Dedication
This book is for S., the only begetter—
Epigraph
After great pain, a formal feeling comes—
The Nerves sit ceremonious, like Tombs—
The stiff Heart questions was it He, that bore,
And Yesterday, or Centuries before?
The Feet, mechanical, go round—
Of Ground, or Air, or Ought—
A Wooden way
Regardless grown,
A Quartz contentment, like a stone—
This is the Hour of Lead—
Remembered, if outlived,
As Freezing persons, recollect the Snow—
First—Chill—then Stupor—then the letting go—
—Emily Dickinson, 1862
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Epigraph
I. The Scar
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
II. The Mirror-Ghoul
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
III. “Holiday”
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
IV. The Labyrinth
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
About the Author
Also by Joyce Carol Oates
Copyright
About the Publisher
I.
The Scar
1
It was on a mild, fragrant evening in late September, several weeks after she had moved to Glenkill, Pennsylvania, to begin teaching at the Glenkill Academy for Boys, that Monica Jensen was introduced to Sheila Trask at a crowded reception in the headmaster’s residence. And the meeting was so awkward, her own response so lacking in brilliance or distinction, Monica could never have predicted that Sheila Trask would remember her or even that they would see each other again.
From the very first, when she visited Glenkill to be interviewed for her position the previous spring (as one, she uneasily gathered, of a half-dozen candidates of “superior qualifications”), Monica had been aware that the artist Sheila Trask lived most of the year in the Glenkill area. She owned one of the old Bucks County estates, an early-nineteenth-century house called Edgemont, which her husband, the sculptor Morton Flaxman, had left her. So far as Monica knew Sheila Trask had only a minor national reputation but she seemed to enjoy a certain local celebrity—though it might have been notoriety.
(A number of artists evidently lived in Bucks County at the present time. None was so famous as Andrew Wyeth, who lived in Chadds Ford, some distance to the south, but their names were nonetheless mentioned occasionally, as if by accident: conversational nuggets that might be examined, and contemplated, or allowed to be dropped, depending upon one’s inclination. The gentlemen who had taken Monica to lunch at an inn on the Delaware River, and who had interviewed her for two hours, so discreetly and casually she might have mistaken the experience for a mere social encounter, brought up Sheila Trask’s name; and the name of her late husband Flaxman. Fortunately for Monica she knew Flaxman’s work—knew enough to say a few intelligent and appreciative things about it, though she wasn’t unstintingly enthusiastic: the heavy white masses, the unbroken lines and featureless curves, the mere semblance of living, primitive forms, had always vaguely troubled her, weighed upon her vision, as she sat with a cooling cup of tea—one cup after another, in fact—in the sculpture garden of the Museum of Modern Art, trying to find a way out of the cul-de-sac of her life. But at least she could envision something when Flaxman’s name was mentioned; so far as Sheila Trask was concerned—she could envision nothing at all. And as she looked from Mr. Greene, the headmaster of the school, to Mr. Farley, who chaired the English Department, Monica could not determine whether this readily admitted ignorance was in her favor or against her. “Miss Trask’s paintings are experimental, I suppose it might be said,” Mr. Greene said, smiling, “—powerful—and abstract—and difficult to describe.” Monica murmured, not quite apologetically, that she knew very little about contemporary art, either American or European—she was afraid she found most of it flat, inhuman, sterile, and oddly unimaginative. “Yes. Exactly,” Mr. Greene said.)
Then, in the early summer, when Monica was taken by a real estate agent to look at various rentals in the area, she was again informed, casually, that Sheila Trask would be practically a neighbor of hers if she rented the house—a five-bedroom farmhouse—she wanted most. Of course, the real estate agent added, it wasn’t likely she would ever meet Sheila Trask since the woman was always traveling. And she spent a great deal of time in New York. She was reclusive, perhaps a bit eccentric, unpredictable, hard to please—so the local merchants said—not universally liked. Monica had hesitated to seem inquisitive—she wanted, here in Glenkill, to establish another sort of reputation altogether—but Betty Connor seemed so guileless, so genuinely friendly, she couldn’t resist asking in what ways Sheila Trask was eccentric. “Various ways,” Mrs. Connor said, retreating at once, “I don’t know her personally, of course. . . . Maybe you’ll meet her yourself.” Did she go out of her way to be disagreeable? Monica asked. “Well,” said Mrs. Connor, “the first thing you’d say about her isn’t that she’s disagreeable, in fact she’s usually charming, very charming, she appeals to a certain kind of man—and woman too, I suppose. But maybe you’ll meet her yourself. Then you can form your own judgement.”
By the time of the Greenes’ party, months later, Monica had quite forgotten about Sheila Trask. In the strain and exhaustion and frequent euphoria of her first weeks of teaching Monica had forgotten a great deal: she had become, rushing from place to place, trying cheerfully to memorize a hundred or more new names, a kind of amnesiac—her earlier life, her earlier preoccupations, had been wonderfully blotted out. Many years ago she had been a golden girl of sorts—she had even looked rather golden—and now it seemed to her that another shadowless epoch of her life might be imminent. If she proceeded with caution. If she behaved very, very prudently.
“I don’t remind myself of myself at all,” Monica murmured aloud, amused. “I seem to be so happy.”
She had surprised everyone who knew her, her ex-husband in particular, by accepting an invitation to teach at a private boys’ school in rural Pennsylvania. Surely she might have done better? Surely she might have waited until something more congenial turned up? But in this phase of her life Monica was done with waiting for the reward, or the fate, she deserved; she was eager to make do with comparatively little. She was eager simply to forget.
So when, at the Greenes’ spirited party, she had happened to see a tall, dark-haired, ra
ther slovenly dressed woman enter the room, Monica had thought only that she was odd—arresting—a “character” in some not fully tangible way. She was a woman five or six years older than Monica, in her midthirties perhaps, and attractive enough, even—almost—beautiful, with derisive black eyes and heavy unplucked black brows and a wide, unsmiling, quizzical mouth. Her figure was almost painfully angular; her shoulders were sloping, her posture slouched. Unlike the Greenes’ other guests she had not taken the occasion seriously enough to dress for it—she wore a shapeless black skirt that fell unevenly to midcalf, and a cheap much-laundered cotton shirt, and what appeared to be a man’s tweed jacket, unbuttoned, and drooping from her thin shoulders. An odd bird of prey, Monica thought, maneuvering where she could observe the woman more easily.
She wore flat-heeled shoes of no discernible style, mud- or paint splattered; and her legs, pale and luminous, and somewhat sinewy, seemed to be bare. Her stride was brash, perhaps horsey—she was certainly a horsewoman or a sportswoman of some kind—she leaned forward to shake hands, jerking her elbow downward in an unusual manner, not feminine (whatever, Monica thought, feminine precisely means) but not masculine either: rather in the style of a self-conscious and slightly sulky adolescent. There was something edgy about her, something mirthless yet jocular, an air of the improvisational and the uncoordinated: she had pinned a white camellia to her untidy hair in a romantic (or a mock-romantic) gesture, but the flower now hung wilted and forgotten as if about to fall. While Harry and Ruth Greene turned their animated attention upon her she frankly surveyed the room, rocking on her heels, her hands inelegantly thrust into her pockets. Alone in this chattering smiling crowd she was unsmiling and appeared to be replying to the Greenes in monosyllables. Monica supposed her a guest of no little significance, judging from the attention paid her by the headmaster and his wife—and now the chaplain and his wife—and several other persons of importance. Perhaps she was the wife of a trustee or a trustee herself, Monica thought, though she was rather young for the role. No doubt she lived on one of the splendid country estates in the area, no doubt she rode thoroughbred horses; there was something arrogant about her stance, the slight, almost imperceptible bend of her knees. . . . She was clearly well-to-do and assured, the kind of woman Monica usually avoided.
Yet there was something familiar about her too—the black gypsyish eyes, the fleshy mouth, the restless manner. The way her gaze sifted through the crowd, idle, predatory, seemingly aimless. Monica wondered for a brief excited moment whether they might have met before. It would probably have been in New York City if anywhere. Though she and her husband had had surprisingly few friends in the two years they had lived in the city they seemed to have been acquainted with a great many persons, a variegated promiscuous number, strangers with “familiar” faces, friendly enough at parties, in fact wonderfully friendly at parties, though otherwise anonymous. . . . The black-haired woman struck Monica as quintessentially New York despite her horsey posture: but when her prowling gaze touched upon Monica there was no sign of recognition or interest.
“That woman over there, the one with the amazing eyebrows,” one of Monica’s male colleagues said in a low voice, “—the one who looks as if she’s wandered in and is about to wander out again—that’s Sheila Trask the painter: does she look anything like her photographs?”
“I’ve never seen a photograph of her,” Monica said.
A few minutes later Mrs. Greene led Monica over to the woman, and introduced them in a hearty voice, as if “Miss Trask” might actually be interested in “Miss Jensen,” one of the promising new instructors on the Glenkill faculty. She clearly offended Sheila Trask by suggesting that the two women were practically neighbors: Monica had just moved into a farmhouse on the Olcottsville Road, and Sheila lived at Edgemont, on the Poor Farm Road, approximately two miles to the north. “I’m afraid I really don’t have any neighbors, Edgemont is so isolated,” Sheila Trask murmured. Her voice was both apologetic and incensed. But she shook hands readily with Monica in her stilted mock-formal way.
Her fingers were thin, cold, surprisingly strong. She wore no rings and her nails had been bluntly filed; even so they were ridged lightly with dirt or paint. She gave off a mingled scent—tobacco, turpentine, wool in need of dry cleaning, the faint sweet odor of the wilted camellia. Close up, Monica saw that she was even thinner than she had appeared at a distance, but wiry, sinewy. She was probably in her early forties. Her skin looked exotic, soiled—it had a queer olivish tint that suggested malnourishment. Her black, moist, slightly protuberant eyes were her most beautiful feature: thickly lashed, deep-set and shadowed, and suspicious. And the unplucked black brows nearly met in a querulous inverted V on the bridge of her nose.
Out of politeness she asked Monica one or two questions about the house she had rented, and Monica’s answers were brief, shy, not very inspired. Ruth Greene, smiling and maternal, led another junior instructor forward to be introduced; there were more murmured exchanges; smiles, handshakes; a few awkward though well-intentioned remarks about Sheila Trask’s work. (These the frowning woman accepted in absolute silence—as if she had heard nothing.) But the young man blundered onward, cleared his throat and declared that he was a “staunch admirer” of Morton Flaxman’s work as well. “He’d be honored to know that,” Sheila Trask said with a flash of malicious gaiety, “if he were alive.”
When Monica left the reception a half-hour later she saw that Sheila Trask had already gone; she must not have stayed more than twenty minutes. Odd, Monica thought, that she had troubled to come at all—she so clearly felt conspicuous, talked-about, ill at ease. And superior to the Glenkill people.
On the flagstone walk outside the residence Monica noticed a limp and torn white flower—a camellia—and had the impulse, for an inexplicable moment, to pick it up.
“You’ll get married again,” friends told her, not knowing how their words stung, and Monica said with as much dignity as she could manage, “Yes—there are different kinds of marriage.”
It had not been for the salvation of her soul—she didn’t any longer believe in either “soul” or “salvation”—but for simple survival that Monica had come to teach at the Glenkill Academy (prestigious, costly, conservative, Founded 1847, as the plaque boasted, by The Society of Friends); and to put her past behind her. Survival was a clear, frank, unpretentious matter, a primitive need which she hoped to cultivate, with hard work and idealism, into something approaching a life.
She, who had always been young, was now a few months from her thirtieth birthday. She was scarred—yes literally and not merely figuratively—by her recent inglorious past: in fact she often found herself stroking her barely visible three-inch wound, her prize, her bitter solace. “Look what you’ve done to me, look what you’ve done,” she had cried in triumph, her first instinct being to accuse, to gloat, to deliver a wound herself which she hoped might be lethal. But the blood had been hers.
It wasn’t true precisely that Monica Jensen had been a golden girl, though she liked the expression—she was reminded by it of Shakespeare’s grim lyric. (“Golden lads and girls all must, / As chimney-sweepers, come to dust.”) A wonderful false democratizing here, a suggestion that all human beings are equal in Infinity, hence why envy, spite, sorrow, pain, unhappiness now—? Small consolation for the chimney sweepers who died young, not only turning to dust but dwelling in it, in life; but immense consolation to the golden lads and girls who need not feel guilt for their selfish privilege. Monica saw herself unsentimentally as a woman, a former girl, who had had the power—derived from where, she couldn’t have guessed—to convince others, for a while, of her goldenness, her specialness. The emotional logic of loving her.
She had been married at the age of twenty-one, and divorced at the age of twenty-nine. There were eight years to account for, more or less. (She had begun living with her fiancé in what had been imagined as a defiant gesture, seven or eight months before they were married. But neither his family nor he
rs had chosen to respond to the defiance.) She was beginning to forget a great deal. She had already forgotten a great deal. The dailiness of their lives—at which they were not very skilled—was rapidly retreating, leaving behind stark and isolated events, mere incidents, things that had happened and were therefore meant to illuminate their participants: the marriage, the ill-timed pregnancy, the abortion, the mourning, the silence . . . and the rest. Monica had told herself sternly that if her experience had been special it would be wicked of her to forget it: but it hadn’t been special, it belonged to too many people of her generation.
The marriage and its breakup were bracketed by two opposing—yet not dissimilar—ceremonies. They too had become impersonal events. Time, which had always unfolded in an uncomplicated motion, vaguely allied with “improvement” or “progress,” had cruelly pleated: so that Monica had no sooner become accustomed to thinking of herself as a married woman than she was no longer married. She had been plunged into a tunnel and before her eyes could become accustomed to the dark she had been forced out of it again, dazed, shaken, considerably older. After eight years she was “herself” again—Jensen and not Bell—whatever that meant. Instead of sharing a three-room apartment off Sixth Avenue with a man said to be her husband she was living, alone, in a five-bedroom shingle-board farmhouse a mile beyond Glenkill, Pennsylvania. It was a region she hadn’t known existed before the previous spring: the serenity and calendar-art beauty of its rolling farmland and woodlands and unpaved roads and lanes seemed to harbor, in its very perfection, a subtle undefined threat to her sense of reality. Or to her sense of what she deserved. (“Do you think you can walk away from all this?” her husband had said, his voice trembling with hatred; and Monica had had no reply that she dared utter aloud.)
But the divorce had gone through just the same. And she was free, as he was. (By way of mutual acquaintances she had learned that he was on the West Coast, working for a cultural foundation of sorts in San Francisco. They had told her the name—the foundation was evidently supported by one of the oil conglomerates—but Monica wasn’t certain she remembered it correctly.) In Glenkill she was alone and undefined and in a curious battered way virginal again. How does it feel at the age of twenty-nine to be the object of no one’s desire, she queried herself—no one’s love, no one’s particular interest? How does it feel to be able to sleep through most of the night? To be able to work efficiently for twelve or more hours a day? Since moving into her farmhouse on the day before Labor Day Monica had experienced several voluptuous attacks of sheer anxiety—that she did not deserve her good fortune and would be punished. Then again she thought, gloating: “But I won’t be punished!—I did walk away without being struck in the back.”
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