Can't and Won't: Stories

BOOK: Can't and Won't: Stories
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For Daniel and Theo and for Laura and Stephanie

Contents

 

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

 

I

A Story of Stolen Salamis

The Dog Hair

Circular Story

Idea for a Sign

Bloomington

The Cook’s Lesson

At the Bank

Awake in the Night

At the Bank: 2

The Two Davises and the Rug

Contingency (vs. Necessity)

Brief Incident in Short
a
, Long
a
, and Schwa

Contingency (vs. Necessity) 2: On Vacation

A Story Told to Me by a Friend

The Bad Novel

After You Left

The Bodyguard

The Child

The Churchyard

My Sister and the Queen of England

The Visit to the Dentist

Letter to a Frozen Peas Manufacturer

The Cornmeal

II

Two Undertakers

I Ask Mary About Her Friend, the Depressive, and His Vacation

The Magic of the Train

Eating Fish Alone

Can’t
and
Won’t

Pouchet’s Wife

Dinner

The Dog

The Grandmother

The Dreadful Mucamas

Reversible Story

A Woman, Thirty

How I Know What I Like (Six Versions)

Handel

The Force of the Subliminal

Her Geography: Alabama

The Funeral

The Husband-Seekers

In the Gallery

The Low Sun

The Landing

The Language of the Telephone Company

The Coachman and the Worm

Letter to a Marketing Manager

III

The Last of the Mohicans

Grade Two Assignment

Master

An Awkward Situation

Housekeeping Observation

The Execution

A Note from the Paperboy

In the Train Station

The Moon

My Footsteps

How I Read as Quickly as Possible Through My Back Issues of the
TLS

Notes During Long Phone Conversation with Mother

Men

Negative Emotions

I’m Pretty Comfortable, But I Could Be a Little More Comfortable

Judgment

The Chairs

My Friend’s Creation

The Piano

The Party

The Cows

The Exhibition

Letter to a Peppermint Candy Company

Her Geography: Illinois

IV

Ödön von Horváth Out Walking

On the Train

The Problem of the Vacuum Cleaner

The Seals

Learning Medieval History

My School Friend

The Piano Lesson

The Schoolchildren in the Large Building

The Sentence and the Young Man

Molly, Female Cat: History/Findings

The Letter to the Foundation

The Results of One Statistical Study

Revise: 1

Short Conversation (in Airport Departure Lounge)

Revise: 2

Left Luggage

Waiting for Takeoff

Industry

The Sky Above Los Angeles

Two Characters in a Paragraph

Swimming in Egypt

The Language of Things in the House

The Washerwomen

Letter to a Hotel Manager

Her Birthday

V

My Childhood Friend

Their Poor Dog

Hello Dear

Not Interested

Old Woman, Old Fish

Staying at the Pharmacist’s

The Song

Two Former Students

A Small Story About a Small Box of Chocolates

The Woman Next to Me on the Airplane

Writing

Wrong Thank-You in Theater

The Rooster

Sitting with My Little Friend

The Old Soldier

Two Sligo Lads

The Woman in Red

If at the Wedding (at the Zoo)

The Gold Digger of Goldfields

The Old Vacuum Cleaner Keeps Dying on Her

Flaubert and Point of View

Family Shopping

Local Obits

Letter to the President of the American Biographical Institute, Inc.

Nancy Brown Will Be in Town

Ph.D.

 

Notes and Acknowledgments

Also by Lydia Davis

Copyright

A Story of Stolen Salamis

 

My son’s Italian landlord in Brooklyn kept a shed out back in which he cured and smoked salamis. One night, in the midst of a wave of petty vandalism and theft, the shed was broken into and the salamis were taken. My son talked to his landlord about it the next day, commiserating over the vanished sausages. The landlord was resigned and philosophical, but corrected him: “They were not sausages. They were salamis.” Then the incident was written up in one of the city’s more prominent magazines as an amusing and colorful urban incident. In the article, the reporter called the stolen goods “sausages.” My son showed the article to his landlord, who hadn’t known about it. The landlord was interested and pleased that the magazine had seen fit to report the incident, but he added: “They weren’t sausages. They were salamis.”

The Dog Hair

 

The dog is gone. We miss him. When the doorbell rings, no one barks. When we come home late, there is no one waiting for us. We still find his white hairs here and there around the house and on our clothes. We pick them up. We should throw them away. But they are all we have left of him. We don’t throw them away. We have a wild hope—if only we collect enough of them, we will be able to put the dog back together again.

Circular Story

 

On Wednesday mornings early there is always a racket out there on the road. It wakes me up and I always wonder what it is. It is always the trash collection truck picking up the trash. The truck comes every Wednesday morning early. It always wakes me up. I always wonder what it is.

Idea for a Sign

 

At the start of a train trip, people search for a good seat, and some of them take a careful look at the people nearby who have already chosen their seats, to see if they will make good neighbors.

It might help if we each wore a little sign saying in what ways we will and will not be likely to disturb other passengers, such as: Will not talk on cell phone; will not eat smelly food.

Included in mine would be: Will not talk on cell phone at all, aside from perhaps a short communication to my husband at the beginning of the trip home, summarizing my visit in the city, or, more rarely, a quick warning to a friend on the way down that I will be late; but will recline my seat back as far as it will go, for most of the trip, except when I am eating my lunch or snack; may in fact be adjusting it slightly, back and up, from time to time throughout the trip; will sooner or later eat something, usually a sandwich, sometimes a salad or a container of rice pudding, actually two containers of rice pudding, though small ones; sandwich, almost always Swiss cheese, with in fact very little cheese, just a single slice, and lettuce and tomato, will not be noticeably smelly, at least as far as I can tell; am as tidy as I can be with the salad, but eating salad with a plastic fork is awkward and difficult; am tidy with the rice pudding, taking small bites, though when I remove the sealed top of the container it can make a loud ripping noise for just a moment; may keep unscrewing the top of my water bottle and taking a drink of water, especially while eating my sandwich and about one hour afterwards; may be more restless than some other passengers, and may clean my hands several times during the trip with a small bottle of hand sanitizer, sometimes using hand lotion afterwards, which involves reaching into my purse, taking out a small toiletries bag, unzipping it, and, when finished, zipping it up again and returning it to my purse; but may also sit perfectly quietly for a few minutes or longer staring out the window; may do nothing but read a book through most of the trip, except for one walk down the aisle to the restroom and back to my seat; but, on another day, may put the book down every few minutes, take a small notebook out of my purse, remove the rubber band from around it, and make a note in the notebook; or, when reading through a back issue of a literary magazine, may rip pages out in order to save them, though I will try to do this only when train is stopped at a station; lastly, after a day in the city, may untie my shoelaces and slip my shoes off for part of the trip, especially if the shoes are not very comfortable, then resting my bare feet on top of my shoes rather than directly on the floor, or, very rarely, may remove shoes and put on slippers, if I have a pair with me, keeping them on until I have nearly reached my destination; but feet are quite clean and toenails have a nice dark red polish on them.

Bloomington

 

Now that I have been here for a little while, I can say with confidence that I have never been here before.

The Cook’s Lesson

 

story from Flaubert

 

Today I have learned a great lesson; our cook was my teacher. She is twenty-five years old and she’s French. I discovered, when I asked her, that she
did not know
that Louis-Philippe is no longer king of France and we now have a republic. And yet it has been five years since he left the throne. She said the fact that he is no longer king simply does not interest her in the least—those were her words.

And I think of myself as an intelligent man! But compared to her I’m an imbecile.

At the Bank

 

I take my bag of pennies to the bank and throw them into a machine that will count them. I am asked by a teller to guess how much my pennies are worth. I guess $3.00. I am wrong. They amount to $4.24. But since I am within $1.99 of the correct sum, I qualify for a prize. Many people nearby in the bank congratulate me warmly. I may choose from among a number of prizes. When I refuse the first and the second, and seem likely to refuse the next, the anxious teller unlocks a secure vault and shows me the full array, which includes a large plastic piggy bank, a coloring book and crayons, and a small rubber ball. At last, so as not to disappoint her, I choose what I think is the best of them, a handsome Frisbee with its own carrying case.

dream

Awake in the Night

 

I can’t go to sleep, in this hotel room in this strange city. It is very late, two in the morning, then three, then four. I am lying in the dark. What is the problem? Oh, maybe I am missing him, the person I sleep next to. Then I hear a door shut somewhere nearby. Another guest has come in, very late. Now I have the answer. I will go to his room and get in bed next to him, and then I will be able to sleep.

dream

At the Bank: 2

 

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