My Salinger Year (26 page)

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Authors: Joanna Rakoff

BOOK: My Salinger Year
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“We can ask,” said Don, “but I don’t think she’s going to do it. I mean”—he laughed and gestured to the little strip that constituted our kitchen—“if she won’t install a sink, is she really going to give us a heater?”

“Isn’t heat required? Isn’t it our legal right, as tenants?” I had no idea where this information was coming from, but I was pretty sure it was correct. “I can’t stay here another winter without heat. It’s ridiculous.” My heart was pounding, strangely, erratically, at the thought of another winter in this apartment, with or without heat. Another winter with Don.

How many times had I been told that I would not meet Salinger? That he would not come in, that he had given up New York. The city—the site of his childhood, the setting for most of his stories—exhausted him. The city had prevented him from working after
Catcher
’s release, when he’d lived in an apartment on Sutton Place, its walls painted black, like that of the filthy communist couple in Mary McCarthy’s
The Group
. The city had allowed his second wife, Claire, to abandon him, their baby in tow, on a three-day visit from Cornish, where she spent twelve, fourteen hours alone with that baby, in a snow-blocked house, while Salinger sat in a shed out back and wrote. Salinger still sat in that office—or, well, a different office, across the road from the original one—all day, and I wondered if he still wrote about New York, if his imagination still dwelled in the Glass family’s enormous East Side apartment, crammed with end tables and books and relics of Bessie and Les’s vaudeville years. Or did his mind now concern itself with the stories of the families that surrounded him in New Hampshire? One small, sad voice inside me wondered if his removal from New York hadn’t ultimately silenced him,
left him without a subject. “I have a question for you,” he often said when he called. But I had questions for him, questions that had accumulated slowly over this year in which I’d tried to console, assuage, and calm his readers, in which I’d earnestly tried to stay true to his intentions, his ideas, his desires.

On a blustery November afternoon, a tall, slender man strode slowly through the finance department, glancing to his left and right with confusion. He wore a pressed flannel shirt tucked into jeans that, too, appeared to have been pressed and his silver hair parted deeply on one side, combed and Brylcreemed in the style of the 1950s and 1960s.
No
, I thought, though even from afar I could see that this man had large, dark eyes and truly enormous ears, the sort of ears I now knew he’d also bequeathed to poor, doomed Seymour Glass. He was making slow, steady progress toward me, a look of mild panic on his face. I stood up with the intention of running over to Salinger—for that had to be who this was, though his visit had not been mentioned to me—and guiding him to my boss’s office, then froze, hovering over my typewriter. If I ran over to help him, would I seem like one of those assistants I’d been warned about? The ones who tried to slip Salinger their stories and gleefully leaked his phone number? Before I could resolve this question, my boss came running out of her office. “Jerry,” she cried, her voice oddly choked with emotion. He’d not been into the office in years, I knew, and I wondered if he looked visibly older, aged, more frail, than the last time she’d seen him. She took his long arm in one of hers, as if to steady him, and embraced him with the other. “Jerry, there you are! It’s so good to see you.”

“Good to see you, good to see you,” he said, smiling down at her. Arm in arm, they made their way to my desk, behind which I still stood, frozen. I had thought that in such a situation my boss would be tense, nervous, but instead she
appeared radiant, relaxed, excited. The obvious occurred to me: She truly liked Salinger. Adored Salinger. Her job—I already knew—was far more than a job to her. But so much of her work involved tending to the interests of the dead I hadn’t thought at all about what such devotion meant in terms of her relationship with the living. She was Salinger’s conduit to the world, his protector, his explainer, his mouthpiece. She was a part of his life, and he hers. She was his friend.

“Joanna, come out here and meet Jerry,” she said, smiling. For the first time since early June, her cheeks had color in them. With a nod, I obeyed, extricating myself from my bulky desk with more care than usual, for I was certain I was going to trip on a wire or bang my shin on a drawer or in some way embarrass all of us with my starstruck clumsiness. My legs seemed to be made of some pliable but heavy substance, like liquid lead. Somehow, though, I found myself standing in front of my boss and Salinger—
Jerry
—resisting the urge to smooth my skirt.

“Jerry,” said my boss, gesturing to me. “This is Joanna, my assistant.”

“Hello, hello,” he said, taking my hand in one of his own and holding it as much as shaking it. His hands were extraordinarily large and warm and dry. “We don’t really need an introduction. We’ve spoken on the phone many times.” In person, his speech was less garbled, his voice less loud. He looked at me, dark eyes shining, as if for confirmation.

“We have,” I agreed.

“Well, it’s wonderful to finally meet you.” He still had my hand in his.

“It’s wonderful to meet you, too,” I parroted back at him, idiotically, resisting a strong and bizarre—and inexplicable—urge to hug him. It was easy to imagine my boss, briefing her next assistant: “No matter how close to his work you feel, you are not to
embrace
him.”

I was also thinking about those letters in my desk. There were, at that exact moment, three half-drafted responses sitting in the drawer with the fan letters. Irrationally, I feared that Salinger might somehow open the drawer and discover them, this breach of policy, of his instruction.


Well,”
my boss said, clapping her hands together as if to startle me out of my misplaced anxiety. “We have a lot to discuss. Let’s get to it. Jerry. Why don’t you come sit down for a bit, and then we’ll go to lunch?”

“That sounds perfect,” said Salinger, and he followed my boss into her office, towering over her small form. The contracts for the “Hapworth” book were drawn up. I myself had typed and retyped multiple drafts of the contract until we found a format that was amenable to Salinger. This, of course, also fell under the category of highly irregular: publishers drew up contracts, not agents. But in this case, the publisher was so small it wasn’t even clear if he had a standard contract and if he did it certainly wouldn’t have applied to a book by J. D. Salinger. My boss had written the contracts herself, and perhaps Jerry was here to sign them, in the dark confines of my boss’s office, the door to which, as I watched, closed with a resolute click.

In my desk lay the letter from Winston-Salem, two neatly typed pages, unfurled from a laser printer, and ending:

I’ll write you again soon. I can hardly wait. Anyway, my line of thought is this: if I was the guy who put myself onto paper and I came out in the form of “The Catcher in the Rye,” I’d get a bang out of the bastard who had the nerve to write me a letter pretending (and wanting) to be able to do the same thing
.

As the door clicked, I slid open the cold metal drawer and fingered the ragged white sheets. I’d read this letter a dozen
times now, unsure of how to respond. I still wasn’t sure what to say. Wouldn’t it be better to simply pass the note on to Salinger and let him decide?

My boss’s door remained closed for a long time, long enough that I eventually slipped out to buy my sad little salad. When I returned, the door was open and they were gone. An hour later, she returned alone. The letter would remain in my desk.

Two days later, on Saturday, a large, red-faced man with a flattop arrived at our apartment with a box. “Hello,” he said, then gestured inexplicably toward the interior of the apartment. Some hours later, an odd, archaic-looking metal contraption was installed on our front wall. “How do you turn it on?” I asked.

“No!” he said vehemently, with another inexplicable gesture. I held up my hands in surrender.

A moment later, Kristina arrived, as always clad in her red nylon track jacket. “Hello, wife!” she cried, taking my hand. Immediately, she and the man—her husband, presumably—began arguing loudly in Polish. I retreated to the couch. “Wife,” she cried, after a good ten minutes. I stood up. “This is the heater. It needs to be hooked up to gas. But my husband forgot pipe. He will come back tomorrow with pipe and hook it up. Okay?”

“Great,” I said, trying to muster some enthusiasm. How could this little box heat an entire apartment? I had never seen a heater that looked anything like this.

“But it’s warm in here,” she cried, smiling. “Whew! So warm! You’ll be fine until then, yes?”

Don and I—in shifts—waited home all Sunday, but Kristina’s husband never arrived. On Monday, I called Kristina
and asked what was going on. “He had trouble finding right pipe, but he has it now,” she assured me. “He’ll be there tomorrow.”

“I’ll be at work tomorrow, though,” I said. “I won’t be able to let him in.”

“We have key. He’ll let himself in.”

“Okay,” I said nervously. My parents had a strict policy against unsupervised strangers in the house.

“Oh my God, Buba,” Don cried, when I expressed concern. “What? Do you think he’s going to steal something?”

All day Tuesday I tried not to worry. The minute the clock hit five thirty, I raced out the door. Half an hour later, I was on our block, where the air had a strange, unprecedented scent, one I couldn’t place. I unlocked the door to the front house, grabbed our mail, then walked through the door to the courtyard, where it hit me full on: gas. The courtyard was full of gas. Gas so thick my eyes immediately began to water. Gas so thick I could actually
see
it, swirling through the air. It had happened, I thought, my worst fear. Don had come home and turned on the stove. The wind had knocked the pilot out and gas was pouring out of the stove. Don was possibly dead. Or near dead. Except that Don wasn’t supposed to be home until much later. He was working, then going to the gym. But he could have changed plans. Been fired. Anything.

For a moment, I stood in the courtyard—staring dazedly at its cracked concrete center—unsure of what to do. Then I ran up the steps, trying not to breathe, and unlocked the outer door, then the door to our apartment, where the gas was so thick my head immediately began to fog over. The stove was closed. Closed and off. As in a horror movie, I slowly turned around. There was the new heater, a fierce flame burning in the little window on its lower left corner. From its bottom, a thick pale-blue pipe now extruded before jogging and running parallel to the floor. Beneath this pipe lay a puddle, a puddle steadily growing as the pipe above dripped
and spurted something that looked like water but thicker. A puddle just perhaps eight inches from that flame.

Brooklyn Union Gas came quickly. “If you had stayed at work an hour later,” the serviceman told me, “the building would have blown.”

“Was it just installed wrong?” I asked, rubbing my hands together. I’d been sitting on the stoop of the front building waiting for their blue truck to pull up.

“They used water pipe instead of gas pipe,” he said. “Kind of unbelievable. The gas ate right through the pipe. And with that open flame—” He shook his head. “I’ve never seen a heater like that before. I can’t imagine where they bought it. Definitely not the local hardware store.” With a thumb, he gestured to the corner, where there was, in fact, a hardware store. “Looks like it was manufactured forty, fifty years ago. Or in another country.”
Poland
, I thought.

“Is it safe?” I asked.

“Safe?” He looked at me as if I’d just asked whether the sky was blue, squinting one eye and smiling a little. He had a broad jaw and blue eyes set amid a spray of creases. “No, I wouldn’t say that heater is safe. I mean, it has an open flame. You walk by it, poof, your coat’s on fire. And that’s just the most basic problem. Even if they set it up properly, what if there’s a leak somewhere else? You’re better off with a space heater. Or just being cold.” He looked at me, standing up a bit straighter and cocking his head to the side. “You live there alone? In that”—sucking in a bit of gas-tinged air, he cocked his head toward the house—“
place
?” I sensed that he had been restraining himself from saying “dump.”

“No, no,” I told him quickly. “I live with my boyfriend.”

His head was still cocked slightly toward the house as he continued to look at me, nodding. Then, in one sudden, elegant gesture, he stood up straight again and placed his hands
in his pockets, so his arms curved out like wings. “Your boyfriend should take better care of you,” he said, pulling his keys out of his pocket. “All right. Let the place air out for at least two hours. We opened all the windows for you. You have somewhere to go?” I nodded. I could go to the L, I supposed, or around the corner, where my friend Cate had just taken a huge railroad flat. “Good night,” he said. “Keep the windows open all night. Let the place air out. You need fresh air, even if it’s cold.”

“Fresh air,” I called as he got in the truck and started it. “Got it. Fresh air.”

At the end of the month, Max again took me along to a reading at KGB, where we sat with a convivial group of young editors and writers who lingered—as was not often the case—long after the reading ended, drinking whiskey with soda backs. “What the hell do you do all day for your boss?” he asked. “I mean, what does
she
do all day back there? Other than smoke and talk on the phone.” I stared at him, blinking, a smile frozen on my face, unsure of what to say. My silence must have cowed him, for he took a bracing sip of whiskey and waved his hands in a gesture of apology. “Forget I said that. Things have been a little tense lately.” He’d been in and out of my boss’s office more often recently, often shouting. Max was up for partner, and it seemed that there were issues with the negotiations. I wasn’t sure, but I suspected this had something to do with the Agency’s old-fashioned cooperative system, in which agents’ salaries were based on seniority rather than sales. At any other agency, Max—with his vast, fantastic client list and his million-dollar deals—would be among the highest-paid agents, but not so at the Agency, where the pot was divided equally. To become a partner, too, he would have to pay into the Agency, though I didn’t know how much. Surely more than my entire salary. I wasn’t
entirely sure why he stayed. “I
do
wonder,” he said, looking not at me but at the wall, where a Soviet-era poster—a woodblock print of a worker holding some sort of hammer-like implement—hung just above our heads. “I do wonder what she does. ’Cause she’s certainly not selling books.” A muscle tensed in his jaw. Suddenly he turned to me, a terse smile creating creases at the sides of his mouth. He looked tired. “What? Is she just, you know, sending threatening letters to everyone who mentions Salinger’s name on his Web page?”

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