Read That Old Cape Magic Online
Authors: Richard Russo
In fact, be grateful
. Shed have been well within her rights to introduce him as her soon-to-be ex, which would have been worse. He didnt realize hed been half hoping shed introduce him as her husband (which he still
was
, after all) until she didnt.
At any rate, he and this friend had been chatting amiably for the last ten minutes. Ringo claimed theyd actually been introduced last spring (No reason for you to remember) when he came on board.
Came on board?
his mother snorted.
What is he, a pirate?
(Silent when he and Laura were in the maze and also during dinner, she was feeling gabby again and seemed to have even less use for Brian Fynch than her son did. Normally her opinion wouldnt have mattered, but she did know her academics.) Ringo loved the college, he went on, as if someone had been spreading vicious rumors to the contrary, and he hoped it would be the last stop on what he termed his long academic journey.
Long and pointless, perhaps, but hardly academic
. It was a wonderful opportunity, really, the kind that came along once in a lifetime. His team in admissions was first-rate, though its star, just between us, was Joy.
(Oh, you smarmy bastard
, both son and mother concluded in the same instant.) In fact, Ringo wished he had a half dozen more just like her. This fairly ambiguous remark he delivered with such convincing innocence that Griffin wondered if maybe he and Joy
were
just friends. Hed been attentive and solicitous to her all evening, but there was certainly nothing to suggest any intimacy between them, though of course she wouldnt have permitted such a display at her daughters wedding.
I wouldnt bring it up, believe me, but Dean Zabian heard I was going to be seeing you this weekend, and I promised Id ask if your situation for the coming academic year had clarified itself.
It was possible, Griffin supposed, that things had come about just as Fynch claimed. The dean of faculty might well have asked him to inquire. But the far more likely scenario was that Fynch was a sly meddler, an insinuator whod sought out the dean, not vice versa. Zabian could be forgiven for growing impatient for Griffin to make up his mind, but he more likely would have asked this favor of Joy rather than Ringo. And of course if he
really
wanted to know, the person to ask was Griffin himself.
Of course everyones hoping youll be returning in the fall, Fynch was saying, but if you cant
I understand, Griffin said. Tell Carroll I wont hang him up much longer.
Its not like your replacements a washout or anything, Fynch continued, oblivious that hed been given full permission to discontinue this particular conversation. The department could probably limp along for another semester or two, but as Dean Zabian put it, Shes no Jack Griffin in the classroom.
Griffin smiled, now certain that he (and his mother) were right about Ringos character. The implied omniscience, the overfamiliarity, the flattery
what a putz. He thought of the elderly woman hed spoken to in Truro this time last year whod been looking for the right occasion to use
fart-hammer
. Well, here it was.
With relief, he noticed that a young man wearing a blazer with the hotels insignia on the pocket was conferring with Joy, who turned to point him out. If youll excuse me, he said, making a show of taking out his checkbook. At this Ringo turned on his heel and fled, apparently convinced he could provide no further service.
Mr. Griffin? said the young man, who appeared to be holding an invoice. Maybe we should go someplace more private?
He nodded agreeably and let the checkbook slide back into his jacket pocket. What are we going to do?
Turning bright purple, the fellow looked even younger and, Griffin realized too late, clearly gay.
By the time hed settled up and returned to the private dining room, the mostly teenaged waitstaff was busy clearing away the last of the dessert dishes and tossing stained tablecloths into portable hampers with more energy and enthusiasm than theyd exhibited earlier in the evening. They probably had a party to go to, Griffin supposed. Hard to believe that Laura herself was past all that now, the anticipation of a young night and its many possibilities. The rehearsal guests had all gone out onto the porch, below which, on the lawn, a drunken game of volleyball was under way, with just enough light from the porch to play by. Andys family, many of whom had traveled a long way that day, had evidently decided to call it a night, so it was just Joys that remained.
Harve, looking tired and agitated, sat at the far end of the porch, near the top of the long, sloping wheelchair ramp. Hed nodded off during the later stages of the dinner, though he refused to admit it, even after snorting violently awake, which caused Jared and Jason to reenact the event for the edification of the children at the designated kids table, after which they were all snorting awake and falling out of their chairs. The old man was now struggling to get up out of his chair, apparently determined not to be wheeled down the ramp past the volleyballers. Griffin sympathized, though Dot apparently didnt. With an assist from Joys sister Jane, she pushed him back into his seat and told him, unless Griffin was mistaken, to behave. Whatever Harve said back caused her to spin on her heel and head indoors in the general direction of the ladies restroom, leaving Jane to reason with her father.
Joy was at the far end of the porch, talking to her other sister, June, and Junes husband, but Griffin could tell she was monitoring the situation. According to Laura, the whole familyHarve and Dot, her mother, Jane and June and their families, Jason and Jaredwas sharing the large cottage at the waters edge apart from the main hotel. Its dark outline was visible against the night sky, its windows glowing warmly yellow. No doubt it would remind Joy of the house theyd rented when she was a girl. Jane and June had probably remembered to bring board games, and after Harve and the smaller children were put to bed, the rest of them would stay up late playing Monopoly and Clue, swapping all the old nostalgic family stories. Griffin, whod heard these too many times, nevertheless felt a twinge of regret (admit it) at being suddenly outside the family circle. Would Ringo, ridiculous oaf that he was, be invited to the table tonight and given Griffins Professor Plum game piece, his silver thimble? Hed made a point of telling Griffin that he was staying in the hotel proper, but that might just be for appearances. He now joined Joy and her sister and brother-in-law, and when Griffin saw him rest his hand lightly on the small of her back, it occurred to him that having just discharged his primary responsibility of the evening, he could slip away unnoticed and probably not be missed.
Why didnt he want to? He was standing in the porch doorway trying to figure that out when his mother said,
You know who you remind me of, dont you?
Which Griffin took to be a rhetorical question.
I thought you told Laura I was just like you
, he fired back, and the shot must have landed, because she shut up. Off to the right he noticed a small alcove from which he could see, without being observed himself, both the porch and the game on the lawn below. A coffee urn had been set up on a sideboard, and that, he decided, was probably a good idea before he drove back up the peninsula. He poured himself a cup and closed the door, lest someone notice him and decide he needed company.
With the exception of pregnant Kelsey, the whole wedding party, as well as some of the teenaged guests, had been recruited to play volleyball. The little kids wanted to play, too, and were running around with their arms up, though the game was taking place well above them. Laura and Andy were on the back line, and when they stopped to kiss, the ball landed right at their feet, causing their teammates to groan. Jared and Jason had positioned themselves on opposite sides of the net and were shoving each other back whenever one of them violated the neutral zone. Coming right down your throat, J.J., Jason warned, and when the ball came over the net he spiked it hard, clearly aiming at his brother, but the shot careened away and narrowly missed Kelsey, who was watching, one hand under her belly, from what shed wrongly imagined was a safe distance.
Hey, hey, easy! Watch out for the little ones! June called from the porch, and was promptly ignored.
I hope you arent going to tell me you enjoy these people
, his mother said. Hed been hoping shed been shut out when he closed the door behind him, but no such luck.
You forget how well I know you
, she continued.
Pretend otherwise all you want, but youve always wanted to be done of these people, and now you are. This sentimental mood youre in doesnt become you
.
Im ignoring you, Mom
, he told her, focusing his attention on a small boy who was acting out below. Furious at being ignored, hed sat down right in the middle of the court, his lower lip sticking out, his face a thundercloud.
A little monster, that one
, his mother observed.
No, Mom, hes a child
, Griffin said, though she might be right.
Andy, apparently fearing the boy might get trampled, picked him up and set him on his shoulders and, when the ball came over the net, managed to position himself so the kid could hit it. The ball went directly into the net, but his face was aglow with importance, and he raised his arms in triumph, as hed clearly seen some athlete do on TV, and was given a round of applause.
You dont like children, you dont like volleyball and you dont suffer fools gladly
.
Maybe you dont know me as well as you think, Mom
.
Fine. Be that way
.
Lets talk about something else, shall we?
We can discuss whatever you like. The weather, if you prefer. Remember how it snowed that last two weeks?
Did he ever. Giant drifts of powder banked two-thirds of the way up the hospital window. Lauras flight out had been one of the last before the airport closed, and it hadnt reopened until Christmas Eve. Twice Griffin had to walk a good mile from the hospital to his motel, the roads impassable, his car plowed in.
In the days following Lauras surprise visit, his mother became increasingly agitated. The morphine calmed her breathing, but something was clearly troubling her that had to do with her granddaughter, Griffin suspected, though he had no idea what. Shes so
, she began several times, her thought always trailing off, as if she were trying to articulate something just beyond her grasp. The oxygen made her mouth dry, so Griffin gave her some ice chips to suck on, thinking that might help, but they didnt. Shes so
Shes so what, Mom?
She fell asleep, still struggling, and Griffin drifted off as well, awaking to the sound of her voice.
Shes so
kind
, isnt she?
Kind?
That
was the word shed been straining to locate? It was as if the concept were fabulously exotic, one shed read about but hadnt personally encountered until now. Either that or shed done a quick genetic scan, looking for and not finding a familial antecedent.
Yes, he said, feeling his throat constrict with pride. She is that.
She makes me almostshe was struggling again now, and Griffin guessed that another unfamiliar concept was groping blindly toward articulationashamed.
The next day, however, she was more herself. Shes not brilliant, though, is she? she said, staring off into space. Theyd been sitting quietly for the last hour, each in private thought. I doubt shell go back to school.
Actually, shes smart as hell, Griffin told her, instantly angry. More important, shes
happy
, Mom. Shes going to marry someone she loves and who loves her.
Happy, she repeated, catching his eyes and locking in. Only very stupid people are happy.
A few short hours, Griffin remembered thinking. Thats all it had taken for her to reflect upon kindness in general and her granddaughters in particular, then to discard it as a cardinal virtue.
They didnt discuss Laura after that, but he continued to feel the ghostly residue of her visit, and unless he was mistaken, his mother did, too. Her decline seemed more rapid now, though over the long days that followed she rallied several more times, much as the doctors had predicted. The peaks werent nearly so high, however, and the valleys were lower. The morphine necessary for her breathing, in ever larger doses, made things weird, then weirder. Each time a dose was administered, her breathing became less labored and she was calmer, but not, somehow, any more at peace.
Shes battling something, one of the nurses remarked. Thats not unusual at this stage. We may never know what its about.
When she let him, he read to her or they watched television listlessly until the morphine took her under. Hed brought The Summer of the Brownings with him from L.A., and he worked on it while she slept. Something about his mothers frail condition, together with the small, rhythmic sounds of the hospital room, made the story accessible in a way it hadnt been the summer before on the Cape. At one point, though, his mother had awakened unexpectedly and asked what he was working on so intently. Oh, them, she sniffed when he told her, clearly disappointed by his choice of subject matter. Thinking it might please her, he said shed been helpful. You told me last June that it was asthma the little Browning girl suffered from, and about Peter eventually dying in Vietnam. But she claimed to have no memory of the conversation. How would I know what happened to those people? she said when pressed. He couldnt figure out what to make of it. His mothers usual MO was to feign knowledge she didnt have, not to confess ignorance.
As Christmas bore down on them, his exhaustion, fueled by sleepless nights and cafeteria food, began to take its toll, and Griffin felt his tenuous grip on reality begin to fray, as if he, too, were being dosed with morphine. He found himself sleeping when she did, dreaming fitfully, the Browning story in his lap. More than once he awoke with his mothers eyes on him, an enigmatic smile playing on her lips. You arent the only one with a story to tell, you know, she said one afternoon.