Golden State

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Golden State Page 1

by Stephanie Kegan




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  For Ed

  Acknowledgments

  I am indebted to the memory of Les Plesko, whose wisdom and generosity made this book possible, and to Joan Sullivan, for more than I can say.

  My deepest gratitude goes as well to Barbara DeSantis, Mollie Glick, Millicent Bennett, Terry Gillen, Sandra Irwin, Laura Simko, Steven Charnow, Marisel Vera, Karen Karbo, Greg Hrbek, and Nora Linneah Gregory.

  chapter one

  THE BAY AREA was in the midst of an autumn heat wave, hot, dry, and unnatural. The air electric against my skin, I had the sense that a single match could ignite us all.

  On the front porch, last night’s Halloween pumpkin was collapsing in on itself—as much, I imagined, from the sound of jackhammers as from the heat. Yet another house on our street was being rebuilt into a mansion. It made me fear for the soul of our family neighborhood at the base of Berkeley Hills.

  Downstairs, Eric was shouting at Julia, hysterical in a school-­morning drama of her own making. Behind my bedroom door, in front of the bureau that had been my grandmother’s, I fastened on a necklace of bright beads and tiny skulls.

  It was the first of November, the Day of the Dead.

  As if I had nowhere else to be, I reached for a small silver-framed photo from the clutter on my dresser top—the little boxes that held a piece or two of jewelry, the handmade knickknacks from the kids, the old photos I barely looked at anymore. I had other snapshots of the three of us, but this one was my favorite. My brother, sister, and I were lined up against the door of our old garage, squinting into the sun. Bobby was in the middle in a zippered jacket, his jeans rolled up at the ankle, an American boy of the fifties. On his right, Sara, in a starched dress, looked as if she was ready for anything the third grade could dish out. I was the littlest in the family, no more than three, perched in my mother’s high heels next to my big brother. I brushed the glass where Bobby’s hand rested on my shoulder. There was no special day of remembrance, I thought, no sad, sweet, shared mourning for those who were not dead, but simply gone.

  On the stairs, Lilly called for mommy. I put the photo down. I had two kids to drive to school, twenty-two more to teach, and no more time for my private sorrows.

  Julia rode shotgun, not speaking to her little sister or me, her head bent over a stack of smudged three-by-five cards. She was debating in a tournament at Stanford and had dressed in her most college-worthy outfit—a little gray skirt, a striped preppy blouse, a long cardigan with just the right amount of sag, and a pair of new flats that looked like they pinched her feet. I’d known better than to suggest a more comfortable pair.

  Outside her school, Julia bolted from the car without saying good-bye. I watched her run from us, my small, slender fifteen-year-old with bouncing red-gold hair and an IQ so high it scared me. I could barely admit how relieved I was to see her go, to be alone with Lilly, who at seven still believed I could do no wrong. We love you both the same, we told the kids: a half lie—the love yes, the sameness impossible.

  I drove south through the hills, away from Julia’s expensive school for intellectual superstars, down toward Mountaintop. Despite the lofty name, the little elementary school where I taught and Lilly was a second grader was wedged into a commercial street in the Berkeley flats. My husband and I had helped found the school. We’d raised money, painted walls, and planted trees, transforming a warehouse on San Pablo into a dream we’d had for our children. When Julia started first grade here, I was suddenly free. I had bigger aspirations than returning to my old teaching job. I was going to be a professor with an office and students who could sit still. But Lilly popped up unexpectedly, Mountaintop needed me, and here I was—for now.

  My third-grade classroom was one of the larger rooms, with a wall of windows catching the morning light. As customary, we started the day on the floor, my students and I in a circle on the rug, the kids with their legs crossed, mine folded under my denim skirt. I read to them about El Día de Los Muertos, the holiday of the dead. This morning we were going to make our own small altars, I explained, paint them bright Aztec hues, decorate them with marigolds and clay skeletons we’d make ourselves. In the afternoon, we’d take a field trip to a cemetery.

  As usual, Ben’s hand popped up.

  “What if you don’t know any dead people?”

  I was surprised, but I shouldn’t have been. My students were so young, their parents and grandparents still so young themselves, this seemed entirely possible. Then you can make an altar for a pet, I suggested. Our class goldfish, Kramer—after the character on the Thursday night show—had died the week before.

  A hand rose slowly. I called on Annie.

  “Did you know it’s so hot out because the globe is warming?”

  A couple of the boys tittered. I shot them a look, but Annie had already dropped her head. I was surprised the kids knew anything about global warming.

  “Annie has brought up something really important,” I said, improvising. “So important, I think our class should study climate change.”

  I didn’t want to think why I was plunging into a subject that had no curriculum. All that work to make Annie feel better? Or was it in some way for Bobby?

  Annie’s head came back up. I dismissed the kids to their seats. It was nine ten, and we were on a roll.

  *

  LILLY AND I stopped for an ice cream after school. Julia off debating at Stanford, it was just the two of us on gummy Shattuck Avenue in the unseasonable warmth, feeling carefree. At home, Lilly played in the backyard while I sliced carrots and potatoes to the news on NPR. When I finished, I turned down the volume to sit with my feet up, reading the newspaper I’d had no time for in the morning. I was deep into a story about the terrible war in Bosnia, civilians killed in the market, hardly listening to the radio at all. Yet I heard the newscaster say there’d been an explosion on the Stanford campus.

  By the time I reached the radio dial, the report was over. I turned on the television in the family room and started flipping through channels. The story might have been breaking news, but I had to wait until five o’clock to hear it.

  Less than an hour before, an explosion of unknown origin had ripped through an academic building in the heart of the campus. The building had been evacuated. There were casualties.

  I told myself that Julia was safe, that all the kids were, that casualties didn’t mean them, but I was frantic as I phoned my husband. As soon as Eric picked up I blurted out the news. “Just a second,” he said calmly. I heard a click and understood I’d been on speakerphone. “You’re in a meeting.” I pictured his office, lawyers in grays and blues. “I’ll call you back when I know more.” My tone was even, but I wanted to punish him. I wasn’t even sure what he’d done wrong.

  The phone rang almost immediately. It was one of the other debate mothers, who hadn’t heard from her daughter either. She was so agitated that she made me sound calm. “The students aren’t together,” she said. “They’re spread all over the campus, moving separately from building to building to debate all these kids from other schools.” Before we ended the call, I tried once more to reassure her, but I couldn’t even reassure myself.

  Lilly emerged from the backyard hungry. I could barely think. I gave her a graham cracker, and told her she could watch TV in my bedroom. Julia would have been suspicious of my breaking of the no-­eating-upstairs rule, but Lilly took the cracker and ran off befor
e I might change my mind. On the news, they still didn’t know what caused the explosion, but they had an unconfirmed report on the casualties: a professor and a graduate student in critical condition. Two other employees wounded less seriously.

  I shuddered but I couldn’t help my relief. Not a high school debater among the injured. I was about to let Eric know when the phone rang again. Julia was on the line making little sense.

  “I can’t understand you,” I said, the fear in my daughter’s voice making me desperate.

  “I don’t know where I am,” she said. “It’s dark out. I can’t find anyone.”

  I got her to calm down, tell me the story: She’d been away from the center of campus and hadn’t heard anything. When she’d moved to her next round, the building was locked. She’d waited for what seemed like forever, then gotten lost trying to find her way back. Finally she’d found a public phone, but now she didn’t even see any people around.

  My panic was so palpable, she recoiled from it.

  “I shouldn’t have called,” she said. “There’s nothing you can do.”

  It was clear she didn’t know about the explosion. My only thought was to keep her where she was.

  “Give me the number on the telephone. I’ll get the campus police to pick you up.”

  “I see somebody,” she said. “I’m going.”

  She left me holding the phone.

  Lilly came downstairs asking for more graham crackers. I gave her the box and sent her back upstairs. I’d forgotten dinner, the vegetables and chicken still in the refrigerator. I was shoving the pan into a cold oven when Eric walked in. He’d been listening to the updates on the radio on the way home.

  “There must be someone we can call,” he said.

  I threw up my hands. “Who?”

  “The campus police for a start.”

  “For a start?” I heard the shrillness in my voice, but I couldn’t contain myself. “What are you implying? That I didn’t think of that? She said she saw someone.”

  Eric looked exhausted. “Don’t give me a hard time, Natalie.”

  “A hard time?” I shouted. We traded accusations, making little sense. Suddenly there was Lilly in the shorts she’d worn to school, her still-baby-chubby knees bare.

  “Why are you guys fighting?” She had her feet planted on the linoleum as if she were going to take no more childishness from us, but her eyes were wary.

  What could I tell her? That for a moment the heavens had parted to show us a future in which we’d lost one of our babies? “Daddy and I are being stupid,” I said, a hand at my eyes. “No, I’m the one who’s being stupid.”

  Eric pulled me next to him. Lilly squeezed between us.

  “Dinner is going to be really late,” I said, clinging to them both.

  *

  WE TRIED not to make a big deal out of picking up Julia when the bus arrived at her school. It could have been any night, parents waiting for their kids in the dark parking lot, just another thing that had to be done. Except that no one spoke or even looked at anyone else, each family grabbing their child and spiriting him or her away.

  Two hours past the usual time, Eric put Lilly to bed. I sat with Julia while she picked at her dinner and told me about her day. After all that had happened, what she wanted to talk about was how upset she was that she hadn’t done better in the final round.

  At eleven, with Julia safely in bed, Eric and I collapsed on the couch. Eric clutched a glass of red wine and wrapped his free arm around me. I rested my head against his shoulder. We’d panicked earlier, but now we’d returned to ourselves, loving and loved, safe in our togetherness. I turned on the late news with the remote, and finally got the full story.

  That day, a little after four o’clock, the head of the computer science department at Stanford University had opened a package addressed to him. The blast from the incendiary device inside had blown off his arm and half his face. The graduate student chatting with him had died on the floor from the massive wound to his chest.

  There had been no malfunctioning generator at Stanford, no chemistry experiment gone awry. It had been a bomb that had caused that afternoon’s devastation on the campus where my daughter had been walking in her new shoes. Someone, some person had done that.

  “I can’t listen anymore,” I said. I clicked off the set and turned to Eric. “Bed,” I said, longing for the sleep that would return us to the safety of our ordinary lives.

  chapter two

  A STORM ten days into the month brought the strange November heat wave to an end. The rain meant no outdoor recess. Lunches would have to be eaten inside, my students and I tethered to one another like convicts on a chain gang. On the fourth day of downpour, the kids grew shifty-eyed, the boys itching like desperadoes who’d been forced to check their guns at the saloon door.

  At the store after work, feeling clammy and sorry for myself, I spent too much on groceries for dinner—a rack of lamb and an extravagant bottle of wine. Once I was past the cash register and home, it seemed worth it, the kitchen filled with the smell of rosemary and garlic sizzling in fat. Lilly drawing in the steam on the window.

  The phone rang, and I knew before answering that it was Eric. When I heard his weary hey, I understood he wasn’t going to be just late. He was going to be ten or eleven o’clock late. I tried to push down my anger, my disappointment. More than good food, I’d been craving conversation, adult life, the pleasure of lingering at the table over a second glass of wine. Eric must have wanted some of that, too. When he apologized, he sounded defeated.

  It was starting. I knew the cycle of Eric’s overworking as well as I knew the seasons, the back-burner cases heating up, the trial dates looming. At first he’d dread the unreasonable hours, the time away from home, the fatigue, but in time he would give in to the drug of overwork, fingers drumming, his gaze gone from us. The children and I would dismiss this stranger, draw into one another until it was over and he turned to the task of wooing us back. The girls would give in at the first sign their real father had returned. It took me longer to forgive the betrayal of all those hours.

  I ate with the kids, feeling sorry for myself. Julia made a show of clearing a few plates before taking off to study. The rain picked up. I sent Lilly to get ready for bed. She came back, reporting a leak in her bedroom. I grabbed a soup pot and followed her upstairs,

  There was no end to the things that needed repairing in our old house. We’d been fearless when we bought it fifteen years before, a 1920s, two-story, Spanish-style stucco, with worn hardwood floors, stairs that creaked, leafy views, and young families up and down the block. We’d updated the kitchen to suit my idea of myself as a cook, and left everything else as it was.

  I moved Lilly’s dollhouse away from the damp spot on her ceiling, put the pot on the floor to catch the leak, and read her bedtime story to the plinking of water on metal.

  “What are we?” Lilly asked, stalling when I reached to turn off the light.

  I asked what she meant.

  She ticked off on her fingers. “Mexican, Jewish, Asian, Catholic.”

  “We’re Californians,” I said.

  “But what else?”

  “There is nothing else,” I said, kissing her good night. Another time, I’d tell her the stories from my side of the family: my mother’s forebears crossing the Sierra Nevada just ahead of the Donner Party; my father’s great-great-grandfather arriving for the Gold Rush and never telling anyone where he’d come from or what he’d left behind.

  After I’d said good night to Julia, I graded papers exactly the way I told my students never to do their homework: in front of the television. A report on the eleven o’clock news made me put down my red pencil. The FBI had tied the bombing at Stanford two weeks before to a serial bomber they’d nicknamed the Cal Bomber for the state in which he operated. Our state. Years on the FBI’s most wanted list, and all they had on him was the composite drawing on the screen. A man in a baseball cap and sunglasses. He looked like everyone
and no one. Until Stanford, he hadn’t sent a bomb anywhere in six years. Now he was back.

  I turned off the set.

  Eric opened the front door at eleven twenty, his pinstripe suit rain spattered, the fresh shirt I’d watched him button this morning now limp and clinging to him. He sat next to me, his briefcase sliding to the floor, leaned his head against the couch, and shut his eyes.

  “That bad?”

  “That bad,” he said. “I’m sorry about dinner.”

  “I hate your job.” I meant it. The incessant hours, the every-man-for-himself mentality in the guise of congenial partnership.

  “When the kids are through college …” His voice trailed off.

  We’d crossed this territory before. Eric’s conviction that he overworked for us, and mine that we never asked this of him. I never cared about money. My parents were lofty thinkers who drove old cars and took us on vacations to a dusty cabin in the Sierras. My first job out of college was as a temp for two dollars an hour. It got me to an attic room in Paris, with yogurt and French bread for dinner. When I finally trained for a career, it was as a teacher. When I married Eric in my parents’ backyard, my sister and I barefoot with wildflowers in our hair, he was a part-time high school athletic coach. I’d never felt like we needed anything more.

  I brushed Eric’s face with my fingers, and felt the deep creases spreading from his eyes. We were the same age.

  I was quiet for a moment. “Remember when my dad was alive and my mother still had Thanksgiving, when we’d sing ‘Over the River and Through the Woods to Grandmother’s House’ with Julia? And then she’d ask if every pair of trees along I-80 was the woods?”

  He laughed, no memory about the kids too corny for us. I asked if he was hungry. He said he was famished, no time even for lunch. In the kitchen, he picked up the wine bottle I’d bought and looked at the label. “I’m sorry,” he said again. I’d left the bottle out so he would be, but I was finished with that game.

  “Open it,” I said. He ate his reheated meal as if he’d never tasted anything as good. It was nearly midnight, but we talked as if we didn’t have to get up at six in the morning. Together, we’d always had that, the ability to forget about tomorrow.

 

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