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Authors: Susan Swan

BOOK: The Wives of Bath
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The Old Mill didn’t look like much, either—just an old brick house beside a muddy creek. It stood all alone in the north end of the ravine, which twisted off between a ridge of wooded hills toward Toronto. Once a real gristmill had stood beside the tavern, but that was over a hundred years ago. I could have been in the middle of nowhere. I wasn’t in Madoc’s Landing, with its string of narrow shops running down to the government wharf. Or downtown Toronto, with its streetcars and windy streets like concrete valleys, stuffed to the brim with dour-looking people. At least these sad-looking city people knew they belonged somewhere. They had an identity. Although I have to admit, I don’t really understand what an identity is. For one thing, it’s what makes you different from the rest of the world (which is what Alice does for
me). And it’s also what you have in common with others—i.e., the way I have something in common with girls.

So I squeezed my rabbit’s foot hard for luck and tried not to think about what the Virgin would do to us if we were caught, or what lie I could make up if somebody nabbed us for being under the legal drinking age. And then Lewis gave me a little push and I half fell into a hall as dark as a church. Did I say dark? I mean pitch-black except for a pair of stained-glass windows on the far wall. Instead of a picture of Jesus, the windows displayed a sheaf of wheat next to a beer mug. This was the Ladies and Escorts room, where boarders were not supposed to go. I could hear people playing pool somewhere to the left of us and to the right, male laughter and the clink of glasses. To my relief, we walked into the little takeout restaurant beside the beer hall. Two St. Mary’s girls in blue tunics sat smoking at one of the tables. “Behold the prey,” Lewis hissed in my ear. Our dates wore pinky-white lipstick, like beatniks, and their hair was teased into thickly hair-sprayed beehives. Convent girls were wild, Lewis said, because their schools were so strict. At St. Mary’s the nuns rang little bells if the girls danced too close to a boy. Sitting at the table with the two girls was one of the Kings College boys we’d fought by the river. When he saw us he stood up and whispered something to the girls, and all three of them stared at me, as if he’d told them about what had happened.

My Mouse heart quaked. The last thing we needed was another rumble.

“Get lost, creep,” Lewis said, and jabbed the Kings College boy with his knee. He looked around to see if anybody was watching and then dragged himself off into the gloomy beer hall, and I realized that Lewis had succeeded in doing the unthinkable—i.e., kneeing him in the groin. Then we sat down, and the two girls put their heads together and giggled as if we didn’t exist. Lewis didn’t seem to notice. So that’s how you act, I thought—as if what other
people do is of no importance. I couldn’t help wondering, just the same, if the boy had told the girls about me, and, if so, if the girls believed him. I watched Lewis for a sign that he was concerned, too, but Lewis only lit up a fag, never once taking his heavy-lidded eyes off the girls’ breasts swelling under their blue tunics. They were more developed than either Tory or me, and the breasts of the girl sitting next to me looked as big as Ismay’s—a 38 C, or my name wasn’t Mouse Bradford.

That was because she was fat. The sleeves of her beige blouse were strained tight across her forearms, and when she raised her hand to smoke, I spotted a B.O. stain.

“Lewis, who’s your friend?” the slighter girl asked. Nervously, I looked away over their bouffant hairdos, pretending I was more interested in Dave Keon’s Maple Leaf hockey sweater in a glass case on the wall, framed like one of Sal’s china plates.

“Lewis, why doesn’t your friend talk?” she asked when I didn’t say anything.

“He’s from Athens, Beth.”

“Well, they speak English there, don’t they?”

“Not him. And he doesn’t like people to draw attention to it, either.”

“Oh, pardon me for breathing.” The slight girl looked at the fat one, and they both started laughing again.

“His name is Nick,” Lewis answered for me.

“That’s a nice name,” the fat girl said. “My name is Josie. It’s short for Josephine.” She put her hand on one of my skinny biceps. “Oh, what big muscles Nick has!” she said, and both girls snickered and hooted.

“Mine are bigger,” Lewis said, and rolled up his sleeves to show them.

“Can’t Nick talk, Lewis?” Josie said when they had finished ogling.

“Endaxy,” I said.

“Oh, he wants to get a taxi,” Josie said.

“No he doesn’t,” Lewis said. “He means he’s agreeing with you—he can’t talk much. See?”

Then Lewis ordered four coffees, and the girls smoked and whispered to each other without touching their cups. I didn’t drink mine, either—my hands were shaking too much. So I just sat there like a dope, watching Lewis through my dark glasses, waiting for a sign from him that would tell me what to do.

When the signal came, I couldn’t believe it. Lewis put his empty mug back on the tray and announced, rude as you please, that he and Beth were going for a walk. Beth looked a little surprised. Then they left, Lewis swaggering ahead, while the men at the counter turned to stare at the girl’s nice round calves in her black winter stockings.

“Would you like to do something with me, Nick?” Josie said pointedly, and I waited for her to start up her giggling again. But she put on a show of looking serious, taking my arm and helping me to my feet as if I were a child who needed instructions.

Outside the Old Mill, the sun was turning the agate-coloured stream almost summer-blue. The air felt warm on my cheeks, and I heard bees droning in the bushes down near the storm sewers. We walked a little way in silence, and then, for no good reason, Josie stumbled against me and clutched at my hand with her fat fingers. Did she think I wanted to hold hands? How perverted! I thought. Then I remembered who I was.

“Is anything wrong?” Josie asked. For a second I almost told her. “I know I’m a little overweight,” she whispered, as if she were trying to keep somebody from overhearing. “But I’m going on a Metrecal diet this weekend.” I must have looked taken aback, because she giggled and said, “I can see you don’t have to go on a diet.” I shook my head and noisily started to chew gum, because I didn’t know what else to do. Her forward manner terrified me. She smiled, as if she wanted to reassure me, all the while chattering
on about how much she hated Latin at St. Mary’s. I didn’t say anything, and after a while she stopped talking, and we walked in an uncomfortable silence toward the wooded end of the ravine.

The river ran quite fast here through a concrete bed. A wall of cement lay flat on either side of the stream, like two strange concrete shores. The water had no choice but to follow the man-made bed. Then Josie said, “I just love the countryside, don’t you?”

I know that feeling superior to people is not polite, but how could anybody think a funny little culvert just outside the city was real countryside? Obviously, Josie didn’t know a river from a hole in the ground. I felt mad at her for being so dense, and a teeny bit of contempt, too, because she hadn’t guessed I was a girl. Then, the next thing I knew, Josie was slapping her chest and shrieking at me about a bee getting caught in her blouse. And all of a sudden she was lying flat on her back in some bushes, and I knew something was going to happen that I didn’t like.

“It’s inside my brassiere, Nick. Get it out, please!”

I bent down and started to peer under her blouse, and she kicked me impatiently.

“Hurry, it’s stinging! Ouch! Oh, it’s mad as can be.” She grabbed my hand and made it yank down the cups of her bra, and then she was spilling out everywhere—lying like a crazy fool in the bushes, her tubby legs spread and her poor pillow-sized breasts bare for all the world to see.

She’d stopped moaning and just lay there without moving. I thought she’d died. And then she said my name in a whispery little voice, and I knew she wasn’t hurt and maybe there hadn’t even been a bee at all. And what’s worse, I understood that this was the moment Kong was waiting for, and I’ve never felt so frightened in all my life. Josie looked not just fat but big—bigger than me by a hundred times. Bigger than the ski mountain in Madoc’s Landing. And I thought with a little shock, this is how you’d look, too,
Mouse, if you were lying there waiting for a boy’s hands to love you. I’d be scared—maybe more scared than the boy. And not knowing that I was a mountain to be scaled.

“Nick, sit down like a good boy.” She patted the ground beside her, and I did what she said, but I kept on my cap to hide my long hair, and even Lewis’s sunglasses, because I was afraid she would see I had girls’ eyes and not boys’ eyes, although, as it turned out, she kept her own eyes half-shut, as if she didn’t want to see what was dead obvious to anybody who cared to look.

I lit a fag to stall for time and thought what a shame it was I had to act tough when my ideal man was John Kennedy. The least I could do was behave like a gentleman and not stare at her breasts. If John Kennedy had been in my position, I know he would have kept his eyes averted. Besides, Josie had embarrassing breasts, and I was sure somebody with breasts like that wouldn’t want anyone looking at them too closely. Funny little white lines ran off from the edges of her nipples, as if her breasts were starting to crack open like a window some kid had broken with a stone. I knew those funny-looking lines were stretch marks, because I’d seen them on Sal’s cousin Ginny, whose body fell to pieces, Sal said, after Ginny had five kids.

Meanwhile, Josie started squeezing me all over and giggling and whispering in my ear about how hard my legs were when they weren’t hard at all. She inched her fingers up toward my crotch and asked me in that fake whispery voice if I had a rubber. I didn’t have a clue what she meant, and she started to laugh again, and just when I thought I couldn’t stand her laughing at me anymore, she kissed me with a wide-open mouth. And I kissed her back, my sunglasses still on. I knew that’s what she wanted me to do, and I did it not just to be polite but because I was curious, too. And she opened her mouth even wider, and all of a sudden I had the stupidest idea that she was like a house with too many open windows. I wanted to warn her to board herself up, because any
robber could crawl into a house like that. And then she snatched my hand and placed it on her breast, and for no good reason I let my hand rest on her soft cool skin—as cool as Plasticine. And then she suggested that I take off my shirt, too, because she wanted to see my breasts.

“Not on your life,” I said, forgetting I wasn’t supposed to speak English, and that’s when I realized that Josie had never believed I couldn’t speak English in the first place. And she’d never believed I was a boy, either.

“You don’t like me because I’m fat,” she said, and started to cry, as if I’d been manhandling her.

“That’s not true,” I said weakly.

“Liar,” she said, sobbing, as she tucked herself back into her bra.

Then she ran off, weeping, and I stood for a long time smoking while Sal’s shaming voice rang and rang in my head. It said all the usual things and a few new bits about how disgusting it was for one girl to touch another, but mostly it kept at me about getting what I deserved for being deceitful, and I had to grant the voice it had a point on that count. When I told Lewis about it, I left out the part about Josie knowing I was a girl, and I wondered if Lewis knew. I said Josie got mad when I touched her, and all Lewis replied was, “You can’t be a real boy, Mouse, until you stop getting sucked in by what girls say. They always want to make everything your fault.”

This wasn’t exactly true, but for the life of me I didn’t know how to argue with him.

27

November 9, 1963

Dear Mr. Kennedy,

It’s high time I told you about the tests. I’ve promised Paulie I won’t say a word to the other girls, and a Mouse always keeps her promises. That’s me to a T—I mean an M. I’m a promise keeper.

Today is a pretty weird day for me. I have to do something that Paulie dreamed up to show my mastery over nature. I’m a little nervous. I feel like Roy Orbison in his song “Runnin’ Scared.” You know that song, Mr. President? I’m sure you’ve heard it, but you probably prefer old-fashioned stuff like “The Shrimp Boats Are Coming.” Well, I’m running scared all the time, too, hoping things will turn out all right in the end.

Right now, I’m in a shed with a pigeon. I’m supposed to kill it to prove I’m a man. Well, not a man—
you’re
a man. To prove I’m manly. I don’t want to do it, and yet I know I have to. Paulie says men have to do things to prove they are men. And they kill the thing they love—like Oscar Wilde said. That’s too much to ask of anybody, but I guess men can’t protect women and children unless they learn to be bad. There’s no way around it. As Paulie says, women are good only for having babies, and men are in charge of death, which is a very, very tough job. If you want to be as good as a man, you have to learn to administer death, too.

Not that I want to be mean to the pigeon, or think it deserves to die. Sure, it pecked my foot a few minutes ago, but I don’t hold
that against it. Actually, it looks a little sick. It’d really be putting it out of its misery by killing it. That happens in war, doesn’t it? Your best buddy asks you to do him in because he’s so far gone he knows he’s not going to live. A poet here named Earle Birney wrote a long poem about two men climbing a mountain. One of them got pretty smashed up during a fall on the rocks. So he asked his buddy to roll him off the cliff, and—can you guess the rest? His buddy didn’t want to do it. But David begged and pleaded, and finally his friend rolled him over like a log into empty space.

I hope you don’t think I’m showing off, but I read about how you said poetry kept you from getting conceited. You said it’s easy when somebody is running the country for them to get too big for their britches and forget about important things. (Like the northern lights on evenings in August and being nice to daughters—the top of my list, Mr. President.) I guess this pigeon is my David, and I have to put it out of its misery. It’s just that I don’t think I can kill a pigeon, Mr. President—even a sick one. But Paulie will be here any moment, and that’s what I have to do. Correction: that’s what I
will
do.

Your pal,
Mouse

November 13, 1963

Dear Mr. Kennedy,

I have great news about Morley! (My father, in case you’ve forgotten.) He came to see me! And I was lucky enough to get him to myself for an hour and twelve minutes. Without Sal. Can you believe that, Mr. President? 1 was coming out of Mrs. Peddie’s class at 3:30 when 1 saw a tall figure in a fedora standing in the front hall. I’d know that fedora anywhere. It’s black, and Sal turns the brim up because she says it will balance the sag of Morley’s big, sloping shoulders.

For a second or two, I thought Morley looked a little sad standing there by himself, like Dr. Kildare on the wrong TV set, staring with his nice, big eyes at the packs of girls in green tunics
swarming past him, their arms full of books. (By the way, I am proud to say I have Morley’s eyes, which are prone to showing circles of fatigue.) Then Morley spotted me, and the next thing I knew he was cuffing me on the cheek and handing me a food package that Sal had made up (ten packages of yellow Chiclets, my fav, and five Oh! Henrys, my second-fav.) I will give the Chiclets to Paulie and keep the candy bars for myself. I’m glad I don’t have to diet like the other girls even though food and mail are the only things I have to live for. (Not that I get many letters.) So I thanked my father, and I would have kissed him, too, except that Morley and I don’t have that kind of relationship.

Then we went for a walk around the hedge, which is where all the girls go with their visitors. Morley shuffled along in his big tan wing tips, not noticing the gorgeous waxy brown leaves still on the oak trees in the ravine or the older girls playing field hockey on the pitch below us. And not—I’m afraid to say—noticing me. You see, Morley always acts like he is asleep or dead, Mr. President. That’s because he works too hard. Like you, he’s very busy. Everybody wants him.

I hoped he would say the wonderful things he’s always wanted to tell me. You know the kind of fatherly remarks I mean. He doesn’t normally say them, because he doesn’t like to make Sal jealous. Well, maybe he’s afraid I would tell her, because that afternoon Morley didn’t talk much. Once, just once, when I was telling him about having our tunics inspected by the matrons, he stopped and said, “You’re all right, aren’t you, Mouser?” I almost told him then about the pigeon, but when he looked at me with his worn-out, old eyes, I just couldn’t bring myself to say how much I hated Bath Ladies College. I didn’t want to cause trouble between him and Sal. So I said, “I’m fine, Morley.” Then we sat in his Olds, and finally he made my cheek sting with his big hand. “Morley’s love taps,” my stepmother says when he pats her goodbye like that. If only you knew how much I hated myself for not being able to talk to him the way I can talk to you! I think it’s because you understand the dark side of things. I know you do, because I read about you giving a talk at Amherst College and how
you quoted Robert Frost’s line, “I have been one acquainted with the night.” I have been acquainted with the night, too, Mr. President. In fact, inside this dump it always feels like night.

I don’t mean that Morley doesn’t know about pain, because he does, and he also has the kindest eyes of anybody you ever saw. Your eyes, Mr. President, are more frank and glad than Morley’s. You always look expectant, as if somebody we can’t see is about to give you a very nice surprise. Morley’s eyes look like he is expecting nothing except problems. Maybe Morley sees just a little too much pain for any decent person to handle. Well, sayonara, Mr. President. It’s been a ball talking to you.

Your buddy,
Mouse Bradford

P.S. By the way, the pigeon died. (Not at my hands.) I thought it should have a sporting chance, so I took it out to the hill behind the school. I set it down and let it stagger around, hoping it would have the sense to fly away. And just at that terrible moment when it didn’t fly off and I knew I had to get out Paulie’s bowie knife, and I felt like Abraham after God asked him to sacrifice Isaac—just then Spruce, Sergeant’s corgi, came tearing down the hill and grabbed the pigeon and ran off shaking it by its neck. Well, I ran after the dog, hitting it with a stick to make it drop the bird. But it was too late—the dastardly deed was done. Spruce chewed the head off the poor thing. I bawled my eyes out, and then Paulie got mad and said I was a disgrace to the male sex. I don’t like being a man that much, Mr. President. I don’t know how you do it.

November 15, 1963

Dear Mr. President,

Today is a red-letter day because you wrote me. I can’t believe it. I have your note taped over my bed beside my Kennedy half-dollar. I especially liked the part
“Regards, John F. Kennedy,”
but I also did appreciate your advice, “Being a child has many difficulties, and parents are not perfect, but we must each give each other the best we have to offer.” Thanks a million, Mr. President. I don’t mean
to sound sentimental, but you are the greatest friend I have ever had.

All my love,
M.B.

P.S. What do you think of a father who cuffs you on the cheek with the back of his hand when he says good-bye? Would you do that to Caroline? Just wondering.

— Mouse?

— What?

— He really wrote you, didn’t he?

— He really did. But I didn’t send my last three letters. I was afraid he wouldn’t approve of the tests, either.

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