eBook - ePub
Telling Time
About this book
As a college president, Thomas Westerly, 72, was a paragon of virtue, a crusader for everything from civil rights to ecology. Now, as he lies dying surrounded by his children, he asks them to go through his papers and destroy anything deemed embarrassing. The children are stunned by the request. But as they leaf through his diaries and records, they discover scandals, neuroses and deviance, leaving them to ask just how well we know the people that we love...
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Yes, you can access Telling Time by Austin Wright in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literature General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
PART ONE
THURSDAY
LUCY WESTERLY: To George Westerly
George? What is this thing, an answering machine? I hear your voice, donāt you hear me? Should I pretend you do? I canāt talk to someone who isnāt there.
If I try, how much time do I have? You want me to think up a message before the machine cuts me off, a message? I have no message, what I have is news, George. Itās bad news, but youāll cut me off before I can tell you.
What good is an answering machine that doesnāt answer? Itās a wonderful invention, so modern and efficient, Iām proud of you, but I canāt speak to it. Call your brothers or sisters, theyāll tell you my news. Or me. You could call me. Yes, itās so long since Iāve heard from you. I donāt even know where you are, except you have an answering machine, and that was your sweet deaf voice not answering.
What do I say now? Stop? Roger? Over and out? Thank you and good night? Do you read me?
RUPERT NEWTON: Item in the Island News
A teller at the Island National Bank today took his own family hostage in his home, confined with a gun. Sam J. Truro, 28, well known to customers of the bank, where he has been employed for five years, retreated into his house at 25 Shoal Point Drive, and announced he was holding his wife, Georgette, 26, and children, Dinah, 7, and Roger, 5, prisoners. The nature of his demands was not known.
Thomas Westerly, 72, of Peach Street, was shot when he tried to intervene. According to witnesses, Westerly approached the house calling upon Truro to give himself up. He was shot on the front walk after ignoring several warnings from Truro, who was standing in the upper window with a rifle. Westerly was taken to Island Center Hospital, where he was described last night as resting comfortably. The nature of his injury was not disclosed.
Police have ringed the Truro house in a standoff. The siege began this morning when Truro called Edward Nelson, the Town Clerk, to state that he was holding his family hostage and would kill them if any attempt were made to rescue them. Asked if he intended to negotiate with Truro, Sheriff Jack Haines said, āWeāre waiting for him to make demands. Then weāll see.ā He called it āa ticklish situation.ā
Westerly, the man who was wounded, is former President of River City University, Ohio, and a controversial figure in the academic world. He moved to this Island in 1988.
Neighbors called Truro a quiet man, a loner, a good neighbor. His fellow employees at the bank said he was moody and variable. Several customers at the bank described him as helpful and friendly. Others did not remember him.
ANN REALM: To George
Mother asked me to find you since she canāt talk to your answering machine. I got your machine too but since you donāt return calls, here goes.
She wants you to know Dadās dying. Heās been dying for six months but this is different. Now itās a stroke. He was in remission and seemed fine but heās back in the hospital. How bad I donāt know, but when she asked the doctor if she should summon her children he said decide for yourselves. Everybody has visited him this last six months, Philip, Henry, Patty, everybody but you. Iāve been going every other weekend. Consider yourself informed.
Iāll go back again tomorrow, one last quick visit. It has to be quick because Frank and I are moving to London next Tuesday. Career move for Frank, career move for me. Youād know this if you had talked to anyone these last months. Up we go in the world, write for details.
Mother thinks youāre in the Canadian wilderness writing another of your so-called lovely nature articles, but I doubt it.
PHILIP WESTERLY: To his wife Beatrice
Left on the kitchen table, Ithaca.
Going to the Island again, tomorrow before you get back. Dadās had a stroke.
I tried to call you at the Holiday Inn. Student party tonight. If Dad dies, you should come to the Island too. Hope you enjoyed your trip.
Iāll give the kids to Mrs. Hook.
PATRICIA KEY: Fax to Philip
Please tell me what happened to Dad. Mother called when I was out and told William he had a stroke. When I came back Mrs. Grummond called on Motherās behalf and told me someone shot him while he was taking a walk. A crazy man with a rifle out a window.
So which is it? Dadās in the hospital from a stroke or because he got shot? I presume he still has cancer either way. No answer from Mother when I called again. Canāt stand the mixup, so Iām faxing you. If you should happen to know.
LUCY WESTERLY: What to tell her children
This morning he was his usual self though uncomfortable, reading the paper, eating his cereal. At lunch quieter than usual, thinking about his writing, I supposed, which makes him uncommunicative. After lunch he went for his walk. I was out front with the watering can, and he went by without speaking. Thatās unusual. He was like not knowing whether to go or trying to remember an errand. I watched him up the street in a shuffly way, making me think how old weāre getting, thinking it for both of us, not just him. But something wasnāt right.
When the policeman came, I was still on my knees with the spade by the garden bed, looking at the garden earth. I saw the policemanās feet first, then Thomas behind with a shabby lost look like a bum. Here you are, the policeman said. This where you live?
The kind policeman, who said to me, Your husband, maāam, he seems a little disoriented.
Well, I never saw him look like that. His eyes empty like a bolt of grief. He bumped the door jamb going into the house, where I followed and found him on the bed. I thought I mustnāt let him go to sleep or heāll die, so I talked to him, asking him, trying to make him speak while he stared at the ceiling with his mouth open. When I saw his eyes again I called 911.
What else is there? They took him on a stretcher. Neighbors peeking out their windows to see whatās being shoveled into the ambulance from the Westerly house. I went with him. In the hospital room, he showed more life. No talkāhe hasnāt spoken since it happenedābut he knew where he was and knew me. He looked scared.
I called Philip and Ann and tried to call George. I called Patty but got William. Mrs. Grummond called Henry for me and Patty again to make sure she got the message.
PHILIP WESTERLY: Anticipating a memoir
Entered on his computer in Ithaca, in a file c:\personal\memblue.515, from which a paper copy will be made in a day or so.
This episode began with the apologetic voice of my mother on the telephone. It was 7:30. I was alone in the house after a pizza and was in the bedroom taking off my clothes for a shower before the party. Her voice with soft anxiety: Philip? Thomas. Hospital. Stroke. I leap for the conclusion but she holds back having a narrative to tell. Her dramatizing impulse, negating the badness in the pleasure she gets from deferring the end. Telling the story in her good time while I sat on the bed with my pants off. Should I come, I said, ashamed not to know if this was a reasonable question.
Then what to do with quick calculations about the pages of appointments with patients filling up tomorrow, Saturday, next week, the awkwardness of canceling or changing, the discomfort of a distinct guilt about something, the calculations which Myra would have to handle with a bunch of phone calls, not āthe fluā this time nor yet a ādeath in the family,ā but āa family emergency,ā with Dr. Friedman standing by expecting the same for him sometime.
Also had to decide between the morbidity of not going to the party and the callousness of going, unless the callousness could be called emotional strength, telling myself the young people would be disappointed. I went to the party then with doubled guilt doubly excused: without my wife because of her trip and without my father because the students would be disappointed. They drank wine out of transparent plastic cups, and the music played and they danced while I talked to a small group about glaucoma and cataracts and specializing in ophthalmology.
If I put this in the speckled notebook instead of the blue I can be a little freer telling about listening to the loud music and watching a future psychiatrist named Linda Wesson dance, watching without Beatrice yet without realizing what I was watching because of the flight of my father through the music while this was happening, the voices, the wine, the small room full of people, and the darker room beyond where people danced in a purple light. The sudden pain of my fatherās flight. Be more accurate. Six months ago it was sudden and this is the fruition. Yet six months ago it was not sudden either, my father at seventy-two having lived his biblical span, short though that may seem now after all the years when he seemed immortal in his good health and it looked as if what I had thought inevitable was in truth impossible, before the event put everything back in place and I could once again anticipate the great loss with everything unstringing and the world falling apart.
Meanwhile, excuse this party in honor of Steve because the medical students wanted and Steve was counting on it. Otherwise itās mope all evening thinking about timeās losses, though I suppose I could have written a poem if I could get the right slant. When I got home the fax machine had Patty with a crazy rumor. Not a stroke but a rifle shot. Which to believe? What a distraction. Hope itās not the rifle shot, which would be an irrational intrusion on the natural development of events.
Meet my patients in the morning, then fly to Boston in time to catch the late ferry. Myraāll reschedule the week.
ANN REALM: Diary
Thursday, May 19, Boston. DAY. Pack, office, bank, box books. Dinner + FR, Flaming Stork.
NEWS: TW stroke. Revisit? London Tues, vacate house, tix, big. LW sigh, bye bye, TW die. Ask FR. Bedside w/o talk? Dying, know? Know, care? Jam conversation w/Infinite?
BUT: Momneed, daddeath, big. Thump heart. FR: OK, squeeze time, packself.
SO: Fly Isl Fri. Ret Bost Tues, London per plan. Better-feel, less rue.
PLUS: Rushwrite GW Mombehalf. GW 0 X mos, ans mach. Selfish pig.
LUCY WESTERLY: To her dead mother
It was good of me not to scold George on his new answering machine. Letās hope he doesnāt come.
I had the following thoughts when Thomas was lying on the bed looking dead.
⢠Horror lest he needed CPR or emergency first aid which I donāt remember how to give or that he be already dead while I was figuring out what to do. It took me a while to think emergency loud enough to go to the phone and dial 9-1-1 with my heart jumping at what to tell the operator.
⢠Regret for the Cruise, remembering my head full of whales and fjords, as I realized we would have been in Oslo today. Thank God for cancellation insurance.
⢠Answer to the Question, Who Will Go First? Now I can think with a clear conscience how to get along after heās gone. I used to wonder how much time Iād have for widowhood. It looks like Iāll have plenty now, more than I want.
⢠Predictable Regret. I saw all forty-seven years in Thomasās white head on the hospital pillow, with his open mouth and sleep rattling his throat. I saw him with the nursesā eyes, how old he looked to them. Not to me. I thought we were still the Younger Generation. Youāre the Middle Generation and Grandpa and Grandma are the Older one.
⢠Widow. I try to adapt to the words that fit. The word girl is obsolete. Widows grieve. Itās part of the definition. Donāt tell anyone, but I seem to be more exhilarated than grieved. Changes excite me, history in the making. I wonder what unpredictable feelings are sneaking across the map, and the danger of being ambushed by a revolutionary crowd.
⢠Worst Case. This would be if Thomas doesnāt die but drags on in ambiguous illness in a wheelchair needing to be diapered, crotchety, helpless, etcetera.
⢠What to tell people. I teeter between recluse and gregarious. I want to chatter. On the other hand, Iām not ready. I need to prepare my speech. Thatās why Iām writing you. It gives me practice, for my speech isnāt ready.
PART TWO
FRIDAY
LUCY WESTERLY: Composed in bed
Thanks for your message. Iāll describe it for you. Someoneās using a tractor this early. A shovel clinking near the garage. Foghornāthough the air seems clear. It must be fog in the harbor or out at sea. You hear it too unless your sealed windows keep it out. Overcast, rain coming. The curtains lift indicating an east breeze, and Freud sits in the window sniffing the sea and listening to birds. He hears robin, song sparrow, house sparrow. Seagulls beyond the houses like a field full of blades of grass. In the gaps a gasoline motor on a fishing boat, assuming itās a fishing boat.
Iām too excited, agitated. If youāre going to die now, thereās something I ought to tell you. I need to tell you because if you die, weār...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Part One: Thursday
- Part Two: Friday
- Part Three: Saturday
- Part Four: Sunday
- Part Five: Monday
- Part Six: Tuesday
- Part Seven: Wednesday
- Part Eight: Thursday (2)
- Part Nine: Friday (2)
- Part Ten: Saturday (2)
- Part Eleven: September
- About the Author
- Copyright
