by John Updike
Pop rises quickly, obliging; yet then he stands in a tentative crouch, offering to say away her brusqueness. “You two have a language all your own. Mary and I, we used to marvel, I used to say to her, There couldn’t ever have been a brother and a sister closer than Harry and Miriam. These other parents used to tell us, you know, about kids fighting, we didn’t know what they were talking about, we’d never had an example. I swear to God above we never heard a loud word between the two of you. A lot of boys, all of six when Mim arrived, might have expressed resentment, you know, settled in with things pretty much his own way up to then: not Harry. Right from the start, right from that first summer, we could trust you alone with him, alone in the house, Mary and I off to a movie, about the only way to forget your troubles in those days, go off to a motion picture.” He blinks, gropes among these threads for the one to pull it all tight. “I swear to God, we’ve been lucky,” he says, then weakens it by adding, “when you look at some of the things that can happen to people,” and goes up; his tears spark as he faces the bulb burning at the head of the stairs, before cautiously returning his eyes to the treads.
Did they ever have a language of their own? Rabbit can’t remember it, he just remembers them being here together, in this house season after season, for grade after grade of school, setting off down Jackson Road in the aura of one holiday after another, Hallowe’en, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Valentine’s Day, Easter, in the odors and feel of one sports season succeeding another, football, basketball, track; and then him being out and Mim shrunk to a word in his mother’s letters; and then him coming back from the Army and finding her grown up, standing in front of the mirror, ready for boys, maybe having had a few, tinting her hair and wearing hoop earrings; and then Janice took him off; and then both of them were off and the house empty of young life; and now both of them are here again. The smoke from her cigarette seems what the room needs, has needed a long time, to chase these old furniture and sickness smells away. He is sitting on the piano stool; he perches forward and reaches toward her. “Gimme a weed.”
“I thought you stopped.”
“Years ago. I don’t inhale. Unless it’s grass.”
“Grass yet. You’ve been living it up.” She fishes in her purse, a big bright patchy bag that matches her slacks, and tosses him a cigarette. It is menthol, with a complicated filter tip. Death is easily fooled. If the churches don’t work, a filter will do.
He says, “I don’t know what I’ve been doing.”
“I would say so. Mom talked to me for an hour. The way she is now, that’s a lot of talking.”
“What d’ya think of Mom now? Now that you have all this perspective.”
“She was a great woman. With nowhere to put it.”
“Well, is where you put it any better?”
“It involves less make-believe.”
“I don’t know, you look pretty fantastic to me.”
“Thanks.”
“What’d she say? Mom.”
“Nothing you don’t know, except Janice calls her a lot.”
“I knew that. She’s called a couple times since Sunday, I can’t stand it to talk to her.”
“Why not?”
“She’s too wild. She doesn’t make any sense. She says she’s getting a divorce but never starts it, she says she’ll sue me for burning her house and I tell her I only burned my half. Then she says she’ll come get Nelson but never comes, I wish the hell she would.”
“What does it mean to you, her being wild like this?”
“I think she’s losing her buttons. Probably drinking like a fish.”
Mim turns her profile to blunt the cigarette in the saucer serving as an ashtray. “It means she wants back in.” Mim knows things, Rabbit realizes proudly. Wherever you go in some directions, Mim has been there. The direction where she hasn’t been is the one that has Nelson in it, and the nice hot slap of the slug being made beside your left hand. But these are old directions, people aren’t going that way any more. Mim repeats, “She wants you back.”
“People keep telling me that,” Rabbit says, “but I don’t see much evidence. She can find me if she wants to.”
Mim crosses her pants legs, aligns the stripes, and lights another cigarette. “She’s trapped. Her love for this guy is the biggest thing she has, it’s the first step out she’s taken since she drowned that baby. Let’s face it, Harry. You kids back here in the sticks still believe in ghosts. Before you screw you got to square it with old Jack Frost, or whatever you call him. To square skipping out with herself she has to make it a big deal. So. Remember as kids those candy jars down at Spottsie’s you reached inside of to grab the candy and then you couldn’t get your fist out? If Janice lets go to pull her hand out she’ll have no candy. She wants it out, but she wants the candy too; no, that’s not exactly it, she wants the idea of what she’s made out of the candy in her own mind. So. Somebody has to break the jar for her.”
“I don’t want her back still in love with this greaseball.”
“That’s how you have to take her.”
“The son of a bitch, he even has the nerve, sitting there in these snappy suits, he must make three times what I do just cheating people, he has the fucking nerve to be a dove. One night we all sat in this restaurant with him and me arguing across the table about Vietnam and them playing touch-ass side by side. You’d like him, actually, he’s your type. A gangster.”
Patiently Mim is sizing him up: one more potential customer at the bar. “Since when,” she asks, “did you become such a war lover? As I remember you, you were damn glad to wriggle out of that Korean thing.”
“It’s not all war I love,” he protests, “it’s this war. Because nobody else does. Nobody else understands it.”
“Explain it to me, Harry.”
“It’s a, it’s a kind of head fake. To keep the other guy off balance. The world the way it is, you got to do something like that once in a while, to keep your options, to keep a little space around you.” He is using his arms to show her his crucial concept of space. “Otherwise, he gets so he can read your every move and you’re dead.”
Mim asks, “You’re sure there is this other guy?”
“Sure I’m sure.” The other guy is the doctor who shakes your hand so hard it hurts. I know best. Madness begins in that pinch.
“You don’t think there might just be a lot of little guys trying to get a little more space than the system they’re under lets them have?”
“Sure there are these little guys, billions of ’em” – billions, millions, too much of everything – “but then also there’s this big guy trying to put them all into a big black bag. He’s crazy, so so must we be. A little.”
She nods like a type of doctor herself. “That fits,” she says. “Be crazy to keep free. The life you been leading lately sounds crazy enough to last you a while.”
“What did I do wrong? I was a fucking Good Samaritan. I took in these orphans. Black, white, I said Hop aboard. Irregardless of color or creed, Hop aboard. Free eats. I was the fucking Statue of Liberty.”
“And it got you a burned-down house.”
“O.K. That’s other people. That’s their problem, not mine. I did what felt right.” He wants to tell her everything, he wants his tongue to keep pace with this love he feels for this his sister; he wants to like her, though he feels a forbidding denseness in her, of too many conclusions reached when he wasn’t there. He tells her, “I learned some things.”
“Anything worth knowing?”
“I learned I’d rather fuck than be blown.”
Mim removes a crumb, as of tobacco but the cigarette is filtered, from her lower lip. “Sounds healthy,” she says. “Rather unAmerican, though.”
“And we used to read books. Aloud to each other.”
“Books about what?”
“I don’t know. Slaves. History, sort of.”
Mim in her stripey clown costume laughs. “You went back to school,” she says. “That’s sweet.” She use
d to get better marks than he did, even after she began with boys: A’s and B’s against his B’s and C’s. Mom at the time told him girls had to be smarter, just to pull even. Mim asks, “So what’d you learn from these books?”
“I learned” – he gazes at a corner of a room, wanting to get this right: he sees a cobweb above the sideboard, gesturing in some ceiling wind he cannot feel – “this country isn’t perfect.” Even as he says this he realizes he doesn’t believe it, any more than he believes at heart that he will die. He is tired of explaining himself. “Speaking of sweet,” he says, “how is your life?”
“Ça va. That’s French for, It goes. Va bene.”
“Somebody keeping you, or is it a new one every night?”
She looks at him and considers. A glitter of reflexive anger snipes at her mask of eye makeup. Then she exhales and relaxes, seeming to conclude, Well he’s my brother. “Neither. I’m a career girl, Harry. I perform a service. I can’t describe it to you, the way it is out there. They’re not bad people. They have rules. They’re not very interesting rules, nothing like Stick your hand in the fire and make it up to Heaven. They’re more like, Ride the exercise bicycle the morning after. The men believe in flat stomach muscles and sweating things out. They don’t want to carry too much fluid. You could say they’re puritans. Gangsters are puritans. They’re narrow and hard because off the straight path you don’t live. Another rule they have is, Pay for what you get because anything free has a rattlesnake under it. They’re survival rules, rules for living in the desert. That’s what it is, a desert. Look out for it, Harry. It’s coming East.”
“It’s here. You ought to see the middle of Brewer; it’s all parking lots.”
“But the things that grow here you can eat, and the sun is still some kind of friend. Out there, we hate it. We live underground. All the hotels are underground with a couple of the windows painted blue. We like it best at night, about three in the morning, when the big money comes to the crap table. Beautiful faces, Harry. Hard and blank as chips. Thousands flow back and forth without any expression. You know what I’m struck by back here, looking at the faces? How soft they are. God they’re soft. You look so soft to me, Harry. You’re soft still standing and Pop’s soft curling under. If we don’t get Janice propped back under you you’re going to curl under too. Come to think of it, Janice is not soft. She’s hard as a nut. That’s what I never liked about her. I bet I’d like her now. I should go see her.”
“Sure. Do. You can swap stories. Maybe you could get her a job on the West Coast. She’s pretty old but does great things with her tongue.”
“That’s quite a hang-up you have there.”
“I just said, nobody’s perfect. How about you? You have some specialty, or just take what comes?”
She sits up. “She really hurt you, didn’t she?” And eases back. She stares at Harry interested. Perhaps she didn’t expect in him such reserves of resentful energy. The living room is dark though the noises that reach them from outside say that children are still playing in the sun. “You’re all soft,” she says, lulling, “like slugs under fallen leaves. Out there, Harry, there are no leaves. People grow these tan shells. I have one, look.” She pulls up her pinstripe blouse and her belly is brown. He tries to picture the rest and wonders if her pussy is tinted honey-blonde to match the hair on her head. “You never see them out in the sun but they’re all tan, with flat stomach muscles. Their one flaw is, they’re still soft inside. They’re like those chocolates we used to hate, those chocolate creams, remember how we’d pick through the Christmas box they’d give us at the movie theater, taking out only the square ones and the caramels in cellophane? The other ones we hated, those dark brown round ones on the outside, all ooky inside. But that’s how people are. It embarrasses everybody but they need to be milked. Men need to be drained. Like boils. Women too for that matter. You asked me my specialty and that’s it, I milk people. I let them spill their insides on me. It can be dirty work but usually it’s clean. I went out there wanting to be an actress and that’s in a way what I got, only I take on the audience one at a time. In some ways it’s more of a challenge. So. Tell me some more about your life.”
“Well I was nursemaid to this machine but now they’ve retired the machine. I was nursemaid to Janice but she upped and left.”
“We’ll get her back.”
“Don’t bother. Then I was nursemaid to Nelson and he hates me because I let Jill die.”
“She let herself die. Speaking of that, that’s what I do like about these kids: they’re trying to kill it. Even if they kill themselves in the process.”
“Kill what?”
“The softness. Sex, love; me, mine. They’re doing it in. I have no playmates under thirty, believe it. They’re burning it out with dope. They’re going to make themselves hard clean through. Like, oh, cockroaches. That’s the way to live in the desert. Be a cockroach. It’s too late for you, and a little late for me, but once these kids get it together, there’ll be no killing them. They’ll live on poison.”
Mim stands; he follows. For all that she was a tall girl and is enlarged by womanhood and makeup, her forehead comes to his chin. He kisses her forehead. She tilts her face up, slime-blue eyelids shut, to be kissed again. Pop’s loose mouth under Mom’s chiselled nose. He tells her, “You’re a cheerful broad,” and pecks her dry cheek. Perfumed stationery. A smile in her cheek pushes his lips. She is himself, with the combination jiggled.
She gives him a sideways hug, patting the fat around his waist. “I swing,” Mim confesses. “I’m no showboat like Rabbit Angstrom, but in my quiet way I swing.” She tightens the hug, and linked like that they walk to the foot of the stairs, to go up and console their parents.
Next day, Thursday, when Pop and Harry come home, Mim has Mom and Nelson downstairs at the kitchen table, having tea and laughing. “Dad,” Nelson says, the first time since Sunday morning he has spoken to his father without first being spoken to, “did you know Aunt Mim worked at Disneyland once? Do Abraham Lincoln for him, please do it again.”
Mim stands. Today she wears a knit dress, short and gray; in black tights her legs show skinny and a little knock-kneed, the same legs she had as a kid. She wobbles forward as to a lectern, removes an imaginary piece of paper from a phantom breast pocket, and holds it wavering a little below where her eyes would focus if they could see. Her voice as if on rustling tape within her throat emerges: “Fow-er scow-er and seven yaars ago –”
Nelson is falling off the chair laughing; yet his careful eyes for a split second check his father’s face, to see how he takes it. Rabbit laughs, and Pop emits an appreciative snarl, and even Mom: the bewildered foolish glaze on her features becomes intentionally foolish, amused. Her laughter reminds Rabbit of the laughter of a child who laughs not with the joke but to join the laughter of others, to catch up and be human among others. To keep the laughter swelling Mim sets out two more cups and saucers in the jerky trance of a lifesize Disney doll, swaying, nodding, setting one cup not in its saucer but on the top of Nelson’s head, even to keep the gag rolling pouring some hot water not in the teacup but onto the table; the water runs, steaming, against Mom’s elbow. “Stop, you’ll scald her!” Rabbit says, and seizes Mim, and is shocked by the tone of her flesh, which for the skit has become plastic, not hers, flesh that would stay in any position you twisted it to. Frightened, he gives her a little shake, and she becomes human, his efficient sister, wiping up, swishing her lean tail from table to stove, taking care of them all.
Pop asks, “What kind of work did Disney have you do, Mim?”
“I wore a little Colonial get-up and led people through a replica of Mt. Vernon.” She curtseys and with both hands in artificial unison points to the old gas stove, with its crusty range and the crazed mica window in the oven door. “The Fa-ther of our Country,” she explains in a sweet, clarion, idiot voice, “was himself nev-er a fa-ther.”
“Mim, you ever get to meet Disney personally?” Pop asks.
Mim continues her act. “His con-nu-bi-al bed, which we see before us, measures five feet four and three-quarter inches from rail to rail, and from head-board to foot-board is two inch-es under sev-en feet, a gi-ant’s bed for those days, when most gentle-men were no bigger than warming pans. Here” – she plucks a plastic fly swatter off the fly-specked wall – “you see a warm-ing pan.”
“If you ask me,” Pop says to himself, having not been answered, “it was Disney more than FDR kept the country from going under to the Commies in the Depression.”
“The ti-ny holes,” Mim is explaining, holding up the fly-swatter, “are de-signed to let the heat e-scape, so the fa-ther of our coun-try will not suf-fer a chill when he climbs into bed with his be-lov-ed Mar-tha. Here” – Mim gestures with two hands at the Verity Press giveaway calendar on the wall, turned to October, a grinning jack-o-lantern – “is Mar-tha.”
Nelson is still laughing, but it is time to let go, and Mim does. She pecks her father on the forehead and asks him, “How’s the Prince of Pica today? Remember that, Daddy? When I thought pica was the place where they had the leaning tower.”
“North of Brewer somewhere,” Nelson tells her, “I forget the exact place, there’s some joint that calls itself the Leaning Tower of Pizza.” The boy waits to see if this is funny, and though the grown-ups around the table laugh obligingly, he decides that it wasn’t, and shuts his mouth. His eyes go wary again. “Can I be excused?”
Rabbit asks sharply, “Where’re you going?”
“My room.”
“That’s Mim’s room. When’re you going to let her have it?”
“Any time.”
“Whyncha go outdoors? Kick the soccer ball around, do something positive, for Chrissake. Get the self-pity out of your system.”
“Let. Him alone,” Mom brings out.