planned to hand this snip-out to Garp just moments before they said good-bye. This snipout of the front cover was sealed in an envelope; the envelope was sealed in another envelope. John Wolf felt pretty certain that Garp would not be able to undo the thing and look at it until he was safely seated in the plane.
When Garp got to Europe, John Wolf would send him the rest of the book jacket for
“This is bigger than the other plane,” Duncan said, at the window on the left-hand side, a little in front of the wing.
“It has to be bigger because it's going all the way across the ocean,” Garp said.
“Please don't mention that again,” Helen said. Across the aisle from Duncan and Garp, a stewardess was fashioning an intriguing sling for baby Jenny, who hung on the back of the seat in front of Helen like someone else's baby or a papoose.
“John Wolf said you were going to be rich and famous,” Duncan told his father.
“Hm,” Garp said. He was involved in the tedious process of opening the envelopes John Wolf had given him; he was having a hell of a time with them.
“Are you?” Duncan asked.
“I
Blown up in black and white, with grains as fat as flakes of snow, was a picture of an ambulance unloading at a hospital. The glum futility on the gray faces of the attendants expressed the fact that there was no need to hurry. The body under the sheet was small and completely covered. The photograph had the quick, fearful quality of the entrance marked EMERGENCY at any hospital. It
A kind of wet finish glazed the photograph, which—with its grainy aspect, and the fact that this accident appeared to have happened on a rainy night—made it a picture out of
The cover of
Helen would never absorb it, and she never forgave John Wolf for it, either. Nor would she ever forgive him for the back-cover photograph of Garp. It was a picture, taken several years before the accident, of Garp with Duncan and Walt. Helen had taken the picture, and Garp had sent it to John Wolf instead of a Christmas card. Garp was on a dock in Maine. He was wearing nothing but a bathing suit and he looked in terrific physical shape. He was. Duncan stood behind him, his lean arm rested on his father's shoulder. Duncan also wore a bathing suit, he was very tan, with a white sailor's cap cocked jauntily on his head. He grinned into the camera, staring it down with his beautiful eyes.
Walt sat on Garp's lap. Walt was so fresh out of the water that he was as slick as a seal puppy, Garp was trying to wrap him warmly in a towel, and Walt was squirming. Wildly happy, his clownish, round face beamed at the camera—at his mother taking the picture.
When Garp looked at that picture, he could feel Walt's cold, wet body growing warm and dry against him.
Beneath the photograph, the caption cashed in on one of the least noble instincts of human beings.
T. S. GARP WITH HIS CHILDREN (before THE ACCIDENT)
The implication was that if you read the book, you would find out
People bought the book by the sad son of Jenny Fields in droves.
On the airplane to Europe, Garp had only the picture of the ambulance to use his imagination on. Even at that altitude, he could imagine people buying the book in droves. He sat feeling disgusted at the people he imagined buying the book; he also felt disgusted that he had written the kind of book that could attract people in droves.
“Droves” of anything, but especially of people, were not comforting to T. S. Garp. He sat in the airplane wishing for more isolation and privacy—for himself and for his family—than he would ever know again.
“What will we do with all the money?” Duncan asked him suddenly.
“All the money?” Garp said.
“When you're rich and famous,” Duncan said. “What will we do?”
“We'll have lots of fun,” Garp told him, but his handsome son's one eye pierced him with doubt.
“We'll be flying at an altitude of thirty-five thousand feet,” the pilot said.
“Wow,” said Duncan. And Garp reached for his wife's hand across the aisle. A fat man was making his unsure way down the aisle to the lavatory; Garp and Helen could only look at each other and convey a kind of hand-in-hand contact with their eyes.
In his mind's eye, Garp saw his mother, Jenny Fields, all in white, held up in the sky by the towering Roberta Muldoon. He did not know what it meant, but his vision of Jenny Fields raised above a crowd chilled him in the same way that the ambulance on the cover of
Duncan began talking about Walt and the undertow—a famous family story. For as far back as Duncan could remember, the Garps had gone every summer to Dog's Head Harbor, New Hampshire, where the miles of beach in front of Jenny Fields' estate were ravaged by a fearful undertow. When Walt was old enough to venture near the water, Duncan said to him—as Helen and Garp had, for years, said to Duncan—'Watch out for the undertow.” Walt retreated, respectfully. And for three summers Walt was warned about the undertow. Duncan recalled all the phrases.
“The undertow is bad today.”
“The undertow is strong today.”
“The undertow is
And for years Walt watched out for it. From the first, when he asked what
It was Walt's fourth summer at Dog's Head Harbor, Duncan remembered, when Garp and Helen and Duncan observed Walt watching the sea. He stood ankle-deep in the foam from the surf and peered into the waves, without taking a step, for the longest time. The family went down to the water's edge to have a word with him.
“What are you doing, Walt?” Helen asked.
“What are you looking for, dummy?” Duncan asked him.
“I'm trying to see the Under Toad,” Walt said.
“The what?” said Garp.
“The Under Toad,” Walt said. “I'm trying to
And Garp and Helen and Duncan held their breath; they realized that all these years Walt had been dreading a giant