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Authors: Joy Williams

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BOOK: The Visiting Privilege
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Mother continues to go on about Tom and Jimmy and Christina and their theories about the boy, whom they've never met but think they know from her going on and on about him, I guess. She's got quite a little socializing network going on for her down at the park. She had a chance to work over at Sweetwater, the marsh they've built out by the sewer treatment plant. She would have made more money but said she'd be lonely with new people. She didn't want to leave her friends. She don't like change.

“Neurotypical,” I say. “Kindly tell me what the hell TomTom's talking about.” I call him that because two normal-size men could fit in his bulk.

“Neuro-
a
-typical,” she says.

“Oh, goodness, pardon me,” I say. “And why exactly are you discussing our family with those dipshits? Our family is no concern of theirs. TomTom's living with one of those women that looks like a man, isn't he? Let him worry about the atypicality of that.”

“She's sweet,” Mother says. “And anyway, Tom wasn't saying anything bad about him. He was just trying to make me feel better. I told my friends about them not letting him back in those classes he was taking.”

“I don't want you talking to them about the boy,” I say. “And I want to remind you, you're the one who wanted one, not me. Just one, you said. One and done.”

—

“You're the low-hanging fruit,” he says to me and Mother. She just purses her lips and pushes her fork around a serving of store-bought pie.

“And I suppose you're not,” I say. “You're the high-hanging fruit.”

You've just got to find him hilarious sometimes.

“They've used up what's easy, like you. They've just used you up. But now they're going to have to deal with the likes of me. And there's no formula.”

“The likes of you,” I say.

He stands up so fast he knocks his glass of milk off the table. But then he catches it. It was flying laterally for an instant and damn if he didn't catch it. But then he storms out of the house and Mother tears up. Then the phone rings and it's one of those robo-calls you can't shut off until they've said their piece.

—

It was around eleven in the morning. A beautiful desert day. You forget how pretty the sky can still be. Mother was over at the park fixing a sprinkler system for the fortieth time. I think they break them deliberate so they'll have something to do. I'm in my shop thinking like I frequently do that the third cup of coffee tastes funny and then all hell breaks loose. People banging on the door and screaming and shouting and I even hear a helicopter overhead. And I say, “Stay, Amy, stay, stay,” and walk out of the garage and there's law officers out there screaming, “sumabitch, sumabitch” and “the congresswoman” and “sumabitch” again, even the women, all of them in uniform and with guns, and I think whatever I was thinking a minute ago is the last peaceful thought I will ever have. Though sometimes now I try to pretend he's still in the house, in his room with the door closed. I pretend he's still living with us and eating with us and getting by with us. But of course he's not and he isn't.

No, we were never afraid of him. Afraid of Jared?

The Girls

T
he girls were searching Arleen's room and had just come upon her journal. The girls were thirty-one and thirty-two. Arleen was of a dowdy unspecific age, their parents' houseguest. She had arrived with the family's city pastor, an Episcopal priest, who had been in a depression for a number of months because his lover had died. The priest spent most of his time in the garden wearing only a bright red banana sling, his flabby body turning a magnificent somber brown. The girls were certain their parents regretted inviting him, for he was not at all amusing, the way he frequently could be, in the pulpit.

Arleen was presently occupied with washing her long hair in the shower down the hall. It had taken the girls many clandestine visits to her room to find anything of interest. The journal was in the zippered pocket of her open suitcase.

“I know I looked here before.”

“She must move it around.”

“Should we start at the beginning or with the last entry? That would be last night, I suppose.”

“That was the Owl Walk. She went on the Owl Walk with Mommy and came back and said, so seriously, ‘No owls.' ”

The girls found that hysterical.

The sound of water on the curtain ceased and the girls hurried downstairs. They made tea and curled up on the sofa with their cats. There were two cats living and two cats dead. The dead cats were Roland and Georgia O'Keeffe, their cremains in elaborate colorful urns on the mantelpiece. The ceramic feet on Roland's urn were rabbits, the ones on Georgia O'Keeffe's, mice. The urns had been conceived and created by the girls.

“Good morning, Arleen,” they said together when she appeared, her hair wadded wetly on her back. She peered at them and smiled shyly. The back of her blouse was soaked because of the sack of hair. She wore khaki shorts. They were the weird kind to which leggings could be buttoned to create a pair of trousers.

“I was hoping,” Arleen said, “that the kitty litter box could be taken out of the bathroom?”

The girls and the cats stared at her.

“It smells,” Arleen said.

“It
smells
?” the girls said.

There was silence. “I took a lovely long walk early this morning,” Arleen said. “I bicycled out to the moors and then I walked. It began to rain, quite hard, and then it suddenly stopped and was beautiful.”

The girls mimed extreme wonder at this remarkable experience.

“It reminded me of something I read once about the English moors and the month of April,” Arleen said.
“April,
who laughs her girlish laughter and a moment after weeps her girlish
tears is apt to be a mature hysteric on the moors.”
She looked at them, smiling quickly, then dipped her head. She had a big ragged part in her hair that made the girls almost dizzy.

“April is far behind us, Arleen,” one of the girls said. “It's June now. You've been here almost two weeks.”

Arleen nodded. “It's been very good for Father Snow.”

“What is
your
home like,” the other asked. They'd found one couldn't be too obvious with Arleen.

“It has stairs,” Arleen mused. “Very steep stairs. Sometimes I don't go out, because coming back there would be the stairs, and often when I am out, I don't return because of the stairs. Otherwise it's quite adequate.”

“Are you fearful of crime?” the girls said. They widened their eyes.

“No,” Arleen said. She had very much the manner of someone waiting to be dismissed. The girls loved it. They spooned honey into their tea.

“Did you have a nice birthday, Arleen?” one asked.

It had been announced several evenings before by Father Snow that it was Arleen's birthday. The girls had remarked that birthdays were more or less an idiotic American institution regarded with some wonder by the rest of the world. Arleen had blushed. The girls had said that they did not sanction birthdays but that they adored Christmas. Last year they had given Mommy and Daddy adagio dance lessons and a needlepoint book, the pages depicting scenes from their life together—Mommy and Daddy and the girls.

No one had given Arleen anything on her birthday but she and Father Snow had taken the opportunity to present their house present—a silver-plated cocktail shaker engraved with Mommy's and Daddy's initials.

“We were looking for something suitable but not insufferably dull,” Father Snow said.

“No, no, you shouldn't have,” Mommy said.

“We have ten of those!” one of the girls said, and they rushed to haul them out of the pantry, even the dented and tarnished ones. The cocktail shaker had proved to be a most popular house present over the years.

“I had a lovely birthday,” Arleen said. She looked at her wrist and scratched it. “Is Father Snow outside?”

The girls pointed toward the garden. They had long pale shapely arms.

Arleen nodded vaguely and turned to leave, stumbling a bit on the sill.

Between themselves, the girls referred to Father Snow as Father Ice, an irony that gave them satisfaction, for his fat sorrow elicited considerable indignation in them. Where was his faith? He didn't have the faith to fill a banana sling. Where was his calm demeanor? It had fled from him. He was the furthest thing from ice they could imagine, the furthest from their admiration of ice, the lacy sheaths, the glare, the brilliance and hardness of ice. There had never been enough of it in their lives. A little, but not much.

Cuddling and kissing the living cats, the girls walked to the kitchen window and looked out into the garden. Arleen was on the ground at Father Ice's feet, her head flung back, drying her hair. Father Ice was talking with his eyes shut, tears streaming down his cheeks.

What a pair! the girls thought. They kissed the cats' stomachs. Father Ice's mouth was flapping away. His lover, a gaunt young man named Donny, had cooked for Father Ice and pressed his vestments. Father Ice had broken down at dinner the previous night over a plate of barbecued butterflied lamb, recalling, it could only be assumed, the manner in which Donny had once prepared this dish. He had just recovered from having broken down an hour earlier at cocktails.

The girls, through the glass, watched Arleen closely.

“She's in love with him, can you believe it? That is not just friendship.”

“That kind of love is so safe.”

The girls had never been in love. They did not plan on marrying. They would go to the dance clubs and perch on stools, in their little red dresses, their little black ones and white ones, darling and provocative tight little dresses, and they would toss their hair and laugh as they gazed into each other's eyes. There were always men around. Men were drawn to them but one would not be courted without the other, even for amusement—they would not be separated. They were like Siamese twins. They were not Siamese twins, of course, they weren't twins at all, nor were they even born on the same day a year apart, which was why they didn't care for birthdays. Men did not mind the fact that they would not be separated. It excited them agreeably, in fact. They didn't believe they didn't stand a chance in the long run.

The girls dropped the cats and moved away from the window, retiring to the large glassed-in porch on the south side of the house to work on their constructions. These were attractive assemblages, neither morbid nor violent nor sexually repressed as was so common with these objects, but tasteful, cold and peculiar. One of the several young men who were fascinated by the girls made the beautiful partitioned boxes in which selections were placed. One of them contained a snip of lace from Mommy's wedding dress. They hadn't asked her for it, but she hadn't recognized it when she saw it either. There were many things of that nature in the boxes.

They heard Mommy's voice. She was saying, “Now how would you describe the sound it made? An asthmatic squeal is what the bird book said though I wouldn't describe it like that. It certainly didn't sound like an asthmatic squeal to me.”

Arleen muttered something in reply. She had apparently come back into the house. It was a three-story nineteenth-century house with fish-scale shingles and wide golden floorboards. It was a wonderful house. Mommy and Daddy almost always had houseguests in the summer. The girls didn't like it, it was as though Mommy and Daddy didn't want to be alone with them in these loveliest of months. The houseguests didn't stay long, usually no more than a week, but no sooner did they depart than others would arrive. The girls found few of them remarkable. There had been one young woman who held their interest for a weekend by drawing in pencil dozens of semi-Gothic, semi-Saracenic buildings, clearly intended to be visions of the starved or the drugged. They watched her closely, thinking her tremendously chic and fraudulent, and were disappointed when she left abruptly, taking, for it was never seen again, one of Mommy's Hermès beach towels, the one with the Lorraine cross.

Most of the guests never returned, but Father Snow had been invited several times. Priests were freeloaders, in the girls' opinion, and although Father Snow could give a good performance in the right surroundings—they had observed this at high holidays—he was no exception. They had not encountered Arleen before. At first, certainly, she had not appeared to be a problem. She was shy, deferential and plain. She wore red sneakers, the left one slit, she admitted, to accommodate a bunion. She did have lovely auburn hair. The one story she told concerned her hair. She had lovely hair as a child as well and had worn it in a long braid. She had cut it off one morning and given it to a man she had a crush on, a married man, a post office employee or some such thing. It had not been returned and the man had moved away. The girls loved that story. It was so droll it was practically retarded.

The girls heard Mommy's voice again and cocked their heads. She was planning the marketing. If Arleen would like to go into town they could get flowers and liquor and food as well and Arleen could give her opinion about a sweater Mommy was considering buying. Daddy said that when you look death in the eye you want to do it as calmly as a stroller looks into a shop window. But Mommy never looked into shop windows like that. She looked into them with excitement and distress. Sometimes what Daddy said didn't take Mommy into account.

“Girls!” Mommy called.

The girls put aside their constructions and glided into the kitchen, where Mommy was putting away the tea things.

“Arleen said she saw the cats playing with a mockingbird earlier. She said they had snapped its legs clean off.”

“Clean off?”
the girls repeated, marveling at the infelicitous phrasing.

Mommy nodded. She was wearing a lovely floral dressing gown and silk slippers just like the girls.

“Those weren't our cats,” one of the girls said, “our cats are sweet cats, old stay-at-home cats, they play with store-bought toys only,” knowing full well that even this early in the summer the cats had slaughtered no fewer than a dozen songbirds by visible count, that they were efficient and ruthless and that the way in which they so naturally expressed their essential nature was something the girls admired very much.

“Are you aware,” Arleen said, “that domestic cats kill four point four million birds every year in this country alone?”

“Awful,” Mommy said faintly.

“Mommy, Mommy, Mommy, don't you listen to such dreadful things. Such dreadful things don't happen in our garden,” the other girl said, hugging her, pretending to hang off her, clutching at her soft waist with her narrow hands, prattling on until Mommy made a smile.

“On a lighter note,” the girls then announced, glaring at Arleen, “we are going to the beach.”

There they spent the remainder of the day, nude and much admired, glistening with frequently applied oil. They talked about Mommy and Daddy. This they did not usually do, preferring to keep them inside themselves in a definite and distinct way, not touching them with words not even inside words, but just holding them inside—trapped, as it were—and aware of them quite clearly without thinking about them, fooling around with them in this fashion.

But Mommy and Daddy were changing. In the girls' eyes, they seemed to be actually crumbling. This was of concern. Daddy was smoking and drinking more and surrendering himself to bleak pronouncements. He was sometimes gruff with them as though they were not everything to him! And Mommy's enchantment with life seemed to be waning. They were behaving uncertainly, and it was harder for them to be discriminating. Daddy had wanted to burn like a hot fire, and he had not. Clearly, he had not. Something was hastening toward him, and Mommy too, at once hastening but slowly, cloaked in the minutes and months.

The girls returned home subdued, coming through the garden and passing beneath the rose arbor where the bird's nest was concealed prettily among the climbing canes. The girls grimaced at it, knowing it contained two rotting eggs, having investigated it some days before. They had not informed Mommy of the nest's pulpy contents and they never would, of course.

In the kitchen there was a message for them, written in Mommy's rounded hand on heavy stationery.

Father Snow and Arleen have gone downtown for ice-cream cones. Daddy and I are taking our naps.

The girls skipped upstairs and into Father Snow's room. There was nothing there but two black round stones on the table by the single bed.

“He doesn't think that's him and Donny, does he?”

“How ghastly.”

In Arleen's room, they immediately went to the suitcase but couldn't find the journal. The journal was missing again, it was nowhere. Then they found it. But they had been absorbed to such a degree in their search that they scarcely noticed Arleen standing in the doorway. She was a smudgy thing, round-shouldered, carrying a whale-shaped purse, a wretched souvenir of this perfect island.

Then she was gone.

“Well, that was considerate of her.”

BOOK: The Visiting Privilege
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