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I went down the hall to the bedroom and found him under the covers reading The Golden Bowl. “Thank God,” he said. “I’m about ready to give up on this. So, did I get decent notices?”

“Come on, you know she liked you.” I took my hairbrush from the dresser and brought it over to the bed. I knew he liked to watch me.

“My well-practiced charm,” he said. “She wasn’t really a pot smoker, was she?”

“We were a very progressive family,” I said.

“As were we,” he said. “Except for us it was Henry Wallace. I’m glad you don’t sit around smoking pot all day.”

“I don’t know,” I said. “You might like me better if I was placid and stupid.”

“I couldn’t possibly.” He ran a finger down my thigh. “She’s wrong about Sinatra, by the way. He was always a shit, I don’t care who he voted for. That damaged-soul-in-the-wee-small-hours crap—the fraudulence is the whole appeal.” He patted the covers beside him. “Let’s try not to be noisy tonight.”

I never did figure out what had damaged him, assuming he was damaged. True, he liked to drink, but he liked liking to drink. (Having met my mother and heard my family stories, he must have figured out what damaged me, but I don’t think he wasted any time worrying about it.) The stories he told about his parents never suggested they hadn’t loved him, or each other. His father had been a professor and his mother a faculty wife, but supposedly the father had stayed out of bed with his students. Saul Bellow and Mary McCarthy and Ralph Ellison and F. W. Dupee—whoever that was—and Hannah Arendt used to come over for dinner. A painter named Stefan Hirsch, whom I also had to look up. He remembered seeing Eleanor Roosevelt, who would make the short trip from Hyde Park for international student conferences. I would have run screaming from all this, but instead of joining the marines—he was a CO during the Korean War—he made them proud by going off to study painting at the Art Students League, then to architecture school at Columbia. It was his brother, ten years younger, who disgraced the family, by becoming an investment banker.

He’d seemed so complicated when we’d first met—I think I said so—but you have to remember I was used to my husband. And now that I could pick up his allusions, most of them, and decode his ironies, he seemed to be a simple man who happened to know who F. W. Dupee was and had learned how to look at a Diebenkorn. When he took pleasure—in bed, at the opera, at a baseball game, reading Bleak House for the fiftieth time or a Trollope he’d somehow missed, playing his bass in that restaurant—he actually appeared to enjoy it. I hope I’m not being condescending; it’s possible that I seemed uncomplicated to him too. I don’t suppose we were any more or any less opaque to each other than any other two people, or to ourselves, though of course how would you ever know? Anyway—to go back to where all this started going off the rails, a couple of paragraphs ago—these days I miss the sex, meaning the traditional two-person, I-Thou sex, not that there was ever a lot of Thou when I was a party to it.

Well, I say this now. But when I’m tempted to get sentimental, I have to remind myself that back then it seemed pretty fraught. At his age, he wanted a woman who didn’t want children—he’d already put in his time—but since he had once wanted children (or why would he have had one?) wasn’t there something fishy about me? If you’re a woman, you can’t win that one: because I didn’t want to be a mother, he couldn’t trust me to mother him, however deep he burrowed his little peepee up into my birth canal. So no wonder he came to prefer the other venue, where he could hurt me—I was a good actress—and then be treated, literally, like shit. Okay, and now let’s do me: this was not just a man old enough to be my father, but a man who had been a father—still was a father—so I needed him to fuck me and then to be turned over and punished. A grown-up dirty marriage, where grown-up dirty needs got met and afterward you smelled of mortality—except I can’t use that; it’s from King Lear. How about “smelled of subtext”?

Except it did smell of mortality. As we both knew: When I was forty-five, still more than fuckable if I didn’t gain another ten pounds, he’d be seventy-five. When I was sixty, maybe still halfway viable, he’d be ninety, and even if he was still alive, no longer even Viagrable. Or if Viagrable, by some awful miracle, not a creature you’d want to see tottering at you with a gleam in his rheumy eye, a steely shaft clattering against his frangible pelvic bone. Didn’t this argue that we should relish each moment while there was anything to relish? Or maybe “cherish” is a better, warmer word, since this is getting a little grim.

My father died that spring, of the heart attack I should’ve known was coming when I saw those veins in his face, and my husband-to-be—I’m getting ahead of the story, but in this sentence I need a new designation for him—offered to go to the funeral with me. It didn’t seem like an ideal occasion for having him meet the family, such as the family was, nor did I want to show up with some other gray-haired man, suggesting that my heart either did or didn’t belong to Daddy—unwholesome either way. He persisted just enough. At the last minute, my mother decided to stay away too—my father had had his own life, she told me on the phone, and she’d made peace with that, but she didn’t want to see any of “those creatures.”

My brother, though, flew in from Colorado; none of us had seen him since he’d gotten clean and saved. I was three when he was born: my mother told me he was an accident, which was indiscreet of her, and I passed it on to him, which was unkind of me. I’d wanted him dead until he was thirteen, when I made him my little drug buddy. He’d dropped out of UConn—it was a wonder he lasted two semesters—and shot heroin, first in Willimantic, then the Lower East Side, then Seattle, then nobody knew where. Somehow he’d ended up in Colorado Springs, where he was drug free, married and a so-called elder in some right-wing church. When he walked into the funeral home, I had the weird thought that it was my father, come back as he was when I was little: he had a businessman’s haircut and a businessman’s blue pinstriped suit, and black-framed glasses like the ones my father had worn before he’d gotten contacts. I ran up to hug him and felt him turn aside to avoid contact with my breasts.

None of my father’s ladies showed up, if he’d still had any, and the only other mourners were two of his friends from work. One got up and spoke of his “community spirit”—I have no idea what that was about—and said he would be missed, not specifying by whom. My brother and I went on to the cemetery, in his rental car. He’d said yes to the offer of a “viewing” before the service—he hadn’t seen my father since dropping out of college—but I’d been willing to take their word for it, until I saw the casket suspended above the grave on canvas straps, by which point it was too late.

“Was it okay looking at him?” I asked my brother as we walked back to his car.

“That wasn’t him,” he said. “I don’t even know why I did it. So, I’m guessing he didn’t know the Lord.”

“Probably not.”

“That’s fucked,” he said. “Sorry—I don’t use that language anymore. But it just is.”

“But don’t you think he’s at peace now?” I said.

“Probably we’d better not get into it,” he said.

“You think he’s in hell,” I said.

“And you think I’m a pod person,” he said. “Like somebody took me over, right? Well, somebody did. And praise Jesus for it. Okay? I said it out loud.” He cast up his eyes at the top of a cedar tree, as if he’d never seen such a thing before. “It’s all different now. I can’t really tell you—it’s like my eyes were washed.” He sounded like he was thirteen again, in wonder after smoking his first joint.