Читаем The New Yorker Stories полностью

Girl Talk ♦ December 7, 1981


Like Glass ♦ February 22, 1982


Desire ♦ June 14, 1982


Moving Water ♦ November 8, 1982


Coney Island ♦ January 24, 1983


Television ♦ March 28, 1983


Lofty ♦ August 8, 1983


One Day ♦ August 29, 1983


Heaven on a Summer Night ♦ November 28, 1983


Times ♦ December 26, 1983


In the White Night ♦ June 4, 1984


Summer People ♦ September 24, 1984


Janus ♦ May 27, 1985


Skeletons ♦ February 3, 1986


Where You’ll Find Me ♦ March 3, 1986


Home to Marie ♦ December 15, 1986


Horatio’s Trick ♦ December 28, 1987


Second Question ♦ June 10, 1991


Zalla ♦ October 19, 1992


The Women of This World ♦ November 20, 2000


That Last Odd Day in L.A. ♦ April 15, 2001


Find and Replace ♦ November 5, 2001


The Rabbit Hole as Likely Explanation ♦ April 12, 2004


Coping Stones ♦ September 12, 2005


The Confidence Decoy ♦ November 27, 2006



THE

NEW

YORKER

STORIES



A Platonic Relationship




When Ellen was told that she would be hired as a music teacher at the high school, she decided that it did not mean that she would have to look like the other people on the faculty. She would tuck her hair neatly behind her ears, instead of letting it fall free, schoolgirlishly. She had met some of the teachers when she went for her interview, and they all seemed to look like what she was trying to get away from—suburbanites at a shopping center. Casual and airy, the fashion magazines would call it. At least, that’s what they would have called it back when she still read them, when she lived in Chevy Chase and wore her hair long, falling free, the way it had fallen in her high-school graduation picture. “Your lovely face,” her mother used to say, “and all covered by hair.” Her graduation picture was still on display in her parents’ house, next to a picture of her on her first birthday.

It didn’t matter how Ellen looked now; the students laughed at her behind her back. They laughed behind all the teachers’ backs. They don’t like me, Ellen thought, and she didn’t want to go to school. She forced herself to go, because she needed the job. She had worked hard to get away from her lawyer husband and almost-paid-for house. She had doggedly taken night classes at Georgetown University for two years, leaving the dishes after dinner and always expecting a fight. Her husband loaded them into the dishwasher—no fight. Finally, when she was ready to leave, she had to start the fight herself. There is a better world, she told him. “Teaching at the high school?” he asked. In the end, though, he had helped her find a place to live—an older house, on a side street off Florida Avenue, with splintery floors that had to be covered with rugs, and walls that needed to be repapered but that she never repapered. He hadn’t made trouble for her. Instead, he made her look silly. He made her say that teaching high school was a better world. She saw the foolishness of her statement, however, and after she left him she began to read great numbers of newspapers and magazines, and then more and more radical newspapers and magazines. She had dinner with her husband several months after she had left him, at their old house. During dinner, she stated several ideas of importance, without citing her source. He listened carefully, crossing his knees and nodding attentively—the pose he always assumed with his clients. The only time during the evening she had thought he might start a fight was when she told him she was living with a man—a student, twelve years younger than she. An odd expression came across his face. In retrospect, she realized that he must have been truly puzzled. She quickly told him that the relationship was platonic.

What Ellen told him was the truth. The man, Sam, was a junior at George Washington University. He had been rooming with her sister and brother-in-law, but friction had developed between the two men. Her sister must have expected it. Her sister’s husband was very athletic, a pro-football fan who wore a Redskins T-shirt to bed instead of a pajama top, and who had a football autographed by Billy Kilmer on their mantel. Sam was not frail, but one sensed at once that he would always be gentle. He had long brown hair and brown eyes—nothing that would set him apart from a lot of other people. It was his calmness that did that. She invited him to move in after her sister explained the situation; he could help a bit with her rent. Also, although she did not want her husband to know it, she had discovered that she was a little afraid of being alone at night.

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