Chapter
One
At three
A.M. on a windy late-November night, Jenny Walker woke in
her historic house in an historic New England town, and sensed
from the slope of the mattress and the chill of the flowered
percale sheets that Wilkie Walker, the world-famous writer
and naturalist, was not in bed beside her.
Often now Jenny woke to this absence. The first time, after
lying half awake for twenty minutes, she tiptoed downstairs
and found her husband sitting in the kitchen with a mug of
tea. Wilkie smiled briefly and replied to her questions that
of course he was all right, that everything was all right.
"Go back to bed, darling," he told her, and Jenny
followed his instructions, just as she had done for a quarter
century.
After that night she didn't go to look for him, but now and
then she would mention his absence the next morning. Wilkie
would say that he'd had a little indigestion and needed a
glass of soda water, or wanted to write down an idea. There
was no reason to be concerned about him, his tone implied.
Indeed her concern was unwelcome, possibly even irritating.
But since the day they met, Jenny had been more concerned
about Wilkie Walker than anyone or anything in the world.
He had come into the University Housing Office at UCLA where
she was working after graduation while she waited to see what
would happen next in her life. It was a misty, hot summer
morning when Wilkie appeared: the most interesting-looking
older man Jenny had ever seen, with his broad height, his
full explorer's mustache; his shock of blond-brown hair, steel-blue
eyes, and sudden dazzling smile. Dazzled, she heard him ask
about sabbatical sublets for the fall. He wanted somewhere
quiet with a garden--he liked to work out of doors if he could,
he explained--but he also hoped to be within a half-hour's
walk of the university. Which no doubt wasn't possible, he
added with another radiant smile.
But Jenny was able to assure him that she knew just the place.
And two days later, while she was still dreaming of Wilkie's
visit and wondering if she could get leave to audit his lectures,
he reappeared to thank her and ask her to have lunch with
him.
It was only later that Jenny realized how unusual that had
been, because at the time Wilkie Walker was extremely wary
of all women. He had been married twice, both times briefly
and disastrously ("I get on well with most mammals, but
I seem to have difficulty with our species"). First to
a sweet and graceful but totally impractical girl whom he
compared to a highbred Persian cat ("all cashmere fur
and huge sky-blue eyes and special diet, but she always had
a slight cold, couldn't hike more than a mile without collapsing,
and was terrified of most other animals").
Then, on the rebound, he had married a young woman who was
equally good looking and much more competent and robust ("strong
and healthy as an Alaskan husky"), but who turned out
to be deeply hostile to men and especially to Wilkie. For
example, when at a time of crisis he asked her to retype one
of his articles, the husky not only growled at him but dropped
his manuscript into the kitchen wastebasket, among eggshells
and wet grapefruit rinds and crusts of rye toast.
At that first lunch Jenny knew that Wilkie Walker was someone
she could, even should, devote her life to. And as she came
to know him better she was almost shocked to discover how
badly he needed this devotion; how much of his own life was
wasted on inessentials. How often he had to set his work aside
for tasks someone else (Jenny, for instance) could do for
him much faster and more easily, for Wilkie had no natural
aptitude for shopping or household repairs or balancing a
checkbook.
And after they were married she did all these things and much
more: happily, gratefully. Soon she became able to help Wilkie
in many other ways: not only typing and proofreading his books
and articles, but accompanying him on field trips, making
notes, and taking photographs. At home she helped with library
research, copying and taxing, finding illustrations (often
her own photos), and creating tables and graphs. As Wilkie
became ever busier and more famous, she kept his schedule
of lectures and interviews and meetings, arranged airline
tickets and hotel reservations, took phone and E-mail messages,
and corresponded in his name with agents and editors and fans.
Usually now, when Jenny woke at night and found herself alone,
she sighed, turned over, and slid back into oblivion. But
tonight sleep didn't come. She lay in the antique four-poster
bed listening to the windy scrape of bare twigs against glass,
thinking that everything was not all right and neither was
Wilkie. For months--since he retired last spring, really--his
nights had been wakeful, and more and more often he seemed
restless or weary during the day. Moreover, none of the things
that he used to enjoy so fully seemed to please him now. For
the first time since she'd known him, Wilkie had to be urged
to attend concerts, lectures, or films. He didn't read most
of the books and articles on nature and the environment that
crowded into the mailbox, often accompanied by letters of
gratitude and appreciation. More and more often he declined
to serve on committees and boards, and he delayed returning
telephone calls, even after Jenny had gently reminded him
several times.
More worrying still, Wilkie hadn't finished his important
new book, The Copper Beech, This, perhaps the
culminating work of his life, was the portrait in depth of
a great tree on the Convers College campus; it would bring
together all his interests: botany, climatology, ecology,
entomology, geology, history, soil science, and zoology. Wilkie's
agent and editor were excited about The Copper Beech,
and it had already been announced in his publisher's catalogue.
Every day Jenny expected her husband to give her the final
chapter to type into the computer, and every day she was disappointed.
Besides this, and almost worst of all, Wilkie seemed to be
losing interest in his friends and family. For over a month
he hadn't been to the faculty club, and he wouldn't let her
ask anyone to dinner. Last week when the children were home
for Thanksgiving he had had little to say to them. He had
less and less to say to Jenny too; also, for nearly a month
he had not suggested making love.
Clearly something was wrong. And that being so, it was Jenny's
responsibility to correct it. Perhaps, she had thought at
first, her husband was ill but didn't realize this, because
he had hardly been sick a day in his life. He had always refused,
for instance, to acknowledge colds: when one showed signs
of wanting to attach itself to him he ignored it until, defeated,
it slunk away.
A month ago Jenny had persuaded Wilkie to have a medical checkup--first
on general principles, then resorting at last to her usual
last resort: the claim that it would make her feel better.
Grumbling about the waste of time, reiterating his belief
that people who weren't ill should stay away from doctors,
Wilkie accompanied her to Dr. Felch's office and was pronounced
to be in excellent health for a man of his age. Prompted by
Jenny, he admitted that he occasionally got up at night, but
declared that he saw nothing wrong with this; he refused to
accept the term "insomnia."
Like almost everyone in Convers, Dr. Felch was somewhat in
awe of Wilkie Walker, the town's most famous citizen.
More for Jenny's sake than his patient's, perhaps, he wrote
a prescription for what he called a "muscle relaxant,"
which Wilkie afterward refused to take. The trouble with most
people today, he told his wife, was that their muscles were
too relaxed, not to say atrophied.
Though Wilkie seemed to have forgotten the whole episode,
one phrase Dr. Felch had used kept running through Jenny's
head: "a man of his age." Wilkie's age was now seventy.
Not for the first time, she recalled the uncomfortable conversation
she had had when she first brought him home to meet her parents.
Wilkie clearly hadn't noticed the slight hesitation in their
welcome, and would have been surprised to hear what was said
when his wife-to-be confronted her mother later in the kitchen.
"Darling, I do like him," Jenny's mother had insisted.
"And of course I realize he's brilliant. He was wonderfully
interesting about those South American bats. And I can see
he really loves you. But--" She turned on the water in
the sink, sloshing away the rest of the sentence, if any.
"But what?"
"Well. He has been married twice before, that always
. . ."
Under Jenny's hurt, resentful stare, her voice faltered. "And
then . . . the age difference. You're barely twenty-one, and
Wilkie Walker is forty-six, almost my age. I always think
of what my mother said once: If you marry someone much older,
you don't ever quite grow up. And when you're forty-six, Wilkie
will be seventy. An old man."
Jenny refused to listen. Wilkie Walker was not like other
people, she declared. He had more energy and endurance and
enthusiasm than most of her college friends.
Her mother, for whom tact was almost a religion, never brought
up the subject again. But her comments continued to swim in
the weedy depths of Jenny's mind, occasionally surfacing in
a sharklike manner. "You see, you were quite wrong,"
she had felt like telling her mother on several occasions,
the latest being her own forty-sixth birthday last spring.
"Wilkie hasn't become an old man at all. When we were
on that walking tour in Greece last month nobody could keep
up with him except the tour guide." She did not say this
only because, though her mother was still in excellent health,
her father was now, after two heart attacks, all too evidently
an old man at seventy-four: stoop-shouldered and short of
breath, slowspeaking and slow-moving.
Remembering all this, Jenny lay listening to the wind scratch
at the glass, recalling recent conversations with her two
grown children over Thanksgiving vacation.
"I tell you what it is, Mom," Ellen had said as
they were washing the dishes. "I think Dad has got a
clinical depression."
Since her daughter was now a medical student, and like many
such students given to scattershot diagnoses, Jenny both believed
her and did not believe her. "Oh, darling," she
temporized. "I don't know."
"That's what I think," Ellen repeated. "I'm
surprised his doctor isn't more concerned."
"Dr. Felch is concerned. He admires Wilkie very much."
"Everyone admires him very much," Ellen said. "That's
not the point."
Billy (Wilkie Walker Jr.) was as usual less definite, but
no more reassuring. "Yeah, I sort of agree with Ellen,"
he admitted the next day in answer to his mother's question.
"Something's wrong. Dad seems to be moving around less,
you know? Like he wouldn't come for a walk yesterday because
it was too cold? I never heard that before; he was always
dragging us out in the goddamnedest freezing snowstorms. Maybe
you should go somewhere warmer this winter."
"Somewhere warmer?"
"Like, I don't know. Florida, for instance."
"Oh, darling. Your father would hate Florida." A
glaring panorama of pink beach hotels and condominiums trimmed
in neon and surrounded by artificial neon-green turf rose
in Jenny's mind.
"I know, Mom. But you could try Key West. It's different
from the rest of Florida. Sort of like Cape Cod with palms,
that's what my roommate said when we were there on spring
break last year. And there's supposed to be lots of writers
and artists around that Dad could talk to."
Jenny lay in bed rehearing these voices, wondering if she
ought to go downstairs, fearing that if she did Wilkie would
not be pleased to see her. For a while she distracted herself
from this anxiety with familiar, less pressing anxieties about
her two beautiful and brilliant children. She pictured Ellen,
who so much resembled Wilkie: tall, ruddy, and broad-shouldered--and
also, since early childhood, always so sure of herself. Sometimes
lately Jenny was almost frightened of her daughter. I wouldn't
like to be Ellen's patient when she becomes a doctor, she
thought: she'd be so sure she knew what was wrong with me.
Then in the dark she blushed, ashamed of this disloyalty.
She imagined Billy, who had been such a beautiful, affectionate
little boy, and now seemed somehow subdued and uncertain.
Both of them were doing well professionally, but Jenny sometimes
worried that Billy, isolated in the nearly all-male world
of computer hardware, would never meet a nice young woman,
and that Ellen would scare nice young men off. Then they would
never marry and have children Jenny could love.
Jenny marveled at people who desired expensive manufactured
objects like an indoor swimming pool or a Mercedes. She already
had too many such objects to take care of. What she longed
for no money could buy: at least one grandchild. And now,
for Wilkie to be himself again.
Copyright
©1998 Alison Lurie
Note: This excerpt
was scanned from printed material and converted to text. Therefore,
100% accuracy to the original is unlikely.
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