Etiquette for the End of the World
A Novel
by Jeanne Martinet
© 2012 by Jeanne Martinet
Published by arrangement with the author
All rights reserved. This book may not be duplicated in any way without the express written consent of the author, except in the form of brief excerpts or quotations for the purposes of review. The information contained herein is for the personal use of the reader and may not be incorporated in any commercial programs or other books, databases, or any other kind of software without the written consent of the publisher or author. Making copies of this book, or any portion of it, for any purpose other than your own, is a violation of United States copyright laws.
For Joyce
Chapter One
The final bomb went off, and her life went up in smoke.
“Tess, I’m afraid we need to talk,” Josh was saying, with a sad shake of his dark, silky head. Dear god, those horrible words, we need to talk. Didn’t people understand this was a cliché? Couldn’t they ever think of something else? Like, for instance: “Tess, what I am about to tell you has more to do with the caprices of the Universe than it does with anything you have caused,” or “Tess, sit down and brace yourself for impact.” But no, it was always just: “We need to talk.” That dialogical death knell. Tess loved talking in general—long phone calls, long coffee dates, intimate bonding over dinners. She practically had a black belt in talking. But why was everyone using this particular sentence on her all of a sudden? We need to talk. Do we? Do we really?
First it had been her friend Rebecca, back in March. “Tess”—she had smiled warmly, apologetically, when she’d said it—“we need to talk. I have an awkward situation to tell you about.” And it was about how she was not inviting Tess to her country house in Millbrook for their traditional “Scrabble and scrapple” four-day mid-summer weekend, the way she had for the last eight years, because of it being a married-couple-with-kids-only thing this year. (So Tess would miss out on Clyde’s famous spit-roasted pig and the luxurious late night swims in the pool, two of her favorite things in the world). And then it was her brother who “needed to talk,” about how, on the advice of his lawyer, he was in fact not going to rectify the injustice of their father’s will, which had left him the beach house, and almost everything else. And then there was her boyfriend. Well, okay, her ex-boyfriend now. Matt, who for the last two years had categorically refused to talk with her about the future of their relationship, suddenly “needed to talk,” to let her know that he had cheated on her with their upstairs neighbor—a twenty-three-year-old feng shui practitioner—which he felt it was only fair to tell Tess (because after all he was such an honorable guy). The worst thing was, it wasn’t a talk at all, it was a fucking email:
Subject: —
From: [email protected]
05/13/11 11:14 AM
To: [email protected]
Tess, we need to talk. Last night when you were teasing me about Sarah I said you were crazy (and btw sorry about that peri-menopausal crack, that was probably uncalled for) but the truth is, we did in fact sleep together. I know I should not say this in an email but I thought once I could get the hard part out in the open, it would be easier for us to discuss it. I still care alot about you but I know this is going to change things for us. C u tonight, I’ll cook.
Now, sitting in her editor’s office, Tess felt as if she were caught in a nightmarish loop in the time/space continuum. Another “talk” forced upon her.
“It’s this last letter … you’ve gone way too far, Tess. It’s not in line with the paper’s spirit. And it’s not the first time either.” Josh picked up Sunday’s edition from where it was lying on top of a pile of mail and read aloud, “‘The best way to a man’s heart is through his rib cage, preferably with a hacksaw.’” He peered over his green-and-purple-rhinestone-studded glasses at her, his eyebrows raised for emphasis. “Darling, I know what you mean about men—no one knows more than I—but people do not want to read this kind of thing, and we have had a lot of negative posts on this. Jonathan is, I’m afraid, putting down his large and powerful foot.” (Jonathan was the publisher, who was not crazy about women writers in the best of times.)
Tess could feel panic rising. She tried to steady herself by focusing on something in the room besides Josh’s face—the brown felt back of a photo frame he had propped up on the edge of the desk. Whose picture was on the other side? Tess could not remember. She felt like grabbing it and hugging it to her chest, no matter who it was.
Her life was blowing away, piece by piece, like a Tibetan sand painting. Her father’s sudden heart attack and death had put her in a funk for most of the past year, affecting her ability to score freelance writing assignments. On top of that, a few months ago her agent had called her, and after stalling in a horribly frustrating way with chitchat about the weather and baseball, told her he was sorry but he had exhausted every venue and was going to stop sending out her book proposal (for a self-help guide, unofficially based on her “Tess Knows Best” column and tentatively titled Tess Eliot’s Quick Fixes for Life, Love, and Your Mother-in-Law). Having depleted her savings, for the last six months Tess had been running up credit card debt and had been barely been scraping by with the money from her column. And now this. This simply could not be happening. She opened her mouth, not sure what would come out. “But … arrhm … maybe I could run a ... a ... retraction?”
“A retraction? What are you going to say, sweetie? ‘Oops, sorry, I didn’t mean a hacksaw, I meant a scalpel’? Anyway it’s not just this piece. You’ve been on a negative tear for a while now.” Josh’s desktop PC chimed with incoming mail. He glanced over at the screen, then at his watch. His wrists were as thin as a nine-year-old’s. “I’m sorry but I have got to go, Tessie. You should go down to HR. Sorry. Believe me, this is not my decision. I think you are brilliant and funny and fabulous.” He smiled stiffly and rose to give her a hug and at the same time reached for the phone, which was buzzing. The hug turned into an awkward one-shoulder grab. “I am really going to miss you, girl.”
So that was that. She was fired from her column, which she had been writing for four years. No more fan mail, no more speaking engagements, no more invitations to exclusive cocktail parties, and, most important, no more paycheck. She was unemployed, broke, single, childless—and even what felt like friendless—at age thirty-nine. Somehow her feet carried her down the long hallway lined with framed front pages, past the busy newsroom, past the production department, and finally to the bank of elevators and out of the building.
On the subway home, standing mashed between several large sweaty men, one of whom reeked of beer, Tess thought, Why is it so crowded already at four p.m.? This city is inhuman. She was fearful that any second the lump in her throat would navigate its way upward and transform itself into tears. The last thing she wanted to do was to start crying on the damn train, in front of all these strangers. She closed her eyes and, turning her head away from the beery man, drew a slow breath deep into her diaphragm, the way she had learned to do in a yoga class last year. She reminded herself that she was invisible in this crowd. Everyone in this car was thinking only about themselves—their own stressful days, their own problems.
She took another breath and tried to get her mind on something else besides her crumbling life. Glancing at the back of a newspaper someone was reading (naturally, she thought, it would have to be her newspaper; it couldn’t be the Times or The Wall Street Journal), she saw Billy Witz had written another NRA editorial. Suddenly a suicide poem by Dorothy Parker echoed in her head: “Guns aren’t lawful, nooses give, gas smells awful, you might as well li
ve.” She pictured the illustrious author sitting on the seat just to the left of her, between the expressionless Chinese woman and the sulky pale white teenager glued to his iPhone. Tess would look down at Mrs. Parker and say, “Listen: I don’t have the right kind of pills, my window’s too close to the ground, I can’t stand the sight of blood, I’m too afraid of pain, I have no choice but to keep going, and let me tell you it sucks big-time.” Mrs. Parker would smile back at her from under her hat and tell her that that didn’t rhyme.
After Tess had squeezed and pushed her way out of the subway she headed straight for the Scrub-a-Dub-Pub, so named because it had once been a Laundromat. They had kept one original wall lined with the machines, for ambience. (Plus they used them for storing wine.) One of the best things about it was that it was only a block and a half from her West 89 Street apartment. A delicious wave of air-conditioning engulfed her as she entered, a welcome relief from the 98-degree August heat. Thank god Richie was there, instead of the meat-headed Patrick. As soon as she sat down, he came over and placed a chilled martini glass in front of her. Another great thing about the Scrub-a-Dub-Pub was that, since they made their money on trendy theme cocktails like the Gin-Spin Cycle, and the Tide Me Over, the regular drinks were not outrageously priced. Tess crossed her arms on the bar and rested her head down on top of them. She closed her eyes.
“Tess. Jesus. What happened to you? Usually no one looks like this until three in the morning,” Richie said, digging into the ice bin with the scoop. “Your ex-boyfriend still torturing you?”
“No, it’s not that. Anyhow I’m too old for ex-boyfriends. Shouldn’t I be on to ex-husbands by now? No, it’s … I lost my column, Rich. My last steady gig. I can not fucking believe it.” She opened her eyes and watched him fill her glass from the metal shaker. “On the other hand I can’t say I really blame them. If I were my boss I’d probably fire me too.” At this, the beginning of a smile appeared at the corners of Richie’s mouth, spurring her on. “In fact, if I were in a serious relationship with myself, I’d break up with me. Or if I were my own landlord, I’d evict me.”
Grinning, Richie pointed an index finger at her like a gun. “And if you were a terrorist you would blow yourself up?” he added.
“Exactly!” Tess found herself smiling. Richie somehow always made her feel better. “For that matter, if I were my own bank, I would close my account. Hey”—she lifted up her head hopefully—“can I possibly run a tab? Like, until next month?”
Richie laughed, though silently. It was really more of a tilting his head back with his mouth open than an actual laugh. He had bushy, dark-blond hair and a rampant red and blond beard. He was positively furry. Tess thought he looked like an ancient king who had been magically transformed into a dog, a dog who was now pretending to be a man. (Obviously a metaphor like this had required many hours at the bar.) He had kind eyes. Tess would have had a major thing for him if not for the fact that he was gay. The unfortunate fact of his gayness had been made crystal clear to her by Patrick, months ago when he caught her gazing wistfully at Richie one day. Patrick had leered and leaned his red face close to hers and made sure Tess knew he was certainly available, but that “the Rich-meister plays for the other team.” Wasn’t that always the way in this town? The jerks were straight, and the wonderful ones were gay.
“A tab?” Richie said, “What do you think this is, Cheers? Tell you what. The second one’s on me.”
She looked at him gratefully, making a mental note to 1) stop after two and 2) make sure she ate a substantial dinner. Because tomorrow she was going to have to swallow her pride and go see Harriet to beg for work. And groveling with a hangover was no fun.
***
Struggling to stay upright on the saggy leather sofa in Harriet Schulberg’s cramped office, Tess watched the eighty-three-year-old woman leaning forward in her wheelchair to leaf through the pile of query letters and manuscripts on the desk. The high-ceilinged, bookshelf-lined room had 1920s picture-rail moldings and elegant narrow casement windows framed by crusted, overly painted white trim. Books were crammed and piled in every available space, in and on top of the shelves. This was not a room for computers and printers; this was a room that had worshipped the old-fashioned written word for a very long time. Whenever she was in this room Tess felt as if she were still twenty-two—still an employee awaiting instructions from her employer—even though they were actually in Harriet’s Upper East Side apartment, where Tess had been coming socially for many years. By now Harriet had become part mother, part therapist, and part friend, but she would always remain—largely—part boss.
Harriet picked up a letter with one hand and inserted her L-shaped nebulizer into her mouth with the other. She inhaled deeply, while perusing the letter with sharp eyes. Her auburn page-boy wig was slightly askew, but her eyebrows had been applied perfectly, in exactly the same hairless arch Tess had seen them when she had first met her seventeen years ago.
“This asshole sounds like some right-wing cocksucker,” Harriet gasped, trying to talk while holding the nebulizer’s vapor in her lungs. She crumpled the piece of paper violently and tossed it into the trash can.
After working for her at three separate publishing houses—first as her assistant, then as an editor under her supervision—Tess was used to Harriet’s way of expressing herself. The woman had worked with publishing giants like E. L. Doctorow, Robert Gottlieb, and Jason Epstein; many of her authors had won prestigious awards. Although retired, Harriet Schulberg was listed in the major publishing-industry reference books and web sites, and as a result had frequent requests for editing, ghosting, and consulting. And even with severe asthma, neuropathy, and a bad heart, she could still take a book with no voice and make it sing. But she had always cursed like a gangster rapper.
Right now Tess was more concerned with what potential editorial work Harriet was summarily throwing away. Tess could not afford to be picky about projects. She needed income. “But wait, Harriet. What was that … ,” she started, gesturing at the trash can with her chin, but Harriet had finished her medication and was going to hold forth.
“You shouldn’t have been working for that shitty newspaper anyway, Tess. The place is riddled with fascists.” (With Harriet, everything was always “riddled”: a person was “riddled with cancer,” a manuscript was “riddled with stereotypes,” the drugstore on the corner was “riddled with morons.”) “It’s always been that way over there … . Remember that writer Teresa represented, the one with the overlarge head and the house in East Hampton? Her fag husband was an editor at the Times for about five years, and the whole time he was fucking the mail room guy, and even so he got promoted, while Fanny—you remember, my roommate from Barnard?—was Ed Bromley’s secretary for years and years, and never got a promotion….you met her at Cindy’s wedding? Cindy is selling real estate now, but she won’t call me back and I think that … .”
Harriet went on, one parenthetical thought leading into another, her fierce face framed by the big red Ken Kesey poster behind her on the wall—the same poster that Harriet had hung in almost every office she had ever occupied. On her desk was the baseball signed by Tom Seaver, and over the desk the familiar hodgepodge of dog-eared black–and-white photos, affixed to the wall with pushpins; on a small shelf above those were various pieces of broken turquoise and silver jewelry from Harriet’s frequent trips to Mexico. Occupying the rest of the available wall space in the room were gloomy abstract paintings done by a grateful writer who could not pay in money.
Tess needed money, and fast, but she could not seem to get Harriet to understand that. Harriet was rejecting things in this pile on the basis of what Harriet herself would want to work on, not on Tess’s need for a job.
“Harriet”—Tess jumped in when Harriet paused for a breath—“the thing is, I really need a paying project. Preferably something where I can get cash up front.”
The old woman gave Tess a dark look, the kind that used to make Tess shake in her shoes. “When I offer
ed you Phyllis Tallamorte two months ago, you didn’t want that, remember? She was offering real money.”
Tess rolled her eyes and gave a pleading little groan. “But that was different, Harriet, that was a long-term, nightmare project. You know that I would have had to fly back and forth to Florida to work with her, and follow her around with a pen and paper, jotting down random notes for weeks, probably taking care of her poodles, and god knows what else … .”
Harriet rummaged around in the large wicker basket where she kept all her pills. “Phyllis Tallamorte’s husband was one of the greatest photographers of the century. He was the first to take nude pictures of pregnant women, in the fifties—remember that photograph I had when we were at Doubleday? the one the CEO wanted me to take off the wall?—the conservatives killed Tallamorte’s career for that. He was put in jail. That biography is going to be an important book.” (Tess had her doubts about just how important the book would be, but she did not voice them.) “It will be reviewed in every major art criticism venue,” Harriet continued. “Of course it wouldn’t be easy. Why should it be easy? ... You want something easier, Tess, there’s always Walter.” She pointed over at a thick manuscript, bound by many red rubber bands, at the top of a stack over to her left. “I’m telling you, Tess, Walter would be worth it in the end.”
Walter Swinton. Tess winced inwardly. Naturally Harriet wanted Tess to take on her own pet author, who was writing another novel that would probably not get published. This one was about immigrants from Ireland during the Prohibition era in Manhattan, and it would be historically well-researched but very old-fashioned and with no narrative zing to it. And although the author would no doubt take Tess for elegant Prohibition-inspired drinks in the lobbies of wonderful old hotels, he would want Tess (and Harriet would expect it too) to edit for nothing—except a piece of future royalties, which would more than likely be nonexistent. In any case, even if Tess wanted to sign on to this impractical job, Walter Swinton was always loath to accept a substitute for his beloved Harriet, who had edited most of his books. He had made that clear plenty of times. But to Harriet, Tess was an extension of her. Even after Tess had gone off in her own direction—making the switch from book publishing to corporate writing eight years before—Harriet was forever trying to remake Tess in her own image.
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