Something Happened

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Something Happened Page 53

by Джозеф Хеллер


  No one will help. (Only my wife's sister verges close enough to that delicate nerve of truth we want unbared, but her front is callous, her motives unkind, and I want to hit her.)

  "Give the kid away," she as much as commands with taunting relish in her rasping, obtrusive way, attacking, pressing her advantage, and we must unite to resist her and beat her back.

  "Good for you! It serves you right," is what I hear her snarling invidiously at us in my own voice and words. "I'm glad it happened. Ha, ha. I'm glad it happened to you because I know you, instead of to people I don't know who live far away."

  I want to hit her because I feel she sees inside me and steals my thoughts, compelling me to repudiate them.

  We want to get rid of him. We want to give him away. And need people in positions of respectable authority to tell us. We haven't nerve to do it alone. What will people we know think of us?

  Unfeeling.

  Inhuman.

  We want to give him away and are afraid.

  (Other people we hear about in Connecticut, New York, Long Island, and New Jersey intend to keep theirs. Why?)

  "Don't," my wife's sister has warned consistently almost from the first day there was no longer any doubt (which was too soon). "Do it fast. Don't be hypocrites. The longer you wait, the worse it's going to be for everybody."

  That suggestion was monstrous. (Hypocrisy was easier.)

  "Don't say that again!" my wife flares up at her that last time. "I don't ever want to hear you say anything about it again to us, or I won't let you come here. I mean that."

  "I've had it," I roar at my wife afterward. "I don't ever want to hear her talk about him again. Or about any of the other kids either. I'll throw her out if she does. If you won't tell her I will."

  "I did tell her. You heard me. Did you think that was easy?"

  "You're only reacting that way because you know I'm right," her sister had responded self-righteously.

  "She was only trying to be helpful," my wife continues repentently. "Now I'm sorry I yelled at her."

  "No, she wasn't. Do you think she was trying to be helpful? I wish she'd move to Arizona with your mother."

  "Her store is here."

  She is a seamy, murky inner lining of my wife's character that my wife has never been able to look at without retreating immediately into remorse. She is another underside of my own (that I am able to show often at home to my family and reveal to myself in daydreams with vindictive jubilation) just as Derek also is, in my occasional wish to be speechless and powerless again and wholly dependent once more on parents and big brothers and sisters. (Except that I would not want to be sent away to a home.) Everyone around me now reminds me of me. Even Kagle reminds me of me. (Green doesn't. I admire Green. Arthur Baron doesn't; I find I don't identify as readily with my betters or with people who have more attractive qualities than my own. Only with people who are worse.) Arthur Baron never mentions Derek to me. Andy Kagle does, and I hate him for it. (I could have killed him when he showed up at the house Sunday without invitation to tell me, unctuously and pretentiously, that it was God's will. I wanted to hit him too.) I resent it blazingly when anyone talks to me about him (and want to kill them), although I also hope that everyone in the world will join together soon at the identical moment to tell me:

  "Give the kid away."

  That isn't going to happen.

  I don't have to poll the members of my family to find out what we want. Even my fair-haired, lovable, good-hearted, sensitive boy, who is appalled by the alternatives, really doesn't mean it when he pleads:

  "Don't."

  He means:

  "Please."

  "But please whisk him away too swiftly for the eye to see or the mind to record and remember."

  Kagle called from the filling station in town with the lie he just happened to be driving through and would like to say hello to the family. He looked haggard. There were sleepless shadows under his eyes and it was all he could do to force even a nervous smile.

  "You hear things," he confided. "This time I'm really worried. Has anyone said anything about me?"

  "I hear you've been to Toledo again."

  "They aren't even talking to me about the convention. By now they usually give me a theme."

  "Maybe they don't have one."

  "I have to meet with Horace White. With him and Arthur Baron. I never have anything to do with Horace White."

  "Maybe he's got some ideas."

  "Two on one," Kagle chirps at me with a wink, as soon as my wife starts back into the house again.

  "Coons?"

  He misses my irony.

  "Not for me. Not in Toledo. I've got good connections there. You ought to tag along sometime. I'll take good care of you."

  "Should I ask him to stay for dinner?" my wife asks.

  "Don't."

  "He looks so unhappy."

  "He wants to drive around."

  "I don't even care," Kagle says, wiping the back of his hand over his mouth, drying his lips. "I'm getting tired of doing the same thing anyway. Where's the kids? I'd like to say hello to them before I go."

  "Out playing."

  "What about the little one? The one with the brain damage?"

  "He's resting. He has to."

  "You know, you shouldn't blame yourself about your boy," Kagle tells me, twisting himself back into his car. "I don't blame myself about my leg. It was God's will."

  "Sure, Andy," I reply with a nasty smile, gritting my teeth. "And you don't worry about your job. If you lose it, it's God's will."

  "Heh-heh," he comments hollowly.

  "Heh-heh."

  "Why didn't you let him stay?" my wife asks.

  "I didn't want him."

  It is God's will.

  I've got Kagle's job.

  "You were with Andy Kagle today," my wife says.

  "How can you tell?"

  "You're walking with a limp. Is his leg getting worse?"

  "No, why?"

  "His limp is worse than ever. You're almost staggering."

  I straighten myself from a position characteristic of one of Kagle's and lean in a slouch of my own against the newel post of the staircase leading to the second floor.

  "No. He's the same."

  She looks at me askance. She's been drinking wine again while helping the maid prepare dinner. Her bleary eyes are tense and patient. (I cannot meet them.) She senses something, and moves ahead carefully with mixed curiosity.

  "Then you must have been with him a long time."

  "I got his job."

  "Did you?"

  "I was promoted today."

  "To what?"

  "Kagle's job."

  "Kagle's?"

  "It finally went through."

  "Was that the job?"

  "Congratulate me."

  "Did you know it was his job?"

  "No."

  "Yes, you did."

  "I had a hunch."

  "What happened to him?"

  "Nothing."

  "What will? I saw the way he looked."

  "He was fired."

  "My God."

  "I fired him today. He doesn't know that yet. But I think he does."

  "You fired him?"

  "I had to, God dammit. He won't be fired. He'll be transferred somewhere else until he quits or retires. I can't keep him around. I couldn't use him after he's been in charge. He's embarrassing. He's sloppy. He'll run my work down."

  "He's got two children."

  "So have I."

  "You've got three."

  "So?"

  "You're forgetting Derek again."

  "So?"

  "You're always forgetting Derek."

  "So?"

  "So's your old man." She is drunk and she is defiant.

  "What the hell else am I supposed to do?"

  "I'm better than you," she tells me.

  "You want a new house, don't you? You liked the idea that I was getting a better job, didn't you?"

&n
bsp; "I used to think I wasn't," she continues. "But I am. You like to think you're better than me. But you're not. I'm the one who's better."

  "Yeah? And you'd be even better still if you'd lay off the wine in the afternoon."

  "Your mother was right."

  "Leave her out of it."

  "You're just no good."

  "I told you to leave her out of it."

  "I never thought I was."

  "You're always bothering me about money, aren't you?"

  "No, I don't."

  "The hell you don't."

  "And neither do they. We don't bother you about money that much."

  "And you wonder why I don't tell you I love you, don't you?"

  "I never thought I was good at anything." There is undisguised scorn, calm, measured contempt that I've never seen in her before. "You don't help much there."

  "Kagle isn't sore at me. Why are you?"

  "Isn't he?"

  "No. In fact, he's the one who recommended me to replace him."

  "No, he didn't," she jeers, with a curling lip and a belittling shake of her head. "You knew months ago. He just found out."

  "You're getting good at this."

  "You taught me."

  "At least you got something."

  "But now I know I'm better than you are, aren't I?»

  "Amn't I. There's no such construction as 'aren't'."

  "Puddy poo."

  "What'd you say?"

  "Puddy poo."

  "Where'd you get that from?"

  "From you. You say it in your sleep."

  "I'm going upstairs. I can't take this."

  "Puddy poo. What about dinner?"

  "Count me out. I'll celebrate upstairs alone. I've got to start working on my speech."

  "What speech?"

  "The big speech I'm going to have to make to open the convention. I'm head of the department now. That might not mean much at home but it means a hell of a lot there. I run the whole show. I can do what I want."

  "Can you get Andy Kagle his job back?"

  "Fuck you," I tell her.

  "You're just no good, are you?"

  "I told you. I warned you. I don't want you ever to say that to me again."

  "I'll say anything I want," she shouts back at me heatedly. "I'm not afraid of you."

  "Yes, you say that to me often," I remind her. "And then you sober up, and discover that you are."

  She shatters. "You bastard." The tears form quickly and are streaming down her face. "You won another argument, didn't you?"

  I don't feel I've won. I feel I've lost as I mount the stairs wearily. It's been a harrowing day at the office. The meetings were concluded at five to allow the rumors to spread and percolate through the company overnight. Kagle lingers later than the rest of us to confirm them appreciatively.

  "I want you to know I had a big hand in it," he tells me. "I fought for you with Arthur Baron when he asked me to recommend someone who I thought could really handle it. They were thinking of someone like Johnny Brown or one of the branch managers. I told them you knew more about it than any of them. Now I'll be free to do the kind of troubleshooting work I like. Don't be afraid of any of it. I'll be around to help you all I can."

  No, he won't.

  "Thanks, Andy. What's that you've got there?"

  "It's a perpetual-motion machine Horace White gave me. I'll bet you'd never be able to figure out how it works if you didn't know where the battery was hidden."

  (Batteries run down. He'll have about ten days after the convention and then he'll have to take a leave of absence for a few weeks and move. Or retire. I have a plan.)

  "What about me?" I maintain to Johnny Brown, who blocks my path skeptically with smoldering belligerence, his muscled jaws knotted for combat (and I wonder, perhaps, if he might not mercifully end my suspense by giving me my punch in the jaw right at the start). "You could have knocked me over with a feather when they told me, I was so surprised."

  "I heard the good news the little birdies are chirping," Ed Phelps chortles to me softly by way of offering congratulations.

  I elude Green. I don't see Red. I feel tense and exhausted on the train ride home. I could use one of my wife's tranquilizers. Even before I walk in the house I am feeling sorry for myself and don't know why. I go to our bathroom for a tranquilizer before I enter my study and close the door.

  "What's wrong with Daddy?" I hope the children are murmuring downstairs in grave consternation, along with Derek's nurse, and that Derek too can perceive in some way that I am upstairs in my study with the door closed.

  "He isn't feeling well," I hope my wife replies with sharp compunction.

  I would like to feel that the closed door of my study or office produces the same ominous, excluding effect on others that the closed doors of certain people still create in me. (I am still affronted that my daughter always keeps the door to her room shut when she's inside. My boy does that too, now.)

  I'm sorry I ever told my wife what I think my mother said to me before she died. (I'm also sorry I said "puddy poo" in my sleep. Now she'll have that on me, also.) I don't know what ever made me feel I could trust her. (A man must make a resolution never to reveal anything personal to his wife.) I was not even sure my mother said it. I wasn't sure she recognized me for more than an instant the last few times I went to visit her in the nursing home or remembered I was there as I sat at her bedside without talking for the twelve, then ten, minutes I stayed. I brought no more gifts of spicy meats and fish and honeyed candies; she couldn't eat. I gave her no gossip. She couldn't hear. I was not even certain most times that she was able to see anyone sitting there when her eyes were upon me.

  "You're no good," she said. There was no voice. It was more a shaping of the words with her lips and a faint rustle of breath. I was surprised, and I bent forward over the cavity of her mouth that I was no longer able to look at straightly and asked her to repeat what she had said. "You're just no good."

  Those were the last words I think I heard her speak to me. If I live to be a hundred and ninety years old, I will never hear any more from her. If the world lasts three billion more, there will be no others.

  Those are some last words for a dying mother to tell a child, aren't they? Even a grown-up family man with a wife and three children. I felt sorrier for myself when I heard them than I did for her. She was dying anyway.

  But I had to go on.

  I don't know what made me think it was safe to confide in my wife. A long time passed before I did. I was feeling so sad. The world was a rusty tin can. We used to curl ourselves up inside discarded old automobile tires and try to roll down slanting streets. We never could. We made pushmobile scooters out of ball-bearing roller skates. It was easier to walk. Mommy caught me when I fell, kissed the place to make it well.

  I should never have told the bitch. The bitches remember things like that.

  The linings of the brain. (The linings of my brain, they give me such a pain.) The linings of my brain are three in number and called collectively the meninges. They surround it on the outside. The innermost is called the pia mater. It is a delicate, fibrous, and highly vascular membrane (gorged with veins and capillaries, I suppose). I feel pressure against it from inside. Things bubble and shove against it as though they might explode. It reminds me at times of a cheese fondue. The pia mater, reinforced by the two supporting layers, the arachnoid and the dura mater, holds fast against the outward expanding pressure of my brain, pushes back. At times, there is pain. The name pia mater derives from an imperfect translation into Latin of Arabic words that meant (ha, ha) tender mother.

  My boy has stopped talking to me

  My boy has stopped talking to me, and I don't think I can stand it. (He doesn't seem to like me.) He no longer confides in me.

  There are times he rebuffs me and I want to cry. I remember the rebuff and it tears at my heart. Why should he want to stop talking to me? I want to be his best friend. Doesn't he know I probably love him more than any
one else in the world? He used to have dreams, he said, in which the door to our room was closed and he could not get in to see us. Now I have dreams that the door to his room is closed and I cannot get in to see him.

  He goes to bed without even saying good night to me, closing his door.

  My head spins, my emotions reel downward into whirlpools. He no longer comes to me for information as often as he used to, and I have no way of knowing anymore what he's thinking, who his friends are, what games he enjoys most, how much trouble he's having at school and with his homework. I hang on news of Forgione. He acts angry with me. It is impossible to get more from him than he wants to tell without offending him or finding out about him surreptitiously by asking someone else. (I wonder if he feels I'm spying on him.)

  "I climbed the rope in school today," he announces one evening when he comes home late for dinner after dark, with his eyes shining warmly and his cheeks and lips colored a healthy, handsome crimson with exercise and excitement. "I made it almost all the way up to the top. Dammit. I bet I could have touched the ceiling if I'd only had the nerve to let go and try."

  "Did you touch the ceiling yet?" I ask him.

  "Why do you keep asking me that?" he blurts out at me resentfully, and goes into his room.

  He is moving away from me and I don't want him to. He is shutting me out. I see the doors closed to his and my daughter's rooms and think of the closed doors at the company and am reminded squeamishly of all those closed cupboard and closet doors I had to open each morning and evening back in the apartment in the city with those baited spring traps concealed behind them when we were trying to catch or kill those mice. Those were not the good old days.

  "Remember," I reminisce with my wife, "those mice back in the city? That one time we had them?"

  "They weren't mice," says my wife. "They were roaches."

 

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