Read The Weight of Heaven Online
Authors: Thrity Umrigar
Tags: #Americans - India, #Murder, #Psychological Fiction, #Married People, #India, #Family Life, #Crime, #Psychological, #Family & Relationships, #General, #Americans, #Bereavement, #Death; Grief; Bereavement, #Adoption, #Fiction
until after lunch,” he said. “Small table.”
“Sorry. That makes sense.”
“Though if you’re in a hurry?”
“No, I’m fine. I’ve nothing planned for today, thank God.”
“So why psychology?” he asked, while thinking, If you don’t
sleep with me I’m going to spontaneously combust.
“It’s what I’ve always wanted to do. Help people heal their lives. I
think it’s one of the reasons I’ve always been drawn to music, too.”
“Yeah. Hearing you yesterday, I’m surprised you’re not studying
music. You were fantastic.”
“Thanks. When I was younger I used to think I’d be a professional musician. I was a music major as an undergrad.”
“Where’d you go to school?”
“Oberlin.”
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“That’s where you’re from?”
“No, I grew up in Shaker Heights, near Cleveland. But my dad
taught at Oberlin, so . . .”
“I’ve heard of Shaker Heights. Do your parents still live there?”
Frank was aware that he was being rude by asking so many questions, but he couldn’t stop himself. He was charmed at how easily
Ellie spoke. She had none of the guarded self-consciousness that
often afflicted beautiful women.
“Your childhood sounds happy,” he said, and hated the trace of
wonder and envy he heard in his voice.
She looked embarrassed. “It’s that obvious, huh? Guess I’m
going to have to keep this a closely guarded secret from my clients.
But it’s true—I had a happy childhood. Go figure.”
She smiled, and he felt himself getting flustered. Everything
about this woman was throwing him off stride. He didn’t know what
to focus on—her flawless, tanned skin, the radiance of her face, the
careless way she pushed her shiny hair out of her eyes, the way she
moved her hands as she spoke, the rich, silver words that tumbled
out of her like a waterfall. Frank knew that he was good-looking.
While growing up, he had strangers at the mall telling his mother
how cute her little boy was; had Jenny Waight, the girl next door,
give him his first kiss when he was twelve; had his male roommate
profess his love for him while in college. But he suddenly felt as nervous and uncertain of himself as he had been the night Jenny Waight
had kissed him behind the garage.
“Did you hear a word of what I said?” Ellie was saying.
“Oops. Sorry. Guess I wandered off for a minute.”
She pulled a face. “Is the company that boring?”
He realized she was flirting with him, and the realization made
him laugh. “Not at all.”
“I was asking about where you grew up.”
“Grand Rapids. A little over a hundred miles from here. That
and a universe away.”
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“How do you mean?”
He looked at her, unsure of how to explain. “I was born in Grand
Rapids,” he said. “But I never felt like I belonged there. It was—
there was something defeated about the place. But my first day here
in Ann Arbor, I felt like I was home.”
She nodded. “How about your parents?”
“My mom wasn’t too crazy about the town either. But she still
lives there. My dad—” He stopped for a slight second, wanting to
ensure that his voice would be smooth and matter-of-fact when he
spoke. “My dad—he left when I was twelve. So I have no idea what
he thought.”
The dark eyes held something in them now, a sharp, probing intelligence. “I’m sorry,” she said simply.
He looked away, afraid of seeing pity in her eyes. He thought
back to the day he’d come home from school and found his mother
weeping in her bedroom. He had immediately blamed himself,
thought back to how defiantly he had spoken to his dad when he’d
been ordered to clear the table the previous week, was convinced
that he had inadvertently conveyed to his father the growing contempt and animosity that he was beginning to feel. For weeks he
had sat on the front porch bargaining with God. In school, he gave
Tommy Hefner a bloody nose for asking if he was okay, now that
his father had left.
“It was a long time ago,” he now said. His tone was measured,
pleasant, as if he was telling her about a recent picnic.
“I see,” she said. She opened her mouth as if to say more, and
he stiffened imperceptibly. “Well?” she continued. “Should we go
back to discussing the matter at hand?”
He stared at her blankly. “What’s that?” he blurted.
She laughed. “The party? At your friend’s house? I thought I
was auditioning for the part? Don’t you want to come up with some
dates and look at the music selection?”
Did she know that he had made the whole thing up? He couldn’t
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tell. At this moment, he hated himself for having made up this cockand-bull story. Maybe he would’ve been better off if he’d told her
the truth—that he would
die
if she didn’t sleep with him. But just as
he was trying to decide whether this was the moment to sit back in
his chair and say that he had a confession to make, she pulled out her
calendar and something about the gesture told him that she had no
idea that there was no friend and no birthday party.
Something stirred in him, a deep tenderness at this trusting,
gullible girl with her head bent over her large appointment book.
Now she was leaning into her bag and pulling out a notebook and he
realized that she had written down possible musical selections. He
pulled his chair closer to hers, saying, “Let’s take a look,” and his
voice was so husky with sexual desire that he was surprised that she
didn’t notice. He felt like a pervert, getting his jollies merely from
inching closer to a pretty girl.
She told him a little bit about each musical piece and he half listened in a semi-delirious state, happy to be smelling her shampoo,
inhaling the subtle sweetness of her perfume, glancing at her face
every chance he got. “You know what?” he said finally, knowing
that she was waiting for him to respond to her many suggestions.
“You decide the music. I have implicit faith in your—good taste.”
And this time he let his eyes linger lightly on her face, her neck, the
sweet place where the white of her dress met her chest. She blushed
and looked away, but when she spoke her voice was light and jaunty.
“Not a problem. Let’s come up with a date, though.”
“Tell you what. Why don’t you give me three dates and I’ll—run
them by my friend?”
“Great.”
He felt a sudden panic at the thought of saying good-bye now
that lunch was over. Leaving Ellie would feel like coming down
from a drug-induced high. “Hey,” he heard himself saying. “I was
thinking of walking down to the art museum. Do you know about
the new Chagall exhibit? Any interest in joining me?”
Th e We i g h t o f H e av e n 1 7 1
“I’ve already seen it,” she said, and the sun disappeared as if
someone had plucked it out of the sky. “But I adore Chagall. If
you’re going, I wouldn’t mind seeing it again,” and the sun assumed
again its rightful place in the sky.
“Cool. Let’s go,” he said, setting down a twenty-dollar bill, and
when she reached for her handbag, he touched her hand lightly and
said, “No way. I asked you. This is my treat.” And all the while his
mind was saying, Remember this moment. It’s the first time you
touched her.
They spent three happy hours at the museum. When they left,
Ellie wanted a Coke, so they went to a nearby café and soon Frank
was talking about this wonderful Chinese restaurant that had recently opened up on Main. Ellie said she loved Chinese food and
he invited her to join him for dinner. It was nine o’clock when they
finally parted, after Ellie refused Frank’s repeated offers to drop her
off at her home. He walked down the streets to his apartment whistling to himself. A first date that had lasted for eight hours, as long
as a workday. While the other schmucks in the city were punching
clocks, appeasing bosses, putting in a full day at work, he had just
spent eight hours in the company of a woman who seemed to get
lovelier with each passing moment. Eight hours. Not bad for a first
date, Frankie boy, he told himself, not bad at all.
He phoned her the next day, but Ellie was going out the door
and couldn’t talk. But she phoned him back that evening and they
talked for three hours. Just before hanging up, he asked her casually
if she was free for lunch on Saturday. She wasn’t, she was playing
in a wedding, but she had to go to Borders on Sunday to pick up a
book she’d special ordered, and did he want to go with her? He did
indeed, but what about grabbing a quick lunch before that? Maybe
do Ali Baba’s again, if it wasn’t too soon.
He showed up at the restaurant intending to confess his deception to her. He had practiced keeping his tone light, making a rueful
face, admitting to being a little starstruck. She was already at the
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restaurant when he got there. “Hi,” he said brightly, and she turned
to face him, but her eyes were cold. He sat across from her, a sudden
feeling of dread enveloping him.
“What’s up?” he said uncertainly, but she interrupted him. “I
want to ask you something. And I want you to tell the truth. There’s
no friend, is there? No birthday party that I’m to play at?”
He shook his head, trying to find that rueful, puppy-dog expression that he had practiced. But suddenly he saw it as she did—not
as a playful ruse by a love-struck man but a ploy by a man ruthless
enough to lie in order to get what he wanted. “I’m sorry,” he said. “I
was going to tell you today.”
She shook her head angrily, and he saw that what he’d earlier
seen as coldness was actually rage. “One thing about me, Frank. I
hate being lied to. Even so-called white lies.” She shook her head
again. “God. I feel like such a loser. Can’t believe I fell for such an
obvious move. I figured it out this morning. Anyway. Guess the
joke’s on me.” She pushed her chair back and got up.
“Where—where are you going?”
Her voice was low but deliberate. “Away. From. You.” She moved
away and then looked back. “Please don’t call me ever again.”
He sat at the table transfixed, watching her stride away until he
could not see her anymore. He did not feel sad. He felt angry. Angry
at himself for having blown this, for having told a lie in order to
get something that he thought he had no realistic chance of getting
any other way. Only to lose her, anyway. And he was angry at her
for not understanding this, for treating him as if he was a goddamn
stalker or something, instead of just a twenty-three-year-old guy
with a serious crush on a woman. Screw her, he told himself. She’s
not worth it. Probably snores in her sleep. He hardened his heart,
became again the twelve-year-old boy who, after he’d stopped keeping his vigil for his father, didn’t allow himself to miss him again.
His anger protected him, allowed him to leave the restaurant without dissolving into tears.
Th e We i g h t o f H e av e n 1 7 3
The tears came as soon as he turned the key and entered his
apartment, which suddenly felt as empty and desolate as a grave. He
collapsed on his futon, his mind leafing through the many snapshots
he’d clicked in the past few days—Ellie with her head bowed over
her notebook, Ellie bent over the cello like a lover, Ellie searching
his face with her all-knowing, probing eyes—and then he was a boy
again, sobbing his losses, his pain at the loss of his father coming at
him fast and evil, like a madman with a knife, and merging with
the pain of this most recent loss. His rational mind tried to tell him
that this was insane behavior, that he barely knew this woman, that
he was crying over a phantom, but it did him no good. He turned
on the stereo so that the neighbors couldn’t hear him, and then he
sobbed, dimly aware that the sounds he was making were not so
much the sounds of a grown man but of someone much younger. He
thought of phoning Scott, but that would have required words, and
he felt beyond words at the moment.
He didn’t eat for a full day after the talk with Ellie. Didn’t shave for
four days. Barely left the apartment. Ignored the two messages that
his mother left on his answering machine. Played Jim Morrison on the
stereo each night and drank two beers before collapsing in bed.
On the fifth day, he woke up early, shaved, and got dressed. He
resolved to stop acting like a goddamn imbecile. He decided to go
for a bike ride down to the river. After the ride, he ran into some
friends and hung out with them. He was pleased with himself when
he finally wound his way home at about four in the evening, proud
to have under his belt a day without lamenting the loss of Ellie. He
took a shower, and when he came back into the living room, he noticed the flashing light on his answering machine.
“Listen,” Ellie’s voice said. “Just because I asked you to never
call me again doesn’t mean that you should—you know,
never
call
me again.”
He was dialing her number before he’d heard the rest of her
message.
All that fall, it smelled of watermelons. And burning firewood. The