Authors: Jane Smiley
square of paper. She wrote her note. Mrs. Kimura held out her hand, and Margaret folded
the note twice and gave it to her. Then there was the smiling and bowing, and Margaret
set down the chopsticks and the noodles and the paper. Later, she thought she might have
liked to buy the noodles. After that, she realized that in the shop she hadn't thought of
Alexander. Pete did not answer her note.
In fact, Margaret was thankful for his silence, because it was impossible--you
could not broach such a subject as marriage, and then, if you did, you were bound to say
something rude or inappropriate, since you knew nothing other than what Dora had
revealed, and all those revelations were jokes or half-truths. Pete himself was such a
suspicious character that if you did promote something, and then that something came to
pass, it would be on your conscience, whatever the outcome, and the outcome was so
much more likely to be unfortunate than it was to be happy. Certainly he was married
already--hadn't Dora hinted as much? There could be more wives than one, couldn't
there? And children, too. What had been easy in Missouri--introducing a name into the
conversation, walking past the family home, running into this friend or that friend,
wondering aloud about an incident from years gone by, even looking in the newspaper, or
watching a person from afar--was impossible here. But then she thought of what was now
in the papers about Ypres again, about the unspeakable horrors that would draw Dora and
her little pistol and her lovely shoes. Ypres was not far from Paris--Margaret didn't know
the exact distance, but it was easy to imagine the rumbling boom of distant cannon. And
no one guaranteed that Dora would stay in Paris once she was on her own.
Dora herself said nothing about going to Europe. Then she came for a weekend
visit to Mrs. Wareham's. She had infiltrated a Wobbly meeting dressed as a young man
and was very pleased with herself. She had worn canvas pants and broken shoes and used
a string as a belt and spoken in "low, resentful monosyllables," saying that she was up
from San Jose looking for a job. "But really," she told Margaret, "I'd heard that Lucy
Parsons might be there, and I was hoping to get a word with her."
The Bells would have shivered in horror at the thought of Dora consorting with
International Workers of the World and swooned at the thought of her sitting down with
such a famous socialist and strike organizer as Lucy Parsons, but Margaret said, "You
might write a book about her." Lucy Parsons was an old woman and would not be going
to Europe.
"Too much time in Chicago," said Dora. She sighed. "The meeting was all Italian
bakery-workers. And I could only understand about half of what they were saying. I was
embarrassed at myself."
Nevertheless, she had written it up for the paper, and the article was appearing
Sunday, which was why she was at Mrs. Wareham's for the weekend.
Margaret said, "I don't--"
"It's not as daring as it appears."
"How do you know?"
"Nothing ever happens, does it? I should have taken you to the meeting. It was all
a lot of shouting. Nothing to be afraid of. No one was drunk, so it was safer than a saloon.
They want to complain. They should complain."
"They work themselves up."
"Or they blow off steam. That's what I say in my little piece. They're happier
afterward."
Dora was pleased with everything about her prank, from the way she learned
about the meeting (eavesdropping) to her costume and her "acting" to her well-developed
memory (she wrote the quotes down afterward, back at her apartment). The indignation
about the article would come not from the Wobblies but from the industrialists, who
would be upset that she had "defanged" their enemies, made them seem merely rowdy,
almost good-natured.
Margaret stayed at Mrs. Wareham's most of the afternoon, even hauling out her
knitting for a bit while Dora read, but she could not think of a way to broach the topic of
marriage. It occurred to her that she might enlist Mrs. Wareham, but she knew full well
that Mrs. Wareham's own marriage had not been a happy one, and as much as she loved
her son, Angus, she pitied the girl he had married in Hawaii, and now there was a child,
and Mrs. Wareham had sent the girl clothes and money. And Mrs. Wareham was not as
set in her isolationist opinions as most people were.
Then Pete Krizenko appeared, when she had almost abandoned her plan,
knocking at the front door of Quarters P while she was washing up after Andrew's dinner.
The moment she opened the door, she knew that she had no idea how to ascertain his
"intentions" or to suggest some "intentions" if he hadn't conceived any on his own. Dora
was thirty-two. Pete was not as old as Andrew, but even by the way he walked into the
room with his hat pushed back on his head and his hands in his pockets, she could tell he
was long habituated to doing just as he pleased. Her project, she thought right then, was
akin to harnessing cats. So what she said was "I'm so glad you've come! How can we
prevent Dora from going to Europe?" And then she backed away from the door and let
him in. Andrew was in his study, but the door stayed closed, because there was always so
much uproar from the ship factories at this time of day; he would not know of Pete's
coming unless she summoned him.
Pete sat down. He said, "Do we want her not to go to Europe? Not even to Spain?
Things in Spain have never been better." Again, she noted, his accent could be from
anywhere. She wondered if he had practiced it as he was standing outside the door, but
then, remembering her purpose, she banished that thought. She said, "She wouldn't stay
in Spain."
Pete settled back and crossed his legs at the ankles. He was holding his hat in his
lap, and now he smoothed the brim. When he smiled, Margaret saw that he was amused
at her. Normally, she didn't mind anyone's being amused at her, but now she felt a sense
of offense take hold. He said, "Perhaps she needs a husband."
"I thought of that."
"I thought of that," said Pete.
"Did you really?"
"Indeed,
I
did."
He didn't add anything. The outcome of that thought was self-evident, wasn't it?
Margaret tried to gauge from Pete's demeanor how he felt about what appeared to
be the failure of his hopes, then said, "Perhaps you could be more persistent."
He said, "What about my manly self-regard? Russian men especially--"
"It didn't seem to me from your stories that you have much manly self-regard."
She shocked herself by saying this, but then said, "I mean to be giving you a compliment,
you know." And she did.
He dipped his head. Compliment accepted, she decided. And then she felt herself
relax a bit--not her distrust, but her discomfort. She asked him if he cared for any tea. The
stove was still hot. He said, "May I prepare it?"
Margaret pointed to the kitchen.
Pete seemed perfectly at home in her kitchen, and perfectly at home making the
tea, but he did it in a way she had not seen before--he boiled the water until it was rolling,
then poured some into the teapot. After he had swirled it around inside the pot, he poured
it out, and then added loose tea to the empty pot, and let it sit for some seconds. He
invited her to look into the pot. She saw the tea leaves relax in the damp warmth into a
dark, fragrant pile. Only then did he pour in the water, which, in the meantime, he had
brought back to the boil. He looked around, picked up a shawl she had left hanging over
the back of a chair, bunched it around the teapot, and cut a lemon into wedges. "Now," he
said, "we have Russian tea. When I visit again, I will bring some salka pastries. They are
good with tea and jam. Little buns."
He handed her the cups and saucers, and himself carried the teapot wrapped in her
shawl into the front room.
The tea was dark and strong, and she liked the lemon. But they were no closer to
securing Dora's presence in San Francisco. Margaret's task, she knew, was to extract
information and then promises. Finally, she said, "Did Dora tell you my sister is married
to her brother?"
"It is my impression that they have twelve or thirteen children."
"They have four children. Four boys."
"Dora does always seem to overestimate the negative effects of any number of
children."
"Beatrice's boys are quite well behaved for Missouri boys. Not so"--she thought
for a moment--"well armed as most."
Pete
laughed.
"It's my other sister, Elizabeth, who has produced the prodigies." It was pleasant,
after all, Margaret thought, the way Pete's willingness to be amused had infused her.
The door to Andrew's study opened, and Andrew came out, papers in one hand
and a book in the other. He said, "My dear--" But then he saw Pete, tossed aside the book,
and crossed the room in two strides. Pete stood up. They shook hands in a hearty way,
and Andrew declared, "The thing is finished!"
He was talking about his manuscript.
Dora was forgotten, because the book he had tossed aside, which he now retrieved
from the chair where it had landed, was a sample volume from a printer Andrew had
unearthed in Oakland. The binding, green, was an excellent possibility. The title could,
for only a small extra payment, be embossed in silver, and the front edge--Andrew
stepped to the table and pushed the tea things aside. Margaret picked up her shawl and
wrapped it around her shoulders. Later, she took the tea things back to the kitchen.
AFTER all, he chose deep ("navy") blue embossed covers with a silver title
(The
Universe Explained
, by Captain Andrew Jackson Jefferson Early, Ph.D., United States
Navy). The frontispiece was a picture of Andrew taken some years before, when his hair
and his mustache were still dark. As Margaret held it in her hands, it seemed to her that it
had arisen quite suddenly, popping into her presence as if from another world. The paper
was glossy and the front edge gilded. The typeface, which Andrew chose on his own, was
surprisingly appealing--upright and uncompromising, but friendly, just the way Andrew
fancied himself to be. The pages of text were interspersed with ink drawings that Andrew
had made. He had an elegant hand, as when he drew the impact craters from the shotgun
experiment he had done with Hubert Lear. The endpapers were especially rich--swirls of
blue and yellow that reminded her of the sky.
A thousand copies were printed. Andrew rented a room to store them, and paid a
young man to send them out to every astronomical journal, geological journal, and
physics journal in the world, also to twenty-five or so newspapers, from the
Times
of
London to the
Sacramento Bee
. They were also sent to heads of observatories, and one,
of course, to Mr. Akenbourn, in South Africa. One was sent, with Andrew's compliments,
to Oliver Lodge in England, another to Professor Russell at Princeton, another to Lord
Rutherford at the University of Manchester. He sent them only to English speakers, and
he sent these volumes as gifts, not as supplications. The rest he expected to sell to
interested parties.
And that is that, thought Margaret with relief. He had gotten it off his chest.
"I have nothing to prove," he said to her one day at breakfast.
"Except your theory." She laughed, though he did not, so she added, "A man who
is proposing a whole new way of looking at the universe has something to prove."
But he shook his head. "My task is to think through my theory as carefully as
possible, working it out so that it is complete and self-contained. How can I prove it, with
a five-inch telescope? Only those astronomers with expensive equipment can prove it,
with mathematicians to back them up."
It was then that she saw how much he had to prove.
The first response was from Mr. Akenbourn, who congratulated Andrew on the
"scope and depth of your analysis, and the pioneering genius of your ideas." But this
letter was enclosed in the same envelope with another in a different handwriting, that of
Mr. Akenbourn's daughter, who said that Mr. Akenbourn had died, but that he had been
reading Andrew's book on his deathbed "and it seemed like he found it enjoyable,
Captain Early, though his strength was waning very quickly. But he wanted to write you,
and so he did. Yours in memory, Clara Akenbourn Maldon."
Oliver Lodge sent a card--"Many thanks. Very busy, all best, Lodge"--and
Science
noted it in the "Books Received" column. Andrew took this as a semi-promise
that someone was even then busy reviewing it. It did receive an actual review from the
St.
Louis Post-Dispatch
("Missourian Sees the Big Picture") and the
Des Moines Register
("Universe Like a Giant Net, Says Scientist"), and a few other, smaller papers, one in
Australia. The editor of
Observatory
, which had published Andrew's letter on Einstein,
sent a note--"Thanks for this, looks good." These acknowledgments dribbled in over the
summer, to the swelling tune of Andrew's regrets.
Pete sent him a note asking for a copy of the book and offering to pay for it