Read The World According To Garp Online
Authors: John Irving
Tags: #Adult, #Classic, #Contemporary, #Humor
“When you’re through playing around,” she said, “I’d just be curious to know what
really
happened.”
“Well,
really
,” said Garp, “the dog was a beagle.”
“A beagle!”
“Well, actually, a schnauzer. He was tied up in the alley all day, but not to an army truck.”
“To a Volkswagen?” Helen guessed.
“To a garbage sled,” Garp said. “The sled was used to pull the garbage cans out to the sidewalk in the winter, but the schnauzer, of course, was too small and weak to pull it—at any time of the year.”
“And the café owner?” Helen asked. “He was
not
in the war?”
“She,” Garp said. “She was a widow.”
“Her husband had been killed in the war?” Helen guessed.
“She was a
young
widow,” Garp said. “Her husband had been killed” crossing the street. She was very attached to the dog, which her husband had given her for their first anniversary. But her new landlady would not allow dogs in her apartment, so the widow set the dog loose in the café each night.
“It was a spooky, empty space and the dog was nervous in there; in fact, he crapped all night long. People would stop and peer in the window and laugh at all the messes the dog made. This laughter made the dog more nervous, so he crapped more. In the morning the widow came early—to air out the place and clean up the messes—and she spanked the dog with a newspaper and dragged him cowering out into the alley, where he was tied up to the garbage sled all day.”
“And there was no cat?” Helen asked.
“Oh, there were lots of cats,” Garp said. “They came into the alley because of the garbage cans for the café. The dog would never touch the garbage, because he was afraid of the widow, and the dog was
terrified
of cats; whenever there was a cat in the alley, raiding the garbage cans, the dog crawled under the garbage sled and hid there until the cat was gone.”
“My God,” said Helen. “So there was no teasing, either?”
“There is always teasing,” Garp said, solemnly. “There was a little girl who would come to the end of the alley and call the dog out to the sidewalk, except that the dog’s chain wouldn’t reach the sidewalk and the dog would yap! and yap! and yap! at the little girl, who stood on the sidewalk and called, “Come on, come on,” until someone rolled down a window and yelled at her to leave the poor mutt alone.”
“You were there?” Helen said.
“
We
were there,” Garp said. “Every day my mother wrote in a room, the only window of which faced that alley. That dog’s yapping drove her nuts.”
“So
Jenny
moved the garbage sled,” Helen said, “and the dog
ate
the little girl, whose parents complained to the police, who had the dog put to sleep. And
you
, of course, were a great comfort to the grieving widow, who was perhaps in her early forties.”
“Her late thirties,” Garp said. “But that’s not how it happened.”
“
What
happened?” Helen asked.
“One night, in the café,” Garp said, “the dog had a stroke. A number of people claimed to have been responsible for scaring the dog so badly that they caused his stroke. There was a kind of competition in regard to this in the neighborhood. They were always doing things like creeping up to the café and hurling themselves against the windows and doors, shrieking like huge cats—creating a frenzy of bowel movements by the frightened dog.”
“The stroke
killed
the dog, I hope,” Helen said.
“Not quite,” Garp said. “The stroke paralyzed the dog’s hindquarters, so that he could only move his front end and wag his head. The widow, however, clung to the life of this wretched dog as she clung to the memory of her late husband, and she had a carpenter, with whom she was sleeping, build a little cart for the dog’s rear end. The cart had wheels on it, so the dog just walked on his front legs and towed his dead hindquarters around on the little cart.”
“My God,” Helen said.
“You wouldn’t believe the
noise
of those little wheels,” Garp said.
“Probably not,” said Helen.
“Mother claimed she couldn’t hear it,” Garp said, “but the rolling sound was so pathetic, it was worse than the dog’s yapping at the stupid little girl. And the dog couldn’t turn a corner very well, without skidding. He’d hop along and then turn, and his rear wheels would slide out beside him, faster than he could keep hopping, and he’d go into a roll. When he was on his side, he couldn’t get up again. It seemed I was the only one to see him in this predicament—at least,
I
was always the one who went into the alley and tipped him upright again. As soon as he was back on his wheels, he’d try to bite me,” Garp said, “but he was easy to outrun.”
“So one day,” Helen said, “you untied the schnauzer, and he ran into the street without looking. No, excuse me: he
rolled
into the street without looking. And everyone’s troubles were over. The widow and the carpenter were married.”
“Not so,” said Garp.
“I want the truth,” Helen said, sleepily. “What happened to the damn schnauzer?”
“I don’t know,” Garp said. “Mother and I came back to this country, and you know the rest.”
Helen, giving in to sleep, knew that only her silence might get Garp to reveal himself. She knew that this story might be as made up as the other versions, or that the other versions might be largely true—even that
this
one might be largely true. Any combination was possible with Garp.
Helen was already asleep when Garp asked her, “Which story do you like better?” But lovemaking made Helen sleepy, and she found the sound of Garp’s voice, going on and on, enhancing to her drowsiness; it was her most preferred way to fall asleep: after love, with Garp talking.
This frustrated Garp. At bedtime his engines were almost cold. Lovemaking seemed to rev him up and rouse him to moods of marathon talk, eating, all-night reading, general prowling about. In this period he rarely tried to write, though he would sometimes write messages to himself about what he would write later.
But not this night. He instead pulled back the covers and watched Helen sleep; then he covered her again. He went to Walt’s room and watched him. Duncan was sleeping at Mrs. Ralph’s; when Garp shut his eyes he saw a glow on the suburban horizon, which he imagined was the dreaded house of Ralph—in flames.
Garp watched Walt, and this calmed him. Garp relished having such close scrutiny of the child, he lay beside Walt and smelled the boy’s fresh breath, remembering when Duncan’s breath had turned sour in his sleep in that grownup’s way. It had been an unpleasant sensation for Garp, shortly after Duncan turned six, to smell that Duncan’s breath was stale and faintly foul in his sleep. It was as if the process of decay, of slowly dying, was already begun in him. This was Garp’s first awareness of the mortality of his son. There appeared with this odor the first discolorations and stains on Duncan’s perfect teeth. Perhaps it was just that Duncan was Garp’s firstborn child, but Garp worried more about Duncan than he worried about Walt—even though a five-year-old seems more prone (than a ten-year-old) to the usual childhood accidents. And what are
they
? Garp wondered. Being hit by cars? Choking to death on peanuts? Being stolen by strangers? Cancer, for example, was a stranger.
There was so much to worry about, when worrying about children, and Garp worried so much about everything; at times, especially in these throes of insomnia, Garp thought himself to be psychologically unfit for parenthood. Then he worried about
that
, too, and felt all the more anxious for his children. What if their most dangerous enemy turned out to be
him
?
He soon fell asleep beside Walt, but Garp was a fearful dreamer; he was not asleep for long. Soon he was moaning; his armpit hurt. He woke up suddenly, Walt’s little fist was snagged in his armpit hair. Walt was moaning, too. Garp untangled himself from the whimpering child, who seemed to Garp to be suffering the same dream Garp had suffered—as if Garp’s trembling body had communicated Garp’s dream to Walt. But Walt was having his own nightmare.
It would not have occurred to Garp that his instructional story of the war dog, the teasing cat, and the inevitable killer truck could have been terrifying to Walt. But in his dream Walt saw the great abandoned army truck, more the size and shape of a tank, guns and inexplicable tools and evil-looking attachments all over it—the windshield was a slit no bigger than a letter slot. It was all black, of course.
The dog who was tied to the truck was the size of a pony, though leaner and much more cruel. He was loping, in slow motion, toward the end of the alley, his weak-looking chain spiraling behind him. The chain hardly looked strong enough to hold back the dog. At the end of the alley, with his legs all buttery and stumbling over himself, hopelessly clumsy and unable to flee, little Walt bumbled in circles but he couldn’t seem to get himself
going
—to get himself away from that terrible dog. When the chain snapped, the great truck lurched forward as if someone had started it, and the dog was on him. Walt grabbed the dog’s fur, sweaty and coarse (his father’s armpit), but somehow he lost his grip. The dog was at his throat but Walt was running again, into the street, where trucks like the abandoned army truck rolled heavily past their massive rear wheels in rows stacked together like giant doughnuts on their sides. And because of the mere gun slits (for windshields) the drivers couldn’t see, of course; they couldn’t see little Walt.
Then his father kissed him and Walt’s dream slipped away, for now. He was somewhere safe again; he could smell his father and feel his father’s hands, and he heard his father say, “It’s just a dream, Walt.”
In Garp’s dream, he and Duncan had been riding on an airplane. Duncan had to go to the bathroom, Garp pointed down the aisle; there were doors down there, a small kitchen, the pilot’s cabin, the lavatory. Duncan wanted to be taken there, to be shown
which
door, but Garp was cross with him.
“You’re ten years old, Duncan,” Garp said. “You can read. Or ask the stewardess.” Duncan crossed his knees and sulked. Garp shoved the child into the aisle. “Grow up, Duncan,” he said. “It’s one of those doors down there. Go on.”
Moodily, the child walked down the aisle toward the doors. A stewardess smiled at him and rumpled his hair as he passed her, but Duncan, typically, would ask nothing. He got to the end of the aisle and glared back at Garp: Garp waved to him, impatiently. Duncan shrugged his shoulders, helplessly.
Which
door?
Exasperated, Garp stood up. “
Try
one!” he shouted down the aisle to Duncan, and people looked at Duncan standing there. Duncan was embarrassed and opened a door immediately—the one nearest him. He gave a quick, surprised, but uncritical look back to his father before he seemed to be drawn through the door he’d opened. The door slammed itself after Duncan. The stewardess screamed. The plane gave a little dip in altitude, then corrected itself. Everyone looked out the windows, some people fainted, some threw up. Garp ran down the aisle, but the pilot and another official-looking person prevented Garp from opening the door.
“It should always be kept locked, you stupid bitch!” the pilot shouted to the sobbing stewardess.
“I thought it
was
locked!” she wailed.
“Where’s it go?” Garp cried. “
God
, where’s it go?” He saw that nothing was written on any of the doors.
“I’m sorry, sir,” the pilot said. “It couldn’t be helped.” But Garp shoved past him, he bent a plain-clothesman against the back of a seat, he smacked the stewardess out of the aisle. When he opened the door, Garp saw that it went outside—into the rushing sky—and before he could cry aloud for Duncan, Garp was sucked through the open door and into the heavens, where he hurtled after his son.
IF Garp could have been granted one vast and naïve wish, it would have been that he could make the world
safe
. For children and for grownups. The world struck Garp as unnecessarily perilous for both.
After Garp and Helen made love, and Helen fell asleep—after the dreams—Garp got dressed. When he sat on his bed to tie his track shoes, he sat on Helen’s leg and woke her up. She reached out her hand to touch him, then felt his running shorts.
“Where are you going?” she asked him.
“To check on Duncan,” he said. Helen stretched up on her elbows, she looked at her watch. It was after one in the morning and she knew Duncan was at Ralph’s house.
“
How
are you going to check on Duncan?” she asked Garp.
“I don’t know,” Garp said.
Like a gunman hunting his victim, like the child molester the parent dreads, Garp stalks the sleeping spring suburbs, green and dark; the people snore and wish and dream, their lawn mowers at rest; it is too cool for their air conditioners to be running. A few windows are open, a few refrigerators are humming. There is the faint, trapped warble from some televisions tuned in to
The Late Show
, and the blue-gray glow from the picture tubes throbs from a few of the houses. To Garp this glow looks like cancer, insidious and numbing, putting the world to sleep. Maybe television
causes
cancer, Garp thinks; but his real irritation is a
writer’s
irritation: he knows that wherever the TV glows, there sits someone who isn’t
reading
.
Garp moves lightly along the street; he wants to meet no one. His running shoes are loosely laced, his track shorts flap; he hasn’t worn a jock because he hasn’t planned to run. Though the spring air is cool, he wears no shirt. In the blackened houses an occasional dog
snorfles
as Garp passes by. Fresh from lovemaking, Garp imagines that his scent is as keen as a cut strawberry. He knows the dogs can smell him.
These are well-policed suburbs and for a moment Garp is apprehensive that he might be caught—in violation of some unwritten dress code, at least guilty of carrying no identification. He hurries, convinced he’s coming to Duncan’s aid, rescuing his son from the randy Mrs. Ralph.