away.â
âAll your pictures of Maria? And of Stepan before he died? All of them? Why?â
âI gave the pictures of Stepan to Martin,â old George said. âHe doesnât have a lot of pictures of his father. I gave him the old home movie film, too. Heâs having it converted to DVDs. Did you know they could do that?â
âYes,â Gregor said. âBennis thinks you donât look well. Is she right? You look fine to me, but if thereâs something wrongââ
âThere is nothing wrong, Gregor, except that Iâm hungry, and at the rate youâre going, weâre never going to get to the Ararat.â
3
Fr. Tibor Kasparian was already at the Ararat when they got there, hunched down on the window booth that was supposed to best resemble the way a restaurant table would be in Yerevan. Gregor doubted this. He didnât doubt that his Armenian ancestors had eaten in restaurants, and probably in their homes, by sitting nearly on the floor with their legs folded up underneath them. He did doubt that they were still doing it even in 1965, never mind all this time later, when Armenia was free and there was probably a McDonaldâs where the old family tavern used to be.
He let old George slide down the low bench first and then slid in after him. Father Tibor had coffee already, and there were places set out for all of them, but none for Bennis. Linda Melajian probably knew before they did who would be sitting at this table every morning.
âBennis is the one not coming?â Tibor said.
âSheâs coming, sheâs just meeting Donna,â Gregor said. âSomething about the house. Iâm learning all kinds of things about houses. Did you know there were over five hundred different varieties of bathroom tile?â
âI knew there were a lot, Krekor, yes,â Father Tibor said. âThey rebuilt my apartment, you remember when it was destroyed with the church. They were always coming over asking me what I wanted to have. I never knew what to say. I didnât care which one I had, as long as it was serviceable.â
âThey built bookshelves,â old George said. âI remember that. They wanted you to put all your books on bookshelves.â
âIt would take the entire Philadelphia library system,â Gregor said. âI donât know if youâve been over there lately. Heâs got them stacked to the ceiling in the dining room.â
âAnd the apartment upstairs is still empty,â Tibor said. âI told them we would never get an assistant. There arenât enough priests in this country to serve the churches we have, and we canât always get somebody from Armenia. And it doesnât always work out.â
âYouâre from Armenia,â Gregor pointed out.
âYes, Krekor, I know. But I wasnât sitting in Armenia and happy there when they wanted a priest over here. I came over on my own, because I wanted to. I lived in New York for years before I got a church. These men come here, theyâre used to there, and all the children now, theyâre third and fourth generation. They havenât got the patience. And I donât blame them.â
âFather Tibor is standing up for the younger generation again,â old George said.
â Tcha, â Tibor said. âWhat would you think if you were an eighteen-year-old American girl, and you had some priest with an accent telling you you were going to go to hell because you didnât let your parents pick your husband? Never mind that the parents arenât interested in picking the husband. Itâs a mess.â
âIâm going to have an American omelet,â old George said. âThe one with ham and cheese in it.â
âA Western omelet,â Tibor said.
âSay what you want,â old George said. âI didnât try to pick a wife for Stepan, and he did fine on his own. And I called him Steve as soon
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