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The Raising

Page 21

by Laura Kasischke


  If Clark were there, in bed, in their apartment, he’d grumble when she came in and lay down beside him, and Mira wouldn’t know if he was asleep and annoyed to have been awakened, or awake and simply annoyed that she had entered the room. It had been a long time (a year? two?) since he’d rolled over and put his arms around her waist and buried his face in her hair.

  Was this what it was like when you found yourself sliding, impossibly and inevitably, toward a divorce?

  And what then?

  Would she and Clark and the beautiful miracle of the twins be turned, as seemed the custom now, into one of those joint-custody arrangements? An elaborate plan sketched out, and signed by a judge? Thursday through Monday with Mira. Monday through Thursday with Clark. Or every other week? Or every two weeks? Vacations numbered, accounted for? Holidays divided up like so many shiny pennies?

  Back in the days of Mira’s childhood, when there was a divorce, the fathers generally just slipped away to California and were replaced by the mothers’ new husbands. But Clark was not the kind of father who would slip away. He might very well be, in fact, the kind of father who would fight her for full custody. He might very well be the kind of father who would be granted full custody by a left-leaning judge who wanted to show that she valued the role of the stay-at-home father as dearly as that of a housewife.

  Mira was, she realized, crying.

  There were tears running down her neck. There were tears pooling around her lips. She wiped them away. She held her breath to try to make the hiccupping sobs subside. She was being ridiculous, getting way ahead of herself. Clark had said nothing about divorce, had he? He’d only taken the twins to visit his mother. It was his mother’s birthday. His mother’s seventieth. He would be back. He’d been right—she couldn’t have come along in the middle of the week.

  Mira took her hands away from her face and forced herself to think of something else.

  The interview.

  She would think about that. Lucas. Her research. Her book. When the boys had first arrived, Mira had been certain that she’d know what to make of Lucas and his account of events. He’d slouched into the apartment looking quite a bit worse for wear than she remembered him—but drugs tended to do that, even to the very young. Jeff Blackhawk had told her that Lucas was in his poetry workshop that semester, and was an interesting writer but seemed unable to speak. Mira remembered him as a terrible writer—all adjectives and unsubstantiated opinions—who could not be dissuaded from dominating every class discussion with his opinions. Halfway through the term with her he’d had that trouble with a drug bust, and after that he had gotten quieter, although his papers became even more opinionated and full of purple prose. She remembered one essay he’d written that had nothing whatsoever to do with whatever assignment he’d been given, and had become, instead, a rant against oppressive drug laws:

  Why does the United States, perhaps the earth’s most variegated garden, feel it must oppress the very youth it purports to wish to nurture into blossom?

  And she also remembered reading this first line to Clark while grading papers at the kitchen table. It was supposed to make Clark laugh, give him an idea of the mind-numbing work she was doing at the kitchen table as he bounced the newborn twins to sleep in the chair across from her, but Clark had just snorted and said, “Really,” in agreement with Lucas’s sentiment.

  But the Lucas in her apartment that evening had appeared drained of his saccharine passions. There was a strange quarter-size patch of hair missing just above his left temple, and repeatedly during the interview he’d pressed his fingers to that spot and rubbed it as if he were experiencing sharp pain there. He must have managed to rub the hair away, and then continued to rub enough to prevent it from growing back.

  His monologue had been chilling, baffling, incredible. Unless he was a future Academy Award winner, this could not have been an act. Mira had the impression he’d not told a soul the story until then, and that perhaps he’d even managed not to think about it in detail until he’d opened his mouth to speak to her.

  But what had actually happened?

  Mira knew what she wanted to believe—the thing that would fit the thesis she knew she shouldn’t have already developed, but had.

  There were thousands of accounts of ghosts reported on college campuses. Murdered coeds thumbing rides to the cemeteries where they were buried. Suicides still weeping in dormitory shower stalls, drunken fraternity brothers still prowling around under the balconies they’d drunkenly fallen from. The youthful dead were particularly inspiring when it came to such stories, and the living youth seemed particularly inspired by their dead peers. And Nicole Werner was the perfect campus ghost. The beautiful virgin with that already ghostly senior portrait. The evil boyfriend. The grieving sorority sisters. The dark, cold night of her violent death. Her roommate had to identify her by the jewelry she was wearing because the gorgeous sorority girl had been unrecognizable.

  In a graduate seminar Mira had been invited to take her senior year in college (because Professor Niro had said he thought she was the most serious undergraduate student of anthropology he’d ever encountered), they’d read Charles Mackay’s classic, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds. The book had impressed Mira deeply—probably more than it impressed the other students, because she was so young. The professor had expressed some contempt for the shoddy research, the slapdash psychoanalysis, the exaggerations in the book, but Mira had carried the impressions of that text with her through all the years of her education that had followed, and she still felt them. There had been no chapter on ghost sightings on college campuses, but Mira remembered very well Mackay’s chapter on haunted houses, and his conclusion that the weak and credulous people who were drawn to them would be the very sort of people who would see ghosts in them.

  Lucas might certainly be one of Mackay’s weak and credulous. Lucas was easy. But what about Perry? Could both boys be suffering from the same overstimulation of the imagination?

  Mira looked down at the watch glowing green on her wrist: 4:02. She had to teach her class in five hours. And somehow it didn’t even startle her (a movie camera would have captured her only casually looking up from her wristwatch as if she’d been expecting the sound all along) when there was a tentative-sounding knock on the door and a whisper she’d never have heard if she had been in bed: “Professor Polson? It’s just Perry Edwards again, if you’re there.”

  34

  Nicole was down to her bra, her panties. They matched. Pink. He hadn’t been able to look closely, but Craig thought he’d glimpsed a little heart, or maybe a bird, sewn onto the right-hand corner of the panties. And he was pretty sure he’d glimpsed the palest bit of downy hair between the panties and the high bikini spot of her inner thigh. Her cheeks had gone from a pink that matched the underwear to a deeper shade of pink in the course of their two hours in his bed. God only knew what color his own cheeks were. He was bathed in sweat. His hair was matted against his forehead. His heart had been beating so hard for so long in every part of his body that at least he knew for certain that he had no undetected heart defects. He’d never have lived through this if he did.

  Perry was at home in Bad Axe for the weekend, so Nicole had spent the weekend rising from and returning to Craig’s bed in their dorm room.

  “No, Craig, not yet. But it feels so good. Oh my God. No, stop. O—”

  It was like a refrain now to the loveliest song he’d ever heard. He would have done anything she’d said. He felt certain that if she’d have let him, he could have levitated with her in his arms and they could have made love on the ceiling. He could have unzipped his body and wrapped her in his skin. He could have buried himself in her neck and slipped into the place between her shoulder and her throat, and been soldered by passion to her forever.

  But she wouldn’t let him.

  “No, oh, Craig, it’s so hard to say no. I want. But, no. Please. I’m not ready. If I were, it would be you, and it would be now. But�
�”

  “It’s okay. It’s okay. I know.” He breathed the words into her mouth. “I just want to press against you. Just let me hold you. Can I touch you—”

  “There. Yes. Oh my God. O—”

  35

  It was one of those October days during which it seemed like the middle of the night all day, and that, Shelly supposed, was why she was waking up so disoriented. That, and the bottle of wine.

  Where was she? What time was it? Who was sleeping beside her?

  Two bottles of wine?

  They’d started drinking after lunch—some tuna filets in olive oil, some tomato slices. First, they’d split the expensive bottle of white, and then the cheap red stuff Shelly kept on hand for cooking. Had they finished both of them?

  Truly, Shelly had no idea how much they’d had to drink, but she could still feel the wonderful muscle exhaustion of the sex. Of the hours of sex. Her lips were swollen with it, and she licked them, and there was the taste of it on her lips and tongue—salty, sweet. Her breasts felt heavy. Her nipples were still hard as little nails. Between her legs she felt bruised and wet.

  How, exactly, had she come to be sleeping in this bed beside Shelly?

  How, exactly, had they gotten from there to here?

  A full moon was shining through the window (Shelly hadn’t bothered to pull the shades), and after she finally managed to open her eyes fully and to rub them into focus, she could see clearly and deliciously that Josie Reilly was asleep on her side, the sheet pulled up only to her naked hip, pale and white, her black hair spilling over Shelly’s rosebud pillowcases. In the corner something with green eyes blinked, and it took Shelly a breathless second to realize that it was Jeremy, standing stock-still, as if on high alert or turned to stone. Confused. Disapproving. Displaced. She remembered Josie saying in the sweetest, most apologetic voice, “Can you please get the cat off the bed? I really don’t like cats.”

  Now, Josie Reilly sighed and opened her eyes, and smiled when she saw Shelly looking down at her. She reached up one elegant arm—the one with the silver vein of a bracelet around it—and placed her fingertips against Shelly’s throat before propping herself up slowly on one elbow and kissing the place she’d touched as she slid her hand from Shelly’s neck to her breast, and her lips moved up from Shelly’s neck to her lips.

  It had been just past noon when Josie had stepped into Shelly’s house bearing two Starbucks cups, shivering in her soaked cashmere hoodie.

  “Can I come in?” she’d asked, and Shelly had said, of course, of course, although she was incredibly annoyed to find Josie there, when she was supposed to be minding the office, and to have been woken up from her nap.

  Josie’s cheeks were crimson, mottled, and there were tiny raindrops on her forehead. Shelly must not have been able to hide the annoyance on her face, because Josie had bitten her lip and then said, “Oops. Should I not have come over? I thought you might need some cheering up.”

  “No,” Shelly said. “It’s fine. It’s . . . nice. Thank you, Josie. How thoughtful.” She took the cup Josie was holding out to her with one hand, and pulled her bathrobe closed around her chest with the other. “Come in. Sit down, and give me your hoodie. I’ll toss it in the dryer—on the delicate cycle.”

  Josie blinked, looking pleased, and the raindrops fell from her eyelashes onto her cheeks. She handed her own Starbucks cup to Shelly so that she could unzip her hoodie.

  “Thank you. I’m soaked.”

  The zipper made a sound that made Shelly think of a comet—something traveling at an incredible speed, very far away—and then Josie Reilly was standing before her wearing what she knew girls now called “camis,” or “tanks,” but which, when Shelly was this girl’s age, had been lingerie. The kind of thing you might wear on your wedding night.

  It was pale green, raw silk, hemmed with a paler green lace. It was also wet, and it clung to Josie’s breasts, making the perfect outline of them visible, no imagination needed. Her nipples were hard. There were goose bumps on her arms.

  “Is it okay, I mean, if I hang out for a bit? I can’t go out like this.” She opened her arms as if to display herself fully in her camisole to Shelly, as if to invite her, incite her, to look at her body, and Shelly did—she couldn’t help but look—and then she looked at Josie’s face, and it was impossible not to interpret the expression on it as flirtation.

  Flirtation verging on seductive invitation:

  Her lips were pressed together. She was batting her eyelashes. A small smirk played at the corners of her lips. Her weight rested on one leg, and the hipbone of the other was bare, a blinding inch of pale exposed flesh.

  Shelly’s breath felt ragged when she inhaled, and she raised her eyebrows, opening her mouth before exhaling and saying, holding up the hoodie, trying to sound casual, “I’ll take this downstairs.”

  “Thanks, Shelly,” Josie said, and then, “Is it okay if I sit down? I don’t think I’m so wet I’ll ruin your couch or anything.”

  “Of course,” Shelly said, and even to herself she sounded like someone in a trance, under a spell, like someone who had just stepped off a treadmill onto unshifting ground. She was almost surprised, when she got to the basement, to find the washer and dryer where they had always been. She pulled out the limp previous load of her own socks and panties, tossed them into the plastic basket waiting in the corner, and then ran her hand through the lint trap before putting Josie’s hoodie on the delicate cycle and turning back toward the stairs.

  “I love your house,” Josie said.

  She’d taken off her shoes and left them by the front door. Her feet were bare. Her toenails were painted silver, like her fingernails. She had one leg crossed over and under the other in a position that was impossibly dexterous and casual at the same time. Her elbow was propped up on the back of the couch, and her fingers were playing through her hair, lifting and pulling and twirling the black strands as, with her other hand, she lifted the Starbucks cup to her lips, sipped, licked them, and then said, looking around, “It’s so cool. Do you live alone?”

  “Yes,” Shelly said. “Except for my cat.”

  “Oh,” Josie said. “What’s its name?” She looked around, as though worried that Jeremy would show himself.

  “Jeremy,” Shelly said.

  “Why Jeremy?” Josie asked. “Isn’t that a little odd for a cat name?”

  “I guess,” Shelly said.

  She had, she realized, no clever story to tell about Jeremy’s name. She’d simply wanted to avoid giving the cat the kind of name all of her single, academic, lesbian friends had given theirs: Plato. Sexton. Amadeus. Sappho.

  She’d pulled the name Jeremy out of thin air, thinking it had no baggage whatsoever, that she’d never known a single person named Jeremy. It was only months later that she remembered the one Jeremy she’d forgotten: a retarded boy who’d lived in her neighborhood, who’d fallen down a flight of stairs in his house and been killed.

  “I’m not wild for cats,” Josie said. “I’m a dog person. Cats seem a little creepy. No offense.”

  Shelly sat down in the chair across from Josie, pulling her robe over her knees as she did. She’d forgotten her Starbucks cup on the kitchen table, and by now it was probably cold. She thought she’d just leave it. She had no idea what treacly beverage Josie might have brought her today.

  “Wow,” Josie said, looking around again. “I’m so used to living with a ton of other people—it would be weird, but really awesome, to have a whole house to yourself.” There was a dreamy look in her eyes, as if she were actually imagining herself in the rooms of Shelly’s house, ambling between them on her own, considering what it would be like if they were hers.

  “Well,” Shelly said. “It’s definitely better than—”

  “A fucking sorority,” Josie said, and took another sip of her drink, looking demurely away from Shelly. She’d never said the word fucking in front of Shelly before—although, once, when the printer made three times the number of a long do
cument than it was supposed to, Shelly had heard Josie shout, “Shit!”

  Shelly cleared her throat. “Well, do you have to live at the sorority?” She hated the sound of her own voice, and the frumpy way she was holding her robe around her.

  At the gym, lifting weights, looking at herself in the mirror, Shelly felt physical, powerful, beautiful. She flushed easily, and knew that men were looking at her. But in the presence of Josie Reilly—in the presence of a girl whose body had been through only nineteen, twenty years—she knew that the kind of admiration she got from men at the gym meant nothing. Here before her, in the form of Josie Reilly, was the embodiment of beauty and youth. This girl had just barely emerged from the cocoon of childhood. In fact, Shelly thought she could see a film of something like dew on Josie’s neck, on her chest, and she even thought she could smell something wafting off of her limbs like pond water—rank and sweet at the same time, so potent.

  Why, Shelly thought soberly then, was she letting this happen?

  Was this happening?

  Never once had she thought of herself as the kind of old dyke who would sleep with a student, a girl. The only women she’d ever found herself attracted to in the past had been her own age, or older. She’d disliked the lesbians she knew who kept women half their ages, and paid their rent. It was so obviously nothing but physical—and wasn’t part of the point, the point of being a woman who’d chosen women over men, to reject that kind of objectification? To reject that abuse of power?

  She was, after all, Josie Reilly’s boss. And the girl was less than half her age. But she was also radiating, indisputably, on Shelly’s couch, her own inalienable power:

  She’d stretched out. One leg was extended luxuriously on the couch. Her fingers continued to move through her silky black hair. Her short top had made its way higher, and two lovely inches of white, flat stomach had been exposed. Under her arms was the downiest bit of unshaven hair. One of the straps of her tank top had slipped over her shoulder bone, and now the top of her right breast was exposed. It was painful to look at, and impossible not to stare. Josie rested her coffee cup on her crotch, and looked at Shelly and asked, “Do you have anything to eat? Like, a sandwich or something?”

 

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