The kid read the note over the policeman's shoulder.
“Wow,” he said, grinning. “What happened to the
He lost three quarters of his prick, Garp thought, but he did not write this on a traffic violation form, or on anything else. Ever.
The boy turned out to have read Garp's novels while he was in jail.
“If I'd known you were the author of those books,” the kid said, “I would never have been so disrespectful.” His name was Randy and he had become an ardent Garp fan. Garp was convinced that the mainstream of his fans consisted of waifs, lonely children, retarded grownups, cranks, and only occasional members of the citizenry who were not afflicted with perverted taste. But Randy had come to Garp as if Garp were now the only guru Randy obeyed. In the spirit of his mother's home at Dog's Head Harbor, Garp couldn't very well turn the boy away.
Roberta Muldoon took on the task of briefing Randy on the accident to Garp and his family.
“Who's the great big lovely chick?” Randy asked Garp in an awed whisper.
Garp wrote.
But even Garp's sourness could not dim Randy's likable enthusiasm; not right away. The boy entertained Duncan for hours.
Garp complained to Helen.
“The boy's not on anything,” Helen assured Garp. “Your mother asked him.”
Garp wrote.
“Randy wants to be a writer,” Helen said.
Garp wrote. But it wasn't true.
At last Randy went away. Though Duncan was sorry to see him go, Garp felt relieved; he did not show anybody else the note Randy left for him.
So I'm not kind, Garp thought. What else is new? He threw Randy's note away.
When the wires came off and the rawness left his tongue, Garp ran again. As the weather warmed up, Helen swam. She was told it was good for restoring her muscle tone and strengthening her collarbone, though this still hurt her—especially the breaststroke. She swam for what seemed to be miles, to Garp: straight out to sea, and then along the shoreline. She said she went out so far because the water was calmer there; closer to shore, the waves interfered with her. But Garp worried. He and Duncan sometimes used the telescope to watch her. What am I going to do if something happens? Garp wondered. He was a poor swimmer.
“Mom's a good swimmer,” Duncan assured him. Duncan was also becoming a good swimmer.
“She goes out too far,” Garp said.
By the time the summer people arrived, the Garp family took its exercise in slightly less ostentatious ways; they played on the beach or in the sea only in the early morning. In the crowded moments of the summer days, and in the early evenings, they watched the world from the shaded porches of Jenny Fields' home; they withdrew to the big cool house.
Garp got a little better. He began to write—gingerly, at first: long plot outlines, and speculations about his characters. He avoided the main characters; at least he thought they were the main characters—a husband, a wife, a child. He concentrated instead on a detective, an outsider to the family. Garp knew what terror would lurk at the heart of his book, and perhaps for that reason he approached it through a character as distant from his personal anxiety as the police inspector is distant from the crime. What business do
It was in the late summer of Garp's convalescence that
Helen knew Garp was writing again.
“I won't read it,” she told him. “Not one word of it. I know you have to write it, but I never want to see it. I don't mean to hurt you, but you have to understand.
“It's not about “it,” exactly,” he told her. “I do not write autobiographical fiction.”
“I know that, too,” she said. “But I won't read it just the same.”
“Of course, I understand,” he said.
Writing, he always knew, was a lonely business. It was hard for a lonely thing to feel that much lonelier. Jenny, he knew, would read it; she was tough as nails. Jenny watched them all get well; she watched new patients come and go.
One was a hideous young girl named Laurel, who made the mistake of sounding off about Duncan one morning at breakfast. “Could I sleep in another part of the house?” she asked Jenny. “There's this creepy kid—with the telescope, the camera, and the eye patch? He's like a fucking pirate, spying on me. Even little boys like to paw you over with their eyes—even with
Garp had fallen while running in the predawn light on the beach; he had hurt his jaw again, and was—again —wired shut. He had no old notes handy for what he wanted to say to this girl, but he scribbled very hastily on his napkin.
he scribbled, and threw the napkin at the surprised girl.
“Look,” the girl said to Jenny, “this is just the kind of routine I had to get away from. Some
said Garp's next note, but Jenny ushered the girl outside and told her the history of Duncan's eye patch, and his telescope, and his camera, and the girl tried very hard to avoid Garp during the last part of her stay. Her stay was just a few days, and then someone was there to get her: a sporty car with New York plates and a man who
“Hey, you dildos!” he called to Garp and Roberta, who were sitting on the large porch swing, like old- fashioned lovers. “Is this the whorehouse where you're keeping Laurel?”
“We're not exactly “keeping” her,” Roberta said.
Shut up, you big dyke,” said the New York man; he came up on the porch. He'd left the motor running to his sports car, and its idle charged and calmed itself—charged and calmed itself, and charged again. The man wore cowboy boots and green suede bell-bottom pants. He was tall and chesty, though not quite as tall and chesty as Roberta Muldoon.
'I'm not a dyke,” Roberta said.