My Life as a Man (25 page)

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Authors: Philip Roth

BOOK: My Life as a Man
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Well, I didn

t move them.


I was going through a stage

as they say.


What stage?


Pathetic. Morbid. Blue. That stage

When did you find them?


One morning. Only about a year ago.


I see

Well
—“
All at once she seemed crushed by my discovery; I thought that she might scream.

Well,

she said, inhaling deeply,

what next? What else have you found out about me?

I shook my head.


You should know
—“
she stopped.

I said nothing. But what should I know?
What should
I
know?


A
Princeton hippie,

said Susan, slyly smiling,

is taking me to a movie tonight. You should know that.


Very nice,

I said.

A new life.


He picked me up at the library. Want to know what I

m reading these days?


Sure. What?


Everything about matricide I can get my hands on,

she told me, through her teeth.


Well, reading about matricide in a college library never killed anybody.


Oh, I just went
there
because I was bored.


In that dress?


Yes, in this dress. Why not? It

s just a little dress to wear around the stacks, you know.


I can see that.


I

m thinking of marrying him, by the way.


Who?


My hippie. He

d probably

dig

a two-headed baby. And a decrepit

old lady.
’”


That thigh staring me and your mother in the face doesn

t look too decrepit.


Oh,

said Susan,

it won

t kill you to look at it.


Oh, it

s not killing me,

I said, and suppressed an urge to reach out and up and stroke what I saw.


Okay,

she said
abruptly—“
you can tell me what you came to tell me, Peter. I

m

ready.

To use a serviceable phrase of my mother

s, I

ve come to grips with reality. Shoot. You

re never going to see me again.


I don

t see what

s changed,

I answered.


You don

t—I know you don

t. You still think I

m Maureen. You still think I

m that terrible person.


Hardly, Susan.


But how can you go around never trusting anyone ever again just because of a screwball like that!
I
don

t lie, Peter. I don

t deceive. I

m
me. And don

t give me that look.


What look?


Oh, let

s go up to my bedroom. The hell with Mother. I want to make love to you, terribly.


What look?

She closed her eyes.

Stop,

she whispered.

Don

t be furious with me. I swear to you, I didn

t mean it that way. It was not blackmail, truly. I just could not bear any longer Being Brave.


Then why didn

t you call your doctor—instead of taking Maureen

s favorite home remedy!


Because I didn

t want him—I wanted
you.
But I didn

t pursue you, did I? For six weeks you were up there in Vermont, and I didn

t write, and I didn

t phone, and I didn

t get on an airplane—did I? Instead I went around day after day Being Brave, and not in Vermont either, but in the apartment where I used to eat and sleep with
you.
Finally I even came to grips with reality and accepted an invitation for dinner—and that was my biggest mistake. I tried to Start My Life Again, just like Dr. Golding told me to, and this very upright man that I went out with went ahead and gave me a lecture on how I oughtn

t to depend upon people who were

lacking in integrity.

He told me that he heard from a reliable source in publishing that you were lacking in integrity. Oh, he made me furious, Peter, and I told him I was going home, and so he got up and left with me, and when I got home I wanted to call you so, I wanted to speak to you so badly, and the only way I couldn

t do it was to take the pills. I know it makes no sense, it was so utterly stupid, and I would never ever do it again. You don

t know how sorry I am. And you may tell yourself that I did it out of anger with you, or to try to blackmail you, or to punish you, or because I actually took what that man said about you to heart—but it was none of that. It was just that I was so worn down from going around for six weeks Being Brave! Oh, let

s go somewhere, to a motel
room or
somewhere.
I want terribly to be fucked. That

s all I

ve been thinking about down here for days. I feel like—a
fiend.
Oh, please, I

m going to scream, living with this mother of mine!

Here that mother of hers was out through the terrace doors, across the patio, and into the garden before Susan could even brush away the tear or I could respond to her appeal. And what response would I have made? Her explanation did seem to me at that moment truthful and sufficient. Of course she did not lie or deceive, of course she was not Maureen. If I didn

t want Susan, I realized then, it was not because I didn

t want her to sacrifice for me her dream of a marriage and a family; it was because I didn

t want Susan any more, under any conditions. Nor did I want anyone else. I wanted only to be placed in sexual quarantine, to be weaned from the other sex forever.

Yet everything she said was so convincing.

Mrs. Seabury asked if I could come inside with her a moment.


I take it,

she said, when we were standing together just inside the terrace doors,

that you told her you don

t plan to see her again.


That

s right.


Then perhaps the best thing now would be to go.


I think she

s expecting me to take her to lunch.


She has no such expectation that I know of. I can see to her lunch. And her welfare generally.

Outside Susan was now standing up beside the chaise. Both Mrs. Seabury and I were looking her way when she pulled the yellow jersey dress up over her head and let it fall to the lawn. It wasn

t pale underpants I

d seen earlier beneath the skimpy dress, but a white bikini. She adjusted the back rest of the chaise until it was level with the seat and the foot rest, and then stretched herself out on it, face down. An arm hung limply over ei
the
r side.

Mrs. Seabury said,

Staying any longer will only make it more difficult for her. It was very good of you,

she said in her cool and
unruffled way,

to visit her at the hospital every day. Dr. Golding agreed. That was the best thing to do in the situation, and we appreciate it. But now she must really make an effort to come to grips with reality. She must not be allowed to continue to act in ways that are not in her own interest. You must not let her work on your sympathies with her helplessness. She has been wooing people that way all her life. I tell you this for your own good—you must not imagine yourself in any way responsible for Susan

s predicament. She has always been all too willing to collapse in other people

s arms. We have tried to be kind and intelligent about this behavior always—she is what she is—but one must also be firm. And I don

t think it would be kind, intelligent, or firm for you to forestall the inevitable any longer. She must begin to forget you, and the sooner the better. I am going to ask you to go now, Mr. Tarnopol, before my daughter once again does something that she will regret. She cannot afford much more remorse or humiliation. She hasn

t the stamina for it.

Out in the garden, Susan had turned over and was lying now on her back, her legs as well as her arms dangling over the sides of the chaise—four limbs seemingly without strength.

I said to Mrs. Seabury,

I

ll go out and say goodbye. I

ll tell her I

m going.


I could as easily tell her you

ve gone. She knows how to be weak but she also knows something about how to be strong. It

s a matter of continually making it clear to her that people are not going to be manipulated by the childish ploys of a thirty-four-year-old woman.


I

ll just say goodbye.


All right. I won

t make an issue over a few more minutes,

she said, though it was altogether clear how little she liked being crossed by a hysterical Jewish poet.

She has been carrying on in that swimsuit for a week now. She greets the mailman in it every morning. Now she is exhibiting herself in it for you. Given that less than two weeks ago she tried
to take her life, I would hope
that you could summon up as much self-control as our mailman does and ignore the rather transparent display of teenage vampirism.


That is not what I am responding to. I lived with Susan for over three years.


I don

t wish to hear about that. I was never delighted by that arrangement. I deplored it, in fact.


I was only explaining to you why I

d prefer not to leave without at least telling her that I

m going.

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