Mickelsson's Ghosts John Gardner (read 50 shades of grey .TXT) đ
- Author: John Gardner
Book online «Mickelsson's Ghosts John Gardner (read 50 shades of grey .TXT) đ». Author John Gardner
âIs she happier without you?â Jessica asked.
âOn the whole,â he said, then quickly raised his hand, palm out. âNo pun intended! Purest accident!â
She shook her head, excusing it. âAs my aunt Rose used to say, âGod spare us.â â She tried to hide a yawn.
He put his hand back down onto Jessicaâs foot. âAnyway, yes, sheâs happier. I hope. Fine young buck to keep her companyâanother âtheater person.â I pay them handsomely to stay out of my hair.â
She studied his eyes, suspicious. âHow handsomely?â
âThousand a month,â he said. âMost months.â
âThatâs crazy!â
He shrugged. âItâs all I can afford.â
A tuck came to the corner of her mouth, making the dimple show, and after sheâd thought for a moment, she said, âYouâre establishing a precedent, you know. When you get into court youâll be stuck with it.â
He made his face worried. âYou think I shouldâve hit her with a hammer?â
She shook her head slowly and looked up at where the wall met the ceiling. âI think you should try to be more serious about all this.â
He squeezed her foot, then playfully ran his fingertips halfway to her knee. âFirst thing tomorrow,â he said. It came to him, all at once, that the room had grown light. The birds were singing like crazy. âGee-whillikins,â he said, looking at his wristwatch, âitâs time for you to get up and jog!â
She laughed. âNo chance! You want to sleep in the guest room?â
He checked her eyes. âThereâs only one bed in the world I want to sleep in right now,â he said; when her face showed panic, he added quickly, though it was not what heâd meant to sayâand perhaps, he would think later, not even what Jessica had wanted him to sayââand thatâs at my apartment.â
âYou wonât fall asleep driving there?â She frowned, eyelids partly lowered.
âHow far is it? Half a mile?â He shrugged and leaned forward as if to get up, but he didnât yet.
âYouâve been drinking, though. Are you sure youâre awake enough?â
âIâm terrific,â he said. âListen, donât see me to the door. Stay right here. Close your eyes. You need a blanket?â
She shook her head.
Now at last, reluctantly, he did rise. He moved toward the head of the couch, where he could look down at her face. Her pallor startled him. What if his keeping her up all night made her ill? Jews were a sickly people. Brilliant and good-hearted, but prone to allergies and infirmities. He pointed at the bridge of her nose as if his hand were a gun. âClose your eyes,â he said. âIâll let myself out. The door locks automatically, doesnât it?â
âMmm,â she said. âTo tell the truth, I really am fading.â
âGood. Sleep, then. Youâre sure I canât get you a blanket?â
She moved her head, just a little, from side to side on the couch cushion.
âYou havenât closed your eyes,â he said.
She smiled. Her eyelids fluttered, then lowered. She seemed asleep already.
He bent down, thinking of kissing her on the lips, then kissed her on the forehead. As he straightened up, he saw a shine on her cheekâthe path of a tear. He stood as if frozen in a slight bow, startled, his hands clasped in front of him. After a moment he took his pipe from the coffeetable and hung it between his teeth, then crossed silently to the door and let himself out.
Mickelsson sighed, coming out of his dreams and memories, finding himself in Binghamton already, without any sense of how heâd gotten there. The shadow of the Jeep on the road beside him darted along too quickly, like something overtaking him. Traffic churned around himâpickup trucks, buses, hurrying carsâdemanding his full attention as no doubt it had done for miles now, though his mind had been elsewhere. He hunted for his pipe, stuck it in his mouth mechanically, eyes on the road, and lit it. Monday. Plato and Aristotle at ten. Ruefully, he shook his head.
Now the campus opened out in front of him, an immense factory-complex of aluminum and brick. Possibly the ugliest campus in America. So he had thought when heâd first arrived, shuddering at his fall. He could not say that, with increasing familiarity, the campus had become more pleasing to the eye. But his heart calmed at sight of the place, exactly asâafter his hours of classes and conferencesâhis heart would calm, late tonight, when he burrowed into the darkness of the Endless Mountains.
Plato and Aristotle at ten. A course for beginners.
Taught by Peter J. Mickelsson.
Incredible.
6
âBut what was âPlato saying,â really?â he inquired of his class, or rather, looking over them, one eyebrow lifted, inquired ironically of the empty blackboard at the back of the room.
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