Read The World Without You Online
Authors: Joshua Henkin
Tags: #Jewish, #Family Life, #Literary, #Fiction
In the bathroom, she runs the faucets in the sink and tub. The boys have dirtied them too; clumps of hair have gathered along the porcelain. Her sons are related to her, no doubt. And to her parents as well. The Frankel family: had anyone ever seen so much hair? “You guys are keeping Drano in business,” Leo used to say. “And Liquid-Plumr too.” Though he was one to talk. He and his sisters were clogging up the drain themselves; the whole family was keeping plumbers in business, liquid and otherwise.
Noelle folds her clothes and places them in the suitcase; at this point, she doesn’t know what’s dirty and what’s not. She’ll have to wash it all when she gets back to Jerusalem. She packs Amram’s clothes as well. She’s tempted to leave them here; they’re not her responsibility. Though they’re certainly not her parents’ responsibility, either.
In the shower, she shampoos and conditions her hair, then sits down on top of the closed toilet and clips her fingernails and toenails. It’s so rare that she can attend to her small bodily concerns, so rare that she can be in a bathroom at all without feeling like an egg timer is ticking on the sink, without having a husband or a son—often several of them—banging on the door and demanding that she vacate.
Outside, the sky promises more bad weather. Finally, yesterday, the rain stopped, but now, on July fifth, it’s set to resume.
She hears voices downstairs, so she steps out into the hallway. She leans over the banister and whispers, “Shhhh.” She wants her boys to sleep as long as possible; they have a twelve-hour flight to endure. But the talking continues: a low-grade hum. She thinks she hears her mother’s voice, but she can’t make out what she’s saying. Her hearing has failed her once more. Though before long, everyone she knows will catch up to her. Life is one long process of losing your hearing. She’s read that there are cell phones now whose ring can’t be heard by adults. High school students leave their phones on during class because the teacher won’t hear them. Only teenagers can hear them. Teenagers, mice, and dogs.
She puts on her shoes and heads downstairs, and when she reaches the landing she sees it’s not her mother, but Gretchen, her grandmother, sitting primly in the living room in the brown armchair, her feet crossed, her hair up in its signature beehive. Lily once said that she never saw Gretchen unprepared at a moment’s notice to be transported to the Philharmonic. That’s how she looks now, wearing pressed gray slacks and a white button-down shirt with the collar open. Around her neck hangs a string of pearls, and she has on matching pearl earrings, delicate as fish eggs. Her skin is creased like a ripened pepper; the tendons in her neck dance as she talks. She has on a little blush and a dab of lipstick, looking as if she is, in fact, expecting to attend a concert.
“Grandma,” Noelle says. “What in the world are you doing here?”
“Is that how you greet me, darling?”
“Grandma.” She bends down to kiss her. “It’s just …”
“What?”
“How did you get here?”
“By car.”
She looks at her watch. “It’s eight in the morning, Grandma. You’re saying you got up at five and drove here yourself?”
“I most certainly didn’t.”
“Then how did you get here?”
“I was chauffeured.” Gretchen looks up as she says this, and Noelle, following her gaze, sees that it’s trained on the chauffeur himself, who has walked in from the kitchen holding a glass of tea for Gretchen and a plastic cup filled with milk for himself. “Good morning, Noelle.”
“Amram,” she says, and she’s so livid she’s struck mute.
“Nice to see you,” he says, and he sits down on the couch.
Amram is wearing the same jeans he had on two days ago, only they appear to have spent the whole time crumpled; they bear an uncanny resemblance to elephant skin. He had a day’s growth of beard when she last saw him, and now he has three days’ growth, which, Noelle knows, makes him think he looks rabbinic, but to her it makes him look like a hoodlum. He’s wearing the same blue button-down shirt, but it, too, appears to have been folded over on itself, and it has a small mustard stain across the middle. Even his black velvet yarmulke, which is bobby-pinned as always to the side of his head, looks as if it’s been left in the gutter.
Noelle would like to wring his neck, and that’s no figure of speech. She’s tempted to put her hands around Amram’s throat and tighten them in a vise grip. She’s not a violent person—she can’t remember having hit anyone since she was a child—but it’s all she can do not to punch him in the face.
He’s sitting across from her with his cup of milk on his lap, looking in his own soiled, slovenly way as if the world owes him no explanation for what has come to pass and he owes no explanation in return. Noelle, standing above him on her parents’ Persian rug, clenches her fists, and the nails cut into her palms. “Amram,” she says, feeling a line of spit come out from between her front teeth, “you look like a bum from the Bowery. Is that where you just came from?”
“Actually, I just came from the Upper East Side. It’s where Gretchen lives. On Fifth Avenue.”
“I know where she lives.”
“It’s where I spent the last couple of nights.”
“You what?” Gretchen doesn’t like having guests in her apartment; she finds them an invasion of her privacy. The only exception was her grandchildren, whom she used to let stay over, and even in their case she would tire of their company after a day and insist on packing them up. Noelle has an image of Gretchen’s apartment, the vast open space of the living room, her gaze traveling past Indonesian rugs, past coffee tables and side tables and end tables, the sheer expanse of surface, those lovely walnuts, cherries, mahoganies, and oaks whose job was to sustain lamps and little glass figurines, in some cases serving no function at all, meant to do nothing besides be there, entire forests cleared for Gretchen’s sumptuousness. “You didn’t sleep in my grandmother’s apartment.”
“I most certainly did.”
Gretchen, still sitting primly in the armchair, says nothing to contradict him. She’s simply drinking her tea, looking ahead expressionlessly toward the porch, where a blue jay is pecking at the feeder.
And Noelle realizes it doesn’t matter where Amram slept. He could have slept in Gracie Mansion, for all she cares. He could have spent the last two nights at the White House itself, installed in the Lincoln Bedroom as President Bush’s personal guest, and it wouldn’t make a difference to her. “Excuse me, Grandma, but I need to talk to my husband alone.” She takes a step toward Amram and now she has grabbed him by the arm and yanked him up from the chair. Some of his milk spills as she does so, but she doesn’t stop. She has him by the shirtsleeve and he’s following her, out through the porch door and into the garden, where the clouds are heavy and it has started to mist, and where, standing beside her mother’s azaleas, she gets up in his face, standing so close she can smell his breath, a revolting combination of pizza and spearmint. She’s actually poking him in the chest.
“Would you get off me?” he says, stepping back from her.
“No,” she says, “I won’t get off you.” She takes another step toward him and is poking him once more. “Do you have any idea how long you were gone?”
“I’ll tell you one thing, Noelle. I didn’t come back here for a lecture.”
“Well, you’re going to get one whether you came back for it or not.”
Amram retreats another step and almost trips over the garden hose. He’s staring at her irately.
“You’ve been gone for two days, Amram,. Forty-three hours, to be precise. That’s long enough for me to file a missing persons report if I’d been foolish enough to file one.”
“Is that all you can say?”
“What else would you like me to say?”
“How about ‘Thank you’?”
“Thank you?” she says. “Thank you for what?”
“For bringing Gretchen back with me. Because if you think it was easy, you have no idea.”
But Noelle doesn’t care if it was easy. She doesn’t care if Amram slung Gretchen over his back and carried her the hundred miles up the Taconic Parkway. “Where in the world have you been?”
“I told you,” he says. “New York.”
“Our flight leaves this evening, Amram. I was prepared to fly home alone.”
“And I was prepared to let you.”
A hoe is toppled in the garden soil, and she picks it up and leans against it. Though now, too agitated just to stand there, she grabs the hoe and starts to dig some dirt, going at it violently, piling it into a pyramid next to her mother’s rosebushes. She could take the hoe to Amram, she really could. She understands for once the logic of gun control, how it’s dangerous to have a weapon in the house, though in Israel all the men serve in the army reserves and there are guns everywhere you walk on the street. She’s glad she doesn’t have a gun right now.
She jams the hoe into the ground. “You missed my brother’s memorial, Amram. You were supposed to say kaddish. That was your one job, and you screwed up. I had to say it for you. And don’t tell me a woman isn’t supposed to say kaddish.”
Amram just stands there, his arms folded across his chest, as if to make the point that he hasn’t said anything.
The tree branches in the garden bulge in front of her. Above her, the clouds crack and break apart. “Why didn’t you call?”
Amram is silent.
“Did you even consider it? I was afraid you might have been killed.”
“Well, I wasn’t.”
“I almost wanted you to be killed. At least that would have explained why you were missing.”
“Noelle—”
“Just stop.”
Again he tries to speak, but she won’t let him. “And it’s not just me who was worried. The boys were scared sick. I had to lie to them—tell them you were calling and you were coming back. The rest of the family was scared, too. My parents, my sisters.”
“Your parents and sisters couldn’t have cared less.”
“Amram,” she says, “tell me where you were.”
“Jesus, Noelle. How many times do I have to say it? I was in New York. Would you like an actual zip code?”
She glares at him.
“What difference does it make where I was? I’m here now, and I brought your grandmother back with me. I convinced her to come, which is what everyone wanted. The whole family together one last time. Because it’s not going to happen again, don’t you understand?”
“Why did you go there in the first place?” And the thought occurs to her: Amram drove down to the city to plead for money. “Did you ask Gretchen for help?”
“What?”
“Did you request money, Amram?”
“And if I did?”
“If you did, I’ll kill you.”
Amram laughs. “Since when did you become so pure? You’re always talking about how when Gretchen dies—”
“Amram, did you?”
Sweat beads on Amram’s forehead. His throat pulses, like a toad’s. “I told you, Noelle. The only reason I went down there was to bring your grandmother back with me. So you could have your last hurrah.”
“Hurrah?” she says. “Is that what you think this is? Hurrah?
Hurrah?
” She claps her hands hard, once, twice, and the sound reverberates through the garden. “You wanted a hero’s welcome, is that it?” That’s the problem, she thinks. Amram wants to be a hero, and what she’s trying to tell him, what she’s been trying to tell him for years now, is that if she wanted a hero she’d have married one.
But before she can say anything more, she can see through the porch window the rest of her family come downstairs and discover Gretchen in the living room. They’re hugging her, telling her how glad they are she’s here, and now the boys have come out into the garden and are embracing their father, saying, “Abba, we missed you, we missed you so much!”
Now Noelle’s sisters and parents have emerged into the garden, too, and are greeting Amram with an enthusiasm Noelle isn’t accustomed to and can’t abide. They’re thanking him for having driven Gretchen up to Lenox. “How in the world did you pull it off?” David says, and Amram, putting on a show of mock sheepishness, simply shrugs.
Now even Nathaniel has walked over and is pumping Amram’s fist, the fact of which clearly pleases Amram—he has on, Noelle thinks, an enormous and stupid grin—and he’s saying, “It looks like Gretchen has met her match,” and Lily is saying, “I never thought anyone could convince Grandma to do anything,” and Gretchen, throughout it all, is sitting in the living room sipping her tea, calmly observing the ruckus.
But Noelle isn’t through with Amram. “Everyone back inside,” she tells the boys, though she means the command for her whole family, and now it’s just her and Amram alone again next to the pile of dirt she’s dug.
Amram takes off, around the bend of the house.
“Where are you going?”
He reaches the garage, where the electric door is up, and he steps inside and retrieves a tennis racquet.
“That’s my mother’s, you know.”
“So what, Noelle. I’m not stealing it.” He drags out a bucket of balls and pushes the button so the garage door closes.
“What in the world do you think you’re doing?”
“I’m hitting tennis balls.” He removes a couple of balls from the bucket and swats them in succession against the garage door, making a dull thudding sound, over and over.
“You’re going to break that door, and then what will you do?”
“I’ll worry about it when it happens.”
But that’s the problem, Noelle thinks. Amram always worries about things when they happen; if he worried about them before they happened, maybe they wouldn’t happen in the first place. And the words come to her:
You break it
,
you own it
. Wasn’t that what Colin Powell said about Iraq? The Pottery Barn rule? Amram is drum-chested and strong—back in college his roommates used to call him Moose—and now, as he continues to hit the tennis ball against the garage door, Noelle can feel the strength in his swing and follow-through. “You’ll wake the neighbors.”
“What neighbors?”
“The ones right over the hedge. The Simmonses? They’ve lived here as long as my parents have.”
“From the looks of it,” Amram says, glancing over the bushes, “they’ve been awake for hours.” Mrs. Simmons is on her knees in her own garden patch, and when she catches sight of Noelle and Amram she waves.