The Corrections
start taking showers instead.”
“Not steady enough on my feet.”
“Here, wet your hair.” She paddled a hand in the tepid water, to give Alfred the idea. He splashed some on his head. She could hear Gary talking to one of her friends, somebody female and chipper and St. Judean, Esther Root maybe.
“We can get a stool for the shower,” she said, lathering Alfred’s hair. “We can put a strong bar in there to hold on to, like Dr. Hedgpeth said we should. Maybe Gary can do that tomorrow.”
Alfred’s voice vibrated in his skull and on up through her fingers: “Gary and Jonah got in all right?”
“No, just Gary,” Enid said. “Jonah has a high, high fever and terrible vomiting. Poor kid, he’s much too sick to fly.”
Alfred winced in sympathy.
“Lean over now and I’ll rinse.”
If Alfred was trying to lean forward, it was evident only from a trembling in his legs, not from any change in his position.
“You need to do much more stretching,” Enid said. “Did you ever look at that sheet from Dr. Hedgpeth?”
Alfred shook his head. “Didn’t help.”
“Maybe Denise can teach you how to do those exercises. You might like that.”
She reached behind her for the water glass from the sink. She filled it and refilled it at the bathtub’s tap, pouring the hot water over her husband’s head. With his eyes squeezed shut he could have been a child.
“You’ll have to get yourself out now,” she said. “I won’t help you.”
“I have my own method,” he said.
Down in the living room Gary was kneeling to straighten the crooked tree.
“Who was at the door?” Enid said.
“Bea Meisner,” he said, not looking up. “There’s a gift on the mantel.”
“Bea Meisner?” A late flame of shame flickered in Enid. “I thought they were staying in Austria for the holiday.”
“No, they’re here for one day and then going to La Jolla.”
“That’s where Katie and Stew live. Did she bring anything?”
“On the mantel,” Gary said.
The gift from Bea was a festively wrapped bottle of something presumably Austrian.
“Anything else?” Enid said.
Gary, clapping fir needles from his hands, gave her a funny look. “Were you expecting something else?”
“No, no,” she said. “There was a silly little thing I asked her to get in Vienna, but I’m sure she forgot.”
Gary’s eyes narrowed. “What silly little thing?”
“Oh, nothing, just, nothing.” Enid examined the bottle to see if anything was attached to it. She’d survived her infatuation with Aslan, she’d done the work necessary to forget him, and she was by no means sure she wanted to see the Lion again. But the Lion still had power over her. She had a sensation from long ago, a pleasurable apprehension of a lover’s return. It made her miss how she used to miss Alfred.
She chided: “Why didn’t you invite her in?”
“Chuck was waiting in their Jaguar,” Gary said. “I gather they’re making the rounds.”
“Well.” Enid unwrapped the bottle—it was a Halb-Trocken Austrian champagne—to be sure there was no hidden package.
“That is an extremely sugary-looking wine,” Gary said.
She asked him to build a fire. She stood and marveled as her competent gray-haired son walked steadily to the woodpile, returned with a load of logs on one arm, deftly arranged them in the fireplace, and lit a match on the first try. The whole job took five minutes. Gary was doing nothing more than function the way a man was supposed to function, and yet, in contrast to the man Enid lived with, his capabilities seemed godlike. His least gesture was glorious to watch.
Along with her relief at having him in the house, though, came the awareness of how soon he would leave again.
Alfred, wearing a sport coat, stopped in the living room and visited with Gary for a minute before repairing to the den for a high-decibel dose of local news. His age and his stoop had taken two or three inches off his height, which not long ago had been the same as Gary’s.
While Gary, with exquisite motor control, hung the lightson the tree, Enid sat by the fire and unpacked the liquor cartons in which she kept her ornaments. Everywhere she’d traveled she’d spent the bulk of her pocket money on ornaments. In her mind, while Gary hung them, she traveled back to a Sweden populated by straw reindeers and little red horses, to a Norway whose citizens wore authentic Lapp reindeer-skin boots, to a Venice where all the animals were made of
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher