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Somehow, thinking of Iowa City and Mao's had made Tony Angel consider that Avellino lacked ambition, but one of the things the cook loved about his Brattleboro restaurant was that it was relatively easy to run; real chefs, like Ah Gou Cheng and Tony Molinari and Paul Polcari, might find Avellino unambitious, but the cook (at fifty-nine) wasn't trying to compete with them.

One sadness was that Tony Angel wouldn't invite his old friends and mentors to come visit him in Vermont, and have a meal at Avellino. The cook felt that his Brattleboro restaurant was unworthy of these superior chefs, who'd taught him so much, though they probably would have been touched and flattered to have seen their obvious good influences on the menu at Avellino, and they surely would have supported the cook's pride in having his very own restaurant, which--albeit only in Brattleboro--was a local success. Since Molinari and Polcari were retired, they could have come to Vermont at their convenience; it might have been harder for the Cheng brothers to find the time.

Ah Gou and Xiao Dee had moved back East, this on the good counsel of Tzu-Min, the young Chinese lawyer who'd married Big Brother--she'd given him some solid business advice, and had never gone back to Taiwan. Connecticut was closer to Lower Manhattan, where Little Brother needed to shop; it made no sense for the Chengs to kill themselves while striving for authenticity in Iowa. The first name of their new restaurant, Baozi, meant "Wrapped" in Chinese. (The cook remembered the golden pork spring rolls and braised pork baozi that Ah Gou made every Chinese New Year. The steamed dough balls were split, like a sandwich, and filled with a braised pork shoulder that had been shredded and mixed with Chinese five-spice powder.) But Tzu-Min was the businessperson in the Cheng family; she changed the name of the restaurant to Lemongrass, which was both more marketable and more comprehensible in Connecticut.

One day, Tony Angel thought, maybe Daniel and I can drive down to Connecticut and eat at Lemongrass; we could spend the night somewhere in the vicinity. The cook missed Ah Gou and Xiao Dee, and he wished them well.

"What's the matter, Tony?" Celeste asked him. (The cook was crying, though he'd not been aware of it.)

"Nothing's the matter, Celeste. In fact, I'm very happy," Tony said. He smiled at her and bent over his red-wine reduction, savoring the smell. He'd blanched a sprig of fresh rosemary in boiling water, just to draw out the oil before putting the rosemary in the red wine.

"Yeah, well, you're crying," Celeste told him.

"Memories, I guess," the cook said. Greg, the sous chef, was watching him, too. Loretta came into the kitchen from the dining room.

"Are we going to unlock the place tonight, or make the customers find a way to break in?" she asked the cook.

"Oh, is it time?" Tony Angel asked. He must have left his watch upstairs in the bedroom, where he'd not yet finished the galleys of East of Bangor.

"What's he crying about?" Loretta asked her mother.

"I was just asking him," Celeste said. "Memories, I guess."

"Good ones, huh?" Loretta asked the cook; she took a clean dish towel from the rack and patted his cheek. Even the dishwasher and the busboy, two Brattleboro high school kids, were watching Tony Angel with concern.

The cook and his sous chef were not rigid about sticking to their stations, though normally Greg did the grilling, roasting, and broiling, while Tony watched over the sauces.

"You want me to be the saucier tonight, boss?" Greg asked the cook.

"I'm fine," Tony told them all, shaking his head. "Don't you ever have memories?"

"Danny called--I forgot to tell you," Loretta said to the cook. "He's coming in tonight."

"Yeah, Danny sounds like he had an exciting day--for a writer," Celeste told Tony. "He got attacked by two dogs. Rooster killed one. He wanted a table at the usual time, but just for one. He said that Barrett wouldn't appreciate the dog story. He said, 'Tell Pop I'll see him later.'"

The "Pop" had its origins in Iowa City--the cook liked it.

Barrett was originally from England; though she'd lived in the United States for years, her English accent struck Tony Angel as sounding more and more English every time he heard it. People in America were overly impressed by English accents, the cook thought. Perhaps English accents made many Americans feel uneducated.

Tony knew what his son had meant by Barrett not appreciating the dog story. Although Danny had been bitten by dogs when he was running, Barrett was one of those animal lovers who always took the dog's side. (There were no "bad" dogs, only bad dog owners; the Vermont State Police should never shoot anyone's dog; if Danny didn't run with the squash-racquet handles, maybe the dogs wouldn't try to bite him, and so forth.) But the cook knew that his son ran with the racquet handles because he'd been bitten when he ran without them--he'd needed stitches twice but the rabies shots only once.

Tony Angel was glad that his son wasn't coming to dinner with Barrett. It bothered the cook that Daniel had ever slept with a woman almost as old as his own father! But Barrett's Englishness and her belief that there were no bad dogs bothered Tony more. Well, wasn't an unexamined love of dogs to be expected from a horse person? the cook asked himself.

Tony Angel used an old Stanley woodstove from Ireland for his pizzas; he knew how to keep the oven at six hundred degrees without making the rest of the kitchen too hot, but it had taken him two years to figure it out. He was refilling the woodbox in the Stanley when he heard Loretta unlocking the front door and inviting the first customers into the dining room.

"There was another phone call," Greg told the cook.

Tony hoped that Daniel hadn't changed his mind about coming to dinner, or that his son hadn't decided to bring Barrett with him, but the other message was from Ketchum.

The old logger had gone on and on to Greg about the miraculous invention of the fax machine. God knows for how long fax machines had been invented, the cook thought, but this was not the first he'd heard about Ketchum wanting one. Danny had been to New York and seen some rudimentary fax machine in operation in the production department of his publishing house; in Daniel's estimation, his father recalled, it had been a bulky machine that produced oily scraps of paper with hard-to-read writing, but this didn't deter Ketchum. The formerly illiterate woodsman wanted Danny and his dad to have fax machines; then Ketchum would get one, and they could all be instantly in contact with one another.

Dear God, the cook was thinking, there would be no end of faxes; I'll have to buy reams of paper. And there will be no more peaceful mornings, Tony Angel thought; he loved his morning coffee and his favorite view of the Connecticut. (Like the cook, Ketchum was an early riser.)

Tony Angel had never seen where Ketchum lived in Errol, but he'd envisioned something from the wanigan days--a trailer maybe, or several trailers. Formerly mobile homes, perhaps, but no longer mobile--or a Volkswagen bus with a woodstove inside it, and without any wheels. That Ketchum (at sixty-six) had only recently learned to read but now wanted a fax machine was unimaginable. Not that long ago, Ketchum hadn't even owned a phone!

THE COOK KNEW WHY he had cried; his "memories" had nothing to do with it. As soon as he'd thought of taking a trip with his son to see the Chengs in their Connecticut restaurant, Tony Angel had known that Daniel would never do it. The writer was a workaholic; to the cook's thinking, a kind of logorrhea had possessed his son. That Daniel was coming to dinner at Avellino alone was fine with Tony Angel, but that his son was alone (and probably would remain so) made the cook cry. If he worried about his grandson, Joe--for all the obvious dangers any eighteen-year-old needed to be lucky to escape--the cook was sorry that his son, Daniel, struck him as a terminally lonely, melancholic soul. He's even lonelier and more melancholic than I am! Tony Angel was thinking.

"Table of four," Loretta was saying to Greg, the sous chef. "One wild-mushroom pizza, one pepperoni," she told the cook.


Tags: John Irving Fiction