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Chapter no 53

East of Eden

All during school next day Abra felt good about going to

see Lee. She met Cal in the hall between classes. โ€œDid you tell him I was coming?โ€ โ€œHe’s started some kind

of tarts,โ€ said Cal. He was dressed in his uniformโ€” choking high collar, ill-fitting tunic, and wrapped leggings. โ€œYou’ve got drill,โ€ Abra

said. โ€œI’ll get there first. What kind of tarts?โ€

โ€œI don’t know. But leave me a couple, will you?

Smelled like strawberry. Just leave me two.โ€

โ€œWant to see a present I got for Lee? Look!โ€ She

opened a little cardboard box. โ€œIt’s a new kind of potato peeler. Takes off just the skin. It’s easy. I got it for Lee.โ€ โ€œThere go my tarts,โ€ said

Cal, and then, โ€œIf I’m a little late, don’t go before I get there, will you?โ€

โ€œWould you like to carry my books home?โ€ โ€œYes,โ€ said Cal.

She looked at him long, full in the eyes, until he

wanted to drop his gaze, and then she walked away toward her class.

2

Adam had taken to sleeping late, or, rather, he had taken to sleeping very oftenโ€”short sleeps during the night and during the day. Lee looked in on him several times before he found him awake.

โ€œI

feel fine

this

morning,โ€ Adam said. โ€œIf you can call it

morning. It’s nearly eleven o’clock.โ€

โ€œGood Lord! I have to get up.โ€

โ€œWhat for?โ€ Lee asked. โ€œWhat for? Yes, what

for! But I feel good, Lee. I might walk down to the draft board. How is it outside?โ€ โ€œRaw,โ€ said Lee.

He helped Adam get up. Buttons and shoelaces and getting things on frontways gave Adam trouble.

While Lee helped him

Adam said, โ€œI had a dreamโ€” very real. I dreamed about my father.โ€

โ€œA great old gentleman

from all I hear,โ€ said Lee. โ€œI read

that portfolio of clippings your brother’s

lawyer sent. Must have been a great old gentleman.โ€ Adam looked calmly at

Lee. โ€œDid you know he was a thief?โ€

โ€œYou must have had a dream,โ€ said Lee. โ€œHe’s buried at Arlington. One clipping

said the Vice

President was at his funeral, and the Secretary of War.

You know theย Salinas Indexย might like to do a piece about himโ€”in wartime, you know. How would you like to go over the material?โ€

โ€œHe was a thief,โ€ said Adam. โ€œI didn’t think so once, but I do now. He stole from the G.A.R.โ€

โ€œI don’t believe it,โ€ said Lee.

There were tears in Adam’s eyes. Very often these

days tears came

suddenly to Adam. Lee said, โ€œNow you sit right here and I’ll bring you some breakfast. Do you know who’s coming to see us this afternoon?

Abra.โ€

Adam said, โ€œAbra?โ€ and then, โ€œOh, sure, Abra. She’s a nice girl.โ€

โ€œI love her,โ€ said Lee simply. He got Adam seated in front of the card table in his bedroom. โ€œWould you like to work on the cutout puzzle while I get your breakfast?โ€

โ€œNo, thank you. Not this morning. I want to think about the dream before I forget it.โ€

When Lee brought the breakfast tray Adam was asleep in his chair. Lee awakened him and read theย Salinas Journalย to him while he ate and then helped him to the toilet.

The kitchen was sweet with tarts, and some of the

berries had boiled over in the oven and burned, making the sharp,

bitter-sweet smell

pleasant and astringent. There was a quiet rising joy in Lee. It was the joy of change.

Time’s drawing

down for Adam, he thought. Time must be drawing down for me, but I don’t feel it. I feel immortal. Once when I was very young I felt mortal

โ€”but not any more. Death has receded. He wondered if this were a normal way to feel.

And he wondered what Adam meant, saying his father was a thief. Part of the dream, maybe. And then

Lee’s mind played on the way it often did. Suppose it were trueโ€”Adam, the most rigidly honest man it was possible to find, living all his life on stolen money. Lee laughed to himselfโ€”now this second will, and Aron, whose purity

was a little on the self-indulgent side, living all his life on the profits from a

whorehouse. Was this some kind of joke or did things balance so that if one went too far in one direction an automatic slide moved on the

scale and the balance was re-established? He thought of Sam

Hamilton. He had knocked on

so many doors. He had the most schemes and plans, and no one would give him any money. But of courseโ€”he had so much, he was so rich. You couldn’t give him any more. Riches seem to come to the poor in spirit, the poor in interest and joy. To put it straightโ€”the very rich are a poor bunch of bastards. He wondered if that were true.

They acted that way

sometimes.

He thought of

Cal

burning the money to punish

himself. And the punishment hadn’t hurt him as badly as the crime. Lee said to himself, โ€œIf there should happen to be a place where one day I’ll come up with Sam Hamilton, I’ll have a lot of good stories to tell him,โ€ and his mind went on, โ€œBut so will he!โ€

Lee went in to Adam

and found him trying to open the box that held the clippings about his father.

3

The wind blew cold that afternoon. Adam insisted on going to look in on the draft board. Lee wrapped him up and started him off. โ€œIf you feel faint at all, just sit down wherever you are,โ€ Lee said.

โ€œI will,โ€ Adam agreed.

โ€œI haven’t felt dizzy all day. Might stop in and have Victor look at my eyes.โ€

โ€œYou wait till tomorrow. I’ll go with you.โ€ โ€œWe’ll see,โ€ said Adam,

and he started out, swinging his arms with bravado.

Abra came in with

shining eyes and a red nose from the frosty wind, and she brought such pleasure that Lee giggled softly when he saw her.

โ€œWhere are the tarts?โ€

she demanded. โ€œLet’s hide them from Cal.โ€ She sat down in the kitchen. โ€œOh, I’m so glad to be back.โ€

Lee started to speak and choked and then what he

wanted to say seemed good to sayโ€”to say carefully. He hovered over her. โ€œYou

know, I haven’t wished for many things in my life,โ€ he began. โ€œI learned very early not to wish for things.

Wishing just brought earned disappointment.โ€

Abra said gaily, โ€œBut

you wish for something now. What is it?โ€

He blurted out, โ€œI wish

you were my daughterโ€”โ€ He was shocked at himself. He went to the stove and turned out

the gas under the

teakettle, then lighted it

again.

She said softly, โ€œI wish you were my father.โ€

He glanced quickly at her and away. โ€œYou do?โ€ โ€œYes, I do.โ€

โ€œWhy?โ€

โ€œBecause I love you.โ€ Lee went quickly out of the kitchen. He sat in his room, gripping his hands tightly together until he

stopped choking. He got up and took a small carved ebony box from the top of his bureau. A dragon climbed toward heaven on the box. He carried the box to the kitchen and laid it on the table between Abra’s hands. โ€œThis is for you,โ€ he said, and his tone had no inflection.

She opened the box and looked down on a small, dark green jade button, and carved on its surface was a human right hand, a lovely hand, the fingers curved and in repose. Abra lifted the button out and looked at it, and then she moistened it with the tip of her tongue and moved it gently over her full lips, and pressed the cool stone against her cheek.

Lee said, โ€œThat was my mother’s only ornament.โ€ Abra got up and put her arms around him and kissed him on the cheek, and it was

the only time such a thing had ever happened in his whole life.

Lee

laughed. โ€œMy

Oriental calm seems to have deserted me,โ€ he said. โ€œLet me make the tea, darling. I’ll get hold of myself that way.โ€ From the stove he said, โ€œI’ve never used that wordโ€”never once to anybody in the world.โ€

Abra said, โ€œI woke up with joy this morning.โ€ โ€œSo did I,โ€ said Lee. โ€œI know what made me feel happy. You were coming.โ€ โ€œI was glad about that

too, butโ€”โ€

โ€œYou are changed,โ€ said Lee. โ€œYou aren’t any part a little girl any more. Can you tell me?โ€

โ€œI burned all of Aron’s

letters.โ€

โ€œDid he do bad things to you?โ€

โ€œNo. I guess not. Lately

I never felt good enough. I always wanted to explain to him that I was not good.โ€ โ€œAnd now that you don’t have to be perfect, you can be good. Is that it?โ€

โ€œI guess so. Maybe that’s it.โ€

โ€œDo you know about the mother of the boys?โ€ โ€œYes. Do you know I

haven’t tasted a single one of the tarts?โ€ Abra said. โ€œMy mouth is dry.โ€

โ€œDrink some tea, Abra. Do you like Cal?โ€ โ€œYes.โ€

Lee

said, โ€œHe’s

crammed full to the top with every good thing and every bad thing. I’ve thought that one single person could almost with the weight of a fingerโ€”โ€

Abra bowed her head

over her tea. โ€œHe asked me to go to the Alisal when the wild azaleas bloom.โ€

Lee put his hands on the table and leaned over. โ€œI don’t want to ask you whether, you are going,โ€ he said.

โ€œYou don’t have to,โ€ said Abra. โ€œI’m going.โ€

Lee sat opposite her at

the table. โ€œDon’t stay away from this house for long,โ€ he

said.

โ€œMy father and mother don’t want me here.โ€

โ€œI only saw them once,โ€ Lee said cynically. โ€œThey seemed to be good people. Sometimes,

Abra, the strangest

medicines are

effective. I wonder if it would help if they knew Aron has just inherited over a hundred thousand dollars.โ€

Abra nodded gravely and fought to keep the

corners of her mouth from turning up. โ€œI think it would help,โ€ she said. โ€œI wonder how I could get the news to

them.โ€

โ€œMy dear,โ€ said Lee, โ€œif

I heard such a piece of news I think my first impulse would be to telephone someone.

Maybe you’d have a bad connection.โ€

Abra nodded. โ€œWould

you tell her where the money came from?โ€

โ€œThat I would not,โ€ said Lee.

She looked at the alarm clock hung on a nail on the wall. โ€œNearly five,โ€ she said. โ€œI’ll have to go. My father isn’t well. I thought Cal might get back from drill.โ€ โ€œCome back very soon,โ€ Lee said.

4

Cal was on the porch when

she came out.

โ€œWait for me,โ€ he said, and he went into the house and dropped his books. โ€œTake good care of

Abra’s books,โ€ Lee called from the kitchen.

The winter night blew in with frosty wind, and the street

lamps with their

sputtering carbons swung restlessly and

made the

shadows dart back and forth like a runner trying to steal

second base. Men coming home from work buried their chins in their overcoats and hurried toward warmth. In the still night the monotonous scattering

music of

the

skating rink could be heard from many blocks away.

Cal said, โ€œWill you take your books for a minute, Abra? I want to unhook this collar. It’s cutting my head off.โ€ He worked the hooks out of the. eyes and sighed with relief. โ€œI’m all chafed,โ€ he said and took her books

back. The branches of the big palm tree in Berges’s front yard were lashing with a dry

clatter, and a cat meowed over and over and over in front of some kitchen door closed against it.

Abra said, โ€œI don’t think you make much of a soldier. You’re too independent.โ€

โ€œI could be,โ€ said Cal.

โ€œThis drilling with old Krag-Jorgensens seems silly to me.

When the time comes, and I take an interest, I’ll be good.โ€ โ€œThe

tarts were

wonderful,โ€ said Abra. โ€œI left one for you.โ€

โ€œThanks. I’ll bet Aron makes a good soldier.โ€ โ€œYes, he willโ€”and the best-looking soldier in the

army. When are we going for the azaleas?โ€

โ€œNot until spring.โ€ โ€œLet’s go early and take a lunch.โ€

โ€œIt might be raining.โ€ โ€œLet’s go anyway, rain or shine.โ€

She took her books and went into her yard. โ€œSee you tomorrow,โ€ she said.

He did not turn toward home. He walked in the nervous night past the high school and past the skating rinkโ€”a floor with a big tent over it, and a mechanical orchestra clanging away. Not a soul was skating. The old man who owned it sat miserably

in his

booth,

flipping the end of a roll of tickets against his forefinger. Main

Street was

deserted. The wind skidded papers on the sidewalk. Tom Meek, the constable, came out of Bell’s candy store and fell into step with Cal. โ€œBetter hook

that tunic collar,

soldier,โ€ he said softly. โ€œHello, Tom. The damn thing’s too tight.โ€

โ€œI don’t see you around the town at night lately.โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œDon’t tell me you reformed.โ€

โ€œMaybe.โ€

Tom prided himself on

his ability to kid people and make it sound serious. He said, โ€œSounds like you got a girl.โ€

Cal didn’t answer.

โ€œI heard your brother

faked his age and joined the army. Are you picking off his girl?โ€

โ€œOh, sureโ€”sure,โ€ said Cal.

Tom’s interest

sharpened. โ€œI nearly forgot,โ€ he

said. โ€œI

hear Will

Hamilton is telling around

you made fifteen thousand dollars in beans. That true?โ€ โ€œOh, sure,โ€ said Cal. โ€œYou’re just a kid. What

are you going to do with all that money?โ€

Cal grinned at him. โ€œI burned it up.โ€

โ€œHow do you mean?โ€ โ€œJust set a match to it and burned it.โ€

Tom looked into his

face. โ€œOh, yeah! Sure. Good thing to do. Got to go in here. Good night.โ€ Tom Meek didn’t like people to kid him. โ€œThe young punk son of a bitch,โ€ he said to himself. โ€œHe’s getting too smart for himself.โ€

Cal moved slowly along Main Street, looking in store

windows. He wondered

where Kate was buried. If he could find out, he thought he might take a bunch of flowers, and he laughed at himself for the impulse. Was it good or was he fooling himself? The Salinas wind would

blow away a

tombstone, let along a bunch of carnations. For some reason he remembered the Mexican name for carnations. Somebody must have told him when he was a kid. They were called Nails of Loveโ€” and marigolds, the Nails of

Death. It was a word like nailsโ€”ย claveles.ย Maybe he’d better put marigolds on his mother’s

grave. โ€œI’m

beginning to think like Aron,โ€ he said to himself.

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