Fates and Furies

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Fates and Furies Page 9

by Lauren Groff


  “. . . owe me two million dollars,” he said.

  “What?” she said.

  He grinned, said, “Twenty-something seconds until 1999. You bet me they’d be divorced by 1998.”

  “Fuck you,” she said.

  “Fuck you, welsher,” he said.

  “We have until the end of the year,” she said.

  “Twenty seconds,” Mathilde said. “Good-bye, 1998, you slow and muddy year.”

  “There is nothing good or bad, but thinking makes it so,” Lotto said drunkenly.

  “You speak an infinite deal of nothing,” Mathilde said. Lotto recoiled, opened his mouth, closed it.

  “See?” Danica muttered. “They’re fighting. If one of them storms out, I’m calling it a win.”

  Mathilde snatched a glass from the tray, and said, “Ten.” She licked at the champagne she spilled on her hand.

  “I’ll absolve your debt if you go on a date with me,” Chollie said, his hot breath in Danica’s ear.

  “What?” Danica said.

  “I’m rich. You’re mean,” Chollie said. “Why the hell not.”

  “Eight,” Mathilde said.

  “Because I loathe you,” Danica said.

  “Six. Five. Four,” the others said. Chollie raised an eyebrow.

  “Okay, fine,” Danica sighed.

  “One! Happy New Year!” they shouted, and someone gave three stomps from the apartment above, and the baby wailed, and outside they could hear the very faint noise of voices shouting all the way over the crystalline night from Times Square, then a blast of fireworks in the street.

  “Happy 1999, my love,” Lotto said to Mathilde; and it had been so very long since they had kissed like this. A month at least. He had forgotten about the freckles on her pretty nose. How had he forgotten such a thing? Nothing like having a wife who worked herself to death to stifle the mood for love. Nothing like dying dreams, he thought, and disappointment.

  Mathilde’s irises shifted smaller when she pulled her head back. “This will be your breakthrough year,” she said. “You’ll be Hamlet on Broadway. You’ll find your groove.”

  “I love your optimism,” he said, but felt sick. Elizabeth and Rachel were both kissing Susannah’s cheeks because she looked so lonely. Samuel kissed her also, blushing, but she laughed him off.

  “I’m trashed,” Danica said, pulling away from her kiss with Chollie. She looked startled.

  They left, two by two, and Mathilde turned off the lights, yawned, piled the food and glasses on the counters to clean them up in the morning. Lotto watched as she shimmied off her dress in the bedroom and climbed under the duvet in her thong.

  “You remember when we used to have sex before we even went to bed on New Year’s Day? A bodily blessing for the new year,” he called to her through the doorway. He considered saying more; that this year, maybe, they could have a kid. Lotto could be the stay-at-home parent. For sure, if he was the one who had the relevant anatomy, a mistake would already have been made with the birth control and a little Lotto would be even now kicking its heels in his gut. It was unfair that women could have such primordial joy and men could not.

  “Baby, we used to have sex on garbage day and grocery-shopping day, too,” she said.

  “What changed?” he said.

  “We’re old,” she said. “We still do it more than most of our married friends. Twice a week’s not bad.”

  “Not enough,” he muttered.

  “I heard that,” she said. “As if I’ve ever made myself unavailable to you.”

  He heaved a sigh, prepared to stand.

  “Fine,” she said. “If you come to bed now, I’ll let you do me. But don’t be mad if I fall asleep.”

  “Glory. How tempting,” Lotto said, and sat back down with his bottle in the dark.

  He listened to his wife’s breath even into snores and wondered how he had arrived here. Drunk, lonely, stewing in his failure. Triumph had been assured. Somehow, he’d frittered his potential away. A sin. Thirty and still a nothing. Kills you slowly, failure. As Sallie would have said, he done been bled out.

  [Perhaps we love him more like this; humbled.]

  Tonight, he understood his mother, burying herself alive in her beach house. No more risking the hurt that came from contact with others. He listened to the dark beat under his thoughts, which he had had forever, since his father had died. Release. A fuselage could fall from a plane and pin him into the earth. One flick of a switch in his brain would power him down. Blessed relief at last, it would be. Aneurysms ran in the family. His father’s had been so sudden, forty-six, too young; and all Lotto wanted was to close his eyes and find his father there, to put his head on his father’s chest and smell him and hear the warm thumpings of his heart. Was that so much to ask? He’d had one parent who’d loved him. Mathilde had given him enough but he’d ground her down. Her hot faith had cooled. She’d averted her face. She was disappointed in him. Oh, man, he was losing her, and if he lost her, if she left him—the leather valise in her hand, her thin back unturning—he might as well be dead.

  Lotto was weeping; he could tell from the cold on his face. He tried to keep quiet. Mathilde needed sleep. She had been working sixteen-hour days, six days a week, kept them fed and housed. He brought nothing to their marriage, only disappointment and dirty laundry. He fished out the laptop he’d stored under the couch when Mathilde had ordered him to clean up before everyone had come over tonight. He just wanted the Internet, the other sad souls of the world, but instead, he opened a blank document, shut his eyes, thought of what he’d lost. Home state, mother, that light he’d once lit in strangers, in his wife. His father. Everyone had underestimated Gawain because he was quiet and unlettered, but only he had understood the value of the water under the scrubby family land, had captured and sold it. Lotto thought of the photos of his mother when she was young, once a mermaid, the tail rolled like a stocking over her legs, undulating in the cold springs. He remembered his own small hand immersed in the source, the bones freezing past the point of numbness, how he’d loved that pain.

  Pain! Swords of morning light in his eyes.

  Mathilde was haloed blindingly in the icicles in the window. She was in her slattern’s robe. Her feet were red at the knuckles with cold. And her face—what was it? There was something wrong. Eyes puffed and red. What had Lotto done? Surely something awful. Maybe he’d left porn on his laptop and she’d seen it when she had woken up. Maybe a terrible kind of porn, the worst, maybe he’d been led into it by wild curiosity, clicking through wormholes so progressively more evil that he ended up at the unforgivable. She would leave him. He’d be finished. Fat and alone and a failure, not even worth the air he’d breathe. “Don’t leave me,” he said. “I’ll be better.”

  She looked up, then stood and came across the rug to the couch and put the computer down on the coffee table and took his cheeks in her cold hands.

  Her robe parted, revealing her thighs, like sweet pink putti. Practically bearing wings.

  “Oh, Lotto,” Mathilde said, and her coffee breath mingled with his own dead muskrat breath, and he felt the swoop of her eyelashes on his temple. “Baby, you’ve done it,” she said.

  “What?” he said.

  “It’s so good. I don’t know why I was so surprised, of course you’re brilliant. It’s just been a struggle for so long.”

  “Thank you,” he said. “I’m sorry. What’s happening?”

  “I don’t know! A play, I think. Called The Springs. You started it at 1:47 last night. I can’t freaking believe you wrote all that in five hours. It needs a third act. Some editing. I’ve already started. You can’t spell, but we knew that.”

  It snapped back to him, his writing last night. Some deep-buried acorn of emotion, something about his father. Oh.

  “All along,” she said, “hiding here in plain sight. Your true tal
ent.”

  She had straddled him, was easing his jeans down his hips.

  “My true talent,” he said slowly. “Was hiding.”

  “Your genius. Your new life,” she said. “You were meant to be a playwright, my love. Thank fucking god we figured that out.”

  “We figured that out,” he said. As if stepping out of a fog: a little boy, a grown man. Characters who were him but also not, Lotto transformed by the omniscient view. A shock of energy as he looked on them in the morning. There was life in these figures. He was suddenly hungry to return to that world, to live in it for a while longer.

  But his wife was saying, “Hello there, Sir Lancelot, you doughty fellow. Come out and joust.” And what a beautiful way to fully awaken, his wife astraddle, whispering to his newly knighted peen, warming him with her breath, telling him he’s a what? A genius. Lotto had long known it in his bones. Since he was a tiny boy, shouting on a chair, making grown men grow pink and weep. But how nice to get such confirmation, and in such a format, too. Under the golden ceiling, under the golden wife. All right, then. He could be a playwright.

  He watched as the Lotto he thought he had been stood up in his greasepaint and jerkin, his doublet sweated through, panting, the roar inside him going external as the audience rose in ovation. Ghostly out of his body he went, giving an elaborate bow, passing for good through the closed door of the apartment.

  There should have been nothing left. And yet, some kind of Lotto remained. A separate him, a new one, below his wife, who was sliding her face up his stomach, pushing the string of her thong to one side, enveloping him. His hands were opening her robe to show her breasts like nestlings, her chin tipped up toward their vaguely reflected bodies. She was saying, “Oh god,” her fists coming down hard on his chest, saying, “Now you’re Lancelot. No more Lotto. Lotto’s a child’s name, and you’re no child. You’re a genius fucking playwright, Lancelot Satterwhite. We will make this happen.”

  If it meant his wife smiling through her blond lashes at him again, his wife posting atop him like a prize equestrienne, he could change. He could become what she wanted. No longer failed actor. Potential playwright. There rose a feeling in him as if he’d discovered a window in a lightless closet locked behind him. And still a sort of pain, a loss. He closed his eyes against it and moved in the dark toward what, just now, only Mathilde could see so clearly.

  4

  THE SPRINGS, 1999

  He was still drunk. “Best night of my life,” he said. “A million curtain calls. All my friends. And look at you, gorgeous. Ovations. Off-Broadway. Bar! Walk home, stars in the sky!”

  “Words are failing you, my love,” Mathilde said.

  [Wrong. Words, tonight, had not failed. Unseen in the corners of the theaters, the forces of judgment had gathered. They watched, considered, found it good.]

  “Body taking over now,” he said, and she was game for what he had in mind, but when she returned from the bathroom, he was asleep, naked atop the duvet, and she covered him, kissed his eyelids, tasted his glory there. Savored it. Slept.

  ONE-EYED KING, 2000

  “Baby, this play is about Erasmus. You can’t name it The Oneiroi.”

  “Why?” Lotto said. “It’s a good name.”

  “Nobody’s going to remember it. Nobody knows what it means. I don’t know what it means.”

  “The Oneiroi are the sons of Nyx. Night. They’re dreams. Brothers of Hypnos, Thanatos, Geras: Sleep, Death, Old Age. This is a play about Erasmus’s dreams, baby. Prince of the Humanists! The bastard of a Catholic priest, orphaned by the plague in 1483. Desperately in love with another man—”

  “I read the play, I know this already—”

  “And the word Oneiroi makes me laugh. Erasmus was the man who said, In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king. One-eyed king. Roi d’un oeil. Oneiroi.”

  “Oh,” she said. She’d frowned when he’d spoken French; she’d been a French, art history, and classics triple major in college. Dark purple dahlia in the garden-side window, gleam of autumn light beyond. She came over to him, rested her chin on his shoulder, put her hands down his pants. “Well. It’s a sexy play,” she said.

  “Yes,” he said. “Your hands are very soft, my wife.”

  “I’m just shaking hands with your one-eyed king.”

  “Oh, love,” he said. “You’re brilliant. That is a better title.”

  “I know,” she said. “You may have it.”

  “Generous,” he said.

  “Except that I don’t like the way your king there is looking at me. He’s giving me the evil one-eye.”

  “Off with his head,” he said, and carried her into the bedroom.

  ISLANDS, 2001

  “It’s not that I agree with them,” she said. “But it was pretty ballsy of you to write about three Caribbean hotel maids in the middle of a Boston snowstorm.”

  He didn’t pick his head up from the crook of his elbow. Newspapers were strewn around the living room of the new second-floor apartment they’d bought. They were still too house-poor to afford a rug. The austere way the oak floors gleamed reminded him of her.

  “Phoebe Delmar, I get,” he said. “She hates everything I have done and will ever do. Cultural appropriation, whatever, strident, shrill. But why did the Times reviewer have to bring up my mother’s money? What does that have to do with anything? I sure as stinkers can’t afford the heat now, so why do they care? And why can’t I write about poor people if I was raised with money? Don’t they understand what fiction is?”

  “We can afford heat,” she said. “Cable, maybe not. But other than that, it’s a good review.”

  “It’s mixed,” he groaned. “I feel like dying.”

  [In a week planes would crash a mile away, and Mathilde at work would drop her cup on the floor, shattering it; and Lotto at home would put on his running shoes and run forty-three blocks north to her office and into the revolving door, only to see her leaving in the parallel glass compartment. They would gaze at each other palely through the glass as she was now outside and he in, and he’d feel a confused shame within his panic, though its source—this very moment with the intensity of his tiny despair—would already have been forgotten.]

  “You’re such a drama whore,” she said. “Phoebe Delmar would win if you died. Just write a new one.”

  “About what?” he said. “I’m dried up. Done at the age of thirty-three.”

  “Go back to what you know,” she said.

  “I don’t know anything,” he said.

  “You know me,” she said.

  He looked at her, his face smeary with newsprint, and began to smile. “I do,” he said.

  THE HOUSE IN THE GROVE, 2003

  ACT II, SCENE I

  [The porch of the plantation house, Olivia in tennis whites, waiting for Joseph to come out. Joseph’s mother is in a rocking chair with a glass of white wine spritzer in her hand.]

  LADYBIRD: Now come on over here and set yourself down. I’m glad we get a minute to chat. Rare Joseph brings a girlfriend home, you know. Most Thanksgivings, it’s just us. Family. But why don’t you tell me about you, darling. Where do you come from? What do your parents do?

  OLIVIA: Nowhere. And nothing. I don’t have any parents, Mrs. Dutton.

  LADYBIRD: Nonsense. Everybody’s got parents. You sprung out of somebody’s head? I am sorry, but Minerva you are not. Now, you may not like your parents, the Good Lord knows I do not like mine, but you have them, for sure.

  OLIVIA: I’m an orphan.

  LADYBIRD: Orphan. Nobody wanted to adopt you? Beauty like you? I do not believe this. Of course, you must’ve been a sullen girl. Oh, yes. I can see you were quite a sullen girl. Difficult. Too smart for your own good.

  OLIVIA [After a long pause.]: Joseph’s taking a really long time.

  LADYBIRD: Boy’s vain. Staring in the mirror ma
king faces, looking at his pretty hairdo. [They both laugh.] In any event, you clearly do not want to talk about it, which I do not blame you for. Sore wound, I’m sure it is, darling. Family being the most important thing in the world. The most important. Why, it’s your family that tells you who you are. Without a family, you’re a nobody.

  [Olivia, startled, raises her eyes. Ladybird is looking at her, smiling broadly.]

  OLIVIA: I’m not a nobody.

  LADYBIRD: Darling, I don’t wish to offend, but I have come to doubt that very much. You’re pretty, sure, but you don’t have much to offer a boy like Joey. And yes, he’s in love, but he’s a lover. You don’t have to worry about him having a broken heart. He’ll have a new girl in minutes. You can just skedaddle. Save us both some time. Let him find someone a little more apropos.

  OLIVIA [Slowly.]: Apropos. You mean a girl with a rich family? That’s funny because, Mrs. Dutton, I have a family. They’re rich as kings.

  LADYBIRD: You a liar? Because you are either lying now or you were lying when you said you were an orphan. Either way, I haven’t believed a word out of your mouth since you got here.

  JOSEPH [Comes out, smiling brightly, whistling.]: Hello, beauties.

  OLIVIA: I never lie, Mrs. Dutton. I’m a pathological truth-teller. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to play some tennis with my little hubby here. [Grins.]

  JOSEPH: Olivia!

  LADYBIRD [Standing.]: Your. Your what, your hubby? Hubby? Husband? Joseph!

  “Cuts a little close to the quick,” Mathilde said, looking up. She wore sadness at the corners of her mouth.

  “You’ll meet my mother someday,” Lotto said. “Just want you to be prepared. She still asks when I’m going to settle down with a nice girl.”

  “Ouch,” Mathilde said. She looked at him over the table, coffee and bagel, half eaten. “Pathological truth-teller?”

 

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