Martin liked the story and wanted to know more.
“Then she brought the child into my bakery for something to eat,” his father said.
“That’s right,” his mother added. “It’s how we met.”
His father stood at the dark window and confessed to the reflection of his son how they waited years before doing anything official.
His mother’s tears made circles on the tablecloth. Martin looked at her hands. Her nails were smooth with rising moons. She pressed on his cheek and he blushed. He imagined the rough hands of a stranger and felt the weight of a baby in his own arms.
When he asked what happened to the child, they were forced to be direct. Martin stared at the milk until it made him cry. His mother left the table and returned with a bottle of chocolate syrup. She poured some into his glass and swirled it with a tall spoon.
“Our love for you,” she said, “will always be stronger than any truth.”
He was allowed to sleep in their bed for a few days, but then missed his toys and the routine in which he had come to recognize himself fully.
A short time later his sister, Yvette, was born.
When Yvette was six years old and Martin a teenager, they closed the bakery and left Paris for California.
Martin never quite understood why they waited so long to apply for adoption papers. Then, when he was a freshman at a small college in Chicago, smoking in bed with a lover, the curtain was lifted.
It was snowing. They ordered Chinese food. A good film was about to start on television. As Martin reached for the ashtray, the sheet uncovered his body. His legs were so muscular. She laid her cheek against them. He told her about West Hollywood High School, track records still unbroken. She listened, then confessed how she was curious, had been wondering why, unlike other European men, Martin was circumcised.
He stopped attending classes.
He read until his eyes were unable to focus.
He was outside the library when it opened and worked until closing. When the director found out what he was doing, she gave him a space in the staff refrigerator. He requested books with titles no one could pronounce. Every photograph was a mirror.
The semester came to an end, and he went home to Los Angeles.
His parents knew he would find out eventually, but couldn’t tell him anything new. His small clothes had been too soiled to keep.
He went to the beach with his sister and watched her swim. He sat on the stairs and listened to his family watch television. He took long drives in the middle of the night.
He worked at the family cafe. They sold croissants and fruit tarts in boxes tied with blue-and-white twine.
One afternoon, after making deliveries, Martin returned to find the front door of the shop locked with the blinds pulled down. After entering through the back door, he was surprised to find the kitchen in darkness. When he reached the counter, the lights came on suddenly and a roomful of people shouted, “Surprise!”
Everyone was dressed up, and there were balloons tied to the chairs. People kissed him on the cheek and forehead. Many of the customers he’d known for years were there, and some of the men wore yarmulkes. Music came on and people clapped.
Martin was stunned. “I don’t understand,” he said. “Has something happened?”
“We just thought we’d give you a kind of coming-of-age celebration,” his mother said.
“It’s tradition in many cultures,” his father added.
After that, Martin’s story was told at every dinner table in Beverly Hills. People came in just to meet him, to tell him their stories, to show him photographs, to convince him that he was not alone—that he would never be alone. One day a woman came into the shop and just stood at the counter in front of Martin. Then she started screaming, “My son! My son! My son!”
Martin’s parents took her into the back and gave her hot tea. Then his father drove her home, where her sister was waiting in the driveway.
Sundays were the busiest days.
Martin served customers and decorated birthday cakes with a plump funnel of icing. He felt lightheaded at the endless list of names, each one a small voice; each one a thumping heart, but louder, deeper, and more permanent now in its silence.
He had been reborn into the nightmare of truth. The history of others had been his all along. The idea of it was more than he could bear. People hiding in the sewers; women giving birth in the dark, in the damp and filth, then suffocating their babies so as not to give the others away.
Families ripped apart like bits of paper thrown into the wind.
They all blew into his face.
Martin decided not to go back to college, so his father revealed the mysteries of flour, water, heat, and time. He shared recipes from old postcards of tiny writing. Audrey Hepburn sometimes drank coffee in the back with his mother. She laughed and held the mug with both hands. Arthur Miller and his sister, Joan, came in for tea and madeleines. The café was famous for running out of things to sell, and often closed by 3:00 p.m.
Martin was a good son. He worked hard and looked after his parents. For him, there was nothing to forgive. He told his mother this on her deathbed in 2002.
“My love for you,” he said, “will always be stronger than any truth.”
Copyright
THE ILLUSION OF SEPARATENESS. Copyright © 2013 by Simon Van Booy. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
FIRST EDITION
ISBN: 978-0-06-211224-8
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Acknowledgments
Beverly Allen; Amy Baker; Bryan Le Boeuf; Darren and Raha Booy; Mrs. J. E. Booy; Dr. Stephen Booy; Douglas Borroughs Esq.; Milan Bozic; Ken Browar; David Bruson; Gabriel Byrne; Le Château Frontenac in Quebec City; Justine Clay; Mary Beth Constant; Christine Corday; Donald Crowhurst; Dr. Silvia Curado; Jennifer Dorman; Cathy Erway; Danielle Esposito; Patricio Ferrari; Peggy Flaum; Dr. Giovanni Frazzetto; Pippo and Salvina Frazzeto; Léon and Hélène Garcia; Colin Gee; Joel Gotler; Lauren Gott; Dr. Greg Gulbransen; Audrey Harris; Dr. Maryhelen Hendricks; Nancy Horner; Mr. Howard; Lucas Hunt; Tim Kail; Carrie Kania; Alan Kleinberg; Hilary Knight; Claude Lelouch; Eva Lontscharitsch; Little M; Alain Malraux; Lisa Mamo; Michael Matkin; McNally Jackson Booksellers; Dr. Bob Milgrom; Dr. Edmund Miller; Carolina Moraes; Cal Morgan; Jennifer Morris; Samuel Morris III; Bill Murray; Dr. William Neal; Ermanno Olmi; Lukas Ortiz; Jonathan Rabinowitz; Nonno Nina and Nonna Lucia Ragaglia; Alberto Rojas; Russo Family of Morano Calabro, Italy; Leah Schachar; Stephanie Selah; Ivan Shaw; Michael Signorelli; Philip Spitzer; Jessamyn Tonry; F.C.V., Eve K. Tremblay; Wim Wenders; Dr. Barbara Wersba.
About the Author
SIMON VAN BOOY was born in London and grew up in rural Wales and Oxford. After playing football in Kentucky, he lived in Paris and Athens. In 2002 he was awarded an MFA and won the H.R. Hays Poetry Prize. His journalism has appeared in magazines and newspapers including the New York Times and the New York Post. Van Booy is the author of The Secret Lives of People in Love, now translated into several languages. He lives in New York City, where he teaches part-time at the School of Visual Arts and at Long Island University. He is also involved in the Rutgers Early College Humanities Program (REaCH) for young adults living in underserved communities.
www.SimonVanBooy.com
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Books by Simon Van Booy
Fiction
The Illusion of Separateness
Everything
Beautiful Began After
Love Begins in Winter
The Secret Lives of People in Love
Edited Editions
Why We Fight
Why We Need Love
Why Our Decisions Don’t Matter
Credits
Cover design by Milan Bozic
Cover photograph © Peter Marlow/Magnum Photos
Copyright
LOVE BEGINS IN WINTER AND TITLE: OTHER STORIES. Copyright © 2009 by Simon Van Booy. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
EPub Edition April 2009 ISBN 9780061879234
Version 01242014
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