There were no last words from Ben, no moments of redemption and grace; he simply disappeared into a soft fit of coughing, his chest rising and falling against the liquid filling his lungs-it was Ben's last race, Charlie had always thought, and it could not be won. He stood next to the hospital bed until the very end, until the nurse took her hand away from Ben's wrist and looked up at Charlie, until they straightened Ben's body while they could, pulled his legs from his chest, pushing down the knobby knees, and set his arms at his sides into the coffin position-society's last formality. As the hospital gown fell back, Charlie had glimpsed Ben's penis, gray and loose in the nest of pubic hair, the catheter tube shoved deep into the pisshole-yet another violation of Ben's youth, as if sucking the life out of him from there, too. Ben's chin was still lifted upward, his eyelids not quite closed, and for a moment his expression appeared brazen, even hostile, daring all comers, which would have been like him. The attendants unfolded the long gray plastic bag and lifted Ben into it with practiced ease, and Charlie stopped them then and asked if they would leave the room for a moment, and that was when he leaned close to Ben, shrouded by the bag, and pressed his own warm forehead against Ben's cool one and said, Goodbye, son, I will love you forever.
He looked at the news for a while, then checked his corporate E-mail while Ellie drifted around the apartment in her nightgown. Her feet looked bumpy. She set a book down by her bed table. She was going to sleep earlier and earlier, it seemed. A sign of depression? He remembered the cloisonne bowl in the front closet and wondered if he could cheer her up.
He retrieved the bowl and set it on the bed.
"Hey, wifey-girl," he called.
"What is-Oh, that is lovely, Charlie." She picked up the bowl, traced her finger around a dragon's nostrils. "This is quite nice."
"I think it's old enough to count."
"I do, too. Where did you get it?"
"There's an antiques place in Shanghai, in the old city. I had them send it."
She ran her fingers along the dragon's wings. "You know, I haven't heard from Miriam upstairs for almost two weeks. She had something terrible happen. Her son killed himself playing racquetball."
"What?"
"Yes. He ran into the wall, headfirst."
"Broke his neck?"
"He died right there on the court, Miriam said. He and his wife had three children. The wife is just devastated. Now Miriam has to help out. He didn't leave enough life insurance, I guess." She pushed her fingers along the dragon's scaled tail. "Anyway, the problem is, Miriam doesn't like the daughter-in-law. They never really-Where did you get it, anyway?"
"An antiques market in the old city." He smiled at her. That didn't mean anything, not necessarily. "I just told you."
"You did? Of course. It's very nice. Thank you, sweetie. I was just trying to-" Ellie stood there. "Charlie, I'm-I'm having some problems."
He nodded silently.
"I'm not remembering things. Little things, mostly. I was trying to remember my mother's birthday today and I couldn't. Then I thought I could look it up in the phone book. I actually put my hand on the phone book before I remembered that made no sense. It's things like that."
"We're all doing things like that."
"No, no, Charlie, don't pretend." Her eyes begged him. "I need you to see this now."
"Come here." He held her. "What else?"
"Oh, I feel like putting notes on everything, just to remember. Call Julia. Get the cleaning. Yesterday I drove the car with the emergency brake on for half an hour."
"That's not good."
He massaged her neck. She sighed, and with the exhalation, the tension seemed to pass out of her. She looked at him expectantly, eyes bright. Smiled, even. My Lord, Charlie thought, she's forgotten what she was anxious about.
"I like this a lot." She picked up the bowl and immediately touched her finger to the dragon's nostril. "Where did you get it?"
"Oh, don't, please."
"What?"
"You're joking."
She looked at him. "About what?"
"Nothing."
"What's the joke?"
"There's no joke."
She smiled hopefully. "You're teasing me about something?"
"No, no, Ellie, I'm not. I thought you were asking about the bowl."
"I was asking about the bowl."
He stared.
"You're making me feel self-conscious. You seem to be suggesting I asked about the bowl before just right now."
"Yes."
"I didn't, though."
"I thought you had, sweetie."
She wanted to be reasonable about the disagreement, he could see. "No, no, I know I didn't, Charlie."
He nodded. "You're right, Ellie. Not to worry."
He helped her to bed, where she took three of her favorite little sleeping pills-the flesh-colored ones, which seemed ominous somehow. "Everything is going to be okay, isn't it?" she asked.
He looked at her, thinking about the question.
"Just humor me, Charlie, just tell me it's all okay."
"Yes."
She searched his face to see if he meant it. "Just tell me one more time?"
"Everything is going to be fine."
"You believe that or you're just saying it to me to make me feel better?"
"I believe it." He nodded. "Okay?"
"Okay."
Ellie frowned at her book for a few minutes, then put her glasses on the table. He watched her settle against the pillow, wondering why she was so anxious, so fixated on disaster. Maybe she sensed he was up to something. Or perhaps it was Julia. He rubbed her brow, which made her sigh agreeably. Strange things pass through her head, he remembered, music and faces and sounds, she forgets herself, she remembers everything, she sees death and babies and her father; she smells a forest or an ocean. Did he know his wife, really? Even now? Her skin remained soft around her eyes and cheeks. A few women's whiskers poked from her chin-he'd never mention them. She sighed again, curled into her pillow, the pills clicking her asleep, and finally he eased up from the bed.
He walked directly into the dining room, carrying the bowl. He hated the fucking thing. Millions from a dead man's mouth-what did it get you? A wife who was losing her mind. He slipped out the front door to the garbage chute in the foyer. The elevator came clanking up then, its circular window rising so slowly that one of Lionel's eyeballs followed Charlie downward. Fuck you, Lionel, he thought, and your silent judgment of me. He yanked the chute door open and shoved in the bowl without hesitation and listened to it thump and slide down the long dark passage, landing with a quiet pop at the bottom, soon to be buried and ground up with the rest of the building's junk mail and toothpaste tubes and wet chicken bones. We throw away everything, Charlie thought bitterly, especially our hopes.
The next morning Teknetrix's share price was up almost two points in the first fifteen minutes of trading-as the financial soothsayers shook their magic rattles and decided that tech stocks were hot-and this was good news, good enough to ward off the spirits of evil Chinese bankers for a day or two, good enough to carry him to the Park Avenue fertility clinic whose services Martha had engaged. He slipped a hand into his pants pocket and jiggled himself a bit, as if to weigh what kind of effort he might be able to make.
In the waiting room, its walls covered with photos of children, half a dozen anxious-looking women flipped through magazines without talking to one another. So young, Charlie thought, just like Julia. Two or three glanced up at him with smiles of benign curiosity, as if he were one of their fathers, which in one sense he was and another he was not.