Family Matters
A Novel
For my mother, and her mother
Amidst our house’s ruins I remain
Single, unpropp’d, and nodding to my fall.
—THOMAS EDWARDS,
“Sonnet on a Family Picture,” 1748
Many six-year-olds, though they still do not
realize that they themselves will one day die,
are beginning to get the idea that death is
often connected with old age and that the older
people often die first. One girl thus remarked
to her mother, “You will be an old, old lady.
And then you will die. And I will have babies.”
—FRANCES ILG and LOUISE BATES AMES,
Child Behavior
Chapter One
Betsy
Betsy Ruscoe was in bed when her mother’s summons came. Judd, beside her, stirred in his sleep at the phone’s first ring, and Betsy—instantly roused—ran to answer it before it could ring again and wake him. He could be savage when his sleep was disturbed.
“Betsy? It’s me, dear. I hope I didn’t wake you up.”
“Well, you did, Mom, sort of, but—” She squinted at the clock. “Mother, it’s four in the morning!”
“Is it? That late? Somehow I thought you’d be up.” She gave her worn-out little laugh. “I suppose I thought my thoughts would waken you. I was thinking about you, Betsy. There’s something we need to talk about.”
“What is it, Mom?” Betsy sat down and supported her head with one hand. She was very tired. She had graded a stack of final exams and fallen into bed at midnight. Judd had been asleep already, and Betsy had lain awake: What did it mean, his going to bed and to sleep without her, without lovemaking? No sex in four days! Was it a good sign (we can be natural and comfortable with each other, as if we were married) or a bad one (he’s losing interest in me)? The dilemma kept her awake, with all its peripheral anxieties: the analysis of his calm breathing, for example (is it faked? is he lying there wishing I were someone else?), and the cold panic that came rushing to engulf her whenever she thought of sleeping there alone, night after night, without Judd.
“Can it wait till morning?” She had to get up at seven, give an exam to her graduate students at eight, she could be at her mother’s shortly after ten.…
“I don’t think so, Betsy. I’m not at my best in the morning, honey. I don’t know what it is, maybe it’s having Terry here. That perfume she uses fogs up my brain.” The hollow laugh again. Terry was the new day nurse, her mother’s special bane: her perfume, her nail polish, her elaborate hairdo. “She looks like a nurse in a Playboy cartoon,” Betsy’s grandfather, Frank, had commented when they hired her. He held his two hands well out from his chest to indicate bosom. “But she’s a fine nurse. We have to appreciate that.” Frank also, Betsy could see, appreciated the perfume, the hair, the bosom. But Terry was a good nurse—efficient, smart, and kind. The night nurse, Mrs. Foster, was less reliable and not young. She often slept, though not soundly. It was understood she would awaken like magic if Violet needed her.
“Is Mrs. Foster there, Mom?”
Violet laughed. “Sound asleep. Right out. I told her to go take a snooze in the guest room, and she did.”
Damn, thought Betsy. She would have to replace Mrs. Foster. At present, there was no need for her services most of the time, but any day, any night, Violet would be needing intensive nursing. She was not in much pain yet, and she still looked on the nurses as jokes—the sexy Terry, the bumbling Mrs. Foster. But the pain was to come, and for sure.
“So this is a good time to talk, honey. Confidentially, I mean.”
“Okay, Mom. Shoot. What’s up?” Betsy heard her bright, upbeat tone with disgust. This was not the way to talk to a dying woman. But how else to respond to her mother’s girlish chatter? Violet seemed at times to be using death as a mode of flirtation, the way a young girl might once have used a fan.
“You’ll have to come over, Betsy.”
“Now?”
“Why—yes. I can’t tell you properly over the phone.”
“In the morning—”
Violet’s voice went petulant—something new for her. “I told you, Betsy. I’m not myself in the morning, and that Terry is here butting her nose into everything, and sometimes I feel so odd, Betsy, you just don’t know! The morning can be so dark, darker than night!”
She took a deep, shaky breath—even over the phone it sounded teary—and Betsy felt tears behind her own tightly shut eyelids. Don’t be like this, Mother, don’t be dying, don’t be sick, don’t cry.… Betsy opened her eyes and looked around the darkened kitchen, washed here and there with dim light, the dinner dishes still piled in the sink. Damn. She closed her eyes again. Her mother continued to sniffle. “Mom!” She lowered her voice: keep it quiet for Judd, keep it cheerful for Violet. “Mom, is this really urgent? Really, now?”
Her mother caught the bantering tone and giggled. “It really is.” She gave one last sniff. Betsy imagined her wiping her eyes with a lace-bordered handkerchief—one of the extravagances she had decided to allow herself in her last days. “I’ve always hated tissues,” she had announced, and Betsy had hunted up, in the attic, a box of the real article, which Terry now faithfully, flawlessly ironed. It was a small task: Violet, once a facile weeper, now didn’t often cry. “But who could blame the poor woman if she did?” Terry would say, tenderly ironing lace.
“I know it’s late, honey, but—”
“It’s all right, Mom. I’ll come over.”
“Now?”
“Right now. Is Grandpa asleep?”
“I guess. Oh, Betsy—” Violet hesitated, as she always did when the question of Betsy’s roommate came up—steeling herself. “Will he mind?”—hating his authority over her daughter but nevertheless recognizing it.
“Judd?” Betsy always referred to him with forced casualness. “He won’t wake up. I’ll sneak over there and back without his even knowing it.”
Violet giggled again, but uneasily. She liked the middle-of-the-night conspiracy, but she didn’t like Judd.
“Do you need anything, Mom?”
“Not a thing, dear.” Neither of them reflected on the irony of the exchange. It was ritual.
Betsy hung up, and, resisting the impulse to lay down her head and groan, she tiptoed back to the bedroom and collected jeans, T-shirt, sandals. Judd lay in darkness; Betsy bent over him and kissed the air an inch above his forehead. “Good-bye, dearest love,” she said soundlessly. Even had he been awake, she would not have said those particular words; she uttered them only in her imaginary conversations with him, and he said them back.
She dressed in the living room and, on her way out the door, thought to leave a note. She propped it against the saltshaker on the kitchen table (their place for notes, as it had been her parents’): “Gone to my mother’s. A whim of hers. Don’t worry.” How I love you, how it kills me to leave the bed where you sleep.… “Back soon. B.”
Barefoot, she let herself out the front door and put her sandals on downstairs, on the porch. They would have clattered dangerously on the steps. She stood a moment, breathing deeply, and looked up for stars. There were none in the pale, predawn sky, but there was a remnant of moon, and Betsy wished on it, childishly, without shame—anything! she would try anything!—before she got in her car and drove through the quiet streets to her grandfather’s house.
Another of Violet’s terminal luxuries, besides linen handkerchiefs, was candy. There was always candy by her bed, often glossy and expensive chocolates in their fluted nests, but sometimes six-packs of Mars Bars or Almond Joys brought by Terry. The doctors approved of the candy. Anything to keep up her strength and her spirts and her weight. And, of course, as no one said though everyone thought, “What does it matter now?” But it mattered to Betsy, who felt more lost and bereft at her mother’s candy eating than at any other aspect of her illness. Her mother, who for years had been a vegetarian, a vitamin freak, a natural-foods fetishist, had taught Betsy that the body was a temple not to be defiled. But when her disease was diagnosed she began to eat candy and to drink coffee again and even bourbon. “My system let me down, Betsy,” she had said. The veil of the temple was rent in two.
She was just sinking her teeth into a Mars Bar when Betsy let herself softly into the house and went up to her mother’s room. She kissed her, smelling the chocolate. Violet hugged with just her arms, spreading her hands wide. “Careful, I’m sticky.” The hug over, she finished the candy bar and reached for another. All the while she was beaming at Betsy.
“You look cheerful,” Betsy said, ignoring the candy.
“I love it when everybody’s asleep in the house but me. I always have. I used to wake up in the night when I was little and roam around. I didn’t care if it was dark, the dark never scared me. Everything looked different—exciting. Once I went into my parents’ room, right up to their bed. My dad opened his eyes and looked at me and winked and closed his eyes again.” She gave her tired chuckle.
She ate her second Mars Bar, looking at Betsy with twinkling eyes, and then wiped her smudged fingers and lips on a handkerchief.
“Well!”
“You wanted to talk, Mom.” Betsy felt more tired than ever now that she was here. Her mother’s room made her tired. It was all dark except for the light right over the bed and the dim light out in the hall by which she’d found her way upstairs. And it was warm in there. They still had the heat on, in mid-May—not for her mother, but for Mrs. Foster, who had poor circulation.
“If you’re not too tired, honey.”
Betsy woke up. “I came all the way over here at four in the morning and tired or not I’m prepared to hear what you have to say if you’ll just get on with it.”
“Don’t get testy. I know I impose on you, but I won’t much longer, you know.”
Violet could speak matter-of-factly about her situation, but she looked at Betsy fixedly, as if testing her reaction; the grim prognosis was still new to them all.
Betsy took her hot hand. “I’m sorry, Mother. You don’t impose on me. I’m glad to do anything I can for you.”
“Good.” Briskly, Violet withdrew her hand, reached for another Mars Bar, decided against it, and folded her hands in her lap, lacing her fingers together.
“Betsy.”
Betsy waited.
“Elizabeth Jane.” Her mother smiled. “What an English and literary name. Your father chose it. I made it Betsy.”
There was another pause. Betsy waited patiently, observing her mother’s flushed cheeks, her brown and white hair cut short now and left straight for convenience, her wide-set brown eyes that gave her the look of a bird, and the slightly beaked nose to match. Violet looked wonderful, everyone said so. She had become plump in middle age, but in spite of the candy bars the disease had begun to whittle her down, and at the moment she was just right. There was always a low fever, and it kept her skin flushed and her eyes bright. She looked impossibly healthy.
“Elizabeth Jane, I want you to find my mama for me.”
Betsy went cold and felt the stomach-dropping sensation that means something significant has taken place. Her mother’s words were insane, but they came like a pronuoncement from on high, a voice from out of the heavens.
“I want you to find my mama,” she said again.
Betsy collected herself and adopted a tone of extreme reasonableness. “Mom, Grandma’s dead. She’s been dead since nineteen fifty-four—”
Violet waved a hand impatiently. “You think I don’t know that? I don’t remember that? I’m not getting dotty, Betsy. You know what I mean.” She waited.
Enlightened, Betsy cried, “You mean your real mother?” She felt overpowering relief.
“I do.” Violet smiled and pulled a book—a P.D. James murder mystery—from under her pillow and took a clipping from it. “Your Grandpa would never look in here.” She held it up for Betsy to see. It was cut from the Times: ADOPTEE’S LONG SEARCH ENDS IN JOYFUL REUNION.
“Everybody’s doing it,” Violet said. “Getting all those records opened up that no one used to be allowed to see. They’re passing laws and everything about it.” She looked with satisfaction at the Times article and tapped it. “This gives a lot of tips—voting lists, old phone books, birth records, newspapers. It would be a nice summer project for you, Betsy. Here, take this. It’ll start you off.”
She didn’t so much hand the clipping to Betsy as confer it on her, as if it were a valuable inheritance. It was fragile, having been unfolded and folded up again many times, and the newsprint was rubbed faint by Violet’s eager fingers. Betsy folded it gingerly and held it in her hand.
“But, Mom, she’s probably—you know—dead by now.” It was a difficult, desperate word to use, in any context. “She’d be a very old woman.”
Violet shook her head. “No. I’ve got it figured out. She was probably an extremely young girl. Who else would find herself in that predicament but a young, innocent girl?” Violet raised a finger in the air. “I have a picture of her in my mind. A young girl no more than eighteen. She looks very much like you did at eighteen, or like I did. But dressed a la nineteen twenty-two—bobbed hair, dropped waist, trying hard to be sophisticated. But a sad little girl underneath …” She laced her fingers together again, neatly. “So—” As if her sentimental vision were conclusive proof. “If she was no more than eighteen when I was born, she’d be no more than seventy-three today, and probably less. I see her as a very young girl. She may be barely seventy.”
“But I thought there was some story—” Betsy faltered. Her mother had told her the tale of her adoption years ago, when she was in college, and she was embarrassed to find she had forgotten most of it. “Wasn’t she married? What was it? She and her husband lived next door to your parents—I mean Grandma and Grandpa—and they couldn’t keep the baby—you, I mean—for some reason, and—what was the story?”
Violet dismissed all this with another flutter of her hand. “All nonsense,” she said complacently, and went on, “Now, Grandma never spoke a word to me about this. It was Aunt Marion who told me—feeling it was her duty before I got married to tell me I was adopted—and it was. A child should always be informed of such things. Not that I was a child. I was nineteen years old by then, and working. Oh, God, Betsy! The shock!”
She leaned back on her pillow and closed her eyes. She wasn’t bothering with her glasses most of the time, and her eyelids looked large and creamy, framed by wrinkles and by the two wings of her eyelashes. “I’ll never forget it, to my dying day.” Tears had come to her eyes when she shut them, and she dabbed with a clean handkerchief: a theatrical woman.
“But how could you not have known?” Betsy demanded. “For nineteen years! No one let it slip? There were no hints? It seems incredible.”
“Betsy, you have no idea what a refined family you come from,” Violet said, with a tiny, ironic smile. “How genteel everyone could be—especially in those days. Adoption meant there was illegitimacy somewhere, and what could be a worse disgrace than that? That’s why I don’t believe that story,” she continued. “Why would a respectable woman give up her baby? It’s just not plausible. No, Marion made that part up, so the story wouldn’t seem so—low. But it was the part that got to me, that this woman didn’t have to give up her baby for adoption. Until I realized, thinking about it while I lie here, that her version was cleaned up for my sake, and I began to see my mother as a young girl, confused, seduced—oh, who knows? But with no alternative but to give me up. And here was this childless couple—your grandma and grandpa—their only child had died at birth, and they wanted a baby more than anything. So you see.”
Violet’s hand hovered over the last Mars Bar and finally took it. Betsy threw the empty cardboard and cellophane package into the wastebasket. It overflowed with wrappers.
“Will you find her for me? It’s important.” Violet chewed steadily, but her eyes were troubled, and she kept them eagerly on Betsy’s face. “You know how important it is, honey. Everything is important to me now. Before I die. I want her.”
The tears came again and were blinked back before she took another bite. Betsy was overcome with sadness and had to blink back her own before she could speak. It was hopeless, of course. It was pathetic, just as the hand embroidery on Violet’s bedjacket was pathetic, and the cheery books by her bed, and the damned candy bars. Nothing seemed worth doing, worth anything, just at that moment. There was death all over the room, but she spread her hands and said, trying to dole out equal parts of hope and deflation, “I’ll try, Mom. It’s all I can do.” Was it better that her mother hoped or didn’t hope? Did it matter? Did it matter?
“Don’t tell your grandfather,” Violet said, looking pleased and sitting up straighter. “I don’t want to hurt him. He doesn’t even know I know. And that article—it says there might be resentment on the part of the adoptive parents.”
“But if I should find her—”
Violet considered, carefully. “He may have to know then, but let’s wait until it’s absolutely necessary.” She lowered her voice. “The worst of it is he may even know who she is, where she is. He could give us a good lead. But we can’t ask him.”
“You’re sure? If he knew her name it would save a lot of time.”
“Promise me you won’t say anything to him, Betsy! Or to Marion! She’d be blabbing it to Grandpa before you could draw breath.”
She was agitated, and Betsy soothed her. She patted her hand. Violet finished her candy bar in one bite.
“Just tell me what you know,” Betsy said, looking for paper. She had scholarly habits; she would write it all down. She found blue, stationery across the room on her mother’s dresser.
“There’s pens in the top drawer.”
Betsy groped and found one. “All right. Now.”
“Well, my parents—I mean Grandma and Grandpa—”
“I know what you mean, you don’t have to say that every time. If we keep qualifying what we mean we’ll never get anywhere.”
There was a pause.
“I’m sorry, Mother.”
Violet sighed. “Try to be patient with me, Betsy.” She leaned forward to Betsy and stretched out a hand, but didn’t touch her. “I’m sorry I dragged you out of bed. There are maroon shadows under your eyes.”
“It’s okay, Mom, honestly it is.”
“Are you using that moisturizer, Betsy? It’s important that you keep your looks if you want to—to—” Keep your looks and keep your man: the shadow of Judd reduced Violet to incoherence because the last thing she wanted Betsy to do was keep Judd. Betsy, who personally felt she didn’t have much worth keeping in the way of looks, saw the problem bogging her mother down. The moisturizers and cold creams and mascara wands and blushers she pressed on her daughter were keeping that man in her bed. Betsy stood up and hugged her mother with an affection that was suddenly exuberant. “I’m using it, don’t worry about it. Just tell me what you know about my grandmother.”
Violent returned the embrace with surprising strength, but then she lay back, looking drained. She stared at Betsy. “Your grandmother!”
Betsy nodded, pleased with the notion. “My grandmother! Maybe she’ll leave me all her money, maybe she’s really wealthy, maybe I’m the granddaughter she’s been longing for.”
Violet giggled weakly. “Oh, Betsy. Do you know, I never thought about her being your grandmother. Isn’t that odd? Oh, we do get self-centered when we get old.” She smiled happily and settled into the pillows with a contented wiggle. Her bouts of contentment always amazed Betsy. She’s dying, she thought.
“Well. Anyway.” Violet frowned, addressing herself to the paper in Betsy’s lap. “My parents and I lived at six sixty-six Spring Street. I’m not sure I’d remember the address if it weren’t for those three sixes—we moved from there when I was little. And my real mother—we can call her Emily, by the way—”
“Why Emily?”
“That was her name.”
“How do you know?”
“Marion told me.”
“You know her name?”
“Well, I’m not at all sure of her last name—wait, Betsy, we’ll get to that part. I’m ahead of myself. Wait.” Violet touched her brow with her long forefinger and closed her eyes. “She must have lived at six sixty-eight, on the right of our house as you went up the hill because—wait, the numbers went down—yes, the Rebhahns lived on the left, and that must have been six sixty-four, in fact I know it was.” She opened her eyes, triumphant. “Yes. She lived at six sixty-eight Spring Street—if it’s true that she lived next door, and I think it was. That has the ring of truth. When you tell a lie, you keep to the truth as much as you can.” You should know, Betsy thought. “I suspect Marion only lied about the marriage. Let’s accept the rest as true.”
“What else can we do? We’ve got to have something to go on,” Betsy said, thinking: hopeless, hopeless.
“Right. So she was a young, unmarried girl living at six sixty-eight Spring Street, and her name was Emily something, like Lofting or Loftig.”
“Aunt Marion told you this?”
“She told me the name, but I didn’t catch it right. To tell you the truth, I didn’t pay that much attention. I was in shock, Betsy. Imagine if you were to find out that I wasn’t your mother? Or that Daddy was never your father?”
Betsy couldn’t imagine it. She brushed the attempt away. Besides, anytime she wished she could look in the mirror and see her mother’s bird face—eyes and beak, sharpened.
“And, of course, this was thirty-five, thirty-six years ago that she told me. But it was something like that. Lofting. Or Loftig. There were a lot of German families in the neighborhood. Say Loftig. But check Lofting.”
“I will.” Violet watched anxiously as Betsy wrote them both down. “Anything else?”
“Not really.” Violet’s eyes became faraway. “Except I saw her once—did I tell you that?”
“Really saw her?” How she dramatizes, Betsy thought. “Really? Or imagined—wished—”
“No, really. I was working at Chappell’s, in hats. I made fourteen dollars a week, Betsy. Can you imagine that?” She chuckled, but it was a faraway chuckle. Betsy had heard many times, especially lately, about her mother’s brief fourteen-dollar-a-week job, and the lunch she treated herself to every payday: a chicken salad sandwich, iced tea, and a hot-fudge sundae at Schrafft’s, all for fifty cents. “So one day your grandpa came in, and there was a woman with him. I was kind of surprised to see him, but I guessed he was going out to lunch, and maybe the woman was a client. He came in the front door with this woman. It was right near the hat department. He didn’t come over to me or anything. They just stood there, he and I waved and smiled, but the woman just stood looking at me, and then they left. Then, a couple of months later, when my aunt told me I was adopted, she said remember that woman in the store with Frank? Well, that was her. Emily. She wanted to have a look at me.”
“But what was she like?”
“Well—I didn’t notice her much, Betsy. Why would I? It was my father I kept looking at, trying to figure out what on earth he was doing there and why he didn’t come over. I asked him, by the way, and he said something about this client he took out to lunch and she wanted to stop in and pick up something for somebody, a gift, I don’t know, and then changed her mind. I hardly remember. But the woman … I know she was tall, like us, and she had a lot of brown hair. I have no idea how old she was. She looked very chic, I think. Most of all I remember she looked happy. Now isn’t that odd? She looked—joyful. Seeing me, I suppose. Seeing with her own eyes that her daughter was well, was grown-up and healthy, had parents who looked after her, with your grandpa a prosperous lawyer—a pillar of the community and all that. I suppose. But I could tell, even though she did nothing but stand there and look, that she was full of happiness, and then she took my dad’s arm and they walked away.”
Betsy looked at her piece of blue stationery. It read:
1922
668 Spring St., Syracuse
Emily Lofting/Loftig—unmarried?
1941, seen Syracuse, Chappell’s Dep’t. Store, with Grandpa tall—brown hair—joyful—chic.
“It’s not an awful lot to go on Mother.”
“It’s enough,” Violet said confidently. “The woman in that article had less. What did you do with it? Read it.”
“It’s right here. I will.” Betsy folded the clipping inside the blue stationery.
“Will you get started right away?” Violet was smiling with excitement.
“I give my last exam tomorrow—today. I could start Monday.”
“Start with the voting lists. The city directory. Birth records.”
“What does your birth certificate say?” Betsy asked suddenly.
Violet looked at her wide-eyed. “I don’t know.”
“You must know. You had to have it when you got married, didn’t you? Where is it?”
Violet was thinking. “Grandma. Grandma. Your grandma. She went down to the county clerk’s office …” There was a pause while she frowned and tapped her forehead with her finger. “Think. Think.” She shook her head. “I can’t remember. I will, though, and I’ll call you.”
“We’ll be over for dinner Saturday.”
“But not a word in front of your grandpa!”
“No, I know.”
“Oh, what was it? My mother did something about my birth certificate when I got married. Now what? What?”
“It’ll come to you. I’ll see if I can get a copy of it at the courthouse.” Betsy stood up. “Can I go home to bed?” She grinned, lest she be accused of testiness.
Violet stopped frowning and smiled back. “You’ve been wonderful, honey, coming over here and listening to my ramblings.”
“Mother, I’m fascinated!”
“Oh, good, good, good,” she said with the gleefulness which, Betsy thought, nothing could ever diminish. “Now just do me one favor. In the kitchen, up in the cupboard over the toaster? There’s a big bag of M and M’s. Get it for me?”
Betsy got it, in the dark, thinking: A whole package of Mars Bars and God knows what else and now a bag of M & M’s. What’s it all doing to her? But she gave it to her mother, even ripping off a corner, feeling betrayed, feeling also that she should be amused, but not being. Violet poured herself a handful, greedily. “Melts in your mouth, not in your hand.”
When Betsy kissed her, Violet said, “Mmm,” with her mouth full.
Judd was up. So much for Betsy’s home-going reveries of slipping cozily and silently into bed beside him and snuggling up to his warmth. He was in the living room with the light on, reading the newspaper. He threw it down when Betsy came in.
“It’s five-twenty-five in the morning.”
He wore a short plaid bathrobe over nothing. His slender, hairy legs were crossed and the dangling foot danced up and down. He looked elegant and angry.
“Didn’t you see my note?”
“What note?”
“On the table by the saltshaker. You know.”
“Why would I look on the table? Did you think I was going to make myself breakfast?”
She regarded him with sadness. Another failure. To establish shared rituals, patterns, habits, traditions was one of her modest goals—which was, in turn, to lead to the more ambitious ones.
“I always leave notes there.”
“Well, I’m afraid I don’t always look there—okay?” He bounced his foot, with its long toes, up and down. His hands were thrust into the pockets of his bathrobe as if there were weapons there. “I’m not a mind reader, sweetiepie.” He used the rare nasty tone that made her despair. The whole thing is a house of cards, she thought, and she determined to help him push it over. As always at such moments, she felt very cold and calm.
“And what does this famous note say?”
“You know where it is,” she snapped back. “See for yourself. I’m going back to bed.”
She turned her back on him and made for the bedroom. She heard him get up, cursing, and stalk into the kitchen.
“God damn it!”
She pulled off her clothes in slow motion, holding her T-shirt daintily by its shoulders before she laid it gently in a drawer. Her jeans she smoothed and draped over a hanger. How neat I am, how complete I am without him; this was what her fastidious movements meant.
He came in, watching her. “Your mother! I might have known. And it was your God damned mother who woke me up at ten minutes after four.”
“What do you mean?”
“The phone rings—right? I answer it, there’s a little whoop—” He demonstrated, in falsetto. “And then click! I knew it was your mother.”
Betsy pulled her nightgown over her head. So her mother had called again while she was on her way over. Why? And then, knowing she’d awakened him, saying nothing about it … The deviousness of Violet was incredible, but so was her inability to get away with things. The uncontrollable whoop of surprise and dismay was just like her. In spite of herself, Betsy felt a rush of tenderness for her mother.
She got into bed, leaving Judd to turn out the light. She buried her face in the pillow; she didn’t want to see him take off his bathrobe and be naked. The bathrobe was flung on a chair, the light switch clicked. After a pause he got in beside her.
I can’t keep living like this, she said lucidly to herself. Better to live alone than to put up with this.
His hand was on her thigh. Immediately, her stomach muscles quivered, and she turned to him gasping. They had four or five ways of making love, depending on circumstances. They did it now swiftly and without frills, and by 5:45 they were both comfortably asleep, back to back. In the morning, they discussed who would pick up Sanka and macaroni at the supermarket, whether or not to go to a movie that night, and what a hell of a lot of noise the God damned garbage men were making. It was the way all their quarrels ended—with lovemaking, careful forgetting, and the dawn of a new day.
In the evening, they were both weary, and willing to be nicer than ever. Macaroni and cheese, hamburgers, a green salad, and a bottle of wine—Judd’s favorite supper, and he did the dishes. They went to a terrible movie, which they both enjoyed, about a killer whale who gets revenge on the humans who killed his mate. The night was warm, and they took a slow walk home, holding hands. It was very nice, and the niceness of it lulled Betsy, as it always did. She felt plump and ripe with contentment, an earth goddess. She woke up Saturday thinking that if they got married in the summer they could have such a nice vacation—it would be nice, very nice.…
She lay sleepily in bed, watching Judd. He had an early assignment to photograph a new shopping mall, and she observed with interest while he got dressed. She loved watching him do things—anything. She liked the economical way he moved, dancerlike. He put on low-slung underpants and tight jeans and a white shirt with the cuffs rolled back precisely twice, and a red and green patterned tie that he knotted loosely, leaving his top button open. He always wore a tie. This delighted Betsy; on Judd, it looked rakish and original. In the summer he wore a straw hat. He also owned a white duck suit and a long woolen cape. A dashing man, she always summed him up—not handsome (hooked nose, small blue eyes, and pitted cheeks), but dashing as the devil. His name was Judd Vandoss, he was thirty-one years old, a successful free-lance photographer. He had moved in with Betsy the preceding winter after deflowering her on New Year’s Eve. The bizarreness of the feat appealed to his imagination.
“A thirty-four-year-old virgin! How could it happen? It’s like a miracle.”
It was, as far as Betsy was concerned. Her other beaux had never achieved it. She could count them on three fingers, starting with Ron, her high school steady, gawky as she but not as bright, who copied her homework and shyly felt her up, but not very far, in the movies. He was a creep (she confessed honestly to herself at age sixteen), but she was lucky to get him. In college there had been Paul: They had done lots of kissing, mostly at Betsy’s instigation, but never seemed to get around to anything else. It was all talk and no cigar, and to preserve her self-respect Betsy had had to type him glibly as a latent homosexual. And there was Alan, her linguistics professor in graduate school, who was married; it was sneaking around to her apartment he liked, more than what they did there, and he was afraid to get involved in a real affair.
These were the only men she had ever spent more than a few evenings with. Until Judd, and the miracle, and the continuing series of miracles, not least of which was her feeling for him. She hadn’t expected overpowering love to come to her at thirty-four. She’d given up on it.
For almost five months they had lived together in pleased astonishment. All winter they had met chiefly and most intensely in bed. It was only now, with the coming of spring, that they had begun to draw back and look at each other. They were still pleased—the rootless wanderer and the passionate virgin who had been saved for him. But Betsy had to admit, though only to herself, that she was tired. She’d had no idea a love affair would require so much study. She might have been back in graduate school, but it was more complicated than graduate school. She was a student and a spy, engaged in constant, wary espionage, puzzling out how to please him, disguising her own feelings and looking for clues to his. She was aware of it when the obviousness of her devotion began to annoy him—talk of love made him curt and uncomfortable—and she had to teach herself the technique of hiding it. She wanted it to be there for him, as a secure background to his life in case he wanted that security (and she had very little idea of what he did want), but she didn’t wish to smother him with it. So, instead of declaring her love, she scrubbed out the tub after him, she let him have the Arts and Leisure section of the Sunday Times first, she learned to make omelets and macaroni and cheese, she helped him to quit smoking, and on mornings when he had an assignment and she didn’t have a class she got up early with him and made his breakfast.
She did so now while he shaved. She had combed her hair, slapped on a little blusher because she was pale, and put on a silk-embroidered kimono she knew was becoming. She wouldn’t see him until dinner, and she wanted him to be left with an attractive image of her to carry through the day. This sort of thing, too, she had taught herself.
She made him a cheese omelet with parsley in the corners, whole wheat toast, fresh orange juice, and coffee. She had coffee and juice. She was going back to bed; it was the first day of her long summer vacation.
“I won’t be back for dinner, Bets.”
“Oh, no!” Involuntarily, she expressed her dismay, and then checked it at his look of outrage. He loathed nets cast out to snare his freedom. “It’s just that Grandpa was really looking forward to having us both.”
“So was I, I really was.”
Betsy analyzed his regret swiftly: 90 percent genuine, 10 percent appeasement—not a bad mix.
“But when I spoke to Jerry yesterday he said we’d be doing night shots, too. I completely forgot to connect it up with dinner or I would have mentioned it last night. But I just realized—hell, I won’t be back till ten at the earliest. More like eleven.”
“I won’t see you all day!”
Almost a wail—not quite, but he punished it. “Well, I’ll have some free time this afternoon between shootings, but I can’t see myself coming all the way back here. This place is way out Route 20, almost to Rochester. I thought if I have the time I’d go out and try to get some shots on one of the lakes for that wildlife competition.”
“Heavens, no, don’t come all the way back.”
He inspected her for irony but found only loving tenderness. He sat down to his eggs.
“Tell your grandfather I’m really sorry. And your mother.” He raised his head. “How is she, anyway? I haven’t seen her for a couple of weeks.”
He had had to miss the last two Saturday night dinners—another tradition going down the drain.
“She’s just the same,” Betsy said.
“She sounded just the same on the phone the other night.” He grinned. “Morning.” Ah, that was the official line: no resentment, just that irrepressible Violet. She adjusted herself to it.
“She has a new bee in her bonnet.”
“As usual, you’ll be the one to get stung.”
“Well—yes. She wants me to find her mother, for my summer project.”
“Her what?”
“Mother. Remember, I told you she’s adopted? She wants a family tree. She read an article.”
“A bit late …”
“That’s what I’m afraid of. Among other things.”
“But you’ve got the job. I mean, you took the job.”
“Of course.” She spoke sharply. “Judd, she’s dying. You don’t say no to a dying woman. You don’t tell her anything is too late.”
“And what happens when you find out? When all your poking around in libraries and courthouses leads to a cemetery? Do you get an old lady from central casting?”
“I’ll deal with that when the time comes. Maybe it’s not hopeless, Judd.”
“Oh, come on.” He forked in the last of the omelet, ate the parsley, and gulped coffee. Betsy began to clear the table; it made a pause during which they could both back off.
“I’ve got to get going. Let’s hope my blasted car starts.”
“Do you have that map?”
“No! Bless you, Betsy Wetsy.” He grabbed her and kissed her forehead. “Where would I be without you? Out in the middle of nowhere looking for a shopping center.”
He hunted through his desk, located the map, and said, “You know, you can’t be sure your mother’s adopted.”
“What?”
“You know how she makes things up. Nobody else has ever mentioned it—right? Are you sure she’s not just trying to inject a little drama into her situation?”
It was a reasonable question. Even an imaginative one. Nothing to get mad at. Judd’s callous, almost flippant attitude toward her mother’s state always pained her. Maybe it was healthy? Or a desperate denial of death that was to be pitied? But it pained her.
“Could be. I don’t think so, but it’s possible. I suppose I’ll find out.”
“To me, she looks like your grandfather. From certain angles.”
He kissed her good-bye with passion, holding her tight. He reached inside her kimono for a piece of breast, and then he pulled her down on the sofa on top of him.
She fitted her body to his.
“This is ridiculous. I’ll be late.”
“You started it.”
He watched her with his pale eyes half-closed while she unbuckled his belt and pulled down his zipper, and then she untied her kimono and awkwardly slipped it off.
“I love it when I’m all dressed and you’re all naked,” he said lazily, and cupped her breasts in his two hands. She moved so he could close his lips around one while they made love. Almost at once—it was something about the way they fitted each other, they had never been able to analyze it—she began to come. She lay on him with her teeth in his shoulder, tasting shirt. He clutched her buttocks, gasping deeply, and let loose the flood of endearments that came only with orgasm: “Oh, my baby, my love, my little love, oh baby, baby—”
After a minute they looked at each other and laughed.
“Now you can go,” she said.
“God, you are terrific. Ah, what an ass—tits—the tightest little cunt—”
“Enough.” The words still embarrassed her, and she kissed him to hide the fact. Then she stood up and put her kimono back on. He lay at ease, unwilling to get up; a shaft of sun across his face made his pale blue eyes look almost sightless, like the eyes of a statue. We are made for each other, she thought.
“You’ve lost that map again.”
They found it on the floor. He adjusted his tie and kissed her again, with no less passion.
“Judd! What’s come over you?” Oh, it was good, it was lovely; no house of cards could be this solid, this beautiful.
“You. You came over me.” He grinned. “A pun.”
“Har har.”
She saw him to the door. He kissed her neck. “Give my best to the family. I’ll try to be home by eleven.”
Back in bed, she hugged his pillow to her breasts, thinking: Judd, Judd, Judd. She felt her vagina contract, sucking in any errant sperm, and then she closed her eyes and, with her arms around the pillow, slept until noon.
In her endless musings on them, her four and a half months with Judd sometimes came to Betsy as a series of photographs—not unlike Judd’s southwestern series that lined the walls of the living room. Odd, because she didn’t feel comfortable with those photographs. It wasn’t just the subject matter—the dead main streets of forlorn Texas towns, garish Mexican roadside shrines commemorating auto accidents, fat women in bars, leathery men with lizard eyes and ten-gallon hats; it was more the way these subjects were presented, in a sunlit, low-contrast style that to Betsy seemed romanticized. The photographs made her uneasy, particularly because Judd was fonder of the series than of anything else he had done. Knowing this, Betsy had studied them intently, wondering what affinity he felt with such bleak memorials, what need to place them in a sunny haze of his own making, but they said nothing to her. They expressed a part of Judd she had no knowledge of and perhaps no liking for, and so to her they were simply false to reality. But her mental photographs had their own falseness.
CLICK! Judd himself, alone, a subject he never would have taken but that she sees clearly. He is doing nothing—at most, half-listening to music he knows every note of by heart, maybe an old Eddie Heywood piano solo or a Billie Holiday record. His ability to do nothing enchants her, he simply sits, the way an animal simply sits, eyes shut, long fingers clasped on chest, where they rise and fall with his breathing. (Her own fingers curl around a book; her mind disciplined to withdrawal by years of drilling, she can concentrate on her reading even in his disturbing presence, but now and then she looks up and takes this photograph.) His hands rest together between his red suspenders, he is wearing a collarless shirt and the wool pants that don’t zip but button, and his feet are bare. (Remove him from stereo and Oriental carpet and transport him to a sunny riverbank, and he might be a character out of Huckleberry Finn—some drifting ne’er-do-well, maybe a gambling man.) He is barefoot because he believes feet need to breathe. (When she asked him once why feet need to breathe and armpits and crotches and navels do not, he obligingly removed all his clothes.) His closed eyelids are long and narrow—fish-shaped—fringed in stiff black lashes. He has five o’clock shadow all day, and now—at just about five o’clock—he verges on being bearded, the rough skin of his cheeks and chin nearly hidden. He is from the Southwest, and she knows the snow-belt winters make him homesick; behind his closed eyes she imagines he travels into his photographs, down dusty, unimaginably sunburnt roads. She has been west only once, to read a paper at the Modern Language Association convention in Denver; she remembers snow, and awesome blue mountains circling the city. But his West is different from hers, and when he smiles, now while she watches, she worries about his memories: Mexican bars, hot nights, peyote, the Tex-Mex food he misses, and raven haired women with mysterious sexual arts. She imagines lurid versions of scenes from Carmen, and marvels at his tameness, stretched out on her Sarouk listening to piano music, with snow falling outside the window.
He opens his eyes and catches her watching; he grins. “All right, damn it, you win—my feet are cold.” She runs for a pair of his wool socks, but that’s not part of her photograph, though it may be of his: a tall, serious-faced woman, hippy and busty in blue jeans and a high-necked sweater, who not only brings him the warm socks but kneels and puts them on his feet.
CLICK! Spring comes coyly to upstate New York, with many false promises. On one such deceptive day, Judd and Betsy take a long walk through the city. They leave the Westcott Street apartment and walk down to Genesee Street and out towards the suburbs, exclaiming every time the sun emerges from the clouds. It is a bright gray day, and in an occasional front yard before the shopping centers take over there are crocuses and snowdrops. Betsy’s photograph encompasses the crocuses but not the traffic or the stores or the grayness; it is composed of flowers, sunlight, and Judd striding easily along with his hand in hers. But the afternoon extends past the edges of her picture. They stop at a deli for cheese and rolls and fruit, and when they reach their destination—a small park off the road, hemmed in by parking lots and laundromats and restaurant chains—they sit on the greening grass and eat. Perhaps Betsy’s photo goes even this far, but there it ends, when the clouds cover the sun for good, and a cold wind comes up, threatening rain. In seconds Judd turns angry and unpleasant, like the weather. They gather up the remains of their lunch, Judd stuffing rolls into a trash container, which he then kicks, while Betsy wraps the uneaten cheese. They stride off toward home, underdressed, walking west into the wind. Betsy carries the bag of cheese and pears. Judd keeps his hands in his pockets and walks slightly ahead of her. He is mad at the weather, mad at her for suggesting a picnic on such a day, mad at the printing problem waiting in his studio that he had taken the day off to escape. They had been discussing, in their oblique and random way, the death of Judd’s mother by drowning, and he is also, Betsy knows (trailing along behind him, cold and chagrined), mad at mortality. (The talk had been part of her continuing effort to get him to tell her about himself, but it was like—as Violet might have put it—“pulling him along by his eyeteeth.” He had, for example, told her in detail about his brother Derek’s reaction, dismissing his own with the observation, “It didn’t seem real,” his pale blue eyes staring opaquely at her, daring her to probe.) She forces herself to think about Pope’s Essay on Criticism, which she will be lecturing on the next morning, while the wind blows back to her the curses he mutters at it. In her mind’s darkroom, the sunny photo is already formed, and when, a month later, she refers happily to “that nice smelly cheese we took on our picnic,” he will look at her in silent amazement.