A Little Life: A Novel - A Little Life: a novel Part 19
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A Little Life: a novel Part 19

"That's true," he said, reminding himself that this was not something for which he had to apologize: he hadn't entrapped Caleb; he hadn't intended to deceive him. He took a breath and tried to sound light, mildly curious. "Would you not have wanted to go out with me if you'd known?"

"I don't know," Caleb said, after a silence. "I don't know." He had wanted to vanish, then, to close his eyes and reel back time, back to before he had ever met Caleb. He would have turned down Rhodes's invitation; he would have kept living his little life; he would have never known the difference.

But as much as Caleb hates his walk, he loathes his wheelchair. The first time Caleb had come over in daylight, he had given him a tour of the apartment. He was proud of the apartment, and every day he was grateful to be in it, and disbelieving that it was his. Malcolm had kept Willem's suite-as they called it-where it had been, but had enlarged it and added an office at its northern edge, close to the elevator. And then there was the long open space, with a piano, and a living-room area facing south, and a table that Malcolm had designed on the northern side, the side without windows, and behind it, a bookcase that covered the entire wall until the kitchen, hung with art by his friends, and friends of friends, and other pieces that he had bought over the years. The whole eastern end of the apartment was his: you crossed from the bedroom, on the north side, through the closet and into the bathroom, which had windows that looked east and south. Although he mostly kept the shades in the apartment lowered, you could open them all at once and the space would feel like a rectangle of pure light, the veil between you and the outside world mesmerizingly thin. He often feels as if the apartment is a falsehood: it suggests that the person within it is someone open, and vital, and generous with his answers, and he of course is not that person. Lispenard Street, with its half-obscured alcoves and dark warrens and walls that had been painted over so many times that you could feel ridges and blisters where moths and bugs had been entombed in its layers, was a much more accurate reflection of who he is.

For Caleb's visit, he had let the place shimmer with sunlight, and he could tell Caleb was impressed. They walked slowly through it, Caleb looking at the art and asking about different pieces: where he had gotten them, who had made them, noting the ones he recognized.

And then they came to the bedroom, and he was showing Caleb the piece at the far end of the room-a painting of Willem in the makeup chair he had bought from "Seconds, Minutes, Hours, Days"-when Caleb asked, "Whose wheelchair is that?"

He looked where Caleb was looking. "Mine," he said, after a pause.

"But why?" Caleb had asked him, looking confused. "You can walk."

He didn't know what to say. "Sometimes I need it," he said, finally. "Rarely. I don't use it that often."

"Good," said Caleb. "See that you don't."

He was startled. Was this an expression of concern, or was it a threat? But before he could figure out what he should feel, or what he should answer, Caleb had turned, and was heading into his closet, and he followed him, continuing his tour.

A month after that, he had met Caleb late one night outside his office in the far western borderland of the Meatpacking District. Caleb too worked long hours; it was early July and Rothko would present their spring line in eight weeks. He had driven to work that day, but it was a dry night, and so he got out of the car and sat in his chair under a streetlamp until Caleb came down, talking to someone else. He knew Caleb had seen him-he had raised his hand in his direction and Caleb had given him a barely perceptible nod: neither of them were demonstrative people-and watched Caleb until he finished his conversation and the other man had begun walking east.

"Hi," he said, as Caleb came over to him.

"Why are you in your wheelchair?" Caleb demanded.

For a moment, he couldn't speak, and when he did, he stammered. "I had to use it today," he finally said.

Caleb sighed, and rubbed at his eyes. "I thought you didn't use it."

"I don't," he said, so ashamed that he could feel himself start to sweat. "Not really. I only use it when I absolutely have to."

Caleb nodded, but continued pinching the bridge of his nose. He wouldn't look at him. "Look," he said at last, "I don't think we should have dinner after all. You're obviously not feeling well, and I'm tired. I've got to get some sleep."

"Oh," he said, dismayed. "That's all right. I understand."

"Okay, good," said Caleb. "I'll call you later." He watched Caleb move down the street with his long strides until he disappeared around the corner, and then had gotten into his car and driven home and cut himself until he was bleeding so much that he couldn't grip the razor properly.

The next day was Friday, and he didn't hear from Caleb at all. Well, he thought. That's that. And it was fine: Caleb didn't like the fact that he was in a wheelchair. Neither did he. He couldn't resent Caleb for not being able to accept what he himself couldn't accept.

But then, on Saturday morning, Caleb called just as he was coming back upstairs from the pool. "I'm sorry about Thursday night," Caleb said. "I know it must seem heartless and bizarre to you, this-aversion I have to your wheelchair."

He sat down in one of the chairs around the dining-room table. "It doesn't seem bizarre at all," he said.

"I told you my parents were sick for much of my adult life," Caleb said. "My father had multiple sclerosis, and my mother-no one knew what she had. She got sick when I was in college and never got better. She had face pains, headaches: she was in a sort of constant low-grade discomfort, and although I don't doubt it was real, what bothered me so much is that she never seemed to want to try to get better. She just gave up, as did he. Everywhere you looked there was evidence of their surrender to illness: first canes, then walkers, then wheelchairs, then scooters, and vials of pills and tissues and the perpetual scent of pain creams and gels and who knows what else."

He stopped. "I want to keep seeing you," he said, at last. "But-but I can't be around these accessories to weakness, to disease. I just can't. I hate it. It embarrasses me. It makes me feel-not depressed, but furious, like I need to fight against it." He paused again. "I just didn't know that's who you were when I met you," he said at last. "I thought I could be okay with it. But I'm not sure I can. Can you understand that?"

He swallowed; he wanted to cry. But he could understand it; he felt exactly as Caleb did. "I can," he said.

And yet improbably, they had continued after all. He is astonished, still, by the speed and thoroughness with which Caleb insinuated himself into his life. It was like something out of a fairy tale: a woman living on the edge of a dark forest hears a knock and opens the door of her cottage. And although it is just for a moment, and although she sees no one, in those seconds, dozens of demons and wraiths have slipped past her and into her house, and she will never be able to rid herself of them, ever. Sometimes this was how it felt. Was this the way it was for other people? He doesn't know; he is too afraid to ask. He finds himself replaying old conversations he has had or overheard with people talking about their relationships, trying to gauge the normalcy of his against theirs, looking for clues about how he should conduct himself.

And then there is the sex, which is worse than he had imagined: he had forgotten just how painful it was, how debasing, how repulsive, how much he disliked it. He hates the postures, the positions it demands, each of them degrading because they leave him so helpless and weak; he hates the tastes of it and the smells of it. But mostly, he hates the sounds of it: the meaty smack of flesh hitting flesh, the wounded-animal moans and grunts, the things said to him that were perhaps meant to be arousing but he can only interpret as diminishing. Part of him, he realizes, had always thought it would be better as an adult, as if somehow the mere fact of age would transform the experience into something glorious and enjoyable. In college, in his twenties, in his thirties, he would listen to people talk about it with such pleasure, such delight, and he would think: That's what you're so excited about? Really? That's not how I remember it at all. And yet he cannot be the one who's correct, and everyone else-millennia of people-wrong. So clearly there is something he doesn't understand about sex. Clearly he is doing something incorrectly.

That first night they had come upstairs, he had known what Caleb had expected. "We have to go slowly," he told him. "It's been a long time."

Caleb looked at him in the dark; he hadn't turned on the light. "How long?" he asked.

"Long," was all he could say.

And for a while, Caleb was patient. But then he wasn't. There came a night in which Caleb tried to remove his clothes, and he had pulled out of his grasp. "I can't," he said. "Caleb-I can't. I don't want you to see what I look like." It had taken everything he had to say this, and he was so scared he was cold.

"Why?" Caleb had asked.

"I have scars," he said. "On my back and legs, and on my arms. They're bad; I don't want you to see them."

He hadn't known, really, what Caleb would say. Would he say: I'm sure they're not so bad? And then would he have to take his clothes off after all? Or would he say: Let's see, and then he would take his clothes off, and Caleb would get up and leave? He saw Caleb hesitate.

"You won't like them," he added. "They're disgusting."

And that had seemed to decide something for Caleb. "Well," he said, "I don't need to see all of your body, right? Just the relevant parts." And for that night, he had lain there, half dressed and half not, waiting for it to be over and more humiliated than if Caleb had demanded he take his clothes off after all.

But despite these disappointments, things have also not been horrible with Caleb, either. He likes Caleb's slow, thoughtful way of speaking, the way he talks about the designers he's worked with, his understanding of color and his appreciation of art. He likes that he can discuss his work-about Malpractice and Bastard-and that Caleb will not only understand the challenges his cases present for him but will find them interesting as well. He likes how closely Caleb listens to his stories, and how his questions show how closely he's been paying attention. He likes how Caleb admires Willem's and Richard's and Malcolm's work, and lets him talk about them as much as he wants. He likes how, when he is leaving, Caleb will put his hands on either side of his face and hold them there for a moment in a sort of silent blessing. He likes Caleb's solidity, his physical strength: he likes watching him move, likes how, like Willem, he is so easy in his own body. He likes how Caleb will sometimes in sleep sling an arm possessively across his chest. He likes waking with Caleb next to him. He likes how Caleb is slightly strange, how he carries a faint threat of danger: he is different from the people he has sought out his entire adult life, people he has determined will never hurt him, people defined by their kindnesses. When he is with Caleb, he feels simultaneously more and less human.

The first time Caleb hit him, he was both surprised and not. This was at the end of July, and he had gone over to Caleb's at midnight, after leaving the office. He had used his wheelchair that day-lately, something had been going wrong with his feet; he didn't know what it was, but he could barely feel them, and had the dislocating sense that he would topple over if he tried to walk-but at Caleb's, he had left the chair in the car and had instead walked very slowly to the front door, lifting each foot unnaturally high as he went so he wouldn't trip.

He knew from the moment he entered the apartment that he shouldn't have come-he could see that Caleb was in a terrible mood and could feel how the very air was hot and stagnant with his anger. Caleb had finally moved into a building in the Flower District, but he hadn't unpacked much, and he was edgy and tense, his teeth squeaking against themselves as he tightened his jaw. But he had brought food, and he moved his way slowly over to the counter to set it down, talking brightly to try to distract Caleb from his gait, trying, desperately, to make things better.

"Why are you walking like that?" Caleb interrupted him.

He hated admitting to Caleb that something else was wrong with him; he couldn't bring himself to do it once again. "Am I walking strangely?" he asked.

"Yeah-you look like Frankenstein's monster."

"I'm sorry," he said. Leave, said the voice inside him. Leave now. "I wasn't aware of it."

"Well, stop it. It looks ridiculous."

"All right," he said, quietly, and spooned some curry into a bowl for Caleb. "Here," he said, but as he was heading toward Caleb, trying to walk normally, he tripped, his right foot over his left, and dropped the bowl, the green curry splattering against the carpet.

Later, he will remember how Caleb didn't say anything, just whirled around and struck him with the back of his hand, and he had fallen back, his head bouncing against the carpeted floor. "Just get out of here, Jude," he heard Caleb say, not even yelling, even before his vision returned. "Get out; I can't look at you right now." And so he had, bringing himself to his feet and walking his ridiculous monster's walk out of the apartment, leaving Caleb to clean up the mess he had made.

The next day his face began to turn colors, the area around his left eye shading into improbably lovely tones: violets and ambers and bottle greens. By the end of the week, when he went uptown for his appointment with Andy, his cheek was the color of moss, and his eye was swollen nearly shut, the upper lid a puffed, tender, shiny red.

"Jesus Christ, Jude," said Andy, when he saw him. "What the fuck happened to you?"

"Wheelchair tennis," he said, and even grinned, a grin he had practiced in the mirror the night before, his cheek twitching with pain. He had researched everything: where the matches were played, and how frequently, and how many people were in the club. He had made up a story, recited it to himself and to people at the office until it sounded natural, even comic: a forehand from the opposing player, who had played in college, he not turning quickly enough, the thwack the ball had made when it hit his face.

He told all this to Andy as Andy listened, shaking his head. "Well," he said. "I'm glad you're trying something new. But Christ, Jude. Is this such a good idea?"

"You're the one who's always telling me to stay off my feet," he reminded Andy.

"I know, I know," said Andy. "But you have the pool; isn't that enough? And at any rate, you should've come to me after this happened."

"It's just a bruise, Andy," he said.

"It's a pretty fucking bad bruise, Jude. I mean, Jesus."

"Well, anyway," he said, trying to sound unconcerned, even a little defiant. "I need to talk to you about my feet."

"Tell me."

"It's such a strange sensation; they feel like they're encased in cement coffins. I can't feel where they are in space-I can't control them. I lift one leg up and when I put it back down, I can feel in my calf that I've placed the foot, but I can't feel it in the foot itself."

"Oh, Jude," Andy said. "It's a sign of nerve damage." He sighed. "The good news, besides the fact that you've been spared it all this time, is that it's not going to be a permanent condition. The bad news is that I can't tell you when it'll end, or when it might start again. And the other bad news is that the only thing we can do-besides wait-is treat it with pain medication, which I know you won't take." He paused. "Jude, I know you don't like the way they make you feel," Andy said, "but there are some better ones on the market now than when you were twenty, or even thirty. Do you want to try? At least let me give you something mild for your face: Isn't it killing you?"

"It's not so bad," he lied. But he did accept a prescription from Andy in the end.

"And stay off your feet," Andy said, after he had examined his face. "And stay off the courts, too, for god's sake." And, as he was leaving, "And don't think we're not going to discuss your cutting!" because he was cutting himself more since he had begun seeing Caleb.

Back on Greene Street, he parked in the short driveway preceding the building's garage and was fitting his key into the front door when he heard someone call his name, and then saw Caleb climbing out of his car. He was in his wheelchair, and he tried to get inside quickly. But Caleb was faster than he, and grabbed the door as it was closing, and then the two of them were in the lobby again, alone.

"You shouldn't be here," he said to Caleb, at whom he couldn't look.

"Jude, listen," Caleb said. "I'm so sorry. I really am. I was just-it's been a terrible time at work, everything's such shit there-I'd have come over earlier this week, but it's been so bad that I couldn't even get away-and I completely took it out on you. I'm really sorry." He crouched beside him. "Jude. Look at me." He sighed. "I'm so sorry." He took his face in his hands and turned it toward him. "Your poor face," he said quietly.

He still can't quite understand why he let Caleb come up that night. If he is to admit it to himself, he feels there was something inevitable, even, in a small way, a relief, about Caleb's hitting him: all along, he had been waiting for some sort of punishment for his arrogance, for thinking he could have what everyone else has, and here-at last-it was. This is what you get, said the voice inside his head. This is what you get for pretending to be someone you know you're not, for thinking you're as good as other people. He remembers how JB had been so terrified of Jackson, and how he had understood his fear, how he had understood how you could get trapped by another human being, how what seemed so easy-the act of walking away from them-could feel so difficult. He feels about Caleb the way he once felt about Brother Luke: someone in whom he had, rashly, entrusted himself, someone in whom he had placed such hopes, someone he hoped could save him. But even when it became clear that they would not, even when his hopes turned rancid, he was unable to disentangle himself from them, he was unable to leave. There is a sort of symmetry to his pairing with Caleb that makes sense: they are the damaged and the damager, the sliding heap of garbage and the jackal sniffing through it. They exist only to themselves-he has met no one in Caleb's life, and he has not introduced Caleb to anyone in his. They both know that something about what they are doing is shameful. They are bound to each other by their mutual disgust and discomfort: Caleb tolerates his body, and he tolerates Caleb's revulsion.

He has always known that if he wanted to be with someone, he would have to make an exchange. And Caleb, he knows, is the best he will ever be able to find. At least Caleb isn't misshapen, isn't a sadist. Nothing being done to him now is something that hasn't been done to him before-he reminds himself of this again and again.

One weekend at the end of September, he drives out to Caleb's friend's house in Bridgehampton, which Caleb is now occupying until early October. Rothko's presentation went well, and Caleb has been more relaxed, affectionate, even. He has only hit him once more, a punch to the sternum that sent him skidding across the floor, but had apologized directly afterward. But other than that, things have been unremarkable: Caleb spends Wednesday and Thursday nights at Greene Street and then drives out to the beach on Fridays. He goes to the office early and stays late. After his success with Malpractice and Bastard, he had thought he might have a respite, even a short one, but he hasn't-a new client, an investment firm being investigated for securities fraud, has come in, and even now, he feels guilty about skipping a Saturday at work.

His guilt aside, that Saturday is perfect, and they spend most of the day outdoors, both of them working. In the evening, Caleb grills them steaks. As he does, he sings, and he stops working to listen to him, and knows that they are both happy, and that for a moment, all of their ambivalence about each other is dust, something impermanent and weightless. That night, they go to bed early, and Caleb doesn't make him have sex, and he sleeps deeply, better than he has in weeks.

But the next morning, he can tell even before he is fully conscious that the pain in his feet is back. It had vanished, completely and unpredictably, two weeks ago, but now it's returned, and as he stands, he can also tell it's gotten worse: it is as if his legs end at his ankles, and his feet are simultaneously inanimate and vividly painful. To walk, he must look down at them; he needs visual confirmation that he is lifting one, and visual confirmation that he is placing it down again.

He takes ten steps, but each one takes a greater and greater effort-the movement is so difficult, takes so much mental energy, that he is nauseated, and sits down again on the edge of the bed. Don't let Caleb see you like this, he warns himself, before remembering: Caleb is out running, as he does every morning. He is alone in the house.

He has some time, then. He drags himself to the bathroom on his arms and into the shower. He thinks of the spare wheelchair in his car. Surely Caleb will have no objections to him getting it, especially if he can present himself as basically healthy, and this as just a small setback, a day-long inconvenience. He was planning on driving back to the city very early the next morning, but he could leave earlier if he needs to, although he would rather not-yesterday had been so nice. Maybe today can be as well.

He is dressed and waiting on the sofa in the living room, pretending to read a brief, when Caleb returns. He can't tell what kind of mood he's in, but he's generally mild after his runs, even indulgent.

"I sliced some of the leftover steak," he tells him. "Do you want me to make you eggs?"

"No, I can do it," Caleb says.

"How was your run?"

"Good. Great."

"Caleb," he says, trying to keep his tone light, "listen-I've been having this problem with my feet; it's just some side effects from nerve damage that comes and goes, but it makes it really difficult for me to walk. Do you mind if I get the wheelchair from my car?"

Caleb doesn't say anything for a minute, just finishes drinking his bottle of water. "You can still walk, though, right?"

He forces himself to look back at Caleb. "Well-technically, yes. But-"

"Jude," says Caleb, "I know your doctor probably disagrees, but I have to say I think there's something a little-weak, I guess, about your always going to the easiest solution. I think you have to just endure some things, you know? This is what I meant with my parents: it was always such a succumbing to their every pain, their every twinge.

"So I think you should tough it out. I think if you can walk, you should. I just don't think you should get into this habit of babying yourself when you're capable of doing better."

"Oh," he says. "Right. I understand." He feels a profound shame, as if he has just asked for something filthy and illicit.

"I'm going to shower," says Caleb, after a silence, and leaves.

For the rest of the day, he tries to move very little, and Caleb, as if not wanting to find reason to get angry with him, doesn't ask him to do anything. Caleb makes lunch, which they both eat on the sofa, both working on their computers. The kitchen and living room are one large sunlit space, with full-length windows that open onto the lawn overlooking the beach, and when Caleb is in the kitchen making dinner, he takes advantage of his turned back to inch, wormlike, to the hallway bathroom. He wants to go to the bedroom to get more aspirin out of his bag, but it's too far, and he instead waits in the doorway on his knees until Caleb turns toward the stove again before crawling back to the sofa, where he has spent the entire day.

"Dinner," Caleb announces, and he takes a breath and brings himself to his feet, which are cinder blocks, they are so heavy and clunky, and, watching them, begins to make his way to the table. It feels like it takes minutes, hours, to walk to his chair, and at one point he looks up and sees Caleb, his jaw moving, watching him with what looks like hate.

"Hurry up," Caleb says.

They eat in silence. He can barely stand it. The scrape of the knife against the plate: unbearable. The crunch of Caleb biting down, unnecessarily hard, on a green bean: unbearable. The feel of food in his mouth, all of it becoming a fleshy nameless beast: unbearable.

"Caleb," he begins, very quietly, but Caleb doesn't answer him, just pushes back his chair and stands and goes to the sink.

"Bring me your plate," Caleb says, and then watches him. He stands, slowly, and begins his trek to the sink, eyeing each footfall before he begins a new step.

He will wonder, later, if he forced the moment, if he could have in fact made the twenty steps without falling had he just concentrated harder. But that isn't what happens. He moves his right foot just half a second before his left one has landed, and he falls, and the plate falls before him, the china shattering on the floor. And then, moving as swiftly as if he'd anticipated it, there is Caleb, yanking him up by his hair and punching him in the face with his fist, so hard that he is airborne, and when he lands, he does so against the table, knocking the base of his skull against its edge. His fall makes the bottle of wine jump off the surface, the liquid glugging onto the floor, and Caleb makes a roar, and snatches at the bottle by its throat and hits him on the back of his neck with it.

"Caleb," he gasps, "please, please." He was never one to beg for mercy, not even as a child, but he has become that person, somehow. When he was a child, his life meant little to him; he wishes, now, that that were still true. "Please," he says. "Caleb, please forgive me-I'm sorry, I'm sorry."

But Caleb, he knows, is no longer human. He is a wolf, he is a coyote. He is muscle and rage. And he is nothing to Caleb, he is prey, he is disposable. He is being dragged to the edge of the sofa, he knows what will happen next. But he continues to ask, anyway. "Please, Caleb," he says. "Please don't. Caleb, please."

When he regains consciousness, he is on the floor near the back of the sofa, and the house is silent. "Hello?" he calls, hating the quaver in his voice, but he doesn't hear anything. He doesn't need to-he knows, somehow, that he is alone.

He sits up. He pulls up his underwear and pants and flexes his fingers, his hands, brings his knees to his chest and back down again, moves his shoulders back and forward, turns his neck from left to right. There is something sticky on the back of his neck, but when he examines it, he's relieved to see it's not blood but wine. Everything hurts, but nothing is broken.

He crawls to the bedroom. He quickly cleans himself off in the bathroom and gathers his things and puts them in his bag. He scuttles to the door. For an instant he is afraid that his car will have disappeared, and he will be stranded, but it is there, next to Caleb's, waiting for him. He checks his watch: it is midnight.

He moves his way across the lawn on his hands and knees, his bag slung painfully over one shoulder, the two hundred feet between the door and the car transforming themselves into miles. He wants to stop, he is so tired, but he knows he must not.

In the car, he doesn't look at his reflection in the mirror; he starts the engine and drives away. But about half an hour later, once he knows he is far enough from the house to be safe, he begins to shake, so badly that the car swerves beneath him, and he pulls off the road to wait, leaning his forehead against the steering wheel.

He waits for ten minutes, twenty. And then he turns, although the very movement is a punishment, and finds his phone in his bag. He dials Willem's number and waits.

"Jude!" says Willem, sounding surprised. "I was just going to call you."

"Hi, Willem," he says, and hopes his voice sounds normal. "I guess I read your thoughts."

They talk for a few minutes, and then Willem asks, "Are you okay?"