Anagrams

Anagrams by Lorrie Moore Page B

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Authors: Lorrie Moore
Tags: Contemporary, Adult
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look at Eleanor. “Gerard tapes,” I say.
    She nods. She’s looking through some old
People
magazines that she wants to sell for a dime apiece. “So, Billy Joel’s getting married to a fashion model,” she is saying, flipping pages. “What can you expect from a guy who writes ‘I don’t want clever conversation’ and calls that a love song.” Pretty soon Eleanor has lost it and is singing “I don’t want clever conversation, I just want gigundo buzooms.” “Kip loves Billy Joel,” she adds. “The man’s got the taste of a can opener.”
    It’s every man for himself out here.
    I will move to a new apartment in town. I will fill it with new smells—the vinyl of a shower curtain, the fishy percale of new sheets, the peppery odor of the landlord’s pesticides. I will take toomany hot baths—a sex and alcohol substitute and an attempt to get reoriented.
    At work, suddenly, no one will seem to understand when I’m joking.
    We are actually doing fairly well in the yard sale, though the sweaters aren’t a big hit since the weather’s warm. “I’m sorry about the record album,” says Gerard, putting his hand on the part of my thigh where the shorts end.
    “That’s okay,” I say, and go into the house and bring out a lot of junky little presents he’s given me in the last two years: crocheted doilies, Crabtree and Evelyn soaps, a drawer sachet that says, “I Pine for You, and Sometimes I Balsam.” They are all from other yard sales. They have sat for years in someone else’s drawers, and then in their yards, and now I’m getting rid of them. I suppose I’m being vengeful, but I never really liked these presents. They are for an old maid, or a grandmother, and now’s my chance to dump them. Perhaps I’m just a small person. Sometimes I think I must love Magdalena more than I love Gerard, because when they both take off for California, I want Magdalena to be happy and I want Gerard to mope and lose his hair into his water dish. I don’t want him to be happy. I want him to miss me. That is not really love; I suppose I understand that. But perhaps it is like a small girl who for one baffled and uncharmed instant realizes her rigid plastic doll is not a real baby—before she resumes her pretending again. Perhaps it is like a football player who, futile and superfluous, dives in on top of the manpile, even after he knows the tackle’s over; even after he knows the play’s completed and it all had nothing to do with him; he just leaps in there anyway.
    “Oh my god,” cries Eleanor, picking up the balsam sachet. “I’ve seen this in at least two other yard sales.”
    “I got it down on Oak Street,” says Gerard. “Is that where you saw it?”
    “I don’t think so.” She holds it up by two fingers and eyes it suspiciously.
    For a while I’ll find myself talking to myself, which will be something I’ve always done, I’ll realize, it’s just that when you’re living with someone else you keep thinking you’re talking to them. Simply because they’re in the same room, you assume they’re listening. And then when you start living alone, you realize you’ve developed a disturbing habit of talking to yourself.
    As medication, I will watch a lot of HBO and eat baked apples with sour cream. The whites of my eyes will chip and crack with scarlet. Only once or twice will I run out into the street, in the middle of the night, with my pajamas on.
    By three-thirty-five business really winds down. I have already sold my ladderback chairs and my Scottish cardigans. I’m not even sure now why I’ve sold all these things, except perhaps so as not to be left out of this giant insult to one’s life that is a yard sale, this general project of getting rid quick. What I really should have brought out is the food Gerard and I still have: potatoes already going bad, growing dark intestines; parsley and lettuce swampy in plastic bags; on the shelf above the stove, spices sticking to the sides of their

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