The English Teacher (16 page)

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Authors: Lily King

BOOK: The English Teacher
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The red hands above the stove were clutched at six-thirty. Where the hell was everyone? She imagined the station wagon skidding into the headlights of a monstrous truck. I’m sorry, ma’am, the cop at the door would say. Her heart raced at the thought of a man at the door with a gun.
She pulled out a saucepan, remembering
As if her soul had shrunk and died, / And left a waste within
and Tom’s fake-earnest question “Which one?” As if he knew the title to even one of Hardy’s poems. Opening a can of tomato paste she had that feeling again that this was not the real moment, that she hadn’t married him, that she and Peter didn’t actually live here. It startled her, how easily reality could slip off her shoulders. She put down the opener and poured herself the damn drink.
After a few sips it was easy to make the paste into a sauce, put the water on to boil. She sat back down at the table, in her seat this time. She stirred the ice with her fingers, thinking of Davis Clay and that awful trick his wife played on him a few summers ago. She’d called people all over the country, childhood friends, aunts and uncles, even his ninety-two-year-old granny, everyone the poor guy loved, and they’d all snuck into his house while he was out playing golf and when he got back they surprised him not with a party but with accusations that he was ruining his life and his children’s lives. They pushed him into a car and drove him to this place in Connecticut for a month, the remaining month of his summer vacation, to dry out. Vida never forgot the way the guy looked in September. Old Clay went to Auschwitz
for the summer, Vida said to someone in the lunch line, and the joke traveled around school. He’d never recovered from it, as far as Vida could tell. He still had these gray hollows under his eyes, as if he hadn’t slept since, and he’d completely lost his sense of humor.
These babies are going to be writing better books …
She felt sorry for Mark Stratton, really. His wife had left him several years ago, taking their six-year-old son with her to Minnesota. He was a pitiful character, someone, despite the irritation he provoked, you had to feel sympathy for, a Robert Cohn. Perhaps she should have been kinder to him after his wife had gone. They’d only had one conversation about it, in the lunch line. He didn’t even mention her or the kid, just that he missed his cat. Vida had earnestly commiserated with him, imagining if something ever happened to Walt, but she’d deliberately separated from him when they’d gotten their food, feigning interest in the salad bar. Now she wished she’d handled it differently, for clearly he’d wanted to talk that day. Carol had been one of his confidantes at the time, and though she and Vida used to gossip nearly every afternoon, Carol would never divulge the details of Mark’s situation. Vida respected her for that, among other things. She acknowledged the familiar shame about Carol and the unfinished letter as it rose, but she didn’t feel it, didn’t let it overwhelm her as it often did. That was the beauty of a good drink at the end of the day.
On his rug in the corner Walt twitched and whimpered. Did he picture her in his dreams? How would she appear to him—in fragments? A pair of legs, a long hand, a soothing voice? Did he have nightmares about her, in which she transformed into a hollering, dog-kicking old crone? The thought of nightmares did not scare her right now. She could even think of her own without panic. The checked shirt, the mustard breath, and her chasing him down the hallway with only a book for a weapon. Every time she lunged for him he got smaller until, when she reached the room he’d veered into, Peter’s room, he was gone. Only Peter was there, in his crib—he was always only a few months old in
the dream—but when she drew close to check on him he leapt to his feet, agile, angry, no longer a baby at all despite the body, and grabbed her. She raised her book and smacked him off. She beat him and beat him until he was finally still.
Vida felt pain in her hands and looked down to see her fingernails cutting into her palms.
She made the next drink stronger, then stirred the sauce with a fork. She wondered if the clock had stopped; it wasn’t even quarter of seven yet. She thought of Fran on her sleepover in some bedroom right now with her girlfriends talking about their hair. She had had enough experience with teenage girls like Fran to know what little went on in their heads. She didn’t understand it. The girl wasn’t stupid by any means, but she’d never read more than a few pages of any of the books she’d loaned her. When she was Fran’s age she devoured books. There had been no better feeling on earth than being under her pink blanket on a Saturday afternoon with a new book in her hands. No reality competed with the reality of those books. If her mother’s hounding grew too persistent she took the book and the blanket to the car and locked herself in. She would spend days—a whole weekend and then Monday and Tuesday if she could convince her mother of a stomach bug—prone, engulfed, gone. She didn’t understand a girl like Fran who found this thin life enough, especially after losing her mother. Why wouldn’t she want to enter a better world every now and then, a world with a little more sense to it, where even tragedy had luster and resonance to it?
Her sister Gena had been like Fran, probably still was. California attracted that kind of person, social, unreflective. Gena had never spent a minute more in the house than necessary, always off with some pack of girls, or, later, boys. Their mother had despaired. She’d wanted good girls who would marry early and well, like Jane and Elizabeth Bennett. Instead she got one who never came home at night
and another who never left the house. One of us finally got married, Mother, Vida said to the ceiling. Was it possible she hadn’t even thought of her mother since before her engagement? Her mother knew everything, now that she was dead. It probably didn’t feel so good to know everything.
She heard the thuds of car doors. She put the bourbon back in the closet. She didn’t remember making a third drink but there it was and she polished it off. She put her glass in the dishwasher, and the spaghetti in the water. Half of the water had boiled off, but she pressed the stiff noodles into it with a spoon, cracking most of them. After they sank, the water became a white fizz. Vida leaned her face into the steam. It felt old and dry. Tom’s voice rang through the house, calling her. There was no apology in it.
He and Peter came into the kitchen carrying big brown bags.
“Chinese takeout!” Peter said, as if he and Vida didn’t used to pick up a meal from the Lucky Star on occasion, as if Tom himself had invented Chinese food.
“I made spaghetti,” Vida said.
“Oh, no.” Tom frowned, and she heard in his tone some facile expression like
A little trust goes a long way.
He’d said that one before. He slid his bag onto the counter, brushed the steamed hair from her forehead, and asked how it went with the computers. He was using a gentle, patient voice, the one he used with Fran or Caleb when they were on the brink of unruliness.
“Awful. They raised five hundred thousand dollars and hired that troll to burn it.” Gone was the fellow feeling for Mark and his divorce. “It was a complete waste of my unpaid time.” She felt her rage rising, with its insatiable appetite. She wished he’d stop touching her head.
“I’m sorry.” But despite the soft voice and caress, he was quite unsorry. He seemed quietly accusatory.
“I wish you’d called,” she said.
“I left this.” He held up a piece of paper next to the flour canister. How was she supposed to have seen that? “Always check there first.” Why was he speaking to her like this?
He bent over the stove. “Mmmm,” he said to the sauce, and then, in one dramatic gesture, flipped the whole pan over.
“What are you—” Nothing spilled out. She’d forgotten to turn down the heat and it had caked on the bottom. The pasta, however, bubbled in happy ignorance behind it.
The food was, though she wouldn’t say it, delicious. Chicken with cashews, shrimp lo mein, fried rice, beef and broccoli. She hadn’t eaten since breakfast. Stuart was at the table, though when he’d come in she couldn’t say.
“Earth to Ma.” Peter never used to be so rude. “The rice?”
“How about an old-fashioned ‘please’?” She never used to be so clichéd.
Tom and Stuart were already arguing.
“Tell me our military couldn’t figure out a way to go in and get them if they wanted.” Stuart spoke with his mouth full, his fork in his fist.
“They couldn’t. They’d be bringing those people home in body bags if they tried.”
“That is so naive, Dad. If we wanted them out we’d get them out. This is all about oil.”
“Oil?”
“Yes. Don’t you even read the paper? We need that oil. We don’t want to jeopardize the sweet oil deal we have with them. That’s why we’ve supported the Shah and his brutal regime for so many years. That’s why we had to take him in last month.”
“We took in the Shah because he needed medical treatment.”
“Spare me the sob story. A lot of people say he’s faking it. And would we take in Pol Pot or Idi Amin if they needed treatment?
No. We only take in the mass murderers who are selling us oil at a good price.”
“Say you were head of the U.S. military, Stuart. How would you rescue those hostages? How would you go into the center of the capital and get inside that building without being seen? Because once you are seen, everybody’s dead. What would you do, take an invisibility pill?” He was angry now.
They went on and on. Eventually Stuart put up two hands in mock surrender.
“Speech which enables argument is not worthy,” he said.
“What?”
“These aren’t the important things.”
“What are the important things?” Vida heard herself ask. He was such a coward, the way he ducked at the last minute behind his mystic baloney.
Stuart put his hands in his lap. “The true self, the inner life, a harmony between heaven and earth.”
This last surprised her. “Do you believe in heaven?”
“In a metaphorical sense.”
“How is heaven metaphorical? Either it exists or it doesn’t.” He was like one of her weakest students, tossing up a big word and hoping it landed in the right place.
“Its existence is not the point.”
“What is the point?”
“The point is”—he paused to look at each of them in turn, and it angered her to see how worshipfully Peter looked back—“not to care about the point.”
“Spoken by a true Sophist.”
“Sticks and stones, Vida.”
“I’m not trying to insult you. I just think it’s too easy to believe in nothing.”
“It’s not nothing. It’s the opposite of nothing.”
“But every time I try to coax a declarative sentence out of you, you twist away in a puff of smoke.”
She saw how calmly he sifted through the words in his head. “To you it appears as smoke.”
“But to you it’s the truth?” She was aware of the absence of sifting in hers.
He nodded.
“Describe what it is you believe. In your words.”
“That which is nameable is not the Tao.”
“Those are not your words. But let me name it for you.
Crock of Crap.

Tom was hushing her but she didn’t care. Someone had to stand up to this Buddhist bully.
“What do you believe in, Vida? In your words.”
So he could get angry. She was glad to see she’d cracked the surface. She felt her own creed assemble easily. “I am a humanist. I believe in man’s creative—”
“And woman’s?”
“That’s a semantic argument for another day.”
“Are we having an argument?”
“Are you interested in my answer?”
Stuart bowed his head.
“I believe in the imagination and its striving toward truth and beauty, toward the ideal, through accurate and penetrating representations of our world.”
“Our world? What is our world? We’re here for two seconds. Blip. Blip. Then we’re gone forever.”
“I believe”—she was surprised by the pleasure she took from saying those two words—“there is a transcendence through acts of creation.”
“You mean writers and artists can achieve immortality if they’re good enough?”
“Not just them. When I pick up Tolstoy, for example, I am instantly connected with his world, his mind, and therefore both of us have transcended. And my world has become richer for the new layer his perceptions have added to it.”
“The goal of the Tao is to detach from this world.”
“Why on earth would you want to do that?”
“Because our attachments to it prevent us from seeing beyond it.”
“You know, Stuart, I’ve heard a lot of stupid theories in my life, but that really takes the cake. If you want to believe that, be my—”
“What’s so special about
your
world, Vida?” He had a way of saying her name that made it sound like she’d made it up. “Teaching books your students will never remember? Keeping them pinned to chairs they ache to get out of? Does that have meaning? Driving home. Making lousy dinners.” He pointed to her glass. “Measuring out your precious bourbon. Fucking my father while you’re—”

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