you think I’m driving all the way back to the city—”

“Oh, no, not today, of course not today,” Elizabeth says. “We’ll set another day. Next week. I’m going to have to call the suppliers in the city.”

James starts to speak and then stops.

Elizabeth sees that he is almost afraid to make her talk. Another word and she’ll be crying.

She tells him she will call later. In a few days. She writes him a check and records it in her checkbook. She writes a check to Hamilton for the whole month’s rent. It is a lot of money. A lot of wasted money. She closes up her gray cash box and puts her ledgers in her old canvas tote bag, silk-screened
Kendall Falls Library.

She cannot explain it to James Boyd or to Hamilton. The Rav has taken her store away from her. He has decided to take it away. And there is no recourse for her. No way to appeal or argue her case before the Kehillah. The decision is made. She can’t negotiate.

Elizabeth has never questioned the Rav’s judgment before, the old Rav’s decisions on halachic matters. That self-cleaning ovens are acceptable for cooking on Pesach, but continuous-cleaning ovens
should never be used on that holiday. That families should eat in their sukkahs on the eighth day of Sukkot. His determinations about education for the children, the tunes sung on Shabbes, the kind of clothes the men should wear, or the hair coverings for women. They were all such small things, transparent, and easy, like air. She never experienced disapproval; she never did anything to merit a rebuke. But when she made something new, the Rav took it from her. When she found something for herself and for the community, then he took it away. He looked at her across his desk as if she existed only on sufferance.

Tremblingly, Elizabeth packs up her makeshift store. She takes down her fluttering calendar. Of course everyone will talk about it. Of course everyone will know. She is shaking, angry to the tips of her fingers. She pulls the Rav’s framed letter off the wall and it drops from her hands. The cheap glass cracks, and one piece shatters on the floor.

“What’s that? What’s that?” Hamilton calls out from the front of the store over the grinding of the ice machine. “You break it, you buy it.”

But Elizabeth closes the Dutch door. She shuts herself into the windowless storeroom. Sitting with her feet up on the rungs of her stool, she ignores the ice machine and the bell ringing as customers come in Hamilton’s front door. She holds herself and rocks softly back and forth, hot and flushed from the close air.

B
Y EVENING
all the summer people know about the store’s closing. The women talk about Elizabeth on their porches, and in their lawn chairs. When they call their husbands in the city, they tell them that Elizabeth Shulman has lost Rav Isaiah’s permission and shut down her business. Even the children know something of the story. They talk about the store as they pedal up Maple. They call to each other in their flock of bicycles. “Ruchel’s mother closed her store. Did you know that?”

“The Rav made her close it down.”

“Ooh.”

“What did she do?” “Nothing!” Ruchel shouts.

Even Beatrix has heard about Elizabeth. She and Cecil have heard from Nina that something has gone wrong with the store, and that Elizabeth has closed up shop. Beatrix thinks it over, pacing on the porch. Back and forth she walks, considering Elizabeth’s situation. Then at last Beatrix says to Cecil, “I’m going over to talk to her.”

“All right,” says Cecil.

“Aren’t you coming?”

“I’m far too comfortable where I am,” Cecil admits. Deep in the wicker couch, he is reading his
TLS.

Beatrix sighs. “It was such a lovely image I had in my mind, Elizabeth twiddling her toes in the twentieth century with Hamilton as her sort of duenna. I don’t see why she had to close. I wouldn’t have done it—”

“You are not Elizabeth,” says Cecil, “to state the obvious.”

“I meant in her position.”

“You would never be in that position,” he says.

“Don’t be so literal. Could I tell her?” Beatrix calls back from the porch steps. “Are we telling people?”

“If you want,” says Cecil.

In the twilight Elizabeth’s children are playing with an old soccer ball. Elizabeth is watching on a lawn chair in the grass.

“Elizabeth?” Beatrix lopes around the side of the bungalow in white jeans and a hooded sweatshirt. “How are you? Nina told us there’s been a rabbinical eyebrow raised at you. I was just coming to say My God, and how awful, and—you know—how absurd. Are you all right?”

“I’m fine,” Elizabeth says.

Beatrix looks at her carefully. “No, you aren’t,” she says.

Elizabeth smiles. She cannot describe to Beatrix how she feels, so small and sick and cold.

“Well,” Beatrix says, “I wanted to tell you something. I hope it cheers you up. You’re the first one I’m telling. We’re reproducing ourselves. We’re having a baby in March.”

“B’sha’ah tova!”
Elizabeth uses the traditional formula, May the
baby be born at a propitious hour. She does not mention her own pregnancy.

“I’m a bit … terrified about it,” Beatrix says, sitting down on the grass before Elizabeth. “Not just the pregnancy and the labor, but the child. I’ve been working so long on my papers and my lectures. I’m only used to thinking about my mathematics, and my career—I’ve never
liked
distractions. And the thought of having something so distracting as a child … You’ll have to advise me. You’ll have to tell me how I’m going to manage.”

“You’ll manage beautifully,” Elizabeth exclaims. “You’ll see that when it happens and when you have the child you’ll forget all about not having distractions….” She speaks reassuringly and, she hopes, cheerfully to Beatrix. And as Elizabeth talks, she finds to her relief that her voice does not betray her. She does not sound like a person whose heart is broken.

BOOK: Kaaterskill Falls
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