Point Omega - Don Delillo [19]
What did I do? I filled the styrofoam cooler with bags of ice and bottles of water and took aimless drives, listening to tapes of blues singers. I wrote a letter to my wife and then tried to decide whether to send it or tear it up or wait a couple of days and then rewrite it and send it or tear it up. I tossed banana peels off the deck for animals to eat and I stopped counting the days since I’d arrived, somewhere around twenty-two.
In the kitchen he said, “I know about your marriage. You had the kind of marriage where you tell each other everything. You told her everything. I look at you and see this in your face. It’s the worst thing you can do in a marriage. Tell her everything you feel, tell her everything you do. That’s why she thinks you’re crazy.”
At dinner, over another omelette, he waved his fork and said, “You understand it’s not a matter of strategy. I’m not talking about secrets or deceptions. I’m talking about being yourself. If you reveal everything, bare every feeling, ask for understanding, you lose something crucial to your sense of yourself. You need to know things the others don’t know. It’s what no one knows about you that allows you to know yourself.”
Jessie rotated the glasses and dishes in the cabinet so we wouldn’t use the same ones all the time and neglect the others. She did this in periodic spells of energy, a person possessed, working out a systematic arrangement in the sink, in the drain basket and on the shelves. Her father encouraged this. He dried the plates and then watched her shelve them, each in its determined slot. She was functioning, she was helping out around the house and she was doing it to an extreme degree, which was good, which was great, he said, because what’s the meaning of doing dishes if you’re not driven by something beyond sheer necessity.
He said to her, “Before you leave, I want you to see a bighorn sheep.”
She went slack-jawed and held her hands out, palms up, like where did this come from, like what did I do to deserve this, eyes wide, a dumbfounded cartoon child.
The night she talked about art galleries in Chelsea.
She used to visit the galleries with a friend named Alicia. She said Alicia was deep as a dime. She said they’d walk down the long street choosing galleries at random and looking at the art and then walking down the street again and around the corner and up the next street, walking and looking, and one day she thought of something inexplicable. Let’s do the same thing, up and down the same streets, but without going in the galleries. Alicia said yes, like instantly. They did this and it was quietly exciting, she said, it was like the idea of both their lifetimes. Walking down those long and mostly empty streets on weekday afternoons and unspokenly bypassing the art and then crossing the street and walking up the other side of the same street and turning the corner and going to the next street and walking down the next street and crossing to the other side and walking up the same street. Down and then up and then over to the next street, again and again, just walking and talking. It honestly deepened the experience, she said, made it better and more appreciative, street after street.
The night she stood on the edge of the deck, facing out into the dark, hands on the rail.
It was a nearly studied pose, unlike her, and I stood up, I wasn’t sure why, just stood up, watching her. The light in Elster’s bedroom was still on. I think I wanted her to turn and see me standing there. If I said something, she would know I was standing. The source of the voice would indicate I was standing and she would wonder why and then turn and look