then?”
“Because—” Naomi paused while her anger settled. “I can’t describe it.”
“Try and tell me anyway.”
“It’s not an idea, some kind of philosophy. It’s what he says about Time—”
“That’s an—”
“I don’t mean as an idea. He does it the way it feels and that’s not some crappy intellectualism. Or the way they speak in Godot, that’s exactly the way people talk when they’re really, really stoned. And that doesn’t have to do with any shit about man—”
“Naomi! More than any other playwright, Beckett’s form is suited—is created with the sole idea of allowing philosophical ideas to exist as characters. He’s the most obviously intellectual playwright I’ve ever read. You know that. Just because you use the word and it’s implanted in your mind as meaning nonsense, you won’t admit that someone you like is an intellectual.”
“You’re just throwing words at me. I’m not arguing semantics!”
“Oh, for crying out loud. Because I’m talking about words you think it’s meaningless.”
She looked contemptuously angry. “This is silly.”
“That’s a lot like Dad, you know. To dismiss an argument when losing it.”
Naomi grabbed the chair in front of her and lifted it up. Her head jerked away from him and then back. She slammed the chair down. “This isn’t a game!” she yelled, tears coming without delay. “I’m not playing. People don’t win and lose, Richard.”
She had the capacity, as did all the members of his family, to make him feel he was crude and unsympathetic. He fought the feeling on instinct, but he feared it was true that he preferred to be right rather than to be kind. “Don’t pull that shit on me. I’m not scared by that fucking chair shit.”
“I’M NOT TRYING TO SCARE YOU,” she screamed, and frightened him into silence.
“Hey, hey.” John came running in. “Nana’s asleep. Just be cool in here, huh?”
Naomi stamped her bare foot on the floor, her eyes red with rageful tears. “Damn it,” she said, and walked inside to her room.
Richard felt the pressure and embarrassment of the sudden silence. He trembled trying to light a cigarette: his fury was liquid in his body and it pumped with dangerous force. He was angry about so many things. His lack of control, the refusal of anyone in his family to listen to his opinions, Naomi’s stupidity, his father’s egotism. There was no way to organize the emotional contradictions behind them. How could he be angry over a failure in his family to have a consistent line on intellectuals? It was absurd to care.
But they browbeat him with their stupid distinctions.
He had heard everything they believed. His father’s love of manners and the proper use of English while he attacked capitalism and doctrinaire Communism; his insistence that American writing was vital and interesting, though he attacked most American writers. His brother, Leo, called American intellectuals pigs and ghouls, though he devoted much of his time to reading them; Leo had an extraordinary background of reading in black history, and he used it to abort any opinions Richard might venture on politics. Richard was shut up because he misused a word, or because he based his judgments on racist history books. Whenever he read a book they recommended and he wished to discuss a judgment of theirs, back came this response: “Oh, wait until you read so and so. Then you’ll see what I mean.”
He loved them and had listened to every idea, great and foolish, they told him. He wanted to be respected in turn. He expected to achieve that with his novel. So he used it as an outlet for the tremendous rage that his argument with Naomi had left with him. He worked until early morning and had forgotten the roots of his inspiration when he fell asleep.
On Monday morning it was snowing. While driving to the airport he hoped the flight would be canceled. Brother and sister, who had casually apologized to each other for their
R. K. Ryals, Melanie Bruce