The Corrections
down to the kitchen as fast as she could, ailing hip and all, to bail him out. “I guess you’re tired and it’s late,” he said. “We don’t have to talk.”
“Thank you for the call,” Alfred said.
Enid was back on the line. “I’m going to finish these dishes,” she said. “We had a party here tonight! Al, tell Chip about the party we had! I’m getting off the phone now.”
She hung up. Chip said, “You had a party.”
“Yes. The Roots were here for dinner and bridge.”
“Did you have a cake?”
“Your mother made a cake.”
The cigarette had made a hole in Chip’s body through which, he felt, painful harms could enter and vital factors painfully escape. Melting ice was leaking through his fingers. “How was the bridge?”
“My typical terrible cards.”
“That doesn’t seem fair on your birthday.”
“I imagine,” Alfred said, “that you are gearing up for another semester.”
“Right. Right. Although actually not. Actually I’m deciding not to teach at all this semester.”
“I didn’t hear.”
Chip raised his voice. “I said I’ve decided not to teach this semester. I’m going to take the semester off and work on my writing.”
“My recollection is that you are due for tenure soon.”
“Right. In April.”
“It seems to me that a person hoping to be offered tenure would be advised to stay and teach.”
“Right.”
“If they see you working hard, they will have no reason not to offer you tenure.”
“Right. Right.” Chip nodded. “At the same time, I have to prepare for the possibility that I won’t get it. And I’ve got a, uh. A very attractive offer from a Hollywood producer. A college friend of Denise’s who produces movies. Potentially very lucrative.”
“A great worker is almost impossible to fire,” Alfred said.
“The process can get very political, though. I have to have alternatives.”
“As you wish,” Alfred said. “However, I’ve found that it’s usually best to choose one plan and stick with it. If you don’t succeed here, you can always do something else. But you’ve worked many years to reach this point. One more semester’s hard work won’t hurt you.”
“Right.”
“You can relax when you have tenure. Then you’re safe.”
“Right.”
“Well, thank you for the call.”
“Right. Happy birthday, Dad.”
Chip dropped the phone, left the kitchen, and took a Fronsac bottle by the neck and brought its body down hard on the edge of his dining table. He broke a second bottle. The remaining six he smashed two at a time, a neck in each fist.
Anger carried him through the difficult weeks that followed. He borrowed ten thousand dollars from Denise and hired a lawyer to threaten to sue D——College for wrongful termination of his contract. This was a waste of money,but it felt good. He went to New York and ponied up four thousand dollars in fees and deposits for a sublet on Ninth Street. He bought leather clothes and had his ears pierced. He borrowed more money from Denise and reconnected with a college friend who edited the Warren Street Journal . He conceived revenge in the form of a screenplay that would expose the narcissism and treachery of Melissa Paquette and the hypocrisy of his colleagues; he wanted the people who’d hurt him to see the movie, recognize themselves, and suffer. He flirted with Julia Vrais and asked her on a date, and soon he was spending two or three hundred dollars a week to feed and entertain her. He borrowed more money from Denise. He hung cigarettes on his lower lip and banged out a draft of a script. Julia in the back seat of cabs pressed her face against his chest and clutched his collar. He tipped waiters and cabbies thirty and forty percent. He quoted Shakespeare and Byron in funny contexts. He borrowed more money from Denise and decided that she was right, that getting fired was the best thing that had ever happened to him.
He wasn’t so naïve, of course, as to take Eden Procuro’s professional effusions at face value. But the more he saw of Eden socially, the more confident he became that his script would get a sympathetic reading. For one thing, Eden was like a mother to Julia. She was only five years older, but she’d undertaken a wholesale recalibration and improvement of her personal assistant. Although Chip never quite shook the feeling that Eden was hoping to cast someone else in the role of Julia’s love interest (she habitually referred to Chip as Julia’s
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