Babylon and Other Stories

BOOK: Babylon and Other Stories
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Acclaim for Alix Ohlin and
Babylon and Other Stories

“Ohlin's talent isn't just her ability to intrigue us. Once we're hooked she doesn't let us go…. Her work is funny, sad, sweet and terrifying all at once: quite an accomplishment.”


“Elegant, disquieting…. Ohlin finds all the acute angles in these intersecting lives, and she sharpens them to a cutting edge; her voice rings clear and true through every story.”


“Ohlin's stories stay grounded with their complex characters and sparkling moments of insight. She's great at probing the moments that can change everything.”


“Via a process all the more impressive for its apparent effortlessness, Ohlin puts readers down in a place quite different from where she picks them up. This is a beguiling and very impressive collection.”


(Montreal)

“Engaging and intelligent, ironic and heartfelt, all at once.”


“Ohlin has rendered her characters' circumstances with such intimacy that once you've met them, it's impossible not to wonder what'll happen to them next.”



Babylon
resonates from page to page, the light of insight and awareness flaring up with sudden, breathtaking surprise as you say yes to understandings you did not realize you had.”


“Alix Ohlin is a sensitive writer, alert to the look and feel of things, and to the comedies and contradictions of her characters' obsessions.”


“Ohlin has a great eye, a great ear and all the other equipment auguring a very successful future.”

—Jay McInerney

“[A] must-read book…. Ohlin is a sort of Alice Munro for generation Y.”


“Ohlin is that rare find—a writer of emotionally intelligent (and intelligently emotional) fiction. Expect to hear her spoken of in the same reverent breath as Lorrie Moore and Joy Williams.”

—Heidi Julavits

Alix Ohlin
Babylon and Other Stories

Alix Ohlin was born in Montreal, graduated from Harvard University, and studied at the Michener Center for Writers in Austin, Texas. Her fiction, which has appeared in
One Story
and
Shenandoah
, among other periodicals, has been selected for both
Best New American Voices 2004
and
Best American Short Stories 2005
. She has received awards and fellowships from
The Atlantic Monthly
, the MacDowell Colony,
The Kenyon Review'
s Writers Workshop, the Sewanee Writers' Conference, and Yaddo. She lives in Easton, Pennsylvania, and teaches at Lafayette College.

ALSO BY ALIX OHLIN

The Missing Person

to my parents

The King of Kohlrabi

It was a summer of disasters. I was sixteen and just starting to relax fully into my vacation when my father took my mother and me out to dinner at the New Chinatown and told us over the Kung Pao chicken that he'd fallen in love with his law partner, Margaret, and the two of them were “going away for a while” to “sort things out.” While he was talking, he twisted a corner of the tablecloth into a ring in his right hand. My mother, leaning back in the corner of the booth, said, “Oh, for crying out loud.” She sounded annoyed. She was drinking a Mai Tai, as usual, and had given me the umbrella, also as usual. Tonight's was blue and I twirled it between my fingers. I was always pleasantly surprised that it really opened and closed, just like a real umbrella. I stuck it into a piece of my chicken and moved some baby carrots and water chestnuts into an arrangement around it, like small, edible patio furniture. No one said anything. I stared at the couple at the table next to us, who were sharing a Volcano, holding hands over the blue flame in the center of it. They saw me looking and loosed their hands as if they were embarrassed.

“You know how much I love you both,” said my dad. My mother and I didn't say anything to this. Margaret had been at our house for Christmas that year. She was a quiet, large-boned
woman with a wide, dark mouth and I'd always thought she was a lesbian.

“I thought she was a lesbian,” I said.

“Well, she's not,” said my dad.

I drove home from the New Chinatown. I had just gotten my driver's license but my parents wouldn't let me take the car anywhere without them. My mom always sat in the front passenger seat, making a big show out of white-knuckling the armrest and covering her eyes when she thought I was being reckless. My father sat in the back seat and whistled. He was a good whistler, and that night he did an up-tempo rendition of “I Get a Kick Out of You.”

I looked at him in the rearview mirror and wondered if he was so happy with Margaret the lesbian that he couldn't stop being happy, even for just a few minutes, even for us. Then a guy came out of nowhere in a red Toyota Corolla, turning in front of me off a side street with a stop sign. I don't know what he was thinking.

“Aggie!” yelled my mother, gripping the dashboard.

“It's not my fault,” I said quickly, and braked hard, too hard I guess, and the car skidded to the left; the right front fender of our car collided with the side of the Toyota. The driver, steam pouring from under his hood, got out and started walking around the dark street, clutching his arm and howling. Next to me my mother began to cry in a dry, sharp way, jaggedly inhaling. These two noises, my mother's and the driver's, were the only two sounds, the night otherwise quiet. We all sat there breathing. My father whistled the first few notes of “Be Careful, It's My Heart.”

This was the second disaster.

The next day my father packed a suitcase and left for Santa Fe, where he and Margaret had sublet an apartment for the summer.
She came to pick him up in her Saab and they drove away together, leaving our crumpled Honda in the driveway. I watched from the bedroom window but didn't say good-bye. As soon as they were out of sight, my mother walked into my room without knocking and plopped herself down on the bed.

“Things are going to be different around here now that your father's gone, Aggie,” she said severely. “You'll be giving up your pampered life of leisure.”

“What?” I said. I had planned to spend the summer learning to play the bass guitar so I could start an all-girl punk band—and it was a good plan, except I didn't own a bass guitar and had no money to buy one—but Mom said I'd have to get a job instead. I wasn't thrilled by this idea. My two best friends were waitressing, and they kept calling, in the middle of their shifts, asking me to remind them never to do it again.

“No, seriously,” said my friend Karen, calling from the pay phone at Shoney's. “I'm going to have a bruise the size of a quarter where this guy pinched my butt. I mean, you should see him, Aggie. His fingers are like
cigars.

Lucy, my other friend, was working as a hostess at a place where she had to dress up as a pirate, with an eye patch and everything. When people from school drove by the restaurant she ducked behind the counter, whether there was a customer there or not. If anybody got upset she'd say, “Sorry! It's that peg leg of mine acting up again.”

I put off the job search for as long as possible, but it wasn't easy. Every night, before she fixed dinner, my mother would fling the cupboard doors wide open and sigh dramatically. “I guess I can eke something out of the meager supplies I have here.”

“We aren't going to starve, Mom.”

She'd shake her head. “I don't know, Aggie. You know what I
make.” She was a substitute teacher. She made next to nothing during the school year and exactly nothing in summer. “I mean, who knows if we'll ever see your father again.”

“Mom, he's an hour away. It's not like he absconded to Mexico.”

“So far as you know.”

She'd send me to the grocery store with twenty dollars and tell me to get enough food for the week. While I was gone, she hung around the living room building tall houses out of the L.A. IS FOR LOVERS cards I'd brought back from our last family vacation, three or four levels high, stretching across the whole dining room table. When I got back she'd blow on the structure and say, “See? Everything just collapsed like a house of cards.” This was her favorite joke.

“Mom, I feel like you're not handling this very well.”

“Well, thank you for your honesty, Aggie.”

“Why don't you get out of the house or something? See your friends?”

“Sure I will! I'll invite everyone out for a fancy dinner! And what I'll do is, I can use the money you've made in your new job.”

At this point we usually declared a truce and ordered out for pizza.

One night at Smith's I was weighing two pounds of potatoes— “It worked for the Irish,” my mom had said, “and it can work for us. Just pray there's no famine, Aggie”—when a man came up to me and said, “Excuse me, miss, what do you think of this kohlrabi?”

“I don't work here, sorry,” I said.

He shook his head quickly. He was a short man, probably around five-three or five-four, with longish gray hair and tanned, stocky arms. “I know you don't,” he said. “I'm asking you as a
consumer. I need an impartial opinion. My wife wants me to bring home some kohlrabi, and it has to be perfect. If you knew her you'd know what I mean. The way she cooks it is so succulent, it's just wonderful. She's the Queen of the Kohlrabi. You should come by and meet her sometime. Anyway, if I don't get the good kohlrabi I'm a dead man. So please, what do you think?”

The vegetable he was holding up looked like some kind of alien spaceship, with four or five long stems shooting out from a little pod in the middle. At the ends of the stems were green leaves that trembled gently in his hands.

“I've never eaten kohlrabi,” I said. I'd never seen it before, either. “So I have no basis for comparison.”

“You don't eat kohlrabi? Why? Do you have something against it? Is there something I should know?”

“Look, I'm young, I just haven't gotten around to it yet,” I said, and started edging away from the produce section.

He followed me. “I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I didn't mean to offend you.” He seemed sincere, if slightly insane. “Look, a fresh eye is good. It doesn't matter if you've never eaten any. Just look at it and tell me what you think.”

I picked it out of his hand and felt it briefly, cupping the pod in my palm like a baseball. The whole thing was a little strange and I glanced over at the canned-goods aisle, mapping an escape route in case it turned ugly. “Well, I'm no expert,” I finally said, “but this one seems a little … limp.”

“Limp?”

“Just a little.”

“Oh my God, you're right,” he said, taking the kohlrabi back and staring at it. “You are just exactly right. Thank you so much. Really, you'll never know what you've done for me tonight.”

“Okay,” I said.

We shook hands, and I wheeled my cart away. I didn't even know what kohlrabi tasted like or how you cooked it—this was the kind of thing I would've asked my dad, if he were around to ask. But he wasn't. I finished up the shopping and was standing in the express line when the man came up behind me. I didn't have many items in my cart, and nothing fancy. His was full of kohlrabi and gourmet cheeses.

“This is very crisp,” he whispered. “I think she's going to be happy, my wife.”

“Good,” I said.

“You eat very plainly,” he said.

“We live in an age of austerity,” I told him.

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