Authors: David Gilbert
& Sons
is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, incidents, and dialogue, and all characters with the exception of some well-known historical and public figures, are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Where actual institutions and real-life historical or public figures appear, the situations, incidents, and dialogues concerning those entities and persons are entirely fictional and are not intended to describe actual events. In all other respects, any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2013 by David Gilbert
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Random House, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
R
ANDOM
H
OUSE
and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Grateful acknowledgment is made to Alfred Music Publishing Co. Inc. for permission to reprint an excerpt from “Salt of the Earth,” words and music by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, copyright © 1968 (Renewed) ABKCO Music, Inc. All rights reserved. Used by permission of Alfred Music Publishing Co. Inc.
L
IBRARY OF
C
ONGRESS
C
ATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION
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ATA
Gilbert, David.
& Sons: a novel / David Gilbert.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-8129-9397-4
1. Families—New York (State)—New York—Fiction. 2. Rich people—New York (State)—New York—Fiction. 3. Family secrets—Fiction. 4. Upper East Side (New York, N.Y.)—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3557.I3383A64 2013
813′.54—dc23 2012031308
987654321
Jacket design: Gabrielle Bordwin
Jacket photographs: © Lisa-Blue/Getty Images
v3.1_r1
Sometimes Louis saw in his sons a mirror that reflected the best of who he was and he was in awe; other times he hoped to see nothing of himself and would insist on molding the opposite, by force if necessary. Fatherhood is the bending of that alpha and that omega, with the wobbly heat of our own fathers mixed in. We love and hate our boys for what they might see.
—A. N. D
YER
,
The Spared Man
O
NCE UPON A TIME
,
the moon had a moon. This was a long time ago, long before there were sons who begged their fathers for good-night stories, long before there were fathers or sons or stories. The moon’s moon was a good deal smaller than the moon, a saucer as compared to a platter, but for the people of the moon this hardly mattered. They maintained a constant, almost mystic gaze on their moon. You might ask these people—not quite people, more like an intelligent kind of eggplant, their roots eternally clenched—What about the nearby earth, with its glorious blues and greens and ever-changing swirls of white? Surely that gathered up some of their attention? Actually, not at all. The earth to them seemed a looming presence, vaguely sinister, like something that belonged to a sorcerer. This brings up another question: how did the creatures of the earth feel about its two moons? Well, to be honest, life at that time was rather pea-brained, though recently scientists have discovered a direct evolutionary link between those moons and the development of binocular vision in the Cambrian slug
.
But one day—for this is a story and there must be a one day—the moon’s moon appeared bigger than normal in the sky, which the wise men of the moon chalked up to something they called intergravitational bloat. Regardless, it shone with even more brilliance, only to be outdone the next evening, when the circumference had quintupled. Nobody was yet frightened; they were too much in awe. But by the tenth day, when the moon’s moon resembled the barrel of a train bearing down on them, the people started to worry. This can’t be happening. What they loved more than anything suddenly seemed destined to kill them. Oh mercy. Oh dear. A resigned kind of panic set in, as they gripped their roots extra tight and prepared for the inevitable impact, which would have come on the twenty-first day except that the moon’s moon passed overhead
like a ball slightly overthrown. Thank heavens it missed, the people sighed. Then they turned their heads and followed its course and soon realized its true path: the distant bull’s-eye of earth. It seemed they were not the players here, merely the spectators. On the twenty-fourth day, roughly sixty-five million years ago, the moon’s moon traveled its last mile and a great yet silent blast erupted from the lower hemisphere of earth. And that was it. Their moon was gone. In its place a cataract of gray gradually blinded all those blues and greens and swirls of white
.
The sky where their moon once hung now seemed dark and injured, its color the color of a bruise. A new kind of longing set in as they stared at earth. Someone was the first to let go, likely the most depressed. To his amazement, instead of withering, always the assumed prognosis, he began to float—not only float but rise up and drift toward the distant grave site of their beloved moon. “We’ve all been holding on,” he shouted down, newly prophetized, “all this time just holding on.” Was this suicide or deliverance? the wise men of the moon debated while someone else let go, and then another, three then five then eight rising up into the sky, their eyes casting a line toward earth and a hopeful reunion with their moon. Before any opinion could be agreed upon, the horizon shimmered with thousands of fellow travelers, the moon like a dandelion after a lung-clearing
fffffffffffffff.
The surface grew paler until eventually only one soul remained behind, a child, specifically a boy. Every second he was tempted to join the others, but he was stubborn and mistook his grip for freedom. Friends and family slowly faded from sight, their pleas losing all echo, and many years later, when the sky no longer included their memory, this boy, now a young man, lowered his head and contemplated the ground. Soon he took his first steps, dragging his cumbersome roots across dusty lunar plains, certain that what was lost would soon be eclipsed by whatever he would find
.
But that will have to wait until tomorrow night
.
A
NDREW
D
YER
June 24, 1942
Dear Charlie,
Thank you for the Inkless Stainless G-men Fingerprint Set. I like it very much. I have already made a record of my family’s dirty mitts. I’m dusting old Mr. Piggybank daily just in case Daddy Desperado gets any ideas. And I’ll be dusting for you too. Hands off the baseball, bud! Thanks for coming to my birthday though it wasn’t half as fun as yours. Normally I hate magicians and their corny tricks but Mr. Magnifico was right good. Where did that bird go? I bet he had two, maybe three of them. Maybe he was all bird. Anyway, see you tomorrow at school, before this letter sees you.
Finally your fellow eight year old,