By the time the police arrived, the plumber had rolled his truck in an attempt to avoid a station wagon at the intersection of Cold Hill and North Lane. He had broken his collarbone and was sitting upright in the cab, though the truck lay on its side; he wasn't able to climb out the door above his head, or he hadn't tried. O. Fecteau appeared calm; he was listening to his radio.
Since that time, I have tried to provoke the offending drivers less; if I sense them taking offense at my stopping them and presuming to criticize their vile habits, I simply tell them I am informing the police and quickly leave.
That O. Fecteau turned out to have a long history of violent over-reactions to social situations did not allow me to forgive myself. “Look, it's all the better you got that plumber off the road,” my wife told me—and she usually criticizes my meddlesomeness in the behavior of others. But I could only think that I had driven a workingman off his rocker, and that during his outburst, if O. Fecteau had killed a child, whose fault would it have been? Partly mine, I think.
In modern times, in my opinion, either everything is a moral question or there are no more moral questions. Nowadays, there are no compromises or there are only compromises. Never influenced, I keep my vigil. There is no letting up.
Don't say anything, Helen told herself. Go kiss him and rub against him; get him upstairs as fast as you can, and talk about the damn story later. Much later, she warned herself. But she knew he wouldn't let her.
The dishes were done and he sat across the table from her.
She tried her nicest smile and told him, “I want to go to bed with you.”
“You don't like it?” he asked.
“Let's talk in bed,” she said.
“Goddamn it, Helen,” he said. “It's the first thing I've finished in a long time. I want to know what you think of it.”
She bit her lip and took her glasses off; she had not made a single mark with her red pencil. “I love you,” she said.
“Yes, yes,” he said, impatiently. “I love you, too, but we can fuck anytime. What about the story?” And she finally relaxed; she felt he had released her, somehow. I tried, she thought; she felt hugely relieved.
“Fuck the story,” she said. “No, I don't like it. And I don't want to talk about it, either. You don't care to regard what I want, obviously. You're like a little boy at the dinner table—you serve yourself first.”
“You don't like it?” Garp said.
“Oh, it's not bad,” she said, “it's just not much of anything. It's a trifle, it's a little ditty. If you're warming up to something, I'd like to see what it is—when you get to it. But this is nothing, you must know that. It's a toss-off, isn't it? You can do tricks like this with your left hand, can't you?”
“It's funny, isn't it?” Garp asked.
“Oh, it's funny,” she said, “but it's funny like jokes are funny. It's all one-liners. I mean, what is it? A self-parody? You're not old enough, and you haven't written enough, to start mocking yourself. It's self-serving, it's self-justifying; and it's not about anything except yourself, really. It's cute.”
“Son of a bitch,” said Garp. “Cute?"
“You're always talking about people who write well but don't have anything to say,” Helen said. “Well, what do you call this? It's no “Grillparzer,” certainly; it isn't worth a fifth of what “Grillparzer” is worth. It isn't worth a tenth of that story,” Helen said.
“"The Pension Grillparzer” is the first big thing I wrote,” Garp said. “This is completely different; it's another kind of fiction altogether.”
“Yes, one is about something and one is about nothing,” Helen said. “One is about people and one is about only you. One has mystery and precision, and one has only wit.” When Helen's critical faculties were engaged, they were difficult to disengage.
“It's not fair to compare them,” Garp said. “I know this is smaller.”
“Then let's not talk anymore about it,” Helen said.
Garp sulked for a minute.
“You didn't like the Second Wind of the Cuckold, either,” he said, “and I don't suppose you'll like the next one any better.”
“What next one?” Helen asked him. “Are you writing another novel?”
He sulked some more. She hated him, making her do this to him, but she wanted him and she knew she loved him, too.
“Please,” she said. “Let's go to bed.”
But now he saw his chance for a little cruelty—and/or a little truth—and his eyes shone at her brightly.
“Let's not say another word,” she begged him. “Let's go to bed.”
“You think “The Pension Grillparzer” is the best thing I've written, don't you?” he asked her. He knew already what she thought of the second novel, and he knew that, despite Helen's fondness for Procrastination, a first novel is a first novel. Yes, she did think “Grillparzer” was his best.
“So far, yes,” she said, softly. “You're a lovely writer, you know I think so.”
“I guess I just haven't lived up to my potential,” Garp said, nastily.
“You will,” she said; the sympathy and her love for him were draining from her voice.
They stared at each other; Helen looked away. He started upstairs. “Are you coming to bed?” he asked. His back was to her; his intentions were hidden from her—his feelings for her, too: either hidden from her or buried in his infernal work.
“Not right now,” she said.
He waited on the stairs. “Got something to read?” he asked.
“No, I'm through reading for a while,” she said.
Garp, went upstairs. When she came up to him, he was already asleep, which made her despair. If he'd had her on his mind at all, how could he have fallen asleep? But, actually, he'd had so much on his mind, he'd been confused; he had fallen asleep because he was bewildered. If he'd been able to focus his feelings on any one thing, he'd still have been awake when she came upstairs. They might have saved a lot of things, then.
As it was, she sat beside him on the bed and watched his face with more fondness than she thought she could stand. She saw he had a hard-on, as severe as if he had been waiting up for her, and she took him into her mouth and sucked him softly until he came.
He woke up, surprised, and he was very guilty-looking—when he appeared to realize where he was, and with whom. Helen, however, was not in the least guilty-looking; she looked only sad. Garp would think, later, that it was as if Helen had known he had been dreaming of Mrs. Ralph.
When he came back from the bathroom, she was asleep. She had quickly drifted off. Guiltless at last, Helen felt freed to have her dreams. Garp lay awake beside her, watching the astonishing innocence upon her face—until the children woke her.
13. WALT CATCHES COLD
WHEN Walt caught colds, Garp slept badly. It was as if he were trying to breathe for the boy, and for himself. Garp would get up in the night to kiss and nuzzle the child; anyone seeing Garp would have thought that he could make Walt's cold go away by catching it himself.
“Oh, God,” Helen said. “It's just a cold. Duncan had colds all winter when he was five.” Nearing eleven, Duncan seemed to have outgrown colds; but Walt, at five, was fully in the throes of cold after cold—or it was one long cold that went away and came back. By the March mud season, Walt's resistance struck Garp as altogether gone; the child hacked himself and Garp awake each night with a wet, wrenching cough. Garp sometimes fell asleep listening to Walt's chest, and he would wake up, frightened, when he could no longer hear the thump of the boy's heart; but the child had merely pushed his father's heavy head off his chest so that he could roll over and sleep more comfortably.
Both the doctor and Helen told Garp, “It's just a cough.”
But the imperfection in Walt's nightly breathing scared Garp right out of his sleep. He was usually awake, therefore, when Roberta called; the late-night anguish of the large and powerful Ms. Muldoon was no longer frightening to Garp—he had come to expect it—but Garp's own fretful s
leeplessness made Helen short-tempered.
“If you were back at work, on a book, you'd be too tired to lie awake half the night,” she said. It was his imagination that was keeping him up, Helen told him; one sign that he hadn't been writing enough, Garp knew, was when he had too much imagination left over for other things. For example, the onslaught of dreams: Garp now dreamed only of horrors happening to his children.
In a dream, there was one horror that took place while Garp was reading a pornographic magazine. He was just looking at the same picture, over and over again; the picture was very pornographic. The wrestlers on the university team, with whom Garp occasionally worked out, had a peculiar vocabulary for such pictures. This vocabulary, Garp noted, had not changed since his days at Steering, when the wrestlers on Garp's team spoke of such pictures in the same fashion. What had changed was the increased availability of the pictures, but the names were the same.
The picture Garp looked at in the dream was considered among the highest in the rankings of pornographic pictures. Among pictures of naked women, there were names for how much you could see. If you could see the pubic hair, but not the sex parts, that was called a bush shot—or just a bush. If you could see the sex parts, which were sometimes partially hidden by the hair, that was a beaver; a beaver was better than just a bush; a beaver was the whole thing: the hair and the parts. If the parts were open, that was called a split beaver. And if the whole thing glistened, that was the best of all, in the world of pornography: that was a wet, split beaver. The wetness implied that the woman was not only naked and exposed and open, but she was also ready.
In his dream, Garp was looking at what the wrestlers called a wet, split beaver when he heard children crying. He did not know whose children they were, but Helen and his mother, Jenny Fields, were with them; they all came down the stairs and filed past him, where he struggled to hide from them what he'd been looking at. They had been upstairs and something terrible had awakened them; they were on their way farther downstairs—going to the basement as if the basement were a bomb shelter. And with that thought, Garp heard the dull crump of bombing—he noted the crumbling plaster, he saw the flickering lights—and he grasped the terror of what was approaching them. The children, two by two, marched whimpering after Helen and Jenny, who led them to the bomb shelter as soberly as nurses. If they looked at Garp at all, they regarded him with vague sadness and with scorn, as if he had let them all down and was powerless to help them now.
Perhaps he had been looking at the wet, split beaver instead of watching for enemy planes? This, true to the nature of dreams, was forever unclear: precisely why he felt so guilty, and why they looked at him as if they'd been so abused.
At the end of the line of children were Walt and Duncan, holding hands; the so-called buddy system, as it is employed at summer camps, appeared in Garp's dream to be the natural reaction to a disaster among children. Little Walt was crying, the way Garp had heard him cry when he was caught in the grip of a nightmare, unable to wake up. “I'm having a bad dream,” he sniveled. He looked at his father and almost shouted to him, “I'm having a bad dream!”
But in Garp's dream, Garp could not wake the child from this one. Duncan looked stoically over his shoulder at his father, a silent and bravely doomed expression on his beautiful young face. Duncan was appearing very grown-up lately. Duncan's look was a secret between Duncan and Garp: that they both knew it was not a dream, and that Walt could not be helped.
“Wake me up!” Walt cried, but the long file of children was disappearing into the bomb shelter. Twisting in Duncan's grip (Walt came to about the height of Duncan's elbow), Walt looked back at his father. “I'm having a dream!” Walt screamed, as if to convince himself. Garp could do nothing; he said nothing; he made no attempt to follow them—down these last stairs. And the dropping plaster coated everything white. The bombs kept falling.
“You're having a dream!” Garp screamed after little Walt. “It's just a bad dream!” he cried, though he knew he was lying.
Then Helen would kick him and he'd wake up.
Perhaps Helen feared that Garp's run-amuck imagination would turn away from Walt and turn on her. Because if Garp had given half the worry to Helen that he seemed compelled to give to Walt, Garp might have realized that something was going on.
Helen thought she was in control of what was going on; she at least had controlled how it began (opening her office door, as usual, to the slouching Michael Milton, and bidding him enter her room). Once inside, she closed the door behind him and kissed him quickly on the mouth, holding his slim neck so that he couldn't even escape for breath, and grinding her knee between his legs; he kicked over the wastebasket and dropped his notebook.
“There's nothing more to discuss,” Helen said, taking a breath. She raced her tongue across his upper lip; Helen was trying to decide if she liked his mustache. She decided she liked it; or, at least, she liked it for now. “We'll go to your apartment. Nowhere else,” she told him.
“It's across the river,” he said.
“I know where it is,” she said. “Is it clean?”
“Of course,” he said. “And it's got a great view of the river.”
“I don't care about the view,” Helen said. “I want it clean.”
“It's pretty clean,” he said. “I can clean it better.”
“We can only use your car,” she said.
“I don't have a car,” he said.
“I know you don't,” Helen said. “You'll have to get one.”
He was smiling now; he'd been surprised, but now he was feeling sure of himself again. “Well, I don't have to get one now, do I?” he asked, nuzzling his mustache against her neck; he touched her breasts. Helen unattached herself from his embrace.
“Get one whenever you want,” she said. “We'll never use mine, and I won't be seen walking with you all over town, or riding on the buses. If anyone knows about this, it's over. Do you understand?” She sat down at her desk, and he did not feel invited to walk around her desk to touch her; he sat in the chair her students usually sat in.
“Sure, I understand,” he said.
“I love my husband and will never hurt him,” Helen told him. Michael Milton knew better than to smile.
“I'll get a car, right away,” he said.
“And clean your apartment, or have it cleaned,” she said.
“Absolutely,” he said. Now he dared to smile, a little. “What kind of car do you want me to get?” he asked her.
“I don't care about that,” she told him. “Just get one that runs; get one that isn't in the garage all the time. And don't get one with bucket seats. Get one with a long seat in front.” He looked more surprised and puzzled than ever, so she explained to him: “I want to be able to lie down, comfortably, across the front seat,” she said. “I'll put my head in your lap so that no one will see me sitting up beside you. Do you understand?”
“Don't worry,” he said, smiling again.
“It's a small town,” Helen said. “No one must know.”
“It's not that small a town,” Michael Milton said, confidently.
“Every town is a small town,” Helen said, “and this one is smaller than you think. Do you want me to tell you?”
“Tell me what?” he asked her.
“You're sleeping with Margie Tallworth,” Helen said. “She's in my Comp. Lit. 205; she's a junior,” Helen said. “And you see another very young undergraduate—she's in Dirkson's English 150; I think she's a freshman, but I don't know if you've slept with her. Not for lack of trying, if you haven't,” Helen added. “To my knowledge you've not touched any of your fellow graduate students; not yet,” Helen said. “But there's surely someone I've missed, or there has been.”
Michael Milton was both sheepish and proud at the same time, and the usual command he held over his expressions escaped him so completely that Helen didn't like the expression she saw on his face and she looked away.
“That's how small this town, and every town,
is,” Helen said. “If you have me,” she told him, “you can't have any of those others. I know what young girls notice, and I know how much they're inclined to say.”
“Yes,” Michael Milton said; he appeared ready to take notes.
Helen suddenly thought of something, and she looked momentarily startled. “You do have a driver's license?” she asked.
“Oh yes!” Michael Milton said. They both laughed, and Helen relaxed again; but when he came around her desk to kiss her, she shook her head and waved him back.
“And you won't ever touch me here,” she said. “There will be nothing intimate in this office. I don't lock my door. I don't even like to have it shut. Please open it, now,” she asked him, and he did as he was told.
He got a car, a huge Buick Roadmaster, the old kind of station wagon—with real wooden slats on the side. It was a 1951 Buick Dynaflow, heavy and shiny with pre-Korea chrome and real oak. It weighed 5,550 pounds, or almost three tons. It held seven quarts of oil and nineteen gallons of gasoline. Its original price was $2,850 but Michael Milton picked it up for less than six hundred dollars.
“It's a straight-eight cylinder, three-twenty cubic, power steering, with a single-throat Carter carb,” the salesman told Michael. “It's not too badly rusted.”
In fact, it was the dull, inconspicuous color of clotted blood, more than six feet wide and seventeen feet long. The front seat was so long and deep that Helen could lie across it, almost without having to bend her knees—or without having to put her head in Michael Milton's lap, though she did this anyway.
She did not put her head in his lap because she had to; she liked her view of the dashboard, and being close to the old smell of the maroon leather of the big, slick seat. She put her head in his lap because she liked feeling Michael's leg stiffen and relax, his thigh shifting just slightly between the brake and the accelerator. It was a quiet lap to put your head in because the car had no clutch; the driver needed to move just one leg, and just occasionally. Michael Milton thoughtfully carried his loose change in his left front pocket, so there were only the soft wales of his corduroy slacks, which made a faint impression on the skin of Helen's cheek—and sometimes his rising erection would touch her ear, or reach up into the hair on the back of her neck.
The World According to Garp Page 33