“If we weren’t married,” Erin told me once as she thumbed a stamp into place, “we wouldn’t be writing to each other.”
Meantime between us there kept coming Robbie, our very queer lull. Our pocket of thought, loud and charged with sensation, but nonetheless a lull. At dinner for instance, if Erin and I sat gumming another conversation into its nastiest shape, he’d whip something off the table and break it. He could shatter a plate so thoroughly that later on Erin and I would find pieces under each other’s clothes. If that didn’t get us up and bustling, if that didn’t at least change the subject to a dustpan and brush, soon enough Robbie would be at it with something bigger. He’d go get a camera and pound one of our dining-room chairs to pieces. A few days later, a few weeks later, the smashing would have picked up still more steam. Once a chair’s leg came off, Robbie would punch it foot-first through the nearest wall — a much more complicated business than the earlier flap about breaking the rules. He might tear the stuffing out of the sofa cushions only to replace them with the plastic seats ripped off the kitchen chairs.
“He has all the instincts,” Erin said once, during the first week of November, I think. “All the natural manly instincts.”
Yes in the glue of that autumn, Robbie offered unpredictable rising bubbles. Certainly Erin seemed to be forever bringing him up. Talking about his dead Mom, his protective shell of flab, his talent. It was as if now that I’d looked in her journal she’d decided I should know exactly what it was she spent all her time writing. Thus the queer lull could become queerer still. Talk about Robbie’s eruptions would end in one of our own. Erin would start going after me again about broken trust and I’d let my face do my dirty work. And then when Erin had slammed the bedroom door shut between us, when she’d thrown the lock, when through that barrier she’d shouted at me, “Why don’t you go? Why don’t you do something for once and go?”—when that hard place was reached, it always seemed that Robbie had come to stand in the hallway beside me. He might have started out by tearing apart something on the back lawn; in fact, by the middle of October it took only a single harsh word between Erin and myself to get him going. But before long his lumbering ostrich-step would echo up the stairwell. He’d slump into place, beside me but head and shoulders above me. Dully eyeing the bedroom doorknob.
Myself, I started to muscle him around. I never let Erin touch him, but it became a rare day when I didn’t at least hook his collar, jerk him down to my eyes’ level. God, the vapor in his look. Then what was he after, to come staggering more and more often between us? I never let Erin touch him. But I said some mean things to him, maybe a few obscenities even, trying to get a response.
No doubt we should have asked for help. There were any number of potential last straws. This smashed pitcher, that piece of upholstery gutted and scattered over the rug. But though Erin may have let the question dangle once or twice, I never picked it up. Certainly neither of us admitted anything directly. Instead we worked extra hours with plastic and putty to repair the holes Robbie had punched in our life. Instead we hid what we could from Mr. Challait and the maid. And most of all instead of asking for help we kept returning to the bedroom. Sometimes with disagreements still in our teeth, sometimes with no better excuse than the paper’s being read and the mail’s being late. Yes, these visits did slowly intensify. The morning we were to go pick up the Thanksgiving turkey, the maid had to ring our doorbell a half-dozen times. I can look at it clinically nowadays; I can say that Erin and I were learning about the timing of orgasms and so forth. A person with a technical way of looking at things would say we were getting better with each fuck. But the experience itself was brutal and way past analysis. Across acres of fields we’d discover low walls of human flesh. And these explorations were made room for more and more often, and we came up with all kinds of excuses for Mr. Challait. We assured him the broken windows were no bother. We never let him see how Robbie had trashed the darkroom downcellar. We pointed out that his son had some vendetta against the property, not against us, so that in fact Robbie was no more dangerous than a dog who needed to be housebroken. Finally, we would stand up to the father and insist that this was what he’d hired us for. We’d been brought here in the first place because the conventional thinkers had failed. For several long moments, the rich man would measure us with an impassive look. Eyes low-lidded, double-chin just visible. Then he’d nod. In the end nothing was allowed to stop us.
But no. No, that’s a lousy way to put it. Maybe “nothing was allowed to stop us,” but Robbie and Erin and I never for a moment had the sense that we were worth stopping. Never for a moment, never for months. Scutwork, newspapers, and the mail. If I could make these three words into a dumb hit single and play it a million times a week, you might get the idea. Our calendar seemed a warehouse, stacked with empty boxes. The evenings were the worst. More and more I’d find myself out in one of those sticky inflatable plastic pillow-chairs, out on the front stoop. Looking beyond the chainlink fence, beyond the uncolored and half-dressed trees. I’d feel the restlessness of fall. School was underway; my father had packed the trunk for me and winked a sardonic, affable goodbye till Christmas. Or I would sense Erin’s birthday, coming up or not long past. A chip-on-the-shoulder mystic at school had told me once that Erin was “classic Scorpio,” but I preferred to think about the other implications of someone’s being born on Hallowe’en night. And then while picturing an infant girl surprised by masks and crepe paper, or while frightened boneless once again by the image of that grown man whose wink had gone to worms, then from my chilled and flaccid seat eventually I’d come to notice Robbie, who was taking another of his rackety naps on the sofa in the living room behind me, our Robbie, whose life between sleep and waking was the same slack cocoon of nightmare. My own tears would start to come. I’d have to run indoors, upstairs. Without turning on the bathroom light, with the colors of sundown burnishing the medicine-cabinet mirror, I stripped. Crying without end. I went on to the shower, crying face to the washcloth, as I had done morning after early morning a year ago in the shower stalls at the dorm. There no one would know about me.
I’m not so smart. I’m not so good in bed as it may have seemed till now. I’m not the kind of person who would marry a high-school friend out of honest loneliness or because I felt scared about the future. I’m only restless. No one at home half the time and always very restless.
Until the morning I left the bedroom door open. The lock unturned, the door itself ajar.
I’d ducked out in mid-foreplay, on the old child’s pretext of needing a glass of water. I’d stopped the door with my heel and fallen on Erin too quick for her to notice.
In letters since, letters from friends, we’ve learned that this experience is common enough among people our age. The roommate comes back to the dorm a day earlier than expected; the parents decide to beat the snowstorm home from the party. And always my friends write that they were surprised by how quickly they returned to dry reality. But sex is fragile, the web of mood far more important than the muscle and mucus clutching beneath its spidery reach. After Robbie crashed into our bedroom, Erin and I both recovered fast — though I believe she had the edge on me. I felt her hipbones jerk out of rhythm while I was still lost in the dark acreage between us. “Robbie!”