“I think so. I just got into it.”
He stood there thinking. He narrowed his eyes and bit softly down on the left corner of his mouth as he always did when something troubled him. “I don’t know if you should read that, Kristin.”
“I won’t be corrupted by it if I haven’t already been corrupted by other things I’ve read.”
“Hmm,” he murmured. “There’s always a first time.”
“Oh, Dad. Besides, finally, I’ll know what really happened. We’ll know,” I said.
“I wasn’t dying to find out,” he replied. “And that still might not be the truth. Lies can be written as well as spoken, you know.” He started to turn away.
“I’ll be down in a few minutes,” I said.
“Does this mean you’re not going to mall-rat it today?”
“Yes, Dad, that’s what it means,” I said, laughing.
He was smiling himself as he walked away.
I returned to the diary like someone starving for news from the outside world, just like someone locked in an attic for years might be.
First Days
Cathy likes to think of us as regular middle-class people living ordinary lives in the small city of Gladstone, Pennsylvania. She bases this on the fact that our house isn’t any larger or much smaller than any other house on our street and that our father drives a modest Chevy. I don’t know why it’s so important for her to think of us as ordinary. I will never think of myself that way.
When I told her that today, she looked at me strangely. She even seemed a little angry about it. I think she believes being ordinary makes her safe or something. I know she thinks all the kids from wealthy families are snobs, especially Lucille Tompkins, whose father owns four jewelry stores. One of her girlfriends told her what the word “snob” means, and she is worried that someone might call her that. I have the feeling someone told her I was a snob and she didn’t know what to say or how to defend me.
She remembers that we weren’t the first to get a television and acts as if that’s something to be proud of, but we did get one about the same time as our neighbors, the Milestones, got one, and Mr. Milestone was manager of the closest supermarket. Actually, Cathy’s the one growing into a snob. She thinks we’re better than rich people even though we don’t have as much, because rich people don’t love each other as much. I told her that was ridiculous, and she told me I was the ridiculous one. I don’t know why I even bother explaining things to her now. Her brain isn’t developed enough to comprehend serious or complicated thoughts. Actually, I can sympathize with why she’s always so confused about us.
Momma doesn’t have an expensive fur coat, but she has very nice, fashionable clothes, often saving whatever she can to buy herself something in style.
In fact, Cathy doesn’t know this, but I have seen Momma search through Daddy’s pants and jacket pockets looking for money he had forgotten was in there. I even know where she hides it in a shoe box at the bottom of her closet. If Daddy notices her thievery, he doesn’t say anything as far as I know. Of course, I’ve wondered why she doesn’t just ask him for the money. Maybe he would think the things she wanted to buy were silly. Or maybe she just feels guilty about spending money on anything other than necessities. She can rationalize it if she steals the money, because it was in his pocket and looks like small change. I wouldn’t say this to her face, but Momma rationalizes often. When I learned what that meant, I nodded to myself. It’s like saying white lies, making excuses, but doing it to tell yourself you’re protecting someone else, keeping someone from being hurt, often mostly yourself. Daddy works so hard for what we have. She would feel bad if she believed she was taking advantage of his trust.
No one wants to look average, especially our mother. I would agree that she had a modest engagement and wedding ring, but over the years, Daddy did buy her some fairly expensive necklaces and earrings and bracelets, probably even when we couldn’t afford it. Maybe he got good deals from Lucille Tompkins’s father. The jewelry, however, was nothing that would make her look ostentatious. My father has a very good sense of taste.
He often told us that something didn’t have to be big to be beautiful or outstanding. I remember him recently telling Cathy and me, “Subtlety is as effective in life as it is in advertising, children.”
He should know, I thought. Daddy is in public relations for a computer manufacturer that needs a great deal of promotion.
Cathy’s too young to understand what he meant by subtlety. Afterward, I tried to explain it to her, but she shook her head and told me that I use too many big words and if I keep filling my head with bigger and more words, it will explode. I don’t know where she gets these idiotic ideas. She hates to read. I think she hates doing anything alone, and that’s why she doesn’t read much.
She’s two years younger than I am, but I’m confident I could have understood what I was telling her when I was her age. I am and always was an avid reader, and with the exception of one B in fifth-grade history last quarter, unfairly given to me by Mr. Firth, a stuffy man with sagging cheeks and a belly that looked like he had swallowed a whole watermelon, I have always been an A-plus student. Mr. Firth has corn-yellow teeth from smoking every chance he gets. I see him rush into the faculty room between classes or during lunch to light up. He always has redness around his eyes that I recently diagnosed as ocular rosacea, a chronic condition that has many possible causes.
My father gave me a “Merck Manual” this year, and I devoured it. He bought it for me because even at a young age, I was asking questions about diseases, illnesses, and surgeries neighbors had.
“We’ve got a potential doctor in our midst, Corrine,” he declared at dinner one night, and then produced the manual. It looked used, but that doesn’t matter to me. Books can get wet and crinkle, and old book pages can turn yellow, but the words don’t disappear for a very long time. Daddy said, “A good book is like good wine. Its wisdom ages and becomes more valuable with time.” He winked at me when he said it, because he knew I believed that, too. Momma just shook her head as if Daddy and I lived in our own world, and Cathy grimaced and said, “Ugh. Old books smell.”
I know that other boys my age get ecstatic over new bikes, Erector Sets, electric trains, new sleds, and baseball gloves, but this manual is the most exciting gift Daddy has ever gotten me, and it is my most prized possession. He even wrote inside the cover: “To our future Dr. Dollanganger. Heal and protect those in pain. Love, Dad.”
I read and reread that dedication almost every night. For me, it’s sort of a prayer. Probably the man I respect the most next to my father is our family doctor, Dr. Bloom. He has an office in his home and lives with his mother. He’s not an old man, but he’s older than most men are when they get married. I don’t think it’s because he doesn’t like girls or anything. I think it’s because he’s too devoted to his sacred work of healing. He just hasn’t found the right woman yet, the woman who will tolerate his rushing out to make hospital calls at all times of the night and leaving parties to care for someone who’s suddenly very ill.
Dr. Bloom looked at my hands once and said, “You’ve got a doctor’s hands, Christopher, strong fingers. You could be a great surgeon someday.”
I don’t think anything anyone ever said to me made me feel any better about myself. I told Daddy and Momma at dinner that night, and Cathy gave us her usual “Ugh” when she understood that surgeons put their hands inside people’s bodies.
“Get an appendix attack, and you’ll be happy to have a doctor do it,” I said.
Her eyes nearly popped. “Don’t frighten her, Christopher,” Momma said.