Authors: Mavis Gallant
I had not seen my godmother since I was eight. My father had died, and I had been dragged away to be brought up in different cities. At eighteen, I had summoned her to a telephone: “It’s Linnet,” I said. “I’m here, in Montreal. I’ve come back to stay.”
“Linnet,” she said. “Good gracious me.” Her chain-smoker’s voice made me homesick, though it could not have been for a place – I was in it. Her voice, and her particular Montreal accent, were like the unexpected signatures that underwrite the past: If this much is true, you will tell yourself, then so is all the rest I have remembered.
She was too busy with her personal war drive to see me then, though she did ask for my phone number. She did not enquire where I had been since my father’s death, or if I had anything here to come back to. It is true that she and my mother had quarrelled years before; still, it was Georgie who had once renounced in my name “the devil and all his works, the vain pomp and glory of the world, with all covetous desires of the same, and carnal desires of the flesh.” She might have been curious to see the result of her bizarre undertaking, but a native canny Anglo-Montreal prudence held her still.
I was calling from a drugstore; I lived in one room of a cold-water flat in the east end. I said, “I’m completely on my own, and entirely self-supporting.” That was so Georgie would understand I was not looking for help; at all events, for nothing material.
I realize now how irregular, how fishy even, this must have
sounded. Everybody has a phone, she was probably thinking. What is the girl trying to hide?
“Nothing” would have been the answer. There seemed no way to connect. She asked me to call her again in about a month’s time, but of course I never did.
M
y godmother spent most of her life in a block of granite designed to look like a fortress. Within the fortress were sprawling apartments, drawn to an Edwardian pattern of high ceilings, dark corridors, and enormous kitchens full of pipes. Churches and schools, banks and prisons, dwellings and railway stations were part of an imperial convallation that wound round the globe, designed to impress on the minds of indigenous populations that the builders had come to stay. In Georgie’s redoubt, the doorman was shabby and lame; he limped beside me along a gloomy passage as far as the elevator, where only one of the sconce lights fixed to the panelling still worked. I had expected someone else to answer my ring, but it was Georgie who let me in, took my coat, and indicated with a brusque gesture, as if I did not know any English, the mat where I was to leave my wet snowboots. It had not occurred to me to bring shoes. Padding into her drawing room on stockinged feet, I saw the flash photograph her memory would file as further evidence of Muir incompetence; for I believe to this day that she recognized me at once. I was the final product, the last living specimen of a strain of people whose imprudence, lack of foresight, and refusal to take anything seriously had left one generation after another unprepared and stranded, obliged to build life from the ground up, fashioning new materials every time.
My godmother was tall, though not so tall as I remembered. Her face was wide and flat. Her eyes were small, deep-set, slightly tilted, as if two invisible thumbs were pulling at her temples. Her skin was as coarse and lined as a farm woman’s; indifference to personal appearance of that kind used to be a matter of pride.
Her drawing room was white, and dingy and worn-looking. Curtains and armchairs needed attention, but that may have been on account of the war: it had been a good four years since anyone had bothered to paint or paper or have slipcovers made. The lamps were blue-and-white, and on this winter day already lighted. The room smelled of the metallic central heating of old apartment buildings, and of my godmother’s Virginia cigarettes. We sat on worn white sofas, facing each other, with a table in between.
My godmother gave me Scotch in a heavy tumbler and pushed a dish of peanuts towards me, remarking in that harsh evocative voice, “Peanuts are harder to find than Scotch now.” Actually, Scotch was off the map for most people; it was a civilian casualty, expensive and rare.
We were alone except for a Yorkshire terrier, who lay on a chair in the senile sleep that is part of dying.
“I would like it if Minnie could hang on until the end of the war,” Georgie said. “I’m sure she’d like the victory parades and the bands. But she’s thirteen, so I don’t know.”
That was the way she and my parents and their friends had talked to each other. The duller, the more earnest, the more literal generation I stood for seemed to crowd the worn white room, and to darken it further.
I thought I had better tell her straightaway who I was, though I imagined she knew. I did not intend to be friendly
beyond that, unless she smiled. And even there, the quality of the smile would matter. Some smiles are instruments of repression.
Telling my new name, explaining that I had married, that I was now working for a newspaper, gave an accounting only up to a point. A deserted continent stretched between us, cracked and fissured with bottomless pits over which Georgie stepped easily. How do you deal with life? her particular Canadian catechism asked. By ignoring its claims on feeling. Any curiosity she may have felt about such mysteries as coincidence and continuity (my father was said to have been the love of her life; I was said to resemble him) had been abandoned, like a game that was once the rage. She may have been unlucky with games, which would explain the committee work; it may be dull, but you can be fairly sure of the outcome. I often came across women like her, then, who had no sons or lovers or husbands to worry about, and who adopted the principle of the absent, endangered male. A difference between us was that, to me, the absence and danger had to be taken for granted; another was that what I thought of as men, Georgie referred to as “boys.” The rest was beyond my reach. Being a poor judge of probabilities, she had expected my father to divorce. I was another woman’s child, foolish and vulnerable because I had lost my dignity along with my boots; paid to take down her words in a notebook; working not for a lark but for a living, which was unforgivable even then within the shabby fortress. I might have said, “I am innocent,” but she already knew that.
My godmother was dressed in a jaunty blue jacket with a double row of brass buttons, and a pleated skirt. I supposed this must be the costume she and her committee wore when they were packing soap and cigarettes and second-hand cheery
novels for their boys over there in the coop. She told me the names of the committee women, and said, “Are you getting everything down all right?” People ask that who are not used to being interviewed. “They told me there’d be a picture,” she complained. That explained the uniform.
“I’m sorry. He should be here now.”
“Do you want me to spell those names for you?”
“No. I’m sure I have them.”
“You’re not writing much.”
“I don’t need to,” I said. “Not as a rule.”
“You must have quite a memory.”
She seemed to be trying to recall where my knack of remembering came from, if it was inherited, wondering whether memory is of any use to anyone except to store up reasons for discord.
We gave up waiting for the photographer. I stood stork-like in the passage, pulling on a boot. Georgie leaned on the wall, and I saw that she was slightly tight.
“I have four godchildren,” she said. “People chose me because I was an old maid, and they thought I had money to leave. Well, I haven’t. There’ll be nothing for the boys. All my godchildren were boys. I never liked girls.”
She had probably been drinking for much of the day, on and off; and of course there was all the excitement of being interviewed, and the shock of seeing me: still, it was a poor thing to say. Supposing, just supposing, that Georgie had been all I had left? My parents had been perfectly indifferent to money – almost pathologically so, I sometimes thought. The careless debts they had left strewn behind and that I kept picking up and trying to settle were not owed in currency.
Why didn’t I come straight out with that? Because you
can’t – not in that world. No one can have the last retort, not even when there is truth to it. Hints and reminders flutter to the ground in overheated winter rooms, lie stunned for a season, are reborn as everlasting grudges.
“Goodbye, Linnet,” she said.
“Goodbye.”
“Do you still
not
have a telephone?” No answer. “When will it come out?” She meant the interview.
“On Saturday.”
“I’ll be looking for it.” On her face was a look I took to mean anxiety over the picture, and that I now see to have been mortal terror. I never met her again, not even by accident. The true account I wrote of her committee and its need for public generosity put us at a final remove from each other.
I did not forget her, but I forgot about her. Her life seemed silent and slow and choked with wrack, while mine moved all in a rush, dislodging every obstacle it encountered. Then mine slowed too; stopped flooding its banks. The noise of it abated and I could hear the past. She had died by then – thick-skinned, chain-smoking survivor of the regiment holding the fort.
I saw us in the decaying winter room, saw the lamps blazing coldly on the dark window panes; I heard our voices: “Peanuts are harder to find than Scotch now.” “Do you send parcels to Asia, or just to Germany?”
What a dull girl she is, Georgie must have thought; for I see, now, that I was seamless, and as smooth as brass; that I gave her no opening.
When she died, the godsons mentioned in her will swarmed around for a while, but after a certain amount of scuffling with trustees they gave up all claim, which was more dignified for them than standing forlorn and hungry-looking before a
cupboard containing nothing. Nobody spoke up for the one legacy the trustees would have relinquished: a dog named Minnie, who was by then the equivalent of one hundred and nineteen years old in human time, and who persisted so unreasonably in her right to outlive the rest of us that she had to be put down without mercy.
Born in Montreal in 1922, Mavis Gallant left a career as a leading journalist in that city to move to Paris in 1950 to write.
Since that time she has been publishing stories on a regular basis in
The New Yorker
, many of which have been anthologized. Her world-wide reputation has been established by books such as
From the Fifteenth District
and
Home Truths
, which won the Governor General’s Award in 1982. In that same year she was made an Officer of the Order of Canada, becoming a Companion of the Order in 1993, the year that she published
Across the Bridge
and was the recipient of a special tribute at the Harbourfront International Festival of Authors in Toronto. In 1996,
The Selected Stories of Mavis Gallant
was published to universal acclaim.
Gallant is a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. She has received several honorary degrees from Canadian universities and remains a much-sought-after public speaker. In 2001 she became the first winner of the Matt Cohen Award.
She continues to live in Paris.