Authors: Jane Smiley
went back into the house, first into the kitchen, and then upstairs. But she could hear
much of what they said, because it was a warm day and the windows were open. She
heard Len say, "If I had known this, if I had had any idea that such a thing was possible, I
would never have devoted my life and my reputation to ..." So, she thought, that was how
it was going to go. No defense of Andrew by Len, either. She closed the window, and
stayed in her room for about an hour. When she came downstairs, Andrew was sitting
quietly in a chair, looking out the window, but as soon as he saw her, he said, "I think,
my dear, that I will go out for a walk. It is a beautiful day."
She could not resist. She said, "Andrew, just one question."
"What would that be, my dear?" Of course, he thought she was going to ask the
plagiarism question, but she had answered that herself. The question she asked was "How
has Len supported himself here for all of these years?"
His shoulders began to shrug, but she held up her hand. She said, "Did you pay
for the publication of that book?"
"Well, I did. Yes."
"Does he know that?"
"Possibly the publisher let that slip at some point."
"Does anyone else know that?"
He didn't answer, and perhaps he didn't know.
After a moment, he said, "He was a stranger. Coming here was his idea."
"But it turned out that he couldn't find a publisher, and so ..."
"We put years of work into his book."
She heaved a sigh, that was all. It was not in her to say, "Serves you right," or
even to reflect more soberly that Andrew had reaped what he had sown, or received a just
and fitting punishment. All she could do was wonder what there was in him that had to
persist. And what came first, the persistence or the orphaned ideas? Astronomers all over
the world, she gathered, had moved on, and been thrilled to do so. But this was what
marriage was, wasn't it? A wife could know that her husband was thoroughly wrong, but
the last thing on earth she could do was say so. Andrew got up and went out. About two
weeks later, after sorting papers furiously, he did the only thing he knew how to do,
which was start writing another book. When he showed her the first pages, when she saw
the first mention of the Aether, she said, "You had better learn to type." She was firm.
She thought that would slow him down, but he bought a more modern typewriter, and she
could hear him every day, behind the door of his spacious study, tap-tap-tap.
1933
1937
IT WAS TRUE, as Margaret remembered Lavinia saying, "Habit proves stronger
than passion." What really happened, she came to believe, was that those nights when she
lay awake wondering what it would be like to move back to Missouri (and would she live
with Beatrice, whose letters were litanies of complaint or suffering, depending upon
Margaret's mood, or Elizabeth, who had become so thoroughly reticent that Margaret had
no idea at all of her true state of mind?) were remembered but no longer felt. Those
mornings when she arose trembling with dread at the idea of hearing his first "my dear"
came to be lived through--what seemed a horror was endured and then buried in the
routine of daily activities. Andrew seemed to have learned a lesson, finally, and become
merely himself--no larger than life-size. She took some deep breaths, planted a rose
garden, did most of what was asked of her. Philosophy intruded--she looked around and
compared her condition with the general run of things and was grateful for continuing
good health. Most important, she became adept at the neutral smile, the moment of
patient silence, the arrangements of the day and the night that kept order around the house
(no stacks of papers in the front hall or the kitchen, the dining room neat). She
remembered Lavinia saying that a wife only has to do what she's told for the first year,
and wondered why she had forgotten that piece of wisdom. All of these efforts were
small, and yet a balance was maintained--past episodes of imbalance became not present,
and that was enough. It was akin to giving up a corset, perhaps, or buying a larger girdle,
or forgetting notions of sin and retribution. Andrew, as far as she could tell, had learned
the lesson of mortality, too--he was seventy-one now, and he knew he had missed many
enjoyments over the years. Mostly, she had learned from watching Mrs. Tillotson that
certain dramatic steps required an imperviousness of character that she did not possess;
she came to be relieved that she hadn't taken them. She let it go at that. He had not
committed adultery, or a felony, or abandonment. It was simple in its way.
One day, Margaret came home from a morning visit to Mrs. Wareham to find
newspapers laid out on the dining-room table--the
Examiner
and the
Chronicle
, the
Vallejo paper, and the
Sacramento Bee
. Andrew was proceeding around the table,
reading every word about an unfortunate incident outside of Nanking. The incident
looked quite straightforward to Margaret--the Japanese army had taken Nanking, which
Chiang Kai-shek then had to abandon. In the course of this, Japanese planes sank an
American boat because the pilots didn't see American flags. Though lots of men were
wounded, only three were killed, and most of the sailors were rescued by nearby British
boats. Roosevelt complained, and some admiral apologized. By the next day, the
Japanese had offered to pay for the sinking of the boat, and the Foreign Minister himself
apologized.
Andrew decided to go over to the island (he hadn't been there in months) and hear
what they were saying in the Officers' Club and anywhere else he could manage to
eavesdrop or to get someone into conversation. He was alight with investigative purpose.
Margaret was glad to get him out of the house. At the end of a week, he even put in a call
to Pete. Andrew wasn't the only person interested, of course--the ladies at the knitting
group had talked about it for an hour. When he hung up, she reported what they had all
agreed upon: "But, Andrew, when most governments make a mistake like that, they cover
it up for weeks, and then go for more weeks insisting that there was provocation, and then
wait to be sued for years after that. I think this incident speaks well of the Japanese."
"Perhaps it does. But it's a mystery. The sailors on the boat said that the flags
were completely visible."
"And, anyway, it seems outside of your usual area."
"It is an interesting event, in and of itself." He paused. "And I have been feeling
of late that I've let the world get away from me. What did I come across the other day?
Oh yes, my bird list, from so long ago. Remember how we walked about the island and
looked at gulls and hawks? I realized that I haven't always been a dull boy."
She thought, What harm can come from his getting out of the house and diverting
himself with this? She said, "It's worth looking into, then."
She said reassuring things like this all the time now, while she was going about
her own business, passing in and out of the rooms he was in on her way to shop or weed
or visit someone or go knitting or work with the aid society she collected for. Though her
happiness had taken a while to set in, she traced it directly to this house Andrew had
purchased. It was pleasant to wake up in, convenient to all of Vallejo, and quite suitable
for hosting her share of knitting circles and get-togethers. After a few days, she quietly
put the newspapers away, and in fact forgot the whole thing until she ran into Mrs.
Kimura around Christmas.
They talked about Naoko, Margaret asked after Mr. Kimura, and Mrs. Kimura
asked after the captain; then Mrs. Kimura declared that she had just heard from Joe that
morning. Joe had moved to Japan as a dentist, thinking there would be more opportunity
there, but in the three years since going had never made up his mind whether to stay in
Japan or to come home. Lester could not make up his mind whether to join his brother or
to continue working for the Pacific Trading Company. Mrs. Kimura, Naoko, Cassandra,
Mrs. Wareham, and Margaret had been over the pros and cons of all the choices--it was
one of their standard topics of conversation. Now Mrs. Kimura reported that Joe and two
of his friends were planning to go to the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo before Christmas, to
leave off a letter of sympathy, and also a monetary contribution toward the medical and
dental needs of those wounded aboard the boat in China.
Margaret exclaimed, "That's very kind!"
Mrs. Kimura said, "Many have done same thing, wealthy businessmen down to
simple schoolgirls. American ambassador wife doesn't have moment to herself from
receiving wives of high families. I admit Joe not think of this, but two friends ask him."
"Even
so--"
"They agree to donate two weeks from their employment to this." She gave
Margaret a happy smile. "And Joe says he found bride from good family, twenty-sixyear-old. She has business sewing Western-style dresses for wealthy Japanese wives."
"Two weeks' pay, though!"
"To me, I see because of this that Japanese people will prevail over the warriors
of the army. Emperor is being pulled in two. He knows that Japanese people don't like
war in China, but the army foils their wishes every time. Two weeks' pay for this is how
much Japanese people want to live in peace."
Later, Margaret wished she had not mentioned this encounter at supper. Andrew
was skeptical, and Margaret was rather sharp when she said, "They've been very
forthcoming."
"Well, my dear, there is literally always more to everything than meets the eye.
The eye is a very poor instrument for seeing anything. Over on the island, they are very,
very suspicious."
"Of what, though?" Her voice was rising. She inhaled deeply. What did it matter,
really? She adopted a neutral expression. It helped.
"Of some sleight of hand. The orange will be pulled out from behind the ear, big
as life, and how did it get there when the magician was wearing short sleeves?"
She laughed. It wasn't very often that Andrew made her laugh, and he gave her a
gratified smile.
And then the incident of the boat (the
Panay)
was resolved, and the papers
completely stopped talking about it.
WITHOUT the universe, the big house was too small for him--the steep steps too
shallow, the high ceilings too low, the spacious rooms only a stride or two long.
Whatever she was doing, knitting or reading or cleaning or cooking, there was the
constant drum of footsteps--boot steps, really--so she was happy when he went out,
dressed nicely, always in a suit and well-shined shoes. He carried a walking stick and
wore a hat to keep off the sun. He walked fast, and he was healthy for a man of his age.
He would never be mistaken for a bum or a ne'er-do-well, she thought.
It was Officer Napolitano and Officer Kelley who stopped by one day and told her
that once in a while he would flag down someone driving a car; once in a greater while,
that person would stop, no doubt thinking that Andrew was an old man in distress.
Andrew would open the passenger door and get in, telling the driver (almost always a
woman) to drive him over the causeway to the island, or perhaps somewhere downtown.
One poor girl took him about for an hour and a half, while he did various errands. The