Chapter One
These days, when people ask how I'm doing-some of them still ask, you'd
be surprised-I shrug and say, as manfully as I can, "Much better than
you'd think." And this is true. I am fed, I am clothed, I still have a
few patients, the Nets are winning, and my mother, thank God, has
finally agreed to the assisted-living place in Rockland. And I have a
home, of sorts-the room we built for Alec above the garage so that he
could pursue his oil painting with the firm scaffold of our love and
money under his feet. God forbid that Alec should ever have felt
unsupported-that we should show dismay at his dropping out of Hampshire
after three semesters and almost sixty thousand dollars of tuition,
books, board, and other proofs of parental esteem. Sixty thousand
dollars vanished-puff-like smoke; our son fails out of a college that
doesn't even give grades, and in response we build him an art
studio above our garage. And here's the kicker: we were happy to do it.
This was one of many lessons we took from the plight of our friends Joe
and Iris Stern, whose daughter Laura was lost to them once, and is
again, now.
My new home, the studio, is floored in gray, paint-speckled linoleum.
Alec's old drawing table sits in the corner, next to a double-sized
futon buried under a pile of airplane blankets. On the opposite wall
rests a slightly corny oak dresser covered in scrollwork and brass,
which Elaine's parents gave us for our wedding and we dutifully kept in
our bedroom for twenty-plus years. An armchair from the same era. By the
armchair there's a stack of books, some Alec's, some mine: Bukowski and
Burroughs, a small selection of graphic novels, and thrillers I no
longer have the taste for.
I read in this studio. I sleep. Sometimes, on weekends or late into the
evening, I listen to the Kriegers fighting next door. Our garage is
situated along the property line; the Kriegers recently finished an
addition, and now, without even trying, I can peer right into their
granite-and-stainless kitchen and watch them go at it. Jill Krieger is a
harridan, it turns out, and Mark likes to throw things. I wonder when
this started. Elaine and I always liked them, always thought they had a
very nice marriage, nice young kids; sure, their addition took forever,
but at least they had the courtesy to keep the exterior tasteful. I
wonder if Elaine can hear them. She and I never fought, you know, never
like that.
If people keep asking me, look deep into my eyes to see if there are any
secrets left in my stubbly soul, I tell them, "Listen, life goes on."
And I'm not just feeding them formula, pap. Life really does go on.
That's what I've learned. It goes. You'd be surprised.
But there have been moments. Today, for example: A Saturday, too warm
for April, I eat lunch with my mother in Yonkers and stay in her
asbestos-ceilinged apartment for as long as she'll let me. We have egg
salad, watch
Law and Order, four in a row, until finally it's
time for her nap-Peter, she says to me, her breath heavy with mayo, I
love you, but if you don't leave soon I'll have a fit. So I leave,
although it takes another two slices of coffee cake; I kiss her on her
soft cheek, get into the rusty white Escort I'm driving these days,
cross the Tappan Zee, and drive slowly south along the Hudson toward the
Palisades. Last month I discovered this small park down there, a little
paved area jutting into the river, where a few fishermen and lost
sailors were gathered to catch toxic bluefish and use the dented
Portosans.
It's three o'clock when I park, and muggy. I take a spot on a peeling
bench, roll up my sleeves. The new-money types eat sandwiches on their
decks, and the immigrant fishermen fill up buckets with poisoned blues.
I watch them, and the minutes turn into an hour and a half. I've become
so good, these days, at just sitting. The city hums across the water,
Harlem, Washington Heights. Light filters underneath the George
Washington Bridge. I study the pools of oil on the surface of the Hudson
and smell the dying fish.
I've always liked being near water, although I've never been especially
handy around it; I don't boat, I don't fish, and when I used to frequent
the JCC, I'd find myself on the basketball courts twelve times as often
as in the pool. But still: a decade and a half ago, we took regular
vacations to the beach, we and the Sterns, down to Delaware because the
area seemed a little more wholesome than the Jersey shore, or maybe just
farther away. Every morning the kids would pick the perfect sandy spot
twenty feet from the Atlantic, and we'd spend two weeks freckling
ourselves under the August glare, then eating dinner at crab barns out
on Route 1, platters of steamed Maryland blues. The Stern children
(first two, then three, then four of them, redheads like Iris, her
fecundity a marvel) sucking on crab legs with joy, my own persnickety
son daintily peeling a shrimp because he didn't like food with claws.
Neal Stern, seven months younger than Alec, shoving a crab carapace in
his face. Iris Stern wiping Old Bay seasoning off each long finger.
It was a summer ritual for years until Laura Stern, their oldest,
started high school and had no more patience for family vacations and
five-hour late-summer drives. The same house every time: a ramshackle
clapboard on Brooklyn Avenue, a washing machine but no dryer, a
dishwasher that was constantly humming, three blocks from the main drag,
a block from the beach. Nautical gewgaws in the bathrooms, sand and salt
everywhere. The kids ran around half-naked all day while Elaine stayed
demure in her black terry cloth cover-up and Iris gallivanted in a white
bikini that Joe teased her about when he thought nobody was listening.
"Would that thing turn see-through if I got you wet?" I did my best not
to listen.
I liked to spend time by myself at the water's edge even then, watch the
old-timers scoop up clams an hour before evening's low tide. Kids would
skate around their grandfathers' knees, duck down with their plastic
sieves to shovel up empty handfuls of sand, while the old men would
carefully tread over the same patches of clamming ground. I'd daydream
about getting a clam and crab license, giving up my practice, moving the
family down to a rickety house by the Delaware shore, where it was
always warm and sunset and Iris Stern was always making coffee in the
kitchen in her white bikini and my son would laugh and run around for
days at a time. Then the tide would sink and I'd go back to the house,
take a shower, remember who I was and where I came from. An internist in
New Jersey, educated on scholarships, raised in Yonkers, married more
than a decade. Husband, father, basketball enthusiast.
I was never as grateful as I should have been for everything I had.
Here on my bench beneath the Palisades, the mosquitoes start to come in,
and the fishermen start to pack up. I watch a red and white cigarette
boat circle the park slowly, wag itself back and forth, causing waves to
ripple up against the log pilings that defend the park from the grime of
the Hudson. There's a young man behind the wheel all by himself, and it
strikes me as unusual to see just one guy in a sport boat on a Saturday.
He steers with a single hand and drinks a beer. He needs a crew of
semiclad blonds around him, I decide. He needs a blasting stereo.
Across the river, the sun angles down behind Riverside Church, making
the building glow.
"You know that kid in the boat?" the last remaining fisherman says to me
after the cigarette boat makes another slow turn around the pilings.
"Should I?"
The fisherman shrugs. "He looks like he knows you."
I give him a quizzical look.
"The way he's circling," the man says, rubbing his chin with a fishy old
hand.
"Nobody knows me," I say, grand and melodramatic. This, by the way,
isn't exactly true, but it is how I would prefer things.
The cigarette boat circles again, slowly, and then once more.
Nineteen ninety-one, August, the summer of the Russian coup and the end
of the Soviet Union, Joe Stern left the beach house early and came back
with a bag of boardwalk cinnamon rolls and six newspapers: the
Times, the
Post, the
Baltimore Sun, the
Philadelphia Inquirer, both the Rehoboth and Wilmington dailies.
Wake up the kids, he said to me. It was maybe eight in the morning; back
then, all five of the kids and also my wife used to sleep till at least
half past nine. Iris tended to get up at six to jog.
"It's their vacation," I said. "They'll wake up on their own."
"History, Pete," my old chum, college lab partner, best friend, said,
spreading the different front pages across the picnic table on the deck.
"The coup failed. It's the collapse of the Soviet Union. The cold war is
over."
Above me, I remember, seagulls circled and cawed, putting me in mind of
vultures, although really they were just after dropped bits of cinnamon
roll. "If the cold war is over," I said, "which I happen to doubt, then
it will still be over when the kids wake up."
"You doubt it?"
"You don't?"
"All the news that's fit to print, my friend," Joe said, smacking the
front page of the
Times.
I picked up the
Sun and read a few sentences under the screeching
headline, but nothing to convince me that it was time to salute a new
world order. "It'll take more than this to end the cold war. We're in
Delaware. History doesn't happen while we're vacationing in Delaware."
"Who cares where we are?" Joe said. He laughed, rubbed his hand over his
bald spot, his gesture when he was nervous, happy, or amused. "What does
that have to do with the news?"
A change in the way things have always been, and I'm reading the
Baltimore paper? "I just think, I think it'll be louder when the cold
war is over. We'll all hear it."
"You can't hear it?"
"Not really."
I grew up crouching under desks at PS 145 and knew that if the Soviet
Union was really going to collapse, it would be a slow-motion, lumbering
thing, the felling of a grand oak, bringing down everything in its path.
It wouldn't be a failed coup launched by a bunch of grumpy, bald
dodderers while I sat on a deck in Delaware. I put down the
Sun,
picked up the
Philadelphia Inquirer-the same information, the
same tone. "They just want to sell papers," I said. "There was a coup.
It didn't work. This isn't the end of the cold war."
"Not everything is propaganda, Pete."
"Look," I said, "you can dismiss me if you'd like, but you've got to
admit that something as enormous and ... and indestructible ... and evil
-"
"Evil?" Joe chuckled. "You sound like Reagan. The Baltic States already
split months ago. The Soviet Union is done." Joe rubbed again at his
bald spot, said laconically, "We're number one."
"I don't believe it."
"Pete," Joe said, "get with the program."
I couldn't have told even Joe, and wouldn't have tried, but I remember
feeling a chill at that moment, looking over the papers, the pictures of
the different Soviet conspirators lined up like mug shots on the various
front pages. I wiped my hands on my knees, stepped off the back deck,
gazed up at the seagulls, still circling. There had never not been the
Soviet Union in my life. There had never not been this particular enemy.
I remember feeling bizarrely afraid. I walked out to the back fence of
the weed-pocked yard in Delaware and looked out at the backs of all the
other houses, still sleeping. I thought about everything I couldn't keep
safe, or even keep the same.
"So what do you think of this, Pete?" my wife asked me when she had
finally absorbed the papers. I poured us some coffee from the thermos on
the table. She was looking at me with a flatteringly grave expression,
as though I were holding the world's only crystal ball.
"If it's true," I said, "if it's happening the way they say, then I
think it's very dangerous."
"Really?"
"The cold war was stasis, Elaine. Us versus them, good versus bad.
Instability, especially in that part of the world, is dangerous. This
makes me concerned. Not panicked, but concerned."
She nodded, turned back to the paper. "I see your point."
"Again, not panicked."
"No," she said. "Of course not."
Usually I liked responsibility: my wife generally trusted my judgment on
matters of international consequence the same way she trusted me with
the paying of bills, the hiring of plumbers. I think it's because I
always spoke with authority and because I always had a clear sense of
what was right and what was wrong. Elaine used to appreciate that about
me. Until my recent troubles, I'd always had a pretty good idea of what
good would come of things, and what bad, and I knew how to prepare.
"Well," Elaine said. "Well, I guess I won't worry too much either,
then." And then she squeezed my hand.
A few minutes later, Iris emerged from the kitchen, her two younger
children filing behind her like ducklings, the baby, Pauline, in her
arms. "It looks crappy out today," she said. "Maybe we should rent some
movies?"
"Movies!" seconded Adam, her younger son. There was a rental place right
near the boardwalk, stocked with lots of fare for children and a
surprisingly comprehensive adult section behind a black curtain, which
Elaine and I had checked out the previous summer, feeling giddy and
brave.
"Pete says instability in Russia is dangerous." Elaine folded her
newspaper. "I guess we could go get a movie."
"Well, of course that's what Pete says." Iris grinned as Neal, her older
boy, gave me a shrewd look. "Pete likes things the way they've always
been."
"Not really," I said. "I'm just not sure that a haphazard breakup of the
Soviet Union is necessarily in our strategic interests."
Iris laughed her heavy, infuriating laugh, and her kids started pulling
through the mess of papers on the picnic table to find the comics. She
let Pauline out of her arms, and the little girl skittered back into the
house. "Strategic interests, Pete?"
"What's the matter with that?"
"This is good news," she said.
"We don't know what kind of news it is," I said.
"It's a relaxing day, we're on vacation, our kids are happy, the world
turns out to be an interesting place." She was in her bikini, one of
Joe's flannel shirts on top as a nod to the darkening weather. Her red
hair was pulled up in a clip on top of her head, and she'd suspended
sunglasses in the cleft of her bikini.
"Pete usually knows which way the wind blows," my wife said, and I loved
her for it.
"Remember our sophomore year?" Iris asked. "He didn't want to go down to
DC to protest because he was afraid it would reflect badly on his
medical school apps?"
"What does that have to do with anything?" I said. "Anyway, I had to
study."
"I know you did, sweetheart," Iris said. She tousled my hair-unlike her
husband, I still had a thick head of it-then plopped herself at the
picnic table next to me. "I'm just teasing."
"Well, stop."
She laughed again. I wondered if Iris teased me because she knew I'd
never really hold it against her. She folded a paper hat out of
newspaper for Neal. Elaine gave me a smile over her paper, and Adam
stole Neal's hat, and the seagulls, which had subsided, began to caw
again. I knew my face was red-I was never very good at being teased-so I
dug up the sports page, checked on the Yankees, since my Nets had yet to
start their season. Eventually, Elaine got up to pour more coffee, and
Joe brought out a fresh plate of cinnamon rolls, and Alec woke up and
shuffled onto the porch to see if I wanted to go to the driving range,
which I did. The rest of that day's schedule is lost to me. I'm certain
that by dinner we were talking about other things besides the Soviet
Union.
And that was 1991. A long time ago.
But I ask you today, have events not borne me out? Rogue nuclear
weapons, a breakdown in command of the Russian army, a frightening
centralization in the world oil market? An autocratic KGB man at the
country's head? Rising AIDS rates, a widening wealth gap, the largest
land mass on the planet-I ask you, Iris, have events not borne me out?
Is it so hard to imagine that I might have been right?
At night, in that beach house, Iris and Joe slept in the bedroom on the
second floor, and Elaine and I slept one floor down from them, and we
could hear them together, always past midnight, although we tried not
to. We heard them almost every night, and rolled our eyes at each other,
and usually woke up in unrumpled sheets ourselves.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "A FRIEND OF THE FAMILY"
by LAUREN GRODSTEIN.
Copyright (C) by LAUREN GRODSTEIN.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.