To put us at our ease, to quiet our hearts as she lay dying, our dear friend Selena said, Life, after all, has not been an unrelieved horror—you know, I did have many wonderful years with her.
She pointed to a child who leaned out of a portrait on the wall—long brown hair, white pinafore, head and shoulders forward.
Eagerness, said Susan. Ann closed her eyes.
On the same wall three little girls were photographed in a schoolyard. They were in furious discussion; they were holding hands. Right in the middle of the coffee table, framed, in autumn colors, a handsome young woman of eighteen sat on an enormous horse—aloof, disinterested, a rider. One night this young woman, Selena’s child, was found in a rooming house in a distant city, dead. The police called. They said, Do you have a daughter named Abby?
And with him too, our friend Selena said. We had good times, Max and I. You know that.
There were no photographs of him. He was married to another woman and had a new, stalwart girl of about six, to whom no harm would ever come, her mother believed.
Our dear Selena had gotten out of bed. Heavily but with a comic dance, she soft-shoed to the bathroom, singing, “Those were the days, my friend…”
Later that evening, Ann, Susan, and I were enduring our five-hour train ride to home. After one hour of silence and one hour of coffee and the sandwiches Selena had given us (she actually stood, leaned her big soft excavated body against the kitchen table to make those sandwiches), Ann said, Well, we’ll never see her again.
Who says? Anyway, listen, said Susan. Think of it. Abby isn’t the only kid who died. What about that great guy, remember Bill Dalrymple—he was a non-cooperator or a deserter? And Bob Simon. They were killed in automobile accidents. Matthew, Jeannie, Mike. Remember Al Lurie—he was murdered on Sixth Street—and that little kid Brenda, who O.D.’d on your roof, Ann? The tendency, I suppose, is to forget. You people don’t remember them.
What do you mean, “you people”? Ann asked. You’re talking to us.
I began to apologize for not knowing them all. Most of them were older than my kids, I said.
Of course, the child Abby was exactly in my time of knowing and in all my places of paying attention—the park, the school, our street. But oh! It’s true! Selena’s Abby was not the only one of that beloved generation of our children murdered by cars, lost to war, to drugs, to madness.
Selena’s main problem, Ann said—you know, she didn’t tell the truth.
What?
A few hot human truthful words are powerful enough, Ann thinks, to steam all God’s chemical mistakes and society’s slimy lies out of her life. We all believe in that power, my friends and I, but sometimes … the heat.
Anyway, I always thought Selena had told us a lot. For instance, we knew she was an orphan. There were six, seven other children. She was the youngest. She was forty-two years old before someone informed her that her mother had not died in childbirthing her. It was some terrible sickness. And she had lived close to her mother’s body—at her breast, in fact—until she was eight months old. Whew! said Selena. What a relief! I’d always felt I was the one who’d killed her.
Your family stinks, we told her. They really held you up for grief.
Oh, people, she said. Forget it. They did a lot of nice things for me too. Me and Abby. Forget it. Who has the time?
That’s what I mean, said Ann. Selena should have gone after them with an ax.
More information: Selena’s two sisters brought her to a Home. They were ashamed that at sixteen and nineteen they could not take care of her. They kept hugging her. They were sure she’d cry. They took her to her room—not a room, a dormitory with about eight beds. This is your bed, Lena. This is your table for your things. This little drawer is for your toothbrush. All for me? she asked. No one else can use it? Only me. That’s all? Artie can’t come? Franky can’t come? Right?
Believe me, Selena said, those were happy days at Home.
Facts, said Ann, just facts. Not necessarily the truth.
I don’t think it’s right to complain about the character of the dying or start hustling all their motives into the spotlight like that. Isn’t it amazing enough, the bravery of that private inclusive intentional community?
It wouldn’t help not to be brave, said Selena. You’ll see.
She wanted to get back to bed. Susan moved to help her.
Thanks, our Selena said, leaning on another person for the first time in her entire life. The trouble is, when I stand, it hurts me here all down my back. Nothing they can do about it. All the chemotherapy. No more chemistry left in me to therapeut. Ha! Did you know before I came to New York and met you I used to work in that hospital? I was supervisor in gynecology. Nursing. They were my friends, the doctors. They weren’t so snotty then. David Clark, big surgeon. He couldn’t look at me last week. He kept saying, Lena … Lena … Like that. We were in North Africa the same year—’44, I think. I told him, Davy, I’ve been around a long enough time. I haven’t missed too much. He knows it. But I didn’t want to make him look at me. Ugh, my damn feet are a pain in the neck.
Recent research, said Susan, tells us that it’s the neck that’s a pain in the feet.
Always something new, said Selena, our dear friend.
On the way back to the bed, she stopped at her desk. There were about twenty snapshots scattered across it—the baby, the child, the young woman. Here, she said to me, take this one. It’s a shot of Abby and your Richard in front of the school—third grade? What a day! The show those kids put on! What a bunch of kids! What’s Richard doing now?
Oh, who knows? Horsing around someplace. Spain. These days, it’s Spain. Who knows where he is? They’re all the same.
Why did I say that? I knew exactly where he was. He writes. In fact, he found a broken phone and was able to call every day for a week—mostly to give orders to his brother but also to say, Are you O.K., Ma? How’s your new boyfriend, did he smile yet?
The kids, they’re all the same, I said.
It was only politeness, I think, not to pour my boy’s light, noisy face into that dark afternoon. Richard used to say in his early mean teens, You’d sell us down the river to keep Selena happy and innocent. It’s true. Whenever Selena would say, I don’t know, Abby has some peculiar friends, I’d answer for stupid comfort, You should see Richard’s.
Still, he’s in Spain, Selena said. At least you know that. It’s probably interesting. He’ll learn a lot. Richard is a wonderful boy, Faith. He acts like a wise guy but he’s not. You know the night Abby died, when the police called me and told me? That was my first night’s sleep in two years. I knew where she was.
Selena said this very matter-of-factly—just offering a few informative sentences.
But Ann, listening, said, Oh!—she called out to us all, Oh!—and began to sob. Her straightforwardness had become an arrow and gone right into her own heart.
Then a deep tear-drying breath: I want a picture too, she said.
Yes. Yes, wait, I have one here someplace. Abby and Judy and that Spanish kid Victor. Where is it? Ah. Here!
Three nine-year-old children sat high on that long-armed sycamore in the park, dangling their legs on someone’s patient head—smooth dark hair, parted in the middle. Was that head Kitty’s?
Our dear friend laughed. Another great day, she said. Wasn’t it? I remember you two sizing up the men. I had one at the time—I thought. Some joke. Here, take it. I have two copies. But you ought to get it enlarged. When this you see, remember me. Ha-ha. Well, girls—excuse me, I mean ladies—it’s time for me to rest.
She took Susan’s arm and continued that awful walk to her bed.
We didn’t move. We had a long journey ahead of us and had expected a little more comforting before we set off.
No, she said. You’ll only miss the express. I’m not in much pain. I’ve got lots of painkiller. See?
The tabletop was full of little bottles.
I just want to lie down and think of Abby.
It was true, the local could cost us an extra two hours at least. I looked at Ann. It had been hard for her to come at all. Still, we couldn’t move. We stood there before Selena in a row. Three old friends. Selena pressed her lips together, ordered her eyes into cold distance.
I know that face. Once, years ago, when the children were children, it had been placed modestly in front of J. Hoffner, the principal of the elementary school.
He’d said, No! Without training you cannot tutor these kids. There are real problems. You have to know how to teach.
Our P.T.A. had decided to offer some one-to-one tutorial help for the Spanish kids, who were stuck in crowded classrooms with exhausted teachers among little middle-class achievers. He had said, in a written communication to show seriousness and then in personal confrontation to prove seriousness, that he could not allow it. And the Board of Ed. itself had said no. (All this no-ness was to lead to some terrible events in the schools and neighborhoods of our poor yes-requiring city.) But most of the women in our P.T.A. were independent—by necessity and disposition. We were, in fact, the soft-speaking tough souls of anarchy.
I had Fridays off that year. At about 11 a.m. I’d bypass the principal’s office and run up to the fourth floor. I’d take Robert Figueroa to the end of the hall, and we’d work away at storytelling for about twenty minutes. Then we would write the beautiful letters of the alphabet invented by smart foreigners long ago to fool time and distance.
That day, Selena and her stubborn face remained in the office for at least two hours. Finally, Mr. Hoffner, besieged, said that because she was a nurse, she would be allowed to help out by taking the littlest children to the modern difficult toilet. Some of them, he said, had just come from the barbarous hills beyond Maricao. Selena said O.K., she’d do that. In the toilet she taught the little girls which way to wipe, as she had taught her own little girl a couple years earlier. At three o’clock she brought them home for cookies and milk. The children of that year ate cookies in her kitchen until the end of the sixth grade.
Now, what did we learn in that year of my Friday afternoons off? The following: Though the world cannot be changed by talking to one child at a time, it may at least be known.
Anyway, Selena placed into our eyes for long remembrance that useful stubborn face. She said, No. Listen to me, you people. Please. I don’t have lots of time. What I want … I want to lie down and think about Abby. Nothing special. Just think about her, you know.
* * *
In the train Susan fell asleep immediately. She woke up from time to time, because the speed of the new wheels and the resistance of the old track gave us some terrible jolts. Once, she opened her eyes wide and said, You know, Ann’s right. You don’t get sick like that for nothing. I mean, she didn’t even mention him.
Why should she? She hasn’t even seen him, I said. Susan, you still have him-itis, the dread disease of females.
Yeah? And you don’t? Anyway, he was around quite a bit. He was there every day, nearly, when the kid died.
Abby. I didn’t like to hear “the kid.” I wanted to say “Abby” the way I’ve said “Selena”—so those names can take thickness and strength and fall back into the world with their weight.
Abby, you know, was a wonderful child. She was in Richard’s classes every class till high school. Good-hearted little girl from the beginning, noticeably kind—for a kid, I mean. Smart.
That’s true, said Ann, very kind. She’d give away Selena’s last shirt. Oh yes, they were all wonderful little girls and wonderful little boys.
Chrissy is wonderful, Susan said.
She is, I said.
Middle kids aren’t supposed to be, but she is. She put herself through college—I didn’t have a cent—and now she has this fellowship. And, you know, she never did take any crap from boys. She’s something.
Ann went swaying up the aisle to the bathroom. First she said, Oh, all of them—just wohunderful.
I loved Selena, Susan said, but she never talked to me enough. Maybe she talked to you women more, about things. Men.
Then Susan fell asleep.
Ann sat down opposite me. She looked straight into my eyes with a narrow squint. It often connotes accusation.
Be careful—you’re wrecking your laugh lines, I said.
Screw you, she said. You’re kidding around. Do you realize I don’t know where Mickey is? You know, you’ve been lucky. You always have been. Since you were a little kid. Papa and Mama’s darling.
As is usual in conversations, I said a couple of things out loud and kept a few structured remarks for interior mulling and righteousness. I thought: She’s never even met my folks. I thought: What a rotten thing to say. Luck—isn’t it something like an insult?
I said, Annie, I’m only forty-eight. There’s lots of time for me to be totally wrecked—if I live, I mean.
Then I tried to knock wood, but we were sitting in plush and leaning on plastic. Wood! I shouted. Please, some wood! Anybody here have a matchstick?
Oh, shut up, she said. Anyway, death doesn’t count.
I tried to think of a couple of sorrows as irreversible as death. But truthfully nothing in my life can compare to hers: a son, a boy of fifteen, who disappears before your very eyes into a darkness or a light behind his own, from which neither hugging nor hitting can bring him. If you shout, Come back, come back, he won’t come. Mickey, Mickey, Mickey, we once screamed, as though he were twenty miles away instead of right in front of us in a kitchen chair; but he refused to return. And when he did, twelve hours later, he left immediately for California.
Well, some bad things have happened in my life, I said.
What? You were born a woman? Is that it?
She was, of course, mocking me this time, referring to an old discussion about feminism and Judaism. Actually, on the prism of isms, both of those do have to be looked at together once in a while.
Well, I said, my mother died a couple of years ago and I still feel it. I think Ma sometimes and I lose my breath. I miss her. You understand that. Your mother’s seventy-six. You have to admit it’s nice still having her.
She’s very sick, Ann said. Half the time she’s out of it.
I decided not to describe my mother’s death. I could have done so and made Ann even more miserable. But I thought I’d save that for her next attack on me. These constrictions of her spirit were coming closer and closer together. Probably a great enmity was about to be born.
Susan’s eyes opened. The death or dying of someone near or dear often makes people irritable, she stated. (She’s been taking a course in relationships and interrelationships.) The real name of my seminar is Skills: Personal Friendship and Community. It’s a very good course despite your snide remarks.
While we talked, a number of cities passed us, going in the opposite direction. I had tried to look at New London through the dusk of the windows. Now I was missing New Haven. The conductor explained, smiling: Lady, if the windows were clean, half of you’d be dead. The tracks are lined with sharpshooters.
Do you believe that? I hate people to talk that way.
He may be exaggerating, Susan said, but don’t wash the window.
A man leaned across the aisle. Ladies, he said, I do believe it. According to what I hear of this part of the country, it don’t seem unplausible.
Susan turned to see if he was worth engaging in political dialogue.
You’ve forgotten Selena already, Ann said. All of us have. Then you’ll make this nice memorial service for her and everyone will stand up and say a few words and then we’ll forget her again—for good. What’ll you say at the memorial, Faith?
It’s not right to talk like that. She’s not dead yet, Annie.
Yes, she is, said Ann.
We discovered the next day that give or take an hour or two, Ann had been correct. It was a combination—David Clark, surgeon, said—of being sick unto real death and having a tabletop full of little bottles.
Now, why are you taking all those hormones? Susan had asked Selena a couple of years earlier. They were visiting New Orleans. It was Mardi Gras.
Oh, they’re mostly vitamins, Selena said. Besides, I want to be young and beautiful. She made a joking pirouette.
Susan said, That’s absolutely ridiculous.
But Susan’s seven or eight years younger than Selena. What did she know? Because: People do want to be young and beautiful. When they meet in the street, male or female, if they’re getting older they look at each other’s face a little ashamed. It’s clear they want to say, Excuse me, I didn’t mean to draw attention to mortality and gravity all at once. I didn’t want to remind you, my dear friend, of our coming eviction, first from liveliness, then from life. To which, most of the time, the friend’s eyes will courteously reply, My dear, it’s nothing at all. I hardly noticed.
Luckily, I learned recently how to get out of that deep well of melancholy. Anyone can do it. You grab at roots of the littlest future, sometimes just stubs of conversation. Though some believe you miss a great deal of depth by not sinking down down down.
Susan, I asked, you still seeing Ed Flores?
Went back to his wife.
Lucky she didn’t kill you, said Ann. I’d never fool around with a Spanish guy. They all have tough ladies back in the barrio.
No, said Susan, she’s unusual. I met her at a meeting. We had an amazing talk. Luisa is a very fine woman. She’s one of the office-worker organizers I told you about. She only needs him two more years, she says. Because the kids—they’re girls—need to be watched a little in their neighborhood. The neighborhood is definitely not good. He’s a good father but not such a great husband.
I’d call that a word to the wise.
Well, you know me—I don’t want a husband. I like a male person around. I hate to do without. Anyway, listen to this. She, Luisa, whispers in my ear the other day, she whispers, Suzie, in two years you still want him, I promise you, you got him. Really, I may still want him then. He’s only about forty-five now. Still got a lot of spunk. I’ll have my degree in two years. Chrissy will be out of the house.
Two years! In two years we’ll all be dead, said Ann.
I know she didn’t mean all of us. She meant Mickey. That boy of hers would surely be killed in one of the drugstores or whorehouses of Chicago, New Orleans, San Francisco. I’m in a big beautiful city, he said when he called last month. Makes New York look like a garbage tank.
Mickey! Where?
Ha-ha, he said, and hung up.
Soon he’d be picked up for vagrancy, dealing, small thievery, or simply screaming dirty words at night under a citizen’s window. Then Ann would fly to the town or not fly to the town to disentangle him, depending on a confluence of financial reality and psychiatric advice.
How is Mickey? Selena had said. In fact, that was her first sentence when we came, solemn and embarrassed, into her sunny front room that was full of the light and shadow of windy courtyard trees. We said, each in her own way, How are you feeling, Selena? She said, O.K., first things first. Let’s talk about important things. How’s Richard? How’s Tonto? How’s John? How’s Chrissy? How’s Judy? How’s Mickey?
I want to talk about Mickey, said Ann.
Oh, let’s talk about him, talk about him, Selena said, taking Ann’s hand. Let’s all think before it’s too late. How did it start? Oh, for godsakes talk about him.
Susan and I were smart enough to keep our mouths shut.
Nobody knows, nobody knows anything. Why? Where? Everybody has an idea, theories, and writes articles. Nobody knows.
Ann said this sternly. She didn’t whine. She wouldn’t lean too far into Selena’s softness, but listening to Selena speak Mickey’s name, she could sit in her chair more easily. I watched. It was interesting. Ann breathed deeply in and out the way we’ve learned in our Thursday-night yoga class. She was able to rest her body a little bit.
We were riding the trails of the trough called Park-Avenue-in-the-Bronx. Susan had turned from us to talk to the man across the aisle. She was explaining that the war in Vietnam was not yet over and would not be, as far as she was concerned, until we repaired the dikes we’d bombed and paid for some of the hopeless ecological damage. He didn’t see it that way. Fifty thousand American lives, our own boys—we’d paid, he said. He asked us if we agreed with Susan. Every word, we said.
You don’t look like hippies. He laughed. Then his face changed. As the resident face-reader, I decided he was thinking: Adventure. He may have hit a mother lode of late counterculture in three opinionated left-wing ladies. That was the nice part of his face. The other part was the sly out-of-town-husband-in-New-York look.
I’d like to see you again, he said to Susan.
Oh? Well, come to dinner day after tomorrow. Only two of my kids will be home. You ought to have at least one decent meal in New York.
Kids? His face thought it over. Thanks. Sure, he said. I’ll come.
Ann muttered, She’s impossible. She did it again.
Oh, Susan’s O.K., I said. She’s just right in there. Isn’t that good?
This is a long ride, said Ann.
Then we were in the darkness that precedes Grand Central.
We’re irritable, Susan explained to her new pal. We’re angry with our friend Selena for dying. The reason is, we want her to be present when we’re dying. We all require a mother or mother-surrogate to fix our pillows on that final occasion, and we were counting on her to be that person.
I know just what you mean, he said. You’d like to have someone around. A little fuss, maybe.
Something like that. Right, Faith?
It always takes me a minute to slide under the style of her public-address system. I agreed. Yes.
The train stopped hard, in a grinding agony of opposing technologies.
Right. Wrong. Who cares? Ann said. She didn’t have to die. She really wrecked everything.
Oh, Annie, I said.
Shut up, will you? Both of you, said Ann, nearly breaking our knees as she jammed past us and out of the train.
Then Susan, like a New York hostess, began to tell that man all our private troubles—the mistake of the World Trade Center, Westway, the decay of the South Bronx, the rage in Williamsburg. She rose with him on the escalator, gabbing into evening friendship and, hopefully, a happy night.
* * *
At home Anthony, my youngest son, said, Hello, you just missed Richard. He’s in Paris now. He had to call collect.
Collect? From Paris?
He saw my sad face and made one of the herb teas used by his peer group to calm their overwrought natures. He does want to improve my pretty good health and spirits. His friends have a book that says a person should, if properly nutritioned, live forever. He wants me to give it a try. He also believes that the human race, its brains and good looks, will end in his time.
At about 11:30 he went out to live the pleasures of his eighteen-year-old nighttime life.
At 3 a.m. he found me washing the floors and making little apartment repairs.
More tea, Mom? he asked. He sat down to keep me company. O.K., Faith. I know you feel terrible. But how come Selena never realized about Abby?
Anthony, what the hell do I realize about you?
Come on, you had to be blind. I was just a little kid, and I saw. Honest to God, Ma.
Listen, Tonto. Basically Abby was O.K. She was. You don’t know yet what their times can do to a person.
Here she goes with her goody-goodies—everything is so groovy wonderful far-out terrific. Next thing, you’ll say people are darling and the world is so nice and round that Union Carbide will never blow it up.
I have never said anything as hopeful as that. And why to all our knowledge of that sad day did Tonto at 3 a.m. have to add the fact of the world?
The next night Max called from North Carolina. How’s Selena? I’m flying up, he said. I have one early-morning appointment. Then I’m canceling everything.
At 7 a.m. Annie called. I had barely brushed my morning teeth. It was hard, she said. The whole damn thing. I don’t mean Selena. All of us. In the train. None of you seemed real to me.
Real? Reality, huh? Listen, how about coming over for breakfast?—I don’t have to get going until after nine. I have this neat sourdough rye?
No, she said. Oh Christ, no. No!
* * *
I remember Ann’s eyes and the hat she wore the day we first looked at each other. Our babies had just stepped howling out of the sandbox on their new walking legs. We picked them up. Over their sandy heads we smiled. I think a bond was sealed then, at least as useful as the vow we’d all sworn with husbands to whom we’re no longer married. Hindsight, usually looked down upon, is probably as valuable as foresight, since it does include a few facts.
Meanwhile, Anthony’s world—poor, dense, defenseless thing—rolls round and round. Living and dying are fastened to its surface and stuffed into its softer parts.
He was right to call my attention to its suffering and danger. He was right to harass my responsible nature. But I was right to invent for my friends and our children a report on these private deaths and the condition of our lifelong attachments.