Four years ago, everyone laughed when the current president confessed to committing adultery in his heart. Tim Senior certainly had. For some reason, people thought that the president’s admission made him even more of a-what did the boys call it-a
By 5 P.M., the house looks almost as she had imagined it, although she doesn’t dare set the dining room table. That would provoke curiosity. They eat dinner in the kitchen, and Tim doesn’t even ask why. Tim never asks her anything. It is six-thirty by the time he stomps through the front door, knowing full well that they eat at six, but he says it’s important for him to go out for drinks with his coworkers. He doesn’t like the job at Tuerkes as much as he did at first, and Doris worries he won’t last long there. He trudges through the clean house, noticing nothing, although he had no problem seeing the mess when it was there and criticizing it for advantage. Tim sees only what is wrong and blames her for everything, even the things that are clearly his fault, like his dinner being cold tonight. Some things just don’t reheat well.
“Some things just don’t reheat well,” she tells him.
“I’m the head of this household,” he says. “Dinner should be ready when I’m ready.”
“The Pollacks have a microwave,” Sean says.
“They give you radiation poisoning,” Doris says, although she yearns for one. But it’s better to have a reason for not wanting the thing you want than to admit to yourself that you want something you can never have.
Over the next two hours, Tim and the boys undo much of what she has accomplished today, and Doris is reminded why she stopped trying to stay on top of the housework. Quietly, trying not to draw too much attention to her actions, she goes behind them and puts the house back to rights. She is dying to set the dining room table, to see if it will measure up to the picture in her mind. Her anticipation over the scene is almost as great as the event. Should she find flowers? It’s late in the season, there are only mums and asters, and they have never been to her liking.
“Do you smell that?” Tim asks, coming into the kitchen from the living room, where he has been watching
“What?”
“I don’t know. Something bad.”
She is almost startled into saying,
“I swear, if that pipe has backed up again, I will”-Tim throws open the door to the basement and clatters down the stairs. “What the fuck are you doing?”
The next thing Doris hears is Go-Go crying-horrible, unnatural cries-as his father yells and, judging from the scuffling sounds, tries to land blows on him.
“Tim!”
He has Go-Go by the wrist, his belt half out of the loops.
“The little shit has shit himself. He was down here trying to rinse his underwear out in the laundry sink, but he left all his turds behind.” He grabs Go-Go by the shoulders, shaking him. “What’s wrong with you? What kind of ten-year-old boy craps himself? How were you going to get all that shit out of the sink?”
“I let him have a hamburger at the drugstore today,” Doris lies, pushing between them, letting Go-Go grab her hips, even though his hands have traces of his own feces. “That probably gave him diarrhea. And he was trying to do the right thing by cleaning up after himself. He just didn’t think about where… things would go if he used the laundry tub. It’s not like he ever rinsed out a diaper, or saw someone do it.”
“He’s stupid,” Tim rails. “Stupid, stupid, stupid.”
“No, he’s not. Stop saying that.”
Another mess to clean up, then herself to clean up. It is late when she finishes, but she stops by Go-Go’s room. He is lying in the dark, staring at the ceiling. He doesn’t sleep well, her baby boy. He never has, though.
“I did have diarrhea,” he says, his eyes fixed on the ceiling. “I mean, I didn’t have a drugstore hamburger, but I did have diarrhea.”
“Oh, Go-Go. What’s wrong?”
“Nothing. I thought it was going to be a fart. I didn’t know.”
“Has it happened before?”
His silence tells her everything.
“At school, Go-Go? Has it happened at school?”
He turns toward the wall.
Doris knows now why Father Andrew is coming to tea. Her son has crapped himself at school. And now at home, within feet of a toilet. She isn’t sure why this is so much more shameful than wetting the bed, yet it is. Something is terribly wrong with Go-Go. Is he crazy? Are all the little things that once made them laugh-the energy, the dancing-were those things they should have been worried about?
She sits on her son’s bed and places a hand on his back. He’s a strong boy, although short for his age, strength and energy almost pulsing through his body. He is, as always, warm to the touch, a furnace. She wants to remember the little boy that was put in her arms ten plus years ago, nine pounds, the biggest of her children, red-