Disturbances in the Field (35 page)

Read Disturbances in the Field Online

Authors: Lynne Sharon Schwartz

“Good instincts! I have horrible instincts. You don’t know the half of it, George. I couldn’t even cope with a baby. How’s that for instinct?” I paused, suppressing. Couldn’t even enjoy nursing a baby. Nursed fantasies of ancient infanticides: exposure, suffocation in a crowded bed. “I’m only grateful Victor didn’t strangle me. He had sufficient provocation. For him, it must have been Eros over Thanatos, though God knows I was hardly erotic.” And I laughed. I was working, and happy, full of banter.

“No, you don’t understand. You were waiting to die in a more fitting way. That kind of downer just wasn’t ... significant enough to destroy you. After all, you’re not just a little trout in the stream who’s too dumb to put up a fight. Remember that? We know you have character, don’t we? Uh, do you mind if I make myself an egg cream?”

We went to the kitchen, where Vivian sat poring over the illustrations in
Now We Are Six.
“Do you mean to say I’m waiting for something more worthy?”

“Do you want an egg cream too, Vivian? Yes? Ah, that’s my girl.” He busied himself with the milk and chocolate syrup. “Didn’t I tell you once before what Freud said about the instinct of self-preservation? Its function might be not so much to keep you alive as to see that you return to an inanimate state in some natural way, a natural death suited to your organism, that is—that you’re not stopped midstream by some extraneous force, a brick falling on your head and such. ‘The organism wishes to die only in its own fashion.’“ He squirted his beloved seltzer into the two glasses and gave one to Vivian. “Here you go, sweetheart. That was simply not your fashion, Lyd.”

“And what is?”

“Well, how would I know?” He drank his egg cream. “Ah! You don’t know what you’re missing. Purist.”

“I don’t like a lot of bubbles. It’s a pretty grim hypothesis. It doesn’t sound like Eros struggling against Thanatos at all. Just between the right kind of death and the wrong. Or maybe between premature death and timely death.”

“Aha!”

“Come on, George. You don’t really think that’s what the whole struggle is all about?”

“I think maybe it’s a case of semantics. The will to live, the will not to die ... So how is that, Vivian?”

She nodded beatifically, immersed in her book.

“Did you like your trip out West?” he persisted.

“Yes,” she said. “I’m reading.”

“I beg your pardon, ma’am. By the way, Lydia, I must tell you about this terrific woman I just met. She’s into child abuse. You know what I mean ... she doesn’t do it, she works with people who do.”

Perhaps I had good instincts, but I had good circumstances too. It would have taken someone more perverse than I to resist them. A few months after that terrible night, Victor found a teaching job; we moved uptown, overlooking trees and river, and closer to Juilliard. To our devoutly middle-class parents it was still a slum, with its flamboyant street life, its shabby and chic patches side by side like a homemade quilt, but to us the place was Eden. It had an elevator. Space. Light. Air. The best things in life were rent-controlled. The mothers in our new neighborhood were tireless activists; we found an array of cooperative nursery schools and play groups. I stepped out into the world to see what was happening. Everything! Amid assassinations and bouts of public grieving, city people were fleeing to fantasy communes in the hinterlands, suburban children abandoning home for the city streets. Everyone was getting high and everyone was in wondrous costume. The world was a rough carnival, where cops and kids exchanged rocks instead of flowers, while in the wings, in the jungle beyond, war raged. And all the time this had been fermenting I had been ... I didn’t know what to call it. Was I too old to put on a costume and join the parade? When I saw women my age marching with babies slung on their backs I was ashamed of how I had spent nearly four years. “You’ve no cause for shame,” said Gabrielle. “You were ... sick. It comes from the situation.” She spelled out the ideology for me. “Weak,” I corrected. “All right, weak. Weak is a kind of sick.” Is it? But I would never be weak again. “That’s absurd,” Gaby said. “It’s like vowing never to be sick again. You’d be better off vowing to resist the dynamics of the nuclear family.” “Words, words.” I laughed at her. “I will never be sick again.” She shook her head and laughed back at me.

I rejoined the trio when Henrietta Frye moved to California. Rosalie introduced me to musicians; the phone began to ring. I flitted from group to group—like our President, I would go anywhere and do anything, only he didn’t. Humble second beginnings, and late, but this time I felt I was constructing something. “Your career,” my mother called it, and she stayed with the children, cooked a week’s worth of dinners and froze them, while I was out rehearsing. As the war ground on, we flourished. Victor was happy. I no longer made him sick, nor was I too tired to move. Quite the contrary.

The preceding years, with their wretchedness, became a blur, as though they had passed in some drugged twilight sleep; I suppressed the details. But I knew their texture and color, stony and dun, and I puzzled over how I could have managed motherhood so badly, been so strangely helpless. Why on earth hadn’t I practiced in the evenings, or at least studied scores or listened to records? Too tired to listen to a record? I didn’t understand. Why hadn’t I found some women to exchange babies with a few afternoons a week, in order to work? Crazy! Ah, if only I had it to do over again! How much better I could do now! My permanent record card need not show an abject failure. I would repeat the course and pass with flying colors, have that shameful F blotted out.

“Have you lost your mind completely?” Victor’s tone made other diners turn and stare. Out to dinner! Something unthinkable a year and a half ago. It was Simon’s, the local pub near the university with the suit of armor in the entryway, where we used to meet before we were married, for those orgies of food and mutual evasion. He gave his wily, amorous smile of then, but confident now. He had me. “You’re a most irrational woman. You actually
like
to court disaster. We finally have a fairly normal life and you want to start that whole mess all over again?” Not a statement,
nota bene,
but a question, open-ended. In his rising inflection was a quaver of interest. Victor was a child-lover, and a lover of happenings.

“I’m sure it wouldn’t be that way again. I’m different now. You weren’t so terrific yourself either. Buying coloring books! Anyway, now we could really enjoy it. All those things that passed me by. I can’t even remember. You know, first word, first step, like in those baby books.”

“You do have a short memory! Have you forgotten the time you locked yourself in the bathroom to slit your wrists? I don’t want to see you do—”

The waitress arrived, in her rimless glasses, leather miniskirt, and beads made out of dried lentils.

“The steak, please,” said Victor.

“And how would you like it?”

“Dripping blood.”

“Dripping blood. Very good.” She made a note on her pad and turned to me.

“I’ll have the same.”

“Also dripping blood?” Her suave, narrow mouth began to curve, unwillingly. A student, no doubt, maybe at Barnard.

“Dripping blood, yes.”

“Would you like anything with it?”

“All the perfumes of Arabia,” said Victor, and the girl began to giggle. Like Nina in college. So proper, so ripe to lay aside propriety.

“I was not going to slit my wrists,” I said as soon as she left. “I just wanted to be alone. It was the only room in that apartment that had a lock on the door.”

“You were so. I remember your words distinctly. You said you’d had enough. You wanted to get it all over with.”

The couple at the next table had ceased their conversation and were frankly hanging on our words. I felt like turning aside to them with an explanation, as in a Brecht play. “Talk is cheap. I didn’t mean that. I’m not the type. I wanted to scare you.”

“Well, you did. It was unforgettable.”

“I’m sorry. I won’t do it any more.”

“Oh Lydia.” He put his hand over mine and tapped several times. “This is pretty dumb, you know.”

Althea and Phil were cranky babies (small wonder), but Alan was the jolly kind a father could bounce around in the air or sit on the back of a bicycle and display to friends in the park. A showpiece. He took lengthy naps, during which I practiced. Our dovetailed schedules, Victor’s and mine, were masterpieces of cooperation, whether from fear or feminism or some mingling of the two hardly mattered. Victor worked on with his calm persistence though the public rewards were typically meager: a few weeks in a gallery, a few reviews, a few sold, then back to solitary labor. But I saw his paintings forever ramifying, complex and convoluted now, like his life. They showed city crowds, the trees and river and ships seen from our windows, skaters and ballplayers in the park, and the children and me, over and over, all with the early respect for the inner signs, and the sinuosity. He was growing in vision, I in proficiency. Way in the distance I spied the limits beyond which I would not pass. I would be excellent, not great. Not entirely because it was too late, or because half my mind was on children. Because my gift itself was not infinitely expandable, as a precious few are. I accepted it. I was happy and the limits still far off. I was willing to keep getting better, knowing I would never get best. What I could do was play with delicacy and make fine discriminations of tone and texture, and with so much practice those skills seeped through me. It would have been indelicate indeed to pine for genius, while simple gifts abounded; I understood why people loved babies—first word, first step. Only domestically did I learn to be lax and inefficient. So lax that under the cold stars Vivian was conceived. Get rid of it? Ah, we couldn’t. We gloried in it. Four! Piquant, original. We could handle anything now.

Just as the carnival cavorted with war in the wings, our sprightly family comedy, too, was performed in the shadow of death. First my father, shocking us by keeling over at his desk in 1969, he who could never be rushed into anything, who had to be the last man on the beach at the close of day, and then Edith. But she was going slowly, slowly. Bone cancer was her license to relax, maybe what she had waited for all her life: finally she said what she thought. Her mannerly evasiveness, her patina of refinement, were cauterized away by the searing pain, exposing unsuspected qualities, strata of rock beneath the surface vegetation: fortitude, penetration, a pragmatism of the emotions. Long-secreted nuggets of her self—her Jewish upbringing, for one thing—wound their way up to split the surface and greet the light. Her face was transformed, hollowed to the bone. The charming, pampered, obedient face gave way to a stark, shrewd old Russian Jew, incarnation of her forebears. So that watching Edith die, her bones settle into sand, was not only wrenching but inspiriting, like watching a birth or a resurrection.

Phenomenal, but it was also taking forever. “Why so long?” Edith griped. “Can’t you ... uh ... She flicked her head sharply towards her husband and made a swift, beckoning, peasant’s gesture with her fingers. “Grease the doctor’s palm a little, eh?” Paul gasped. He had never heard her talk that way. “Do everyone a favor, Paulie?” He couldn’t. “How long can this drag on?” Victor whispered in bed. “It’ll be over soon, dear.” “Oh sure, soon. And then what? Two more to go?” He was so bitter and angry. “No, no,” I whispered, “they can’t all be as bad.” Still, we knew it was in the course of things, the grief we were born for, unlike ...

“Be good,” this new, toughened, skin-and-bone Edith said to Victor from her hospital bed. His mouth fell open, he was so startled. “Stay good, I mean.” Later, close to the end, drugged and barely awake, she said something to him in Yiddish. This too was very simple.
“Zeit gezunt, mein kind,
” I repeated for him at home, when he asked. “Be well, my child. No, more like stay well.” The most common phrase, I told him. People said it every day—they didn’t have to be dying. I must have heard it a thousand times from my grandparents. But for Victor, in that language, and from her, it was the first time. He wept, and Vivian, who was almost two, climbed up onto his knees.

Edith had always liked to soothe, to smooth. She left us money to soothe her leaving, money we might have had earlier but for our insane pride. We moved into a bigger apartment in the same patchwork neighborhood. Victor rented a studio in SoHo and his paintings grew larger. I hired men to do the housework, young actors and singers, mostly, who whistled as they worked and were charming to the kids. I felt a barbaric, utterly shameless thrill watching men scrubbing bathroom tiles or prancing around with a feather duster. Oh, there was no denying now that we were in the cozy middle class. No more playing poor. Hadn’t we earned the comfort, though? Not only by labor but by suffering? And suffering right. Everyone suffers; the important thing, the experts say, is knowing how to “handle” suffering. (“... two handles, one by which it may be borne ...”) Except in their unnaturally hushed offices they call it pain. Suffering is too tactile a word for them to bandy about—you can feel what it means when you say it. Eventually you might learn to handle it so well that there would be no pain too devastating for you to overcome. So it seemed.

I did do better the second time around, with the second pair, as I promised. And even now, God almighty, after everything, I still feel a twinge of childish pride. I told you so. Okay, Lydie, clutching your exemplary report card to your milked-out breasts, you did do better, you did fine, no one can dispute it. But you lost them.

I lost my children because I was unworthy of them.

Oh Jesus, Lydia, what kind of primitive horseshit are you throwing around?

No, no, just listen! You don’t understand. I don’t mean because I was working day and night; that part is okay. Acquitted. And not because I let them go on the bus. Acquitted. But with those first two ... I was a sadistic, self-pitying bitch.

But you know all about—

No, no, never mind the reasons or the justifications. I’ve heard it all from my friends; their logic is unassailable; I bow down to it; I stand explained. Nevertheless, that is what I was.

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