By MAX ROSS
1.
Among the snowy houses, a small woman in a white wool coat shoveled a path from the street to her front door. Meanwhile snow was falling, gathering slowly on the path being cleared, and on the small woman shoveling.
Each of the womanâs movements was like the second half of an echo: It seemed as if her gestures werenât occurring now, but had been initiated some time ago. Faint, also fated. She emptied half a shovelful of snow onto a large bank, and then gathered more snow in her shovel.
Her shovel was as tall as she was, its blade curved and royal blue. She had one hand atop its handle, and her other hand gripped its middle, and she pushed the shovel softly along the ground as if it were a broom.
Some of the snow was from the previous day, when it had also snowed. As Gail shoveled now, the falling snow dotting the air made her realize she would probably need to shovel her walkway again tomorrow, too. She didnât mind: even as it snowed now, she wished for more snow to shovel.
Her shoulders and lower back were becoming sore. Despite the repetitionâgathering in and emptying out again and againâher movements didnât become more efficient or fluent, and she continued to clear only a small bit of path with each pass of her shovel. Once, as she emptied a heft of snow, a gust of wind came and scattered it all back onto her walkway, and she laughed a small frustrated laugh and stamped one boot on the ground. Snow shook off the sides of her boot.
Now, at dusk, the snow was blue; but during the day, when the sky had been cloudy, the snow had been gray. Certain shadowsâfrom a cedar tree, from a parked minivanâcast red or green tints on the snow.
One of her neighbors across the street began shoveling now also, and the sound of Gailâs blade and the neighborâs blade growling against ice and concrete resounded through the neighborhood, which otherwise was silent except for airplanes occasionally passing overhead.
She exhaled heavily into her scarf, causing her glasses briefly to fog up.
Soon her son, David, was coming over to eat leftoversâtheir Thursday ritual. If she didnât finish, he would shovel the rest of the walkway for her. It was important to try and finish shoveling before he arrived. Tonight they would eat leftovers and he would jokingly berate her for not having yet sold her house, even though there was nothing more she could do to get the house sold. Her husband had left her three years agoââI am,â heâd said one evening, âessentially a gay person.â She had been doing the dishes, and she could remember the difficulty sheâd had, after his announcement, removing her rubber gloves. In the following weeks sheâd been unable to conjure any anger toward him; she understood immediately that their separation was his only chance for a contentment that had always, despite their bond, eluded them. Her contentment, meanwhile, would have to come from where? From elsewhereâElsewhere, a land faraway and likely imaginary. But their divorce had been finalized in the last year, and it was time for her to leave their home. Again she emptied snow into her yard.
David parked his Honda at the curb.
âI thought I said Iâd shovel.â He was protective of herâneedlessly, but still she didnât want to deny him what he believed to be his duties. She saw this as her duty to him.
âIâm sorry,â Gail said. âI know. Itâs just that, actually itâs kind of funny, but I really felt like shoveling.â
They hugged, jackets rustling. David had come from the restaurant where he waited tables, and Gail observed that, beneath his coat, he was still in his server uniform; heâd dropped out of graduate school, and lately he seemed to be working a lunch shift every day. Snow gathered on their shoulders, and David wrested the shovel from her.
âI can do it,â Gail said.
âMom, justââ
âDonât you need gloves?â Gail said.
She went into the house, and David began to clear the rest of the walkway. A moment later, one could hear her practicing piano. The music came through the living room windows muffled, Chopin in a minor key. Gail kept her foot too long on the sustaining pedal, and, sourly, the notes slurred together. Sheâd begun to take lessons as a means to fill her evenings, and was playing again the pieces sheâd performed in high school and college, which she was surprised she still remembered. It was her fingers, their muscles and tendons, that remembered. She didnât need the sheet music, but kept it in front of her just in case.
Alone or with company, Gail peeled the price stickers off her wine bottles before opening them. Shreds of sticker caught under her fingernails like citrus peel. She and David drank their first glass as their food heated.
âCan we cheers?â she said. She held her glass in the air like a baton.
âWhat are we cheersing?â
âI donât know. Itâs just cheers.â
âItâs me and you,â David said. âThereâs nothing to cheers.â
âItâs Shabbat.â
David said it was Thursday.
âBut we do Shabbat on Thursday,â Gail said, and extended her arm to clink her glass against his. He shook his head at her. He had, Gail knew, become embarrassed by her, was ashamed of even the smallest intimaciesâclinking glasses, hugging hello. He was, she thought, embarrassed by her need for these formalities, her need for him to prove his affection, her need for him to remain her son.
She saw out the kitchen window that the snow had begun to fall more heavily.
âSnow,â she said.
âWinter,â said David. âMinnesota.â
âI was just saying,â Gail said.
Sheâd put on the Miles Davis album that she played on Thursdays. While she adjusted knobs on the stove, removing a lid here and poking a piece of fish there, David set pairs of plates, forks, and napkins on the table. On one of the chairs Gail had piled old newspapers, an old New Yorker she wanted to read because David had told her to, coupon-heavy junk mail, dog leashes, her reading glasses, and several pencilsâthe things that accumulate during a lone womanâs week.
âWhat should I do with all this?â
Looking up from a pot, Gail said, âOh, Iâll take care of it.â
She removed the pile from the chair and set it on the counter by the radio.
âWhy not just ask me to?â David said.
He stood beside her at the stove and nudged her elbow with his elbow. In the last few years sheâd begun to feel a little as if he were flirting with herâheâd distanced himself from her and teased her to collapse the distance.
âIâm sorry. It was a long day,â she said. âIt was a day where I feel like I didnât get anything done. We donât have enough volunteers to do snow removal, and the ones we do have donât have snowblowers. Theyâre supposed to have snowblowers. It was a lot of figuring things out.â
For dinner they had chicken Gail had roasted two nights ago, and salmon and rice from the night before. When she ate alone, she always set aside a portion to save for Thursdays with her son. Crumples of tinfoil lay shiny on the counter. As she dished two plates, David asked if sheâd heard from anyone about the house, and Gail said no, and repeated that no matter how much preparation she didâsheâd had the bathroom and living room repainted, had switched out all the dead lightbulbs in the basement, and, with funding from her ex-husband, had a new dishwasher installedâit felt like there was always more to do.
âIâm still a little sad to sell the house, though,â she said.
âYouâve been saying that for two years almost.â
âI have not. Has it been that long? It doesnât feel like that long.â
The house had been on the market for twenty months, and the one offerâtendered nineteen months agoâhad made her so fretful that sheâd asked her agent to remove her listing from his catalogue. Then sheâd called back the next week and asked him to relist the home. Still, she didnât want to leave. She had no idea where she would go. There was nowhere she wanted to go to. But there was pressure to sell from her son, from her ex-husband, from her agent, from herself, from her therapist, from her co-workers who listened, and she understood that selling her house was the appropriate thing to do. She wished she didnât care about appearing appropriate. David refilled his wineglass, which hadnât been empty. Gail clinked hers again against his. He said, âBut itâs so big for just you and Rabbit.â
âAnd you,â Gail said. âItâs your home, too.â
âAnd all you ever do in winter is complain about how cold it gets. And you refuse to turn up the heat to human temperatures.â
âAre you cold?â
âIâm fine,â David said. âHave you thought about lowering the asking price again?â
âOkay,â Gail said. âI get it.â
âIâm just saying. Maybe what youâre asking is too high. And it seems intentionally too high.â
âYou know what? Enough.â
âIâm sorry.â
âIâm sorry, too.â Gail put down her wineglass. âThings are still hard. Everything happens for reasons, but things are hard. And I have to do whatâs right for me.â
âWhich is sometimes nothing,â David said.
When Gail cried, there usually werenât any tears at first, just a strange way of breathing that caused the base of her throat to become hollow. âYou give me such a rough time,â she said. âThis is my home.â
In the middle of the meal, she remembered to insist on lighting and blessing Shabbat candles. David opened a second bottle of wine and poured full their glasses. The sediment stain on the inside of Gailâs lower lip darkened each time she sipped. When theyâd finished eating, and after Gail had wrapped the leftovers in various foils and plastics and given them to her son to take home, Rabbit made it known with a moan that she wanted to go out for a walk on Cedar Lake.
It was snowing still. Another inch of snow had accumulated on the front walkway. Even for Minneapolis this was a notably snowy winter. The night was silent except for the crunching of Gailâs boots and the occasional scrape of a neighborâs shovel. On her way down to the lake, she passed a large man walking his small, annoying dog, whom Rabbit, her black Labrador, chose not to acknowledge.
Once on Cedar Lake, Gail was wary of ice patches and did not lift her feet, gliding instead as if on skates. The lakeâs surface was pockmarked with fishing holes, most of which had frozen over since the sun went down. In the distance, a cross-country skier scissored by, dressed in black, or dark blue.
One of Gailâs neighbors, a recently widowed woman also named GailâGail Goldsteinâwas on the lake walking her boxer, Molly. The women greeted each other and the dogs sniffed one anotherâs rears, huffing with sapphic intention.
âIs it okay that I dropped the leash?â Gail said. âI should have asked.â
âOh, itâs all right,â said Gail. âThey seem so happy. This is good for Molly. Sheâs been cooped up all day.â
They watched the dogs circle. Not knowing what to say, they said nothing. Still, the women filled the space between them with words.
âIs it getting colder out?â Gail asked. âI canât tell.â
âI think so. I think it feels colder. And usually it gets colder around now. I still just canât believe the snow,â Gail said. âRabbit loves the snow. Donât you, Rabbit?â
âItâs pretty, at least. Do you know what it always reminds me of? There was that scene from Doctor Zhivago, the movie, when theyâre on the train. And thereâs a lot of snow.â
âI heard itâs supposed to keep falling through tomorrow.â
âRabbit will be so happy.â
âNot Molly. Mollyâs going to be cooped up all day in the kitchen while Iâm at work.â
âI guess Rabbit will be cooped up, too.â
The dogs gnashed at each otherâs feet and tails.
âYou know what, though? I feel cooped up all day, too, sometimes,â Gail said. She brushed to the ground snow that had gathered on her hood. âSome days, and this sounds sadâI donât mean for it to sound so sadâI just think, âWhatâs the point?ââ
âYes! Like when I wake up and it feels like the dayâs already over,â Gail said. âEspecially in winter, when itâs still dark in the morning.â
âI hate that! I get up and go swimming and then I work all day. And then itâs dark by the time Iâm home.â Gail removed her glasses and, instead of polishing them, blew the snow off the lenses with two quick huffs. âJust the other day, do you know what I did?â she said. âWhen I got home from work, I put on Pat Metheny in my living room and danced all by myself. And I enjoyed it! But I knew that if anyone saw meâexcept Rabbit; Rabbit danced too, in her wayâif anyone saw me Iâd be so embarrassed.â
âI love that,â Gail said. âI love doing that.â
âIt was nice, though.â
They made plans to walk their dogs together and dance later in the weekâit was strange how naturally this date was conceived; the women had never spent time together beforeâand then Gail proceeded on. She walked past the skating area, where high school boys were playing pickup hockey as their girlfriends screamed on the sidelines, wearing white sweaters and drinking from mirrory flasks.
âArenât they cold, Rabbit?â she said aloud. âThey look cold.â
Another cross-country skier (or maybe the same one as before) passed by them, close enough so Gail could hear his skis tracing through the snow, like sandpaper on rough wood. She watched the skier recede through a screen of falling snow toward the shore.
2.
The next week, something terrible happened: Gailâs real estate broker called to say a young couple wanted to buy her house. They had a small child and liked the neighborhood. Apparently the husband had grown up nearby.
Gail considered this offer more carefully than she had the first. At the JCC she sat at her desk, her eyes closed. She was the Volunteer Outreach Coordinator, assigning volunteers to shovel snow from the walkways of homes owned by the elderly and the feeble. A spreadsheet glowed on the screen in front of her. She swallowed and breathed. She sensed that, like her childhood, like her marriage, another of her livesâthe sad but oddly cherished three-year span of post-separationâwas over.
âItâs a very strong offer for this market,â the broker said.
âOkay,â said Gail. She was eating lunch. On her desk, by her keyboard, were a container of coffee-flavored yogurt, half an apple, and a paper napkin sheâd used at lunch the day before. âThis is a big decision, though. Iâd like to think, if thatâs okay.â
After she hung up, Gail put one hand on each of her knees and stared at her computer screen. Her knees touched lightly together. Her shoes, black ballerinalike flats, touched at the toes but not the heels. I canât sell my house until Iâve found another, she thought. But I donât want another. I just want to stay. But I canât stay. Iâm not sure why, but I canât. Patches of her white napkin turned yellow after she wrapped the rest of her apple in it.
âThatâs terrific,â her ex-husband said.
âI know,â Gail said. âIt is. But I need to make a decision. Iâm just so unsure.â
âIt is a decision,â said Mark. âAnd, as Iâve said, whatâs most important is that you do what makes you comfortable. Itâs wonderful that thereâs this offer now, but what it indicates to me is that you wonât have huge amounts of trouble getting other offers, and I donât think you should let the thought of âWill this be the only chance?â enter your head.â
âItâs my home.â Gail disliked how Mark had already taken up both sides of the issue, ready to be enthusiastic about whatever she decided. It made her feel her own desperation.
They had continued to sleep together for several months after heâd left, even though Gail was aware he must have been sleeping with men as well. Sheâd wonderedâand it had struck her as absurdâif she should have him wear a condom. Yet she couldnât deny him. He was still her husband, and sheâd wanted him with her even as she disliked this permissive, needing wife in herself. They didnât have sex anymore, but he came over occasionally to walk their dog, to eat dinner. They spoke about money (Mark still paid an enormous portion of her mortgage); they spoke about their son. Their talking was pretense; Gail knew her husband simply needed to see that she was still herself, that their home was still their home, and that he still had access to them. He wanted her to stay here, she suspected, as much as she didâand this made her want to go.
âAnd now I have to look for a new place,â she said. âI stopped when it seemed like nothing was going to happen. Oh, I wish nothing was happening.â
Mark was a quiet a moment, and then said: âWhat say I came with you to check out houses this weekend or next weekend? I have, as youâre aware, a sixth sense for this sort of thing.â
Gail dunked her spoon over and over into her yogurt, thickening it, and said she didnât know. He would end up choosing her house; he would be insulted if she didnât like what he liked.
âThatâs a really nice thought,â she said.
As she finished her yogurt, Gail sent emails confirming the participation of the volunteer snow-shoveling groups sheâd arranged for the next week. As she typed, the offer on her house continued to preoccupy her, and she became distracted. She checked the payroll program to make sure the payroll for the week had gone through, but forgot to reimburse herself for the new shovels and bags of salt sheâd purchased for the JCC.
In the staff kitchen she rinsed out her yogurt container and put it in her purse to recycle at home. Then she shut down her computer and turned off her desk lamp, yanking the small chains connected to the lampâs bulbs.
When Gail arrived home that evening, after turning on the oven and removing the price sticker from the bottle of wine sheâd picked up for her and Gail Goldstein to share, she walked through her house to make sure nothing had been stolen or rearranged that morning when it had been shown. Nothing was, and this was what Gail found most disconcertingâbecause she knew someone had been here, could tell that the bathroom had been used and her pianoâs keys futzed with. But nothing was displaced. When she walked through open houses, she was careful not to displace things, too. She lifted a vase and put it back in its same spot.
Gail Goldstein was ten or so years older than Gailâin her late fiftiesâand slightly heavier. She had a white puff of hair. Her eyes were blue and busy with assessment; she looked at everything as if appraising its price. Before heâd died two years ago, her husband had been the director of the Minneapolis Institute of Art, and Gail Goldstein, who had a great deal of money and a Ph.D. in art history (sheâd written three books on Gustav Klimt) was still a board member. The women had just walked down to the lake and back with their dogs, and now, in Gail Rossâs living room, they drank pinot noir. Before sipping, Gail Goldstein first sniffed her glass and wrinkled her nose.
âOh, this store I work in,â she was saying, lowering her glass. âI do it just to pass the time, really, and to be with people, but sometimes the people drive me crazy.â Three days a week, she worked at a specialty kitchenware outlet in the Macyâs in the Mall of America, selling German knives. âOur knives really are wonderful. Iâve used them for years. But people just donât trust them.â
âThatâs too bad.â
âIâll show people how to use them and care for them. I do these little demonstrations, chop-chop-chop. But two weeks later someone will come back with a damaged blade. Theyâll claim we switched the knives in the box. People just donât know how to take care of nice things. Itâs nice to be in a house with nice things,â she said.
âThank you,â said Gail Ross, flattered.
The living roomâs lights were dimmed halfway (and, as whenever they were dimmed, they emitted a soft buzzing sound). Rabbit and Molly were curled into each other under the piano, asleep. By now each woman had been warmed by her half glass of wine and, somewhat unbeknownst to themselves, were nodding their heads to the Pat Metheny album Gail had put on. The music was no louder than it had been fifteen minutes before, but it seemed louder, as if dampers had been removed from the trumpets. They stood from the sofa. In dancing, Gail Rossâs usual clumsiness evolved not quite into grace, but into a nimble fluttering. In eight steps she turned a circle without touching her heels to the floor or spilling any wine. She thought she was spinning toward the window, but she ended up near the piano, smiled, and turned back the other way. Gail Goldstein sashayed beside her, holding one hand to her cheek. She danced as if there were a partner in front of her and she were trying to seduce that partner. Her bracelets added a jangle to the music. For a few minutes they quit speaking. The song was Methenyâs rendition of âOrder,â a piece that itself had no orderâshifting key signatures and time signatures, like a deck of cards being shuffledâbut both women continued to dance in 4/4, as if theyâd turned the album on as an excuse to dance to the more traditional pieces playing within themselves, the unceasing inborn music that dictated their movements. Gail Ross balanced on one foot and made her other three limbs sort of explode away from the rest of her body. Gail Goldstein walked two steps forward and then, jauntily, two steps back. As she danced by the dogs, Gail Ross shook her finger at them as if saying, âNo, no,â and they each looked up briefly from their nap. Gail Goldstein quit dancing and, quietly panting, sat on the sofa with her wine. She watched her hostess, shaking her head with amazement after each of her twists and hops. When the album finished, unaware that it had finished, Gail Ross continued dancing for ten or fifteen seconds. She turned circles while staying in place. After sheâd stopped, she pressed her palm to her chest, feeling her own heartbeat, and said, âThat was so good!â
They moved into the kitchen. So did their dogs. Gail Ross made coffee, and the women spoke of other dog owners in their neighborhood.
âIâll be sad when you leave,â Gail Goldstein said.
âI will be too,â said Gail. âThe whole neighborhood feels like my home. Iâve been here for so long.â
âChange can be a good thing.â
âIt can,â Gail said. She took a small, conscious sip from her coffee. âBut it can be the wrong thing, too, canât it? I donât feel ready. I might need to wait.â
âWhat for?â Keeping her eyes fixed on Gailâs, Gail Goldstein moved her chin through air, guiding it over an invisible fence. âOpportunities disappear. Youâve got this offer, right? There havenât been others. I would have thought itâs relieving to have the offer.â
Gail said that, yes, it was relieving. âBut Iâm trying to be honest with myself,â she said. âItâs a big change. And I need to know itâs what Iâm supposed to do. It shouldnât matter,â she went on, wanting not to bring up her ex-husband, yet knowing that, caffeinated and tipsy, she couldnât stop herself, âbut Mark says he understands if I want to stay, and knowing that is a big help, too.â
âYouâre still in contact. Iâm curious.â
âOf course,â Gail said. âFrom time to time, we still go on little dates. Not dates, really.â Her cheeks flushed pink as she said this. âItâs odd. Itâs nice, but itâs odd.â
Gail Goldstein made her chin jump the fence againâa gesture of disdain. The skin of her neck stretched out as she did so.
âIt still feels like heâs my husband. I canât help feeling that. So much of him is the same.â
âWell, I understand that, but it might not be the healthiest mindset. Itâs been a few years now, correct? Certainly he shouldnât be influencing your decisions.â
âHeâs not,â said Gail. âHe doesnât. Not like that, anyway. But weâre still close. I donât think weâll ever not be close.â
âWhat about when you find someone else? Will you still be close then?â
Gail Ross refilled their mugs of coffee, as well as their glasses of wine. In three years, sheâd dated two men. The first had been twenty years older than her, and even she recognized that she was with him only because she wanted to be with someone so stable, so set in his routines, that she wouldnât have to worry about unexpected change. The second had, like Mark, been an attorney, but with childish enthusiasms. He collected rare comic books, and took her to see the Lord of the Rings movies as soon as they were in the theaters. She had tried for months to break up with him but always lost her courage. Eventually she simply quit returning his phone calls. It was, she found, staggeringly easy.
âYes, I think we will,â she said. âIs that enough cream? There? Good. He wants me to be happyâhe does. But he hates hearing about me dating. But itâs funny, tooâheâs so proud when he talks about Thomas. Thomas is his boyfriend. And itâs awful. It makes me feel just awfulâit doesâto hear about Thomas.â
âHeâs controlling, it sounds like. No, I mean insecure. Heâs insecure.â
âThatâs not what Iâm saying. Heâs sad that Iâm sad. Heâs sad that I canât find anyone yet. But Markâs said that to me, tooâthat he doesnât know what his reaction will be when I start dating someone seriously. And I do, I worry if thatâs something thatâs preventing me from being involved with someone. Iâm afraid of how much it might hurt him. But if it does happen, I do think weâd still be close.â
âYou canât keep clinging to him. But you know that, I suppose. I suppose Iâm being boring.â
âYou know what I wish? Itâs so silly, but I wish there were some way I could look, just very quickly, about five years into the future, and see that everythingâs all right. If I could see that, I think things would be much easier for me than they are right now.â
âThatâs not how it works, though,â Gail Goldstein said. âYou have to live it first.â
Their conversation shifted to their children, and how well they were doing. Before long Gail Goldstein clipped Molly to her leash, put on her jacket and gloves.
âWeâll do this again,â both women said.
Except for the kitchen, Gail shut off all the lights in her house. Speaking with Gail Goldstein had conjured up Markâs image with unusual force. She washed the wineglasses and coffee mugs by hand as, suddenly behind her, at the kitchen table, her husband went over one of his legal documents that Gail barely understood. He was preparing for a deposition and absently bobbed his tea bag in his tea. Gail cleared his dessert plate for him and washed it at the sink. She always wondered what world he went into while he was working; his concentration transported him entirely. Work, work, heâs always inside his work, Gail thought to herself. Well, Iâll do his dishes.
She recalled the fads theyâd gone through togetherâwatching Northern Exposure, abstaining from red meat, power walkingâand soon the memory of him dissipated into general vagueness.
She and Rabbit went upstairs and performed their nighttime ritualsâGail brushing her teeth with her new electric toothbrush; Rabbit stamping the imaginary grass on her padâbefore settling down. For a moment Gail reflected on what she would do in a few hours when it was time to get up (make tea, write in her journal), and readied herself for a night of fitful, caffeinated sleep, wondering without worry if her son would come home tonight, if her husband would come home tonight. She would keep the house a little longer, just in case.
3.
The third, fourth, fifth, and sixth offers on her house Gail refused as well. Everyone said the housing market must be back, but Gail wished it werenât so.
Her refusals took place over two months, during which she lost fifteen poundsâdiminishing her to a sum total of ninety-seven. With the weight she also lost much of her energy and strength. What had once been easy now wasnât: mornings she could swim only half a mile; she became winded walking around the lake with Rabbit, bending over at intervals, a hand on each knee, to catch her breath; generally it was difficult to keep warm, and at home she wore a knitted blanket around her shoulders. Too many offers and she would waste to nothing.
When she came home one evening from the JCC, there was a birdâa robinâperched on her refrigerator. Fist-sized, with black wings and a bright red chest, it had its talons curled just over the edge of the refrigeratorâs door. Rabbit sat and stared at it, her tail wagging slowly. As Gail entered the kitchen, the robin rose up and flew a circle around the room. The flutter of its wings was surprisingly loud for a bird so small, cotton rubbing cotton. Rabbit scampered out of the kitchen, afraid, and returned only when the bird had landed once again atop the refrigerator.
Gail didnât know what to do. She wondered foremost where the bird had come from. It was an intruder, menacing. The robinâs face was hawkish. How long had it been here? It was winter, too cold for the robin to have flown in from outside. Was there a nest in the attic? From what she deemed a safe distance, Gail waved her hand at the bird, prompting it to fly around the kitchen again. This time it landed on a chair across the room. When Gail shooed it a second time, it perched on the sinkâs faucet. Gail laughed, sat at the counter, removed her glasses, and rested her forehead against her palm. Evidently sensing its victory, the bird again circled the kitchen to perch on the refrigerator.
Gail fed Rabbit, then went upstairs to change into her robe. She had no plans tonight except to look over pictures of houses and condominiums her real estate agent had emailed her. She hoped that when she went back downstairs the bird would be gone, back to wherever it had come from. But when Gail returned to her kitchen, the robin was still perched on the refrigerator. And Rabbit was pacing on the far side of the room, panting hysterically. Every time Rabbit turned around, she looked up at the bird to make sure it was still in its place. She was wagging her tail, and Gail knew she was afraid.
âItâs okay,â Gail said, and knelt down to rub Rabbitâs chest. âYouâre afraid of a bird. Itâs just a bird. Itâs okay.â
Rabbit pressed her muzzle against Gailâs hand, but resumed pacing nervously once sheâd stopped being petted.
As Gail prepared dinnerâa small salad of mixed greens and a piece of the previous nightâs quiche, reheatedâshe remained aware of the robinâs presence. Stubbornly it stayed on the refrigerator, allowing itself to be swung back and forth when Gail opened the door to retrieve her chilled bottle of wine. Maybe it had been living in her house for some time. She hoped not. Maybe there were eggs. Gail, with a sudden happy thrill, thought her house would be impossible to sell if it turned out to be infested with birds. She chopped a cucumber into wheels, and then quartered the wheels. Once, maybe five years ago, she and Mark had used a trail of popcorn to lure a pigeon, which had flown in through an open window, into a stockpot. David had been where? Away at college. Thatâs right. Sheâd been airing out his room for spring.
The timer on her oven buzzed; startled, the robin took flight; Rabbit ran into the living room, then sheepishly returned; Gailâs quiche was ready.
Paging through her real estate agentâs pictures, she looked over the interiors of bathrooms and porches. The images were from summer, and it seemed she wasnât looking over house listings but vacation brochures.
Two weekends ago sheâd agreed to go with Mark to see a house in Lowry Hill, the neighborhood where he now lived.
âEvery day I pass this place on my way to work, and I swear to you Iâve had the thought, If this place were for sale, it would be perfect for Gail,â Mark had said. âAnd then it shows up on the market.â
The house was two stories and painted blue, with a red brick chimney sticking out its top. When they entered, the agent showing the home was speaking with another couple, and Gail and Mark moved through the rooms by themselves.
âAnd itâs exactly as Iâd imagined it would be,â Mark said. Without quite seeming aware of it, heâd kept his car keys in his hand, and jingled them whenever they stepped from one room into another. âThe living room with the south-facing windows. Tell me that isnât crossword puzzle territory. And the kitchen with its big marble counter.â
âIt is nice,â said Gail. She ran her hand over the back of a sofa.
He wants me near him, she thought, and he doesnât even know it. Thatâs him, though: heâs convinced, he really is, that the house is perfect for meâbut really itâs just perfect for me for him.
âIt seems like a good price for the market,â she said uncertainly.
âFirst off, moneyâs not an issue,â Mark said. âI can help out with whatever. But, yes, what theyâre asking isnât in the realm of the unreasonable. Oh, and this could be your office.â They stood in the doorway of a bedroom not quite big enough for a bed. âIf it were me? This is where Iâd stick all my computer and filing stuff. Though Iâd probably repaint.â He was in the middle of renovating his own home and, Gail knew, had come to see domestic spaces as potential for better domestic spaces. âWhat do you think?â
âI donât know,â Gail said. âI like it. I do. But Iâm not sure it feels like a home.â
They walked back through the rooms, Mark jingling his keys in his palm.
Heâd called several times in the intervening weeks to see if she wanted to look at more houses. âSigns are everywhere,â he said. But she refused him each time, saying she was tired, or had plans with Gail Goldstein. Perhaps heâd finally sensed her reluctance; in the last few days, she hadnât heard from him.
As she ate her quiche, the robin up on the refrigerator behind her, Gail became absorbed in the pictures from her real estate agentâsquare footage and property taxes and, instinctively, school districts. She decided to light one of the two Shabbat candles on the table, humming the tune of the requisite prayer. As soon as the wick was lit, the robin flew from its perch down to the table. First it landed on the back of the chair adjacent to Gail; then, after a moment, the bird hopped onto the tabletop, near the flame.
Gail remained immobile, the extinguished match smoldering in her hand. She stared at the robin, and the robin appeared to stare back at her, although its eye was an opaque black, like a button.
âOkay,â Gail said. âOkay.â
The robin hopped back and forth, landing on a napkin, overturning a spoon, but always staying close to the candle. Gail placed a bit of cucumber near the bird, which it ate immediately. She set out more cucumber bits, and a sliver of carrot. The bird quickly ate them all. To eat, the bird bowed its entire body, a fat housewife bending to fix her shoe. âOkay,â Gail said again. With her hand she fanned out the candleâs flame, and the bird flew back up to the refrigerator.
After finishing the dishes, she called Mark to tell him about the bird.
âI wish you could see Rabbit. She runs out of the room every time it moves.â
âWhatâs the bird doing?â
âWell, itâs not doing anything. It seems to really like the top of the refrigerator.â
âI suppose thatâs where Iâd go if I were a bird. That seems almost logical. The highest perch.â
Gail pressed the phone to her ear with her shoulder. She looked up at the bird. âI donât, I really donât like it being here,â she said. âI donât like the idea of it. But I canât send it outside.â
Mark said he would be by in ten minutes.
After they hung up, Gail realized the only reason the bird was in her house at all was so she had an excuse to invite him over. But why this should be, she didnât know. She lit a match. The bird flew toward it, Gail shook it out, and the bird swooped around and went back to the refrigerator.
Minnesota in winter was cashmere sweaters and thick, warm wool socks. Four oâclock dusk; eight oâclock midnight. Snow. Long, silent stretches of just looking out the window. One could say one was watching the snow. Gail counted a million flakes of it. Her front yard was a beach. Soon the headlights of Markâs car shot through the dark.
Although he still had keys, Mark didnât open the front door himself. He tapped its glass lightly with one finger until Gail let him in. As always, Rabbit was enthusiastic to see him, urinating a little onto the boot mat.
âRabbit misses you.â
âMy women,â said Mark. âMy traumatized ladies.â
He hung his coat on the coat tree, and then removed his hat and scarf and stuffed them into his coatâs sleeves. He hated to be cold and yet had never left Minnesotaâhad never, Gail considered at times, been able to leave the place where he was from and where he wasnât him. Instead he wrapped himself until he could cope. Theyâd met in winter, during their sophomore year at the University of Minnesota. In the main library Gail had been writing a paper on Chopinâs Preludes, and Mark asked if he could join her at her table; it was finals week, and there were no other places to sit. After removing his gloves, heâd spent several minutes warming his hands by blowing into them and rubbing them. Meanwhile he read a small, square book by Wallace Stevens. Mark wanted to be a poet, and had published several poems of his own in the universityâs literary journal, but it would be weeks before he mentioned this to Gailâan act of concealment. He refused ever to read his work to herâanother, ongoing act of concealment. Heâd continued to write poems through law school and the early part of their marriage, but he never shared them. He would say they werenât finished, and then he would never finish them, so he would never have to show them. At some point heâd quit writing them altogether.
Before trying to capture the bird, Mark insisted on checking out the attic to make sure there wasnât a nest. He directed a flashlight toward dark corners. There were cardboard boxes with sheet music, old framed posters that had hung in the apartment he and Gail had shared before they were married, a bicycle missing its handlebars and seat. Gail hadnât been in the attic for a year and now realized sheâd been avoiding it. There was too much here to remind her of the life she wanted not to be reminded of, because she wanted to be in it.
A blue plastic laundry basket was filled with their sonâs albums of baseball cards. Mark picked one of them up and absently flipped its pages. Each fit nine cards, in three rows of three, protected by thin plastic sheaths.
âDavid was such a nut about his card collection,â he said, with wonder. âThe weekly inventories. Arranging his favorites by price. I wonder if theyâre still worth anything.â
âCan we please just do the bird?â Gail said.
âWe are. But look at this.â
âIt makes me sad, I think,â Gail said. âI donât want to look.â
Mark set down the album in its basket.
âItâs just us,â he said.
âDoesnât it make you sad?â
âIt does and it doesnât. But mostly no. No. I like being up here.â He clicked off the flashlight, and they stood in darkness for a moment before he clicked it back on. His voice was more somber as he spoke. âAll this stuff. Itâs from a part of my life that I donât get to visit much anymore,â he said. âItâs a part of my life that I miss. Iâm glad itâs still here.â
âItâs not still here, though.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âItâs not really here. Itâs not really anywhere,â Gail said. Her therapist had instructed her, in moments when she became overwhelmed with upset, to try and step back from herself and assess whether sheâd been truly provoked. But right now Gail had no means to distance herself from herself. Her ex-husband had taken too much from her by giving her too much. She wanted him to quit helping with her bills, she wanted him to quit offering to look at houses with her, she wanted him to quit letting her live here, she wanted him not to be here now. She had invited him over, she sensed, so she could tell him to go. âNone of this stuff is real anymore,â she said. âItâs all been taken away. You like to visit it. You like to visit me. But itâs all gone; itâs not here. Iâm not here. Iâm not here,â she repeated. âIâm here but Iâm not here and neither is any of this.â
âGail.â
âIâm sorry,â she said, âbut can we please just do the bird?â
When they returned to the kitchen, Rabbit and the robin were watching each other from across the room.
âDo you think theyâre communicating?â Mark said. âItâs like thereâs some supernatural force connecting them.â
Gail, not wanting to agree or disagree, said, âMaybe.â
To catch the bird, they decided to use their popcorn trick. Gail poured the kernels and a few tablespoons of oil into her popcorn maker and set it on the stove. When she lit the flame beneath the pot, the bird flew down and landed on the nearest empty range top.
âIt likes fire,â she said.
The bird stared into the flame. Its body was bent sideways, as if it were peering under a bed.Â
âThat,â said Mark, âis so bizarre.â
He waved his hand in the birdâs periphery, but it continued to look only at the flame.
The popcorn made its hollow sounds, rapidly at first, but then less frequently. Mark stepped near Gail and placed his arm around her shoulder. When she didnât remove it, he turned toward her fully and dipped his hands inside her robe. He wanted no more than to do this, to encircle her with his arms, but he knew the gesture implied sex, implied he wanted something more. How unfair that everything had implications now. Instinctively Gail stepped into him. The embrace was familiar. But then she sensed what heâd sensedâthe unwanted implication of sex. Nevertheless they held each other a moment longer, looking at the robin and listening to the popcorn pop.
âI donât know what to do,â she said. âI donât even know if I really want to catch it. I donât want it here either, though. I wish it wasnât here!â
âShe wishes it werenât here,â Mark said.
He took a pasta pot from where it hung above the counter. He set it over the mesmerized bird. It began to flap its wings. They scraped the metal, and the pot trembled under Markâs hand. He smiled at Gail and raised his eyebrows several timesâhis standard, not very good impression of Groucho Marx. Then the bird shrieked, an awful sound that filled the entire kitchen like a siren. Its shriek was an infantâs shriek, disproportionate to its size, and desperate. Mark, frowning now with effort, slid the potâs lid into place and fixed it with a double layer of masking tape.
âI think I need more wine,â Gail said, once the bird had quieted. âIs that bad?â
She poured out glasses for them both. They drank standing up. Mark spoke of his boyfriend, and the renovations they were doing on their house, and a vacation theyâd been thinking of taking to Ecuador. He didnât like to talk to Gail about his life, but otherwise felt he was avoiding it, thereby forsaking it; he spoke of his life to ratify it and remind himself that, in leaving her, heâd acted honestly. Now he picked up one of the real estate printouts Gail had been looking at earlier.
âSome of these are really nice,â he said, and suggested they get together again to look at houses.
âMaybe,â Gail said.
âIs maybe a yes?â
âI donât know. I think maybe is maybe. No, actually, I think maybe is no,â she said. Sheâd suddenly begun to tremble, and took a breath to calm herself. And then another breath. âI need you to know that looking for a houseâitâs incredibly hard for me sometimes,â she said. âThings are hard, still. Things are hard for both of us. But itâs been different for me lately. Thatâs what I was trying to say upstairs, I think.â
Why, she wondered, did she always feel she was retelling him this?
âOf course itâs different,â Mark said.
âIâm not sure if you understand, though. I think getting the house sold has taken its toll on me. And finding a new place is taking a toll, too. Iâm a little scared to do it. And I have some things I need to say. About everything thatâs happened.â She gestured around the kitchen, toward the refrigerator, toward the sink, to indicate that these objects were included in everything. Her hands were shaking, she saw, and she made them into fists and stuffed them into her robeâs pockets. They shook there, too, and she willed herself not to cry.
âI donât know what I need from you,â she went on. âBut I donât think I want you more involved in finding a new house. I think that talking about that with you all the time would be really hard. Itâs already been hard. And I donât think youâve picked up on that. Youâve worked very hard to make sure Iâm comfortable,â Gail said, âto make sure I didnât have to worry about anything. I know you said I could stay in the house as long as I need to, and thatâs been helpful. But now I just want it to be over. I donât want to be here anymore. Even though itâs my home. And itâs difficult, because I donât want to leave, either. Does that make sense? I need to make my own decisions.â
âGail. No oneâs trying to make any decisions for you.â
âNo, I know,â Gail said, putting her hand in the air: stop. âBut even if you think youâre just being helpfulâsometimes when you think youâre being helpfulâand you are, youâre being helpfulâitâs hard on me, because itâs hard to refuse your help. And sometimes I donât think your help is whatâs right for me.â
âI donât know what youâre asking me,â Mark said.
âIâm not asking you anything!â said Gail. âThis isnât a problem to⊠fix. I just need you to understand where Iâm coming from. Iâm asking you to try and understand.â
And Gail explained why she couldnât ever refuse to see Mark when he asked to see herâshe loved him, she was his wifeâbut how his requests had begun to make her dislike him, and even, she realized as she said it, to make her intimidated by him because he could be so demanding; she understood that Mark missed being loved by her, missed being known by her, but he couldnât keep asking her to comfort him, because being near him made her want to always be near him, and it was unfair for her to have to endure that.
Mark nodded his head slowly, rearranging the real estate printouts into a neat stack. âEverything youâre saying is totally understandable,â he said.
Mark tapped the edges of the papers against the table, straightening them.
âIâm sorry I didnât, and I havenât, handled things as appropriately as I might have,â he said.
The house, Gail said again, her car, her electricity, and all the money things that Mark still took care of. Shoveling, mowing the lawn: everything Mark had done that she now did, she said. Dating; having to make new friends, she said. He was attached to everything, somewhere, everywhere, and she wanted him not to be.
âGail.â
She glared.
âI donât know what to say.â
âIâm sorry,â Gail said. And then, âNo, Iâm not. This is how I feel. It was all piling up.â
âSo I see.â What Gail had been afraid of was exactly what was happening: rather than appearing surprised or hurt, Markâs face arranged itself into a hardened expression of sympathy for her. âThat makes a lot of sense,â he said.
âIâm not sure it does. Iâm not sure it makes any sense at all. I donât like that you think that it makes sense. It doesnât make sense to me.â
âIt does,â Mark said. âI can see what youâre saying. Iâve been imposing myself on you, and youâre completely right, itâs completely true: this is something Iâd never considered had been happening. But now that you say it out loud, it makes total sense to me.â He set down the printouts, lining them up precisely with the tableâs corner. âAnd Iâm so sorry,â he said. âBut, yes. I see in practically a thousand ways why itâs better for you if I recuse myself from looking for homes. Itâs totally understandable.â
Now it was as if it had been his idea that he not help with the house. She wasnât preventing him; he was recusing himself. He had usurped her agency.
âIâm sorry,â she said.
âYou have absolutely nothing to be sorry for.â
Hearing this, Gail felt deprived of all the things for which she wanted to be sorry.
âItâs just what feels right to me.â
âOkay,â Mark said. âI understand.â
Once he had gone, Gail felt sheâd been wronged again; sheâd been deprived of her malice.
4.
The night was a great black parachute hovering over the city, and seemed to be sinking lower and lower. Mark drove aimlessly, distracted, his eyes unblinking as he looked out on the road. Halfway around Lake of the Isles, he pulled over and took the pasta pot from his back seat. The bird was still flapping energetically inside. Using his car key, he split the masking tape and lifted the potâs lid. The bird flew into the air; Mark watched it rise above the trees and disappear. The pot, he saw, was filthy with shit and small black feathers. He didnât know why that surprised him so much. Before going home, he went to Lunds to pick up a slice of chocolate cake for him and Thomas to shareâhe never told Thomas when he was visiting Gail, and had said he was going out to get some dessert. At the pastry counter, he ran into one of their friends whoâd been sick but was apparently getting better, if such things could happen. And then he cruised around Lake Harriet and Lake Calhoun, picking with his fingers at the cake as he steered back to his house.
âChocolate cake,â Mark said.
âOh,â said Thomas. He knelt on the kitchen floor, hovering over blueprints heâd drawn himself. âYou were gone for a while.â
âI went for a drive. I had some work-related head-clearing to do, I realized once I was in the car. And the plows must have just come through earlier. The streets were totally cleared, and there was no one out tonight.â Mark bent down to kiss Thomas, and handed him the paper bag with the chocolate cake. âI ate my half,â he said. âItâs all yours. Although, if you found it in your heart to give me just maybe one more bite, I wouldnât say no to it.â
âShould I make coffee?â
âScotch,â Mark said. âYou should make scotch.â
âIâll make scotch. That sounds good.â
âThereâs something about chocolate cake and scotch that just goes incredibly well together. Donât move, though. Iâll get it going.â Mark poured each of them a measure. âI donât even need a whole bite,â he said. âJust a half bite. For the chocolate. To get the flavor of it.â
Kneeling over the blueprintsâhe always knelt, like an imaginative childâThomas appeared boyish and sad. He was an architect specializing in suburban townhomes; the houses he built were not identical to each other, Mark thought, but were identical in the (very small) degree to which they differed from one another.Â
He handed Thomas a glass of scotch. âI put an ice cube in it, to release its bouquet or whatever,â he said.
Plastic sheets were taped over the kitchenâs windows. The floors were sprinkled with plaster dust. The oven had been removed; deactivated electrical wires snaked out from the wall menacingly. Mark wanted more natural light for the kitchen, but was irked that Thomas kept insisting on making the windows biggerâdidnât he understand how expensive it was to put in new windows? Didnât it mess with the houseâs foundations? He wanted the electric lighting to be subtler, finding tacky and obvious the recessed fixtures that Thomas suggested.
Right now he was still charged up with adrenaline from capturing the bird and releasing it, from being berated by Gailâhad he really been so overbearing? He supposed he probably had. There was somethingâmore than somethingâto her idea that heâd suggested she stay in the house only because he wanted her there. He poured himself more scotch, and promised himself that that was it for the night.
âThe cake is soft,â Thomas said.
âLunds,â said Mark. âYou know who I ran into at the store? Alexander. Heâs up and about.â
âI like Alexander.â
âHe looks terrible,â Mark said.
âIs he okay?â
âHe is. Heâs been doing all that medication stuff. He says itâs doing its thing. And he says Wade is taking mostly excellent care of him.â
âI like Wade,â Thomas said.
Mark stood above him, and his own shadow spread over the blueprints. Everything was rectangles, circles, triangles, numbers, and he couldnât translate it into a kitchen.
âHowâs it looking?â he said.
âWell, Iâm trying to figure out the lighting, actually,â Thomas said. He erased something with his pencil and bent down incredibly close to the paper, prostrating, to blow the erasures away. Mark fit one of his feet directly on top of Thomasâs foot, as if it were a carâs accelerator pedal.
âWhat are you erasing?â
âIâm erasing a line that I drew accidentally.â
âYou know what I like?â Mark said. âIs there are these sort of nuanced track lights Iâve seen. Theyâre very out-of-the-way, but at the same time, if you place them right, they can hit all the right spots with this really great light.â
âYou mentioned that. Our kitchenâs probably not wired for them. Weâd have to rewire everything, and take down the entire ceiling.â
âIâm just saying,â Mark said. âTheyâre very nice lights.â
Thomas erased something else from the blueprint and then added in something that Mark assumed was dubious, expensive, and wrong.
âWe talked about having a chandelier in the middle of the room, and then the hanging lamps that you liked over the counter.â
 âI know,â Mark said. âBut Iâve decidedâIâve been thinking about it, and I just donât like that idea at all. Itâs just so many things hanging everywhere. Itâs like kitchen of the tentacles.â He poured himself more scotch, a slight amount. âI could ask Gail what those lights I like are called,â he said. âWe had them put in not too terribly long ago.â
âWiring.â
âI think we needed to rewire, too. I remember it not being such a huge deal.â
âWell, Iâll just wait on doing anything else, then,â Thomas said. âAnd Iâll call the contractors to tell them not to come tomorrow, because the electricians have to come first.â
âAll right,â Mark said. âAll right.â
âAnd maybe I should call Gail and ask what electricians she used.â
âHey, thatâs out of line. Thatâs totally unfair.â
âWe could replicate her entire kitchen. We could make the whole place hers.â
âThatâs not what Iâm saying.â
âWe could invite her to live with us.â
âEnough,â Mark said.
Soon the kitchen would have no walls. Around himself, Mark felt the roomâs emptiness vibrate like a plucked string: in the last week it had been rebuilt by men who specialized in removal, repossession, and lack. Each of the last six nights, since the oven had been removed, he and Thomas had eaten out. Despite jogging every day, Mark could feel his stomach getting soft and dense. Mark had bought Gail a dishwasher and was still paying more of her mortgage than she knew; he was supplementing their sonâs income; he was paying for his own renovations on top of his own mortgage. Heâd had a good few years at work, and his debts were manageable, lessening. Still his life was all mortgages and owing. Thomas licked his thumb, scrubbed away something that the eraser couldnât get, and then licked his thumb again. Mark reached for Thomasâs hand, licked his thumbâit tasted like leadâand then gave him his hand back. He said, âHey, you know what? Iâm sorry. Youâre right about the kitchen. Youâre doing excellent with the kitchen. And whatâs great about you when you get touchy,â he went on, âis you think youâre being very serious and angry, but then you have this big piece of chocolate smeared on your lip. Itâs very cute actually.â
âYou need to give me some credit,â Thomas said. âI know what Iâm doing. And I think we could design a really fun kitchen.â
âBaby, letâs have fun then. Thatâs all I want, is for you to have some fun designing.â
âIâm trying to.â
Kneeling: posture of children; posture of supplicants; posture of gentiles praying foreign prayers; posture of subordinationâto God, to Mark; posture of giving head, weeding, floor-scrubbing: activities of the un-Mark; activities he needed performed, but would not perform himself, and which he looked down on.
Soon there would be nothing anymore to kneel on: Tomorrow the contractors were coming to rip up the floors.
5.
The real estate agent lived in the outer-ring suburbs, and Gail didnât trust that he knew his way around Minneapolis. Driving from house to house, he went too fast along indirect streets constipated with slow-moving snowplows, brave idiot bicyclists, and snow. Nevertheless, even though she knew exactly where they were going and how best to get there, Gail followed behind him, David beside her.
But then, braking for a yellow light that the agent had sped through, Gailâs car lost traction on an ice patch and skidded into the intersection where France Avenue met Excelsior Avenue, four lanes in each direction. Her Subaru floated toward the intersectionâs center, spinning left as Gail spun the steering wheel, ineffectively, right. âOh no,â she said. Her eyes widened as a minivan approached. Its driver, Gail saw as it came closer, was a young woman in large sunglasses, and there was a child in the front seat. âNo,â Gail repeated. The minivan steered around her, barely, trailing a honk behind it like a ribbon. Gail inhaled through her teeth. Her car continued sliding; it rotated counterclockwise. In the middle of the intersection her wheels finally found grip again and the car stopped. Her gym bag thumped to the backseat floor. âOkay,â Gail said, âall right.â Shaken, she removed her forearm from Davidâs chest. After a moment she pressed her boot tentatively down on the gas. Her real estate agent was far up ahead, headed circuitously toward some residential neighborhood where an empty brick house was waiting to be unlocked and inspected.Â
âThat was so scary,â Gail said, once she was in the correct lane.
âIcy streets,â David said, playing it cool.
âMy heart is racing,â she said. âAre you all right?â
She told David to turn off the stereo so she could concentrate on driving. To focus better, she inched her seat up closer to the wheel, so that it was against her chest.
âItâs like the time coming home from the Childrenâs Theatre,â she said. âI thought we were going to die.â
âI was too young to remember,â David said. âDid you think we were going to die just now?â
âThatâs not what I meant. Iâm just saying it reminded me.â
âMaybe I should drive.â
âThatâs notâwhere is he going? Thatâs not what I meant. Heâs going so fast.â
Already that morning theyâd walked together through three houses. David had flicked light switches and flushed toilets and corroborated the agentâs assertions that Gail should think about making an offer. Gail asked questions from her notepad. She inspected range tops knowingly, and frowned. Whatever had felt familiar and hopeful about these houses from the catalogue listings had dissipated; she couldnât imagine living in any of them. Although it was early in the day, sheâd become unusually tired. Her eyes were scratchy with fatigue. Once again she reminded herself to eat more, to sleep more, but knew she wouldnât. She was bereft of these simplest urges.Â
âI donât know if any of these places have felt like a home yet,â she said now.
âI know,â said David. âThey havenât. But itâs also kind of like, whatâs going to feel like a home? That seems to be asking a lot from a house, when itâs just a fifteen-minute thing.â
âIâm not sure,â Gail said. The agent went through another yellow light, then pulled over to wait for her. âBut Iâll know. It will feel like home.â
She reached behind herself to try and hoist her gym bag back onto the car seat.
âYou should see if you can look at houses at five in the morning, or whenever you wake up,â David said, âto see what their early-morning aura is. I bet thatâs a big deal for you.â
âNo one would let me in their house at five! And I wouldnât be comfortable with it,â Gail said. She held her bag by one of its straps, but it was too heavy, and she couldnât maneuver it on the seat. âAnd itâs been closer to six lately. Itâs so dark out in the mornings.â
The light changed, and the agent pulled quickly out from the curb and was soon far ahead again. Gail let go her swim bag and did her best to follow.
âBut Iâll just know,â she said. âWhen we were looking at homeâI mean our houseâDad and I just looked at each other, and both of us knew.â
âA surefire method.â
âYou know what? Just enough, okay?â
She followed the real estate agent down a block that ended in a cul-de-sac; she followed him around the cul-de-sac; she followed him back up the block, and then the opposite way along the street theyâd just been on.
âWhere is he going?â Gail said. âI did like the house weâre about to see, though, in the catalogue. I hope I still like it as much.â
Soon they were navigating Kenwoodâs alphanumerical streets. It was the second day of a snow emergency, and cars were parked all along the even-numbered side. Abruptly, Gail parked behind a station wagon on Fremont Avenue. They watched the agentâs car recede and turn eastward at the next stop sign. A moment later they saw his car pass again, this time heading, faster, west.
âI think Iâm still just a little shaken,â Gail said. She kept both her hands on the steering wheel and, even though her car was in park, her boot still pressed down on the brake. âWeâre looking for a home. We skidded in the car and weâre looking for a home and Iâm a little shaken, okay? Iâm a little shaken and Iâm a little upset. And I just feel like Iâve had enough. Iâve had enough. Does that make sense?â
Ahead of them, the station wagonâs bumper was covered with pacifist and feminist and environmental stickers that David tried to decipher the dissatisfied humor of. Gail looked at him as his ears, and then his face and the back of his neck, reddened. Still gripping the steering wheel, she could feel her pulse in her palms.
âIâm glad youâre doing this with meâand I know youâre trying to help, and I know youâre very coolâbut what I need is a little less sarcasm, okay?â
âOkay,â David said.
âDoes that make sense?â
âIt does,â David said. âIâm sorry.â
âOkay,â Gail said. âThank you.â
A snowplow passed slowly by, beeping and flashing, and pinged Gailâs car with salt spray.
âCan we hug?â Gail said.
Chests pressing against their seatbelts, they embraced. They kissed each other on the cheek (eyeglasses clacking), and then David kissed his motherâs lips. Their faces separated for a moment, and then, unsure why, he kissed her again. Both were brief, but the second kiss was longer than the first. His eyes had closed. Again their faces separated, and Gail looked at David inquiringlyâpurely inquiringly: without implication, her eyes just wondering, flatly, innocently, âWhat?â
Backing away into his seat, David was unsure what sort of face to present. He removed his glasses and rubbed his eyes with his palms.
His seatbelt tugged him into place. It had been an instinct: kiss Mom, sheâs upset. And while it was exciting how quickly that instinct had punctured their relationshipâs exoskeleton of politeness and privacy, already he could feel their diffidence recalcifying. It was an instinct he felt often, felt more often than he cared to acknowledgeâkiss Momâbut suppressed for all the normal reasons. But it saddened him that, even around his mother, he had to be so careful and performative. He didnât know when that had started. His lips, cheeks, and chest all burned. For a second, or half a second, heâd believed he was comforting her. But then, as soon as she seemed calm againâas soon, almost, as their lips had come apartâall the queasy associations with kissing returned, and he wished he hadnât done it. He hadnât punctured their exoskeleton at all, but merely kissed and disturbed that and, in so doing, made the bones more sensitive to themselves, more certain of their own structural necessity.
Gail turned fully around and, with both hands, lifted her gym bag onto the back seat. Her sonâs (and husbandâs) affections were such warped, mutated things while, unfairly, Gail and her wants were always simple, always the same. She was so unchanged. David had kissed her. It seemed a weak and perverse compensation for their last dozen years of increasing separation, and she knew it wouldnât open anything up between them. She had been unchanged again.
From somewhere the real estate agent came driving down the block and parked on the empty, just-plowed side of the street. He got out of his car, his teeth and blond hair shining in the sunlight, and walked up a flight of icy stone steps to a small brick house. He fit the keys into the lock on the front door. A foyer of absolute darkness opened up in front of him, a black rectangle inside a white day. The agent waved at David and Gailâhis arm locked straight out, his hand flapping limplyâto come inside.
[Purchase your copy of Issue 13 here.]
Max Ross‘s writing has been published in The New York Times, the Los Angeles Review of Books, and The Paris Review Daily. The prequel to this story in The Common appears in the spring 2017 issue of American Short Fiction.Â