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Authors: Rebecca Makkai

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The Hundred-Year House (32 page)

BOOK: The Hundred-Year House
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Armand said, “You’re so quiet.” And without knowing he would, he reached forward and grabbed Eddie’s jaw and popped it open like he was giving a dog a pill. He pulled a nickel from his pocket and stuck it on Eddie’s tongue. Eddie closed his mouth. Armand let go of him.

Eddie managed to say, “Why did you do that?” The coin still in his mouth. Armand heard it click against his teeth.

“I thought if I paid the nickelodeon it would make some noise. And see? It worked.”

THE WHITE RABBITS APPRAISE GAMBY

Mr. Devohr has requested dinner at five—a bad sign, surely. There will be no drinks before, no gathering in the library. When they enter the dining room at four-fifty, Gamby Devohr is already there, Samantha at his side. She’s managed to put on a dress.

Fannie whispers to Josephine: “He looks like a starfish. Stuffed in a suit and fitted out with a black wig.”

Josephine to Fannie: “He doesn’t resemble his mother one bit.”

Fannie: “Not a bit.”

They glance to where Violet hangs on the wall, darkly regarding her endless stream of uninvited houseguests.

“He’s terribly young.”

“He’s twenty-five.”

“Keep your voice down.”

“He can’t hear.”

“He flunked out of Yale, Samantha said.”

“But I thought he left to marry the girl. And seven months later, wouldn’t you know, a baby!”

“It’s amazing how quickly they grow them, these days.”

“Look, someone’s folded all the napkins like little sailboats. How swank!”

The artists file past to shake Gamby’s hand, to thank him for his generosity. Armand has traded in his knickers for ludicrous Oxford bags, a facetious nod to formality, and as he introduces
himself Gamby stares, confused, at what appears to be a floor-length skirt. When Samantha introduces Marceline, Gamby turns red. “Miss Horn,” he says. “It’s a great honor. I watched you in
Old Kentucky
, and you were just swell. Wasn’t that you in
The Statesman
? In the dress, you know, that dress? I’d love to—wow, I’d love to hear some of your stories!”

Fannie can’t look at Josephine, or they’ll both laugh. Gamby is nothing more than a little boy in a suit. The silly nickname fits.

Marceline accepts the kiss on her hand. “The honor is entirely mine.”

Fannie, whispering: “His father’s been trying to boot Samantha for years, Zilla said. Only the board wouldn’t.”

“Augustus? That’s the father?”

“And he had a stroke last year.”

“He’s got something to prove, then, hasn’t he? Gamby.”

“Show up at the old man’s bedside and give him back the house.”

“Look how smooth his hands are!”

“And plump!”

They sit to eat.

Josephine to Fannie: “Wouldn’t we love to sculpt him?”

Fannie to Josephine: “I’d do it in mashed potatoes. With a little butter hat.”

EDDIE AT DINNER

The food was elegant, a stretch for the cook: consommé julienne, roast Surrey fowl with bread sauce, hearts of celery, new potatoes in cream. Eddie struggled to eat.

Gamby asked them each, cordially, about their work. Armand said, “You’ve probably seen my magazine covers and forgotten them at once. I did a lot of fadeaway girls, when that was the style.”

“I suppose they model for you!” Gamby said. “The girls.”

“Certainly.”

“And why does it help to be here in the woods? Don’t artists thrive in the city?”

Zilla said, “We are like flowers, Mr. Devohr. We might exhibit ourselves in the city, but we grow best in the wilderness.” She touched his arm with two fingertips. She wore all white.

“Huh.”

Fannie said, “We don’t even have a proper studio right now, Josephine and I. We’re trying to make enough pieces here this month to last the rest of the year.”

“What, to sell?”

“That
is
how artists make a living.” Samantha must have realized how sharp she sounded because she took a long drink of water and looked around the table. She wanted someone to rescue her.

Marlon said, “I’ve written a tremendous amount, this stay. A
tremendous
amount.”

Gamby listened patiently, and soon enough he was focused in again on Marceline, asking about the talkies. “Von must speak from farther up in the throat,” she was saying. “Or it von’t record vell. You do as if you vere talking into the telephone.”

He said, “I heard they can do gunshots now. Isn’t it true, they invented a slow-motion pistol just so it’ll record?”

“Yes,” Marceline said. “It opens many possibilities.” Brave woman, chatting so amiably about the death knells of her own career.

Zilla, seated to Gamby’s left, was the one responsible for figuring out how serious he was in his mission, how doomed they all really were. If anyone could get a man to give too much away, it was Zilla—her palpable empathy, the way she leaned into everything you said. Even Eddie relaxed when he talked to her, and the chill vanished. Being near Zilla was being near a small, smooth lake.

Eddie forced a bit of bread. He’d lost weight here. If he stayed any longer, he might vanish entirely. He heard Zilla, her voice a bit higher, more emphatic than normal: “Oh, but we don’t even
interact
with the town! It’s like an invisible fairy castle! This is my third stay, and I haven’t set
foot
off the grounds but once, when I cracked my wrist and was rushed to the doctor. I don’t suppose they think anything of us at all!”

A minute later, Gamby laughed for all the table to hear: “It goes without saying that if I’d decided to be an
artist
or a
poet
, or what have you—my father would have sent me over Niagara in a barrel.”

“Yes.” Zilla said it through her teeth. “We’re awfully lucky to do what we do.”

Viktor was rotating all the food on his plate to the left. Choreographing his vegetables. What must it have meant, Eddie wondered, to be accustomed to young dancers he could throw around—literally throw in the air!—and then to fall in love with
a woman like Zilla? A woman so grounded, so unflappable (so
married
too), that he, Viktor, would inevitably be the one to bend and break. It would be unbearable, surely.

Gamby was saying: “So when you start a painting, do you arrange all your fruit and whatnot on a table, or do you just make it up?”

Eddie watched Armand and Marlon pretend to talk to each other. Marlon had removed his smoking jacket for once, and he might even have been sober. His moustache was waxed. Armand, beside him, his hair combed into golden waves. Armand’s teeth looked as if each had been collected from a different man’s mouth, a sort of harlequin set. Eddie remembered a toy Roman arch where, when the keystone was pulled, the entire thing collapsed. He imagined that if he pulled out Armand’s incisor, something similar would happen, the splendors of the ancient world giving way all at once.

Eddie excused himself from the table as the orange layer cake was served, and said he must lie down with his headache. It pained him to be so rude, but his one task tonight was to sneak Ludo his dinner. And then he’d pack his trunk. He wanted to leave as soon as possible in the morning.

In the kitchen, Eddie picked up the covered plate from the cook and wove past the sinks to the back exit. A small blonde girl, no more than four, sat at the counter on a stool, staring disconsolately at a plate of peas. Her milk glass was empty.

“Mr. Devohr’s daughter, Grace,” the cook whispered. “I don’t know what I’m expected to do with her.”

When he returned from the attic with the empty tray, she was there still, and she glanced up with hopeful eyes, until she saw he wasn’t her father. He wondered if anyone had considered her in the midst of all the planning. He didn’t imagine they’d found a maid to watch her, to put her to bed. He said, “I have an important job to do. There are hungry fish out back, and I’m going to
give them their supper. I don’t suppose you know how to rip bread very, very small.”

Grace gave him a deep, appraising look, like an old lady’s. “Oh yes I do!”

“Well, you’ll have to help me, then. I’m afraid I’m not very good at it. The fish are always complaining. Will you come along?” She hopped from her stool, and the cook, winking, handed Eddie two slices of the dinner bread. He put one in Grace’s hand and said, “This one’s too heavy for me.”

“Are your arms very skinny?”

“Yes, quite.”

They sat on the two big rocks by the largest koi pond, and Eddie showed her how to tear tiny pieces and throw them in. They watched the fish come to gobble the crumbs, their round mouths impossibly large.

“The spotted one is my best one,” Grace said. “What is his name?”

“Oh, that’s Elwood. A terribly distinguished gentlefish.”

“Does he love bread the best of any food?”


Almost
. Almost. Do you know what he told me the other day? He wishes, more than anything in the world, for a root beer float.”

Grace looked skeptical. “It would fall apart in the water.”

“That’s precisely the problem. He’ll never get his wish.”

“But I know how to do it! Take him out with a big scoop, and put him
into
the root beer float. He can eat it from inside it.”

“Ha! You are an exceptionally wise young lady. I might make a poem about you.”

She threw another crumb and thought a moment. “Face.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“That’s what rhymes with Grace.”


He convinced her, miracle of miracles, to lie in bed with a book. He read her the story of Rapunzel from the Brothers Grimm she’d
brought on the train, and he changed her into her white nightgown, and he tucked her into the spare bed in Samantha’s house, in the room behind the office that Gamby had surprised everyone by accepting. He drew the blinds against the evening sun—it was only ten to six—and told her that back in Toronto, it was nearly midnight.

“Can you remember what I just read you? You can look at the pictures all over again.”

“I can read words. I can even read the big words!”

“I shouldn’t have doubted it. Did you know, if you lie very still and read the same story ten times, you’ll have magic dreams?”

“Oh, I knew that.”

“So someone told you the secret. And Elwood will dream about root beer, and I will dream about you.”

Grace giggled and kicked her toes under the sheet. Eddie moved her water closer and kissed the top of her head. She smelled like sun and grass.

MARCELINE AT THE END OF THE WORLD

Zilla dropped her spoon on the table with a clatter, and said, a bit too loudly, “Oh, how
clumsy
of me!” Confirmation. That Devohr was here on a euthanasia mission. That he couldn’t be charmed. Marceline hadn’t caught his exact words, but then she didn’t need to—the man’s intentions were clear. And so: They all braced themselves, ran through their parts, such as they were, and tried to continue their several conversations as if nothing had happened.

Zilla took a breath to say something, but just then there came a loud knocking above them. A series of small, hard raps that seemed to travel the whole length of the house, ending over the window.

Josephine laughed—a nervous burst.

It happened again: hard and fast, on the roof—the dining room did stick out from the rest of the house—and trailed off as if it wanted them all to follow somewhere.

Devohr scanned their faces, blinking his little eyes again and again.

Marceline wondered if this was the misfiring of some effect they’d arranged for Devohr’s benefit—akin to all the fireworks shooting off at once, before the grand finale. She perceived nothing but confusion all around her, though, and concern. Fannie and Josephine grabbed each other’s hands.

Samantha said, finally, “It’s the acorns. They’re early this year.”

So it hadn’t been the plan. What had been the plan? Zilla was to have spoken. But she just sat there, ashen, the only one not laughing now, the only one who didn’t seem relieved, and whispered into her cupped hands: “Good lord.”

Marceline had simply been told to flirt, and this she had done expertly. The high art of pantomime—quite possibly her last performance of that art. She was unfortunately hazy on other details. But she could flirt till dawn.

Mr. Devohr stretched and stood. “We should end this soirée. I’ll be heading back to Chicago quite early in the morning.”

Samantha said, “We’re finished.” But it was a question, and they all knew she wasn’t referring to dinner.

He sniffed. “You’ve had a good run, Miss Mays. I always say, it’s important to recognize when the party’s over. There’s a fine art to it.”

Armand said, out loud: “What in the hell do you know about
art
?”

Marceline thought for a moment they might all erupt into violence or weeping. Instead the energy slowly left the room. A leak in the balloon.

Zilla should have taken over now, but she was still glazed, still spooked.

Marlon finally spoke. “Well, what happened to the booze? If we’re giving up here, can we at least make a good night of it?” The poor man. He was twitching, positively twitching. Marlon hadn’t been in on the plan—he’d spent the afternoon sobering up, not rehearsing—but he’d inadvertently cut to the chase, skipping over Zilla’s forgotten invitation to visit the studios, skipping the slow progression that would lead them all to a nightcap and then another and another. Which would all lead, somehow or other, to Gamby Devohr’s heart.

“He’s only joking, Mr. Devohr,” Fannie said. “We don’t drink a drop here!” Marceline supposed this was part of the script, a
displaced line. She felt herself back on a rooftop in Fort Lee, those embarrassing summer flickers of twenty years past, costumes pulled from theater trash, directors who’d never directed so much as bicycle traffic. Devohr was about to laugh. Marceline—finally she knew exactly what to do—Marceline stood up next to him and slid her hand down the outside of his thigh. She cocked her head and let her eyelashes fall slowly down. “Please do join us for a drink,” she said. “For a last bacchanal. How often, back in Canada, do you live like the artists do? The night is terribly young.” And she could see in his dopey eyes the affirmation of what she’d learned on her very first picture: Sex trumps a poor script and poor players any day.

BOOK: The Hundred-Year House
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