Maggie Terry

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by Sarah Schulman




  “Schulman’s startling brilliance and wry humor is everything.”

  —JACQUELINE WOODSON, author of Another Brooklyn

  “Maggie Terry is the most beautiful, most bitter, most sweet, and all around best detective novel I’ve read in years. Precise, insightful, heartbreaking, and page turning—read this book, now.”

  —SARA GRAN, author of Claire DeWitt and the Bohemian Highway

  “Maggie Terry is day-after noir: the party is over, the neon burned out, and there’s nothing to drink but cold-pressed kale juice. Clear-eyed and beautifully written, this novel is classic Schulman. She flenses and dissects the human condition, weighs every organ—how we connect, what forms the beating heart of a community—then magically breathes life back into the husk and helps it rise, reborn. Maggie Terry is a light shining in the waste, offering hope: where there are people, there is the possibility of connection, and together we can make it.”

  —NICOLA GRIFFITH, author of So Lucky

  “Maggie Terry is inventive, boundary pushing, and absolutely electric. It centers women and queerness in the most exciting way, within a story you’ll never want to stop reading. Sarah is a brilliant writer who navigates fiction with all the same nuance, depth, and authenticity we’ve come to expect from her groundbreaking nonfiction work. Get lost in this deeply engrossing novel.”

  —JILL SOLOWAY, creator of Transparent

  “Entirely original and mixing many genres, this book is about imagining a way forward when there seems to be no way at all.”

  —KAITLYN GREENIDGE, author of We Love You, Charlie Freeman

  “A reverberating story of our times. Sarah Schulman is at the top of her very considerable powers in this deeply humane novel. It is profoundly, just stunningly good.”

  —KATHERINE V. FORREST, author of High Desert

  “A psychological portrait of a woman trying to make her way back from the edge, and an inspiring one at that.”

  —DANNY CAINE, The Raven Book Store

  ALSO BY SARAH SCHULMAN

  NOVELS

  The Cosmopolitans

  The Mere Future

  The Child

  Shimmer

  Rat Bohemia

  Empathy

  People in Trouble

  After Delores

  Girls, Visions and Everything

  The Sophie Horowitz Story

  NONFICTION

  Conflict Is Not Abuse: Overstating Harm, Community Responsibility, and the Duty of Repair

  Israel/Palestine and the Queer International

  The Gentrification of the Mind: Witness to a Lost Imagination

  Ties That Bind: Familial Homophobia and Its Consequences

  Stagestruck: Theater, AIDS, and the Marketing of Gay America

  My American History: Lesbian and Gay Life During the Reagan/Bush Years

  PLAYS

  Mercy

  Enemies, A Love Story (adapted from IB Singer)

  Carson McCullers

  Manic Flight Reaction

  Published in 2018 by the Feminist Press

  at the City University of New York

  The Graduate Center

  365 Fifth Avenue, Suite 5406

  New York, NY 10016

  feministpress.org

  First Feminist Press edition 2018

  Copyright © 2018 by Sarah Schulman

  This book was made possible thanks to a grant from New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, used, or stored in any information retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission from the Feminist Press at the City University of New York, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  First printing September 2018

  Cover and text design by Drew Stevens

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Schulman, Sarah, 1958- author.

  Title: Maggie Terry / Sarah Schulman.

  Description: New York, NY: Feminist Press, [2018]

  Identifiers: LCCN 2018011665 | ISBN 9781936932405 (ebook)

  Subjects: LCSH: Political fiction. | GSAFD: Mystery fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3569.C5393 M34 2018 | DDC 813/.54--dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018011665

  In memory of Thelma Wood

  CONTENTS

  ADVANCED PRAISE PAGE

  ALSO BY SARAH SCHULMAN

  TITLE PAGE

  COPYRIGHT

  DEDICATION

  DAY ONE: WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 2017

  CHAPTER ONE: 8:00 AM

  CHAPTER TWO: 9:00 AM

  CHAPTER THREE: NOON

  CHAPTER FOUR: 1:30 PM

  CHAPTER FIVE: 2:00 PM

  CHAPTER SIX: 2:30 PM

  CHAPTER SEVEN: 6:30 PM

  CHAPTER EIGHT: 8:30 PM

  CHAPTER NINE: 10:00 PM

  CHAPTER TEN: 10:15 PM

  CHAPTER ELEVEN: 11:00 PM

  CHAPTER TWELVE: 11:55 PM

  DAY TWO: THURSDAY, JULY 6, 2017

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN: 7:00 AM

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN: 9:10 AM

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN: 10:00 AM

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN: 11:30 AM

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: 8:00 PM

  DAY THREE: FRIDAY, JULY 7, 2017

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: 7:00 AM

  CHAPTER NINETEEN: 1:00 PM

  CHAPTER TWENTY: 2:30 PM

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: 6:30 PM

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO: 11:30 PM

  DAY FOUR: SATURDAY, JULY 8, 2017

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE: 8:00 AM

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR: 10:00 AM

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE: 6:00 PM

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX: 7:00 PM

  DAY FIVE: SUNDAY, JULY 9, 2017

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN: 5:00 PM

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT: 8:00 PM

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  ALSO BY FEMINIST PRESS

  ABOUT FEMINIST PRESS

  DAY ONE

  WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 2017

  CHAPTER ONE

  8:00 AM

  Everyone was in a state of confusion because the president was insane. No one knew if a strategy drove the chaos, or if he was simply mad. The wide range of elected officials in charge of protecting the people was inadequate to the task. The system had created their status and yet that system no longer existed. But they were too complicit to go rogue. Seven months into the madness he gave his July 4 speech on a sweltering July 1, just to create more anxiety. Reading off of the teleprompter, he proclaimed that his nation would now say “Merry Christmas” instead of “Happy Holidays.” He decreed that “Americans don’t worship the government, we worship God.” And he threatened war in the few spots on earth where one was not yet raging while trying to close down Amtrak. Muslim humans from six countries were banned for no reason that correlated to anything in reality. He proposed repealing universal health care without substituting something in its place. If he had ever paid taxes, he didn’t want to pay any more. While rarely coherent, this man often repeated that he was “winning” and reminded his audience that he had already “won” and would continue to “win.”

  Social deterioration unfolded at breakneck speed. Only thirteen ambassadors had been appointed to take care of our relationships with the entire world; most of the governmental offices were empty. Public land was being divided and sold to the highest bidder. The poor, shaken planet earth was, herself, in revolt. Fires ravaged the world. So many people had been driven from their homes that the word home had been redefined as a memory, a myth of permanence.

>   Meanwhile, back in New York City, the subways either derailed with regularity or did not run at all. Landlines that had functioned during 9/11 and Hurricane Sandy were finally down because the cables had been chewed through by rats. A doctor walked into a hospital in the Bronx with an automatic weapon, murdered another doctor, and wounded six patients. Fireworks seemed redundant as everyone’s bike was stolen.

  As for Maggie Terry? To say she was frightened would be untrue, because the degradation of her specifically personal cliché betrayed a banality that was incompatible with either national calamity or simple fear. It was not fear per se, but the first experience of real trepidatious, hesitant terror coming embarrassingly late at the age of forty-two. Her timing could not have been worse, as her private disintegration mirrored that of her society. And this made her seem even more pathetic and small.

  The reason it had previously taken four decades of blithe self-confidence until Maggie suddenly shattered was, of course, intoxication, and there is nothing more mundane. Addiction, like the sunrise, is known, predictable, useless, dependable, and a fact.

  And yet, there are still revelations.

  That first morning, Maggie’s new place was not yet painted. There were no blinds on the windows. Boxes sat in a corner; there was no furniture. The refrigerator’s medicinal hum was the room’s only sign of function. Could she learn from her refrigerator and achieve its goal of preservation? The summer was hot as hell when hell lives in a studio apartment. Maggie sweated out her first night on top of a sleeping bag, handed over silently and without expression by Rachel G., her sponsor. Rachel had also taped newspapers onto the windows to provide some discretion while still not officially enabling by going out and buying the shades that both of them knew Maggie should purchase for herself. But what self? The windows were wide open, begging for breezes anyway, so to hell with decorum. There was no shower curtain.

  Maggie took a chaotic shower, stepped out into the puddles, dried herself with dirty laundry, and put on the clean clothes Rachel had laid out in preparation for this important day. Hair still wet, she walked outside onto the same block where she had lived for fifteen years in an entirely different reality, in a different apartment with another person and, eventually, their child. When it finally became time for her discharge from institutional control, she had been unable to decide anything including where she wanted to live now, and could not imagine how to know. And when this insanely overpriced, unimpressive box was suddenly available through a friend of Rachel’s, on that very same street, it became the easiest thing to do. The friend was nice, put the phone and lease in Maggie’s name. Everyone owed Rachel a favor for someone else. Return. No decisions. Same subway stop, same corner crosswalk, and the very same deli to stumble to in the mornings. Only, the stumble of sobriety is like an empty farm in August, too many flies, the quiet heat, and the pressure of nature holding its breath. It is old for the world, and yet for Maggie it was new.

  “Welcome back.” This was Nick Stammas, owner of Nick’s Deli. A forgotten piece of furniture in Maggie’s life. “I haven’t seen you in so long.”

  Does he know?

  “Yeah. Hi, Nick. What’s new?”

  “We got a new deli guy. This is Joe. He just came here from Albania.”

  A skinny, disoriented young man with a crooked smile, and a five o’clock shadow at eight o’clock in the morning, smiled and waved and looked confused.

  “He don’t speak English yet. Look.” He pointed with his chin across the street to something she could barely discern. “You know what they got? Something called cold-pressed juice. Ten dollars. They have scones, made with cheese. Four dollars. Iced soy lattes. A pastry, coffee, and juice and you have to hand over a twenty. If you need soy, why do you buy cheese? I’m telling you . . .”

  “Crazy.”

  “And I’m telling you.” He leaned in from the chest. “It’s a chain. Forget it! How ya doin’?” The kernel of real concern gave it all away.

  Everyone knows.

  “Good.”

  “That’s great news.” He smiled. He was warm and beefy and hairy and overworked. Talking to customers enriched his life, a window into the soul of a microcosm of the world.

  “Thanks, Nick. How are you?”

  “Can’t complain, the kids, you know. How long has it been?”

  How long has it been?

  “Since before the election.”

  “Oh my God, Maggie. Forget about it. Don’t even talk about it. What can you say? Don’t make yourself crazy.”

  For the foreseeable future, Nick would be the first person she would speak to every morning. He would be her family, her man. She wanted to respond warmly to his recognition. The truth is that Maggie wanted to love Nick Stammas, and standing at the corner between the overpriced mints, tasteless bananas, and packages of dried-out, sugary Danish, she tried to open her heart, to feel good about him. To decide to be happy, no matter what. But once again the comfort she yearned for just was not there. Instead of an old friend, she found a kind of looming clown. He was, after all, a bored person playing a role, trapped in service to people like her. That neighborhood guy. She, too, had a role. What was it again? To buy things from him, give him something to tell his wife, TV in the background. “That lady was back in this morning, the fuckup. Her skin is sour.” Was that the meaning of Maggie Terry’s life?

  “Eighteen months.”

  “You look skinny,” he said. “Go to the gym.”

  Do I go to the gym? She had no idea of who she was.

  “Okay.”

  “Did you see the paper today?”

  She panicked. “Did someone bomb something?” What about Alina? Is she safe?

  “I tell you, Maggie, I am just as afraid of the president bombing someone who’ll bomb us back as I am of some crazy kid. No, no, don’t pay attention to that bullshit. Too stressful. Forget politics. I’m talking about the poor girl who got choked.” He held up a tabloid, read out the headline, “Actress Strangled.” Clucking for the record, Nick folded the paper expertly and set that morning’s New York Post down on the counter. It was for her. “The usual?”

  “What’s my usual?”

  “Two large black coffees, a packet of Tylenol, and the paper. I have an espresso machine now. You want an espresso?”

  Nauseated by living, that menu seemed impossible. Coffee for the shakes; painkiller for someone trying not to feel pain.

  “No thanks. I’ll take . . . something . . . healthy. Do you have . . .” she grasped, “smoothies?”

  Where did that come from?

  “Nope,” he shook his head sadly.

  “Nick, help. What do you have that is good for me?”

  He smiled. He didn’t shave regularly, this guy. “I’ll give you a mint tea and an apple. How’s that?”

  “Sure.”

  “It’s good for your heart. And Maggie, do some aerobics, Pilates, something!”

  Behind the counter were rows of cigarettes, $17 a pack. They no longer looked necessary. Maybe she was getting better. Why would anyone buy those dangerous things? Who are the people who still could? The immune! That’s who. Now that she had crossed over into the category of the wounded, there was no going back.

  Another “reason” that Maggie returned to the same old street where she had lived stoned and blasted out of her mind for fifteen out of the thirty years that she’d been using was that Mike Fitzgerald’s law firm was only a five-block walk from her new apartment. Maybe it was princessy, but she didn’t think she could handle the subway at rush hour, and she certainly couldn’t pay for a cab. Handle. Of course, she could handle the subway. What kind of bullshit crap excuse was that? She could walk down those scum-and-gum-encrusted stairs, stand anxiously in the heat and ice. She could hang on to slimy poles, smash into clueless tourists forever, or sit face front into some man’s crotch. But it would make things harder. The sweating, the standing, the fear of offending the wrong person, clutching her purse, checking out the undercovers, trying n
ot to look paranoid, watching the vermin square-dancing across the platform, men handling their own genitals like they were tough tomatoes in fragile skins.

  Frances had long fled the neighborhood so there was no chance of Maggie being mistaken for a stalker. That word used to mean men who chased movie stars with guns or stabbed their ex-girlfriends and ex-wives. Now it could be used to mean a trembling shadow hovering over her own girlfriend, her ex-girlfriend, and their own . . . own . . . child. They were gone, and Maggie had returned here to the abandoned desert reeking of their absence. There was revulsion as she tried to push back that image of herself, drinking in a bar, doing lines with idiots, while Alina was being born. Knowing that she had to get her ass to the hospital, that Frances was expecting her to . . . be there. Now she could see that she was just a frightened little child herself, afraid of facing facts—that Frances was going to have someone to love more than she had ever loved Maggie. And that this was a repetition. A pattern. Always being the person who wasn’t loved as much, enough, or at all. That kid was going to take all of that away from her, being precious to another person, to Frances. So, fuck that. She did another line. She knows now that was . . . wrong, no other word for it: wrong. And she apologized even back then. She said she was sorry and she meant it, but it was such a bad move. No one wanted to hear the reason why.

  But here she was now, sober, and it had been years ago, really. Some things get better over time and some things have to be made better. Some improvement is a group endeavor . . . or forgiveness and understanding and listening. And thank God for Mike Fitzgerald; God bless him. And there was no God. And she would not say “Higher Power bless him” because there was a level of profanity in that robotic recitation of imposed vocabulary. But thanks to Mike, and his mercy, she was coming out of rehab to a job that wasn’t demeaning and provided the chance to prove herself so that she could get Alina back, the only reason to prove anything. At least shared custody. That shouldn’t be in the realm of the impossible if she did what she was told. At least visitation.

  “Let me help you out,” Mike said on Family Day. The social worker thought Mike was her dad but he wasn’t old enough. It was the kindness, the soft soulful eyes that everyone wanted their father to have. Mike’s surprise job offer two weeks later provided opportunity where there might have been only a wave goodbye. He’s a blessing, that guy. Professor Mike. He’d given her an A back, back, back in grad school, and that had made her entire career possible. Everyone had been telling her to go to law school, but somehow—she was only realizing this now, in fact Maggie was only realizing everything now—she couldn’t picture herself being a lawyer and doing the kind of drugs she wanted to do. It was unconscious, like everything else, but fucking present. Her father drank constantly and he was a rich man. She could have done the same, but then she would be surrounded by the type of people she grew up with: rich drunks. What would be wrong with that? Maggie crossed Eighth Avenue and looked in the window of an abandoned storefront. What was going in there? A cookie place? Who buys all those cookies and macaroons and macarons and gelatos and macro, ultrasweet coffees with pumps of flavored sugar and whipped cream? Stoned people.

 

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