excellent, dripping with ketchup and smothered with grilled onions.
“Okay, enough,” my mom said after a while. “Quentin, how was your day?”
“Fine,” I said. “Getting ready for finals, I guess.”
“I can’t believe this is your last week of classes,” Dad said. “It really does
just seem like yesterday . . .”
“It does,” Mom said. A voice in my head was like: WARNING NOSTALGIA
ALERT WARNING WARNING WARNING. Great people, my parents, but
prone to bouts of crippling sentimentality.
“We’re just very proud of you,” she said. “But, God, we’ll miss you next
fall.”
“Yeah, well, don’t speak too soon. I could still fail English.”
My
mom laughed, and then said, “Oh, guess who I saw at the YMCA
yesterday? Betty Parson. She said Chuck was going to the University of Georgia
next fall. I was pleased for him; he’s always struggled.”
“He’s an asshole,” I said.
“Well,” my dad said, “he was a bully. And his behavior was deplorable.”
This was typical of my parents: in their minds, no one was just an asshole. There
was always something wrong with people other than just sucking: they had
socialization disorders, or borderline
personality syndrome, or whatever.
My mom picked up the thread. “But Chuck has learning difficulties. He has
all kinds of problems—just like anyone. I know it’s impossible for you to see
peers this way, but when you’re older, you start to see them—the bad kids and
the good kids and all kids—as people. They’re just people, who deserve to be
cared for. Varying degrees of sick, varying degrees of neurotic, varying degrees
of self-actualized. But you know,
I always liked Betty, and I always had hopes
for Chuck. So it’s good that he’s going to college, don’t you think?”
“Honestly, Mom, I don’t really care about him one way or another.” But I did
think, if everyone is such a person, how come Mom and Dad still hated all the
politicians in Israel and Palestine? They didn’t talk about
them like they were
people.
My dad finished chewing something and then put his fork down and looked
at me. “The longer I do my job,” he said, “the more
I realize that humans lack
good mirrors. It’s so hard for anyone to show us how we look, and so hard for us
to show anyone how we feel.”
“That is really lovely,” my mom said. I liked that they liked each other. “But
isn’t it also that on some fundamental level we find it difficult to understand that
other people are human beings in the same way that we are? We idealize them as
gods or dismiss them as animals.”
“True. Consciousness makes for poor windows, too. I don’t think I’d ever
thought about it quite that way.”
I was sitting back. I was listening. And I was hearing something about her
and about windows and mirrors. Chuck Parson was a person. Like me. Margo
Roth Spiegelman was a person, too. And I had never quite thought of her that
way, not really; it was a failure of all my previous imaginings. All along—not
only
since she left, but for a decade before—I had been imagining her without
listening, without knowing that she made as poor a window as I did. And so I
could not imagine her as a person who could feel fear, who could feel isolated in
a roomful of people, who could be shy about her record collection because it was
too personal to share. Someone who might read travel books to escape having to
live in the town that so many people escape to. Someone who—because no one
thought she was a person—had no one to really talk to.
And all at once I knew how Margo Roth Spiegelman felt when she wasn’t
being Margo Roth Spiegelman: she felt empty. She felt the unscaleable wall
surrounding her. I thought of her asleep on the carpet with only that jagged sliver
of sky above her. Maybe Margo felt comfortable there
because Margo the person
lived like that all the time: in an abandoned room with blocked-out windows, the
only light pouring in through holes in the roof.
Yes. The fundamental mistake I
had always made—and that she had, in fairness, always led me to make—was
this: Margo was not a miracle. She was not an adventure. She was not a fine and
precious thing. She was a girl.