Page 40 of The Glass Family

“What’s the matter?” Mrs. Glass demanded. “What’s the matter with that? Why such a look, young man?”

Zooey didn’t reply till he had opened a new package of razor blades. Then, dismantling his razor, he said, “You’re so stupid, Bessie.” He ejected the blade from his razor.

“Why am I so stupid? Incidentally, you just put a new razor blade in yesterday.”

Zooey, his face expressionless, locked a new blade into his razor and began his second-time-over shave.

“I asked you a question, young man. Why am I so stupid? Didn’t she get that little book out of her college library, or what?”

“No, she didn’t, Bessie,” Zooey said, shaving. “That little book is called ‘The Pilgrim Continues His Way,’ and it’s a sequel to another little book, called ‘The Way of a Pilgrim,’ which she’s also dragging around with her, and she got both books out of Seymour and Buddy’s old room, where they’ve been sitting on Seymour’s desk for as long as I can remember. Jesus God almighty.”

“Well, don’t get abusive about it! Is it so terrible to think she might have gotten them out of her college library and simply brought them—”

“Yes! It is terrible. It is terrible when both books have been sitting on Seymour’s goddam desk for years. It’s depressing.”

An unexpected, a singularly noncombatant, note came into Mrs. Glass’s voice. “I don’t go in that room if I can help it, and you know it,” she said. “1 don’t look at Seymour’s old—at his things.”

Zooey sai

d, quickly, “All right, I’m sorry.” Without looking at her, and although he hadn’t quite finished his second-time-over shave, he pulled the face towel down from his shoulders and wiped the remaining lather off his face. “Let’s just drop this for a while,” he said, and tossed the face towel over onto the radiator; it landed on the title page of the Rick-Tina manuscript. He unscrewed his razor and held it under the cold-water tap.

His apology had been genuine, and Mrs. Glass knew it, but evidently she couldn’t resist taking advantage of it, perhaps because of its rarity. “You’re not kind,” she said, watching him rinse his razor. “You’re not kind at all, Zooey. You’re old enough to at least try for some kind of kindness when you’re feeling mean. Buddy, at least, when he’s feeling—” She simultaneously took in her breath and gave a great start as Zooey’s razor, new blade and all, slam-banged down into the metal wastebasket.

Quite probably Zooey hadn’t intended to send his razor crashing into the wastebasket but had merely brought his left hand down with such suddenness and violence that the razor got away from him. In any case, it was certain that he hadn’t intended to strike and hurt his wrist on the side of the washbowl. “Buddy, Buddy, Buddy,” he said. “Seymour, Seymour, Seymour.” He had turned toward his mother, whom the crash of the razor had startled and alarmed but not really frightened. “I’m so sick of their names I could cut my throat.” His face was pale but very nearly expressionless. “This whole goddam house stinks of ghosts. I don’t mind so much being haunted by a dead ghost, but I resent like hell being haunted by a half-dead one. I wish to God Buddy’d make up his mind. He does everything else Seymour ever did—or tries to. Why the hell doesn’t he kill himself and be done with it?”

Mrs. Glass blinked her eyes, just once, and Zooey instantly looked away from her face. He bent over and fished his razor out of the waste-basket. “We’re freaks, the two of us, Franny and I,” he announced, standing up. “I’m a twenty-five-year-old freak and she’s a twenty-year-old freak, and both those bastards are responsible.” He put his razor on the edge of the washbowl, but it slid obstreperously down into the bowl. He quickly picked it out, and this time kept it in the grasp of his fingers. “The symptoms are a little more delayed in Franny’s case than mine, but she’s a freak, too, and don’t you forget it. I swear to you, I could murder them both without even batting an eyelash. The great teachers. The great emancipators. My God. I can’t even sit down to lunch with a man any more and hold up my end of a decent conversation. I either get so bored or so goddam preachy that if the son of a bitch had any sense, he’d break his chair over my head.” He suddenly opened the medicine cabinet. He stared rather vacuously into it for a few seconds, as though he had forgotten why he opened it, then put his undried razor in its place on one of the shelves.

Mrs. Glass sat very still, watching him, her cigarette burning low between her fingers. She watched him put the cap on the tube of shaving lather. He had some difficulty finding the thread.

“Not that anybody’s interested, but I can’t even sit down to a goddam meal, to this day, without first saying the Four Great Vows under my breath, and I’ll lay any odds you want Franny can’t, either. They drilled us with such goddam—”

“The four great what?” Mrs. Glass interrupted, but cautiously.

Zooey put a hand on each side of the washbowl and leaned his chest forward a trifle, his eyes on the general background of enamel. For all his slightness of body, he looked at that moment ready and able to push the washbowl straight through the floor. “The Four Great Vows,” he said, and, with rancor, closed his eyes. “ ‘However innumerable beings are, I vow to save them; however inexhaustible the passions are, I vow to extinguish them; however immeasurable the Dharmas are, I vow to master them; however incomparable the Buddha-truth is, I vow to attain it.’ Yay, team. I know I can do it. Just put me in, coach.” His eyes stayed closed. “My God, I’ve been mumbling that under my breath three meals a day every day of my life since I was ten. I can’t eat unless I say it. I tried skipping it once when I was having a lunch with LeSage. I gagged on a goddam cherrystone clam, doing it.” He opened his eyes, frowned, but kept his peculiar stance. “How ’bout getting out of here, now, Bessie?” he said. “I mean it. Lemme finish my goddam ablutions in peace, please.” His eyes closed again, and he appeared ready to have another try at pushing the washbowl through the floor. Even though his head was slightly down, a considerable amount of blood had flowed out of his face.

“I wish you’d get married,” Mrs. Glass said, abruptly, wistfully.

Everyone in the Glass family—Zooey certainly not least—was familiar with this sort of non-sequitur from Mrs. Glass. It bloomed best, most sublimely, in the middle of an emotional flareup of just this kind. This time, it caught Zooey very much off guard, however. He gave an explosive sound, mostly through the nose, of either laughter or the opposite of laughter. Mrs. Glass quickly and anxiously leaned forward to see which it was. It was laughter, more or less, and she sat back, relieved. “Well, I do,” she insisted. “Why don’t you?”

Relaxing his stance, Zooey took a folded linen handkerchief from his hip pocket, nipped it open, then used it to blow his nose once, twice, three times. He put away the handkerchief, saying, “I like to ride in trains too much. You never get to sit next to the window any more when you’re married.”

“That’s no reason!”

“It’s a perfect reason. Go away, Bessie. Leave me in peace in here. Why don’t you go for a nice elevator ride? You’re going to burn your fingers, incidentally, if you don’t put out that goddam cigarette.”

Mrs. Glass put out her cigarette against the inside of the wastebasket again. She then sat quietly for a little interval, without reaching for her cigarette pack and matches. She watched Zooey take down a comb and re-part his hair. “You could use a haircut, young man,” she said. “You’re getting to look like one of these crazy Hungarians or something getting out of a swimming pool.”

Zooey perceptibly smiled, went on for a few seconds with his combing, then suddenly turned. He wagged his comb briefly at his mother. “One other thing. Before I forget. And listen to me, now, Bessie,” he said. “If you get any more ideas, like last night, of phoning Philly Byrnes’ goddam psychoanalyst for Franny, just do one thing—that’s all I ask. Just think of what analysis did for Seymour.” He paused for emphasis. “Hear me? Will you do that?”

Mrs. Glass immediately gave her hairnet an unnecessary adjustment, then took out her cigarettes and matches, but she merely kept them for a moment in her hand. “For your information,” she said, “I didn’t say I was going to phone Philly Byrnes’ psychoanalyst, I said I was thinking about it. In the first place, he isn’t just an ordinary psychoanalyst. He happens to be a very devout Catholic psychoanalyst, and I thought it might be better than sitting around and watching that child—”

“Bessie, I’m warning you, now, God damn it. I don’t care if he’s a very devout Buddhist veterinarian. If you call in some—”

“There’s no need for sarcasm, young man. I’ve known Philly Byrnes since he was a tiny little boy. Your father and I played on the same bill with his parents for years. And I happen to know for a fact that going to a psychoanalyst has made an absolutely new and lovely person out of that boy. I was talking to his—”

Zooey slammed his comb into the medicine cabinet, then impatiently flipped the cabinet door shut. “Oh, you’re so stupid, Bessie,” he said. “Philly Byrnes. Philly Byrnes is a poor little impotent sweaty guy past forty who’s been sleeping for years with a rosary and a copy of Variety under his pillow. We’re talking about two things as different as day and night. Now, listen to me, Bessie.” Zooey turned full toward his mother and looked at her carefully, the flat of one hand on the enamel, as if for support. “You listening to me?”

Mrs. Glass finished lighting a fresh cigarette before she committed herself. Then, exhaling smoke and brushing off imaginary tobacco flakes from her lap, she said grimly, “I’m listening to you.”


Tags: J.D. Salinger Classics