Read an Excerpt
 Better Than Sane 
 By Alison Rose  Random House 
 Copyright (C) 2004 by Alison Rose 
All right reserved. ISBN: 1400041244 
  Chapter One 
 THE ORIGINAL MARRIED MAN
I'll never be anywhere I like better than the veranda off my  childhood bedroom in Palo Alto, California. My room was upstairs,  fairly large, with a few French windows overlooking the garden. The  bedspreads on my twin beds were quilted in cream-colored chintz wing  a small chandelier with grapes on it, a friendly presence at night.  But the thing that mattered most was the veranda. All the wisteria  and magenta bougainvillea grew up onto the veranda, and when I lay  there under the green awning on my collapsible chaise with green  cushions, anything bad or ugly was automatically blacked out: gone.
The house in Palo Alto was made out of sandy-colored stucco, with  cream-colored wood trim. Mother's mother and stepfather had built it  in 1928. It had a pitched roof with a dark-green front door and a  wrought-iron grille over a small window, and all the shutters were  painted British racing green. I don't think of the house without  seeing fairly bright, undepreth little claret-red rosebuds all over,  the same as the curtains on the windows. From the ceiling hussing  small green leaves all over it, but it didn't look as cheerful in  winter, when the leaves fell off. Facing the street was an enormous  blue spruce and two deodar cedars, the kind whose tops tip over.  There was another hovering blue spruce (looking old, like the other,  because the needles were silver), and a little boxwood hedge going  all the way around the house. From the front door to the sidewalk was  a winding brick path with violas (blue, lavender, white) on either  side and, along the front sidewalk in the spring, purple iris, which  looked too thin and unprotected against the street. They died fast.
Out in the back of the house, in a corner, stood a huge evergreen  tree that could have been in Yosemite. A white owl used to sit in it.  Across from a brick terrace, sort of in a row, stood some fruit  trees: nectarine, apricot, peach, a flowering Japanese plum. Down in  the garden were lilacs, daphnes, dahlias, and sweet peas, and cannas:  big white flowers with orange centers. A stone wall went around the  back of the garden and along one side of it. The grass out back was  scalloped with tuberous begonias (the small ones) in a border.  Outside the breakfast room were an orange tree and a grapefruit tree,  but the fruit didn't grow very well: undersized, not so sweet, too  pale. Not enough sun.
I never did think of myself as a person who would get married and  live in a house. My mother and father seemed like two separate  entities in our house, so to me marriage was a state and a house was  a place where people who are wittily mean to each other live in an  isolated way.
At the dinner table, my sister-she's six years older-and I would  sit at our places in our school uniforms, navy pleated skirts and  white middy blouses. A little crystal bell sat on the table by my  mother's place, to call Nita, the maid. ("Don't forget the finger  bowls and the butter balls," my sister told me on the telephone the  other day.)
My father sat at the head of the table, in a chair with arms. The  rest of us sat in chairs with no arms, but all of them, like his,  were upholstered in dark yellow-gold damask. Oddly, there was a  portrait of me in a white dress on the dining-room wall behind him.  Daddy nearly always looked as if he were on the verge of losing  control in one violent way or another, as if he were going to laugh  at us or swat us away in a fit of bad temper. He had green eyes, a  good color, but they often took on a sneering and impatient cast. His  hair was very dark and straight, with some hair tonic in it. He  usually wore a dark suit and a white shirt. In between courses, my  father would rant about his patients (he was a psychiatrist) or his  hatred of Communism, and my sister would be mute when he asked her  questions about current world crises. Any answer she came up with to  any question he asked was invariably wrong. My sister might start to  cry, Mother saying, "Milton! You don't hear yourself," as he hollered  some more. Other times my sister or I, or even my mother, would get  up and run.
Because I never said a word at the table, he would sometimes turn his  attention to me and say in a very loud voice, "How are you,  Personality Minus?"-he had a way with language-or he yelled and  threatened to send me to Agnew State mental hospital, near San Jose,  where he frequently went on his after-dinner rounds. At other times,  as if there were only the two options, he might say to me, "You're  going to be a femme fatale, Babs." My mother and my sister and I were  Babs I, Babs II, and Babs III to him, though none of our names  resembled the name Barbara.
Nita, meanwhile, just kept coming in and out of the swinging door to  the kitchen, punctuating my father's monologues with interludes of  clattering dishes. Nita-her real name was Juanita Johnson-was a  dark-chocolate black woman in a starched white uniform who had turned  up in our kitchen in Palo Alto, thick glasses shielding a crossed  eye, pomade stuff combed into her hair. We'd always had Japanese  maids before. (There was an upstairs maid and a downstairs maid.  "That's how people lived then, honey," Mother says now.) Nita said  "uh-huh" continually, as if agreeing with what she'd just said. Even  my father became subdued as she passed the food around in all those  silver things.
The first night Nita served dinner at our house, my blond friend  Squirrel was there-we were about twelve-and we giggled at Nita,  because she didn't know about serving: she didn't know how to set a  dinner table, didn't know where the dishes went, or how to clear the  dinner plates: she stacked them one on top of the other, right at the  table, food still on them.
My father, who was very tall and handsome, sometimes told witty, mean  stories about his patients: a middle-aged woman, for instance, was  frightened to put on a dress, a sweater, anything, over her head,  "for fear she'd be stuck in the dark," he said, smirking. He wouldn't  tell us a single thing about Doris Day, however, though she had been  a patient of his. One youngish man was upset because his father owned  a funeral parlor on the wrong side of town. There was the man who had  to do everything twice: wash his face twice, brush his teeth twice,  comb his hair twice, put on his clothes twice. The human race was  really hopeless, according to Daddy. He got depressed by the  patients-he said so. One time, he said all the homosexuals should be  thrown in the Pacific Ocean. Too often he told scary,  world-coming-to-an-end stories about his friend Robert Oppenheimer  and his recent invention the atomic bomb.
Perhaps to cheer himself up, at breakfast he sang songs to himself  like "I don't want her, you can have her, she's too fat for me" while  Nita served him a soft-boiled egg and her shoulders shook with  laughter. In his droll mode, he used to sing around the house, "It's  great to get up in the morning, it's great to get up in the morning,  it's great to get up in the morning, but it's nicer to stay in bed."  But he was in another mood altogether when he banged on my bedroom  door. He would bang with both fists so hard it sounded as if the door  would fall down, but it didn't. He would yell, each word dragged out  unnaturally-he sounded literally brutal-"Get...up...Babs!" Then I  would get up, put on my school uniform, and go downstairs to the  breakfast room, where my father would say, from inside his perfect  white shirt and his dark suit, "Good morning, Babs!"-loud. I never  said "Good morning" back to him, and in fact I have never been able  to say "Good morning" to anyone since. The worst banging on my door  was during my sacred weekly ritual of watching Gardner McKay in  Adventures in Paradise, one night a week. I counted on Gardner McKay  to save me and he did. No matter how hard my father banged on the  door, I knew Gardner McKay understood everything. The  close-to-unnatural beauty of Gardner McKay's whole self, combined  with a mixed-up-and-lost thing on his face, made me certain of that.  No matter what, he was my weekly savior, complete with a vase of  hand-picked flowers on top of the TV set, my bedroom door locked.
Most of my mother's friends (except the one who had been married to  Otto Rank) had little crushes on my father. For Christmas, he got  dozens of presents from those people whom Mother called "grateful  patients."
Mother didn't know what to do with all the dinnertime violence. She  seemed removed somehow from the chaos around her, an outsider, and  would sometimes say, "I'm the only sane one around here!," as if she  were defining a malady that separated her from the rest of us. Mother  wore Chinese silk pajamas with a matching silk coat nearly every  night. When she was twenty-one, Mother had been the only girl in a  class at Yale Graduate School studying Chinese history. She told me  this, or something like this, twenty million times, holding forth  less on the history of peasant uprisings in twelfth-century China, or  whatever, than on her professor-who had studied under So-and-So, and  who often invited her to his house for a glass of sherry. Her mother  had been brought up by Chinese servants, who gave her wedding  presents-that's what servants did then-so those gifts were around  the house, too: Chinese porcelain vases, bronze things.
My father believed that chemicals were the only way to make a  mentally disturbed person reasonably sane. Like many people who  believe things ahead of their time, he had a contract to write a book  about it all but never finished it. My mother said that he hadn't  wanted to have children, because he believed mental illness was  hereditary and he didn't want them to suffer what he had suffered.  She thought he tried out on himself the pills that he believed were  going to work, to see what the effect was. This may have accounted  for some of his more spectacular moods.
My friend Squirrel spent the night in my room often, her blond hair  on the pillow on the other twin bed. This was the first time I had  seen blond hair that early in the morning, and it seemed optimistic.  Squirrel played Chopin on the big piano downstairs, and Schubert. I  would make her play a Liszt rhapsody as loud and as fast as she  could, faster and faster, and it was a kind of ecstasy to sit next to  her on the black piano bench when she played.
Before Squirrel's arrival, I had three mops as best friends. This  went on for two years when I was about ten and eleven. Most days  after school, I'd take my mops dancing in the dahlia garden, where I  had them all to myself. These were mops the maids used to clean the  kitchen floor with. I would find them drying by the back door,  between the garbage cans and the wooden milk box for the milkman. My  mops were blond, like the blond girls at school who were older and  taller than I was. I loved the mops' hair, soft yellowy-white rope,  shoulder-length, which looked good wet, too-so thick!-and I loved  the way it fell across their faces. Each mop's expression depended on  how the soft rope had been horizontally stitched across her face.  Their eyes seemed downcast. Since the stitching wasn't exactly the  same, I could tell one face from the other, and one's hair was  slightly shorter, or was parted in the middle, as opposed to a side  part, or was lighter. I've always thought blond hair gives a color to  the world that other hair doesn't. Blond hair gave a girl at school a  different personality, different thoughts in her head, a fair  entitlement. The bright-yellow tall, narrow bodies of my mops  intensified their blondness. The way their hair smelled when it was semi-wet, maybe with a touch of kitchen bleach-that was nice, too.  The mops were good dancers on the lawn, their rope-hair swaying this  way and that, the way the grownup girls' did in my sister's fashion  magazines.
My first love, though, had been my pencil collection. A few school  years before, I'd had twenty-five pencils, mostly regular yellow  ones: black lettering, black numbers, bands of black-and-gold metal  at the end, worn-down pink erasers. There was one black pencil, with  an odd square eraser-she was probably Jewish. They were a whole  school of private friends, all girls, just the way it was at my real  school. Their faces were that pencil-pale wood and smooth lead; I had  to be careful with their faces. Each pencil had a first name, and  most of them had last names, too, and every single one of them had a  particular face. The shape of the face depended on how the pencil had  been sharpened, how much lead there was above the wood, how rounded  off the point of the lead was. Some of the pencils didn't get along  with the others, but all of them were reliably faithful to and quiet  with me.
One afternoon, my mother sharpened my pencils. Their faces were  obliterated and unrecognizable. Some of them were a lot shorter, too.  It was as if everyone I knew had a different head and face on a now  stunted body. I couldn't look at them anymore, all distorted like  that, so I abandoned them. In the years that followed, I would see  one of the pencils around the house, by a telephone, vaguely  recognizable, but dead.
There was a total education right there in our house, if anybody  wanted it. Largely, this education consisted of men-older ones and,  later, young ones-and books. Sometimes the men and the books  collided. At first, caught up, as I was, in my pencils and mops, I  didn't know I wanted this education. Daddy had said it didn't matter  if I ever went to college. He said, "It doesn't matter if you ever do  anything, Babs." An early boyfriend of my sister's pointed out Kafka,  which was exceedingly helpful. There was the story about the man who  lived by himself and thought about getting a dog because he was  lonesome, but first he figured out the many reasons not to get a dog.  Then some bouncing balls appeared in his apartment, following him  around and bouncing underneath his bed all night, keeping him awake,  until he thought of some scheme to control the bouncing. In the  morning, the balls started bouncing again. Kafka made the floor feel  like something to stand on, not slanted.
  
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