Read A Perfectly Good Family Online

Authors: Lionel Shriver

Tags: #Brothers and sisters, #Sibling rivalry, #Family Life, #North Carolina, #General, #Romance, #Inheritance and succession, #Fiction

A Perfectly Good Family (8 page)

BOOK: A Perfectly Good Family
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‘Who wouldn’t?’
‘Any normal son with a heart.’
‘Truman, I wouldn’t even come home for Christmas.’
‘I didn’t blame you!’ He started to pace. ‘You know, I trained her—even before we got married—not to come to the dovecot.’
‘As I recall, the big accomplishment was to get her to knock.’
‘Right. Twentyone years old, and she’d waltz straight into my room as if I were still in my cot.’
At another time—as I had for so many years that it ceased to make Truman angry and simply bored him—I’d have suggested that if he didn’t want his mother walking in unannounced the answer wasn’t to ‘train her’ but to move out.
‘So we had that confrontation. After which—theatrically—she’d knock. This turned out to be important, since there were some mornings I had to stuff Averil up the spiral staircase to hide on the tower deck.’ He was worked up, but couldn’t help smiling.
‘In winter it was freezing,’ Averil recalled fondly. ‘The neighbours must have wondered, a naked woman on the top of your house. And Truman would scurry around hiding my clothes under the sheet and she’d come in and start to make the bed…’
I had heard these favourite stories before.
‘Right, well,
sanctified
by marriage,’ said Truman, ‘we got a little privacy, OK? Dinner upstairs except on Sundays, and we had our own life. After Father died that went to hell. She’d knock, three timid taps, but never waited to be invited, and crept up the stairs calling my name in that kiddie voice,
Twooo-maaannn
! Some days we hid. Some days we both chattered on the tower deck.
‘Well, last spring she came up again and it was time for grapefruit and I wanted to slip the bourbon from under my sandbag and have our nightcap and finish talking about—’
‘Mother,’ I provided.
‘Of course. We stood around the kitchen and gave her yes and no answers to every question and folded our arms and looked at the ceiling and wouldn’t even ask her to sit down in the living room—didn’t offer her coffee, didn’t ask her about the hospice—but does she get the message? NO! So after half an hour, right, after all those hugs and pats on the arm I couldn’t control myself.
Gosh, Mother
! I exploded.
You can’t be mean enough
!’
Truman sat down with a thud. ‘Well, you know how her voice was always fake? Cheery and falsetto? I’ll never forget hearing it change. It sank a full octave lower. It wasn’t nasal any more. All the muscles in her face dropped.
No, you’ve done a pretty good job
, she said, and her posture became totally straight with her shoulders squared and she walked calmly down the stairs. That was her real voice. I’d never heard my own mother’s real voice before. Amazing. It was almost worth it,’ Truman added. ‘But not quite.’
‘So sometimes,’ I noted, ‘you did hit her.’

5

'I thought about Mordecai's false dilemma,' Truman admitted as we squealed on the porch swing late the next afternoon. 'I might pay $10,000 for a night with Mother and Father, as long as it were different.'

  'Maybe that was his point,' I said, toeing the swing in a figure eight. 'That it couldn't have been different. Therefore, inexorably, if Mother appeared in your dovecot from beyond the grave, in five minutes you'd be fretting for her to leave you alone. That's the way it was, so that's the way it was.' A tautology, but I was groping.

  'What do you think was wrong?'

  'Mother was miserable.'

  'Yes, for the last two years—'

  'Long before that.'

  'And Father never noticed?'

  'Come on. Mother was the one who never noticed.'

  I reported a remark she'd made to me when I was twelve, making my mother only forty. Rather out of nowhere, she informed me in the same buoyant, bouncy tone she'd used for reading aloud The Man with the Yellow Hat, 'The best of my life is over, of course. I'd be glad to die now, except that would be selfish. I have to think of the family.'

  'What she was saying,' I told Truman, 'was she wished she were dead. And this from the happiest woman in the world, according to herself. She thought it a common enough sentiment and went on to propose we have Spanish noodles for dinner.'

  'Don't that beat all,' said Truman.

  Like my brothers, I, too, had tried all my life to get away from my parents, the underpinning assumption that of course I couldn't get away or I'd not have gone to such extravagant

lengths as putting the entire Atlantic Ocean between us. The two deaths, one on the other, had therefore arrived with a dumb surprise. Behold, it was more than possible to flee their company; in the end they fled mine.

  Truman and I had talked plenty about my parents and we weren't through. A brother is a gift this way, since no one else would tolerate our interminable dissection for five minutes. Claustrophobically as I might yearn to chat about something else, should we stray to other matters conversation sagged and I was inevitably lured back. Talk of my parents was like candy we couldn't resist but which made us sick.

  It was as if we were trying to solve a puzzle, like the Independent crossword. Yet Andrew and I had never done anything with our filledin crosswords but throw them away. Therefore my question was less whether my mother, feeling excluded, tried regularly to divide me from my brothers than to what conceivable use I might put this information.

  I suggested we go for a walk (for Truman, that always meant the same walk); he objected that he walked after dinner and I kicked him. He grumbled and said all right he'd fetch Averil and I pleaded please don't. 'She'll feel left out!' he objected.

  'Sometimes people are left out,' I said, picturing my mother's eyes hood and smoulder while Truman and I conducted whole conversations in a language we had invented. 'So there's nothing wrong with their feeling that way.'

  I grabbed a muffler and jittered on the front porch as Truman applied for permission upstairs. At last he emerged, alone but harried. One walk had cost him.

  'What's the big deal?' I asked as we tripped down the stoop. 'For Christ's sake, I'm your sister.'

  'You're not married,' he said. 'Filling out course registrations can be a big deal. If Averil can get jealous of a pencil, she can certainly manage it with a whole sister.'

  I swished through the curling leaves of the black walnut tree.

  He side-eyed me. 'You're looking pretty good.'

  'Thanks. The last two weeks, I lost some weight.'

  'Suits.'

  I biffed him lightly on the upper arm, solid as a firm mattress. 'You, too. Not bad.' It was a service we did one another, mutual confirmation that neither of us was falling apart.

  As we cornered Blount Street to North, I glanced back at Heck-Andrews; gold light retouched the manila clapboard so it no longer seemed to need painting. Massive for a residence, it was dwarfed by the Bath Building rising behind it, a great white slab for the NC State Laboratory of Public Health. The steady roar of its circulation system Truman claimed to detest, but I'm sure he was used to the noise. It was the hulk of concrete itself he reviled. Erected in 1987, the Bath Building destroyed the view from our back porch, once of an open field used for landing the governor's helicopter. The field was now circumscribed by a mall of polished granite office buildings, and children could no longer play Army there—a game my father had discouraged, and which had therefore been our favourite.

  As we strode down Wilmington Street, my eyes swivelled from the Mall on our left to Oakwood on our right. It had taken me years of absence to notice that our neighbourhood was bizarre. Smack in the middle of downtown Raleigh, our Reconstruction enclave might easily be mistaken for a state theme park; add a gruesome dental surgery, a pretty girl pretending to churn butter, and an over-priced beeswax candle factory and I think we'd have got away with charging tourists admission. The houses were all Colonial Revivals and Second Empires, with storm cellars, boarded-up outhouses, and a proliferation of chimneys; happy darkies hauling water from a hand pump would not have looked remotely out of place. The grand, leisurely scale of these dwellings had been made possible by the Civil War, which had ravaged and levelled so many homes around the capitol. Carpetbagging architects had poured down from the north, for land was cheap, pine plentiful, and labour, with freed slaves and veterans equally unemployed, eager to pound clapboard for a meal a day. The yards were grand, their hardwoods grown as lush and steady as their planters intended.

  What Oakwood's architects would not have anticipated was the New South on our left: a faceless array of stoic government granite indistinguishable from dozens of other downtowns north and south. This was the land of Internet and sun-dried tomatoes, no longer butt of barefoot bumpkin jokes, but the most rapidly expanding regional economy of the country, whose Research Triangle labs and industrial facilities drew scientists and magnates from all over the States. I cannot explain it, but none of this

new-found sophistication stanched my horror when I slipped and said that's real nahce or stopped me from lying to Londoners that I was born in New York.

  'Do you ever regret not studying architecture?' I asked my brother.

  'Oh, not really.' He sighed. 'I'd have been expected to design modern buildings, wouldn't I? I only like the old ones. The last thing I'd want would be to goon up at the Bath Building and realize it's partly my fault.'

  'You and Prince Charles,' I said. 'Ever miss the hardware truck?'

  'Yes,' he said. 'Often.'

  After high school, Truman went through a 'phase'—according to my father. Surely daunted by Sturges McCrea's professional eminence and degree from Harvard Law, Truman decided to be, as he put it, 'regular'. He refused to go to university. I had walked in on several prolix sessions in the parlour—not rows, they were civil—when I visited from Manhattan. Truman would be extolling the simple-honest-man and his simplehonest-job, for wasn't it ordinary hard-working people who built this country…? My father would rub his chin with a smirk until Truman ran out of euphemisms for unskilled labour, then deliver his own monologue about the value of a liberal arts education and what a privilege it was to 'luxuriate in the fields of the mind'.

  For years Truman didn't give in, and considering that I think of him as the family toady he deserves some credit for holding out so long. Truman drove deliveries for Ferguson's Hardware for a decade. Averil's father owned the store, and it was there they met; she worked the floor weekends while getting an education degree from NC State. Her father paid my brother execrably even after he became an in-law, though Truman received his fifteen-cent-an-hour raises with the same awed, unquestioning acceptance of divine intervention on his behalf as when his allowance went up to thirty cents from a quarter.

  'I understood that job,' he explained. 'I got to know the layout of the city the way you did London on your scooter, right? The truck was cosy. It was my truck. I played tapes and sang along and in the winter the heater kept it snug and in the summer I had air conditioning…And I always packed a swell lunch.'

  I wanted to say, come on Truman, wasn't it dull, didn't you crave something challenging, I mean how can you retain so much affection for a bloody van, for Christ's sake, but I stopped myself. I do not know why this so rarely occurs to me, but I remembered for once that my brother was not me.

  'I thought you found philosophy stimulating.'

  'It was OK at first. Lately…Well, you'd think that all those books about is there a God and the implications of mortality and do we have free will would be of some help, right, when your mother dies? If they're not some kind of explanation or resort, what good are they?'

  'Not much.'

  'These airy-fairy philosophers are no use at all!' He waved his hands. 'I find Mother downstairs one morning, do you think I was going to look up 'Mothers: death' in an index? It's just, Corlis, all these Great Questions, they don't seem to have anything to do with my life. I used to feel ashamed of myself. I was afraid I wasn't smart or serious enough to be edified by all that wordy pondering. But now I wonder if maybe I'm plugged in and it's these cobwebbed old farts who haven't a clue. When Dr Chasson launches into the mind-body problem I sit in the back of the class remembering that tomorrow is Tuesday and it's time to wheel the trash to the curb. But, you know, maybe garbage disposal is actually more important! For that matter, all this, is there a God? Corlis—I don't care!'

  'Huh,' I considered. 'I guess I don't either.'

  'Most people don't! All they care about,' he added grimly, 'is being right.'

  Truman had always been given to diatribes, and I found them wonderful.

  We had crossed in front of Peace College, passed Krispey Kreme Donuts, and were now ambling down Person Street. Mordecai lived off Person Street, in a basement under the post office to our left, and as if to advertise this fact 'Mordecai Florist' (no relation) blinked in neon on this block. Truman sped up; I lingered. I could feel a pulse here, a thrum up through my feet as if my brother's Rockwell table saw rumbled the whole street; metal shrieked in the distance. Poking off the post office's far wall, DECIBELLE, INC. swung on the plain black sign, and the back end of the army surplus troop transporter loomed up the slanted drive to the curb. I knew better, however, than to suggest we stop by. On

the other hand, had Truman not wanted to risk running into his brother at all he could have eliminated Person from a stroll he took every day. An eccentric flirtation.

  We reached a parking sign. We about-faced. We turned around here because he always turned here: the usual logic.

  'If you're so disaffected,' I said, 'what are you going to do?'

  'I'm going to be a professor,' he recited. To me, Truman's assertion had the same colour as his announcement in third grade: I'm-going-tobe-a-fireman.

  'That would make Father happy,' I humoured him.

  'Father was always happy,' said Truman acidly. 'He didn't care what I did.'

  'He spent an awful lot of time convincing you to go to college—'

  'He just wanted to win.'

BOOK: A Perfectly Good Family
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