Too Short for a Blog Post, Too Long for a Tweet 362
Here are a few excerpts from a book I recently read, "The Goldfinch," by Donna Tartt.
 
WHEN I WAS LITTLE, four or five, my greatest fear was 
that some day my mother might not come home from work. Addition and 
subtraction were useful mainly insofar as they helped me track her 
movements (how many minutes till she left the office? how many minutes 
to walk from office to subway?) and even before I’d learned to count I’d
 been obsessed with learning to read a clock face: desperately studying 
the occult circle crayoned on the paper plate that, once mastered, would
 unlock the pattern of her comings and goings. Usually she was home just
 when she said she’d be, so if she was ten minutes late I began to fret;
 any later, and I sat on the floor by the front door of the apartment 
like a puppy left alone too long, straining to hear the rumble of the 
elevator coming up to our floor.
Almost
 every day in elementary school I heard things on the Channel 7 news 
that worried me. What if some bum in a dirty fatigue jacket pushed my 
mother onto the tracks while she was waiting for the 6 train? Or muscled
 her into a dark doorway and stabbed her for her pocketbook? What if she
 dropped her hair dryer in the bathtub, or got knocked in front of a car
 by a bicycle, or was given the wrong medicine at the dentist’s and 
died, as had happened to the mother of a classmate of mine? 
To
 think of something happening to my mother was especially frightening 
because my dad was so unreliable. Unreliable I guess is the diplomatic 
way of putting it. Even when he was in a good mood he did things like 
lose his paycheck and fall asleep with the front door to the apartment 
open, because he drank. And when he was in a bad mood—which was much of 
the time—he was red-eyed and clammy-looking, his suit so rumpled it 
looked like he’d been rolling on the floor in it and an air of unnatural
 stillness emanating from him as from some pressurized article about to 
explode. 
Though I didn’t
 understand why he was so unhappy, it was clear to me that his 
unhappiness was our fault. My mother and I got on his nerves. It was 
because of us he had a job he couldn’t stand. Everything we did was 
irritating. He particularly didn’t enjoy being around me, not that he 
often was: in the mornings, as I got ready for school, he sat puffy-eyed
 and silent over his coffee with the Wall Street Journal in front of 
him, his bathrobe open and his hair standing up in cowlicks, and 
sometimes he was so shaky that the cup sloshed as he brought it to his 
mouth. Warily he eyed me when I came in, nostrils flaring if I made too 
much noise with the silverware or the cereal bowl.
Resolutely
 I stared at the television. I hadn’t been at school since the day 
before my mother died and as long as I stayed away her death seemed 
unofficial somehow. But once I went back it would be a public fact. 
Worse: the thought of returning to any kind of normal routine seemed 
disloyal, wrong. It kept being a shock every time I remembered it, a 
fresh slap: she was gone. Every new event—everything I did for the rest 
of my life—would only separate us more and more: days she was no longer a
 part of, an ever-growing distance between us. Every single day for the 
rest of my life, she would only be further away.
SOMETIMES,
 IN THE NIGHT, I woke up wailing. The worst thing about the explosion 
was how I carried it in my body—the heat, the bone-jar and slam of it. 
In my dreams, there was always a light way out and a dark way out. I had
 to go the dark way, because the bright way was hot and flickering with 
fire. But the dark way was where the bodies were.
With
 the news about Andy, it was like someone had thrown an x-ray switch and
 reversed everything into photographic negative, so that even with the 
daffodils and the dogwalkers and the traffic cops whistling on the 
corners, death was all I saw: sidewalks teeming with dead, cadavers 
pouring off the buses and hurrying home from work, nothing left of any 
of them in a hundred years except tooth fillings and pacemakers and 
maybe a few scraps of cloth and bone.

Comments