things, maybe test blood for diseases or viruses or something, but do it really well, be the one doctor all the parents would trust. âLittle Aliceâs blood must go to Dr. Sandy,â theyâd say.â She giggled; she made circles with a strand of hair. In the theater Winkler had to sit on his hands to keep them from touching her. âOr no,â sheâd say, âno, I want to be a bush pilot. I could get one of those passbook accounts of Hermanâs and finally save enough to buy a used plane, a good two-seater.Iâd get lessons. Iâd look into the engine and know every part, the valves and switches and whatever, and be able to say, âThis plane has flown a lot but she sure is a good one.ââ
Her eyelids fluttered, then steadied. Across town her husband was crouched in the net, watching a puck slide across the blue line.
âOr,â she said, âa sculptor. Thatâs it. I could be a metal sculptor. I could make those big, strange-looking iron things they put in front of office buildings to rust. The ones the birds stand on and everybody looks at and says, âWhat do you think thatâs supposed to be?ââ
âYou could,â he said.
âI could.â
Every night nowâit was January and dark by 4Â P.M . âhe pulled on his big parka and drew the hood tight and drove past her house. Heâd start at the end of the block, then troll back up, the hedges coming up on his left, the curb-parked cars with their hoods ajar to allow extension cords into the frost plugs, the Newport slowing until heâd come to a stop alongside their driveway.
By nine-thirty each night, her lights began to go off: first in the windows at the far right, then the room next to it, then the lamp behind the curtains to the left, at ten oâclock sharp. Heâd imagine her passage through the dark rooms, following her with his eyes, down the hall, past the bathroom, into what must have been the bedroom, where sheâd climb into bed with him. At last only the tall backyard light would glow, white tinged with blue, all the parked cars drawing energy from the houses around them, the plugs clicking on and off, and above the neighborhood the air would grow so cold it seemed to glitter and flexâas if it were solidifyingâand heâd get the feeling that someone could reach down and shatter the whole scene.
Only with great effort could he get his foot to move to the accelerator. Heâd drive to the end of the block, turn up the heater, roll alone through the frozen darkness across town.
âItâs not that heâs awful or anything,â Sandy whispered once, in the middle of Loganâs Run. âI mean, heâs nice. Heâs good. He loves me. I can do pretty much whatever I want. Itâs just sometimes I look into the kitchen cupboards, or at his suits in the closet, and think: This is it?â
Winkler blinked. It was the most sheâd said during a movie.
âI feel like Iâve been turned inside out is all. Like Iâve got huge manacles on my arms. Lookââshe grabbed her forearm and raised itââI can hardly lift them theyâre so heavy. But other times I get to feeling so light itâs as if Iâll float to the ceiling and get trapped up there like a balloon.â
The darkness of the movie theater was all around them. On-screen a robot showed off some people frozen in ice. In the ceiling the little bulbs that were supposed to be stars burned in their little niches.
Sandy whispered: âI get happy sometimes for the younger gals at work, when they find love, after all that stumbling around, when theyâve found their guy and get to talking about weddings during break, then babies, and I can see them outside smoking and staring out at the traffic, and I know theyâre probably not a hundred percent happy. Not all-the-way happy. Maybe seventy percent happy. But theyâre
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington