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Authors: Rick Moody

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Sis, you became engaged too quickly. There had been that other guy, Mark, and you had been engaged to him, too, and that arrangement
fell apart kind of fast —I think you were engaged at Labor Day and broken up by M.L.K.’s birthday —and then, within weeks,
there was this Brice. There’s a point I want to make here. I’m trying to be gentle, but I have to get this across. Brice wore
a beret.
The guy wore a beret.
He was supposedly a great cook, he would bandy about names of exotic mushrooms, but I never saw him boil an egg when I was
visiting you. It was always you who did the cooking. It’s true that certain males of the
species, the kind who linger at the table after dinner waiting for their helpmeet to do the washing up, the kind who preside
over carving of viands and otherwise disdain food-related chores, the kind who claim to be effective only at the preparation
of breakfast, these guys are Pleistocene brutes who don’t belong in the Information Age with its emerging markets and global
economies. But, Sis, I think the other extreme is just as bad. The sensitive, New Age, beret-wearing guys who buy premium
mustards and free-range chickens and grow their own basil and then let you cook while they’re in the other room perusing magazines
devoted to the artistic posings of Asian teenagers. Our family comes from upstate New York and we don’t eat enough vegetables
and our marriages are full of hardships and sorrows, Sis, and when I saw Brice coming down the corridor of the Mansion on
the Hill, with his prematurely gray hair slicked back with the aid of some all-natural mousse, wearing a gray, suede bomber
jacket and cowboy boots into which were tucked the cuffs of his black designer jeans, carrying his personal digital assistant
and his cell phone and the other accoutrements of his dwindling massage-therapy business, he was the enemy of my state. In
his wake, I was happy to note, there was a sort of honeyed cologne. Patchouli, I’m guessing. It would definitely drive Glenda
Manzini nuts.

We had a small conference room at the Mansion, just around the corner from Glenda’s office. I had selected some of the furnishings
there myself, from a discount furniture outlet at the mall. Brice and his fiancée, Sarah Wilton, would of course be repairing
to this conference room with Glenda to do some pricing. I had the foresight, therefore, to jog into that space and turn on
the speaker phone over by
the coffee machine, and to place a planter of silk flowers in front of it and dial my own extension so that I could teleconference
this conversation. I had a remote headset I liked to wear around, Sis, during inventorying and bill tabulation —it helped
with the neck strain and tension headaches that I’m always suffering with —so I affixed this headset and went back to filing,
down the hall, while the remote edition of Brice and Sarah’s conference with Glenda was broadcast into my skull.

I figure my expression was ashen. I suppose that Dorcas Gilbey, when she flagged me down with some receipts that she had forgotten
to file, was unused to my mechanistic expression and to my curt, unfriendly replies to her questions. I waved her off, clamping
the headset tighter against my ear. Unfortunately, the signal broke up. It was muffled. I hurriedly returned to my desk and
tried to get the forwarded call to transmit properly to my handset. I even tried to amplify it through the speaker-phone feature,
to no avail. Brice had always affected a soft-spoken demeanor while he was busy extorting things from people like you, Sis.
He was too quiet —the better to conceal his tactics. And thus, in order to hear him, I had to sneak around the corner from
the conference room and eavesdrop in the old-fashioned way.

—We wanted to dialogue with you (Brice was explaining to Glenda), because we wanted to make sure that you were thinking creatively
along the same lines we are. We want to make sure you’re comfortable with our plans. As married people, as committed people,
we want this ceremony to make others feel good about themselves, as we’re feeling good about ourselves. We want to have an
ecstatic celebration here, a healing celebration that will bind up the hurt
any marriages in the room might be suffering. I know you know how the ecstasy of marriage occasions a grieving process for
many persons, Mrs. Manzini. Sarah and I both feel this in our hearts, that celebrations often have grief as a part of their
wonder, and we want to enact all these things, all these feelings, to bring them out where we can look at them, and then we
want to purge them triumphantly. We want people to come out of this wedding feeling good about themselves, as well be feeling
good about ourselves. We want to give our families a big collective hug, because we’re all human and we all have feelings
and we all have to grieve and yearn and we need rituals for this.

There was a long silence from Glenda Manzini.

Then she said:

—Can we cut to the chase?

One thing I always loved about the Mansion on the Hill was its emptiness, its vacancy. Sure, the Niagara Room, when filled
with five-thousand-dollar gowns and heirloom tuxedos, when serenaded by Toots Wilcox’s big band, was a great place, a sort
of gold standard of reception halls, but as much as I always loved both the celebrations and the network of relationships
and associations that went with our business at the Mansion, I always felt best in the
empty
halls of the Mansion on the Hill, cleansed of their accumulation of sentiment, utterly silent, patiently awaiting the possibility
of matrimony. It was onto this clean slate that I had routinely projected my foolish hopes. But after Brice strutted through
my place of employment, after his marriage began to overshadow every other, I found instead a different message inscribed
on these walls:
Every death implies a guilty party.

Or to put it another way, there was a network of sub-basements in the Mansion on the Hill through which each suite was connected
to another. These tunnels were well-traveled by certain alcoholic janitorial guys whom I knew well enough. I’d had my reasons
to adventure there before, but now I used every opportunity to pace these corridors. I still performed the parts of my job
that would assure that I got paid and that I invested regularly in my 401K plan, but I felt more comfortable in the emptiness
of the Mansions suites and basements, thinking about how I was going to extract my recompense, while Brice and Sarah dithered
over the cost of their justice of the peace and their photographer and their
Champlain Pentecostal Singers.

I had told Linda Pietrzsyk about Brice’s reappearance. I had told her about you, Sis. I had remarked about your fractures
and your loss of blood and your hypothermia and the results of your postmortem blood-alcohol test; I suppose that I’d begun
to tell her all kinds of things, in outbursts of candor that were followed by equal and opposite remoteness. Linda saw me,
over the course of those weeks, lurking, going from Ticonderoga to Rip Van Winkle to Chestnut, slipping in and out of infernal
sub-basements of conjecture that other people find grimy and uncomfortable, when I should have been overseeing the unloading
of floral arrangements at the loading dock or arranging for Glenda’s chiropractic appointments. Linda saw me lurking around,
asked what was wrong and told me that it would be better after the anniversary, after that day had come and gone,
and I felt the discourses of apology and subsequent gratitude forming epiglottally in me, but instead I told her to get lost,
to leave the dead to bury the dead.

After a long excruciating interval, the day of Sarah Dan-forth Wiltons marriage to Brice Paul McCann arrived. It was a day
of chill mists, Sis, and you had now been gone just over one year. I had passed through the anniversary trembling, in front
of the television, watching the Home Shopping Network, impulsively pricing cubic zirconium rings, as though one of these would
have been the ring you might have worn at your ceremony. You were a fine sister, but you changed your mind all the time, and
I had no idea if these things I’d attributed to you in the last year were features of the
you
I once knew, or whether, in death, you had become the property of your mourners, so that we made of you a puppet.

On the anniversary, I watched a videotape of your bridal shower, and Mom was there, and she looked really proud, and Dad drifted
into the center of the frame at one point, and mumbled a strange
harrumph
that had to do with interloping at an assembly of such beautiful women (I was allowed on the scene only to do the videotaping),
and you were very pleased as you opened your gifts. At one point you leaned over to Mom, and stage-whispered —so that even
I could hear —
that your car was a real lemon and that you had to take it to the shop and you didn’t have time and it was a total hassle
and did she think that I would lend you the Sable without giving you a hard time?
My Sable, my car. Sure. If I had to do it again, I would never have given you a hard time even once.

The vows at the Mansion on the Hill seemed to be the part of the ceremony where most of the tinkering took place. I think
if Glenda had been able to find a way to charge a premium on vow alteration, we could have found a really
excellent revenue stream at the Mansion on the Hill. If the sweet instant of commitment is so universal, why does it seem
to have so many different articulations? People used all sorts of things in their vows. Conchita Bosworth used the songs of
Dan Fogelberg when it came to the exchange of rings; a futon-store owner from Queensbury, Reggie West, managed to work in
material from a number of sitcoms. After a while, you’d heard it all, the rhetoric of desire, the incantation of commitment
rendered as awkwardly as possible; you heard the purple metaphors, the hackneyed lines, until it was all like legal language,
as in any business transaction.

It was the language of Brice McCann’s vows that brought this story to its conclusion. I arrived at the wedding late. I took
a cab across the Hudson, from the hill in Troy where I lived in my convenience apartment. What trees there were in the system
of pavement cloverleafs where Route Seven met the interstate were bare, disconsolate. The road was full of potholes. The lanes
choked with old, shuddering sedans. The parking valets at the Mansion, a group of pot-smoking teens who seemed to enjoy creating
a facsimile of politeness that involved both effrontery and subservience, opened the door of the cab for me and greeted me
according to their standard line,
Where’s the party?
The parking lot was full. We had seven weddings going on at once. Everyone was working. Glenda was working, Linda was working,
Dorcas was working. All my teammates were working, sprinting from suite to suite, micromanaging. The whole of the Capital
Region must have been at the Mansion that Saturday to witness the blossoming of families, Sis, or, in the case of Brice’s
wedding, to witness the way in which a vow of faithfulness
less than a year old, a promise of the future, can be traded in so quickly; how marriage is just a shrink-wrapped sale item,
mass-produced in bulk. You can pick one up anywhere these days, at a mall, on layaway. If it doesn’t fit, exchange it.

I walked the main hallway slowly, peeking in and out of the various suites. In the Chestnut Suite it was the Polan-skis, poor
but generous —their daughter Denise intended to have and to hold an Italian fellow, A. L. DiPietro, also completely penniless,
and the Polanskis were paying for the entire ceremony and rehearsal dinner and inviting the DiPietros to stay with them for
the week. They had brought their own floral displays, personally assembled by the arthritic Mrs. Polanski. The room had a
dignified simplicity. Next, in the Hudson Suite, in keeping with its naval flavor, cadet Bobby Moore and his high-school sweetheart
Mandy Sutherland were tying the knot, at the pleasure of Bobby’s dad, who had been a tugboat captain in New York Harbor; in
the Adirondack Suite, two of the venerable old families of the Lake George region —the Millers (owner of the Lake George Cabins)
and the Wentworths (they had the Quality Inn franchise) commingled their tourist-dependent fates; in the Valentine Room, Sis,
two women (named Sal and Mar-tine, but that’s all I should say about them, for reasons of privacy) were to be married by a
renegade Episcopal minister called Jack Valance —they had sewn their own gowns to match the cadmium red decor of that interior;
Ticonderoga had the wedding of Glen Dunbar and Louise Glazer, a marriage not memorable in any way at all; and in the Niagara
Hall two of Saratoga’s great eighteenth-century racing dynasties, the Vanderbilt and Pierrepont families, were about to
settle long-standing differences. Love was everywhere in the air.

I walked through all these ceremonies, Sis, before I could bring myself to go over to the Rip Van Winkle Room. My steps were
reluctant. My observations: the proportions of sniffling at each ceremony were about equal and the audiences were about equal
and levels of whimsy and seriousness were about the same wherever you went. The emotions careened, high and low, across the
whole spectrum of possible feelings. The music might be different from case to case —stately baroque anthems or klezmer rave-ups
—but the intent was the same. By 3:00
P.M.,
I no longer knew what marriage meant, really, except that the celebration of it seemed built into every life I knew but my
own.

The doors of the Rip Van Winkle Room were open, as distinct from the other suites, and I tiptoed through them and closed these
great carved doors behind myself. I slipped into the brides side. The light was dim, Sis. The light was deep in the ultraviolet
spectrum, as when we used to go, as kids, to the exhibitions at the Hall of Science and Industry. There seemed to be some
kind of mummery, some kind of expressive dance, taking place at the altar. The Champlain Pentecostal Singers were wailing
eerily. As I searched the room for familiar faces, I noticed them everywhere. Just a couple of rows away Alex McKinnon and
her boy Zack were squished into a row and were fidgeting desperately. Had they known Brice? Had they known you? Maybe they
counted themselves close friends of Sarah Wilton. Zack actually turned and waved and seemed to mouth something to me, but
I couldn’t make it out. On the groom’s side, I saw
Linda Pietrzsyk, though she ought to have been working in the office, fielding calls, and she was surrounded by Cheese, Chip,
Mick, Mark, Stig, Blair and a half-dozen other delinquents from her peer group. Like some collective organism of mirth and
irony, they convulsed over the proceedings, over the scarlet tights and boas and dance belts of the modern dancers capering
at the altar. A row beyond these Skid-more halfwits —though she never sat in at the ceremony —was Glenda Manzini herself,
and she seemed to be sobbing uncontrollably, a handkerchief like a veil across her face. Where was her husband? And her boy?
Then, to my amazement, Sis, when I looked back at the S.R.O. audience beyond the last aisle over on the groom’s side,
I
saw Mom and Dad.
What were they doing there? And how had they known? I had done everything to keep the wedding from them. I had hoarded these
bad feelings. Dads face was gray with remorse, as though he could have done something to stop the proceedings, and Mom held
tight to his side, wearing dark glasses of a perfect opacity. At once, I got up from the row where I’d parked myself and climbed
over the exasperated families seated next to me, jostling their knees. As I went, I became aware of Brice McCann’s soft, insinuating
voice ricocheting, in Dolby Surround Sound, from one wall of the Rip Van Winkle Room to the next. The room was appropriately
named, it seemed to me then. We were all sleepers who dreamed a reverie of marriage, not one of us had waked to see the bondage,
the violence, the excess of its cabalistic prayers and rituals. Marriage was oneiric. Not one of us was willing to pronounce
the truth of its dream language of slavery and submission and transmission of property, and Brice’s vow,
to have and to hold Sarah Wilton,
till death did them part, forsaking all others,
seemed to me like the pitch of a used-car dealer or insurance salesman, and these words rang out in the room, likewise Sarah’s
uncertain and breathy reply, and I rushed at the center aisle, pushing away cretinous guests and cherubic newborns toward
my parents, to embrace them as these words fell, these words with their intimations of mortality,
to tell my parents I should never have let you drive that night, Sis. How could I have let you drive? How could I have been
so stupid? My tires were bald —I couldn’t afford better. My car was a death trap; and I was its proper driver, bent on my
long, complicated program of failure, my program of futures abandoned, of half-baked ideas, of big plans that came to nought,
of cheap talk and lies, of drinking binges, petty theft; my car was made for my own death, Sis, the inevitable and welcome
end to the kind of shame and regret I had brought upon everyone close to me, you especially, who must have wept inwardly,
in your bosom, when you felt compelled to ask me to read a poem on your special day, before you totaled my car, on that curve,
running up over the berm, shrieking, flipping the vehicle, skidding thirty feet on the roof, hitting the granite outcropping
there, plunging out of the seat (why no seat belt?), snapping your neck, ejecting through the windshield, catching part of
yourself there, tumbling over the hood, breaking both legs, puncturing your lung, losing an eye, shattering your wrist, bleeding,
coming to rest at last in a pile of moldering leaves, where rain fell upon you, until, unconscious, you died.

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