โCompletely unwearable,โ Elizabeth said to Walter Pine as she emerged from KCTVโs wardrobe room. โEvery dress was skintight. When your tailor measured me last week, I thought heโd done an accurate job, but perhaps not. Heโs older. He might need reading glasses.โ
โActually,โ Walter said, shoving his hands in his pockets in an effort to look casual, โthe dresses are meant to be snug. Camera adds ten pounds, so we use tight clothing to take it off. Suck it in, slim it down. You wonโt believe how quickly youโll get used to it.โ
โI couldnโt breathe.โ
โItโs only for thirty minutes. You can breathe as much as you want after.โ
โWith each inhale, our bodies initiate the blood purification process; with each exhale, our lungs release redundant carbon and hydrogen. By compressing any portion of the lungs, we put this process at risk. Clots form. Circulation drops.โ
โHereโs the thing, though,โ said Walter, trying a different tactic. โI know you donโt want to look fat.โ
โI beg your pardon?โ
โOn cameraโand please donโt take this the wrong wayโyouโre a heifer.โ
Her jaw dropped. โWalter,โ she stated. โLet me make something very clear to you. I will not wear that clothing.โ
He clenched his teeth. Was this going to work? As he flailed around for some new way to reason with her, the TV station orchestra down the hall launched into a rehearsal of their latest little ditty. It was theย Supper at Sixย theme songโ a perky little tune heโd commissioned himself. A cross between a modern cha-cha-cha and a three-alarm fire, it was a toe-tapping tour de force that, just yesterday, his boss had enthusiastically described as Lawrence Welk on amphetamines.
โWhat on earth isย that?โ she said, gritting her teeth.
โ
Phil Lebensmal, his boss and KCTVโs executive producer and station manager, had been very clear when heโd approved the cooking show concept.
โYou know what to do,โ heโd said after meeting Elizabeth Zott. โBig hair, tight dresses, homey set. The s*xy-wife-loving-mother every man wants to see at the end of the day. Make it happen.โ
Walter looked at Phil across the expanse of Philโs ridiculously oversized desk. He didnโt like Phil. He was young and successful and clearly better at everything than Walter, but he was also crass. Walter didnโt like crass people. They made him feel prudish and self-conscious, as if he were the last remaining member of the Polite People, a now-extinct tribe best known for their decorum and good table manners. He passed his hand across his graying fifty-three-year-old head.
โHereโs an interesting twist, Phil. Did I tell you that Mrs. Zott can cook? I mean,ย reallyย cook. Sheโs an actual chemist. Works in a lab with test tubes and things. Even has a masterโs in chemistry, if you can imagine that. I was thinking we could play up her credentials; give housewives someone to relate to.โ
โWhat?โ Phil said, surprised. โNo, Walter, Zott is not relatable, which is good. People donโt want to see themselves on TV, they want to see the people theyโll never be on TV. Pretty people, s*xy people. You know how this works.โ He looked at Walter, perturbed.
โOf course, of course,โ Walter said, โitโs just that I thought we might shake things up a bit. Give this show more of a professional feel.โ
โProfessional? This is afternoon TV. You used to run a clown show in this same time slot.โ
โYes, thatโs the unexpected part. Instead of clowns, weโll do something meaningful: Mrs. Zott will teach homemakers how to make a nutritious dinner.โ
โMeaningful?โ Phil snapped. โWhat are you? Amish? As for nutritious: no. Youโre killing the show before it even gets started. Look, Walter, itโs easy. Tight dresses, suggestive movementsโmaybe like the way she dons the potholders just so,โ he demonstrated, as if he were pulling on a pair of satin gloves. โAnd then thereโs the cocktail she mixes at the end of every show.โ
โCocktail?โ
โIsnโt that a great idea? I just thought of it.โ โI really donโt think Mrs. Zott will go forโโ
โBy the way. What was that thing she said last weekโabout being unable to solidify helium at absolute zero. Was that supposed to be a joke?โ
โYes,โ he said. โIโm pretty sure itโโ โWell it wasnโt funny.โ
Phil was right, it hadnโt been funny, and worse, Elizabeth hadnโt meant it to be funny. She had meant it to be one of the things she might talk about on her show. Which was a problem because no matter how often he explained the showโs concept to her, she didnโt seem to get it. โThese are just normal housewives youโll be talking to,โ Walter told her. โJust your average Janes.โ Elizabeth had looked back in a way that scared him.
โThereโs nothing average about the average housewife,โ she corrected.
โ
โWalter,โ Elizabeth was saying after the song had finally finished. โAre you listening? I think I can solve our wardrobe problem in two words. Lab coat.โ
โNo.โ
โIt would give the show a more professional feel.โ
โNo,โย he said again, thinking of Lebensmalโs very clear expectations. โBelieve me. No.โ
โWhy not approach this scientifically? Iโll wear it for the first week, then weโll review the results.โ
โThis isnโt a lab,โ he explained for the billionth time. โThis is a
kitchen.โ
โSpeaking of the kitchen, howโs the set going?โ
โItโs not quite ready. Weโre still working on the lighting.โ
But that wasnโt true: the set had been ready for days. From the eyelet curtains at the fake window to the various knickknacks that clogged the counters, it was the ultimate Good Housekeeping kitchen. She would hate it.
โWere you able to get the specialized instruments I need?โ she asked. โThe Bunsen burner? The oscilloscope?โ
โAbout that,โ he said. โThe thing is, most home cooks wonโt have that sort of thing. But I was able to round up nearly everything else on your list: utensils, the mixerโโ
โGas stove?โ โYes.โ
โEye wash station, of course.โ
โY-yes,โ he said, thinking of the sink.
โI guess we can always add the Bunsen burner later. Itโs quite useful.โ โI bet.โ
โWhat about the work surfaces?โ
โThe stainless steel you requested was unaffordable.โ
โWell thatโs odd,โ she said. โNonreactive surfaces are usually quite inexpensive.โ
Walter nodded as if he were surprised too, but he wasnโt. Heโd picked out the Formica countertops himself: a fun-filled laminate flecked with shiny gold confetti.
โLook,โ he said. โI know our goal is about making food that mattersโ good-tasting, nutritious food. But we want to be careful not to alienate people. We have to make cooking look inviting. You know. Fun.โ
โFun?โ
โBecause otherwise people wonโt watch us.โ
โBut cooking isnโt fun,โ she explained. โItโs serious business.โ โRight,โ he said. โBut it could be a little fun, couldnโt it?โ Elizabeth frowned. โNot really.โ
โRight,โ he said, โbut maybe just a little fun. A smidge fun,โ he said, holding up his forefinger and squeezing it next to his thumb to show just how little. โThe thing is, Elizabeth, and you probably already know this, TV is governed by three hard and fast rules.โ
โYou mean rules of decency,โ she said. โStandards.โ
โDecency? Standards?โ He thought of Lebensmal. โNo. I meant actual rules.โ He used his fingers to count. โRule one: entertain. Rule two: entertain. Rule three: entertain.โ
โBut Iโm not an entertainer. Iโm a chemist.โ
โRight,โ he said, โbut on TV, we need you to be anย entertaining
chemist. And do you know why? I can sum it up in one word. Afternoon.โ โAfternoon.โ
โAfternoon.ย Just saying the word makes me sleepy. Does it make you sleepy?โ
โNo.โ
โWell, maybe thatโs because youโre a scientist. You already know about circadian rhythms.โ
โEveryone knows about circadian rhythms, Walter. My four-year-old knows about circadianโโ
โYou mean your five-year-old,โ he interrupted. โMadeline has to be at least five to be in kindergarten.โ
Elizabeth waved her hand as if to move on. โYou were saying about circadian rhythms.โ
โRight,โ he said, โAs you well know, humans are biologically programmed to sleep twice a dayโ a siesta in the afternoon, then eight
hours of sleep at night.โ She nodded.
โExcept most of us skip the siesta because our jobs demand it. And when I say most of us, I really just mean Americans. Mexico doesnโt have this problem, nor does France or Italy or any of those other countries that drink even more than we do at lunch. Still, the fact remains: human productivity naturally drops in the afternoon. In TV, this is referred to as the Afternoon Depression Zone. Too late to get anything meaningful done; too early to go home. Doesnโt matter if youโre a homemaker, a fourth grader, a bricklayer, a businessmanโno one is immune. Between the hours of one thirty-one and four forty-four p.m., productive life as we know it ceases to exist. Itโs a virtual death zone.โ
Elizabeth raised an eyebrow.
โAnd although I said it affects everyone,โ he continued, โitโs an especially dangerous time for the homemaker. Because unlike a fourth grader who can put off her homework, or a businessman who can pretend to be listening, the homemaker must force herself to keep going. She has to get the kids down for a nap because if she doesnโt, the evening will be hell. She has to mop the floor because if she doesnโt, someone could slip on the spilled milk. She has to run to the store because if she doesnโt, there will be nothing to eat. By the way,โ he said, pausing, โhave you ever noticed how women always say they need toย runย to the store? Not walk, not go, not stop by.ย Run.ย Thatโs what I mean. The homemaker is operating at an insane level of hyperproductivity. And even though sheโs in way over her head, sheย stillย has to make dinner. Itโs not sustainable, Elizabeth. Sheโs going to have a heart attack or a stroke, or at the very least be in a foul mood. And itโs all because she canโt procrastinate like her fourth grader or pretend to be doing something like her husband. Sheโs forced to be productive despite the fact that sheโs in a potentially fatal time zoneโthe Afternoon Depression Zone.โ โItโs classic neurogenic deprivation,โ Elizabeth said, nodding. โThe brain doesnโt get the rest it needs, resulting in a drop in executive function and accompanied by an increase in corticosterone levels. Fascinating. But
what does this have to do with TV?โ
โEverything,โ he said. โBecause the cure for this neuro, uh, deprivation as you call it, is afternoon programming. Unlike morning or evening programming, afternoon programming is designed to let the brain rest. Study the lineup and youโll see itโs true: from one thirty p.m. to five p.m., TV is stuffed with kid shows, soap operas, and game shows. Nothing that requires actual brain activity. And itโs all by design: because TV executives recognize that between these hours, people are half dead.โ
Elizabeth envisioned her ex-colleagues at Hastings. They were half dead.
โIn a way,โ Walter continued, โwhat weโre offering is a public service. Weโre giving peopleโspecifically the overworked housewifeโthe rest she needs. The childrenโs shows are key here: theyโre designed to electronically babysit children so the mother has a chance to recuperate before her next act.โ
โAnd by act you meanโโ
โMaking dinner,โ he said, โwhich is where you come in. Your program will air at four thirtyโexactly the time your audience will be emerging from the Afternoon Depression Zone. Itโs a tricky time slot. Studies show that most housewives feel the greatest amount of pressure at this time of day. They have much to accomplish in a very short window of time: make dinner, set the table, locate their childrenโthe list is long. But theyโre still groggy and depressed. That is why this particular time slot comes with such great responsibility. Because whoever speaks to them now mustย energizeย them. Thatโs why when I tell you that your job is to entertain, I mean it sincerely. You must bring these people back to life, Elizabeth. You must wake them back up.โ
โButโโ
โRemember that day you stormed into my office? It was afternoon. And yet despite the fact that I was in the Afternoon Depression Zone, you woke me up, and I can assure you that is nearly statistically impossible because all Iย doย is afternoon programming. But thatโs how I knew: if you had the power to make me sit up and listen, there is no doubt you can do the same for others. I believe in you, Elizabeth Zott, and I believe in your mission of
food that mattersโbut thatโsย notย just making dinner. Understand this: you must make it look at leastย a littleย fun. If I wanted you to put viewers to sleep, I would have slotted you and your hot pads in at two thirty.โ
Elizabeth thought for a moment. โI guess I hadnโt really thought of it that way.โ
โItโs TV science,โ Walter said. โHardly anyone knows about it.โ
She stood silently, weighing his words. โBut Iโm not entertaining,โ she said after a few moments. โIโm a scientist.โ
โScientists can be entertaining.โ โName one.โ
โEinstein,โ Walter shot back. โWho doesnโt love Einstein?โ
Elizabeth considered his example. โWell. His theory of relativity is riveting.โ
โSee? Exactly!โ
โAlthough itโsย alsoย true that his wife, who wasย alsoย a physicist, was never given credit forโโ
โThere you go, nailing our audience again. Wives! And how would you wake up these Einsteinian wives? Using TVโs time-tested waker-uppers: jokes, clothes, authorityโand, of course, food. For instance, when you throw a dinner party, I bet everyone wants to come.โ
โIโve never thrown a dinner party.โ
โSure, you have,โ he said. โI bet you and Mr. Zott throw them all theโโ โThere is no Mr. Zott, Walter,โ Elizabeth interrupted. โIโm unmarried.
The truth is, Iโve never been married.โ
โOh,โ Walter gasped, visibly taken aback. โWell. That is certainly interesting. But would you mind? I hope you wonโt take this the wrong way, but would you mind never mentioning that to anyone? Specifically to Lebensmal, my boss? Or reallyโanyone?โ
โI loved Madelineโs father,โ she explained, her brow slightly furrowed. โItโs just that I couldnโt marry him.โ
โIt was an affair,โ Walter said sympathetically, dropping his voice. โHe was stepping out on his wife. Was that it?โ
โNo,โ she said, shaking her head. โWe loved each other completely. In fact, weโd been living together forโโ
โThat would be another great thing never to mention,โ Walter interrupted. โNever.โ
โโtwo years. We were soulmates.โ
โHow nice,โ he said, clearing his throat. โIโm sure itโs all in order. But still, thatโs not the sort of thing we need to tell anyone. Ever. Although Iโm sure you had plans to marry him at some point.โ
โI didnโt,โ she said quietly. โBut more to the point, he died.โ And with those words, her face clouded with despair.
Walter was shocked by her sudden shift in character. She had a way about herโan authority that he knew the camera would loveโbut she was also fragile. Poor thing. Without thinking twice, he put his arms around her. โIโm deeply sorry,โ he said, pulling her in.
โSo am I,โ she muffled into his shoulder. โSo am I.โ
He flinched. Such loneliness. He patted her back as he did with Amanda, communicating, as best he could, that he wasnโt just sorry for her loss but understood it. Had he ever been in love like that? No. But now he had a very good idea what it looked like.
โI apologize,โ she said, pulling away, surprised at how much sheโd needed that hug.
โItโs okay,โ he said gently. โYouโve been through a lot.โ
โRegardless,โ she said, straightening up, โI should know better than to speak of it. Iโve already been fired for it once.โ
For the third time that morning, Walter flinched. When she said โit,โ he wasnโt sure what she meant. Had she been fired for killing her lover? Or for being an unwed mother? Both explanations were plausible, but he far preferred the second one.
โI killed him,โ she admitted softly, eliminating his preference. โI insisted he use a leash and he died. Six-Thirty has never been the same.โ
โThatโs terrible,โ Walter said in an even lower voice, because even though he didnโt understand what sheโd said about the leash or the six thirty time zone, he understood what sheโd meant. Sheโd made a choice and it had
ended badly. Heโd done the very same thing. And both of their bad choices resulted in small people who now bore the brunt of their parentsโ poor choices. โIโm so very sorry.โ
โIโm sorry for you, too,โ she said, trying to regain her composure. โYour divorce.โ
โOh, donโt be,โ he said, waving his hand, embarrassed that his lurch at love could be compared in any way to hers. โIt wasnโt like your situation. Mine didnโt have anything to do with love. Amanda isnโt even technically mine in the DNA sense of things,โ he blurted without meaning to. In fact, heโd only just found out three weeks ago.
His ex-wife had long insinuated that he wasnโt Amandaโs biological father, but heโd figured sheโd only said it to hurt him. Sure, he and Amanda didnโt look alike, but plenty of children donโt look like their parents. Every time he held Amanda in his arms, he knew she was his; he could sense the deep, permanent biological connection. But his ex-wifeโs cruel insistence ate at him, and when paternity testing finally became available, he produced a blood sample. Five days later, he knew the truth. He and Amanda were total strangers.
Heโd stared at the test results, expecting to feel cheated or devastated or any of the other ways heโd guessed he was supposed to feel, but instead heโd felt completely nonplussed. The results didnโt matter at all. Amanda was his daughter and he was her father. He loved her with all his heart. Biology was overrated.
โIโd never planned to be a parent,โ he told Elizabeth. โBut here I am, a devoted father. Lifeโs a mystery, isnโt it? People who try and plan it inevitably end up disappointed.โ
She nodded. She was a planner. She was disappointed.
โAnyway,โ he continued. โI believe we can make something withย Supper at Six.ย But there are some things about TV that youโre just going to, well, have to put up with. In terms of the wardrobe, Iโll tell the tailor to ease the seams. But in quid pro quo, Iโd like you to practice smiling.โ
She frowned.
โJack LaLanne smiles when heโs doing push-ups,โ Walter said. โThatโs the way he makes hard things look fun. Study Jackโs styleโheโs a master.โ
At the mention of Jackโs name, Elizabeth tensed. She hadnโt watched Jack LaLanne since Calvin died, and that was partly because she blamed himโyes, she knew it wasnโt fairโfor Calvinโs death. The memory of Calvin coming into the kitchen after Jackโs show filled her with a sudden warmth.
โThere you go,โ Walter said. Elizabeth glanced up at him. โYou were almost smiling.โ
โOh,โ she said. โWell, it was unintentional.โ
โThatโs fine. Intentional, nonintentional. Anything will do. Most of mine are forced. Including those at Woody Elementary School, where Iโm headed next. Iโve been summoned by Mrs. Mudford.โ
โI have too,โ Elizabeth said, surprised. โI have a conference tomorrow.
Does yours concern Amandaโs reading list?โ
โReading?โ he said, surprised. โTheyโre kindergartners, Elizabeth; they canโt read. Anyway, the issue isnโt Amanda. Itโs me. Sheโs suspicious of me because Iโm a father raising a daughter alone.โ
โWhy?โ
He looked surprised. โWhy do you think?โ
โOh,โย she said, with sudden understanding. โShe believes youโre s*xually deviant.โ
โI wouldnโt have put it so, soโฆblatantly,โ Walter said, โbut yes. Itโs like wearing a badge that says โHello! Iโm a pedophileโand I babysit!โ โ
โI guess weโre both suspect, then,โ Elizabeth said. โCalvin and I had s*x nearly every dayโcompletely normal for our youth and activity levelโbut because we werenโt marriedโฆโ
โAh,โ Walter said, paling. โWellโโ
โAs if marriage has anything to do with s*xualityโโ โAhโโ
โThere were times,โ she explained matter-of-factly, โthat I would wake up in the middle of the night filled with desireโIโm sure thatโs happened to
youโbut Calvin was in the middle of a REM cycle, so I didnโt disturb him. But then I mentioned it later and he was practically apoplectic. โNo, Elizabeth,โ he said, โalways wake me up. REM cycle or no REM cycle. Do not hesitate.โ It wasnโt until I did more reading on testosterone that I better understood the male s*x driveโโ
โSpeaking of drive,โ Walter interrupted, his face scarlet. โI wanted to remind you to park in the north lot.โ
โThe north lot,โ she said, her hands on her hips. โThatโs the one off to the left as I pull in?โ
โExactly.โ
โAnyway,โ she continued. โIโm sorry that Mudford has implied youโre anything other than a loving father. I very much doubt sheโs read the Kinsey Reports.โ
โThe Kinseyโโ
โBecause if she had, sheโd actually understand that you and I are the opposite of s*xual deviants. You and I areโโ
โNormalย parents?โ he rushed. โLoving role models.โ
โGuardians.โ
โKin,โ she finished.
It was that last word that cemented their odd, tell-all friendship, the kind that only arises when a wronged person meets someone who has been similarly wronged and discovers that while it may be the only thing they share, it is more than enough.
โLook,โ Walter said, marveling that heโd never had such a frank discussion about s*x or biology with anyone, including himself. โAbout the wardrobe. If the tailor canโt make those dresses more breathable, choose something from your closet for now.โ
โYou wonโt consider the lab coat idea.โ
โItโs more that I want you to beย you,โ he said. โNot a scientist.โ
She tucked a few stray hairs behind her ears. โBut Iย amย a scientist,โ she argued. โItโs who I am.โ
โThat may be, Elizabeth Zott,โ he said, not knowing how true this would turn out to be. โBut itโs only a start.โ