COMING OF AGE
AT THE END
OF DAYS
Fiction by Alice LaPlante
Turn of Mind
A Circle of Wives
COMING OF AGE
AT THE END
OF DAYS
Alice LaPlante
Atlantic Monthly Press
New York
Copyright © 2015 by Alice LaPlante
Jacket design Patti Ratchford
Jacket photography David Ryle/Gallery Stock
Author photograph by Asa Mathat
“Godmother,” copyright 1928, renewed © 1956 by Dorothy Parker, from The Portable Dorothy Parker by Dorothy Parker, edited by Marion Meade. Used by permission of Viking Penguin, a division of Penguin Group (USA) LLC.
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Published simultaneously in Canada
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN 978-0-8021-2165-3
eISBN 978-0-8021-9134-2
Atlantic Monthly Press
an imprint of Grove Atlantic
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For Sarah, with all my love
In those days men will seek death and will not find it;
they will desire to die, and death will flee from them.
—Revelation 9:6
I give her sadness,
And the gift of pain,
The new-moon madness,
And a love of rain.
—Dorothy Parker, “Godmother”
Prologue
ANNA DREAMS OF THE RED HEIFER night after night.
In the dream, the Red Heifer is moving carefully, even delicately, through the aisles of the Walgreens on El Camino. Past the diapers, the Benadryl, and the deodorant, gazing at the wares with its large wet eyes. A value shopper.
Nothing much happens in the first part of the dream. People walk by as if a brilliantly hued bovine in a suburban drugstore is the most natural thing in the world. No one questions its presence, much less its right to exist at all. Except Anna. She follows the Red Heifer as it ambles through the automatic doors into the blinding California sun. She knows the Red Heifer is important. And she feels responsible. If she can just keep it in sight. Prevent it from falling into the wrong hands. But she loses the Red Heifer in the parking lot. She searches, increasingly frantic. Where did it go? Not out onto the street—Anna hears no screeching brakes, no blaring horns. Vehicles roar past. The Red Heifer has simply vanished.
Then, only silence. The traffic ceases. Cars freeze, line up motionless in every direction, although the stoplights continue to cycle through greens, yellows, and reds. The cars are empty. No humans inhabit this world any longer. And Anna, knowing that she has failed, is full of woe. She invariably wakes in tears. Because she must accept responsibility. Because she knows, deep down, that she helped bring this on. That she’s one of them. A true believer.
PART I
In the Beginning
1
ANNA LIVES IN SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA, in a housing development built in the sixties. In a subdivision that supplanted a citrus grove in what was then called the Valley of Heart’s Delight. In an uninspired house that was a forerunner of the barracks that would soon obliterate all the fields and orchards and give rise to a new name for the region: Silicon Valley.
Anna’s street has twenty-five houses on it, but just four house models: a rancher, a colonial, a Cape Cod, and a split-level. Over the years people have added decks and landscaping, enlarged the windows and converted garages, but the skeletons of the original structures remain. When a light goes on upstairs in the colonial diagonally across the street, the mirror image of Anna’s own home, Anna knows that Janie Poole, thirteen years old, has taken refuge in the bathroom to avoid the squalling of her newborn twin brothers. If the hall on the bottom floor of the split-level next door is suddenly illuminated in the late evening, Mr. Johnson is helping Mrs. Johnson to the master bedroom after she’s enjoyed one scotch too many. There are no secrets, no mysteries, in this suburban enclave.
The Sunnyvale Post Office knows Anna’s block as the Street of Children’s Names. A year before Anna was born, the city dug up and re-poured the sidewalks. The glistening gray virgin squares proved too tempting to the neighborhood children, who carved their names in the still-wet concrete. Their engravings remain today, are writ large along the block. Each letter covers an entire pavement panel, and over the years the residents have come to call the houses by the children’s names rather than their numerical addresses. Anna lives in S-A-R-A-H with her mother and father. The Goldschmidts live in K-A-R-I-S. Jim Fulson, the only child of that epic effort still living on the block, can be found across the street in C-A-R-O-L-I-N-E. The foul Hendersons next door to him in C-L-A-I-R-E.
Most lights are out by midnight on the Street of Children’s Names. Everyone in bed by 11:30 pm. Except Anna. She ghosts in the early morning. No respite. Up at 3 am, unable to sleep. Too agitated to lie in bed. An uncalm insomnia. Her mother tries everything—chamomile tea, hot milk, even pills. Those Anna flushes down the toilet. She knows there must be a reason for her to be awake at such an hour. She is waiting for answers. Until then, she is resigned to witness the death of each successive night. To acknowledge the arrival of each new day. To prepare for whatever follows.
2
ANNA IS SIXTEEN WHEN THE darkness descends.
She had hints that it was coming. Interludes of deep sadness over the past twelve months. Mourning, almost, triggered by the smallest things. An expression flitting across her father’s face as he gazed at her mother. A glimpse of a small boy waiting alone at a bus stop. But the sadness always dissipated, she would always come to, and find herself again. Until now.
The morning it all changes, the problem starts with the mirror, still plastered with pink Disney princess stickers, smudged from practice kisses. She looks at her reflection and retches. A sudden, violent aversion. What. Is. That. Thing.
Only the previous evening, she’d stood naked in front of her mirror—just so—appreciating her shoulders, her breasts, her waist, admiring her long blonde hair. Her recent makeup purchases were scattered on the bureau: cheap Maybelline, L’Oréal from Walgreens. Because I’m worth it. Those were the articles of faith of her peers, their most fervent beliefs, and Anna had been trying to subscribe to them, trying to blend in. “People like us, we pretend. We fake it, until we’re into our twenties,” her mother told her. “Then we come into our own. Then our weirdnesses become our strengths.” Anna had had one of her flashes of despair at this, but her mother hadn’t noticed, was looking straight ahead while driving, her hands steady on the wheel. Their most intimate talks, of which this was one, occurred while her mother was preoccupied with other things.
Ann
a can’t bear to look at herself now. She covers her mirror and turns all the photos of herself to the walls. Her mother gives up turning them back after the fifth day. Both she and Anna’s father are openly concerned. Whispering stops whenever Anna walks into the room. She begins wearing her Stanford sweatshirt everywhere, the peaked hood drawn tight around her head, over her ears, pulled down to cover her forehead. Anna’s mother tries to make light of it. “Hello, Grumpy,” she says. “Or is it Bashful?” but Anna is as receptive to human interaction as a slab of meat.
Depression, they call it. Such a flat name for such a ferocious and uncompromising beast. Anna prefers the medieval term. Melancholia. Black bile. A foul humor that steals into your joints, paralyzes your muscles, immobilizes your bones. But it also clears your vision, reveals the truth that everything is tainted, and that you are worse than untouchable. An obscenity.
At school, first: What’s wrong, Anna? Then increasingly, sullenly, even from her friends: What’s your problem? A couple of phone calls. A dramatic attempt at intervention. Then, nothing. Three weeks later Anna is where she needs to be: alone.
But Anna’s body is the true enemy. A heaviness of limbs. She can barely lift her head from the pillow in the morning. Melancholia. Transforming her into a machine for manufacturing despair. It is hard to breathe. Why breathe.
Anna cycles through the rote motions of an automaton. Her day shaped by invisible orders by an invisible commandant. Wear this. Eat this. Look this way. Now look down. Shake your head no. Say not a word. Turn. Turn and leave the room.
Then, one morning, at the breakfast table. Staring at the milk carton. Then. There it is. Her path forward. Expiration date. Heat spreads across Anna’s face. Her fingers tingle. Her expiration date. Anna does not yet know the exact day and time. But it is coming. It will come. She will be released from pain.
3
IT IS AROUND THIS TIME that Anna’s mother decides to start a reading regime at bedtime. Anna feebly protests—“I’m sixteen!”—but lacks the energy to prevail. Her mother is adamant. She chooses an old Bible that once belonged to Anna’s grandmother. “This gives us some time together,” she says. “Besides, you’re not truly educated if you don’t know your biblical stories. You won’t understand literary references. Or great works of art or music. Or what religious nutcases are talking about in election years.” Until this point, Anna has learned nothing about God. “Religions are the work of the devil,” her mother is fond of saying, without irony. In the throes of her melancholia, and ultimately grateful for any attention her mother deigns to give her, Anna acquiesces when her mother opens the book and begins to read.
In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth . . .
So Anna learns about the creation of the world, about Adam and Eve, but as metaphors, not truths. The snake stands for temptation. The apple for knowledge that humans should not possess. Anna doesn’t blame Eve for coveting it. She would have coveted it, too.
Anna finds she enjoys thinking that powers exist greater than herself. She recognizes Satan’s determination and ruthless single-mindedness. Both her parents have it, each in their own way. They usually gaze past Anna to focus intently on some other object—her mother, the pianist, on her music; her father, the amateur scientist, on his study of earthquakes. Anna knows she doesn’t come first with either of them. But Satan? The sweet cajoling that convinced Eve to eat the fruit—Anna would like to be subjected to that intense wooing.
Anna’s mother is particularly scornful when explaining original sin, but it makes sense to Anna, this idea that she was born in shadow, and that some redemptive act is required to make her endurable.
Despite her mother’s commentary, Anna is rapt during the nightly readings, riveted by the stories of Daniel, and Joseph, and David.
They have become a welcome ritual, the only occasions Anna gets precious time alone with her mother. Her mother doesn’t even mind being touched now; they sit side by side propped up by pillows on Anna’s double bed, together holding the heavy book so both can see the printed words. Anna’s mother reads them out loud, slowly. When they reach Revelation, Anna sits straight, grips her mother’s arm. She finds the answers she has been unknowingly searching for. She recognizes it when she hears it.
I have the keys to hell and of death.
Anna looks up pictures of hell on the Internet. She finds Bosch’s The Last Judgment. Bosch’s vision of hell delights her, the strange horned and great-snouted creatures wrestling with the humans in the crevices of dark mountains. The nakedness here excites her, rouses her from her lethargy. This is a hell she can believe in. This is a place she can get to whenever she chooses to go. She doesn’t see the strange creatures as metaphors, but as truths, and the chaos in the painting reflects that inside her. Here would be a place she would fit in.
Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched.
Yes, Anna can believe in this.
4
DISMAYED AS MUCH BY ANNA’S fixation on Revelation as by her depression, Anna’s parents and her therapist try to trace Anna’s current state back to its roots. The friendless early days at school. Her tendency to be a loner. For Anna is different. This has always been the case. At six, she was clumsy and earnest. Children are ruthless conformists, and Anna diverged from the norm just enough to affront the sensibilities of the other first graders, who firmly closed ranks against her. They didn’t invite Anna to their homes, to the park, to the ice-cream parlor after school. Anna was aware that things happened between her classmates, that bonds were being forged, but she never had a way in.
Anna’s mother didn’t help. Wouldn’t approach the other mothers, the social arbiters of the elementary school, the keepers of the playdate schedules. When approached herself—a rare occurrence—Anna’s mother pulled back, rejected advances. She couldn’t play tennis in the afternoon, her job as a piano tuner wouldn’t allow it. She didn’t have time for coffee in the morning after drop-off, that was her piano practice time. At pickup, when the other mothers gossiped in clusters at the front of the school, Anna’s mother sat in her car listening to the music of Erik Satie, her eyes closed, her fingers moving as if over a keyboard. Or she talked on the phone to her best friend Martha, to her technician buddies at the music academy where she helped maintain the pianos. Whenever Anna and her mother bumped into little groups of classmates around town, at the park, or at the public swimming pool, Anna knew not to intrude upon those closed circles, she would move herself to a different swing set, or eat her ice cream outside. Anna’s mother was oblivious to all this, didn’t even recognize the other mothers, who long ago stopped attempting to break through her reserve.
Even back then, Anna had trouble sleeping. So at night she often slipped out of her room and down the hall to the living room, hid behind the couch while her parents, unmindful, went about their evening routine.
Anna was soothed by watching her father at his computer, charting and graphing geological seismic activity, her mother at the piano, noting fingerings on a piece of music. Her mother at that time was engrossed in Satie’s Gymnopédies, the unhurried and dissonant melodies so heavy and grave that Anna’s heart slowed its beating to match their measured calm. She lay behind the couch growing languid and somnolent, and eventually would crawl back to bed and sleep.
A year passed, then two. But Anna still had trouble fitting in, was still the same loner she’d been in first grade. Just be patient, the pediatrician told her parents. This is just a phase. Anna’s mother would push her out the door when the other neighborhood children were playing tag in the street. But even here she felt awkward, unwelcome. Her parents would see her futilely chasing a crowd of mocking boys and girls around home base, a weak and spindly tree. She’d come into the house in tears. Her father told her that anger was greater than sadness. He told Anna to stand up for herself. But Anna, at eight, knew she was being patronized, knew how ineffectual her father was.
> One day an older boy from across the street called to Anna as she hovered awkwardly around the periphery of yet another game of tag.
“Hey there,” he said. “You. Yes, you.” Anna pointed to herself uncertainly. “Come over here.” He was standing in front of C-A-R-O-L-I-N-E. “It’s Annie, right?”
Anna stopped to listen but kept her eye on the girl who was It, ready to run should she become prey.
“I want to show you something,” the boy said. He was fourteen, maybe fifteen, almost man-sized, belonging to that most mysterious of places, high school. He opened his right hand and showed Anna a fistful of small rocks that he’d gathered from the border of the flowerbeds of C-A-R-O-L-I-N-E, where he lived. He settled himself cross-legged about five feet from a tree, and motioned for Anna to sit next to him. He piled the rocks in a small pyramid between them.
“Do what I do,” and the boy picked up a rock and threw it at the tree. It bounced harmlessly off the trunk. “Just get mad. Throw some stones. Get it out of your system. Then you can show those other kids what’s what.” Anna looked at the tree, then at the boy. Her face revealed nothing, she’d already learned from her mother how to hide her thoughts. Anna picked up a rock and threw. She missed.
“No, you have to hit it,” said the boy, and he did so again. Anna tried and this time the rock made a satisfying thud when it struck wood.
The boy pointed to the branches that were swaying back and forth in the wind, causing the trees to bend and nearly touch each other. “See, they all talk to each other. Right now, they’re whispering up and down the street that no one better mess with you, or else.”
Coming of Age at the End of Days Page 1