momentary hesitation? Did he know at this moment what he was really going to ask for, what he hoped would come of it? Or was he just confessing drunkenly on a balcony while a party died down all around him? I donât think it mattered. In the end, we would all have to play a role in the conversation to make all of the gears click to get from X to Y. He said, âThis last visit with her, I told my mother that Iâd, well, that Iâd gotten married.â
âMarried?â Helen said disdainfully.
âYou lied to your mother on her deathbed?â Peter said. The conversation made me think of my own mother. Lucky, I thought, to have had a mother on a deathbed, to have had the opportunity to lie to her.
âShe was out of it, doped up on morphine,â Elliot said, not defensively as much as explanatorily. âShe was in a state; sometimes when sheâs in these states she talks to her dead sister. It was that kind of a state.â
âBut why would you tell her youâd gotten married?â I asked. âI mean, wouldnât she be upset not to have been invited to the wedding and that youâd married someone sheâd never met?â
âMarried!â Helen said. âI mean, why not tell her youâve got gangrene and have to get a leg amputated!â And then she whispered, âMarriage can kill you limb by limb. Donât you know that?â Helen enjoyed disparaging the institution of marriage in front of married people. It was a petty, almost charming kind of vengefulness.
âWell, she was in this state and she started to obsess over the fact that I wasnât married and that Iâd go through life without anyone to take care of me and without anyone to take care of. She was getting more and more worked up. And so I just gave in and I lied to her. I told her Iâdmet someone and that it had been a quick decisionâlike in the old days.â
âPeople used to do that kind of thing,â Peter said. âTheyâd meet and get married in two weeks.â
âBecause they werenât allowed to have sex,â Helen said. âYouâd have done the same thing if youâd been in that boat, but how many years did it take you two to get engaged?â Helen pointed at the two of us.
âThree years,â Peter said. âA little slice of heaven!â This was an old joke between us. Weâd been to an anniversary party for a couple whoâd been married twenty years and this was how the man referred to their marriageâover and over, toast after toast, conversation after conversation. By the end of the evening, it sounded like a death knell. Peter and I started to use the phrase about everythingâoffice meetings, gym workouts, trips to the grocery storeâtrying to keep its awfulness at bay. Weâd never used the phrase to actually describe any part of our relationship, though, and this seemed like a breach of the rules.
âMy mother and my father had gotten married like that,â Elliot said, âa couple weeks after they met. She respects decisions like that even though they got divorced.â Everyone was looking at him now and he was suddenly aware of our eyes on him. âI donât know why I said it. It was some kind of weird impulse.â He shrugged. âI didnât think sheâd remember it when she calmed down, but she did.â
âAnd now what?â Helen asked.
âAnd now, of course, sheâd like to meet her before she dies,â Elliot said, as if kind of mystified by his own predicament.
âOh, what a tangled web,â Helen said. âTsk, tsk.â
âIf you met her, youâd understand,â Elliot said. âSheâs a force. Sheâs unwieldy. Sheâs an unwieldy force.â
âI understand mothers like that,â Helen said, scratching her wrist a little angrily.
âUnwieldy like waves,â I said.
âLike tsunami waves,â
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