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After laboring over two paragraphs on Tuesday afternoon, Eddie rose to make another pot of coffee with the new machine that Amanda had, as threatened, purchased. He wondered how much it had cost, but he knew that asking would invite discord. Their financial worries had nibbled at his sleep, and he’d been able to rest no more than four or five broken hours for several nights running. He’d learned to mark the small hours by the sounds of the city’s nocturnal necessities: the one o’clock grocery delivery truck with the grinding brakes, the two-thirty sidewalk construction crew, the three o’clock street cleaning machine, the five o’clock building garbage trolley.

Throughout this painful nightly roll of the clock numbers, Amanda slept soundly by his side. Her even breathing and the warmth from her limbs saturated him with dread. He could not believe that she loved him with the old love, and he feared that only the greatest of publishing luck would be sufficient to hold onto her. Soon, he thought, she won’t even sleep with me. And it was that terrible idea that prompted him to rise on the roughest mornings — those mornings when he was most exhausted — and face the inscrutable computer screen.

He tried to convince himself that sleep deprivation was good for his creative process — being closer to the dream space and all that crap. But he knew that fatigue was not conducive to a book-length work, and he often found himself fundamentally stumped by such logistics as getting two characters from house to car or moving an object out of his protagonist’s left hand and into her right. Unintentional rhymes slipped into sentences that were becoming tortured: “A revision of her decision would have made her an object of derision.” He wanded whole paragraphs for deletion and endured a gnawing anxiety when he imagined other people reading his most deplorable lines. The reviewers would ignore him if he was lucky, but excoriate him if they noticed. It would have been better if they had not loved Sea Miss. They might go easier on him now, refrain from using that damning word: disappointment.

The writing went better, generally, in the evening, when Eddie managed to remember and take encouragement from the fortunate years when his fine writing style had come as easily as typing itself and Amanda had loved him without restraint. Still, even late in the day, the elaborate description of a setting that was thematically meaningful or the subtle revelation of character motivation often seemed beyond his powers as a writer. He stuck to as much dialogue as he thought he could get away with. Dialogue had been all but missing from Sea Miss, a tale in which the characters seldom encountered one another and rarely spoke when they did. Now Eddie found that dialogue filled up pages quickly. And when he didn’t know how to round out a necessary scene, he could always have his characters discuss something or other. On this Tuesday afternoon, with the newly brewed coffee boosting his keyboard speed, the viola player and her promiscuous violin-playing friend were conversing about deaf culture. Their dialogue was stilted, he knew, but he could fix it later.

He called for Amanda to come into the study they had separated from the living room with a pale blue shoji screen, pretending that the long, narrow space was indeed another room.

“I’m busy,” she answered.

He waited. “Come when you’re done?”

“I’ll be there in ten minutes.”

When she appeared twelve minutes later, her face — cautious eyes but clamped jaw — looked apprehensive but hard. “I hope you haven’t called me in here to tell me how badly your work is going. You used to agree with me that writer’s block is just mental laziness.”

He flinched, visibly he feared; this was not the mood he’d hoped for. “I just wanted to tell you that I’m a third of the way through. I just wrote the hundredth page.” The exaggeration approximated truth, and Eddie nearly believed his words.

“Thank goodness. That’s really good, Eddie.” She smiled at him for what felt like the first time in days, her mouth pulling slightly wider on one side. “Are you going to write some more tonight?”

“I wasn’t planning to, not if you’ll come sit with me. We don’t talk enough these days.”

“I’m kind of in the middle of something. In awhile, though, okay?”

Eddie followed her around the screen, resisting his desire to still her slightly swiveling hips between his hands. Instead he veered into the galley kitchen attached to the living room that also served as dining room. Amanda liked to say, “We’ll know we’ve made it when every room has only one purpose.”

He poured himself two fingers of bourbon and pressed his novel from his mind. Leaning against the counter despite its uncomfortable metal edge, he sipped his drink and watched his wife at the dinner table, which she had covered with stiff foam. She was cutting mats for two drawings she’d bought at a gallery across town.

“I know we can’t afford works by artists who have already made it big,” she’d said, “but I hate bare walls and I’m certainly not going to hang posters like a college student.”

Not wanting to anger her, Eddie had refrained from asking the price of the original drawings. He’d let the table she was working on go unmentioned, too. Right after they moved into their Murray Hill apartment, she’d convinced him that they could furnish it better and more cheaply by scouring the local flea markets than they could by ordering through catalogues as did most of the people they knew. Amanda soon developed an eye for quality, age, and authenticity. Now their apartment sat impeccably furnished, and they had the credit card bills as evidence.

She drew a line with a pencil and then followed with the Exacto knife.

Eddie refilled his whiskey before scanning the living room bookcase. Madame Bovary—now that’s a book with fine style and a juicy plot, he thought. It was also a novel that was not written under a daily quota system, not written with a timer ticking in a writer’s ear. He pulled it from the shelf, wondering whether he could restructure his new book into a contemporary retelling of Flaubert’s quotidian tragedy.

Amanda rose from her precise work, poured herself a drink, and sat back down at the table.

“Remember when we read this for ‘Form and Theory’?” He scooted to the end of the long sofa so that her back would not be fully to him.

“I remember it well enough.” Her voice reminded Eddie of a string of beads, an impression he found soothing. She laughed, shook her head. “Poor Jackson barely got through that course.”

“I suppose,” he said, “that the study of Flaubert isn’t going to help me now. Sometimes I worry that I’ve read myself into paralysis. Maybe I could write something decent if I stopped reading altogether. Or maybe I’m reading the wrong sorts of things. Maybe I should read only books completely unlike what I’m working on. Or perhaps just poetry. Maybe I should quit reading all prose until I’m done with the book. Or maybe just stop reading fiction?”

“Eddie, you passed the hundred-page mark, and here we are having a nice time. So naturally you have to turn morbid.”

He wanted her to turn to him, to celebrate his small triumph of page count. More: he wanted to know that she loved him no matter what he wrote, or how little. He watched the changing angle of her elbow as she followed her pencil line with the tilted blade of the exacto knife. Her slices were precise, and when she lifted the mat, the rectangle she’d cut from its center fell out clean, making the smallest plop as it hit the table. When she turned to him from this victory, her hair slinked across her back, revealing her profile, chin slightly lifted.