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Roxana Robinson
Roxana Robinson is the author of more than ten books, including the novels Sparta and Cost; short story collections; and the biography Georgia O'Keeffe: A Life. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic, The New Yorker, Harper's Magazine, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, and Vogue, among other publications. She has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation, and she was president of the Authors Guild from 2014 to 2017. She teaches in the Hunter College MFA program and divides her time among New York, Connecticut, and Maine.
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Summer Light - Roxana Robinson
LIGHT
One
It’s much too foggy,
Laura said flatly. We can’t go.
She lay stretched out on a rumpled sofa near the window, her long legs, in faded jeans, blending with the scattered denim pillows. She pulled her long hair back from her face with both hands, and stared out of the window. Ordinarily, Great Cranberry Island could be seen clearly from the front porch of the old house they had rented in Northeast Harbor, but now she could barely see the porch railings: drifting swags of white obscured everything.
Ward, who lived with Laura, sat on the floor, playing Parcheesi with Sammy, Laura’s four-year-old son. The two blond heads faced each other across the board, the two backs curved like parentheses around the game. Richie, who was married to Laura’s sister, Sarah, sat in a threadbare armchair with the Sunday papers.
It’s barely foggy at all,
Ward said, without looking up. You just aren’t wearing your glasses.
Anyway it may clear by dinnertime,
said Richie.
Even if it hasn’t cleared by then, it’s a straight shot,
said Ward. He moved a small red marker on the board. Six, seven, eight. Gotcha,
he told Sam. It’s a piece of cake. Due south out, due north back.
Sam looked at the board, then—at the word cake—up at Ward. Ward smiled.
But it will be different at night,
argued Laura.
No, it won’t,
Ward said. He turned to her. Due south out, due north back. We have a compass.
We’ll be lost at sea,
Laura pointed out. She saw them swept away in the darkness, a drifting point in a vast and hostile sea, far beyond help.
No,
said Ward, we won’t.
Ward believed in facts, facts underlay his days and his transactions with the world.
Laura eyed him. She shoved up the sleeves of her purple sweater, revealing her thin pale arms. Laura felt that she spent her life listening to men who told her that things would work when she knew they would not: her vacuum cleaner, her carburetor, her marriage.
We may as well go,
said Richie. He wore round tortoiseshell glasses, and had high, rounded cheekbones and big teeth. He looked like a friendly Eskimo. He leaned back in his chair and stretched, his long arms in the ratty red sweater lifted high over his head. A bare patch of brown skin appeared across his stomach. As his head went back Laura saw on the top of it a thinning patch. This was a shock: she had not imagined Richie getting older. She looked away, as though she had seen something indecent.
Sarah stood up and began to stack dishes. I think we should go,
she said quietly; we planned it.
Sarah’s own long, dark hair swung in a neat braid over her woven shirt, and she wore dark corduroy jeans and clogs. She moved calmly, with a sense of serene purpose. She was eight years older than Laura, and Laura thought she was perfect. At twenty-nine Laura at last preferred her own age to her sister’s; still, she felt her sister’s superiority to be deep and irreversible.
Sarah was always the first one to start working. Laura believed that there was some discrepancy between them, some early flaw in the casting, or in the metal itself. She believed that she would give off a tinselly clang if struck, compared to her sister’s deep bell tone.
Their lives were very different. Sarah and Richie had done over an old farmhouse in the country, where she grew vegetables, made bread, knitted sweaters. Laura had never seen the house, but she imagined it set on a hillside, its white clapboards shining against the casual grass, its corners neat and firm, its fireplaces vast and comforting, its spaces welcoming. Laura longed, at times, to dissolve her own scratchy life in Sarah’s, to give herself up to the circle of seasons, to the steady rise of yeast, the slow growth of woolen sleeves. Laura lived, uncertainly, in Ward’s Central Park West apartment, not quite divorced from Sam’s father, treading water, waiting for something that would set her life in order.
Laura sat up on the sofa and watched her sister, feeling, as always, rebuked by Sarah’s industry.
Sarah finished loading the tray and carried it downstairs to the kitchen, humming. Laura stood up and stretched, now that Sarah had gone, and began to pick up the rest. Her own brown hair hung loose past her shoulders; her eyes were blue, not brown, and her nose was long and rather lordly. There was a resemblance between the two—clear, pale skin and high color, and a deceptive calmness about the eyes—but Sarah’s face was round and her cheeks were full; she missed beauty by a narrow margin and Laura hit it sqaure. It was the beauty that confused Laura, that muddied her view. It held her like a vise, rigid in its grip. She was afraid to try to be anything else, afraid that that was all she was.
What time will we have to leave?
Laura asked, and Sam looked up, now anxious.
Leave where?
he asked, suspicious.
We’re going on a grown-up dinner,
Laura said, putting the dishes down at once. Come here.
She held her arms out, but Sam, betrayed, would not go near her. She lunged, grabbed him and held him against her. The fire had suffused him with heat, and, holding him, Laura felt him warm and beloved next to her flesh. You’d hate it,
she said mendaciously, and anyway you get to stay with Winifred.
She spoke as though Winifred were a three-day trip to Hawaii, instead of their cheerful eighteen-year-old neighbor.
Good deal, Sam,
Ward said judiciously. I wouldn’t mind staying home with Winifred myself.
He was putting the Parcheesi game away very neatly, each token going into a little slot. He looked up, to see how this had struck Sam. Ward, unlike the others, had pale caramel skin; he was half-Jewish, with a straight Roman nose, and thick loose rich curls—a dark grainy blond, the color of hay. Ward was big, and it seemed to Laura that his size, his solidity, must somehow connect him with the earth, the world, with those statements of facts, of absolutes, that men were so good at. Laura herself felt insubstantial in comparison, as though she might lose touch entirely at any moment.
Richie and Sarah’s daughters, Pia and Karin, were at the movies, so Winifred and Sammy stood alone in the doorway, waving to them as they left. Winifred had blazing red hair, which was visible for a long time in the fog. Laura kept turning around to wave at Sammy, wondering if this would be the last time that he ever saw his mother. All of them wore long pants, heavy sweaters and slickers. Laura had tried to think of something she could produce triumphantly in case they were swept out to sea, but could think of nothing that would not be so obvious as to make her look ridiculous if they were not.
As they walked through the pine trees the dense fog cut them off from the known world. The trees seemed to solidify only just in time for them to pass by, and to begin dissolving a moment too soon.
Down at the dock, the boats leaned uncertainly in the mist, slipping quietly about in their stanchions. They climbed into their Boston whaler, cold and mist-filmed, and moved slowly past the other boats. The rest were deserted, the big yawls and ketches battened down against the weather.
Once out in the open water, Ward pushed forward on the throttle, and they began to ease quickly through the fog. Laura could hear the water lapping nearby, but she could not quite see it. The boat was all she could see, and past it and around it was the opalescent density of the fog. The sun irradiated it, shining into but not through it. There was a brilliance in the west.
By the time they reached Great Cranberry, it was nearly dark. The trip took forty minutes across the open water. As they approached the shoreline the fog thinned and lessened, and Laura watched lights appear through it, and boats, and the ghostly long, gray wooden dock where the ferry tied up and the little low building that was the restaurant.
Ward tied up the boat on the far side of the float, his blunt, thick fingers working surely among the heavy, stiff coils of rope. His hair stood up in spikes, salt-thickened, and his eyebrows were white with mist. He grinned at Laura, and put his arm around her as they walked along the dock.
How was that?
he asked, squeezing her hand.
Terrific,
said Laura, reserving her real judgment. They were not home yet.
The restaurant was a pair of low-ceilinged rooms with a wall of windows overlooking the harbor. They were put in the small room; the big one was filled with people who would leave on the eight o’clock ferry. The waitress brought them drinks and, unexpectedly, hot popovers, which steamed damply when they were opened. The butter slid at once off their flabby yellow sides, melting into a rich, thick pool at their centers.
The first day, shopping together at the Pine Tree Market, Sarah had looked at the dense yellow blocks that Laura had put in the shopping cart.
Oh, butter!
Sarah said, and, when Laura looked at her, she went on. I never buy it. We’re all used to margarine and powdered milk.
There were in her voice thin streaks of pride, self-righteousness, a conscious sense of virtue. Laura knew the tone: this was how they had grown up. Their lives had been governed by deliberate frugality, proof of their state of grace. It was not merely that they were poor—anyone might be poor—it was that they had chosen to be poor. Their father had converted to Quakerism, left his job at Morgan Stanley in Manhattan and moved the whole family down to Red Top, Maryland, to become the editor of the local paper. It was the triumph of principle over greed, and it had placed the whole family on a dais of pious superiority. They were superior, for example, to people who bought their clothes new: the fact that their own clothes were from the thrift shop, wrinkled and limp before the first wearing, made Laura’s family more admirable.
Her father’s strict and rigid moral vision had divided Laura’s world into mutually exclusive parts; there was no overlapping, no shaded area, no forgiveness. Laura had always wished the division hadn’t been so strict or so clear: beauty, plenty and sin on one side, dearth and virtue on the other. Early on, she had chosen the former, and now, as always, when faced with someone who had chosen the latter she was swept by exasperation, envy and helplessness.
Want some butter?
Laura asked Sarah now, or shall I see if they have any margarine?
She wished immediately that she had not said it.
But Sarah laughed, and said, Don’t bother. I’ll make do with this stuff, whatever it turns out to be.
Do you have a moral bias against butter?
asked Ward.
Purely financial,
said Sarah cheerfully.
I support cows,
said Richie. I prefer a cow to a vegetable any day. I support the all-dairy spread.
That sounds like a cattle ranch,
Laura said.
But it was his fault, if it was anyone’s, that they could not afford butter, she thought. Sarah had married Richie when he was at architecture school, and had struggled along, supporting them both with translating and typing jobs until he graduated. Richie’s family was from New Canaan; he had grown up in a big white house overlooking the golf course. Laura had assumed that he would gradually become rich, drawing Sarah and their family into a creamy life, flowered towels in the guest room, girls’ boarding schools, a kind black woman in the kitchen. Instead, he had taken her off to a tiny town in New Hampshire. They had a perilous existence in the old, cold farmhouse at the edge of a cow pasture. Richie designed houses (never the kind he wanted to) for a local developer, and the odd professional building for a mall. He had told Laura that he ran eighteen miles a day, and did most of his work at night. Laura had met him before Sarah had, the summer she was sixteen, and he was twenty-four. Laura had been in love with him.
We support cats,
announced Ward, or some of us do.
This was directed at Laura.
Ward wants to kill my cat,
she said, stirring things up.
I don’t recall saying that,
said Ward.
What is it that you want, then?
I want less cat pee,
Ward said, making his hand into a fist and laying it gently down on the table, that’s what I want.
Laura’s cat was a gray Maltese, shy, sweet, and very neurotic. Nathaniel, Laura’s husband, had given Sheba to Laura as a wedding present, and Laura suspected that Ward disliked the cat for symbolic reasons. But Sheba was not a metaphor; she was a cat. She slept curled up in the crook of Laura’s knee, and in the morning stood golden-eyed by Laura’s face, purring in a steady rhythm of delight.
But in Northeast Harbor Sheba had sunk below the level of tolerable neurotics, even Laura admitted that. The cat was frightened of the three-story descent to the kitty litter in the laundry room, and she stayed in Laura and Ward’s room, and made messes in the upper floors. She had peed on the bathroom rug and on one in the upstairs hall, and Laura had suspicions of the kindling box in the living room.
She’ll stop,
said Laura. She’s just having a hard time settling down.
If she doesn’t stop, we’re going to have to burn the house down to get rid of the smell,
said Ward.
But we won’t have Sheba murdered,
said Laura.
Winifred tells me there’s a very good ASPCA over in Manset,
said Ward. They’re very careful about finding homes for animals.
What is this, a conspiracy?
Laura asked. You have a responsibility to your animals; you don’t throw them out of your house just because they made a slip.
She disliked the idea of Sheba in a cage, her plushy fur pressed against wire mesh, her golden eyes filled with dread: what of her own slips?
There was a pause, and Sarah sighed and shook her head. Well, it is a problem,
she said sympathetically. Pets are supposed to give you pleasure, not misery. We had a cat called Scrubs. When he was about ten, he began to bite people. He bit everyone; he was like an attack cat. He bit us and the children. And then he started to pee on everything.
She looked at Richie. Remember, he peed all over the new suitcase you bought me. We had to throw it away.
And what did you do with him?
asked Laura, sure it would be the right thing.
Had him P.T.S.,
said Richie.
What’s P.T.S.?
asked Ward.
That’s what it says on the ticket you get: ‘Put To Sleep.’
Ward began to laugh. They give you a ticket for a dead cat? What do you do with that?
But Laura was angry. How could Sarah have done this? You really had him killed?
"Actually, I had him killed, Richie said.
Your gentle lady sister wanted him killed, but she wouldn’t soil her hands. She wouldn’t even drive him to the vet’s. I stood at the bottom of the stairs with poor old Scrubs in the traveling box, growling and spitting and trying to escape—as well he might—and I yelled upstairs, ‘Governor Freeman! Governor Freeman! A last plea for clemency! The prisoner requests a pardon!’"
And?
said Laura.
She pretended she didn’t hear me.
I did not pretend,
Sarah said. I really didn’t hear you.
You really didn’t want to answer,
Richie said. You wouldn’t even tell the girls what you had done.
I did too tell the girls.
Finally.
For years, Laura had seen Sarah and Richie only at Christmas, in Maryland. They never came to New York, and Nat had always refused to make the long drive to their home in New Hampshire. (It’s ten hours, both ways,
he would complain, and, when we get there, we’ll have to walk around in the mountains. And at dinner they’ll have in Mormons for a sing-along.
) But Laura had imagined Sarah and Richie happy in the countryside; she had imagined that they led a calm and unruffled life, that they never argued, that their gentleness extended to each other as well as to the rest of the world. Now she was embarrassed to hear them talking like this to each other, their sentences armed with sullen