by Anne Tyler
“Except?” Maggie asked.
“Well, it’s just that … shoot, before she was born I had this sort of, like, anticipation. And now I’ve got nothing to anticipate, you know?”
“Oh, that’ll pass,” Maggie said. “Don’t worry.”
But later, to Ira, she said, “I never heard of a father getting postpartum blues.”
Maybe if the mother didn’t, the father did; was that the way it worked? For Fiona herself was cheerful and oblivious. Often as she flitted around the baby she seemed more like one of the enchanted little girls than like a mother. She paid too much heed to Leroy’s appurtenances, Maggie felt—to her frilly clothes, her ribboned sprout of hair. Or maybe it just seemed so. Maybe Maggie was jealous. It was true that she hated to relinquish the baby when she went off to work every morning. “How can I leave her?” she wailed to Ira. “Fiona doesn’t know the first little bit about child care.”
“Well, only one way she’s ever going to learn,” Ira said. And so Maggie left, hanging back internally, and called home several times a day to see how things were going. But they were always going fine.
In the nursing home one afternoon she heard a middle-aged visitor talking to his mother—a vacant, slack-jawed woman in a wheelchair. He told her how his wife was, how the kids were. His mother smoothed her lap robe. He told her how his job was. His mother plucked at a bit of lint and flicked it onto the floor. He told her about a postcard that had come for her at the house. The church was holding an Easter bazaar and they wanted her to check off which task she would volunteer for. This struck the son as comical, in view of his mother’s disabilities. “They offered you your choice,” he said, chuckling. “You could clerk at the needlework booth or you could tend the babies.” His mother’s hands grew still. She raised her head. Her face lit up and flowered. “Oh!” she cried softly. “I’ll tend the babies!”
Maggie knew just how she felt.
Leroy was a long, thin infant, and Fiona worried she was outgrowing the bureau drawer she slept in. “When are you going to get started on that cradle?” she asked Jesse, and Jesse said, “Any day now.”
Maggie said, “Maybe we should just buy a crib. A cradle’s for a newborn; she wouldn’t fit it for long.”
But Fiona said, “No, I set my heart on a cradle.” She told Jesse. “You promised.”
“I don’t remember promising.”
“Well, you did,” she said.
“All right! I’ll get to it! Didn’t I tell you I would?”
“You don’t have to shout at me,” she said.
“I’m not shouting.”
“Yes, you are.”
“Am not.”
“Are too.”
“Children! Children!” Maggie said, pretending she was joking.
But only pretending.
Once, Fiona spent the night at her sister’s, snatching up the baby and stomping out after a fight. Or not a fight exactly but a little misunderstanding: The band was playing at a club in downtown Baltimore and Fiona planned to come along, as usual, till Jesse worried aloud that Leroy had a cold and shouldn’t be left. Fiona said Maggie would tend her just fine and Jesse said a baby with a cold needed her mother and then Fiona said it was amazing how he was so considerate of that baby but so inconsiderate of his wife and then Jesse said …
Well.
Fiona left and did not come back until morning; Maggie feared she was gone for good, endangering that poor sick baby, who needed much more nursing than Fiona could provide. She must have been planning to desert them all along, in fact. Why, just look at her soapbox! Wasn’t it odd that for almost a year now she had borne off to the bathroom twice daily a tortoiseshell soapbox, a tube of Aim toothpaste (not the Morans’ brand), and a toothbrush in a plastic cylinder? And that her toilet supplies were continually stored in a clear vinyl travel case on the bureau? She might as well be a guest. She had never meant to settle in permanently.
“Go after her,” Maggie told Jesse, but Jesse asked, “Why should I? She’s the one who walked out.” He was at work when Fiona returned the next day, wan and puffy-eyed. Strands of her uncombed hair mingled with the fake-fur trim of her windbreaker hood, and Leroy was wrapped clumsily in a garish daisy-square afghan that must have belonged to the sister.
What Maggie’s mother said was true: The generations were sliding downhill in this family. They were descending in every respect, not just in their professions and their educations but in the way they reared their children and the way they ran their households. (“How have you let things get so common?” Maggie heard again in her memory.) Mrs. Daley stood over the sleeping Leroy and pleated her lips in disapproval. “They would put an infant in a bureau drawer? They would let her stay in here with you and Ira? What can they be thinking of? It must be that Fiona person. Really, Maggie, that Fiona is so … Why, she isn’t even a Baltimore girl! Anyone who would pronounce Wicomico as Weeko-Meeko! And what is that racket I’m hearing?”
Maggie tilted her head to listen. “It’s Canned Heat,” she decided.
“Candide? I’m not asking the name of it; I mean why is it playing? When you children were small I played Beethoven and Brahms, I played all of Wagner’s operas!”
Yes, and Maggie could still recall her itch of boredom as Wagner’s grandiose weight crashed through the house. And her frustration when, beginning some important story with “Me and Emma went to—” she had been cut short by her mother. (“ ‘Emma and I,’ if you please.”) She had sworn never to do that to her own children, preferring to hear what it was they had to say and let the grammar take care of itself. Not that it had done so, at least not in Jesse’s case.
Maybe her own downhill slide was deliberate. If so, she owed Jesse an apology. Maybe he was just carrying out her secret scheme for revolution, and would otherwise—who knows?—have gone on to be a lawyer like Mrs. Daley’s father.
Well, too late now.
Leroy learned to crawl and she crawled right out of her bureau drawer, and the next day Ira came home with a crib. He assembled it, without comment, in his and Maggie’s bedroom. Without comment, Fiona watched from the doorway. The skin beneath her eyes had a sallow, soiled look.
On a Saturday in September, they celebrated Ira’s father’s birthday. Maggie had made it a tradition to spend his birthday at the Pimlico Race Track—all of them together, even though it meant closing the frame shop. They would take a huge picnic lunch and a ten-dollar bill for each person to bet with. In times past the whole family had squeezed into Ira’s car, but of course that was no longer possible. This year they had Jesse and Fiona (who had been away on their honeymoon the year before), and Leroy too, and even Ira’s sister Junie decided she might brave the trip. So Jesse borrowed the van that his band used to transport their instruments. SPIN THE CAT was lettered across its side, the S and the C striped like tigers’ tails. They loaded the back with picnic hampers and baby supplies, and then they drove to the shop to pick up Ira’s father and sisters. Junie wore her usual going-out costume, everything cut on the bias, and carried a parasol that wouldn’t collapse, which caused some trouble when she climbed in. And Dorrie was hugging her Hutzler’s coat box, which caused even more trouble. But everyone acted good-natured about it—even Ira’s father, who always said he was way too old to make a fuss over birthdays.
It was a beautiful day, the kind that starts out cool until sunlight gently warms your outer layers and then your inner layers. Daisy was trying to get them to sing “Camptown Races,” and Ira’s father wore a grudging, self-conscious smile. This was how families ought to be, Maggie thought. And in the bus that carried them in from the parking lot—a bus they half filled, if you counted the picnic hampers balanced on empty seats and the diaper bag and folded stroller blocking the aisle—she felt sorry for their fellow passengers who sat alone or in pairs. Most of them had a workaday attitude. They wore sensible clothes and stern, purposeful expressions, and they were here to win. The Morans were here to celebrate.
They spread out o
ver one whole row of bleachers, parking Leroy alongside in her stroller. Then Mr. Moran, who prided himself on his knowledge of horseflesh, went off to the paddocks to size things up, and Ira went too, to keep him company. Jesse found a couple he knew—a man in motorcycle gear and a slip of a girl in fringed buckskin pants—and disappeared with them; he wasn’t much of a gambler. The women settled down to select their horses by the ring of their names, which was a method that seemed to work about as well as any other. Maggie favored one called Infinite Mercy, but Junie disagreed. She said that didn’t sound to her like a horse with enough fight to it.
Because of the baby, who was teething or something and acted a little fretful, they staggered their trips to the betting window. Fiona went first with Ira’s sisters, while Maggie stayed behind with Leroy and Daisy. Then the others came back and Maggie and Daisy went, Daisy bristling with good advice. “What you do,” she said, “is put two dollars to show. That’s safest.” But Maggie said, “If I’d wanted safe I’d be sitting at home,” and bet all ten dollars on Number Four to win. (In the past she’d argued for the family to pool every bit of their money and head straight for the fifty-dollar-minimum window, a dangerous and exciting spot she’d never so much as approached, but she knew by now not to bother trying.) Along the way they ran into Ira and his father, who were discussing statistics. The jockeys’ weights, their previous records, the horses’ fastest times and what kind of turf they did best on—there was plenty to consider, if you cared. Maggie bet her ten dollars and left, while Daisy joined the men, and the three of them stood deliberating.
“This kid is wearing me out,” Fiona said when Maggie got back. Leroy evidently didn’t want to be carried and she kept straining toward the ground, which was littered with beer-can tabs and cigarette butts. Dorrie, who was supposed to be helping, had opened her coat box instead and was laying an orderly row of marshmallows from one end of the bleacher to the other. Maggie said, “Here, I’ll take her, poor lamb,” and she bore Leroy off to the railing to admire the horses, which were just assembling at the starting gate with skittery, mincing steps. “What do horses say?” Maggie asked. “Nicker-nicker-nicker!” she supplied. Ira and his father returned, still arguing. Their subject now was the sheet of racing tips that Mr. Moran had purchased from a man with no teeth. “Which ones did you vote for?” Maggie asked them.
“You don’t vote, Maggie,” Ira told her. The horses took off, looking somehow quaint and toylike. They galloped past with a sound that reminded her of a flag ruffling in the wind. Then, just like that, the race was finished. “So soon!” Maggie lamented. She never could get over how quickly it all happened; there was hardly anything to watch. “Really baseball gives a better sense of time,” she told the baby.
The results lit up the electric billboard: Number Four was nowhere to be seen. That struck Maggie as a relief, in a way. She wouldn’t need to make any more choices. In fact, the only person who came out ahead was Mr. Moran. He had won six dollars on Number Eight, a horse his tip sheet had recommended. “See there?” he asked Ira. Daisy hadn’t bet at all; she was saving for a race she felt surer of.
Maggie gave the baby to Daisy and started unpacking their lunch. “There’s ham on rye, turkey on white, roast beef on whole wheat,” she announced. “There’s chicken salad, deviled eggs, potato salad, and cole slaw. Peaches, fresh strawberries, and melon balls. Don’t forget to save room for the birthday cake.” The people nearby were munching on junk food bought right there at the track. They stared curiously at the hampers, each one of which Daisy had lined with a starched checkered cloth tucked into little pleats around the edges. Maggie passed out napkins. “Where’s Jesse?” she asked, searching the crowd.
“I have no idea,” Fiona said. Somehow, she had ended up with Leroy again. She jiggled her sharply against her shoulder, while Leroy screwed up her face and made fussing noises. Well, Maggie could have predicted as much. You don’t use such a rapid rhythm with a baby; shouldn’t Fiona have learned that by now? Wouldn’t simple instinct have informed her? Maggie felt an edgy little poke of irritation in the small of her back. To be fair, it wasn’t Fiona who annoyed her so much as the fussing—Leroy’s jagged “eh, eh.” If Maggie weren’t loading paper plates she could have taken over herself, but as it was, all she could do was make suggestions. “Try putting her in the stroller, Fiona. Maybe she’ll fall asleep.”
“She won’t fall asleep; she’ll just climb out again,” Fiona said. “Oh, where is Jesse?”
“Daisy, go look for your brother,” Maggie commanded.
“I can’t; I’m eating.”
“Go anyway. For goodness’ sake, I can’t do everything.”
“Is it my fault he went off with his dumb friends somewhere?” Daisy asked. “I just got started on my sandwich.”
“Now listen, young lady … Ira?”
But Ira and his father had left again for the betting windows. Maggie said, “Oh for—Dorrie, could you please go and hunt Jesse for me?”
“Well, but I am dealing out these here marshmallows,” Dorrie said.
The marshmallows traveled in a perfect, unbroken row the length of their bleacher, like a dotted line. As a result, none of them could sit down. People kept pausing at the far end, meaning to take a seat, but then they saw the marshmallows and moved on. Maggie sighed. Behind her back, a bugle call floated on the clear, still air, but Maggie, facing the bleachers, went on searching the crowd for Jesse. Then Junie nudged a few of Dorrie’s marshmallows out of line and sat down very suddenly, clutching her parasol with both hands. “Maggie,” she murmured, “I am feeling just so, I don’t know, all at once.…”
“Take a deep breath,” Maggie said briskly. This happened, from time to time. “Remind yourself you’re here as someone else.”
“I believe I’m going to faint,” Junie said, and without warning she swung her spike-heeled sandals up and lay down flat upon the bleacher. The parasol remained in both her hands, rising from her chest as if planted there. Dorrie rushed distractedly around her, trying to retrieve as many marshmallows as possible.
“Daisy, is that your brother up there with those people?” Maggie asked.
Daisy said, “Where?” but Fiona was quicker. She wheeled and said, “It most certainly is.” Then she shrieked, “Jesse Moran! You get your ass on down here!”
Her voice was that stringy, piercing kind. Everybody stared. Maggie said, “Oh, well, I wouldn’t—”
“You hear me?” Fiona shrieked, and Leroy started crying in earnest.
“There’s no need to shout, Fiona,” Maggie said.
Fiona said, “What?”
She glared at Maggie, ignoring the squalling baby. It was one of those moments when Maggie just wanted to back up and start over. (She had always felt paralyzed in the presence of an angry woman.) Meanwhile Jesse, who couldn’t have missed hearing his name, began to thread his way toward them. Maggie said, “Oh, here he comes!”
“You’re telling me not to shout at my own husband?” Fiona asked.
She was shouting even now. She had to, over the cries of the baby. Leroy’s face was red, and spikes of damp hair were plastered to her forehead. She looked sort of homely, to be frank. Maggie felt an urge to walk off from this group, pretend they had nothing to do with her; but instead she made her voice go light and she said, “No, I only meant he wasn’t that far from us, you see—”
“You meant nothing of the sort,” Fiona said, squeezing the baby too tightly. “You’re trying to run us, just like always; trying to run our lives.”
“No, really, Fiona—”
“What’s up?” Jesse asked breezily, arriving among them.
“Ma and Fiona are having a fight,” Daisy said. She took a dainty nibble from her sandwich.
“We are not!” Maggie cried. “I merely suggested—”
“A fight?” Ira said. “What?”
He and Mr. Moran were all at once standing in the aisle behind Jesse. “What’s going on here?” he asked above Leroy’s cries.r />
Maggie told him, “Nothing’s going on! For Lord’s sake, all I said was—”
“Can’t you folks be left to your own devices for even a minute?” Ira asked. “And why is Junie lying down like that? How do these things happen so fast?”
Unfair, unfair. To hear him talk, you would think they had such scenes every day. You would think that Ira himself was in line for the Nobel Peace Prize. “For your information,” Maggie told him, “I was just standing here minding my own business—”
“You have never once in all the time I’ve known you managed to mind your own business,” Fiona said.
“Now cool it, Fiona,” Jesse said.
“And you!” Fiona screeched, turning on him. “You think this baby is just mine? How come I always get stuck with her while you go off with your buddies, answer me that!”
“Those weren’t my buddies; they were only—”
“He was drinking with them too,” Daisy murmured, with her eyes on her sandwich.
“Well, big deal,” Jesse told her.
“Drinking from this silver flat kind of bottle that belonged to that girl.”
“So what if I was, Miss Goody-Goody?”
“Now listen,” Ira said. “Let’s just all sit down a minute and get ahold of ourselves. We’re blocking people’s view.”
He sat, setting an example. Then he looked behind him.
“My marshmallows!” Dorrie squawked.
“You can’t leave your marshmallows here, Dorrie. No one has room to sit.”