Emma Donoghue Two-Book Bundle (4 page)

BOOK: Emma Donoghue Two-Book Bundle
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Sarah started laughing before the door shut behind him. She was still laughing when she pressed the plunger.

Expecting

I thought I saw him last Friday, stooping over the grapefruits in my local supermarket. Without stopping to make sure, I put my half-full basket down beside the carrot shelf and walked out the door marked ENTRANCE ONLY.

It might not have been him, of course. One round silver head is pretty much like another. If I’d seen his face, if the strip of mirror over the fruit counter had been angled the right way, I’d have known for sure: soft as a plum, as my mother would have said, if she’d ever met him. But it was probably someone else, because he never shopped on a Friday, and why would he come all this way across town to a perfectly unremarkable new supermarket? Besides, I never told him where I lived.

We had only ever met on Saturdays, in the windswept shopping centre I had to go to before the supermarket opened down the road. That first time, I was toying with an angora jumper on the second floor of the department store when I caught his eye. I figure they’re safe to smile at if they’re over sixty. He moved away with something long and green over his arm; I shifted over and browsed through five kinds of silk dresses before realizing I was in the maternity section. Not that it mattered much, of course, since anyone can wear any old shape nowadays.

The elderly gentleman held the heavy swing door open for me to go through first. ‘Best to take things easy,’ he commented, and I smiled, trying to think of something original to do with pasta for dinner. As we emerged into the shopping centre he asked a question that was half drowned out by the clamour of the crowd. I said ‘Mmm,’ rather robotic as usual among strangers. Thinking back, later that afternoon, I did remember hearing the word
expecting,
but I presumed he meant rain.

I bumped into him again in the charity furniture shop ten minutes later. Gallant, he insisted on lifting a table for me to look at the price. I only clicked when he said, ‘The dress is for my daughter; she’s due in July. And yourself?’

I shook my head.

He must have thought I was rebuking his curiosity; his face went pink from the nose out. ‘Pardon me.’

‘No no, it’s all right,’ I flustered.

‘Early days yet, then,’ he said confidentially.

It suddenly seemed like far too much trouble to explain; we could be standing here all day. Besides, this garrulous stranger would think me a fool, or worse, a wistful spinster type given to browsing through maternity dresses. So I said nothing, simply grinned like a bashful mum-to-be, as the magazines would say.

It’s not the first mistake, but the first cowardice, that gets us into trouble. Why was it so hard to say that I hadn’t heard his original question, as we came out of the department store? If only I’d said, ‘I’m afraid I’m not expecting anything!’ and made an awkward joke of the old-world euphemism.

And of course when the following Saturday, cup in hand, he edged over to my table in the shopping centre’s single faded café, it was impossible to go back to the beginning. He told me all about his daughter’s special high-calcium diet. I saw now that clearing up that first misunderstanding would have been child’s play compared to this: How could I admit to having lied? I tucked my knees under the table, nodding over the pros and cons of disposable nappies.

He was lonely, that much was clear. I was a Saturday shopper because it was the only day I had free, whereas since his retirement he had developed a taste for the weekend bustle at his local shopping centre. But not a weirdo, I thought, watching him swallow his tea. All he wanted was to chat about this cyclone of excitement that had hit the year his only daughter got pregnant at thirty-three. ‘Me too,’ I said without thinking. Thirty-three, really? He thought that was a wonderful coincidence. And from amniocentesis we slipped on to living wills and the judicial system, his small mobile face shifting with every turn of conversation.

For a few weeks the office was a bag of cats, and I forgot all about him. Then one Saturday, rushing by with a baguette under my arm, I saw him staring bleakly into the window of what used to be the Christmas Shop. For the first time, it was I who said hello. When, after pleasantries about crocus pots, he began telling me about his daughter, and how the hospital said it was nothing she’d done or not done, she hadn’t overstrained or failed to eat, just one of these things that happen in most women’s lives, I wished I had followed my first impulse and walked right by. I didn’t want to spare the time to sit beside him, making fork marks in an almond slice.

He fell silent at one point, and as some kind of strange compensation I began to rhapsodize about my own phantom pregnancy. I’d never felt better; it was true what they said about the sense of blooming. Instead of wincing, his face lit up. He said he would bring me a cutting from last Sunday’s paper about prenatal musical appreciation. I promised him I was drinking lots of milk.

Walking home with a box of groceries on my hip, I began to count weeks. If I had met him just after payday, which was the fifth of the month … I realized with a spasm of nausea that I should be beginning to show.

At this point the ludicrousness of the whole charade hit home. Since it was clearly impossible to explain to this nice old man that I had been playing such a bizarre, unintentional, and (in light of his daughter’s miscarriage) tasteless joke, I would just have to make sure I never saw him again.

But I didn’t manage to make it to the huge supermarket in the town centre after work any day that week. Come Saturday I crawled out of bed late and pulled on baggy trousers. His steel-wool head was before me in the queue at the flower stall; when he looked around, I waved. Yes, his daughter was back at work, these daffs were for her, and wasn’t a bit of sunshine wonderful? Only when he had walked away did I realize that I had my hand on the small of my back, my belly slumped over my loose waistband.

The next Saturday I did my hand washing and baked scones with the end of the cheddar, then sat knotted up in an armchair and read some papers I’d brought home from work. My mother dropped by; when I offered her some tea, there wasn’t any milk or sugar, so I had to justify the empty shelves by claiming not to have felt well enough to go out.

Afterwards, I lay on the sofa with the blanket she’d put over me, watching the sky drain. I was heavy with a lie I couldn’t begin to explain. If I’d made a joke of it to my mother, she’d probably have called him a nosy parker.

My ribs were stiff; I shifted to face the rough woollen back of the sofa. If it were true, would I be throwing up in the mornings? Would I be feeling angry, or doubtful, or (that old pun) fulfilled? I grinned at myself and went to put on my makeup for a night out dancing.

The following Friday I managed to sneak away from work early enough to shop in town. I had packed my briefcase full of papers, then shoved them back in the in-tray.

Saturday I spent hoeing the waking flower beds outside my basement flat. Some friends arrived with
Alien
and popcorn. One of them noticed me holding my stomach after a particularly tense scene and raised a laugh by warning me not to throw up on the sofa.

Truth was, I’d been trying to remember at what point it would start kicking. For a few seconds I’d believed in it.

It was time to call a halt. The next Saturday I trailed up and down the shopping centre for an hour and a half in the spring chill. Every time I went into the library or the pet shop, I was sure he had just left. When the tap on the shoulder did come, as I was reading the list of prices in the window of the hair salon, I jerked so fast he had to apologize. But looking shocked and pinched did suit my story, I supposed.

As we neared the top of the café queue, his bare tray shuffling along behind mine, I rehearsed my opening line: ‘I’m afraid I lost the baby.’ It sounded absentminded and cruel. I tried it again, moving my lips silently. The beverages lady cocked her ear, thinking she’d missed my order; I cleared my throat and asked for a strong coffee. It was all my fault for having let a tiny lie swell into this monstrosity.

Before I could begin, he placed his shopping bag on the chair between us. ‘I’m glad I caught you today,’ he said pleasurably. ‘I brought it along last week, but I didn’t run into you. I was going to return it, but then I thought, who do I know who’d make good use of it?’

Under his bashful eyes, I drew out the folds of green silk. ‘Wouldn’t your daughter wear it anyway?’ I asked.

He shook his head hastily.

‘You shouldn’t have,’ I said. ‘It’s beautiful.’ I slumped in the plastic seat, my stomach bulging.

He folded the dress back in its tissue paper and slipped it into the bag.

Though I didn’t even know his surname, I felt like I was saying goodbye to a lifelong friend, one who had no idea that this was goodbye. I insisted he have a third of my lemon tart. We talked of Montessori schools and wipeable bibs, of our best and worst childhood memories, of how much had stayed the same between his generation and mine but would be different for my baby. We decided it was just as well I was due in August as the weather might be mild enough to nurse in the garden. When I looked at my watch it was half two, the coffee cold in the pot.

As I stood up, I had an hysterical impulse to say that if it proved to be a boy I’d name it after him. Instead, I mentioned that I was going off on an early summer holiday, but yes, of course I’d be home for the birth.

The new regime was a manageable nuisance. On Saturdays now I went straight from karate class to a shopping centre twice as far away in the other direction. An old friend of mine, meeting me laden with bags on the bus, mocked me for being so upwardly mobile, to go that far in pursuit of walnut-and-ricotta ravioli. One Saturday in May my mother asked me to come along to the old shopping centre, to help her with a sack of peat moss, and I had to invent a sudden blinding headache.

The dress I wore as often as the weather allowed; it seemed the least I could do. The leaf-green silk billowed round my hips as I carried my box of groceries close to the chest. There was room under there for quintuplets, or a gust of summer air. When August came and went and nothing happened, I felt lighter, flatter, relieved.

That was five years ago, but always I keep one eye out for him, even on the streets of other cities where my new job takes me. I have my story all ready: how I shop on Sundays now when my mother can take the children, two boys and a small girl, yes, quite a handful. He’s sure to compliment me on having kept my figure. And his daughter, did she try again?

I felt prepared, but last Friday when I thought I saw him among the grapefruit I backed out in panic. What do you say to a ghost, a visitor from another life?

It occurs to me all of a sudden that he may be dead. Men often don’t live very long after they retire. I never thought to ask how old he was.

I find it intolerable not to know what has become of him. Is this how he felt, wondering about me? On Saturday when I woke in my cool white bed, I had to fight off the temptation to drive down to the shopping centre and park there, watching through the windscreen for him to walk by.

The Man Who Wrote On Beaches

As a child he’d never known what to put. He always started out along the expanse of saturated sand with a yip of excitement, but after scraping the first great arc with the edge of his sneaker, he’d stand with his leg extended like a dog trying to piss. Everything took so long on sand, you might as well be using Morse code. You’d better be sure you still meant what you were writing by the time it was done. Once he’d put HELLO, but his brothers laughed and scuffed out the O with their toes.

Then another time on another beach, some New Year’s Day when he was maybe fourteen and alone, he’d written COCK-SUCKERS in letters as long as himself. It looked so terrible, printed so starkly for the clouds and every passing stranger to read, and he’d thought the first wave would wipe it out, but in his nervousness he’d dug too deep with the crescent of mussel shell, so the small frills of water only smoothed his words, glossed over a mistake he’d made on the K. The letters looked graven, as if on a headstone, the obscenity emerging from the beach itself. So after such a long while of standing with his back to the wind, he’d dragged a line through the whole word with the toe of his pointed shoe, lurching along on the other foot, but still it was legible or could be guessed at anyhow, since no other word looked like that one.

The day he was forty-three, he accepted Jesus Christ as his Lord and Personal Saviour. It was quite a shock to his system.

A few weeks before, he had been driving through downtown Tacoma on a sticky afternoon much like any other. Traffic was slow as molasses and he found himself staring at a bus shelter with a poster on it that said in large pink letters, JESUS IS THE WAY.

He might well have seen it before, on other days when he’d been preoccupied with what to make for dinner or whether Margaret had remembered to call the IRS from the office about those tax forms, but the fact was that only on that particular day was there a chink open in his mind as he glanced at that bus shelter, a crack wide enough for those words to drop in. And for a moment he forgot a lifetime’s worth of wisecracks about the Born Agains; for a moment he thought,
What if it was true? What if just maybe?

Wouldn’t that explain a lot of things, like what a mess this country had gotten itself into? Wouldn’t that make some sense of how his life had turned out after all the promising things his report cards had said, after all his dumb dreams of changing the world?

Not that he was complaining. He’d been to Corsica and Bali and Scotland and the Everglades; he had a home with a view of Puget Sound and a good job and a great collection of German steins and a lot of laughs. Above all, he had Margaret, who was twice what he deserved. But it struck him sometimes that in a couple more decades he would be dead without ever having figured things out. And think of it: All these years he’d been using the word
Jesus
as a colourful form of ouch – if he dropped a wrench on his foot, say – when for all he knew the Born Agains were right, and Jesus just might be the way.

He was still half joking, or at least he thought he was.

Waiting for the lights to change, he tried it out loud. ‘Jesus?’ so it sounded like he was calling softly over the car door to someone in the street he thought he remembered from high school who probably wouldn’t know him any more.

But all at once he was sick to his stomach, felt so bad in fact that when the light changed he pulled right instead of left and parked in front of a fire hydrant. He laid his wet forehead on his hands where they gripped the steering wheel and said, maybe out loud or maybe in his head, he didn’t know, ‘I’m nothing, I’m scum, Jesus, Jesus, Jesus.’

When he finally got home he watched some drag racing and waited for it to wear off, like a hangover, or heartburn. Margaret came home with antipasti from the deli; she felt his back where his T-shirt was stuck to it. He blamed the heat.

But by the weekend he still felt the same way. So come Sunday morning he walked down the road till he came to the first building with the word
Jesus
on it.

It was the Church of Jesus Our Lord. He thought he’d bolt at the end of the service, but strangers gathered round to welcome him. It turned out it wasn’t them who’d paid for the sign at the bus shelter downtown, that was the Church of Christ Crucified, but still, ‘No objections,’ said the pastor. ‘It was Our Lord who led your feet to our door.’

He still felt sick, standing there. These people weren’t his sort of people, or so he would have said a week before. Their phrases were foreign to him; there was talk of missions and calls and walks with God. When they used words like
voice,
or
light,
he was never sure if they were to be taken literally. Their clothes were funny and the pastor stood too close to him. He knew he might turn these people into a big joke at the next office party. He felt like James Dean and wished he hadn’t worn his leather jacket. He felt like a sinner. And when an old lady who’d introduced herself as Mrs Keilor said, ‘See you next week,’ part of him was so relieved he thought he might go down on his knees and cry.

Which was exactly what he did a few weeks later, on his forty-third birthday. Pastor Tull said it took a lot of folks that way.

For the first few weeks he hadn’t said a word to Margaret about where he was going; he let her think he was stretching his legs. And when he began to mention the church it was all very cool; he tried to sound like an anthropologist on the Nature Channel.

‘Do you actually believe any of that stuff?’ Margaret asked lightly in the middle of Sunday dinner, and he shrugged and took another slice of salmon.

But on his birthday he walked home and told her he’d accepted Jesus Christ as his Lord and Personal Saviour. He said it all in a rush before he lost his nerve; he could hear how odd the words sounded as they left his mouth, like a very dry sort of joke.

Margaret let out a single whoop of laughter. He didn’t take offence; it was a sound she always made when an appliance broke down or she slept through the alarm and missed her car pool. After a minute she came over to give him a hug with stiff arms and say, ‘Whatever makes you happy.’ As if it was a line she’d found in a magazine.

A couple of months on, he started bringing her to the odd church social. She seemed to come willingly enough, just as years ago she used to accompany him to occasional hockey games, because that was his thing. She recognized a guy from her accounts department, and they talked about the crazy new ventilation system. She admired Pastor Tull’s moustache.

Mrs Keilor was in charge of the salad table. She whispered a question about whether his wife was saved, too. ‘Not yet,’ he said, as if he had great hopes. He was afraid somebody would ask Margaret the same question; he kept one ear out for her sharp laugh.

Margaret had no time for the abstract; that was something he always used to love about her. If she couldn’t touch it, smell it, taste it, then it didn’t matter. Her favourite exclamation was ‘Unreal’. Whenever he started talking hypotheticals, she would reach for her sewing box, so the time wouldn’t be completely wasted. Once she got around three sides of a cushion cover while he was wondering aloud about the future of democracy.

He didn’t talk about his ideas, these days. He kept his new books on his side of the bed; he left his new cassettes in the car so he could play them on the way to work. He only watched the Bible Channel on the evenings when Margaret was out at the Y. And she quietly worked around this latest and most obscure of his hobbies.

He waited for her to ask, but she didn’t. He would have welcomed her questions; he still had a bunch of his own. But Margaret was content not to understand. He couldn’t figure that out. How she could bear not to know what was going on in his head. In his heart. In what he was learning, with some embarrassment, to call his soul.

He was dreaming about Jesus these days; that was something he wouldn’t have told Margaret even if she’d asked. In the dreams he was generally walking up a mountain behind Jesus, who only looked about twenty-two, thin but surprisingly solid. You could lean your head on his bony shoulder. Jesus could speak without moving his lips.

He never had difficulty getting up these mornings; he just asked Jesus to get him out of bed and next thing his feet were on the rug. And work got done just like that. The things he had expected to be hardest were almost easy. He had thrown away his Zippo the day after his birthday and hadn’t had a single drag since. Every time he got the craving he said, ‘Jesus, Jesus, Jesus,’ in his head till it went away. The same with beer. After Josh Miles at the church, who used to be an alcoholic, took him aside for a word, he saw he was better off without the stuff. Now he didn’t miss it, didn’t need it. He still dusted his stein collection, but he was thinking of donating it to a charity raffle. After a couple of weeks, Margaret got the hint and stopped asking would he like a cold one from the refrigerator. She teased him a little about what a clean-living guy he’d become – but not in front of friends.

Another thing, he wasn’t sure their friends were his friends any more. They were the same people; it was him who’d changed. For the first year ever he put down every cent he’d made on his tax return. He could only talk about things like that to his church friends, those people in cheap shoes he’d have bust a gut laughing at a couple of months back.

What he couldn’t tell them, though, was that Margaret wasn’t his wife.

At a church picnic he watched her blowing bubbles with a four-year-old. Mrs Oberdorf had her eye on him. ‘You and your wife been blessed with any children?’ she asked in her cracked voice.

‘Not yet.’

She nodded, her mouth twisted with sympathy.

He hoped she’d think it wasn’t their fault. He hoped she wouldn’t use the word
husband
in front of Margaret.

One evening when she was pinning up new drapes he said it. ‘We should get married one of these days.’ But it didn’t sound romantic enough. It sounded like clearing out the garage.

Margaret took the pins out of her mouth. ‘You think so?’ She had this way of letting words hover like smoke.

‘I know we used to say we didn’t need it, but recently I’ve been reconsidering.’

She pinned up another fold of fabric.

‘It might feel good. It might be the thing to do,’ he added, as if he were kidding around. He hoped she wouldn’t hear the guilt behind his voice.

‘OK. What the hell,’ said Margaret. He winced, but not so she’d notice. ‘We’ve both done it before and it didn’t kill us.’

Then she laughed until he laughed, too, and she came over and kissed him on the ear.

But as he was signing his name in the register – his ballpoint pressing the paper a little too hard – he knew that this time wasn’t going to be like those other times. Neither he nor his first wife in DC nor Margaret nor her first husband in LA had had the slightest idea what they were really doing. This time would be the real thing, because now he knew what a promise was. Now he knew what the words meant.

To show she wasn’t taking the whole thing too seriously, Margaret was wearing red. He didn’t care; it looked good on her. ‘You can bring your God buddies if you like,’ she’d told him, but he said that was all right, he’d rather keep it small, just the two of them and a pastor (not Pastor Tull, just some Unitarian) and a few friends who drove down from Seattle and Vancouver.

After the ceremony he was high like he hadn’t been since that time he tried cocaine at the prom. He was a bank robber who’d made it to Acapulco.

The next Sunday after church he said the word. ‘My wife and I are taking a vacation,’ he mentioned to Mrs Keilor, and relief stabbed him through the ribs.

For their honeymoon – about ten years too late, according to his mother in San Francisco, but she sent them a cheque anyhow – he and Margaret were going to drive right down the West Coast. That first night in a motel in Mount Saint Helens he lay under the weight of his wife and moved and shut his eyes. It felt like he was running down the right road at last. But later when he was letting the condom slither off him, he wanted to cry.

They hiked up a volcano the next day, cinders crunching like cornflakes under their feet. Later they squatted over tide pools and saw anemones blossom like green doughnuts and purple sea urchins as big as their hands. Margaret tilted her face up to the sun while he took pictures and figured out the distances between towns.

In Eugene, Oregon, he woke up in the middle of the night and had to shake her awake. ‘Honey,’ he said urgently. Then, apologetically, ‘Honey, I just realized, we’re meant to have children.’

The words shocked his ears.

At first Margaret didn’t answer, and he thought she was still asleep, till he saw the line of her jaw. Then she said, ‘For god’s sake.’

Exactly, he was tempted to say, but didn’t.

In the morning he woke up to find her packing.

He stared at her knotted hands, ramming two pairs of his socks into a corner. ‘Who was it,’ Margaret asked, ‘just remind me who was it who talked me out of it all those other times?’

‘You were never sure—,’ he began.

‘That’s right, I wasn’t sure, but you sure were.’ A little bead of spit on her lip caught the sunlight. She plucked up another pair of socks but didn’t put them in the bag. ‘Who was it always told me it would be madness to go off the Pill? Who was it said we’d lose all our freedom, tie ourselves down?’

His throat felt like it was full of wadding. He cleared it. ‘Guess everybody gets tied down one way or another.’

Margaret’s hands were jammed into the pockets of her silky dressing gown; her nails were stretching the seams. ‘Who was it kept saying he wasn’t ready?’

‘I don’t know,’ he said, nearly whispering. ‘I don’t know who that guy was.’ There was a silence so complete he could hear the chambermaid vacuuming at the other end of the motel. ‘But I’m different now.’

‘You can say that again.’ She stared at him; her eyes were hard as hazelnuts. ‘You’re on another planet.’

‘I’m finally ready,’ he pleaded.

‘Oh yeah?’ Her voice was bigger than the room. ‘Well, I’m forty-two, so you and your friend Jesus can go to hell.’

BOOK: Emma Donoghue Two-Book Bundle
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