The Hour I First Believed (Hardcover)
by Wally Lamb
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Overview
Wally Lamb's two previous novels, "She's Come Undone" and "I Know This Much Is True," struck a chord with readers. They responded to the intensely introspective nature of the books, and to their lively narrative styles and biting humor. One critic called Wally Lamb a "modern-day Dostoyevsky," whose characters struggle not only with their respective pasts, but with a "mocking, sadistic God" in whom they don't believe but to whom they turn, nevertheless, in times of trouble ("New York Times").
In his new novel, "The Hour I First Believed," Lamb travels well beyond his earlier work and embodies in his fiction myth, psychology, family history stretching back many generations, and the questions of faith that lie at the heart of everyday life. The result is an extraordinary tour de force, at once a meditation on the human condition and an unflinching yet compassionate evocation of character.
When forty-seven-year-old high school teacher Caelum Quirk and his younger wife, Maureen, a school nurse, move to Littleton, Colorado, they both get jobs at Columbine High School. In April 1999, Caelum returns home to Three Rivers, Connecticut, to be with his aunt who has just had a stroke. But Maureen finds herself in the school library at Columbine, cowering in a cabinet and expecting to be killed, as two vengeful students go on a carefully premeditated, murderous rampage. Miraculously she survives, but at a cost: she is unable to recover from the trauma. Caelum and Maureen flee Colorado and return to an illusion of safety at the Quirk family farm in Three Rivers. But the effects of chaos are not so easily put right, and further tragedy ensues.
While Maureen fights to regain her sanity, Caelum discovers a cache of old diaries, letters, and newspaper clippings in an upstairs bedroom of his family's house. The colorful and intriguing story they recount spans five generations of Quirk family ancestors, from the Civil War era to Caelum's own troubled childhood. Piece by piece, Caelum reconstructs the lives of the women and men whose legacy he bears. Unimaginable secrets emerge; long-buried fear, anger, guilt, and grief rise to the surface.
As Caelum grapples with unexpected and confounding revelations from the past, he also struggles to fashion a future out of the ashes of tragedy. His personal quest for meaning and faith becomes a mythic journey that is at the same time quintessentially contemporary--and American.
"The Hour I First Believed" is a profound and heart-rending work of fiction. Wally Lamb proves himself a virtuoso storyteller, assembling a variety of voices and an ensemble of characters rich enough to evoke all of humanity.
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- ISBN-13: 9780060393496
- ISBN-10: 0060393491
- Publisher: Harper
- Date: November 2008
- Page Count: 740
Customer Reviews
BookPage™ Reviews
The power of grace
In a long-awaited novel, Wally Lamb revisits love and loss
Having your book picked by Oprah for her book club is a heady experience for an author. Suddenly hundreds of thousands of new readers discover your work, you appear before millions of television viewers to receive Oprah's accolades, and you make a whole lot of money.
But according to Wally Lamb, this recognition can be a double-edged sword. Having had his first two novels chosen by Oprah (She's Come Undone and I Know This Much Is True), the pressure to produce an equally worthy book had Lamb struggling through a year-long case of writer's block. He started and discarded several attempts before finally finding his voice in a new novel titled The Hour I First Believed.
"I was scared to death," laughs Lamb, speaking from his office in Willimantic, Connecticut. "Once the canvas got larger and larger, I was pretty scared I was not going to be able to pull it off and finish it. At one point I talked to my agent and said maybe I should just give this advance money back and scurry back to the classroom and just forget about the whole deal."
The acorn which grew into his latest work came to him in a single sentence which his soon-to-be protagonist whispered into his ear: "My mother was a convicted felon, a manic-depressive, and Miss Rheingold of 1950." For the next nine years, Lamb turned this sentence into a 700-page epic, weaving the real-life tragedy of the Columbine shootings into one man's personal experience of love and lossa tapestry that stretches back a hundred years, showing how our ancestors can take a greater role in our lives than we might realize.
"That's exactly what I learned by writing this book. I came to believe that in ways we can never really figure outbecause we only knew our grandparents as old people and we didn't know their grandparentsthat it's all sort of connected and sets us up for certain kinds of lives. I do believe that we have some control [over our lives], but probably far less than we realize."
This belief is personified in Lamb's central character, Caelum Quirk, a man described by his second wife as "an emotional eunuch." He and his third wife, Maureen, have moved from Connecticut to Littleton, Colorado, in an attempt to save their marriage. Maureen has been unfaithful; the only emotion Caelum seems capable of expressing is anger. However, their efforts to survive these problems are quickly overshadowed by the killing spree of two teenaged boys at Columbine High School where the couple works. Caelum is back in Connecticut, settling his recently deceased aunt's estate, when he learns of the horrendous events. Maureen is at the school; it is only by the slimmest of chances that she is spared. But she becomes a victim of "collateral damage"the guilt and devastating emotions often felt by those who escape such a hideous experience. She becomes addicted to prescription drugs as a coping mechanism, so the couple move back to Caelum's family's Connecticut farm in yet another attempt to start their lives over.
An important part of The Hour I First Believed is Caelum's family history, which is thoroughly entwined with the women's prison across the street from his farm. His great-grandmother created the prison, taking as her motto, "A woman who surrenders her freedom need not surrender her dignity."
Concurrently with writing the book, Lamb was forging his own connection with women prisoners, teaching a weekly writing workshop at the York Correctional Institution in Niantic, Connecticut. From the first day, Lamb found his students eager to write about where they went wrong, where their lives went out of control. Through their work, Lamb also discovered that about 70 percent of these women were victims of incesta number born out by national statistics.
"Through what they write, they free themselves from a lot of that sorrow and a lot of that terrible, terrible guilt that sometimes comes along with being a victim. It's really been a profound experience for me to bear witness to the women and their stories. But also, it's hard because as it comes out of them, it becomes your thing to bear as well."
Lamb was so impressed with the women's stories that he approached HarperCollins about doing a collection of their essays. Choosing selections by 10 of Lamb's students, the publisher released Couldn't Keep It To Myself, promising each inmate $5,600 upon her release for what she'd written.
But a week before the book's publication, Connecticut's attorney general sued the writers for the entire cost of their imprisonment, a figure much greater than the modest sum promised by the publisher. An ugly fight ensued, escalating into confiscation of the women's computer disks and, among other things, investigation of Lamb as a volunteer.
"I thank my lucky stars for '60 Minutes' and the Pan American Center which shed light on all this," Lamb says. "All of a sudden, Connecticut did a backflip and suddenly this program is wonderful and they're really gung-ho on rehabilitation and all that kind of stuff."
The theme of damaged individuals fighting for redemption is a familiar one for Lambit's been central to all three of his novels. And while he says he's never sure what will happen to his characters until he writes the end of a book, his personal beliefs would certainly steer him in that direction. As he says in the afterword to this novel, "I believe that love is stronger than hate."
With his first two books, Lamb chose titles from old pop songs ("Undone" and "True"). However, in his latest, he took a line from one of America's favorite hymns, "Amazing Grace." "The Hour I First Believed" ends the second stanza, which is about the redemptive power of grace, one of the novel's themes. Lamb says it guided him throughout the nine years he spent writing it.
"I had that title before I had the book, right from the beginning. It was the carrot before the horseand of course, I'm the horse."
Rebecca Bain writes from her home in Nashville.
- ISBN-13: 9780060393496
- ISBN-10: 0060393491
- Publisher: Harper
- Date: November 2008
- Page Count: 740
First Chapter
Chapter One
They
were both working their final shift at Blackjack Pizza that night, although
nobody but the two of them realized it was that. Give them this much: they were
talented secret-keepers. Patient planners. They’d been planning it for a year,
hiding their intentions in plain sight on paper, on videotape, over the
Internet. In their junior year, one had written in the other’s yearbook,
“God, I can’t wait till they die. I can taste the blood now.” And the
other had answered, “Killing enemies, blowing up stuff, killing cops! My wrath
will be godlike!”
My
wrath will be godlike: maybe that’s a clue. Maybe their ability to dupe everyone was
their justification. If we could be fooled, then we were all fools; they were,
therefore, superior, chaos theirs to inflict. But I don’t know. I’m just one
more chaos theorist, as lost in the maze as everyone else.
It was Friday, April 16, 1999, four days before they opened fire.
I’d stayed after school for a parent conference and a union meeting and, in
between, had called Maureen to tell her I’d pick up takeout. Blackjack Pizza
was between school and home.
It was early still. The Friday-night pizza
rush hadn’t begun. He was at the register, elbows against the counter, talking
to a girl in a hairdresser’s smock. Or not talking, pretty much. There was a
cell phone on the counter, and he kept tapping it with his index finger to make
it spin—kept looking at the revolving cell phone instead of at the girl. I
remember wondering if I’d just walked in on a lover’s spat. “I better get
back,” the girl said. “See you tomorrow.” Her smock said “Great
Clips,” which meant she worked at the salon next door—the place where
Maureen went.
“Prom date?” I asked him. The big event was the next night at
the Design Center in Denver. From there, the kids would head back to school for
the all-night post-prom party, which I’d been tagged to help chaperone.
“I wouldn’t go to that bogus prom,” he said. He called over
his shoulder. “How’s his half-mushroom-half-meatball coming?” His cohort
opened the oven door and peered in. Gave a thumbs-up.
“So tell me,” I said. “You guys been having any more of your
famous Blackjack flour wars?”
He gave me a half-smile. “You remember that?”
“Sure. Best piece you wrote all term.”
He’d been in my junior English class the
year before. A grade-conscious concrete sequential, he was the kind of kid who
was more comfortable memorizing vocab definitions and lines from Shakespeare
than doing the creative stuff. Still, his paper about the Blackjack Pizza
staff’s flour fights, which he’d shaped as a spoof on war, was the liveliest
thing he’d written all term. I remember scrawling across his paper, “You should think
about taking creative writing next year.”
And he had. He was in Rhonda Baxter’s class. Rhonda didn’t like him,
though—said she found him condescending. She hated the way he rolled his eyes
at other kids’ comments. Rhonda and I shared a free hour, and we often
compared notes about the kids. I neither liked nor disliked him, particularly.
He’d asked me to write him a letter of recommendation once. Can’t remember
what for. What I do recall is sitting there, trying to think up something to
say.
He rang up my sale. I handed him a twenty. “So what’s next year
looking like?” I asked. “You heard back from any of the schools you applied
to?”
“I’m joining the Marines,” he said.
“Yeah? Well, I heard they’re looking for a few good men.” He
nodded, not smiling, and handed me my change.
His buddy ambled over to the counter, pizza box in hand. He’d
lost the boyish look I remembered from his freshman year. Now he was a lanky,
beak-nosed adult, his hair tied back in a sorry-looking ponytail, his chin as
prominent as Jay Leno’s. “So what’s your
game plan for next year?” I asked him.
“University of Arizona.”
“Sounds good,” I said. I gave a nod to the Red Sox cap he was
wearing. “You follow the Sox?”
“Somewhat. I just traded for Garciaparra in my fantasy league.”
“Good move,” I said. “I used to go to Sox games all the time
when I was in college. Boston University. Fenway was five minutes away.”
“Cool,” he said.
“Maybe this is their year, huh?”
“Maybe.” He didn’t sound like he gave a shit either way.
He was in Rhonda’s creative writing class, too. She’d come into
the staff room sputtering about him one day. “Read this,” she said. “Is
this sick or what?” He’d written a two-page story about a mysterious avenger
in a metal-studded black trench coat. As jocks and “college preps” leave a
busy bar, he pulls pistols and explosives out of his duffel bag, wastes them,
and walks away, smiling. “Do you think I should call his parents?” Rhonda
had asked.
I’d shrugged. “A lot of the guys write this kind of crap. Too
many video games, too much testosterone. I wouldn’t worry about it. He
probably just needs a girlfriend.” She had
worried, though, enough to make that call. She’d referred to the meeting, a
week or so later, as “a waste of time.”
The door banged open; five or six rowdy kids entered Blackjack.
“Hey, I’ll see you later,” I said.
“Later,” he said. And I remember thinking he’d make a good
Marine. Clean-cut, conscientious, his ironed T-shirt tucked neatly into his
wrinkle-free shorts. Give him a few years, I figured, and he’d probably be
officer material.
At
dinner that night, Maureen suggested we go out to a movie, but I begged off,
citing end-of-the-week exhaustion. She cleaned up, I fed the dogs, and we
adjourned to our separate TVs. By ten o’clock, I was parked on my recliner,
watching Homicide
with the closed-caption activated, my belly full of pizza. There was a Newsweek opened on my lap
for commercial breaks, a Pete’s Wicked ale resting against my crotch, and a
Van Morrison CD reverberating inside my skull: Astral
Weeks, a record that had been released in 1968, the year I turned
seventeen.
I was forty-seven that Friday night. A month
earlier, a guy in a music chat room I’d begun visiting had posed the question,
“What are the ten masterworks of the rock era?” Dozens of us had begun
devising our lists, posting them as works in progress and busting each other’s
chops about our selections. (I came to picture my cyber-rockin’ brethren as a
single balding fat guy in a tie-dye T-shirt—size XL when XXL would have been a
better fit.) My masterwork choices were as controversial as the next guy’s. I
incurred the good-natured wrath of several of my cyberbuddies, for instance,
when I named to my list Springsteen’s Nebraska
while excluding Born
to Run and Born in the U.S.A.
“Dude, as spokesman for the Boss’s TRUE fans,” a trash-to-energy engineer
from Michigan messaged me, “I regret to inform you that you’re more f***ed
up than a soup sandwich!” I dished it out, too, of course, not always
successfully. I learned that I’d deeply offended a professor of -medieval
literature by stating that the bloodline of the Backstreet Boys could be traced
to that other vapid and overrated boy band of an earlier era, the Beach
Boys. The scholar asked if he could communicate with me privately, and I obliged
him with my address. A week later, I received a FedEx envelope, postage paid
by Princeton University, which contained an erudite (if unconvincing)
eleven-page defense of the album Pet
Sounds.
For weeks, listening and list-making had consumed me: Sgt. Pepper or Songs in the Key of Life?
Aretha or Etta James? I’d saved my tenth and final berth for the unorthodox
but always interesting Van Morrison but was having trouble deciding between Van
the Man’s elegant Moondance
and his more emotionally raw Astral
Weeks. Thus, that Friday night, the earphones.
But it was armor, all of it, I see that now: the TV, the open
magazine, the aural review of my life, the keyboard chatter. I’d safeguarded
myself in multimedia chain -mail to prevent emotional penetration from Maureen.
A shadow moved across the carpet, and I looked
up from Homicide to her. “Caelum?” her lips said. She was holding our
wicker tray, two glasses of red wine counterbalanced by a lit candle. I watched
the wine rock in the glasses while she waited. The candle was scented—spice of
some kind. She was into Enya and aromatherapy back then.
I lifted my left earphone. “Yeah, give me a
few minutes,” I said. “I want to let the dogs out, catch a little of the
news. I’ll be up.”
Maureen, her wines, and her defeated shoulders turned and started
up the stairs. I could read Mo from the back, same as I could the other two. But
reading and responding are two different things. “Look, don’t just stare at
the pages,” I used to tell my students. “Become
the characters. Live inside
the book.” And they’d sit there, staring back politely at the alien from
Planet Irrelevance.
Maureen’s my three-strikes-and-you’re-out spouse and, as far as
I know, the only one of the trinity who ever cheated on me. That lit candle on
the tray? It’s one of the signals she and I came up with back in Connecticut,
back in 1994, during the sensitizing humiliation of -couples counseling—those
seven sessions we attended in the aftermath of her Courtyard Marriott fuck-fests
with Paul Hay.
Whom I’d met a few times at her staff parties. Who was in our
Rolodex. Come to think of it, we must have been in the Hays’ Rolodex, too.
“Hello?”
I said. Ordinarily, when the phone rang while I was grading papers, I’d let
the machine get it. But the rain that March night had started making clicking
sounds against the floorboards of the deck and the dogs had come back inside
wearing ice crystals on their backs. Nervous about Mo’s driving home from tai
chi on treacherous roads, I was half -waiting for a call.
“May I speak to Maureen Quirk?” the woman asked.
“She’s out,” I said.
“Are you Mr. Quirk?”
“Yeah, but look. No telemarketing at this number. Take us off
your—”
“Do you know who Maureen’s out with?”
I uncapped my pen. Tore off a piece of some kid’s blue book to
jot down her number. “Excuse me,” I said. “Who’d you say this is?”
She identified herself not by name but by association: she was
Trina Hay’s best friend. Trina was sitting right there next to her, she said,
but too upset to talk on the phone. “We just wanted you to know, in case you don’t know, that your
wife’s having an affair with Paul.”
I said nothing for several seconds, but when I finally did speak,
all I could come up with was, “Paul who?”
“Paul Hay,”
she said. “Trina’s husband.
Did you know they have a little boy named Casey? Or that Trina has lupus? Or
that they’re building a house?”
Jesus, she was giving me the whole A&E
Biography, and I was still on Paul
Hay? Paul Hay? Where do I know that name from? Maureen’s
betrayal hadn’t broken the surface yet. Or maybe it had, because my instinct
was to kill the messenger.
“So what are you—some no-life chick’s gotta borrow her
friend’s business?” I asked.
“This is
my business, okay?” she said. “I’m Casey’s godmother.”
“You’re fat, aren’t you? You have a fat voice.”
“Do you know who bought Trina and Paul the lot they’re building
their house on? Trina’s father,
that’s who. The month before he died.”
“Your options are limited, right? It’s either Tina’s problems
or a spoon, a pint of Ben & Jerry’s between your knees, and Touched by an Angel.”
“Her name’s Trina, okay?
And my personal life is none of your business. Just tell your little slut of a
wife that if she thinks she’s moving into Trina’s new house when it’s
finished, she’s . . . she’s . . .”
There was dead air for a few seconds, some muffled whispering. Then
the avenger was back on the line, blubbering. “I am trying to stop your wife
from destroying my friend’s marriage. Okay?”
“Yeah, sure, Fat Chunks. Your Nobel Peace Prize is in the
mail.” I can’t remember which of us hung up on the other.
I paced, muttered. Sent my students’ blue books flying and the
dogs running for cover. When I realized the cordless phone was still clenched in
my hand, I whacked it five or six times against the refrigerator door. My car
keys were on the counter. I stared at them for several seconds, then grabbed
them.
The trucks hadn’t sanded Bride Lake Road yet, but I kept
mislaying the fact that the road was icy. Passing the entrance to the women’s
prison, I spotted oncoming headlights and hit the brakes. The fishtail I went
into nearly sent me crashing into the security gate. My heart thumped. My breath
came out in short blasts. I remembered who Paul Hay was.
I’d met him a -couple of times at her staff parties. Reddish
hair, bearish build. We’d small-talked. He’d tried home brewing once, but it
had come out watery. He liked the Mets. Maureen was nurse-supervisor at
Rivercrest Nursing Home back then, and Lover Boy was in her pool of per diem
LPNs.
The karate school where she took tai chi was in a strip mall near
the Three Rivers depot. There’s a convenience store, a bike shop, Happy Joy
Chinese, and Caputo’s Martial Arts. The plate-glass window was foggy. I got
out, walked to the door, opened it a crack. Twenty or so little kids in karate
suits stood with their hands clasped as if in prayer. “Bow to the master, bow
to the flag,” the instructor said. Well, okay, I thought. She’s guilty.
I slipped and slid my way back home. No car in
the garage. I fed the dogs, picked the exam booklets off the floor, picked up
the phone. No dial tone; I’d killed it. Two Johnny Walkers later, she came
through the door with Chinese food. “Hey,” I said. “How was it driving?”
“Not great, but I lucked out. I followed the sand truck all the
way up Bride Lake Road. You eat yet?”
“Nope.”
She hit the message machine. Her J. C. Penney order was in, one of
her first-shift nurses was taking a “mental health day” and needed a sub.
She put on a pot of tea, set two places, and opened the cardboard containers.
“Look at this,” she said. Her open palm was piled with soy sauce and mustard
packets. “If someone consumed all this sodium, they’d have a stroke.”
“So why’d you drive across town to the other place when you
were right next door to Happy Joy?” I said.
“Because last time you said Happy Joy’s too greasy.”
Which was true—I had. It was.
We spooned out the food. The kettle whistled. Maureen got up to get
our tea. “What happened here?” she asked. Her fingers were skidding along
the refrigerator door.
“What?”
“These dents?”
“Tell me,” I said. “Who gets on top, you or him? Or do you
alternate?”
Okay, this next part’s hard. I’m not proud of the moo shu and
orange chicken dripping down the wall. Or the fact that when she tried to leave
the room, I grabbed her so hard by the wrist that I sprained it. Or the fact
that she totaled her car on her way to her friend Jackie’s apartment.
She wouldn’t come back. She wouldn’t take my calls. Each day, I
went to school, taught classes, endured staff meetings, drove home, and walked
the dogs. I spent my evenings calling Jackie’s number on our brand-new phone.
Redial, redial, redial, redial. When Jackie’s boyfriend warned me to stop
calling or else he’d have
the calling stopped, I said okay, fine, I didn’t want any trouble. I just
needed to talk to my wife.
Next day after school, I drove over to the town hall and found out
where Hay was building their dinky little shoebox of a house. It was out in the
sticks, out past the old gristmill. I drove out there around dusk. The place was
framed; the chimney was up. Overhead was a pockmarked moon.
I drove back there the next morning, a Saturday. His truck was
there. He was up on the second floor. He squinted down at me, puzzled. I cut the
engine. That’s when I saw it, in the seat well on the passenger’s side: the
pipe wrench I’d borrowed from Chuck Wagner to tighten our leaky hallway
radiator valve. It wasn’t premeditated. I’d meant to return that wrench for
a week or more. But suddenly its being there seemed just and right. There was a
fire in my head.
Six weeks after that moment, in a darkened classroom at Oceanside
Community College, I would learn via an anger management class video about the
cardiology, neurology, and endocrinology of rage—about how, as I reached for
that wrench, my hypothalamus was instant-messaging my adrenal glands to secrete
cortisol and adrenaline. How stored fat was dumping into my bloodstream for an
energy turbocharge. How my heart was pumping overtime, sending a surge of blood
to my muscles and lungs in preparation for what that instructional video called
“the evolutionary miracle of fight-or-flight.” That morning, I saw Hay and
took the former option.
Took out his windshield. Took the wrench to his stacks of
not-yet-installed Andersen windows. When he came flying at me, I took a swing at
his head that, thank God, didn’t connect. He head-butted me, knocked me
backward, gave me a cracked rib and a busted lip, a bruised tailbone.
They arrested me that afternoon. Hay got a restraining order.
Maureen got me out of the house and would not let me take the dogs. We all got
lawyers. Mine, Lena LoVecchio, was a friend of my Aunt Lolly’s. Her manner was
brusque, her hairstyle a shellacked mullet. There were two framed posters on the
wall behind her desk: the UConn women’s basketball team with their
championship trophy and Kramer from Seinfeld.
“How come he gets to screw my wife and
be the victim?” I asked Lena.
“It’s all about the wrench,” she said.
I tried to explain to Lena how I’d reached the point where there
was nothing between me and the pain of my wife’s betrayal. She kept nodding,
sad-eyed, her fingers stretching a rubber band. When I stopped talking, she
said, “I’m your attorney, Caelum. Not your therapist.”
Pending disposition of the case, I took a mandatory unpaid leave of
absence from teaching. Took Aunt Lolly up on her offer to have me come stay at
the family farm with her and her don’t-ask-don’t-tell companion, Hennie. (It
was April, and my aunt was as practical as she was sympathetic; I got room,
board, and laundry ser-vice in exchange for plowing and manure spreading.) I
took the deal the lawyers hammered out. In exchange for two hundred hours of
community ser-vice, completion of the anger management class, and restitution on
all that broken glass out at the Hays’ hacienda, I got the assault and damage
charges reduced to misdemeanors. That meant probation instead of prison and a
shot at qualifying for “accelerated rehabilitation.” It would be the
judge’s call. If I got it and behaved myself for a year, my criminal record
would be wiped clean and I could teach again. My case was on the docket for
August the first.
I missed school—the kids, the daily grind. Had Melanie DeCarlo
gotten into one of her dream schools? Had Mike Jacaruso gotten that soccer
scholarship? When the Wildcats made it to the semi-finals in basketball, I drove
up to their big game against Wethersfield. Made the mistake of sitting in the
Three Rivers section. I left at the half, though. I couldn’t take the fact
that, although everyone was packed in tight on those bleachers, I had room on
either side of me. Couldn’t take the whispering, the swiveling heads: that’s that teacher who .
. .
The community ser-vice piece was punishment by acute tedium. I’d
have been okay with a soup kitchen or group home assignment, but they gave me
data entry at the DMV—six mind-numbing hours every Saturday for thirty-three
weeks.
Hey, you think those Motor Vehicle employees are charmers when
you’re in line? You should feel the love when you’re one of their community
ser-vice penitents. This one woman? Had Disney crap pinned up all over her
cubicle walls? She goes to her supervisor and accuses me of helping myself to
the M&Ms in the glass canister on her desk. Which was bullshit. She’s
blowing her nose every two minutes and leaving used Kleenex all over her desk,
and she thinks I want to get within ten feet of that germ pool?
And then there was anger management: twelve three-hour sessions run
by Beth the Ballbuster and Dredlock Darnell, who, I’m guessing, must have been
at least a semi-finalist
for Dunkin’ Donuts’ Customer of the Decade. They had this good cop/bad cop
thing going, those two. He’d expound on “our feelings as messengers” and
play the pathetically dated videos—The
Blame Game, Slaying
the Dragon Within. She’d try her best to incite us, drill-sergeant style, cutting
off at the knees any guy clueless enough to claim that he didn’t really have
to be there or that, on some level at least, his wife or girlfriend had asked
for it. “Bullshit!”
Beth declared, in the middle of one sap’s poor-me ramble about the connection
between his mother’s ridicule and the fact that he’d sunk a barbecue fork
into his nagging wife’s leg. “Stop using your lousy childhood as an excuse,
and stop calling her ‘the wife.’ She has a name, doesn’t she? Use it. And
face the fact that you’re a domestic terrorist.” During break midway through
our second session, I’d rolled my eyes and quipped sotto voce to Beth that
some of the bulletheads in our class probably needed stupidity management more
than anger management. “Mr. Quirk, are you under the mistaken impression that
we facilitators are your peer group?” she asked. “Because we’re not.
You’re in the abusers’ group.” After that icing, I joined the smokers and
gripers outside, neither nodding at nor challenging their mumblings about wasted
time, whale -blubber, and femiNazis.
I learned things, though. The curriculum may have been redundant,
Darnell may have had food issues, and Beth may have bulldozed her way through
resistance rather than dismantling it the way a more skillful teacher might have
done. (“Hey, you don’t want
to
fix yourself? Fine. Drop out. I’m
not the one who needs the signed certificate.”) Still, I went away with a
better understanding of the biology of anger, what triggers it, and what I could
do to short-circuit it. More than that, I had a twelve-week dose of humility.
Man, I hated the sick-to-my-stomach feeling I got driving to that class every
week. Hated the beat-up/riled-up feeling I always had afterward. Hated facing up
to the fact that, whether she’d been unfaithful to me or not, if Maureen had
gotten killed that icy night when she totaled her Toyota, it would have been my
fault because she’d left out of fear. If I’d bashed in Hay’s skull with
that pipe wrench, his death would have been on me. I was
in the abusers’ group, not the group for the abused; that’s what I learned.
My childhood grudges, my righ-teous indignation, and my master’s degree
didn’t count for squat. My Phi Beta Kappa key unlocked nothing. I was my
failings and my actions, period. Like I said, it was a humbling experience.
In court, Hay’s lawyer stood and asked the judge if his client
could speak. Attorney LoVecchio and I exchanged uh-oh looks; this wasn’t in
the script. This couldn’t be good.
In the months since the incident, Hay said, he had rediscovered His
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. He had broken the ninth commandment and had come
to understand that he bore responsibility for the outcome of those trespasses.
He was not a vindictive man, he said. He was sorry for the hurt he’d caused.
He hoped I
could forgive him as he
had
forgiven me. He looked right at me when he said that last part. I looked away
from him. Looked back and nodded. The judge granted me my “accelerated
rehab.”
Maureen had filed for divorce by then. That fall, I helped Lolly
and Hennie with the milking and the apple and pumpkin sales. I also resurrected
the Bride Lake Farms corn maze. During the fifties and early sixties, the maze
had been a Three Rivers tradition; we’d get a -couple thousand paying
customers going through that thing in season. -“People
like
to get lost for a little while,” my grandfather used to say. But the maze’s
popularity had petered out during the late sixties, maybe because, by then, most
of us were already more lost than we wanted to be. Out in the old desk in the
barn, I found my father’s pencil sketch for the original three-acre labyrinth,
dated 5/12/56, and duplicated that. Did a decent enough job of it, so I went
down to the newspaper and tried to get the features editor interested in doing a
nostalgic story. “The Return of the Bride Lake Farm Corn Maze,” something
like that. She wasn’t interested, though, and we couldn’t afford paid advertising, so
the whole thing kind of fizzled. I mean, we got some families on the few
weekends that weren’t rained out, and a few school groups during the week, but
it was nothing like when I was a kid, when the cars would be parked a quarter of
a mile down Bride Lake Road.
I took a stop-gap second job as night baker at Mama Mia Pastry,
which was how I’d put myself through school back in the seventies. Mr. and
Mrs. Buzzi had both retired by then, and their surviving son, Alphonse, was
running the biz. The Buzzis’ older son, Rocco, and I had been high school
buddies, then roommates at BU, seatmates at Sox games. Being back at the bakery
felt like a demotion, especially since, technically, Alphonse Buzzi was now my
boss. When he was a kid, his brother and I used to tease Alphonse mercilessly.
He’d ask for it, you know? Squeal on us, ambush us with water balloons.
“Baby Huey,” we used to call him, and he’d go crying to his mother. After
Rocco died, Alphonse became a friend by default, I guess you could say. He was
still annoying, though. Still a baby. My first wife? Patti? She was always
trying to fix him up with women from her bank, but nothing ever took. I mean,
even now, the guy’s in his mid-forties—runs a business,
for Christ’s sake—and you know what he’s into? Paintball. You know
what’s sitting on top of the file cabinet in his office? His friggin’
Super-Soaker.
But anyway, nighttime baking suited me okay; I wasn’t sleeping
for shit anyway. I kept telling myself that my year away from teaching gave me
the perfect opportunity to write again—kept feeding myself that “Life gives
you lemons, make lemonade” crap. I bought a three-ring binder and a
three-hundred-sheet package of loose-leaf paper. Put the paper in the binder,
snapped the rings shut, put a pen in the pocket, and put it on the nightstand
next to my bed. But I didn’t
write
again. Didn’t open that fucking loose-leaf binder once.
And then Maureen called me. Out of the blue, on Halloween night.
Well, it was one in the morning, so, technically, it was already November the
first. All Saints Day, I remembered, from my Catholic childhood. Mo was crying.
She was scared, she said. Sophie, the older and needier of our two mutts, was
sick. Dying, maybe. Dogs could die from too much chocolate, right? Maureen had
overplanned for trick-or-treaters, then gone to bed, leaving most of the
unclaimed candy in a bowl by the door. Sophie had chowed down on thirty or forty
of those miniature Hershey bars, wrappers and all. She’d been vomiting
chocolate, paper, and foil nonstop for two hours. The vet’s answering ser-vice
wouldn’t pick up. Could I come over?
I stopped at the all-night convenience store on my way and bought
Pepto-Bismol. Sent Maureen to bed and stayed up with Soph for the rest of the
night. She stopped retching around three in the morning. I sat there, watching
her sleep, her chest heaving. By dawn, her breathing had normalized. By seven,
she was up again, looking better and wanting breakfast.
One thing led to another with Mo and me. She’d tell me okay, I
could come over for a cup of coffee. “One hour,” she’d insist. The first
time, she even set the stove timer. Then she let me take her out to dinner. Then
we started walking the dogs out by the reservoir. Started watching UConn
basketball on TV. One night when I went over there, I brought a bottle of wine,
and we drank it and made out on the couch. Made our way to the bedroom. We were
awkward with each other, out of synch. I came before she was anywhere near
ready. “It’s okay,” she kept saying. “It’s fine.”
Later, after I’d started dozing, she said, “Caelum?”
“Hmm?”
“Tell me a secret.”
At first I didn’t say anything. Then I said, “What kind of
secret?”
“Something you’ve never told anyone before.”
Mr. Zadzilko, I thought. I saw his broad face before me, the bare
lightbulb hanging from the ceiling of the utility closet. “I don’t . . . I
can’t think of anything.”
“Tell me something about your ex-wife.”
“Patti?”
“Francesca. You never talk about her.”
I rolled toward her, onto my side. And because I wanted to come
home again, I complied. “Well,” I said. “When I started writing my book?
She bought me a computer. My first computer.”
Mo said that wasn’t a secret. It didn’t count.
“Yeah, but wait. The day she left me? She took her house
key—the one she left behind—and scratched something onto the face of the
monitor.”
“What?”
“Two words: emotional castrato. . . . Like our whole marriage was
my fault. Like her living in New York all week and coming home on weekends—some weekends, I should
say, fewer and fewer, actually—like that had nothing to do with it. And
here’s what a freaking masochist I
was: I lived with that goddamned monitor. Kept typing away, squinting around and past those words. It was four or five months
before I unplugged the fucker and hefted it out to the curb. Lifted it over my
head and dropped it face-first onto the sidewalk, just so I could hear the
pleasure of it crash. Spring clean-up, it was, and the town trucks were driving
around, picking up -people’s bulky waste. And the next morning, I heard the
truck and stood at the window. Had the pleasure of watching them haul it away. .
. . So there’s your secret.”
“Who else knows about it?” she asked.
“No one else. Just you.”
She reached over. Stroked my hair, my cheek. “After my parents
split up?” she said. “When I used to spend weekends with my father? He’d
come into my room some nights, sit in the chair across from my bed and . . . ”
“What?”
“Masturbate.” My mind ricocheted. She anticipated the question
I wanted and didn’t want to ask. “That was as far as it ever went. He never
. . . you know.”
“Did he think you were asleep?”
“No. He used to watch me watching him. Neither of us ever said
anything. He’d just do it, finish up, and leave. And in the morning, he’d be
Daddy again. Take me out and buy me chocolate chip pancakes for breakfast.”
“That’s sick,” I said. “How many times did it happen?”
“Two or three, maybe. Then he started seeing the Barracuda, and
it stopped.” The Barracuda was Evelyn, her stepmother, a high-stakes real
estate broker. From the start, Evelyn and Mo had kept their distance.
“You tell your mother?”
“No. You’re the first person I’ve ever told. . . . It was
pretty confusing. I was only eleven. I mean, most of the time he was so distant.
So unavailable. Then he’d . . . I knew it was wrong to watch him. Dirty or
whatever, but . . . ”
“But what?”
“It was this thing we shared. This secret. It messed me up,
though. I slept around a lot in high school.”
I put my arm around her. Squeezed her tight, then tighter.
“Caelum? Do you think you could trust me again? I know I’ve
given you good reason not to, but . . . I mean, if you’re going to be all
Sherlock Holmes every time I go out . . .”
I told her I wanted
to be able to trust her—that working on it was the best I could promise.
“Okay,” she said. “That’s fair.”
On our next date, she told me I could come back home if I wanted
to. There was one condition, though: -couples counseling.
Our therapist, the sari-wearing, no-nonsense Dr. Beena Patel, was a
dead ringer for Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. I’d assumed Mo was
going to be the one to take the heat, since she was the one who’d cheated, but
within the first fifteen minutes of session one, I realized that Dr. Patel was
going to be an equal-opportunity nutcracker. Besides, Dr. Patel said, she
thought it would be more profitable for us to focus on the future than the past.
And speaking of profitable, her fee was a hundred and fifteen a pop.
Dr. Patel assigned homework. She made Mo and me design a series of
nonverbal requests we could use when asking directly for something made either
one of us feel too vulnerable. Universally recognizable signals weren’t
permitted. No raised middle finger in response to a cutting remark, for
instance; no ass-grabbing if, walking into the kitchen and seeing her in those
cut-offs of hers, I suddenly got in the mood. “The creation of signs exclusive
to you as a -couple is as much a part of the therapy as the employment of
them,” Dr. P explained. “And, of course, with that, the careful honoring of
each other’s reasonable requests.” So, a tug of the earlobe came to mean: Please listen to me.
A hand over the heart: What
you just said hurts. A lit candle: Come
upstairs. Be with me. Love me. And I did love
Maureen. I do. Ask any of us cynical bastards to lift up our shirt, and we’ll
show you where we got shot in the heart.
“You can’t just say
you
forgive her, Mr. Quirk,” Dr. Patel used to insist during the solo sessions she
requested because, at our regular appointments, Maureen was averaging 75 percent
of the talking. “If you truly want to live inside this marriage, then you must
shed your carapace of bitterness and embrace
forgiveness.”
“My carapace?” I said. “What am I? An insect?”
Dr. Patel didn’t smile. “Or else, my friend, move on.”
But rather than move on, we’d moved. Maureen’s mom was dead;
her father and the Barracuda had a grown daughter and a grandchild. They had
nothing more than a birthday- and Christmas-card relationship with Mo, and even
then, the good wishes were always in Evelyn’s handwriting. But Mo had this
fantasy that she and her dad might become closer if she was back in Colorado. I
couldn’t see why she wanted that, frankly. I mean, by rights, the guy should
have been registered as a sex offender. But I never said that, and Maureen had
never wanted to talk about Daddy with Dr. Patel. And as for me, the thought of
standing in front of classes of high school kids who hadn’t heard about my
arrest—as opposed to kids who had—well,
that had a certain appeal. So we made umpteen phone calls. My Connecticut
teaching license was transferable, and Maureen had never let her Colorado
nursing credentials lapse. We flew out there in late June, interviewed, found a
house we liked in Cherry Knolls. By mid-July, we had jobs at the same high
school—me as an English teacher and Maureen as a backup school nurse. And so
we hired movers, closed our bank accounts, sedated the dogs for the trip west,
and went.
If, for Maureen, Colorado was coming home, I was a stranger in a
strange land. “Welcome to God’s country,” -people kept saying, usually
with a nod to those ubiquitous goddamn mountains. “Drink water, or the
altitude’ll do a number on you.” And it did, too. I’d get nosebleeds out
of nowhere for the first month or so.
It was the small things I missed: the family farm in October, Aunt
Lolly’s chuckle, my old jogging route, Fenway Park. I’d held on to those
same Red Sox seats (section 18, row double-N, seats 5 and 6) since my BU days.
I’d sat with Rocco Buzzi in the early years, and later with his brother,
Alphonse. I mean, I’d go
to a Rockies game, but it wasn’t the same. They’re home-run-happy out there,
for one thing; someone dings one, and the altitude takes care of the rest.
Maureen would go with me to Coors Field sometimes in the beginning, but she’d
usually bring a book, or drag me to some LoDo art gallery afterwards. “How
many points do we have now?” she’d ask, and I’d have to remind her it was
runs, not points. I don’t know. It’s just different out there. You know what
you can get on a pizza in metro Denver? Mesquite-flavored tilapia, with or
without goat cheese. Jesus God.
Hey, in my own defense? I was respectful of those signals of ours
for a while. I’d see her hand on her heart and comfort her. I’d act on a lit candle.
Light one myself from time to time. And it worked; it was
better. I’ll give counseling that much. But over time, I got careless. Got
bitter again, gummed up in the flypaper of what I was supposed to be beyond: the
fact that those Monday and Thursday nights when she was supposed to be taking
tai chi, she’d been opening her legs and taking Paul Hay inside her instead. I
don’t know. Maybe that stuff with her father had
messed her up. I mean, it had to have, right? But after that tell-me-a-secret
night, we never went near the subject again—not even with Dr. Patel.
I tell you one thing, though: Mo’s moving back to Colorado
didn’t get her what she wanted, father-wise. She went over to their house
three or four times at the beginning. She’d get all dressed up, buy them
gifts. I chose not to go with her. The thing was, I didn’t trust myself.
Figured seeing Daddy Dearest might trigger something, and I’d go off on the
guy. Coldcock him or something. It’s not like I didn’t have a history.
Maureen would always come back from those visits saying she’d had a good time,
or that their house was beautiful, or that their granddaughter, Amber, was so
adorable. She’d be down, though—in a slump for the next few days. Sometimes,
I’d eavesdrop when she called them. Maureen would small-talk with Evelyn for a
while and then ask to speak to her father. He’d oblige her—come to the phone
maybe half the time. And when he did, it made me sad to hear Mo doing most of
the talking. He never called her. Neither did Evelyn. Or Cheryl, the
half-sister. Somewhere during our second year out there, Maureen stopped
calling, too. It was hard for her, as it had been hard for me. I knew a thing or
two about abdicating fathers.
But
anyway, that Friday night? In our Colorado living room? Homicide ended on its
usual note of moral ambiguity, Van Morrison’s “Slim Slow Slider” faded to
silence, and the news came on. There was relative calm in the world that night.
Nothing you’d stay glued to your recliner over. No sign of the trouble those
two rage-filled little motherfuckers were planning. Channel Nine had a
convenience-store stickup in Lakewood, an environmental protest in Fort Collins.
There was the usual numbing news from Kosovo. Get up, I kept telling myself. Go
to her. Instead, I’d stuck around for the Sox and Celtics scores, checked in
with the Weather Channel for the national temperatures. We’d been out there
for four years by then, and I was still keeping tabs on Connecticut weather.
Still, I meant to go up to her. I was going to. But the news led
into Letterman,
and since James Brown was the musical guest, I decided to open a beer and catch
that soulful old reprobate, too. Should I add the Godfather of Soul to my
masterworks list, I wondered. And if so, who should I bump? . . .
My eyes cracked open some time after three. I looked around until I
recognized the room. Got up, got the dogs taken care of and the downstairs
locked up. Went up there.
Our bedroom was lit by dying candlelight and aromatic with ginger.
Wax had dribbled down the front of the bureau and cooled. Carapaced the carpet.
Maureen was scowling in her sleep. She’d drunk both of the wines.
I dropped my clothes beside our bed and got in next to her. She
rolled onto her side, away. Moondance,
I thought. No, Astral
Weeks. And in the midst of my indecision, I suddenly saw the long view
of my inconsequential life: Mouseketeer, farm kid, failed husband, mediocre
teacher. Forty-fucking-eight years old, and what had I accomplished?
What had I come to know?
In
the aftermath, I’d learn that he lied to me on two counts that afternoon at
Blackjack Pizza. First, he hadn’t been as anti-prom as he let on; he’d asked
a -couple of girls and been refused. As was his habit when one of his peers
displeased or slighted him, he’d gone home, grabbed a marking pen, and X-ed
out their faces in his yearbook. Second, he was not
headed
for the Marines. The Rocky
Mountain News would report that the antidepressant he was taking for
obsessive-compulsive disorder had disqualified him. The recruiter had dropped by
his home and delivered the news on Thursday, the night before I’d bought that
pizza. His buddy had
made plans to go to the University of Arizona, though; he and his dad had driven
there a few weeks earlier and chosen his dorm room. Had that been part of the
deceit? Had he been playing both fantasy baseball and fantasy future? Playing
his parents along with everyone else? His computer offered no clues; they
confiscated it within the first few hours, but he’d erased the hard drive the
night before.
Over and over, for years now, I have returned to that Friday night:
when I can’t sleep, when I can, when the steel door slides open and I walk
toward her, Maureen looking sad-eyed and straggly-haired, in her maroon T-shirt
and pocketless jeans. Mo’s one of the victims you’ve never read about in the
Columbine coverage, or seen interviewed on the Today show or Good Morning America.
One of the collaterally damaged.
I just wish to Christ I’d gotten up the stairs that night. Made
love to her. Held her in my arms and made her feel safe. Because time was almost
up. They’d bought their guns, taped their farewell videos, finalized their
plans. They’d worked their last shift together at Blackjack—had made and
sold me that pizza that, piece by piece, Mo and I had lifted out of the box and
eaten. Chaos was coming, and it would drive us both so deeply into the maze that
we’d wander among the corpses, lost to each other for years. Yet there Maureen
was on that long-ago night, up in our bed, waiting for me.
Get up those stairs! I want to scream to my clueless April-seventeenth-of-nineteen-ninety-nine self. Hold her! Make her feel safe! Because time was running out. Their first shots were eighty hours away.
Excerpted from The Hour I First Believed. Copyright © 2008 by Wally Lamb.
- ISBN: 9780060393496
- Publisher: Harper
- Date: November 2008
- Page Count: 740
- Availability: In stock. Usually ships within 24 hours.
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