Read The Middle Kingdom Online
Authors: Andrea Barrett
âI dreamed I lost my research grant,' he said. âThat I had to go back and work for my old advisor. As a
technician.
Jesus.'
The window in the living room was half-hidden by a pair of ugly fiberglass curtains framing it on either side. We kept it open for the breeze, even though the screen had long since rotted away. Walter had talked about fixing it for weeks, but the plague of bugs we'd dreaded had never materialized, and so he kept putting it off. Because the window faced the woods, I had never drawn those curtains closed. I had never touched them until that morning, when I tugged at the drawcord and tried to open them wider, so the dawn could lighten Walter's clouded face.
The curtains hardly moved at all. When I pulled the cord again, we heard a noise. âWhat's that?' Walter asked. I heard a tiny scritching sound, like toenails on glass.
âI don't know,' I said. I moved to the center of the window and grasped a fold of curtain in my hand, peeling it away so I could examine the rod. Rusted hooks, maybe. I rolled the fabric over and then froze, staring at what I held in my hand. The curtain was lined with tiny brown bats, a solid mat from edge to edge and floor to ceiling, like a moth-eaten moleskin coat. The bats hung upside down by their claws with their wings wrapped around them like shawls and their small faces, cross with interrupted sleep, peering out at me. I screamed when two of them moved, and Walter rushed to my side.
âJesus!' he said. âThis is
fantastic!
A whole colony, probably sleeping here every day after they finish feeding for the night â¦' He turned back the other curtain, which was similarly lined, and at that second touch the bats stirred themselves, the whole mass shifting and unwrapping their wings. When I started crying, they poured out the window in three streams that looked like smoke.
Walter put his arm around me, genuinely puzzled. âWhat are you afraid of?' he asked softly.
What makes you cry in your dreams? I wanted to ask him that, ask him why he'd kept me up in this trailer, listening to him, while everyone else played below; why he'd let me live in his house for a year when he didn't travel all that much and had no plants to water, no pets to feed.
âThey won't hurt you,' he said, his hands stroking my hair. âThere's nothing scary about them. They're like spiders â very friendly and smart. Useful. They eat bugs â that's probably why we've been so comfortable here without the screen.'
Stroke, stroke; very calm and rational, as if he were afraid of nothing in the night. I hated spiders almost as much as I hated bats, and I wasn't comforted. The bats had been there all summer, roosting secretly after their nighttime expeditions, and I had never noticed them. They could have nested in my hair. I couldn't stop crying.
Walter stroked the back of my neck and then my back and then my hips. I'd lost thirty pounds since I'd started school and so I didn't feel I had to fling his hand away. Gently, he closed the curtains and led me to the couch, where the manuscript he'd read to me still lay in a yellow heap.
âSsh,' he said, laying me down among the papers. âDon't worry. I'll take care of you.'
The bats made a whispering noise as the last of them left, and we made love surrounded by fish. People gave these to Walter, because of the work he did: fish pictures and fish statues and fish cups and vases and bowls; fish lapel pins and cufflinks, fish ties, fish hats. Walter had arranged these along the shelves and walls, and all summer I'd smiled at this evidence of something warm and boyish in him. I thought any man who'd keep these things and display them so proudly must have a sweet inside. Walter was shy, I thought. The fish eyes glinted at me. Walter was reserved. But I knew him better than anyone, I could find what was hidden in him.
âYou're so soft,' he said to me later, and his clumsiness told me he meant it. âSo smooth.'
Walter screened the window for me and the bats never returned. In the weeks that followed, we worked at the lab or on the lake all day, and when dusk fell we showered and made dinner and met with the students and then read. Walter read old volumes of natural history, liking to know every creak and call and whistle and song in the woods, while I, years behind, always behind and ashamed of it now, read the journals Walter marked for me. Each night we read until eleven and then went to bed, and on the nights Walter decreed, when he wasn't too tired and we didn't have to get up too early the next morning, we made love.
Thanksgiving in Fargo, North Dakota, with Walter's family; Christmas in Westfield, Massachusetts, with mine. That was the deal we worked out the first year we were married and stuck to every year after that.
In 1980, those holidays were also our first meetings with each other's family, because our wedding had been private, secret, almost furtive. Walter had wanted it that way. Him in a blue suit, me in a simple dress; two of his students for witnesses; two plain rings and a civil ceremony. âIt's a second wedding for both of us,' Walter had said. âWhy fuss?'
And that was fine with me. He had proposed to me over the kitchen table â upright, not on his knees â ticking off on his fingers the reasons we should join our lives, and I had liked that too. I liked that he was so sensible and sane. I liked that he had a plan for our lives. Budgets, goals, investments. Lists and planned recreations. On Sundays we were to sit by the fire or, if the weather was good, outside, and eat lunch from trays and read together happily. And in time, when we both felt ready, we were to start a family. Two children, we decided. A boy and a girl, two years apart. We'd start savings accounts for their college tuition as soon as they were born. Walter's calm predictions for our future thrilled me.
On our first Christmas we woke in Walter's house â our house â and had coffee in bed and exchanged presents and made love clumsily, buried beneath the blankets. Walter's fish watched over us, as they had since our return from the reservoir; he'd brought his collection back when I'd told him I liked them. And if our lovemaking no longer had the edge and fervor it had had in the trailer, still it was good enough. Our bodies fit well together, and Walter was patient and gentle. Sometimes Randy, so strange and wild, appeared when I closed my eyes, but when he did I chased him away and tried to focus on Walter instead. When I whispered that his hands were cold, he warmed them on his own thighs.
Two feet of snow buried everything that day. On the drive to Westfield I got carsick and threw up, but I couldn't convince Walter to turn around and take me back home. âIt's Christmas,' he said gently. âDon't you want to be with your family? Don't you want me to meet them?'
Yes and no, yes and no. Secretly, I'd feared Walter might bolt if he saw my family before we said our vows, and all fall I'd made up excuses for why we couldn't visit them. Now I was sick with all I'd hidden. Walter's parents, whom I'd met a month earlier, had been tidy and respectable. âThey're a little ⦠unusual,' I said. âI'm afraid you won't like them.'
âHow bad can they be?' he said, but his smile faded when he first saw the house. The asphalt shingles were loose in several places; a squirrel had tumbled one of the garbage cans and tossed orange peels and paper across the snowy yard. Great-uncle Owen's BMW contrasted oddly with my father's old station wagon and my mother's tired Pontiac. The windows had been sealed with plastic for extra insulation, and a ragged corner on the hall dormer flapped in the wind. The front door was framed with strands of plastic holly and decorated with a cardboard Santa Claus.
My mother greeted us. She wore a red dress, red high heels, red lipstick; she'd dyed and teased and lacquered her hair into a coarse black helmet. When she opened the door she smiled as if she were glad to see us. âMerry Christmas, darlin',' she said, with a trace of the Virginia accent she'd somehow held onto for years.
âThis is my mother,' I murmured to Walter. âRoxanne Doerring.'
âCall me Roxy,' she said brightly to him. âEveryone does.'
She led us inside, where nothing had changed since I was small. We'd had the green plastic tree since I was in elementary school, along with the white plastic candles and the dusty bulbs and the poinsettia-printed tablecloth. My mother laid her delicate hand on Walter's long arm. Always the smallest one in the room, always the most noticeable, she'd stayed tiny through an act of will, five feet of skin and bone and sinew.
âShe works as a school librarian,' I'd told Walter earlier. âShe raises roses. She tapes books for the blind.'
But I hadn't told him how she and I had been at war for as long as I could remember. She was from Virginia and I was not; I was half my father's child and his half was all that showed. I'd weighed ten pounds when I was born, and although my father called me healthy and his mother, my Mumu, called me pleasingly plump, my mother was appalled. She kept her own weight down by rigorous dieting, and by the time I was five she was already hiding food from me.
âYou have your father's metabolism,' she'd say, setting down my afternoon snack of carrots and celery sticks. âLook at him. Look at his family. You have to be careful.'
Behind her back I'd eaten everything I could find. I cleaned out my friends' refrigerators, spent my allowance at the candy store, hid the chocolates Uncle Owen brought me from Boston and ate them at night. When I grew old enough to babysit, I swooned over my employers' cupboards and ate everything but the baby. Morning and night I sat down to my mother's skimpy, carefully balanced meals, and when she weighed me each Sunday she shrieked in horror as I tried to look bewildered.
âAre you doing this to
spite
me?' she'd ask.
Perhaps I was. My mother had had no outlet for her intelligence beyond raising me and Toby, changing the wallpaper every three years, nagging my father. She didn't go to work until Toby and I were grown, and so during my childhood she focused on me, trying to make me into what she'd wanted and missed. Harping on the things I wasn't to do: I was not to marry a man who'd meant to be a New York chef and had ended up as a cook in a Westfield school cafeteria. I was not to have children so young that they ruined my life; not to live with my Swedish mother-in-law; not to have to scrimp and scrounge over every penny. I was to hold myself dear, be somebody; beautiful and aloof and fastidious, well-dressed and socially adept. My mother wanted my next-door neighbor and enemy, Luellen Barnes, and what she got instead was me.
âIt's lovely to meet you,' Walter said, detaching his arm from my mother's grasp as he followed her over to my father's chair.
âMy father,' I said. âEdwin Doerring.'
Dad rose slowly and swallowed Walter's hand in his, silent as always in my mother's presence. âHe's a cook,' I'd told Walter, but I hadn't explained where, nor had I told him how, when my father came home from his job in the cafeteria, he used to slip me the treats he'd hidden in his huge black coat. He never ate supper with us; he'd been working with food all day and he had no appetite. Instead, he'd take a long shower and then retreat to the room he'd made for himself in the attic. After supper, after we'd done our homework, Toby and I were sometimes allowed to go up to his room and play quietly while Dad worked on his stamp collection. He shuffled tiny, jewel-colored bits of paper from Cameroon and Mozambique, Belize and New Guinea and Chile, and because he liked me fat he sometimes met me in the kitchen late at night, after my mother and Toby had fallen asleep, for a shared, stolen snack.
I had never told Walter that either â not how my cheeks puffed, my thighs swelled. How my belly grew high and wide, an echo of my father's, or how my mother fumed when the salesgirl at Filene's steered me toward the chubby section, toward vertical stripes and concealing navy blue. I was big-boned, thick-waisted â chubby, but not much worse than that until my last two years of high school. Girl-chubby, genetically chubby; chubby because I was built that way and also because my father and Mumu and Uncle Owen liked it.
Walter thanked my father for inviting us and then moved toward my brother Toby, who rose from the floor where he was playing with Cindy and Samantha, his twins.
âGrace,' Toby said dryly. âHow nice of you to honor us.'
He pushed his girls forward and then tugged his wife, Linda, up from her seat on the hassock. My mother murmured introductions. Toby took after her â small, neat, precise. When I was two, he had tried to gouge out my right eye with one of his long, thin thumbs, and our relationship had never changed much after that. He had never gotten over the humiliation of me running around with his high-school friends.
Walter stood in the center of this crowd, uneasy, nervous, damp. âYou're a marine biologist?' my mother said. âIs that what Grace told me?'
âFreshwater, actually,' Walter said. âI'm a lake ecologist.'
âOh, isn't that interesting,' Linda said.
âGrace was your student?' Toby said. He knew; although I hadn't brought Walter home before I'd spoken about him often enough when I'd called.
âOne of the best students I've ever had,' Walter said.
âMakes sense,' Toby said. âShe used to be a real teacher's pet.'
Meanwhile Uncle Owen sat in the easy chair near the fireplace, in which a fake fire of electric logs glowed. Always, until Mumu died, he had sat in that chair on one side of the fire, while Mumu pulled her wheelchair across from him. My father's uncle, not mine; Mumu's brother. But where Mumu was crumpled and soft and pale, her legs useless from the nerve damage caused by her diabetes, he was broad and tanned and vigorous. And wealthy, too â he had a flourishing business in Boston, dealing in Oriental art and antiques, and his apartment in Cambridge had been my favorite place in the world. Silk hangings, a blue enamel bird in a cage, music boxes, black lacquer chairs, old rugs, plants in huge pots, and a succession of handsome young male companions who kept house for him and answered his phones and petted me when I visited. Uncle Owen had stayed with us often, all throughout my childhood, and he had rescued me from my mother many times in minor ways and once spectacularly.