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"Forget All That 7-9" {Pendragon} (MF rom wl lact)

FORGET ALL THAT

by Uther Pendragon

anon584c@nyx.net

IF YOU ARE UNDER THE AGE OF 18, or otherwise forbidden by law to

read electronically transmitted erotic material, please go do

something else.

This material is Copyright, 1997, by Uther Pendragon. All

rights reserved. I specifically grant the right of downloading

and keeping ONE electronic copy for your personal reading so long

as this notice is included. Reposting requires previous

permission.

All persons here depicted, except public figures depicted as

public figures in the background, are figments of my imagination

and any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly

coincidental.

# # # #

FORGET ALL THAT

by Uther Pendragon

anon584c@nyx.net



Part Seven:

Continued from Part Six.

Wednesday morning was special. It was Christmas Eve. Bob's

father was home. Vi was coming on the afternoon train.

"You will get your wrapping done before that, won't you

dear?" Katherine said. "I want Kathleen to have the wrappings

before church." Katherine was practicing. Kathleen Violet

Brennan had been Vi for most of her life. She had decided to be

"Kathleen" as soon as she entered medical school. It made sense;

it is hard to imagine a woman less like a violet. Her family

took its time getting used to the change, though. "Kathleen"

would have been easier to learn if Kathleen had ever been at

home.

Although this was addressed to Bob, I answered it. "I still

have to do the fancies for a few presents. Bob has most of his

wrapping done." Bob wraps a very neat package as long as it has

a regular shape. (In the Brennan family, more than half of all

gifts are books, counting magazine subscriptions in the other

half.) He does not put ribbons or bows on them. So he puts the

paper on gifts from me, and I put the "fancies" on gifts from

him. I might say that I am not a real Brennan child in that I

bring my own gift-wrappings, or -- at least -- take less from the

family stash one year than I left behind the year before. Bob

and Vi think that access to the wrappings is part of their

birthright.

"Too bad that now I can take a long vacation, she can't," I

said.

"I get the impression, dear, that she took some time to

spend with Charles. Apparently, she is very lucky to get a

vacation at this time of year. It would be disloyal of her to

ignore him, don't you think, dear?"

"Loyalty is one thing," Bob's father said, "silence is quite

another. I don't know what we did to our kids. Bob was

practically a blabbermouth in comparison to Vi." He would wait

until she got there to use her new name. "Did you hear about her

last visit home? Kate? You were on the phone."

"She called me up, dear, to ask if she could bring a friend

home with her for a visit. Of course the answer was yes; of

course I suspected that 'a friend' meant a boy. But there was no

reason to jump to conclusions. 'Of course, dear,' I said. 'I'll

fix up Bob's room for her. I hope that she'll be comfortable

without a carpet on the floor.'

"'Don't bother, mother,' she said. 'Charles will be

sleeping in my room.' Of course, I'm not going to put a male

guest in my daughter's bedroom, and I told her so. What they did

after we had shut our door is another story."

"She told me that you asked her to make it look like both

beds had been slept in," I said.

"And they looked like both beds had been slept in. On

separate nights, but both beds." I looked over at Bob's father.

He was slightly amused. Vi thought that he hadn't known about

that part. "I probably would have abandoned my principles if he

could have visited this Christmas," Katherine continued. "Trying

to pretend that he was sleeping on the couch would have been

inconvenient and absurd. It ruins one's self-image to realize

that your principles yield to convenience. Anyway...."

"Anyway," said Bob's father. "The first time that she

mentioned his name to her mother -- to either of us -- was

'Charles will be sleeping in my room.' Had you heard of him

before?"

"I don't know how much before," I said. "I think that she

may have organized her visit to us before she organized her visit

to you. We had to schedule a baptism, after all, not just a

visit. And she had called during her first year in medical

school, crying about breaking up with a boyfriend. She

identified that time to Charles as 'the first breakup.' She

never told me about the reconciliation. But then, I was shoulder

to cry on, not a social secretary."

"Well, we worried about you, dear," Katherine said, "and

look how you two turned out. So my worry about her might be

needless. On the other hand, we had actually met you, dear.

And you two never broke up." I looked over at Bob. He was

trying to look innocent; he can't do that look. "Parents do

worry. I don't like that pattern of breaking up, but at least

they've known each other for a long while."

"I think," Bob said, "that you are making too much of my

silence. I didn't keep you informed about every conversation

with Jeanette, but you knew about most of my dates. I asked for

the car to drive to a dance. I didn't specify that the dance was

at my school rather than in Wichita; I didn't specify that we

were dancing on the floor rather than the ceiling; and I didn't

specify that I was taking Jeanette.

"As for Vi, you knew that she was dating in high school.

She kept dating in college. I never suspected that she would

stop dating because she was in medical school. Though it might

happen. At some point, you stop reporting your dates to your

parents."

Well, this was classical Bob. Not one statement was untrue.

(Although outrageously untrue statements are also classical Bob,

he scrupulously avoids certain kinds of lying.) There were a few

points that he passed over, however. If Bob took the car for

dates, he needed permission; he also dressed up for dances and

such. Those were "dates." We met a lot of times between dates,

and I doubt if his parents had known any more about those

meetings than my parents had.

parents don't expect to hear about each and every date that

a college girl has. They do expect to hear about someone about

whom their daughter is serious. Of course, I am in no position

to talk. But my parents were different.

"Wait fifteen years," Bob's father said. "You know that

your daughter is an autonomous human being," (I told you that my

parents were different) "but she is still half your future.

You'd like reports on critical areas. She knows that she is

welcome in this home; and she knows that her friends, bar

outrageous behavior, are welcome. I'd just like to hear that she

is dating a man before that I hear that she is sleeping with him

and contemplating marriage."

"Are they thinking about marriage, then?" I asked. Vi

usually tells me things like that as soon as she tells her

mother.

"Well, dear," Katherine said, "she hasn't said so, but they

did visit. You know how hard it is for them to co-ordinate times

off. The visit was no casual event. Vi never said so, but it

was something of an announcement."

"I don't want to press her," Bob's father said. "They have

to be sure, and residencies in different cities would make a

mockery of marriage anyhow. I just would like to walk down the

aisle at my daughter's wedding. Please *don't* quote me." He

had a bypass operation years ago. He is reasonably healthy, but

the whole family is conscious of the contingency of his life.

"Anyway, I've seen both my children graduate and receive advanced

degrees; and I've held my grandchild. Although not this

morning." On this hint, Katherine yielded her up. The Kitten

explored his pockets and found chewable wonders. He had taken

one of those sets of plastic "keys" that they make for babies and

cut the connection; those and the pens filled both his pockets.

"Maman," she said, and was immediately handed to me.

"Yes, darling," I said and gave her a big kiss. "Je suis ta

maman." She wasn't much impressed by that information. A minute

later she wanted to go back to the man with the abundant pockets.

Sheer bribery, I call it.

I was determined to add another jar feeding to The Kitten's

schedule. (Or a second feeding of baby food. But I do think

that "baby food" applies to breast milk as much as to anything

Gerber sells.) So when she showed some signs of hunger, I had

her grandfather plunk her down in the highchair.

I made the funny face; she responded; I shoved the spoon

in. She was a little surprised, but closed her mouth on it. We

went on from there. It didn't go as smoothly as it had for

Katherine; for one thing, when The Kitten wasn't grabbing at the

spoon, she was reaching toward my breasts. She knew the

schedule. We got a jar of fruit and a significant amount of

cereal down, however. The mess was much less than it had been

previous times. I cleaned her up and cuddled with her for ten

minutes before handing her over to Katherine. "Come to Grandma

Brennan, dear," she cooed. The Kitten had very little quilt time

that morning. Her grandparents acted like a tag-team.

Of course, I should have waited to change the schedule until

we were home. She got hungry much earlier than I had expected,

just before an early lunch. We couldn't delay that because Bob's

parents were due to leave for the train station. "I'll change

her first," said Bob. "Why don't you feed her upstairs?"

Everybody went their various ways. When I got upstairs, Bob had

the special pacifier in her mouth.

Bob ate with his parents, but he brought sandwiches upstairs

as soon as they left. They were lunchmeat sandwiches with

mustard. Greater love hath no man than to spread a condiment

that he hates on his wife's sandwiches. He stood behind the

rocker and fed me. "I can't speak like this," I said.

"I'll do the talking," he said. "Nod when it's time." When

the Kitten would pause, I would nod, and Bob would say a

sentence. It must have confused The Kitten no end. At first he

used lines of verse, then he changed his tune.

"Your mother, dear Kitten, is ... the kindest mother in the

whole world.... But she is more than that.... She is also the

sweetest wife.... She is beautiful, ... and kind, and sexy, and

smart.... She can manage an office, ... and find her way around a

foreign city.... She runs a house, ... and reads French

handwriting, ... and wows professors.... She prepares good

food, ... not quite so intimately for me as for you, ... but

delicious nonetheless, ... and she keeps the house clean, ... and

translates documents, ... and reminds her husband ... of

birthdays and such.... Good as her cooking is, ... it can't match

the sweet milk ... that she prepares for you.... Doesn't it taste

good? ... Daddy has sampled it, ... and the taste is

delicious, ... but not so sweet as the source.... She is a woman

flowing in milk and honey.

"She makes the milk for you, ... though Daddy steals a

bit.... She makes the honey for Daddy.... It leaks out down

below.... It has the most enticing aroma in the world, ... but

its taste is a thousand times more arousing.... That is how you

came to be.... Your mommy's shape attracted your daddy.... Her

smooth skin and cute ears brought him near." At this point, he

touched my ears. I was blushing while he said this, but he kept

my mouth full. Okay, there was a lot that I could do to stop

this line of blarney, but it excited me while it embarrassed me.

It wasn't the sort of thing one should tell an innocent child

about her parents, but The Kitten was too young to comprehend.

And I had confided some of my plans for papa to her. Anyway, he

was going on.

"The breasts that you suck aroused him.... But the honey

made him gasp with its aroma, ... maddened him with its taste....

It made him desperate to enter her, ... and then it smoothed that

entry.... Anointed with her honey, ... driven by her beauty, ...

excited by her acceptance, ... clasped by her loving warmth, ...

Daddy moved faster and faster within mommy until he shot you

out.... But mommy was holding part of you, too.... When those

parts came together, ... it was a Kitten.... And Grandma Brennan

was glad ... when she heard that it had happened, ... and Grandpa

Brennan was glad when ... he heard that it had happened, ... and

Aunt Kathleen was glad when ... she heard that it had

happened, ... and mommy was ecstatically happy when she found

out, ... which she did first of all... Daddy was happy that ...

there would be a Kitten, too, ... even though he didn't know how

cute, ... and sweet, and funny, and clever, ... The Kitten would

turn out to be.... But Daddy was happy when The Kitten was

started, ... before he knew that she was going to arrive at all."

Okay. That would need editing before we used it for a sex-

ed lecture for The Kitten, really for cat -- which would be her

name as soon as she could walk. Still, there were worse ways of

expressing it.

Aside from brushing my cheek with the arm that was feeding

me, Bob had touched only my ear and my neck, both of them

briefly. I was, however, aroused enough to be nearly squirming

in the rocker. Neither The Kittens sucking nor the rocking

motion helped a bit (or they both helped, depending on how you

figure it).

"So, darling daughter," Bob continued. "As soon as you are

quite done, ... we will set you on the quilt over there, ... and

Mommy will go to make sure that what Daddy shoots into the

honey, ... doesn't cause any rival sibling, ... to our very own

Kitten.... Then, since you won't need ... the rocker, ... Daddy

will use it instead.... And he will rock and rock in the

chair, ... and rock and rock in Mommy, ... until the honey is

flowing freely, and ... Daddy and mommy will rock ... together in

the chair, ... and rock against ... each other as well.... Then

they will be real real happy.... They will try to keep you happy

too.... N'est-ce pas, ma femme?"

"Certainment, mon mari," I said. And we rocked in silence

for a minute while Bob played more and more with my hair and

earlobes, and The Kitten played less and less with my breasts.

"I think that she is done," I whispered to Bob. I handed her to

him for the burping. That is much less necessary these days, but

I think she enjoys the contact. I know that he usually does,

although perhaps not that afternoon.

He was still dressed when I came back from the bathroom in

my robe, but he stripped quite rapidly. The Kitten's quilt was

fairly close to the heater, but separated from it by some

shelving. We need fear neither a chill nor a burn. Bob placed

our suitcase between the rocker and the quilt.

We kissed gently while we were standing there, then quite

hotly. Bob's hands roved all over my body before he removed the

robe.

The Kitten was watching us in the sun-lit room. "Bob," I

said, "I can't." He looked as though I had struck him. "Let's

go to the bed."

Bob relaxed. "Sure, the bed isn't 'no.' Can you sit on the

foot?" That was pretty-well hidden from The Kitten. I nodded.

He kept kissing me and stroking me. I broke for the bed. I sat

on the foot while Bob knelt between my legs. I bent over to

exchange one last hot tongue kiss. I looked at The Kitten before

flopping back on the bed. She was looking at a rattle that she

had just found.

I dropped back and pulled a corner of the bedspread over my

shoulders. Bob kissed my stomach, circling my navel before

sticking his tongue into it. I wiggled. "Bob don't," I said.

It was an entirely different "don't" than I had said to the

rocker. He kissed my mound. "Are you sure you don't mind the

hair?" I asked.

"I love your hair," he said. "I loved your offering to me."

I had shaved it for his birthday. I had never said for how long,

but I felt like an "injun giver" for letting it grow back. Bob

kissed the mound a few more times, before he dropped to the

thighs.

"Remember that Vi's train *might* be on time," I said. "I

want you up here on top of me well before they get back." Then I

lay back to enjoy the trip.

I had been fairly wet down there when I left the room, Bob's

comments about honey having drawn some. I had cleaned all that

off before inserting the diaphragm, of course, and been totally

dry when I came back. Bob's lips and tongue were changing that

situation, but I was really farther along in my arousal than Bob

could tell. I grabbed a pillow just in case. He parted my outer

lips with his fingers. He could have done the same with the

inner ones, but he licked the edges until they slowly spread.

"I do love you," I told him. I couldn't help lifting my

hips as his tongue finally swept along the length of one lip.

"You think it is just your genitals, ..." I shivered as he

licked the other lip. "and your fingers, ..." I was quite juicy

now, and he sucked up a bit. "and your lips, ...." I tensed as he

licked across my bud. I wouldn't say anything coherent any more.

I pulled the pillow across my mouth as he settled in to lick me

to ecstasy.

"Oh Bob," I moaned. My hips were moving under his mouth now,

but that didn't keep his tongue from kindling more fire to feed

the one burning in my belly. "Bob," I shouted into the pillow.

The fire tensed my body into an arc, pressed against his mouth

near the top. He accepted this offering with a long, sucking,

kiss. I screamed something unintelligible into the pillow as the

fire flared through me, shook me, and dropped me back on the bed.

"Oh Bob," I said when I could breathe. He came onto the bed

and held me. "Love you," I managed to gasp out.

"I love you, too," he said. He kissed my face and head,

avoiding my mouth to let me breathe.

"I know you love me," I said after a while. "Tell me you'll

love me forever."

"Forever, despite anything, as long as I live."

"Is The Kitten watching us?"

"Not now" he said. "She is playing with her toes."

"Give me five minutes."

"Of course, as long as you want. Do you want me in you

then?" Well yes, but I had been getting too many of my wants

lately.

"What do you want?" I asked. "Not making an exhibition."

"Could you manage an encore?"

"You'd have to manage it, but I could participate. Kiss me

here first." I meant with us both lying on the bed.

He chuckled. "Anywhere you ask. How about here?" He

kissed my shoulder. "Or here?" He kissed my temple. "Or here?"

He kissed my ear. "Or here?" He kissed my mouth and licked my

lips and played tag with my tongue. I had to break it to

breathe, but it was lovely while it lasted. He hadn't any more

questions, but he had lots more kisses.

"Try here," I said and guided him onto the breast that The

Kitten had just left. "Be very gentle." He was gentle,

worshiping it with his mouth more than actually sucking on it.

"Anyway, you think it is just your lovely lips and tongue and

fingers and the other part that fills me and make me feel so

nice. But, beyond them, I love your voice, and your gentleness,

and the way that you talk and read to The Kitten." He licked all

over the areola then, a game in which he tries to avoid the

nipple. He can't quite avoid it, but the touches are

unpredictable, and very light, and incredibly tingly.

"Oh Bob," I said. He kissed the nipple. It was a light

peck for goodbye.

"I love you," he said as he started to kiss down across my

stomach. I was recovered now, and anxious for him to get to his

goal. Bob kissed everywhere on his path, jumped from the path to

tickle my navel again, and continued from there to my mound. He

went on kissing there a long time, probably because he had to

leave me to go any farther.

"Check on The Kitten," I reminded him.

"She's fine," he said from a point above my knees.

Because of everything that I had been through already, my

inner lips were exquisitely sensitive. Bob guessed that, or

wanted to tease, or was just expressing his tenderness. Anyway,

his kisses and licks were soft and slow and sprinkled all over

that tiny area. Then the tension of promise captured me. I

pulled the pillow back to my face. Wave after wave of pleasure

rolled through me from his tongue, each leaving me wound tighter

than the last. One last kiss wound me the tightest.

Then the tightness broke, and flowed through me, and pulsed

inside me, and carried me away, and then stranded me.

Bob was up on the bed beside me, kissing my temple and my

forehead. "I love you," he said. "From the instant in the

schoolyard, to the day we talked of our future, to the long

afternoon, to the time in the woods, to the day you forgave me,

to seeing you walk down the aisle, I have loved you. I loved you

in the hotel room, where you were so brave and accepting. I

loved you in the forest, in the tent in the rain, in the

furnished apartment, the birthday and Christmas presents. When

you followed me to Boston as if it were the ends of the Earth,

when you led me through Paris as if you were born there, I loved

you and admired you and lusted after you. When you asked me for

a baby and wanted to lie there until it was born, when you

presented me with our daughter, when you do so much to care for

her. From meeting you until this moment, I love you, and want

you, and want to care for you. I always shall."

"Let me get all on the bed," I said. I moved up towards the

head of the bed, Bob trying to help. "I love you, too. I always

shall. Can I have you in me this time?" We kissed, and he

stroked me all over, not concentrating on the sensitive parts.

Then our kiss got hotter, and his hand stroked over the insides

of my thighs.

I was running like a river by this time, as Bob found out

when I parted my legs to let his hand reach their juncture.

"Oh love," he said.

"Yes," I said. "Love." It seemed a meaningful statement at

the time. And it must have been, because he kissed me

passionately but briefly on my mouth and climbed between my legs.

Which was precisely what I had wanted him to do.

He entered me quite smoothly. His motions were pleasure and

fulfillment to my body and spirit both, until they became need.

I met his thrusts with mine, and he speeded up. He reached

between us to touch me. I tensed as he did this, and spasmed two

strokes later. He was only an instant behind me, pulsing into my

depths.

We lay entangled and gasping for breath until The Kitten

cried. Bob picked her off the bare floor, patted her into

comfort, and put her back on the quilt. I dabbed up our mess and

grabbed my robe. Given the chance, The Kitten will suckle a bare

breast within half an hour of filling up.

I went into the bathroom first, though we might have gone

together at home. I dressed while Bob was gone, but he came back

wearing only his shorts. He dropped down on The Kitten's quilt,

and gestured to me to take the other side. We didn't touch each

other, but formed walls to her play space.

She shook a rattle for a minute then flung it away. Bob

retrieved it but put it behind him. I got another toy from the

pile at the wall end of the quilt and offered it to her. We

hardly talked to her and not at all with each other. The Kitten

rolled until she ran into Bob. He captured her and blew across

her hair. She laughed and tried to roll away. After a second,

he let her go. She laughed more and rolled all the way into me.

So I captured her. Instead of blowing on her hair, I kissed the

top of her head. Rolling back, she got turned a bit. She ran

into fuzzy bear. She started playing with it, the rolling game

forgotten.

I think we may both have dozed.

We were surprised by the slam of the front door. Amtrak,

which you can't depend on for *anything*, had been on time. I

slipped on my shoes and closed the door before running

downstairs.

As my fifteen-year-old bridesmaid, Vi had been strikingly

mature. As an intern of twenty-six, Kathleen (I might as well

make the change here) exuded youthful enthusiasm. We hugged.

"How have you been doing?" I asked. "Did you stop in Ohio?"

"Only two days. I'm fine. Slept almost all the way in the

trains, and have cut my sleep debt almost in half. Char sends

his love."

"I thought that all of that was taken." She laughed. "Talk

later?" She nodded.

"And how come he got pictures that I didn't?" she asked.

"Because he isn't on my Christmas gift list." He only got a

set of pictures from the baptism, anyhow. She had already

received more pictures than that. We hugged again. Bob came

clattering down the stairs.

"Dr. Brennan, I presume," he said. (Have I mentioned how

proud we are of her new status as an M. D.?)

"Dr. Brennan, I presume," she answered. They hugged. That

settled, Bob went out to get the rest of her luggage from the

car. The conversation became general, which is a polite way of

saying that four Brennans were talking at once. "Enough of this

chit-chat," Kathleen said. "I have to inspect my god-daughter's

religious progress. I think that inspection will take until we

leave for church."

"I'll go get her," I said. Bob slid off into the kitchen,

where the remains of lunch hadn't cleaned themselves up while we

were otherwise engaged.

The Kitten was still on her quilt. She wasn't complaining

about her diaper, but it was certainly ready for a change. I

took care of that before bringing her downstairs. She was two

hours away from any sulks and happy to greet a new admirer. I

don't believe that she could possibly remember Kathleen.

"Catherine Angelique," Kathleen said. "Oh how you have

grown."

"Dear," Katherine said, "let me tell you something that I've

told the others. This is Jeanette's child. Jeanette is

providing her with the food that she needs, and the comfort that

only she can provide. You may have your share of play and

cuddling with her subject to two rules. One, Jeanette makes the

rules; you don't do anything she says not to do, whether you

think it is safe or not; you give her back to Jeanette on demand,

no ifs ands or buts. Two, there are five of us; Jeanette is

providing most of the input; we four take care of the output. If

you can't change her diapers, you can watch the rest of us hold

her."

"Mother, I'm a medical intern. I just went through med

school. A dirty diaper from a healthy baby is nothing. For that

matter, I've changed her before; and I certainly can again.

Maybe I should start now."

"You shouldn't," I said. "I changed her upstairs."

"Upstairs?" Bob's father said. "Bob came down not ten

minutes ago. Bob! Come here!" Those last three words could

easily be heard in the kitchen, probably could be heard in the

street outside.

"Yes sir," Bob said.

"You were included in your mother's rules. You left a wet

baby for your wife to change. Do you duck all the dirty jobs?"

"Sir. I have changed a third of my daughter's diapers since

we arrived here. If Jeanette does a few changes, it's because

she is there when it's necessary, and I am absent or asleep. I

have changed my first-born's diaper almost every day since she

came home from the hospital."

"One diaper a day?"

"Not one diaper a day, many diapers most days. I have

*held* my first-born child *every* day of her first seven months

except when holding her was a threat to her health. I have

*changed* her every day that I have held her since nurses ceased

being available.

"Jeanette does primary care. I won't compare myself to her.

I would, however, ask if there is any other father in this room

who *saw* his first born once in every *week* of that child's

first seven months. For that matter, Jeanette needed me for the

month before The Kitten's birth more than for the month after."

(That wasn't quite true. Bob was forgetting how traumatic the

"minor surgery" was that I had after The Kitten's birth.) "I was

there for her then." (Now, that *was* quite true -- whichever

way you interpret "then.")

Bob had not raised his voice through any of this, though the

intensity came through and some of the 'S' sounds were hissed.

Now his volume dropped in half. There wasn't another sound in

the house; no one missed a word he said, much as we wished that

we could. "I was with my wife and child virtually from the time

that you walked out of that door until you walked back through

it. The Kitten was happy and didn't particularly need changing

when I left her, which was minutes after Jeanette left her. You

*know* that Jeanette wouldn't have ignored her child in need;

why do you *assume* that the need developed while I was there

instead of during the time when I was gone."

"There was no urgent need," I said. "I'm grateful for

Katherine's rule, but it isn't fair to The Kitten to present her

to someone when she is wet."

"I'm considered a good teacher," Bob continued without

taking any notice of that statement, "a fair scholar, a

responsible father. The only person entitled to an opinion

considers me a decent husband. Every employer that I have ever

had has asked me back as long as there was work available. I

can't remember ever being out of the top third of my class. I

graduated on time, completed my course work on time, completed my

*dissertation* on time. I have all the negative virtues, not a

drunk, no arrests. I even get insurance cheaper for being a safe

driver. I don't consider myself to be a world shaker, a record

setter; but the only person in the whole fucking world who

considers me a failure is my own father. And he considers me a

failure in everything."

"I never said that," his father answered.

"You don't say 'everything.' You say them one. Thing. At.

A time!"

I looked at Vi. "It's Christmas Eve," I said.



Part Eight:

"If not now, when?" she replied. "You sit there," she told

her father, pointing to one end of the couch. "And you sit

there," she told Bob, pointing to the other end. They looked at

her without moving.

"Do it," I said. "Or," I told Bob's father, "You won't hold

The Kitten another time the rest of this visit. And you," I was

pointing at Bob, then I stopped dead.

"She's my child too," he said. I was going to say that he

couldn't hold me. But those words wouldn't leave my mouth.

"Because you love me," I said. "I beg of you to sit down

and listen because you love me." He looked at me for a moment

before dropping onto the couch so hard that it bounced. "Stay

there. Katherine, could you hold The Kitten?" She did.

"And get my nitroglycerine, please," said Bob's father.

"It's purely precautionary."

Vi rummaged through her bags while I rushed upstairs. I

returned with a package containing a tape recorder. Christmas

allows you to put anything in your suitcase without your spouse

suspecting.

Vi had hers set up when I got there. "You go first," I

said. After all, Bob had articulated the charges.

The tape player hissed and crackled. The recordings hadn't

been great to begin with, and they had been dubbed. "I'm proud

of both of you." The voice was recognizably Bob's father.

"But Bob," said taped Vi.

"Both of you, but Bob does have the clear eye that Madison

would have loved. I'm glad that he wasn't around to see Bob's

dissertation. That was what he wanted for his people, you know.

I was an anomaly. He wanted clear minds but didn't care about

business courses. You can learn 'business' in well less than a

year. It might take you a decade to learn the inner workings of

a steel mill or an auto assembly line, but general business

practice is a very small area of knowledge. Anyway, Madison

would have paid anything to get Bob. He could have operated the

program. 'Look at the situation. Report what you know, report

what questions remain, report what is needed to find the answers

to those questions.' Madison said, 'Clear thinking can be

taught; indeed it must be taught. But it can only be taught to

some people.' Bob has learned clear thinking. And not only

about history. He would have felt like shit if the trip to Paris

hadn't turned up anything. And rightly so, he grades on results

not effort; he should be graded accordingly. But he evaluated

the risk correctly, and acted on it. 'Toujours audace.'"

Then there was a break. The whole tape was a series of

conversations.

"I don't know. Talking about a woman's loyalty to her man

seems like putting a demand on your mother, although she has been

constantly loyal. And I *don't* know. Loyalty is not

the-way-to-win-a-woman, it is the essence of being a man. Ask

your mother, not I, what the essence of being a woman is. But a

man is loyal. Your brother would die for Jeanette, that's easy;

he'll also live for her, which is the hard part."

A silence.

"Well, he might have turned Madison down, but I'm glad that

he didn't have to decide. I like to think that I might possibly

have been as hot as Bob is intellectually. (You never saw your

father when he was dealing with real scholarship every day.) But

he clearly is smarter about life than I was before my heart

attack. Maybe than I am now. Then too, you kids have the

benefit of my bad example. But that sort of money is a horrible

temptation. 'My wife is slaving away in an office without the

benefit of a decent education. I could buy so much for her

including full-time college; I could relieve my parents of the

burdens of debt and my sister of her worries about school loans.'

Bob was never greedy -- never past the age when any kid is. But

you want so much for others."

A sharp crackle.

"He asked me once, 'And did you deserve Mother?' Nasty kid.

Well, I never claimed to deserve your mother. And I will admit

that I deserved the question. The odd thing is that he may

actually deserve Jeanette. I know that he's done things to hurt

her, although she is too loyal to allow anyone to mention

them -- let alone to mention them herself. Maybe not deserve her

exactly, but have you noticed the changes in her year-to-year?

All brides glow, but beneath that glow she always looked a little

brittle. Maybe it's simply that she was nervous around us and

grew less nervous. Maybe it was her pregnancy last year that

made her seem much more settled in herself. I dunno. But she

sure-as-hell isn't a woman in a *bad* marriage. Except

economically, of course. I just made so many blunders myself,

that I want to help him avoid them."

A longer pause.

"Success? Would he teach more students at Harvard, or teach

them better? I made twice the money at thirty that your brother

makes. Nominal. I thought that I was a success; I was wrong. I

hope that he makes more money, that he gets tenure in the Ivy

league, that his research is cited in all the best places.

(Though I don't know what the best places are for history.) But

he chose satisfaction over money. And I hope that my example

serves you two. It's hell when all you can give your kids is a

bad example, but it's worse if they then ignore it. He's a

success on the standards that he chose; I'm a failure on the

standards that I chose; and his standards are gold to my brass.

Which is odd, when you consider that the standard that I chose

was gold."

The tape hissed until she stopped it.

I handed her my cassette. There was silence as she put it

in. The first voice heard was mine, I'd started the tape a

little late.

"Thrown in jail?"

Bob answered me on the tape: "Well, the official penalty is

prison. Stock swindlers don't serve prison time. But every

stock offering has to say that previous growth doesn't guarantee

future growth. He has a long list of investments that 'couldn't

go down' which later crashed. Let's ask him about this at

Christmas ... if it isn't moot by then. This bubble could last

another two years; sometime I'll tell you about Disraeli. It

could burst tomorrow. I remember this much of what he told me: a

stock can be valued at the dividend it is paying now; it can be

valued at the profit it's making now; it can be valued at the

increased profit you think that it will make in the future; it

can be valued at the increased price that you think that others

will pay for it. Marketers call the last, 'total return.' The

dividend plus the increase in price is the 'return' on the

investment. Economists call it a bubble or the 'greater fool

theory.'"

The timbre of Bob's voice seemed to change for the next

passage. Actually I had used a different recorder.

"They made a serious mistake. My father points out that

most people would like to know whether others would bow to

threats before making them. They want to say, 'Choose between

him and me, unless you would choose him.' This pattern he calls

'seriously limited credibility.' Anyway they threatened to

resign unless their demands were met, and the board replied by

accepting their resignations. The board couldn't have behaved

better if my father were on it."

Then, without a pause:

"Doctors get it. You ever hear the joke about 'That's God;

he only thinks he's a doctor'? But once out of residency,

doctors deal with reality rather than with senior doctors.

Executives are surrounded with secretaries and subordinates. The

only thing that they have to deal with, rather than assigning

others to deal with, are senior executives. That makes

socialization in the corporate culture their only survival task.

My father is tough-minded, but I still don't understand how he

survived all those years without succumbing."

A short pause.

"You'd do better to wait until Christmas. I argue economics

with my father all the time. 'Wrought ideas are always better

than cast ideas.' And who taught me that? But I would never buy

when he says sell. That is a practical matter."

The timbre of his voice changed again.

"Charles, you misjudge my family. My father, Kathleen's

father, will back his daughter against the world. Give him a

what-if, and he'll answer a what-if. Why blame him for that?

Draw up sides, and he's on Kathleen's side. Period."

A hiss.

"The weird thing... You sure I'm not boring you?"

"Not in the least," I said.

"The weird thing is that he hadn't *managed* anything up

'til then. He'd evaluated plenty. But all that he had bossed

was a small, totally dedicated, team. A skunk works, if you know

that term, of never more than twenty men. If they had known what

was wrong with Brewster, they'd never have sent him. They figure

him for a dollars-and-cents man; but he finds out that the

trouble was personnel. So he deals absolutely fairly with the

men, gets rid of the worst supervisors, and bides his time. He

waits until he knows an upturn is coming. One of the biggest

companies in the field was in the middle of a bitter strike. As

you can imagine, office furniture companies aren't hurt much by

union boycotts. Anyway, he invites the union leadership to the

house. He sells them on an agreement to have them sign a direct

mail piece to union locals around the country to ask them to

*look* at Brewster's product the next time that they bought

office furniture. The pitch was that this was a company that

dealt fairly with the union, they should have a chance. Second,

he gets them to agree that every time a man is called back from

layoff, productivity per person would also increase. (He knows

what was happening on the shop floor, and that surprises them.)

Every time a man is called back, he calls him into the office

first. He tells him that his call-back is because the other

workers on the floor are doing better work, and asks him to do

better work so that the next man can be called back. Two years

later, quality is through the roof and prices have been

relatively stable. No one is laid off, and wages are

competitive. The union leadership looks like champions, and so

does management. They only fight about what they should fight

about."

The tape ran out, and I handed her another.

"Ihm hmm. Have you looked at the heater in the corner?

Those shelves are attached to the walls. I might be able to pull

them over on me; you're too light; The Kitten doesn't stand a

chance. There is a switch controlling the heater; it is attached

to the shelves at eye level. A little bit of overdesign, there;

but my father doesn't miss a trick. Now, aren't you glad that

you married me?"

Then something of a pause.

"You know it's odd. When you two financed the tape, we all

spoke of it as Jeanette's education. Some tiny fraction for her.

Without it, however, she might have gone on with the literature.

I very much doubt that I could have written the dissertation

without that and the radio and the magazines. When we got to

Paris, Jeanette knew what was going on. She was au courant in a

way that most French majors wouldn't have been. The magazines

and the short wave taught her about twentieth century France in a

way that nothing else could have."

"Russ wondered whether the gift of the magazines had gone on

too long," Katherine said.

"It's clearly too late to worry about this year," Bob said.

"There is a little backlog now. Nice to have someone else in the

house storing old magazines. By the summer, Jeanette will have

some idea of her new pattern of living. If the backlog is

larger, then she can read it down after the last subscription

expires. For that matter, Dad must be running out of possible

magazines. We have money, Jeanette can subscribe to one of her

favorites from the selection that he gave her. The real gift was

the experience. That is permanent. On the other hand if he gave

her *Science*, ..."

"But Bob is right about the magazines," I said. "They were

an incredible gift. So was the radio."

"And the tape recorder," Bob said. "He always sees how

things will work together."

There was a squeal.

"I've thought about that for two reasons," Bob said. "Not

about it being shoved down my throat. He was right in the past.

That wasn't where I would have spent my money. I never objected

to reading *Newsweek*, though. I did think that it might be time

for an assistant professor to buy his own."

The recorder hissed quietly until Vi turned it off.

"Now," she said, "You two know what everyone else in the

room has known for years, how the other speaks about you when

you're gone. Bob, *I* might think that you're an idiot. Dad

does not. Dad, Bob *listened* to all those stories. He retells

them. It is patently absurd for you two to bristle at each other

all the time."

"May I get up now?" Bob's father asked.

"Go right ahead," she answered. "So will I. I have

packages to wrap."

"I would appreciate it if you left The Kitten in Katherine's

hands a little longer, sir," I said. "You are certainly entitled

to your anger, but she's too young to tell that it isn't directed

at her."

"I bow to your wish," he said, "but you've lost the enormous

respect that I had for you. You should never, ever, have taped

Bob without his permission."

He and Bob went their separate ways. He with a book, Bob

with the print-outs. I will never understand men. I finished

the clean-up of the kitchen.

Katherine brought me The Kitten somewhat later, it was time

for another meal. "Did I do wrong?" I asked.

"I'm sure that I don't know, dear. You should

know -- Kathleen should certainly know -- that people don't

behave according to the facts, but according to something

deeper." The new feeding schedule put The Kitten on the edge of

her late afternoon grumpy time just as I was trying to feed her

out of a jar. I would have to watch that. Kathleen came in to

watch, but I shooed her away. When we were finished and washed,

I took The Kitten into the living room and lay on the couch.

Soon The Kitten was asleep on my stomach.

Bob came downstairs. "Do you want me to put her in the

crib?" he asked. I nodded. He picked her up and took her

upstairs. I wandered into the kitchen and finished his cleanup.

Kathleen (I have to remember not to call her Vi) was putting her

presents under the tree. I considered getting ours, but I didn't

consider it to the extent of leaving the living room. We looked

at each other.

"It seemed such a good idea," she said.

"With The Kitten," I said. "I wasn't being nasty. Your

mother showed me a trick to feeding her, and it only works if

she's looking at me. You were too diverting."

"I didn't think you were blaming me. It isn't your style.

Don't bother cutting me down a peg; Dr. Schumacher will do it for

you."

"What did he say," I asked her, "about your plans?" She had

brought up her analyst, after all.

"It didn't ever seem to come up."

"Vi!" I'm not at her level of perceptiveness, but *not*

mentioning something like that must have meant some ambivalence

towards the idea.

"Yeah," she said, "I know. Clear after the fact, isn't it?"

She went back upstairs, and I looked for something else to think

about.

Bob's family had a Britannica from before Micropedia. I

pulled out the volumes that would cover all the authors whose

names I could think of, nearly half the volumes. I read their

article on Balzac first. Bob taught me that trick. Reading an

article on matter that you know lets you see the depth of the

articles. Then I went through the others in alphabetical order.

Celine was interesting; maybe I would tell them that I couldn't

come to the table until I had read about Verne.

The adult Brennans might or might not have accepted that

argument, but the youngest certainly wouldn't. A few hours

later, when I had read more than my mind was ever going to hold,

Bob called that The Kitten needed me. "Upstairs or down?" he

asked.

"Upstairs," I yelled back. I left a pile of books beside

the couch, my claim to be a naturalized Brennan, and went up to

feed The Kitten in the rocker. As I rocked, I murmured what a

pretty baby she was. But soon the events of the past afternoon

overcame me. "Ta maman t'aime, ... et ta maman aime ton

pere, ... mais ta maman est un ane."

"That's all true," called Bob from the bed, "if une maman

can be un anything." (Bob think that every noun should have a

feminine form.) "Mais son pere aime sa mere, aussi. Tell her

that." And I gladly did so.

"Do you really, Bob, after all I did."

He got up and stood beside me. "And didn't do. Remember

that. Anyway, I said that I love you and I do. I didn't say

that I wasn't furious. But I'm a lot less furious than I was

when I left the couch you had me confined on. (Y'know, that

sounds a lot more intriguing than the reality.) Anyway, we'll

talk. Does everybody have their presents downstairs."

"Kathleen does."

"Well, if Kaytoo has hers down," he said, "I can take ours

down."

"Bob...." Calling her "Kaytoo" was a declaration of war.

"Not even she will claim that I started this one."

"I think," I said, "that you have a quarrel with me and she

has a quarrel with your father."

"My father has a heart condition. Planning a quarrel with

him violates her hypocritical oath, even ignoring her duty as a

daughter -- as the two of you were so eager to do." Bob stumped

off, conveniently ignoring that he had verbally slashed at his

father just before the incident in question.

I couldn't even figure out whether "didn't do" was supposed

to aggravate or mitigate the offense. I mean, there was a whole

raft of things that I didn't do. I didn't include our lovemaking

from the tape in which Bob told the story; I hadn't got Bob drunk

to pour out his feelings for his father to the tape. On the

other hand, I hadn't warned him that I was taping him; I hadn't

included some bitter statements he had made about his father. I

hadn't blown up the federal building in Oklahoma City or won the

Nobel Peace Prize. Just what that I hadn't done did he mean? I

went back to pouring out my feelings to my daughter.

I knew how Bob would feel if his father died without

resolving this tension between them. This had seemed the only

chance. It had failed miserably.

Life went on. They make extra picture holders to fit in

wallets. I think that these are especially intended for

grandparents. We had filled two for Kathleen, except for one

position left open for a picture of Charles. I had elided the

truth a little with her. Bob, not I, was giving her the

pictures. Which meant that her presents were one load for Bob to

carry down the stairs. You can't expect him to put both the

picture sets in one box, let alone a small box. He came up from

that trip to ask, "Are those encyclopedia volumes by the couch

yours?"

"Uhn huhn."

"Are you done with any?"

"I'm on the volume with Gide."

"Alpha order?" he asked. I nodded.

He stayed down a long time after the last trip. When he

came in, he asked, "Are you two done?" We weren't. "Start

without us," he called down the stairs. When The Kitten was

finished, he changed her and put her in the Snuggli. He wore her

down the stairs, and then put her down on the living-room quilt.

They had waited for us. Bob's father said grace and we all

began to eat. Bob had a sudden thought. "Sorry about the mess I

left in the kitchen," he said.

"Mess?" said Katherine. "It was neat as a pin."

"I cleaned up," I said. "I knew you had been interrupted in

the middle."

"You didn't even clean up the kitchen?" Bob's father

started. We'd just gone through hell to avoid this pattern.

"Mr. Brennan, sir," I interrupted. "We are your guests.

Anything *we* can do to ease your burdens is *our* obligation and

*our* pleasure. Please feel free to ask *us* to do anything.

But, so long as *we* deliver, which one of *us* does it is *our*

goddamn business." I could not read the expression that he

turned to me, but it didn't make look like either pain or anger.

"He had hours..." he began.

"Dear, why did you slam the door so loudly when we got back

home?" Katherine asked.

"He could have done it...."

"He couldn't do it immediately, dear. Jeanette hadn't eaten

yet. Perhaps he offered to do it as soon as she had eaten, and

she preferred his presence and said that they would do it

together later. Perhaps she thinks he should have done it, and

wants to tax him with it in privacy. If one of them did it, it

was done. She's declared their independence, and they don't need

our supervision. And I do believe that she did it much more

nicely than Kathleen declared hers, don't you?"

Kathleen gave a "what have I done" look. I couldn't help

her there.

"And perhaps," I put in, "we are writing a book together and

rearing a child together. If Bob is working on the book and

listening for the child, it makes no sense to climb the stairs to

interrupt both rather than do ten minutes work downstairs.

"I was serious about our division of tasks. It's

comfortable for us. I got the encyclopedia off the bottom shelf;

The Kitten needed me; Bob returned the volumes that I was done

with. We are in the middle of an argument, but he doesn't say

'That's her mess, let her deal with it.'

"When we were newlyweds, we divided up all the tasks very

seriously. As time went on, we found ourselves internalizing

those tasks. Every new apartment changed them slightly. My

pregnancy and the arrival of The Kitten threw them overboard. We

still have those assignments, but it's much more seeing the next

job that's sitting there. 'Turn over the patties, the timer just

rang.'

"We added full time child-care and subtracted a full time

secretarial job to our joint assignments when The Kitten was

born. Instead of my doing all the child-care, or a total

juggling of assignments, we've fallen into the pattern of Bob

having all his old housework assignments, but I do them if I get

a spare moment. That way, The Kitten is always my first task."

"And," Bob broke in, "taking care of yourself is your second

task. Mother, this woman would need a nap in the daytime. She

wouldn't wake up at night and read (though she would wake up at

night and nurse), she would actually need that sleep. But she

would feel guilty about it. What would The Kitten do if her

Maman got sick?"

"Okay," I agreed. I was trying to deal with his parents

just then, not him. "My second duty is to keep myself healthy.

Still, there are plenty of days when I have time to spare. Maybe

I do the dishes, maybe I sort socks. And maybe I take a nap or

read a murder mystery. The point is that I feel much better than

I would if I were neglecting one of my assignments."

"And," Bob said, "I would rather have the dishes be my

responsibility and sometimes be relieved of it, than have the

dishes be her responsibility and sometimes have it shoved off on

me."

"So," I continued, "We are just bringing our home pattern

here. You give all the assignments to Bob, and I pick up the

holes if nothing else is pressing. I will, however, help in the

preparation of Friday's dinner." This was a tradition. Bob and

I took Christmas dinner with my parents, and dinner the day after

with his parents. Kathleen and I assisted Katherine in the

preparation.

"I think," said Katherine, "that you will find your

availability will be limited this year."

"Her availability?" said Kathleen. "How about mine? I was

supposed to have The Kitten all day today and hardly held her."

"You yielded her up as soon as you had her," her father

pointed out. "You can hardly expect her grandparents to put that

time in a bank for you."

"This isn't The Kitten's best time of day," I said. "You

can all hold her tomorrow morning. Kathleen can hold her as long

as The Kitten permits, or until church, after dinner." The

Kitten isn't a toy to be shared. On the other hand, she seemed

to be glorying in it.

"I brought her downstairs," Bob said. "She can make her

needs known, but we don't like to leave her on the other level."

"Do you have one of those baby monitors?" Kathleen asked.

"It lets you have some privacy without allowing her any."

Brennan bluntness strikes again.

"We've looked at them," Bob said, "but we won't really need

them until we get a two-bedroom apartment." Also, as Bob pointed

out to me, a set just might appear under the Christmas tree.

"Except that you could use it right now," Kathleen pointed

out.

"I don't think it is that critical, dear," Katherine said.

"But it is," Bob said. "She's right. I bet the mall is

still open. Is there a Radio Shack or something in the mall

these days?"

"I really couldn't help you, dear," Katherine said. Bob and

Kathleen looked at each other. One gift identified.

"Tell me Kathleen," I said. "I'm fascinated by parts of

your work...."

"You wouldn't be," she said. "I mostly fetch and carry."

"It's more your studies, the diagnostic end. What is the

current label for adult siblings who regress to babyish behavior

every time that they get together?"

"Do you mean 'Brennan'? That is not currently a diagnostic

category, but we are working on it." Bob and Kathleen were

supposed to be in a state of declared war; maybe they were.

Package rattling was accepted behavior around the Brennan

Christmas tree, not just your own packages. It was, however,

considered mean to tell someone what their gift from someone else

was. Unless you were lying, which made it completely all right.

"I warn you all," said Kathleen. "My alarm clock is

regularly set at six a.m." The Brennan rule is that the kids

can't come down on Christmas before their regular waking time.

Kathleen and Bob could have it changed today, but they wouldn't

dream of it. It is part of the Christmas tradition. So is

arguing about it.

"But," Bob said, "that's Central Time. That is seven

Eastern Time. Anyway we have an alarm clock which rings hours

earlier than that."

"Well," Kathleen, "I'm going to check it's settings." And,

at that, we started wandering away from the table. I went back

to my encyclopedia articles until even Kathleen could see that

The Kitten wanted Maman. And soon we left for church.

The Snuggli can be configured in all sorts of ways, Bob had

it arranged so that The Kitten faced the same direction that he

did. Then he sat facing backward in the van. The Kitten was

perfectly happy on the ride there, I didn't know how she would

take the ride back.

The church uses a ritual that is called "Passing the Peace."

You take the hand of the person next to you and say "The peace of

God is yours this night." ("... this day," for morning

worship.) Then that person passes it on to the person next to

them. You can use a hug, rather than a handshake, if you want.

Our pew went: the usher took Katherine's hand, she hugged her

husband, he took Bob's hand, he hugged me with us both bent to

avoid The Kitten who was still in the Snuggli, I hugged Kathleen,

then I took The Kitten's hand. (I wasn't being formal with The

Kitten. It's just that holding her is too common for a ritual.)

This service was "Hymns and Lections." About the second

hymn, The Kitten decided that it was time to eat. Our whole

schedule had been upset. "Trade with her," Bob's father said to

him. I sat between two big men each with his hand on the pew

ahead of ours; it was almost a private booth. A boy who couldn't

have been more than ten had looked back towards us several times

up to then. He looked back once more during the next reading.

Bob's father snapped his fingers -- the sound must have carried

to the reader -- pointed his finger at the boy, and made a

circling motion. The boy faced front through the rest of the

service. He managed to leave at the end without looking in our

direction. He couldn't have seen anything; I was in a nursing

bra and The Kitten was in the way. I didn't stand when the

others did, and I sang from memory.

The Kitten was not happy to be deprived of my breast when

the service ended, but she hadn't been drinking much for some

time. We stuck a pacifier in her and ducked the line. "Sorry,"

said Bob's father in a voice that filled the space, "we have to

get the baby home. No rides this year, ask someone else." He

had already told that to several regulars.

"Hi Vi," someone called.

"Merry Christmas," she responded, but none of us was

stopping.

"All in?" asked Bob's father. "All buckled?" Once we were

moving, The Kitten settled down. Bob was still carrying The

Kitten and led the way into the house and up the stairs. With a

hand hauling him up the railing, he can take two steps at a time.

As soon as I could drop my coat and give her access, The Kitten

clamped on to my breast and took two deep sucks. Then she

discovered that her tummy was nearly full after all and went back

to playing.

"The crisis is over," I said. Ten minutes later, she

agreed. Bob got more of burp than usual, she must have swallowed

air when she was on the pacifier. I took my time in the

bathroom, cleaning my breasts as well as my face. I wasn't

relishing this night.

Bob visited more than the bathroom on his trip. He took my

coat downstairs and came back with the encyclopedia volumes which

I hadn't put back. Now I was a real Brennan, with a stack of

books beside my bed which I might read sometime. The door was

locked, the Kitten was going to sleep, there weren't any more

excuses.

"I'm sorry, Bob, but the two of you bristle when together

and praise each other when apart. I couldn't help thinking about

what would happen if something like the last argument were the

last words you had with him." (That's one reason that you say "I

love you," when you walk out the door. What happens if the last

thing you said to your spouse was a dig?)

"Look, I'm your husband. Okay? That's your child. Okay?

Learn the difference.

"If that was the only thing you'd done, I would be through

the roof. I dunno, girl. First you and Vi decide that you know

better than two adult men what they need, then you two plan to

manipulate us with that fool stunt, and then you betray me. One

of those conversations was from our marriage bed! That is

disgusting. The ones from our table were bad enough. I don't

quote you; you don't quote me. That's been our rule. Then you

*tape* me. And you tape me in bed."

"I cut out the bed part of it."

"Great! You had our intercourse on tape, but it's all right

because you erased it. But the part that you played for the

whole damn family was from our bed! It was part of my making

love to you! Do you remember your second 'game'? Back then you

said that you wanted me to talk to you. Give me the tape and the

recorder."

I handed them to him. He erased the tape. Neither of us

spoke while it went through both sides. He removed the cassette

and stamped on it. Dissatisfied with the crack, he jumped up and

came down on it with all his weight. It shattered, and he almost

fell. He dumped the bits except the tape into the wastebasket.

"I'll burn this," he said, knotting the tape up. "There has

to be more." I nodded. He went through the ritual with two more

cassettes.

"I must admit that I enjoyed that," he said after the last

shards had stopped flying.

"The rest is at home," I said.

"We'll burn it all there. That's one part. I want you to

swear that you'll never tape me in secret again."

"I swear it. On my wedding ring." He looked surprised but

accepted it.

"I wish that you would treat me like an adult, but I'll

never ask you to swear that. You wouldn't keep that oath. But

you know what else you did?"

"No." This was getting awful.

"You looked for a credible threat to keep me there, in that

seat. And you couldn't find one. However idiotic and vile your

plan was, you couldn't make the threat that you would ban me from

your arms."

"How did you know that was what I was thinking?"

"Beloved, it was your only weapon. And you decided that it

would be too much."

"That. And I wouldn't go through with it. And you know

that I wouldn't go through with it. I love you Bob."

"And I love you. And you appealed to that love, knowing

that it was enough. For that knowledge, I would forgive you

anything."

"But not yet!" He looked confused. "I want your

forgiveness, need it. But I want to ask it in a special place.

Sit in the rocker."

"You don't have to do this to get me to forgive you." Bob

has a horror of marital sex in-exchange-for.

"I know that. It's just that I need to be there to

apologize."

He stripped and sat down. Bob has never turned down a

sexual invitation from me since the days when he told his

pubescent girlfriend that she didn't know what she was

suggesting. Of course, I could break that pattern simply by

asking him right after a climax, or -- possibly -- when he is in

the depths of one of his colds.

I thought that I might have accidentally found a third way

to break it. He wasn't even slightly erect. I turned off the

overhead light and straddled him in the rocker. "I love you," I

said, "and I'm sorry that I taped you without your permission."

I kissed him on the forehead, which I can't often reach, and then

on the lips. I caressed him all over his torso, courting him as

he had so often courted me. "And I could never refuse you.

Never."

He laughed at that. I had refused him often enough in our

dating days. "Even in the early days, I didn't really *refuse*,"

I said. "It was a matter of telling you that I wasn't ready.

You didn't demand, so I didn't refuse. But I meant something

different. I could have refused you then. I could have refused

you in our first year, even. But then you showed me what it was

I would be refusing. I would miss my passion, but I would be

able to bear it; I couldn't bear losing your passion. Oh Bob,

want me, make me want you even more."

Because I did want him, wanted him desperately, was torn

apart that he wasn't in me; but that was entirely emotional. My

body would have accepted his then, but it didn't crave his body

the way my mind craved it. He figured out what I meant by what I

said. He pulled me down to his mouth for a long kiss. His hands

roved my skin while his tongue roved my mouth. When he spread

his legs and -- consequently -- mine, I had to grab the back of

the rocker to keep my balance. I shifted my grip onto his

shoulder.

He used the nails of both hands on me, between a tickle and

a scratch. One hand was on the bottom of my right breast, the

other on the even-more-sensitive skin where my thighs meet my

hips. That hand soon moved the half-inch to my nether lips. He

played with them, rolled one against the other, stroked so

lightly that he was only tickling the hairs, pressed one and then

the other, before finally parting them. Then he played similarly

with the inner lips. Before he parted these, I was ready for

him. The desires of my body had nearly caught up with the

desires of my heart. I could feel his grin at the moisture he

found, but his mouth didn't leave mine for the longest time.

He stroked that liquid up towards the top of my valley, went

back to get more, stroked that a tiny bit higher, went back to

get more.... I went from desire to agony. I was determined not

to ask for him that night, determined that he would set the pace.

He, however, seemed uninterested in going further. When I

couldn't stand it a moment longer, I broke our kiss. "Don't you

want to be inside me?" I asked.

"Do you want it."

"Horribly, for ever so long," I said. "Couldn't you tell?"

He grinned in the dimness of the night-light. "Raise up."

I did, and he moved forward in the rocker. He was holding me

spread, and I touched him with my fingertips. I shuffled forward

and settled myself down.

When we made contact, I moved him to the precise spot. Then

I eased myself down. I had to move again to make it all work

right, but I slowly impaled myself on my love. The entry felt

wonderful, the heat felt better, and the fullness felt best of

all. The look on Bob's face suggested that he felt wonderful

too. "Should I begin rocking?" he whispered.

"Oh yes, love," I said. "And forgive me then."

He got the rocker moving, which got him moving within me and

all our critical parts moving against each other. "I do forgive

you," he said. "I do." And we rocked harder, and he moved

further in and further out, and he rubbed all my critical parts

faster, and he said "I do," much louder.

I pulled his mouth against my breast. "It doesn't hurt," I

lied. And he sucked on me and rocked us harder still. It did

hurt, but it also thrilled me. Like that, he wasn't going in as

deep, but he was rubbing up and down my valley with every stroke.

He got milk that The Kitten had left, and he throbbed within me

when it left me. "Oh, forgive me," I sobbed. My body stiffened

away from his mouth.

"I do," he shouted, and then he did. He fell back and

thrust upward. I flamed in his arms and around his phallus. And

he did and did and did, thrusting up against me, pulsing deep

within me, filling me with all the little Bobs.

Which promptly ran out again as soon as he had left me. But

I stayed in his lap, leaning against his body. The rocker was

shoved back but it was safe. We gasped there forever. Then we

cleaned ourselves and the rocker seat up and crawled into bed.

"You didn't have to do that," Bob said. "You know that. I

already forgave you."

"*You* didn't have to do it. *I* did. I really wanted to

feel forgiven, and I felt more forgiven like that. I really

won't record you again."

"Against my will," he said.

"Neither against your will, nor without telling you first."

"I love you," he said. "Even though I think you have

absolution confused with baptism."

"If you really forgive me," I said, "hug me tight."

"I can't hug you as tight as I love you. It would crush

you." But he hugged me tight all the same. And I hugged his

arm.



Part Nine:

Despite their ages and educational attainment, Bob and

Kathleen insist on being little children on Christmas morning.

Their parents, who wouldn't have it any other way, fix stockings

for them (and for me) late on Christmas Eve. Sometime before I

entered the family, Vi took on the task of preparing a stocking

for each of her parents. Bob's contribution to this is sporadic,

but it included photos this year. There were two stockings for

The Kitten, since we had brought one from home. I was really

surprised that there weren't three. There were a few sprigs of

mistletoe around, one of them over the couch. This is the

assigned place for Bob and me on Christmas day.

(I don't think it is really fair to carry a baby under a

sprig of mistletoe and kiss her there, but I kept that opinion

all to myself.)

The stockings and one gift are opened in sleepwear, and then

everyone scatters to dress for the fancy breakfast. After that,

the rest of the gifts are opened and recorded. When we were

dirt-poor students, our gifts were from Bob-and-Jeanette. Now we

each give a gift to each of the other members of the family.

(When she was a dirt-poor student, not that interns do so

much better, Kathleen often gave gifts to Mom-and-Dad or to

Bob-and-Jeanette. Once she gave the two of us a used murder

mystery. I devour them, Bob seldom reads them. Bob, who will

ride Kathleen about anything, expressed real gratitude. He told

me, "All you got was a used book; I got a happy wife.")

Kathleen was more-or-less lying in ambush when I stumbled

out of our room that morning. "Is The Kitten ready?" she asked.

Since I was heading for the bathroom having left a naked husband

in the room behind me, I was rather abrupt with her. "Tell me

when she is," was all Kathleen said. I had already fed The Kitten

and Bob had been changing her. When I got back to the room, I got

her into a dress (sleepwear rule be hanged) and handed her to her

aunt. "Oh Kitten, you look darling," Kathleen said. I knew that

was the last I would see of my daughter until she got hungry

again.

This year the first gifts for Bob and me were the matching

sender and receiver of the baby monitor. Our stockings, as well

as The Kitten's were full of small-but-too-big-to-swallow toys.

The Kitten's first gift was *Now We Are Six* (with the original

Shepherd drawings) from her Aunt Kathleen. She had warned the

whole extended family that she was giving the series, which

precluded duplicates but destroyed its surprise value. Her gift

next Christmas will be *House at Pooh Corner*, for example.

Kathleen's first gift was a photo album. The first page was

an enlargement of the picture of The Kitten that the Senior

Brennans had used on their Christmas card. The rest was blank, as

she carefully showed Bob and me. "Look, Catherine Angelique," she

said. "That's you."

The stocking ritual took quite some time, since Kathleen was

holding The Kitten with at least one hand, and had to show her

each of the gifts in each of her stockings. The Kitten has a

short attention span for toys, but not *that* short. She got a

rattle fairly soon and held on to it through the rest of the

first stocking and part of the second. The wrapping paper from

her gift, however, captured her attention.

"I explained to Bob, when he was about that age," Bob's

father said grabbing the paper which had wrapped her book, "the

difference between soap and food. Soap, I explained is rubbed on

the outside of your face; and food goes in your mouth."

"It wasn't that age, dear," Katherine said. "He was nearly

two years older."

"Anyway," Bob's father continued. "Bob explained to me the

difference between food and paper. Food, he explained, is rubbed

on the outside of your face; and paper goes in your mouth.

However," at this word he put the paper way out of her reach. "I

think we'll try to keep the paper out of his daughter's mouth

today. All gone, darling." She was not pleased with this.

"You know, dear," Katherine said towards the end of this

exercise, "it's always a temptation to tell a child 'But it's for

your own good.' Because, of course, you are continually making

decisions for the child's good. That never works. No-one

appreciates having things done *to* them. And they appreciate it

even less when they are asked to be grateful. Remember that, will you,

when The Kitten has a better grasp of verbal communication. You should

remember that, as well, dear."

Now I was probably the first "dear," but I couldn't guess to

whom the last sentence was addressed. Kathleen, however, knew.

She held up her bare left hand. "'There's just one thing,'" she

sang. "'You ought to give at least an engagement ring.' mother I

may *never* have any children."

"That's all well and good, dear. It's your decision after

all." (Have I mentioned that the Brennans' idea of the relation

between parents and adult children differ's from my parents'

idea?) "However, that decision doesn't provide you with a license

to parent those who aren't your children. Now does it?"

"No ma'am.... C'mon Kitten, we're going up to watch Aunt

Kathleen dress. I've showered so somebody else can use the

bathroom." She was on the stairs before I realized that she had

been spanked; and she was in her room before I figured out that I

had been, too.

Kathleen was still carrying The Kitten when we were all

gathered for the fancy breakfast. "Isn't she the cutest baby in

the whole world?" Bob asked his sister.

"I think so, but I may be prejudiced."

"I'm not prejudiced," he said. (I'm reporting on his words,

not testifying to their truth.) "She's the cutest baby in the

whole world, and I'll speak for the record."

"You may well be speaking for the record with these two,"

said his father in a bitter tone.

"Jeanette's not recording this," Bob said, "although I

reserve the right to search her for a wire." He wasn't doubting

my word, he was being risque.

"But still...." his father said.

"Sir," Bob said in a voice that cut through his father's.

"As the senior partner informed you, this firm is available for

all manner of subcontracting, but *not*!" That word cracked

through the room, and he let a two-beat pause follow it. "for

micro-management. Whether Jeanette is taping me now or will tape

me in the future is a question between Jeanette and myself.

Period. Whether it's been settled or will be settled or will

never be settled is an internal family matter."

Bob's father looked apoplectic during the first half of the

speech, but he had some other expression by the end. "I haven't

done much right by you," he said to Katherine. "But, by God, I

sired a *man* on you."

"I think that you contributed a bit more to his being a man

than the Y chromosome, dear," she answered, "and you did a lot

right by me. Do you mind if I say the grace?"

"Go ahead." She said a fairly elaborate grace, thanking God

for the food, the company, and the festive season. Then she

thanked him for the Prince of Peace and asked the blessing of

peace on the family. The amens were hesitant, but all around the

table.

"Since the topic has been raised...." I began.

"Never going to make her a real Brennan, are you?" Kathleen

said to Bob. Her mother saw my hurt. Kathleen had been the first

person to call me a Brennan, when I wasn't.

"Topic doesn't matter, dear," Katherine explained to me.

"Raise your own."

Bob cut through the last sentence with, "And, as the

original speaker, you have the right of way and may plow through

her speech, and mother's, and mine, ignoring us."

"First," I said to Bob's father, taking this advice. "Of

course you have provided a lot towards Bob's personality. The

stories he remembers show that; and on that topic, I think I know

what you do at Brewster. I couldn't understand what you did

before.

"Do you really want to hear?" he asked.

"Wow," said Kathleen, "that was quick restoration to grace.

He never asked *us* if we wanted to hear."

"I really want to know," I said.

"I already knew whether you wanted to hear, Kathleen Violet.

Anyway, it all starts with Ward Technology, a conglomerate, and

Madison, then a small-time management consultant. A growth

conglomerate works like this (but the numbers are out of date; I

worked them out long ago).

"Tortoise manufacturing is a corporation earning a hundred

million dollars a year. That is net profit after taxes. The

market values Tortoise at nine times earnings. Hare conglomerate

is a company also earning a hundred million dollars in the last

year, but it has been growing at thirty percent a year in

earnings per share. So the market values it at twenty times

earnings. Hare buys Tortoise for a round billion in new Hare

stock. Then the merged company makes one hundred ninety-five

million dollars in the next year. For Hare, that is ninety-five

percent more earnings on fifty percent more shares. That makes a

thirty percent increase in per-share earnings. The market is

proven right about Hare, it continues to value it at twenty times

earnings. Hare's shares are worth thirty percent more than they

were last year. The old owners of Tortoise are happy, since they

have shares of stock worth over forty percent more than the

Tortoise shares that they held last year.

"What no-one seems to notice is that the market now values

at three-point-nine billion a mix of plant and equipment that it

valued at two-point-nine billion last year when it earned five

millions more profit.

"Of course, when a growth conglomerate slips, it is all over

but the crying. Well, Ward Tech had almost slipped. Justice had

nixed its largest acquisition of the year before, and its growth

was much lower than expected.

"Now the other half of this is Madison...."

He said a lot more before Katherine said, "Her eyes have

glazed over dear."

"I'm sorry," he said, "I thought that you wanted to hear."

"I wanted to *learn*," I said. "It's just that there is more

to learn than I can handle at once."

"What you really ought to do, dad," Bob said, "is to write it

down. I know some of it, but it's like the game 'Rumor.' You

tell me; I tell Jeanette; Jeanette tells The Kitten; and suddenly

Madison is the fourth president, and Brewster Furniture makes

office equipment.... Yeah, I know, in all your spare time."

Meaning that he hadn't any.

"One possibility," I put in, "if this isn't a sore point

right now, is to put it on tape. Don't worry about filling

cassettes, one story per tape. Put a little card with each tape

telling what the subject is and the date of recording and the

date covered by the narrative." Guess who made a few extra bucks

transcribing for an oral-history project. "If worst comes to

worst, The Kitten would have a record of your voice. At best, I

might be able to type them up sometime. Right now, I'm booked.

But my part of the books dribbles off long before Bob's part."

"I, at least, am serious," Bob said. "You don't know how

important the memoirs and diaries of the less-than-famous are to

historians. Not meaning to denigrate you, but you aren't a

politician or a general. We have their memoirs; we'll have the

biographies of the entertainers of this time. But most of the

stories don't say how the rest of the world operated. Anyway,

Kathleen might not have listened, but she'll read it if it's in

print." That is an article of faith in the family. She read

Britannica from A to Z, though she admits skipping parts of the

duller articles.

"Think about it," Kathleen said. "And, although I'm much

more selective these days, I would read that."

Later, when Bob's father looked like he had finished eating,

I asked him if that were true. When he nodded, I told Kathleen

to give The Kitten to him. Having wrestled with her all through

the meal, she was reluctant to give her up. "But this was only

niece time," she said. "I haven't had any goddaughter time at

all." That lost. Kathleen and I cleared the table and hurried

in to share in the experience of the tree.

The Kitten, as I expected, made out like a bandit. Instead

of being grateful for all the toys and books she received, she

resented all the wrapping paper that she was being denied. We

left the party suddenly for some cereal and fruit. There were

piles of presents for us when we got back.

Bob and I got matching shirts with large pockets like his

father was wearing. I'm not sure that I want my daughter to get

more experience picking pockets than she has already, but she

certainly enjoys it. I also got a necklace of beads like

Katherine's but even more splendiferous in color. It has larger

and, therefore, even less dangerous beads.

The Kitten, on top of everything else, got a child's picture

book *in French* from Bob's father. I gave him a big hug in

gratitude, forgetting that it wasn't -- technically -- a gift to me.

Kathleen put off Bob's gifts to her until the end. Then she

unwrapped a box, searched the wrapping paper, opened it to find

another box, unwrapped it and searched the wrapping paper.... The

picture set was taped to the bottom of the fourth box in.

However, she opened that box and unwrapped, opened, and searched

the fifth box before looking at the pictures. There is no telling

with a Bob box. Bob and I got a hug in thanks. She expressed more

enjoyment over the pictures than over the very nice blouse that I

had given her. On the other hand, the pictures would have been

rather dull without The Kitten; and I made her myself.

The other picture set was wrapped somewhat less complexly.

The family talked about extreme Bob packages from the past. He

used to do this to his parents as well, and to me; but he has

slacked off in recent years. Ours are generally less elaborate

than Kathleen's.

Sooner or later, every Christmas includes the story of the

year Bob gave his sister a series of *seven* boxes, each of them

padded from the larger one by crushed newspaper, and all of them

otherwise empty. After she had thrashed around in the discarded

wrappings for a length of time which increases with every

retelling, he got the book from his room and tried to slip it

into the wrapping paper under the excuse of helping her look.

This story seems to require four Brennans to tell it

properly, leaving me the only audience. In a few years, The

Kitten will join me. This Christmas, looking at four adults

laughing uproariously, she decided that it must have been

something that she had done; she waved her hands to keep us

laughing. I'd planned to feed her just before leaving for my

family's celebration. She'd awakened hungry earlier than usual,

however, and we hadn't managed to stretch the times much.

I fed her much earlier than I had planned, and downstairs.

The latter was a mistake, because the bustle disturbed The Kitten,

and it distracted me from my speech when she paused. Midway

through the feeding, Bob's father asked if he could read "King

John's Christmas" from The Kitten's new book. I asked her, and

reported her permission. I felt like a servant of the Pythoness.

When she was in the play-with-the-nipple stage, she cut it short

to admire all the talk going around. That didn't cut her ration

by much, and I let it go. With any luck, my parents would be

through their meal by the time she got hungry again, and it would

be a good excuse for short goodbyes. I left The Kitten with

Katherine, and went upstairs to express some milk from my other

breast. I don't mind nursing The Kitten before the family, but

nursing a damn machine should only be done in private. They held

the poem until I got back down. The king got his India-rubber

ball just before it was time to leave for my parents' house.

Since the car seat was in the van, we drove that to my

parents' house. "Every time I drive this route with you," Bob

said, "I expect to be told that I'm not old enough to drive you

home." Daddy had objected to Bob's driving me on a date when Bob

was newly licensed. Daddy then drove us to the movie, however,

showing that it was a real concern for my safety, not just

another power play. Since Bob never had a moving violation and

my father had frequent ones, that concern might have been

misplaced.

"You aren't going to act the bear like that with The

Kitten's dates are you?" I asked him.

"Probably not. Since I won't let her date until she is

twenty-one, I figure that all of her potential dates will have

established a driving record. If it is without blemish, I'll let

her ride with them." Bob and I have to discuss the dating rules

sometime in the next thirteen years.

mommy gets to have her celebration on Christmas. That means

that the Brennan feast is delayed a day. The Brennans almost

never have guests to what is, to them, a major family feast.

Mommy, on the other hand, always wants guests. She doesn't have

much of a selection on Christmas day, but the dual inconvenience

shows her power over those who come and over us.

The Brennans have turned the oddity into an advantage. They

have a Christmas celebration one day and a Christmas feast the

next. Meal preparation takes most of the day, and makes the

feast much more special.

My mother's guests this year included a widower, three

widows, a single woman of my mother's age, my brother, Dave, and

us. Dave is older than me and younger than Greg. (Which makes him

both my older brother and my younger brother; think about it.) He

is also bad news. Bob had told Dave very quietly on a previous

such occasion that touching me would be an occasion for seriously

mixing it up with Bob. "And which of us would win that one?" Dave

had asked. Bob is bigger, but Dave fights dirtier and much more

often.

"And which of us would be violating parole on that one?" Bob

had replied. He'd made his point. If the police have to be

called, and I am under oath to call them if any such fight

occurs, they know Dave. Bob, on the other hand, has no arrest

record; he's a college professor and the son of the president of

the town's largest private-sector employer. This year, Dave

seemed to be on is best behavior. He said nice things about The

Kitten, but didn't try to touch her. It may have been Bob

hulking over us, it may have been a lack of interest in babies.

Dave was even drinking tomato juice, but his presence raised the

tension level.

The Kitten was a hit with the older guests. Her grandmother

was the only one who didn't coo over her.

Dinner was much later than the year before. I feared that

The Kitten wouldn't last through it; but the recent changes had

blown the schedule to smithereens, so I couldn't be sure. We had

some of my milk in a bottle. I didn't feel that walking away from

the table to go breast-feed would be a big hit. I would feel less

comfortable feeding The Kitten in front of my family, let alone

their guests, than I did in Bob's old church which I attended

once or twice a year. Bob's only worry, and a serious one, is

that he would have to leave me to care for The Kitten.

"And what do you do, Mr. Brennan?" one of the widows asked.

"Call me Bob."

"Mr. Brennan teaches school up in the North," my mother put

in.

Bob has the least pride of status of anyone I know; Mommy's

statement is technically correct; Bob's mother teaches school,

and he reveres her. Even so, saying an Assistant Professor

"teaches school" minimizes his standing. And Bob is "Dr.

Brennan" or "Professor Brennan" rather than "Mr." I never

understand what advantage mommy sees in this, her daughter's

social standing must reflect on hers to some degree. And mommy

cares about social standing.

"Oh, what is the name of the school?"

"Grand Valley State University," Bob said. "It's in

Michigan."

"They call a school a university?" The woman wasn't nasty,

but neither was she bright.

"No," I said, "Mother calls a university a school. And, to

some extent, it is."

"We," Dave put in, "are eating with an actual university

professor. Aren't you impressed." Dave, having spent five years

in high school, regards himself as an expert on education.

"Were I a professor at thirty-two, you would have reason to

be impressed," Bob said. "Unfortunately, I'm a mere assistant

professor. That's a much commoner breed."

"I," said the widower suddenly, "am more impressed by

thirty-two than by an assistant professor. Oh to be young again!"

That brought laughs and agreement from the table. Soon, the

conversation got around to the ills that flesh is heir to. The

details were excruciating.

Half way through the meal, however, The Kitten demanded

food. Bob pushed his chair back and I passed him the bottle.

"Sorry," he said, "our child needs feeding." mommy expostulated,

but he ignored her. He knew that The Kitten's cries would start

my breasts working whether he had a bottle with him or not.

"He shouldn't be feeding the child now," mommy told me.

"And how do you know he can do it right?"

"Mother, only he has ever bottle fed The Kitten. If I'm in

the same room, my breasts leak." Now that is sober fact. I

expected some complaint that I would feel comfortable breast

feeding my child in front of my in-laws but not in the same house

as my own family.

Instead, she said, "Leaking breasts! Ladies don't mention

leaking breasts. Janice has your daughter ever talked about

leaking breasts at the dinner table?" Janice didn't think so.

"George?" The widower had no daughter. "Well, if you had, you

wouldn't want her talking about leaking breasts."

Now, two cases of incontinence had already been mentioned. I

don't think that leaking breasts are that much worse than leaking

bladders. Also, of the five mentions of leaking breasts, mommy

had managed four. And these were, as the tv censors say,

gratuitous.

"This criticism of formula is simply a modern fad anyway.

Isn't that right, Father?" mommy calls Daddy "Father" when any of

her children are in the room. Why is a mystery, but then most

things about mommy are mysteries.

"Mommy," I said, "I respect Daddy's skill and knowledge as

a pharmacist." And I do. He isn't that effective a businessman

and had been a lousy parent, but he knows drugs and their

interactions.

"And well you might," mommy said. "He built The Pharmacy up

from next to nothing." Which he didn't, in the first place; and

which would imply business skill rather than professional

knowledge, in the second.

"But I don't think he would feel comfortable criticizing the

position taken by the AMA with regard to substances which are

not, after all, prescription substances in the USA."

"What has that to do with your father's putting years into

building up a business that you ignored and abandoned?" I had

"abandoned" the pharmacy by marrying a man who wasn't going to

carry it on. My marrying one who was going to carry it on had

been Daddy's dream, but certainly not Mommy's.

"Nothing, I was just pointing out that the American Medical

Association endorses breast-feeding for at least one year. Your

opinion to the contrary notwithstanding."

"It's not polite to always change the subject, Jeanette.

That's the trouble with these bossy modern women. They turn their

men into wimps doing women's work, ..." (Now Bob complains that

his strength has declined from the summers when he did highway-

construction labor. But "wimp" isn't the first term which comes

to mind when you see him.) "and then they try to change the

subject to their private concerns." (All my comments had been in

response to hers.)

Mercifully, mention of modern times led to a general chorus

of complaints. The sin of women working competed with the

difficulty of hiring housemaids and cleaning women on affordable

terms. I don't want to suggest that anyone raised a possible

conflict between these two evils. It's just that both topics were

broached and people had to choose which one to address at any

particular moment.

Daddy did contribute to this conversation. The economic

problems of this country were entirely due to three causes: the

minimum wage, affirmative action, and "paying people to not work

and worse, paying them to have babies." Oh to be back in the

glorious, untrammeled, economy of 1931! But I didn't say so, I'd

used up my parent-contradiction quota for this year. As I said,

he is careful about your prescription. If you have prescriptions

from two doctors, or from one careless doctor, take his advice.

But not his advice on politics or economics.

Bob brought The Kitten back in. I took her, and Bob dug in

to what was left on his plate. It was the best appetite that I've

seen him exhibit in that house. We had brought presents to mommy

and Daddy from each of us and photos from The Kitten. These would

be opened later. We were given our presents in public, one for

each of us. Bob got a tie; The Kitten got a stuffed animal (an

elephant, I thought it was cute); I got a blouse which was too

small and too young for me. We thanked them effusively.

The Kitten was getting crankier and crankier, an excuse for

us to leave. "You didn't even give me a chance to hold my

grandchild," mommy said.

"You didn't ask when she was in a good mood," I replied,

silently thanking God. We drove off with The Kitten complaining

about the car seat even after the van got moving.

Continued in Part Ten.

FORGET ALL THAT

Uther Pendragon

anon584c@nyx.net

1997/12/30

1999/12/30

2000/10/22

This is the third segment of the last story (so far) in a series

of stories about the Brennans.

The first segment of this story is:

fat_a.txt

Parts 1-3

The fourth and last segment is:

fat_d.txt

Parts 10-12

The first story in the series is:

forever.txt

"Forever"

The list of the entire series is:

brennan.txt

Brennan stories Directory

The list of *all* my stories can be found at:

index.txt

Index to Uther Pendragon's Website



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