Read That Old Cape Magic Online
Authors: Richard Russo
Wiping his fingers on a napkin, he adjusted the mirror, turned the key in the ignition and shifted into reverse. Hed have to apologize, of course, for everything hed allowed to happen, but he knew it wasnt really apologies Joy cared about. Shed been right all along that his parents, not hers, had intruded on their marriage with such disastrous consequences, which meant that he had to figure out how to convince her that all that was finally over, that they could begin again with a clean slate.
Clean slate
. Those were the exact words in his head at the moment of impact. The sound was explosive: the initial boom, then the shattering of glass and the shriek of metal on metal, as the back of Griffins head hit the padded rest. Ow! he said, rubbing his neck, just as hed always done as a kid after one of his fathers rear-enders, all of which had occurred just like this one, completely without warning.
Ow
. A childs word, and hed spoken it in a childs voice, full of grievance and resentment. He half expected to see a childs startled, betrayed eyes, not his fathers knowing, sad ones, staring back at him from the rearview.
The driver of the other car, a teenaged boy with an acne-ravaged face, appeared at his window. You okay? he said.
Griffin couldnt tell whether the boy was asking if he was hurt or why on earth he was laughing. Griffin rolled down his window and told him he was fine, just surprised.
I dont see whats so funny, the kid said tentatively, as if, given the difference in their ages, he wasnt sure he was entitled to this opinion.
Wait a few years, Griffin told him, unlatching his seat belt and getting out.
The other vehicle was a late-model BMW. The boy had also been backing out. Griffin identified the parking space hed just vacated, saw in his minds eye the perfect arc in space and time that had resulted in their violent meeting, each blind to the others existence until the instant of collision. Both trunks had sprung and were standing up at perfect right angles. Griffin tried to close his, but the lock mechanism wasnt properly aligned anymore, and it popped right up again. Both sets of taillights were smashed, both bumpers crumpled. It was the kind of wreck that wouldve cost his father a few hundred bucks to repair, but today would run into thousands. Otherwise, the vehicles looked drivable. I guess we should exchange insurance information, he said.
At this the boy visibly wilted, as if the necessity were tantamount to admitting that, yes, theyd just had an accident, something he still hoped might be avoided.
Griffin got a pen and a piece of paper from the car and handed them to him.
The boy said, Couldnt we just
, then lapsed into silence.
The cops would have to be called, of course, but when Griffin went back to the car he saw that the cup holder where his cell had been sitting was now empty. He finally located the phone on the floor under the rear seat. Its screen was black, and when he pressed the space bar it stayed black. He pressed several other keys and was about to give up when the screen suddenly leapt to life with a message: CALLING JOY. Before he could hit the button to disconnect, he heard his wife answer, her voice sounding tinny and far away.
Joy, he said. He was about to explain that he hadnt meant to call when he realized that this might just be the moment of grace hed been waiting for yesterday and had given up on. Is this a bad time?
Im in the car, she admitted. Im surprised to hear your voice. I guess I thought youd be halfway back to L.A.
He decided on a jaunty tone. No, Im on the Cape. I called to tell you its official. Ive become my father. I just backed my rental car into a brand-new BMW. We scattered his ashes yesterday, and I think this might be his way of telling me I wont be rid of him so easily. When she didnt immediately respond, he realized just how forced the jauntiness must have sounded. We did Mom, too, he continued more seriously. Near Chatham. Her favorite part of the Cape.
Are you okay? Was anyone injured?
No. To both questions.
Silence again.
So why tell me about it?
was what she must have been thinking.
And heres the really weird part, he said, unsure whether he was just talking to keep her on the line or, in some roundabout fashion, finally coming to the point. Since yesterday, maybe for a while before that, Ive been wondering
He stopped here, unsure how to continue, though what hed been wondering couldnt have been simpler. Ive been wondering if maybe I loved them. Its crazy, I know, but
do you think thats possible?
Oh, Jack, Joy said, as if she wouldve liked to ask where in the world hed done his graduate work. Of course you did. What do you think Ive been trying to tell you?
In the rearview mirror Griffin could see the boy, pen in hand, staring blankly at the piece of paper, as if hed forgotten his very identity.
Jack?
Im here, he told her, then, a moment later, heard himself ask, Is there anything left, Joy, or did I kill it all?
She didnt answer immediately, and he understood that the long, painful beat of silence was what hed been dreading far more than the final verdict. You came close, she finally admitted, sniffling. But no. You killed only the part that could be killed.
They talked for another minute or two, though only about logistics. She offered to drive down to Falmouth, but he told her that wouldnt be necessary. In a town this size he shouldnt have any trouble finding a bungee cord to secure the trunk, his fathers time-honored solution and good enough for now. Itd probably take him an hour or so with the cops, after which, if the car was drivable, hed be back on the road. They left it that theyd meet just over the Sagamore. They could have some lunch around there, call the rental-car company and find out what they wanted him to do with the wreck, then drive home together.
When he hung up, his mother said,
There, was that so difficult?
Yeah
, he told her,
it was
.
He expected a smart-assed retort but it didnt come, and when it didnt he became aware of an unfamiliar but extremely pleasurable feeling. How to describe it? Plumb. He was feeling plumb. Okay, maybe not completely, but no more than a half bubble off. Plumb some. As good as could be expected. He wondered if
plumb
might be another word for happy.
I think maybe Im going to be okay, Mom
, he ventured. Still no response.
I guess what Im saying is its okay for you to be dead now. Both of you. In fact
, he added, afraid hed given them too much leeway,
I insist
.
The boy was kicking impotently at the brightly colored shards of taillight glass when Griffin returned. Hed somehow written down all the necessary information, and his name was Tony Loveli. He was sixteen. My fathers on his way, he said. Hes going to kill me. I just got my license last week.
Dont worry, Tony, Griffin said. Well tell him it was my fault.
The kid shook his head morosely. You dont understand. Thats not going to matter. Hes a divorce attorney. A complete and total fucking asshole.
Not complete, Griffin said, though of course hed never met the man, who might well be an asshole. Not total.
A fat gull circling overhead screeched a loud objection. Griffin watched it warily, but it was just a stupid bird, and after a moment, no harm done, it flew away.
Acknowledgments
Okay, I admit it. I had help. Many thanks to my agents, Nat Sobel, Judith Weber and Joel Gotler; to my editors, Gary Fisketjon and Alison Samuel; to Emily Milder, Gabrielle Brooks, Meghan Wilson, Russell Perreault, Kate Runde, Victoria Gerken and all the other good folks at Knopf/Vintage who sell my books; to my daughters, Emily and Kate, whose weddings inspired all manner of imagined catastrophe; to my wife, Barbara, who knows enough about marriage to write her own book but read mine several times without complaint. Thanks also to The Silver Lounge on Cape Cod for the use of their sign. And, finally, my gratitude to my mother, whose recent passing caused me to reflect more deeply on inheritance and all that the word implies. Not to mention love.
THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK
PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF
Copyright Š 2009 by Richard Russo
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.
[http://www.aaknopf.com] www.aaknopf.com
Knopf, Borzoi Books and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Russo, Richard, [date]
That old cape magic / by Richard Russo.1st ed.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-27330-7
1. College teachersFiction. 2. Married peopleFiction.
3. Cape Cod (Mass.)Fiction. 4. Midlife crisisFiction.
5. ReminiscingFiction. 6. Domestic fiction. I. Title.
PS3568.U812T47 2009
813′.54dc22 2009020311
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
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