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Authors: Rebecca Lee

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BOOK: Bobcat and Other Stories
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Berber and Bryan were standing under the television, newly married and with their turbans off, thankfully. Bryan had cornered David and was asking him about his newest book. “Are we meant to believe that there is or isn’t a God by the end?”

This made David laugh. “I really don’t know,” he said, as he hugged me hello.

Lesley and David had lined up two lasagnas end to end—she had made one vegetarian and he had made one meat, and they lay there under the candlelight, awaiting us. I was so hungry. I’d been so sad for the last two weeks that I hadn’t been able to eat. I was in the middle of a protracted miscarriage—the baby still alive, but with a heartbeat measuring once a minute, like one of those sea creatures that live at the floor of the ocean.

“I saw it,” David said to me. “I saw the show.”

“Oh yeah?” I said. “What’d you think?”

“I thought it was great,” he said. “I really did. All that derring-do. And the culture is ready for a big dose of feminism.”

“You think?”

“Yes. If I were a woman, I’d want to be an Amazon.”

“Thanks,” I said. And then he touched my arm, just like that, which so surprised me that I nearly fell into his arm. It must be exactly what men don’t want—you reach to touch a woman lightly and then she falls into you, her whole weight, which in this case included another man’s dying baby. “Sorry!” I said. Sorry to David Booth for falling into him, and sorry to baby, for everything. For no life.

But anyway, life isn’t that good always. I wished I could let the baby know that. There’s a lot that’s lousy. It’s true there are large turning structures—Ferris wheels

that will carry people high into the air above the ocean, that is true, and then around the next corner there are funhouses, those are great, and then there are just ordinary playgrounds on every corner, and there are things not even for children that are for children, like church spires that look like weather vanes, and there is one downtown that actually spins, a little spinning cross, an image that would live in the child’s mind maybe forever, gathering ideas to it, spinning madly but also stable there, and in tonight’s wind it wouldn’t even be a cross, it would be distorted into maybe a little question mark, and standing for all the children in town as a kind of fervent lasting joyful little thing they always know. So there is a lot, admittedly.

But then you grow up and you get a wonderful man and he cheats on you, or you get somebody like Bryan, who at your wedding says this as his vow—“I will be your teacher and you will be my team.” Or you get David Booth, in which case you marry somebody else.

We sat down to the his and hers lasagnas, right as the last levees were breached and the ninth ward completely overwhelmed. See, I said to the baby, look at the seawater rising, look at the cats and dogs on the roof, it’s okay to just pass along,
(I will miss you!),
just keep going.

Acknowledgments

This book was written with thanks to (but not about) my family: Don and Marilyn Lee, Emma Beke and Stephen Beke, Wendy Arnold, Steve Arnold, Joshua Arnold, Jessica Arnold, Eric Lee, Janya Wongsopa, John Beke, Allison Beke, Paul Beke, Alexander Bilson, and Kate Bilson.

Many thanks to writers and friends in Wilmington: Dana Sachs, Todd Berliner, Karen Bender, Robert Siegel, Nina de Gramont, David Gessner, Philip Gerard, Phil Furia, Jill Gerard, Mark Cox, Malena Morling, Sarah Messer, Michael White (Picture me floating down through the fires of this day and the next), John Sullivan, Mariana Johnson, Hannah Abrams, Kimi Faxon Hemingway, Emily Smith, Ben George, Tim Bass, Lavonne Adams, Clyde Edgerton, Kristina Edgerton, Virginia Holman, Megan Hubbard, Beau Bishop, Lisa Bertini, Peter Trachtenberg, and Wendy Brenner, who routinely says lines so funny that I try to immediately put them into stories, plagiarism that she cheerfully tolerates.

Many thanks also to C. Michael Curtis, Sumanth Prabhaker, Adrienne Brodeur, Nicole Winstanley, and Leslie Bienen.

And also, to Doug Stewart, who is the best, fastest, nicest, and smartest agent in the world.

And to everyone at Algonquin, huge thanks: Elisabeth Scharlatt, Ina Stern, Brunson Hoole, Anne Winslow, Kelly Bowen, Debra Linn, Emma Boyer, Chuck Adams, Lauren Moseley, Katie Ford, Craig Popelars. And thank you to Kathy Pories, whose thinking is poised perfectly, at every moment, between serious and funny.

Published by

ALGONQUIN BOOKS OF CHAPEL HILL

Post Office Box 2225

Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27515-2225

a division of

WORKMAN PUBLISHING

225 Varick Street

New York, New York 10014

© 2013 by Rebecca Lee.

All rights reserved.

“At North Farm” from
A Wave
by John Ashbery. Copyright © 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984 by John Ashbery. Reprinted by permission of Georges Borchardt, Inc., on behalf of the author.

Some of these stories appeared first elsewhere: “Bobcat” was published as a chapbook with Madras Press, 2010
;
“The Banks of the Vistula” was first published in the
Atlantic Monthly,
1997
;
“Slatland” was first published in the
Atlantic Monthly,
1992
;
“Min” was first published in the
Atlantic Monthly,
1995
;
“Fialta” was first published in
Zoetrope,
2000.

This is a work of fiction. While, as in all fiction, the literary perceptions and insights are based on experience, all names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

eISBN 978-1-61620-265-1

BOOK: Bobcat and Other Stories
6.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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