Chapter 4
ON SUNDAY MORNING the study door was closed—Denny’s door—and everyone tried to keep the little boys from making too much noise.
“Go play in the sunroom,” Nora told them when they’d finished breakfast. “Quietly, though. Don’t wake your uncle.
” But even on their best behavior, exaggeratedly tiptoeing as they left the kitchen, they seemed to radiate disruption.
They jostled and elbowed and poked one another and tripped over their own pajama cuffs, while Heidi ran frenzied circles around them.
On the floor in the corner, Brenda raised her head to watch them leave and then groaned and settled her chin on her paws again.
Red was sleeping late too, so the others had no way of knowing how things had gone at the train station.
“I tried to stay awake till the two of them got home,” Abby said, “but I must have nodded off. I can’t seem to read in bed anymore!
I should have sat up for them downstairs. Another cup of coffee, Nora?”
“I can do that, Mother Whitshank. You sit still.”
It was going to be a while, evidently, before the two women settled just who was in charge of what. This morning Abby had put out toast and cereal as usual, and then Nora had come down and scrambled an entire carton of eggs without so much as a by-your-leave.
Stem was in his pajamas and Abby in her bathrobe, but Nora wore one of her dresses, white cotton with navy sprigs, and sandals that showed her smooth, tanned feet.
For breakfast she had eaten more than all the rest of them put together, but so slowly and so gracefully that it seemed she hardly ate at all.
“I was thinking,” Abby said, “we might invite the girls and their families to lunch. I know they’ll want to see Denny.”
“Could we make it a late lunch?” Nora asked. “The children and I have church.”
“Oh, certainly. Yes, we could start at … one o’clock, would you say? I believe I’ll do a rolled roast.”
“If you put the roast in the oven for me,” Nora said, “I can see to the rest of the meal when I get back.”
“Well, I’m still able to manage a simple family meal, Nora.”
“Yes, of course,” Nora said serenely.
Stem said, “I’ll pick up whatever you need in the way of groceries.”
“Oh, Dad can do that,” Abby told him.
“Mom. That’s what I’m here for.”
“Well … but go to Eddie’s, then, where you can charge it to our account.”
“Mom.”
Luckily for Abby, Red walked in at that moment. (Abby disliked money discussions.) He was wearing his ratty old bathrobe and his mules that made a whisk-broom sound, and he was carrying his Fred Flintstone glass that he used for his nighttime water. “Morning, all,” he said.
“Well, hi!” Abby said, sliding her chair back, but Nora was already up and fetching the coffeepot. “Did Denny get in all right?” Abby asked.
“Yep,” Red said, sitting down.
Stem said, “Train on schedule?”
Either Red didn’t hear him or he felt the question wasn’t worth answering. He reached for the platter of scrambled eggs.
“There’s toast,” Abby told him. “Whole wheat.”
He dished out a large pile of eggs and passed the platter to Nora, who took another helping.
“If I have to see that statue one more dad-blamed time,” he said, “I’m going to hire myself a wrecking ball. It’s embarrassing! Other cities’ train stations have fountains, or hunks of metal or something. We have a giant tin Frankenstein with a heart that pulses pink and blue.”
“How was Denny?” Abby asked him.
“Fine, as far as I could tell.” He peered into the cream pitcher. “Is there more cream?”
Nora rose and went to the fridge.
“All we talked about was the Orioles,” he said, giving in at last to his audience. “Neither one of us believes they can keep this up till postseason.”
“Oh.”
“He brought three bags with him.”
“Three!”
“I asked him,” Red said, stirring his coffee. “I asked why so much luggage, and he said it was summer clothes and winter clothes.”
“Winter!”
“Winter took most of the room, he said. Thicker material.”
“How’d he carry all that?” Stem asked.
“Boarding, he used a redcap, he told me. But getting off again … Have you tried finding a redcap in Baltimore? After midnight? He managed okay, though. If I’d known, I would have parked the car and come inside the station.”
“Winter clothes!” Abby said to herself in a trailing voice.
“Good eggs,” Red told her.
“Oh, Nora made those.”
“Good eggs, Nora.”
“Thank you.”
“I guess I should empty the study closet,” Abby said. “But already I’ve had to find space for the things from the bunk-room closet, and the one in Stem and Nora’s room.” She was looking a little panicked.
“Relax,” Red told her, without looking up from his eggs.
“I hate it when you tell me to relax!”
Nora said, “I can empty that closet.”
“You wouldn’t know where to put things.”
“Nora’s a whiz at organizing storage space,” Stem said.
“Yes, I’m sure she is, but—”
“Hey, everybody,” Denny said, walking into the kitchen.
He was wearing paint-stained khakis and a String Cheese Incident T-shirt, and his hair was very shaggy, fringing the tops of his ears.
(As a rule, the men in the family were fanatic about keeping their hair short.) He seemed healthy, though, and cheerful.
Abby said, “Oh, sweetheart! It’s so good to see you!
” and she rose to hug him. He returned her hug briefly and then bent to pet Brenda, who had struggled to her feet and shambled over to nuzzle him.
Stem lifted one hand from where he sat, and Nora smiled and said, “Hello, Denny.”
“Any breakfast left?”
“There’s plenty,” Abby said. Nora stood up again to fetch the coffeepot.
“Where’re the kids?” Denny asked when he was seated.
“In the sunroom,” Abby said. “I hope they didn’t wake you.”
“Never heard a thing.”
“How was your trip?”
“Not too bad.” He helped himself to the eggs.
“You could have waited till this morning, you know. The train’s empty on Sunday mornings.”
“It was empty last night,” he said.
Stem asked, “You still working with those kitchen people?”
“Naw, I quit that job.”
“So what are you doing now?”
“I’m here now,” Denny said, and he sent Stem a level gaze.
Nora said, “If you’ll excuse me, I have to get the boys ready for church.”
Denny transferred his gaze to her for a moment, and then he picked up his fork and started eating.
The little boys were thrilled to hear that Denny was awake.
They swarmed back into the kitchen and climbed all over him and pelted him with questions and demands—had he brought his baseball glove?
would he take them down to the creek?—while Heidi barked and jittered around them and tried to insert herself into their midst. Denny shrugged them away good-naturedly and promised they’d do something later, and then Nora herded them upstairs, Stem following close behind with Sammy on his back, and Red went off to the sunroom with the morning paper.
That left just Abby and Denny. As soon as they were alone, she poured herself another cup of coffee and sat down again. “Dennis,” she said.
“Oh-oh.”
“What?”
“Gotta watch out if you’re calling me ‘Dennis,’ ” he said. He spooned some jam onto his plate.
“Denny, I know what Jeannie must have told you. How I’m so dithery nowadays I need a keeper.”
“She didn’t say that.”
“Well, whatever she said, I just want to explain my side of it.”
He cocked his head.
“This thing that got them all worried,” she said, “I mean the reason Stem and Nora thought they should move in with us: it wasn’t the way it sounds.
I didn’t … wander off and get lost like some mental defective or something.
What happened was, it was the night of that terrible storm, the one they’re calling a ‘derecho,’ remember that?
Oh, Lord, ‘derecho,’ ‘El Nino’… all these words we throw around these days.
Tell me that’s not global warming! But anyhow, this storm knocked over one of the Ellises’ giant trees, right on the line between our two properties.
That’s not to mention the hundreds of other trees, as well as shutting down half the city’s electrical power, including ours. ”
“Bummer,” Denny said. He bit into his toast.
“You should have seen that tree, Denny. It looked like a huge stalk of broccoli lying on its side, only with roots. And the hole it left! A hole as deep as a basement. You can understand why a person would be curious about it.”
“What are you saying: you went out to look at the hole?”
“Well, probably.”
“Probably?”
“I mean, yes, I’m pretty sure that’s what I did.”
“Mom. It was a storm the strength of a hurricane. You must remember if you went out in it.”
“I do remember. I mean, I remember I was out in it; I just don’t remember going out.
See, sometimes my mind skips across a few minutes, like a needle on a record.
I’ll be doing something ordinary, but then all at once it’s later, you know?
Maybe five or ten minutes later; I’m not sure.
And there’s a completely empty gap between the last minute and the current minute.
It’s not like when you phase out doing some routine chore but you’re still aware that time has passed.
This is more like … waking after surgery. ”
“That sounds like a mini stroke or something,” Denny said. “Or maybe a seizure.”
“Well, I don’t know.”
“Have you mentioned it to a doctor?”
“Absolutely not.”
“But it could be there’s some easy fix.”
“No fix I’d want at my age,” Abby said. “And besides, it doesn’t happen very often. Not often at all.”
“So, okay, you’re telling me you just found yourself out in a rainstorm, looking down into a hole.”