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Our Little Racket

Page 47

by Angelica Baker


  You don’t really learn anything so deep from embarrassment or shame, you just learn not to make all the same mistakes again. What, then, should she have learned? Weiss was treated as a bad egg, careless and cavalier. The exception that endangered the rest of the system rather than that system’s purest product. No one in the world her father had once dominated learned much of a lesson, she didn’t think. So then, what steps was she supposed to take to avoid this pain in future? She’d only ever been a cog in the system, a party to the long con. Whatever racket her father had been running hadn’t taught her anything at all when it crashed.

  HE LIVED, NOW, in a fortress down in Florida. His finances were something of a mystery. She assumed the new wife had money. He still showed up in New York every now and then for speeches. He still got to be the man they’d nicknamed Silverback, sometimes. Their once or twice yearly phone calls were always at his urging, never at Madison’s. So maybe she had, in the end, chosen a side.

  She sat down on a lawn chair and looked across the water to the other part of the island, even as it got dark, even as the winter chill moved in. She bundled herself up and stayed there. There was no food inside, she’d brought nothing for dinner. When she went back in, there would be only a long evening alone with Gran’s ghosts, only bourbon and the fireplace.

  She’d chosen her side, and she’d stayed there. She had allowed Lily, the woman who had done so much to raise her, to be effectively cut from her life. She had never spoken to Amanda again after that night at the Welsh party. She’d followed all her mother’s cues. She’d punished her father with her own distance, because that had seemed like her only option. Because she’d probably always known who he was. She couldn’t, looking back, see that first winter as anything other than the last, grasping attempt of a child to keep her eyes closed to the sickly green sunlight her parents’ shadows had once blocked for her.

  And now, here she was, alone in the only place on earth that still felt like a home to her.

  We should have holed up here, she thought again. We should have come here, my mother and my father and Lily and the boys and me. We should have closed ourselves off from the world until it was over, like plucky refugees from some apocalypse, trapped in our own adventure story. The kind of story that ends with survival.

  She went inside, finally, when it grew too cold. She drank the bourbon. She called her boyfriend, but he didn’t pick up. She found some abandoned pasta in a high cabinet. The bourbon was working, and she imagined for herself that the pasta was a remnant. It was an uncherished artifact, the last proof: they really had locked themselves up in here, they really had kept one another alive through that first winter.

  After she ate, she curled up on the couch and closed her eyes and tried to remember. What it had felt like when she had a tribe of her own, when she had taken for granted that if her parents had a flaw, it was that they cared too much about her future, her brothers’ futures. That they held their children too close, devoted too much to building them a life.

  When she could have told anyone, without hesitation, what the word home really meant to her.

  It never would have worked, she knew that. They couldn’t have hidden away here. The threat was never out there. There were no febrile hordes scratching at the roof, no one coming to fight them for their last resources.

  We wouldn’t have been safe in here because we were the toxin. We wouldn’t have been safe in here because the epidemic would have been locked in with us. Sloughing off our skin, reddening our eyes. Turning us on one another, eventually, our little, yellowed teeth.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Thank you, thank you, thank you.

  Thank you to the grad crew—Christian Caminiti, Essie Chambers, Amy Feltman, Eli Hager, Cory Leadbeater, Rachel Schwerin, and Sam Graham-Felsen. Thank you for being, by turns: drinking buddies, therapists, sounding boards, and—most of all—readers.

  Thank you to Bryan Burrough, William Cohan, Steve Fishman, Michael Lewis, Nina Munk, Vicky Ward, and Andrew Ross Sorkin for their phenomenal writing about the world of Wall Street, much of which I found very helpful at the preliminary stage.

  Thank you to the Edward F. Albee Foundation; to Ruthie Salvatore and everyone at the Ucross Foundation; and to Mary and Patrick Geary in Princeton, for rooms with views and blissful solitude. Ucross in particular was a haven for me during the stressful final hours, and I’ll be forever grateful.

  Thank you to my teachers. Thank you to Eric Schrode and Kathleen Neumeyer, two of the first and quite possibly the toughest—you both set the standard, to this day. Thank you to John Crowley and to Traugott Lawler. Thank you to Erroll McDonald, to Deborah Eisenberg, to Donald Antrim. Thank you to Sam Lipsyte, for his devilish grin as he told me to write a better opening chapter. Thank you to Elissa Schappell, who taught me what to do with a first draft.

  Thank you to Heidi Julavits, for being the sharpest and smartest cheerleader at the moment when I needed it the most.

  Thank you to Darryl Pinckney, who took me to lunch when this book was a mess and asked all the right questions, for his keen insight and timely encouragement.

  Thank you to Patrick Ryan, for his early support of my writing, and to John Freeman, for making me a better thinker (about this book and countless others).

  Thank you to David Burr Gerrard for frequent reads and constant advice, and for enduring more than a few of my rants and raves.

  Thank you to Andrew Kaufman for answering embarrassing finance questions early on, for indulging in no more than the usual amount of mockery when faced with my total ignorance, and for giving everything a close look near the end.

  Thank you to Julianne Carlson, Camille Fenton, Elena Goldblatt, Mark Iscoe, Emma Ledbetter, Andrew Segal, Nikila Sri-Kumar, Lisa Sun, and Chenault Taylor—for believing I would finish, for keeping me laughing even in the darkest hours.

  Thank you to the many others whose kindnesses have been essential, including: Marilyn Aitken, Deborah Antar, the Botwick boys, Caroline Bleeke, Julie Buntin, Charlie Clark, Jenny Crapser, Tamara Day, Neena Deb-Sen, the Dewhirst family, David Dunning, Peter Jackson, Abram Kaplan, Denny and Annie Kearney, the Miller family, Denise and Keith Mills (and the entire Davidson-Dennis-Parent bunch), Kate Philip, Streeter Phillips, Anna Pitoniak, Alexandra Schwartz, Michael Seidenberg, the Shabahang family, Danny Seifert, Moses Soyoola, Annie Spokes, Nathan Stevens, Timbo Shriver, and Arturo Zindel.

  Thank you to Caryl Phillips, whose generosity is matched only by his brilliance and his rigor.

  Thank you to everyone at Ecco and HarperCollins, especially Sonya Cheuse, Dan Halpern, Miriam Parker, and Emma Dries. But most of all, thank you to Megan Lynch, who had a vision for this book and who took the most exquisite care of it and of me. I feel unspeakably lucky that I found my way to her.

  Thank you to Marya Spence, Marya of the infinite patience, unparalleled eye, and extraordinary cool. She found me and saw something where there was yet so little, and it would be impossible to overstate her role in forcing this book to exist. Every day of this process, I thanked and thanked the universe for sending me her smarts and her friendship. (And thank you to Rebecca Dinerstein, for introducing me to Marya.)

  Thank you to Monsita Botwick, my godmother and role model. I’m hardly the only one in awe of her humor or her grace.

  Thank you to my brother, my favorite person on the planet. If I am ever, in flashes, cool, smart, witty, or wise, it’s because I am trying to become the girl he’s believed me to be for the last twenty-six years.

  Thank you to my parents, whose astonishing (and, let’s face it, foolhardy) support was a lifeline for the four years I struggled to write this book, and for the twenty-four years before I’d even begun. To my mother: the most voracious reader I know, and the toughest audience, and the most bottomless well of belief, all of which made her an invaluable resource. Thank you for putting books into my hands from the beginning. And to my father, who never once doubted me and who gave the rowdiest whoop when I told him it was really goin
g to be a book. Every writer should be so fortunate as to have these two in her corner.

  This book, like most everything worthwhile that I do, would not exist without the faith, humor, wisdom, and all around dreaminess of Connor Mills. This book is for him.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  ANGELICA BAKER was born and raised in Los Angeles. She received her BA in English and creative writing from Yale and her MFA in fiction from Columbia University. She now lives in Brooklyn.

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  CREDITS

  Cover design by Allison Saltzman

  COPYRIGHT

  “Little Racket” first published in The New Yorker © 2015 by Anne Carson. Used by permission of Anne Carson and Aragi Inc.

  “The Plain Sense of Things” from The Collected Poems of Wallace Stevens by Wallace Stevens, copyright © 1954 by Wallace Stevens and copyright renewed 1982 by Holly Stevens. Used by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  OUR LITTLE RACKET. Copyright © 2017 by Angelica Baker. 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, 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 hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  FIRST EDITION

  EPUB Edition June 2017 ISBN 9780062641335

  ISBN 978-0-06-264131-1

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