McSweeney's Enchanted Chamber of Astonishing Stories

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McSweeney's Enchanted Chamber of Astonishing Stories Page 5

by Michael Chabon


  “Sure, in a minute.”

  Top raised his eyebrows, said: “Sure. Anyway, we’ll be there. Me and Evie and Miranda.” To Vivian: “Nice to meet you.” He slipped around the corner again.

  “Friends waiting for you?” said Vivian.

  “Sure, I guess. Yours?”

  “It’s not the same. They’re a couple.”

  “Letting you mingle, I guess that’s what you mean.”

  “Whereas yours are what—dates?”

  “Good question. It’s unclear, though. I’d have to admit they’re maybe dates. But only maybe. Vivian what?”

  “Relf.”

  “Vivian Relf. Totally unfamiliar. I’m Doran Close. In case that triggers any recall.” Doran felt irritable, reluctant to let go of it, possibly humiliated, in need of a drink.

  “It doesn’t.”

  “Have we pretty much eliminated everything?”

  “I can’t think of anything else.”

  “We’ve never been in any of the same cities or schools or anything at the same time.” It gave him a queasy, earth-shifty sensation. As though he’d come through the door of the party wrong, on the wrong foot. Planted a foot or flag on the wrong planet: one small step from the foyer, one giant plunge into the abyss.

  “Nope, I don’t think so.”

  “You’re not on television?”

  “Never.”

  “So what’s the basis of all this howling familiarity?”

  “I don’t know if there really is any basis, and anyway I’m not feeling such howling familiarity anymore.”

  “Right, me neither.” This was now a matter of pure vertigo, cliffside terror. He didn’t hold it against Vivian Relf, though. She was his fellow sufferer. It was what they had in common, the sole thing.

  “You want to go back to your friends?” she said.

  “I guess so.”

  “Don’t feel bad.”

  “I don’t,” lied Doran.

  “Maybe I’ll see you around.”

  “Very good then, Less-Than-Familiar-Girl. I’ll look forward to that.” Doran offered his hand to shake, mock-pompously. He felt garbed in awkwardness.

  Vivian Relf accepted his hand, and they shook. She’d grown a little sulky herself, at the last minute.

  Doran found Top and Evie and Miranda beyond the kitchen, in a room darkened and lit only by a string of Christmas lights, and cleared of all but two enormous speakers, as though for dancing. No one danced, no one inhabited the room apart from the three of them. There was something petulant in choosing to shout over the music, as they were doing.

  “Who’s your new friend?” said Miranda.

  “Nobody. I thought she was an old friend, actually.”

  “Sure you weren’t just attracted to her?”

  “No, it was a shock of recognition, of seeing someone completely familiar. The weird thing is she had the same thing with me, I think.” The language available to Doran for describing his cataclysm was cloddish and dead, the words a sequence of corpses laid head to toe.

  “Yeah, it’s always mutual.”

  “What’s that supposed to mean?”

  “Nothing, nothing.”

  “Look around this party,” said Doran. “How many people could you say you’ve never been in a room together with before? That they didn’t actually attend a lower grade in your high school, that you couldn’t trace a link to their lives? That’s what she and I just did. We’re perfect strangers.”

  “Maybe you saw her on an airplane.”

  Doran had no answer for this. He fell silent.

  Later that night he saw her again, across two rooms, through a doorway. The party had grown. She was talking to someone new, a man, not her friends. He felt he still recognized her, but the sensation hung uselessly in a middle distance, suspended, as in amber, in doubt so thick it was a form of certainty. She irked him, that was all he knew.

  It was two years before he saw the familiar girl again, at another party, again in the hills. They recognized one another immediately.

  “I know you,” she said, brightening.

  “Yes, I know you too, but from where?” The moment he said it he recalled their conversation. “Of course, how could I forget? You’re that girl I don’t know.”

  “Oh, yeah.” She seemed to grow immensely sad.

  They stood together contemplating the privileges of their special relationship, its utter and proven vacancy.

  “It’s like when you start a book and then you realize you read it before,” he said. “You can’t really remember anything ahead, only you know each line as it comes to you.”

  “No surprises to be found, you mean?” She pointed at herself.

  “Just a weird kind of pre . . .” He searched for the word he meant. Preformatting? Precognition? Preexhaustion ?

  “More like a stopped car on the highway slowing down traffic,” she said, seemingly uninterested in his ending the unfinished word. “Not a gaudy crash or anything. Just a cop waving you along, saying nothing to see here.”

  “Doran,” he said.

  “Vivian.”

  “I remember. You visiting your friends again?”

  “Yup. And before you ask I have no idea whose party this is or what I’m doing here.”

  “Probably you were looking for me.”

  “I’ve got a boyfriend,” she said. The line that was always awkward, in anyone’s language. Then, before he could respond, she added: “I’m only joking.”

  “Oh.”

  “Just didn’t want you thinking of me as Ben and Malorie’s, oh, sort of party accessory. The extra girl, the floater.”

  “No, never the extra girl. The girl I don’t know from anywhere, that’s you.”

  “Funny to meet the girl you don’t know, twice,” she said. “When there are probably literally thousands of people you do know or anyway could establish a connection with who you never even meet once.”

  “I’m tempted to say small world.”

  “Either that or we’re very large people.”

  “But maybe we’re evidence of the opposite, I’m thinking now. Large world.”

  “We’re not evidence of anything,” said Vivian Relf. She shook his hand again. “Enjoy the party.”

  The next time was on an airplane, a coast-to-coast flight. Doran sat in first class. Vivian Relf trundled past him, headed deep into the tail, carry-on hugged to her chest. She didn’t spot him.

  He mused on sending back champagne with the stewardess, as in a cocktail lounge—from the man in 3A. There was probably a really solid reason they didn’t allow that. A hundred solid reasons. He didn’t dwell on Vivian Relf, watched a movie instead. Barbarian hordes were vanquished in waves of slaughter, twenty thousand feet above the plain.

  They spoke at the baggage carousel. She didn’t seem overly surprised to see him there.

  “As unrelated baggage mysteriously commingles in the dark belly of an airplane only to be redistributed to its proper possessor in the glare of daylight on the whirring metal belt, so you repeatedly graze my awareness in shunting through the dimmed portals of my life,” he said. “Doran Close.”

  “Vivian Relf,” she said, shaking his hand. “But I suspect you knew that.”

  “Then you’ve gathered that I’m obsessed with you.”

  “No, it’s that nobody ever forgets my name. It’s one of those that sticks in your head.”

  “Ah.”

  She stared at him oddly, waiting. He spotted, beneath her sleeve, the unmistakable laminated wristlet of a hospital stay, imprinted Relf, Vivian, Rm 315.

  “I’d propose we share a cab, but friends are waiting to pick me up in the white zone.” He jerked his thumb at the curb.

  “The odds are we’re anyway pointed in incompatible directions.”

  “Ah, if I’ve learned anything at all in this life it’s not to monkey with the odds.”

  There was a commotion. Some sort of clog at the mouth where baggage was disgorged. An impatient commuter clambered up
to straddle the chugging belt. He rolled up suit sleeves and tugged the jammed suitcases out of the chute. The backlog tumbled loose, a miniature avalanche. Doran’s suitcase was among those freed. Vivian Relf still waited, peering into the hole as though at a distant horizon. Doran left her there, feeling giddy.

  All that week, between appointments with art collectors and gallerists, he spied for her in the museums and bistros of the vast metropolis, plagued by the ghost of certainty they’d come here, to this far place, this neutral site, apart-but-together, in order to forge some long-delayed truce or compact. The shrouded visages of the locals formed a kind of brick wall, an edifice which met his gaze everywhere: forehead, eyebrows, glasses, grim-drawn lips, cell phones, sandwiches. Against this background she’d have blazed like a sun. But never appeared.

  Oh Vivian Relf! Oh eclipse, oh pale penumbra of my

  yearning!

  Pink slip, eviction notice, deleted icon, oh!

  Stalked in alleys of my absent noons, there’s nobody

  knows you better than I!

  Translucent voracious Relf-self, I vow here

  Never again once to murk you

  With pallid tropes of familiarity or recognition

  You, pure apparition, onion—

  Veil of veils only!

  Doran Close, in his capacity as director of acquisitions in Drawings and Prints, had several times had lunch with Vander Polymus, the editor of Wall Art. He’d heard Polymus mention that he, Polymus, was married. He’d never met the man’s wife, though, and it was a surprise, as he stepped across Polymus’s threshold for the dinner party, bottle of cabernet franc in a scarf of tissue thrust forward in greeting, to discover that the amiable ogre was married to someone he recognized. Not from some previous museum fete or gallery opening, but from another life, another frame of reference, years before. Really, from another postulated version of his life, his sense, once, of who he’d be. He knew her despite the boyishly short haircut, the jarring slash of lipstick and bruises of eyeshadow, the freight of silver bracelets: Vander Polymus was married to Vivian Relf.

  Meeting her eyes, Doran unconsciously reached up and brushed his fingertips to his shaved skull.

  “Doran, Viv,” said Polymus, grabbing Doran by the shoulder and tugging him inside. “Throw your coat on the bed; I’ll take that. C’mon. Hope you like pernil and bacalao!”

  “Hello,” she said, and as Doran relinquished the bottle she took his hand to shake.

  “Vivian Relf,” said Doran.

  “Vivian Polymus,” she confirmed.

  “Shall we pry open your bottle?” said Vander Polymus. “Is it something special? I’ve got a rioja I’m itching to sample. You know each other?”

  “We met, once,” said Vivian. “Other side of the world.”

  Doran wanted to emend her once, but couldn’t find his voice.

  “Did you fucking fuck my wife?” chortled Polymus, fingers combing his beard. “You’ll have to tell me all about it, but save it for dinner. There’s people I want you to meet.”

  So came the accustomed hurdles: the bottles opened and appreciated; the little dinner-party geometries—No, but of course I know your name or If I’m not wrong your gallery represents my dear friend Zeus; the hard and runny cheeses and the bowl of aggravatingly addictive salted nuts; the dawning apprehension that a single woman in the party of eight had been tipped his way by the scheming Polymus and another couple, who’d brought her along—much as, so long ago, Vivian Relf had been shopped at parties by the couple she’d been visiting. Hurdles? Really these were placed low as croquet wickets. Yet they had to be negotiated for a time, deftly, with a smile, before Doran could at last find himself seated. Beside the single woman, of course, but gratefully, as well, across from Polymus’s wife. Vivian Relf.

  He raised his glass to her, slightly, wishing to draw her nearer, wishing they could tip their heads together for murmuring.

  “I used to think I’d keep running into you forever,” he said.

  She only smiled. Her husband intruded from the end of the table, his voice commanding. “What is it with you two?” Irrationally, Polymus’s own impatience seemed to encompass the years since Doran and Vivian’s first meeting, the otherwise forget-table, and forgotten, party. Doran wondered if anyone else on the planet had reason to recall that vanished archipelago of fume, conversation, and disco, tonight or ever. The ancient party was like a radio signal dopplering through outer space, it seemed to him now.

  “You fuck him, Viv?” said Polymus. “Inquiring minds want to know.”

  “No,” said Vivian Relf-Polymus. “No, but we were probably flirting. This was a long time ago.”

  Polymus and his wife had captured the attention of the whole table, with evident mutual pleasure.

  “We had this funny thing,” Doran felt compelled to explain. “You remember? We didn’t know anyone in common. You seemed really familiar, but we’d never met before.”

  This drew a handful of polite laughs, cued principally by the word funny, and perhaps by Doran’s jocular tone. Beneath it he felt desperate. Vander Polymus only scowled, as for comic effect he might scowl at an awkwardly hung painting, or at a critical notice with which he violently disagreed.

  “What I remember is you had these awful friends,” said Vivian. “They didn’t hesitate to show they found me a poor way for you to be spending your time. What was that tall moody boy’s name?”

  “Top,” said Doran, only remembering as he blurted it. He hadn’t thought of Top for years, had in fact forgotten Top was present at the Vivian Relf Party.

  “Were you breaking up with some girl that night?”

  “No,” said Doran. “Nothing like that.” He couldn’t remember.

  “If looks could kill.”

  Those people mean nothing to me, Doran wished to cry. They barely did at the time. And now, what was it, ten years later? It was Vivian Relf who mattered, couldn’t she see?

  “Do you remember the airport?” he asked.

  “Ah, the airport,” said Polymus, with a connoisseur’s sarcasm. “Now we’re getting somewhere. Tell us about the airport.”

  The table chuckled nervously, all in deference to their host.

  “I haven’t the faintest idea what he’s talking about, my love.”

  “It’s nothing,” said Doran. “I saw you, ah, at an airport once.” He suddenly wished to diminish it, in present company. He saw now that something precious was being taken from him in full view, a treasure he’d found in his possession only at the instant it was squandered. I wrote a poem to you once, Vivian Relf, he said silently, behind a sip of excellent rioja. Doran knew it was finer, much more interesting, than the wine he’d brought, the cabernet franc they’d sipped with their appetizers.

  He might have known Vivian Relf better than anyone he actually knew, Doran thought now. Or anyway, he’d wanted to. It ought to mean the same thing. His soul creaked in irrelevant despair.

  “This is boring,” pronounced Vander Polymus.

  The dinner party rose up and swallowed them, as it was meant to.

  MINNOW

  by AYELET WALDMAN

  SHE WOULD DO HIM THE FAVOR, she thought, of letting him help her up the stairs. Matt held her around her waist, his arm stiff, his hand cool even through the fabric of her maternity shirt. Edie gazed along the narrow upstairs hallway, the walls hung with photographs all framed in matching gold leaf. Edie in her wedding gown, her eyes demurely fixed on the bouquet of tuberoses and orchids in her hands, a small smile playing on her lips, a gentle haze over the image as though the photographer had rubbed his lens with Vaseline. Matt in his hockey uniform, mugging for the camera, his gloved hand looped around the neck of a masked goalie. Matt in his long black cap and gown, holding his law school diploma up over his head in one hand and his young half sister upside down with the other, her shoe leaving a trail of gray mud along the smocked yoke of his gown. A magazine photograph of Edie and her two sisters from their modeling years: three little girls
in matching seersucker dresses with bare feet and carefully tousled curls.

  During the night, she saw, when Matt had come home to shower and change his clothes, he’d had the presence of mind to close the door to the small bedroom at the far end of the hall, and to take down the postcards from the lintel over the door. She had found the postcards in a shop on Fourth Street: pink-cheeked cherubs, each draped over and through a letter of the alphabet printed in elaborate Victorian typeface. Edie had bought four of them, brought them home, and spelled out the word “baby” over the door to the little bedroom. It had taken Matt two days to notice and another minute or two to realize what they meant.

  He steered her into their bedroom with his cold, steady hand. “Get into bed, sweetheart. I’ll bring you something to eat.”

  Edie knew that she ought be to be hungry. She had been hungry, it seemed, for the past twenty-three weeks, and she had eaten nothing at all since last night.

  “I just want to take a shower.”

  In the bathroom, Edie tugged her pants down around her thighs and saw that the thick pad had slipped to one side, allowed a stream of stringy blood to soak the cotton of her panties and stain her leg. She pulled the pad loose and threw it away. She did not bother to rinse out her panties, just balled them up and threw them away too, covering the mess in the wicker trash can with a few wadded tissues.

  “Everything all right?” Matt asked through the closed door.

  “Fine,” she said, and stepped into the shower.

  She stayed in the shower a long time, washing her hair and scrubbing her blood-smeared thighs. When she was done she rubbed herself dry and smoothed lotion automatically onto her legs and feet, her elbows and hands. She avoided touching her belly. She rummaged through the medicine cabinet until she found Matt’s stash of Ambien, swallowed one, and put the medicine bottle back, taking care to turn it so that the label was facing in the direction that it had been.

  “You sure you don’t want to eat something?” Matt said when she came out. He was sitting on the edge of the bed, pleating the duvet cover between his fingers.

  “Maybe later,” Edie said as she put on a clean pair of underwear and affixed in place one of the bulky pads the nurse had given her before they left the hospital. “I think I’ll just try to sleep.”

 

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