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Authors: Lorrie Moore

Tags: #Adult, #Contemporary

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BOOK: Anagrams
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“I know what you mean,” says Gerard, bending over in his lawn chair to tie a sneaker. We are in the side yard of the house, liquidating our affections, trading our lives in for cash: We are having a yard sale. Gerard straightens back up from his sneaker. His hair falls into his face, makes him look too young, then too handsome when he shakes it back. My heart hurts, spreads, folds over like an omelette.

It’s two against one out here.

Eleanor is trying to sell her old shower caddy for a quarter, even though the mush of some horrible soap has dried to a green
wax all over it. Eleanor is a good friend and has come to our yard sale this weekend with all of the mangy items she failed to sell in her own sale last weekend. I invited her to set up her own concession, but now I wonder if she’s not desecrating our yard. Gerard and I are selling attractive things: a ten-speed bike, a cut-glass wine decanter, some rare jazz albums, healthy plants that need a healthy home, good wool sweaters, two antique ladderback chairs. Eleanor has brought over junk: foam rubber curlers with hairs stuck in them; a lavender lace teddy with a large, unsightly stain; two bags of fiberglass insulation; three seamed and greasy juice glasses, which came free with shrimp cocktail, and which Eleanor now wants to sell for seventy-five cents. She’s also brought an entire crate of halter tops and an old sound track of
Thoroughly Modern Millie
. She spreads most of this out on one of the low tables Gerard and I have constructed from cement blocks and two old doors hauled from the shed out back. Magdalena, our dog, has a purple homemade price tag somehow stuck (“like a dingleberry,” says the ever-young Gerard) to her rear end. She sniffs at the shrimp glasses and knocks one of them over. Gerard smooths her black coat, strokes her haunches, tells her to cool it. Eleanor once described Magdalena as a dog that looked exactly like a first-grader’s drawing of a dog. Now, however, with her ornamented rear end, Magdalena looks a bit wrong—dressed up and gypsied, like a baby with pierced ears. Her backside says “45 cents.” Magdalena has the carriage of a duchess. I’ve always thought that.

Eleanor places various articles of clothing—some skirts, a frayed jacket, the wounded teddy—in the branches of the birch trees next to us. Now we are truly a slum.

“That is just lovely, Eleanor,” says Gerard, pointing to the birch trees. Magdalena has run over and started woofing up at Eleanor’s clothes.

“Oh, go off and be a yuppie puppy,” says Eleanor to the dog. Sometimes, like a spooky ventriloquism act, Eleanor assumes, and
overassumes, my anger. Gerard is a tired lounge pianist who is leaving in two days to start law school in California. He is taking Magdalena. He is not taking me. He says he needs to make
Law Review
so he can get some wonderful job somewhere. Eleanor likes to define yuppies as people who buy the expensive mustard and the cheap ketchup, while the rest of the world gets it the other way around. “Gerard, you’re too old to become a yuppie,” she says, though she is wrong. Gerard is one year younger than Eleanor, and almost two years younger than I.

Eleanor strolls over with a paper bag and sits down. “A watershed moment!” she announces, and reaches into the bag and pulls out an opened box of Frost ‘N’ Tip for Brunettes Only and places it on the table next to my beautiful Chinese evergreen and my wine decanter, which my brother gave me; I’m willing to pawn more than I realized. “My entire past, right here, and I’m only asking a dime.” Eleanor grins. She has recently rinsed her hair red. She and her husband, Kip, are moving in ten days to Fort Queen Anne, New York, where Kip got a better job, and Eleanor wanted to start over. “Dead town,” she said, “but you can’t beat the money with a stick.”

I stare at the frost kit. The lettering is faded and there are coffee cup rings, like an Olympics insignia, on the front. “Eleanor,” I say slowly. People walk by, look at the clothes in the trees, smile, and keep walking. I’m about to tell her her sense of retail is not ours. “Eleanor,” I begin again, but then instead I dig a dime out of my change cup and give it to her. “How do you think I’ll look?” I smile, and hold the frost kit next to my face like a commercial. I’m the only one here who’s not moving out of town, though I am taking a vacation and going to Cape Cod for two weeks to think about my life.

“The terror of Truro,” she says. “You’ll dazzle.” She rips off a hangnail with her teeth. “Gerard’ll rue the day.”

It’s two against one out here.

Gerard sits back down next to me on the other side. Eleanor,
suspecting she’s been overheard, reaches over and pats Gerard on the thigh, tells us again about the ketchup and mustard.

Gerard isn’t smiling. He stares off at the trees. Magdalena has settled at his feet. “Looks like someone was murdered in that thing, Eleanor,” he says, pointing at the lace teddy.

I reach next to me, under the table, and clasp Gerard’s hand, in warning, in rescue. It’s two against one out here; we just keep taking turns.

“No, we’re not getting married,” I told my mother on the phone when she asked. “He’s going to California and I’m staying here.” Usually she doesn’t phone. Usually she just does things like send me notes with histrionic scrawlings that read, “Well, you know,
I
can’t use these,” and along with the notes she encloses coupons for Kotex or Midol.

“Well,” said my mother. “The advice I hear from my women friends nowadays is don’t get married until you’re thirty. Just take your time. Have fun gallivanting around while you’re young. Get everything out of your system.”

Gallivanting
is a favorite word of my mother’s. “Mom,” I said slowly, loudly. “I’m thirty-three. What on earth do you think I’m getting out of my system?”

This seemed to stump her. “You know, Benna,” she said finally. “Not every woman thinks like you and I do. Some just want to settle down.” This yoking of mother and daughter was something she’d taken to doing of late—arbitrarily, without paying attention. “No, you and I are kind of exceptional that way.”

“Mother, he said he thought it would be hell to live with me while he was in law school. He said it already was a kind of hell. That’s what he said.”

“I was like you,” said my mother. “I was determined to be single and have fun and date lots of men. I didn’t care what anyone thought.”

·  ·  ·

Everyone keeps asking about Magdalena. “Dog’s for sale?” they say, or “How much ya asking for the dog?” as if it’s their own special joke. Then they laugh and stay around and poke through our belongings.

The first thing to go is my ten-speed bike. It is almost new, but it’s uncomfortable and I never ride it. “How much?” asks a man in a red windbreaker who has read about our sale in the classifieds.

I look at Gerard for assistance. “Forty-five?” I say. The man nods and gets on the bike, rides it around on the sidewalk. Gerard scowls at his sneakers, walks off, circles back. “Next time,” he whispers, “ask for sixty-five.” But there isn’t a next time. The man comes back with the bike. “I’ll take it,” he says, and hands me two twenties and a five. Gerard shrugs. I look at the money. I feel sick. I don’t want it. “I don’t think I’m good at these things,” I say to Gerard. The man in red loads the bike into his Dodge Scamp, gets in and starts the ignition. “It was a good bike, but you didn’t feel comfortable with it. The guy got a great deal,” says Gerard. The Scamp has already lumbered off out of sight. Now I own no bike. “Don’t worry,” says Eleanor, putting her arm around my shoulder and leading me off toward the birch trees. “It’s like life,” and she jerks a thumb back toward Gerard. “You trade in the young spiffy one and then get yourself an old clunker and you’re much happier. The old clunker’s comfortable and never gets stolen. Look at Kip. You have the old clunkers for life.”

“Forty-five dollars,” I say and hold the money up in front of my face like a Spanish fan.

“You’ll get the hang of it,” says Eleanor. There is now something of a small crowd gathering by Eleanor’s box of halter tops, by Gerard’s records, by my plants. Not the plants, I say to myself. I’m not sure I should be selling the plants. They are living things, even more so than Eleanor’s halter tops.

Eleanor is being a saleswoman by the birches. She indicates the black skirt. “This is a Liz Claiborne,” she says to a woman who may or may not be interested. “Do you know who she is?”

“No,” says the woman, annoyed, and she moves off toward the jazz records.

“We’ll take the plants,” says a teenaged girl with her boyfriend. “How much?”

There’s a small ficus tree and the Chinese evergreen. “Eight dollars,” I say, picking a number out of the air. The sick feeling overtakes me again. The Chinese evergreen is looking at me in disbelief, betrayed. The couple scrounge up eight dollars, give it to me, and then take the plants in their arms, like kindly rescuers of children.

“Thanks,” they say.

The branches of the ficus tree bob farewell, but the Chinese evergreen screeches, “You’re not fit to be a plant mother!” or something like that all the way out to the couple’s car. I put the eight dollars in my cup. I’m wondering how far you could go with this yard sale stuff. “Sure,” you might say to perfect strangers. “Take the dog, take the boyfriend, there’s a special on mothers and fingers, two-for-one.” If all you wanted to do was to fill up the cash cup, you might get carried away. A nail paring or a baby, they might all have little masking-tape price tags. It could take over you, like alcoholism or a religion. “I’m upset,” I say to Gerard, who has just sold some records and is gleefully putting cash in his cup.

“What’s the matter?” Again I’ve unsweetened his happiness, gotten in the way, I seem to do that.

“I sold my plants. I feel sick.”

He puts one arm around my waist. “It’s money. You could use some.”

“Gerard,” I say. “Let’s run off to New Hampshire and wear nothing but sleeping bags. We’ll be in-tents.”

“Ben-na,” he warns. He takes his arm away.

“We had a good life here, right? So we ate a lot of beans and rice.”

“Take your eight dollars, Benna. Buy yourself a steak.”

“I know,” I say. “We could open a lemonade stand!” The evergreen still shrieks in the distance like a bird. In the birch trees the stain on Eleanor’s teddy is some kind of organic spin art, a flower or target; a menstrual eye bearing down on me.

I know what will happen: He will promise to write every other day but when it turns out to be once a week he will promise to write once a week, and when it becomes once a month and even that’s a postcard, he’ll get on the phone and say, “Benna, I promise you, once a month I’ll write.” He will start saying false, lawyerly things like “You know, I’m extremely busy” and “I’m doing my best.” He will be the first to bring up the expense of long distance calls. Words like
res ipsa loquitur
and
ill behooves
will suddenly appear on his tongue like carbuncles. He will talk about what “some other people said,” and what he and “some other people did,” and when he never specifically mentions women it will be like the Soviet news agency which never publicizes anything containing the names of the towns where the new bombs are.

“Sure, I’ll take a check,” Eleanor is saying. “Are you kidding?” Miraculously, someone is buying
Thoroughly Modern Millie
. A man with a swollen belly and a checkbook but no shirt. The hair on his chest is like Gerard’s: a land very different from his face, something exotic and borrowed, as if for Halloween. He picks up the wine decanter. It’s ugly, a hopeful gift, expensive and wrong, from my lonely and overweight brother. “You can have it for a dollar,” I say. Once I found a fairly new book of poems in a used bookstore, and on the inside cover someone had written, “For
Sandra, the only woman I’ve ever loved.” I blushed. I blushed for the bitch Sandra. Betrayals, even your own, can take you by surprise. You find yourself capable of things.

The man writes checks to both Eleanor and me. “Is the dog for sale?” he chuckles, but none of us responds. “My wife’s crazy about Julie Andrews,” he says, holding up the record. “When she was little she wanted to grow up to be a nanny, just so she could sing some of her songs. Doe a deer and all that.”

“Ha! me too,” I say, a ridiculous nanny, a Julie Andrews with a toad in her throat. The man toasts me with the wine decanter, then takes off down the sidewalk.

“The taste of a can opener,” mutters Eleanor.

And on the phone in California, in one final, cornered burst of erotic sentiment, he will whisper, “Good night, Benna. Hold your breasts for me,” but the connection won’t be very good and it will sound like “Hold your breath for me,” and I’ll say “You’re out of your mind, baby doll,” and hang up with a crash.

There is a lull in our yard sale. I go inside and bring out beers, pouring one into a dish for Magdalena. “Well,” says Gerard, leaning back in his lawn chair, exploding open a can and eyeing the birches. “No one’s gone for the lavender teddy yet, Eleanor. Maybe they think it’s stained.”

“Well, you know, it’s not really a whole stain,” Eleanor explains. “It’s just the outline of a stain—it’s faded in the middle already. Bruises fade like that, too. After a few more washings the whole thing’ll be gone.”

Gerard blinks in mock seriousness. I gulp at my beer like a panicked woman. Gerard and Eleanor count their money, rolling it and unrolling it, making cylindrical silver towers. It’s two against one. People stroll by, some stop and browse, others keep on going. Others say they’ll come back. “People are always saying
they’ll come back, and then they never do,” I say. Both Eleanor and Gerard look quickly up at me from their money cups, as if I have somehow accused them, one against two. “Just noticing,” I say, and they return to their money.

A very beautiful black-haired woman in a denim jumper walks by, and, noticing our sale, stops in to poke and rearrange the merchandise. She is tan and strikingly gray-eyed and all those things that are so obviously lovely you really have to give her demerits for lack of subtlety. “Oh, is the dog for sale?” She laughs rather noisily at Magdalena, and Gerard laughs noisily back (to be polite, he’ll explain later), though Eleanor and I don’t laugh; he is closer to her age than we are.

BOOK: Anagrams
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ads

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