Authors: Jane Smiley
As for Alexander, sometimes his eyes were open, wide open and staring.
Sometimes his body was stiff. Dr. Bernstein checked on him twice a day, not saying
much, only asking if he was still nursing. More or less, he was still nursing.
On the morning of the eighteenth day, she unwrapped him and saw that his belly
was hugely distended. She saw, moreover, that it had been hugely distended, but that she
hadn't recognized it as hugely distended--she had only recognized it as Alexander. Alarm
and guilt surged in her, burning upward from her feet, enveloping her head, her brain, her
mind in a fever of knowledge. Her first thought was not to call Dr. Bernstein at all, but to
hide this development from him and, for some reason, call Mrs. Kimura. Even as she
thought this, Alexander started to make a noise, high-pitched and distressed, and to arch
his back. It seemed to her that he was crying for help, so she picked him up and went to
the door of the room and opened it. Naoko was in the hallway. She looked at her, and
without Margaret's saying a thing, the girl ran out the front door. Margaret closed her
door and carried Alexander over to the bed. She sat down and readied herself to nurse,
but in that short moment, the moment between her sitting down and her putting him to
the breast, he lost even that ability--Margaret felt it. It was a feeling of something
dissolving. She looked at his face. She saw that he had but one thing left, which was that
he could look back at her. She stroked the top of his head, moving the thin hairs this way
and that, feeling the smoothness of his golden skin. She held him closer, as gently as she
could. And then, in the way that you can feel with your baby but not see or sense with
anyone else larger or more distantly related, she felt the life force go out of him entirely.
1909
1911
THE LEARS MOVED AWAY--off to Hawaii and then Anchorage ("A sad day
for me," wrote Mrs. Lear, "but have you ever tasted moose? It is actually quite good
salted and dried"). The big house was taken by an older couple, Captain Pritchard and
Mrs. Pritchard, no children. Mrs. Pritchard was seventeen years older than Margaret, but
she seemed to think they were two of a kind. Though she was an agreeable, mild person,
she was afflicted with headaches and almost never emerged from her vast domicile.
Margaret had her confidantes now, and everyone on the island was friendly, but she knew
she had become the strange sort of lady that she remembered noticing as a child, the sort
of lady who was always neat and kind, whose house was quiet because there were no
children, who hosted the knitting circle and kept small treats around in case some child
might be in need of a licorice whip or a shortbread cookie.
Then, in the summer of 1911, she got a letter from Dora, who was living in
Europe. Dora's departure from St. Louis had been scandalous, but not unwelcome.
Elizabeth had written Margaret, "Robert's mother has thrown up her hands and washed
her hands at least ten thousand times, but it has had no effect at all. Now she says, 'We
shall have to BUY someone for her on the black market!'" Dora wrote:Darling,I was
sitting at a table at the restaurant at the new Goring Hotel with Ezra Pound, who is from
Idaho, can you imagine, and in walks Hearst, my BOSS, I knew him instantly, and he sits
down at the next table, and when he takes off his top hat, he puts it down on the floor
beside Ezra. Without saying a word, or even pausing in his ingestion of his sausage and
mashed potatoes, Ezra picks up his foot and puts it inside the hat. Hearst jumps up and
says, "Young man! You have your shoe in my hat!" and Ezra says, "Old man! You have
put your hat in my way!" And while they are glaring at each other, I say, "Mr. Hearst,
Miss Dora Bell,
Cosmopolitan
. May I introduce you to Mr. Pound, Ezra Pound?" At
which point, Ezra finished his sausages and exclaimed, "Pound the bell! Pound pound
pound, / As Ronald her steed did tattoo the pavement / Hatching a flock of doors, a /
barbed surreal randy will." He tossed this off in a resonant voice that caught the attention
of all the people, who then clapped, though I doubt that they understood all of the puns he
was making on our names. Then Ezra handed Mr. Hearst his top hat, and got up and
walked out. Mr. Hearst invited me to his table, and he asked what sort of poetry that was,
so I told him about Ezra and his friends. I can't say that he was impressed, except that he
said that he had been to Idaho--"Full of jokers and freaks, Miss Bell." The result of all of
this was that I have taken a position at the
San Francisco Examiner
, and I am to come
and live there.
In Europe, Dora specialized in a certain type of article, in which she happened to
find herself somewhere--walking down the road between Florence and Siena, or
exploring the Fortress of Diocletian at Split. She would fall into conversations with
people she met, and report them, as if word for word. Though she got interviews with
important politicians from time to time, mostly her subjects were not important at all.
They simply showed her how to gut a tuna or to make a pudding out of sheep stomachs or
to hide in some rocks and keep the baby quiet while a bear ambled past. Were the articles
reports or stories? Did Dora listen, or did she make it all up? Margaret didn't actually
care. When Lavinia sent her a sheaf of articles that Beatrice had culled from the
magazine, she read them avidly and felt as though she now knew the Adriatic perfectly.
Andrew was more skeptical, but he read every article from beginning to end. He declared
that he was glad Dora was coming, a breath of fresh hot Missouri air in the California
damp.
Dora arrived in Vallejo in the first-class car of the Overland Limited, stayed at the
best hotel in town. She was tiny still, but slender now rather than square. She wore a
medium-blue tiered coat over a lighter-blue skirt, and her shoes were very neat, also in
blue. After tea, they went for a stroll. She walked and talked quite confidently,
discoursing on this and that as they tramped down the street. She scanned faces and
facades and perspectives, taking everything in. Every so often, she would reach into her
bag and take out a small notebook and a pen, saying only, "One little moment, darling,"
and then write something down. When Margaret asked her what she was writing, she
said, "Goodness, I don't know. I never look into my notebook. But the habit of writing it
down keeps it in my mind. My mind is such a dustbin. Don't you remember that in St.
Louis you could hardly raise your eyes from your shoes without offending someone?
Darling, don't you enjoy California? Do you ever get tired of it? I have never seen such a
variety of humanity all in one place." Her deep, satisfied breath was practically a snort.
A week or so later, Dora asked her about Alexander. No, really, she drew
Margaret out in a practiced way. Margaret rarely if ever spoke about Alexander--every
lady in her knitting group had a tale to tell, if not of her own misfortune, then of a sister's
or a cousin's. After describing what happened as best she could, Margaret said, "Dr.
Bernstein told us about women whose children suffered from an icterus like Alexander's,
and then produced one child after another, each one sicker than the last, though how a
child could be sicker than Alexander, I don't like to think. I took that to heart. Whatever
the condition is, it doesn't seem to be relieved by the passage of time or anything a doctor
can do." She put her finger to her lips, as if keeping a secret, and then took it away, and
said, "I hated Andrew for months afterward."
Dora
nodded.
"I hated him for being disappointed in Alexander. Even though Alexander was
dying from the first moment he was born. I realize now that I was beside myself, of
course."
Dora took her hand. Margaret sighed, and then tried to be scientific. "Andrew
insisted that we test our blood, and our blood types are compatible. It's a mystery." She
went on. "I did describe Alexander's symptoms in a letter to my mother." She sipped her
tea, then said, "Of course, my mother was sympathetic, but Ben's and Lawrence's deaths
were so much worse. And my father's, of course." Margaret didn't say that she supposed
she had been cowardly not to keep at it, as Lavinia and every woman she knew had done.
She had let the scientific speculations of Dr. Bernstein and Andrew make up her mind for
her. The painful part was not so much the death of Alexander as it was that if she let
herself dwell on thoughts of Alexander, then they would be followed inescapably by
thoughts of her hand in Lawrence's, or her father bending down to say something to her.
She turned these things over in her mind, and perhaps if Lavinia had lived down the street
it would have come up one day when she found her mother in a meditative mood, and
they would have talked it out. She never had the courage to write about it in a letter,
though.
Then she said, as brightly as she could, "I thought of adopting. There was a boy I
heard of, two years old, whose mother, father, and older brother died right in town. The
boy survived all alone for three days. It was in the paper. I even went to the orphanage to
look at him. Relatives in Texas took him in. But Andrew was interested in his own
offspring, not someone else's. And he has gotten quite carried away with his book about
the moon. No time for much else, really."
Dora said, "Oh, Margaret."
Margaret changed the subject back to Dora's adventures.
What Margaret didn't tell Dora was something larger and more nebulous--that it
was Andrew himself who seemed dangerous. Not so much dangerous to her, Margaret,
but dangerous to any child they might have. When she remembered those weeks with
Alexander in the room at Mrs. Wareham's, what she remembered was not the fog of
Vallejo, but the fog of Andrew, his voice booming like a horn, his breath filling the room,
his body casting a cool shadow over the baby, his inquisitiveness a probe, draining
Alexander's own small life force. Could any infant withstand such a thing? That Andrew,
with the approval of Dr. Bernstein, stayed away from her--that he no longer read
Havelock Ellis, or aspired to a houseful of youthful geniuses--was more than fine with
her.
* * *
AT the end of the summer, Dora happened to come on the ferry, intending to stay
for the weekend and then take a horse up to Napa to explore. She put herself up at Mrs.
Wareham's--in Margaret's room. Margaret had kept the room at Mrs. Wareham's, at first
because she couldn't bear to give it up, and later because it gave them access to Vallejo
when they didn't want to take the trouble to get the ferry to the island. She kept
Alexander's cradle there until one of the ladies in her knitting circle asked if she could
give it to her daughter for her grandson, and Margaret saw that she was right, and kind, in
her intentions. As a result of her keeping the room, and using it, Mrs. Wareham had
become her good friend. The two of them spent many evenings knitting and discussing,
and lamenting, the wild habits of Mrs. Wareham's son, Angus. Andrew was as good with
Angus as he had been with the Lear boys--since Andrew was up most nights, and was tall
and strong, he didn't mind rousting Angus out of the bad neighborhoods, carting him
home drunk, and putting him to bed without disturbing Mrs. Wareham. And it gave him
the opportunity to exercise his curiosity about something other than the universe--he
declared to Margaret that he could have mapped Vallejo if there were a call for that sort
of thing. Angus had finally, in the last year, gone into the navy. He was now a sailor over
at the island, about to embark upon his first mission, to the Bay of Fundy.
Dora stayed that night with Mrs. Wareham. By the next morning, when Margaret
arrived for breakfast, the two women had settled it between them that Margaret's room
was to pass to Dora. Dora fancied the idea of a retreat, not so much because she wished to
rusticate herself and take a rest, as because she wished to have yet another place to
explore and another group of friends.
While Mrs. Wareham's daughter, Cassandra, and Naoko served breakfast to the