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Authors: John Updike

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So it was with a sinking feeling that Fegley heard that the boy was making mobiles this summer. “But what about his job?” he asked.

“I don’t think he ever called that number Clara gave him,” Sarah said.

Clara, Fegley’s present wife, was a civil engineer with a firm in White Plains and had given her stepson a lead on a summer job with a road-repair crew.

“What do you mean exactly, mobiles?” Fegley asked.

“They’re lovely,” the distant voice answered. “They really must be seen to be believed. You should come look.” Her voice was fading; one of her annoying habits, which he had not been much aware of as long as they lived together, was that of dropping the telephone mouthpiece to her chin as she talked.

“All right, damn it: I’ll be right over,” Fegley said. “I want to
talk
to Warren. Clara went to a lot of trouble to find a contractor who had filled his minority quota.” He left his new studio, an abandoned gas station in Port Chester, with its friendly mounds of junk and pleasant, unifying stench of the acetylene torch, and swung his Porsche up onto the battered road, into that overtrafficked grid interconnecting Westchester County’s hidden green hives of plenty. He drove the thirty minutes across 287 to his old suburb.

It was strange, to be in his former home. The large Tarry-town house, once so full of children and their music and clutter, was silent now, and its furniture only half familiar. The former Mrs. Fegley had a new husband, a hearty pipe-smoker whose spoor and scent were everywhere. Like Clara, the man led a useful inartistic life and worked all day. Sarah still painted and, what was hurtful, had improved; her recent still-lifes were filled to the corners, and the perspective was tight as a drum. Apologetically she announced, “Warren said he’d be right back. I told him you were coming.”

“Aha. Where did he go, ostensibly?”

“He said downtown to buy some more copper wire. His mobiles take a lot of it.”

“I bet. Do you know what copper wire costs these days?”

“Of course. Who do you think gives him the money?”

“Then why do you let him?”

“I let
you
,” she said, and looked lightly away—the equivalent of allowing the telephone mouthpiece to slip down to her chin. It was true: she had let him do what he could. She had indulged him. For a time she had supported them both, working as a salesgirl in the old Fifth Avenue Bonwit’s.

Sarah had put on weight, without impairing a certain
absent-minded grace that flitted into the air from foci in her wrists and ankles. Adjusted to the sight of her and the ambience of the house, Fegley remembered the kindergarten crayon scrawls posted on the refrigerator with magnets, the driftwood sculptures brought home from their summer rentals, the collages of beach glass, the crow-quilled haiku, the linoleum cuts at Christmastime, the cardboard circuses. Once, Fegley had bought the children a set of Cuisenaire rods to inculcate number theory, and the baby daughter, then about four years old, had taken two of the units for number one—tiny wood cubes—and pencilled dots on them to make dice. She had made little cats of the rectangular rods representing number two, dogs of the longer threes, people with faces and bow ties of the still longer fours, and skyscrapers, with pencilled windows and canopied doorways, of the fives. Sarah had gone ecstatic over this show of “creativity.” The child, Fegley saw now, should have been spanked. A delayed fury spoke in him: “You’ve brought these kids up to live in a never-never land. All this stuff, the world doesn’t
need
it. It needs practical nurses. It needs securities analysts. You should
tell
them.”

“I never told
you
,” she said, in that same mild and distant voice. “Why should I say it to
them?

“I was different,” he said. “I was ignorant. I was desperate to get out of Missouri. Our children aren’t desperate, they’re just kidding around.”

Sarah shrugged. “Who’s to say? He’s been
so
excited. I’ve never seen him work this hard—down in the cellar all day and into the night, pounding and sawing.”

Fegley’s father’s hands, he remembered, had combined the hardened traces of chisel-nicks and saw-slips with a spotty bubbling of brown warts on the backs. Those hands had done
honest work, Fegley used to think, admiring them; and now his own hands, scarred by metal, looked much the same. The image of his broad-shouldered son in the cellar, captive to an illusion, and of a once young and slender woman standing on sore feet behind a counter at Bonwit’s, and of his own young mother sitting opposite him carefully crayoning in the depths of the Depression—these superimposed images afflicted him with a pathos and sense of waste that were paralyzing. His former wife had to prompt, “Why don’t you go down and look at them?”

“I don’t want to see the damn things. I came to see
him
.”

“It might be a while before he comes back, frankly. I think he was scared of what you’d say to him, that’s why he took off.” Warren had inherited his brown eyes from her, with those same elusive golden flecks.

“Poor little Warren,” Fegley said, and descended the steps to his former cellar. Scrap lumber and stray junk from the long ago when he had worked at home had mysteriously disappeared; his old workbench supported an unfamiliar litter of pliers and snippers, coiled wire, cut tin, glue, tape, and mutilated sheets of plastic and cardboard. A new fluorescent tube brightened the work space, but Warren had hung the finished mobiles in the dimness that stretched beneath the cobwebbed pipes and floor stringers to the faint far stone foundation wall. Each mobile embodied a different idea: some suggested the flight of birds, others the scales of a dragon; some were twirled of copper wire into terminations like the heads of fiddlehead ferns, and some held at the ends of invisible black-wire arms cardboard paddle shapes, or crescents or circles, ranged in sequences drifting outward in precarious spacy cascades that gently moved as the creator’s mother’s footsteps, heavy with fatality, descended the stairs.

“See?” Sarah asked.

Each mobile by itself might have looked spindly, but the effect of so many, hanging unsold, unrequested by the world, waiting here in the dark, was of a leafy forest or a firmament of stars twinkling one behind the other in a recession as good as infinite.

“Yeah,” Fegley had to say, half to himself. His former wife came and stood beside him, to get the same perspective. “That’s right,” he said. “Keep breaking my heart.”

The Ideal Village

O
UR PARTY
had of course long known of the existence of the village; yet there was fear that our pilots, Fidel and Miguel, would be unable to locate its clearing in the vastness of the jungle. Not a month before, dusk had overtaken a supply plane aiming for the landing strip of some Lutheran missionaries still farther to the south, and the pilot had panicked and made a run for the lights of the coast. His fuel had carried him as far as the Montes de Ferro, where the scar of his crash was (we saw from the air) indistinguishable from a mining tip. And our second plane, piloted by Miguel, did drop from radio contact in the clouds—those strange clouds that in this part of the world form directly above the vaporous rivers, so that the sky seems to be full of enormous snakes—but it later developed that he had merely tuned in to the band of reggae music ceaselessly transmitted from the large rebel encampment in the Montes del Oro. (The encampment lies just over the border and seeks, of course, to overthrow not our exemplary and democratic government but that of the neighboring
country, with its deplorable regime.) Fifteen minutes after we landed, Miguel’s Cessna materialized in the sky as a speck no bigger than a buzzard, and as indolent in motion. We cheered. Even the chief cheered, though he had seen much pain in his years in the city as a chiropractor, and had always his dignity to think of.

He and the radical priests had come forward to greet us, but as it were reluctantly, long after our engines had been cut and the unpacking of our baggage—our backpacks and
chinchorros
and Styrofoam wine coolers—had already created small mountains on the packed earth in the shadows of our wings. The landing strip was also the main street of the village, and our backwash had stripped wands of grass from the conical roofs, and our engine noise had made short work of the afternoon siesta. Of the two priests, one was tall and pale and elegant, his accent the Spanish lisp, and the other shorter and darker, his mixed blood churning in him like a suppressed vivacity. The chief, of course, had pure Indian features, though sagged and soured by his years of metropolitan experience. In late middle age he had been rallied by the nobility of this experiment—communism and ethnicity seamlessly combined—to return to the village of his origins. He wore the tribal parrot-feather girdle, which did not quite cover his buttocks, and the armbands of monkeyskin that blazoned his rank, and the vest of a gray three-piece suit. Miguel brought his little red-striped Cessna in on the money and trundled to a stop, trailing a crowd of children. Some of the children were naked, some wore blue jeans, but all appeared healthy, cheerful, and unalarmed, in contrast to the children of the unideal villages we had visited previously. There was no begging, and only on the part of the onyx-eyed infants was any tactile curiosity expressed in our apparatus or the sleek and shiny urban costume of the females in our party.

We were shown to our quarters, where some male villagers strung our
chinchorros
to the overhead beams, using the knots that only they knew, and so swiftly that even Ortega, the knot expert among us, could not follow the twists. Each tribe, in a culture based upon vines and fibers, and which thirty years ago astounded the pioneer anthropologists with the intricacies of its woven fishnets and suspension bridges, boasts a secret language of knots—a flurry of brown fingers and thumbs capped, as the knot is cinched, with a guffaw, half defiance and half celebration, out of mouths disfigured by the perpetual wad of green tobacco.

We were afforded time to freshen, and then given the expected tour of the artichoke fields, the acres of experimental cotton, the long hut where the women on looms powered by the village generator mass-produce the ancestral patterns, the small huts where the old men carve from kapok wood the same unvarying figures of coati, capybara, jaguar, and centipede, to be sold at airport souvenir shops a thousand miles away. Such an industry, the taller priest explained in his epicene Catalan, is of course less than ideal, since the zoömorphs thus manufactured are acknowledged by the hand that whittles them to have lost their sacred animistic purpose. We are in transition here. These old men—his gesture flicked across the bent, partly shaved heads—can create only these forms, which their fathers seriously confused with living creatures. The next generation, he hoped, would be quite free of the old shadows and produce wood carvings expressive of both their own individual genius and the beauty of the common weal. Whether such figures would be popular in the airport shops remained to be seen. We advance here by trial and error, he said; we do not disdain half-measures. Only in our ultimate goals are we doctrinaire.

These goals, it did not need to be said, were liberty, equality,
fraternity; worker control of the means of production; freedom from oppression, subtle or overt. A social contract, in short, that had no binding edges. The smaller priest laughed, with his half-breed exuberance, out here in the artichoke fields, where the shadows were beginning to thicken, leaf upon leaf; his plump hands, slightly cupped, momentarily formed in front of his cassock a mystical shape, an intangible social form whose edges did not bind.

We swam in the river. There were no piranhas along this stretch, we were assured, and the alligators were in their
sazón de letargo
—their season of torpor. Conchita and Esmeralda looked piquant in their bikinis, slender and sallow and nervous. The opaque beige water swallowed their flesh at the knees like some magically thin paint; yet we emerged the same color as before, and uneaten. The vegetation along the riverbanks was monotonous and tall. Many tropical species, our botanist, Fernando, explained, had been shaped by nature to look almost exactly alike. An explorer from Mars, he went on to elaborate, even were he to land at our icebound poles would find microbes and lichen, so abundant—so frantically, hysterically abundant—is life on this permissive planet.

As, wrapped in our towels, we crossed the wide plaza of earth at the center of the village, between the feasting hut and the hut of adolescent initiation, we were struck by the large smooth stones dotted about without apparent pattern, and casting long shadows as evening approached. Luis, our anthropologist, surmised that these were counters in some ritual or game. He was not far wrong; the melancholy chief merrily explained that the young men of the village tested their strengths by lifting these stones. Against our polite but unemphatic
protests, the present champion was called forth: a rather fat boy in blue jeans and stencilled T-shirt (
Bata Shoes
, his shirt advertised, though he was barefoot) who had to be urged forward like a bashful girl by his companions. He removed his shirt, displaying a soft-looking, rounded, almost female chest. He approached a stone—presumably the heaviest, a champion in its own stolid and mindless way—and with sudden decisiveness tugged at one end so that the monolith stood upright. Upended, it looked heavier, its shadow having become so much longer. The boy squatted and embraced the stone as a father would embrace a toddling child who had just demonstrated a need for affection. Then he attempted to stand with his burden, and the entire crowd (for our inner arc of witness had been multiplied and made into a complete circle by the arrival of much of the village population) grew tensely silent in empathy with his effort. On first attempt, the stone outbalanced him and he had to release it abruptly, dancing back lest his bare toes be crushed. On second try, he wrestled it up onto his thighs and then higher, so that the stone, like some massive slithering parasite, seemed to be searching for an entry into his body; at last, his bashful smile awash with strain, the champion had the monster on his shoulders. He turned once to face the complete circle of his audience and then dumped the stone to the ground with a thud swallowed in the burst of applause. The speed with which the boy melted into the shadows seemed modestly to state that his gift was not his own, but a divine blessing that had happened to alight on him; he had been pushed forward just as a crowd of loiterers at a street corner in my native North America might offer up one of their own to be questioned by Fernando’s hypothetical explorer from Mars.

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