It was Loretta who had no doubts. When Janet saw her over Easter (she and Michael came into the city and vacationed for two days at the Mark Hopkins), Loretta embraced her, kissed her, thanked her, gave her an antique platinum brooch that looked like a dragonfly and was encrusted with amethysts and tourmalines. A commemoration? Hush money? All Loretta said was “I love you. You are the greatest.”
—
RICHIE’S TIME in office had begun after Cheney’s was over, so he hadn’t known him as a fellow congressman. When Bush was elected, with Cheney vice-president, even some of the Democrats thought they would be fine with him. He had a reputation of being able to listen, at least, and of not saying “Fuck you” to every Democrat every time. Michael liked Cheney because he was “uncompromising” and “had principles,” which Richie considered a truer indicator than the faulty memories of his colleagues. However, he had not expected the onslaught of arm twisting that began after they came back from recess. And he hardly had Riley to help him. She came to work with the baby (Alexis Aurora Wickett), but she was ruthless: she would work on solar and wind and electric cars and some idea about harnessing the energy of the tides, but she had no opinions about anything else, not even whether Cheney should pony up documents to the General Accounting Office about conflict of interest among members of the late and unlamented Energy Task Force. “Enron, Enron, Enron,” echoed in everyone’s heads, but Cheney brushed it off until, with the help of Richie, Congressman Dingell, and Congressman Waxman, the head of the GAO finally sued Cheney for the materials.
But you would not have known that Richie had ever said “boo” to anyone from the White House, or so much as frowned in Cheney’s direction, because, in preparation for the vote on the Iraq Resolution, the Capitol was swarming with them—Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld, Powell, all the way down to Rod Paige, who was the secretary of education. They came to his office, they knocked on his door, they took him aside in the corridors, they sat down with him in the cafeteria. They talked to Lucille, Riley, Corrie, Leslie, Rudy, Ben, Sam, Jenny, everyone. His staffers pretended that he was inalterably opposed to giving President Bush the power to go to war, when, in fact, Richie had always planned to vote yes, in spite of what his constituents might desire. He did, in fact, expect to be thrown out of his seat on November 6, and to be showing up at Michael’s office on November 7, hat in hand.
He had stayed with Ivy and Leo in Sag Harbor in August, and Ivy was furious with him. She was right about everything: there was no evidence connecting Saddam Hussein to 9/11; Saddam Hussein was contained; Saddam had no weapons of mass destruction; the Middle East was a powder keg and so fate should not be tempted; Afghanistan was the point; Osama bin Laden was the point. Richie’s view was that the Resolution did not have to lead to war—it was meant to put the ball in Saddam’s court, to challenge him to clean up his act. It was a resolution, not necessarily a declaration of war, even though some of his colleagues thought it was. Ivy said that Richie was deluding himself, and maybe he was, but he felt Charlie like a weight on his conscience that got heavier every day.
No remains had ever been found. He was one of six. Perhaps, Richie thought, he had taken a window seat in the front of the plane, and that was the reason—the remains had distributed themselves in an airplane shape diagonally from outside of the first-floor Defense Intelligence Agency through the Naval Intelligence Agency and into the office of the administrative assistant to the army. There was bunching, scattering, and empty space. The empty space appeared to be where the wings had been, but perhaps that was an illusion. Charlie and the five other ghosts (as Richie thought of them) had been included in a memorial at Arlington a year after the attack. After attending the ceremony with all of his staff and Nadie and Alexis (aged four months, born May 11), Richie had felt less at peace rather than more. Since then, he’d found himself saying words like “united front,” “strong response,” “hit back,” “gathering threat,” and “wake up and smell the coffee.” That he could agree with Cheney (and disagree with Jerry Nadler) in this, and yet go after Cheney about the Energy Task Force, made him feel schizophrenic and flexible, though not both at the same time.
It didn’t help that Alexis, whom he saw every day, was emerging into that stage of infancy that was maybe the cutest and most appealing. She was smiling; she was staring at her fists; she was grasping rattles and fingers and growing out her mop of hair (brown, like Riley’s); her gaze followed Richie as he walked away from her, saying, “Are you my dad? Are you my dad?” Nadie, too, was encouraging him to be more aggressive. And Lucille. And Ben and Sam. Enough had been had by all. If Saddam was allowed to do as he wanted, well, what about Iran? Those opposed to the Resolution brought up Iran all the time. Iran was our enemy. Iran was Saddam’s enemy. Saddam had been our friend all through that war—there was a photo of Rumsfeld shaking Saddam’s hand. But Cheney and his minions made the case that if Saddam had been our “ally” (and the word always had oral quotation marks around it), and he was out of control, then it was our job to rein him in, and, in the process, show Iran an example that they would do well to heed.
Richie knew that there was some fuzzy background there that both his uncle Arthur and his dad had been involved in. His mom was not clear in her own mind what it was, only that, when he and Michael were about six months old, his dad had disappeared for four days and come home looking sun-swept and haggard. (Well, “jetlagged” was the real word, she said, but it looked like more than that. It looked as though his trip had taken him somewhere that even World War II hadn’t taken him.) Only when the embassy had been attacked in ’79 had he mentioned that he had once been to Iran, had helped to deliver cash to the…well, to someone. But she had noticed a change in their marriage that she dated from that summer: he was sharper, more ambitious, away more often. She’d thought at the time that he simply hated fatherhood, or her version of motherhood, but imagining that trip he’d taken gave her pause. She’d once mentioned it to Arthur, but he hadn’t taken the bait, said nothing.
And so the Resolution was passed—the New York vote split down the middle. Jerry Nadler stared at him when he cast his vote, maybe in disbelief, maybe in contempt. The balls were in the air now, Richie thought, as he sat in his seat and gazed around the Chamber at all the yakking, at DeLay, Gephardt, Pelosi, Hastert, Armey. Yes, many balls were in the air of all different colors, and Richie didn’t see anyone who could catch them.
2003
THE DUPLEX Henry shared with Riley and Alexis was in Northwest. It was an attractive, faintly Colonial brick cube with two entrances and a pleasant lawn that looked out onto trees in three directions. It was about as unlike Chicago and northern Wisconsin as you could get without palm trees, Henry and Riley agreed. Downstairs, there was a living room, a largish kitchen, a dining room, a sunroom, two bedrooms, and two baths. Upstairs, there was a bedroom, a bathroom, a room “formerly known as the kitchen,” as Riley said, and stacks and boxes and shelves of books. One of the last things that Charlie had done before 9/11 was drive Henry’s U-Haul full of books from Evanston to Washington. Henry had bought the house, but had planned to rent out part of it. After Charlie died, the plan changed.
Henry didn’t see Riley and Alexis very often. His entrance went to the garage and the driveway, her entrance out the front door to the sidewalk; she and Alexis usually took the bus to Tenleytown Station, then the Metro to work. He didn’t hear her often, either; the insulation was so good between the two apartments that he would have said that Alexis didn’t cry at all.
Henry did cry, though, and surely Riley did. He liked Riley, he liked Charlie’s parents, who had visited twice, and he liked Alexis, for a baby, but it was painful to discover how they receded in his affections now that Charlie was gone. He had known that he liked, or even loved Charlie in an avuncular way. Sometimes joked that, had he produced his ideal son, that boy would have been like Charlie, unlike himself, a throwback to the regular Langdon/Cheek/Vogel/Augsberger stock. Charlie had said, “What about the mom?” bu
t smiled as he said it, and Henry had to admit that he hadn’t thought to imagine Fiona. Henry didn’t think Riley liked him much, but living here was convenient, cheap, and pleasant for her. He could be relied upon to look after Alexis if Riley went out, and to talk to her, and even hold her (carefully, gingerly) if he had to.
When Claire had visited in December, she was astonished at the mess, and congratulated him: he was loosening up! But it wasn’t that—the boxes of books were not unpacked, but they were neatly stacked and out of the way. It was that he was on to something new, and most of his days were spent at the Folger. What he was interested in was not Shakespeare, though he had started by looking at archaic origins for some of the plays, just out of curiosity. But then he saw, lying on a table in the reading room, a manuscript in Gaelic, and he realized that he had missed his calling. His calling was Ireland—the strange mix of Gaelic, Viking, Anglo-Saxon, and indigenous inhabitants that the English and the Icelanders and the Scots and the French only thought about when they had to. He felt Gerald of Wales inside himself, lifting his gaze and looking across the Irish Sea, toward Waterford.
Henry had always been amused at the Langdon/Vogel attitude toward the Irish—that they didn’t exist. When his aunt Eloise moved to Chicago, his mother had muttered to his father that now she would undoubtedly marry an Irishman, and what would they think about that? When she married a Jew, his mother had breathed a sigh of relief. Jews, at least, were intelligent, not cunning. Henry realized that he had imbibed this prejudice when he studied Anglo-Saxon rather than the Celtic languages. The Celtic languages were far more interesting, and a much greater puzzle than the Germanic ones. And, yes, the Vikings had been all too familiar with Ireland—they had raided and marauded and enslaved; a study of Icelanders after the Second World War had shown that they were as Irish as the population of South Boston.
But his real pleasure was in the mystery of the Celtic languages—Irish, Breton, Scots Gaelic, Welsh, Manx, and Cornish. Gerald of Wales would have been fluent in at least one. Celtic speakers may have lived at the periphery of Europe, but their language was closer to Italic than to German—the Irish word for wheel was roth, akin to the Latin rota—eventually to show up in modern English as “rotate,” whereas the Old Norse hvel and the Old English hweohl had evolved into plain old “wheel.” The Irish had split off the common Indo-European trunk half a millennium before the Germanic languages. Henry imagined those Celts—cunning, handsome, leading small but spirited horses, telling each other stories and myths that made no sense to anyone else, making their way to the edges of the Continent, then being driven farther west. The only things interfering with his plan to spend the summer in Wexford and Waterford were that he was seventy, and was thus rather nervous about driving on the left side of the road, and that George W. Bush, that craven pig, was about to start a war that could end anywhere. Henry and Richie had had a screaming argument about Richie’s vote for the Iraq Resolution and his apparent support for the imminent invasion. Henry had, in fact, been more violent in his opposition than Riley was.
Henry would have said that he was gifted at taking the long view—he enjoyed taking the long view. Yes, the Roman Empire declined and collapsed, and you could put the turning point at any one of several places; Henry himself thought the conquest of the Germanic peoples by Julius Caesar had been a mistaken use of resources, both military and natural, and that Caesar’s assassination was a testament to the instability the Gallic Wars had caused. The British Empire had collapsed much more quickly, and not that long before Henry’s own birth, but he felt a good deal of equanimity about that in spite of his long history of Anglophilia. Libraries had a way of smoothing over the pain of convulsive change. But he was having difficulty taking the long view about intervention in the Middle East. His particular bête noire was Tony Blair.
Tony Blair was three months younger than Michael and Richie, and, given what Henry knew of those two, he had very little faith in the depth of Tony’s analysis of the pertinent issues. According to Tony’s biographer, he had been quite like Michael and Richie—always in trouble, a student whom his teachers “were glad to see the back of,” someone whose main desire in life was to emulate Mick Jagger. At the press conference Blair held with Bush, a reporter had asked the question (noted only as “Q” in the Times), “Mr. President, Bob Woodward’s account of the White House after Sept. 11 says that you ordered invasion plans for Iraq six days after Sept. 11. Isn’t it the case that you have always intended war on Iraq, and that international diplomacy is a charade in this case?” Neither Blair nor Bush had addressed the question—all tough questions (including the question of whether there was any evidence of direct links between Saddam and Al Qaeda) were avoided. But Henry really understood what he was seeing only this morning, when the Times reported that Blair’s most recent report in support of the war in Iraq, which Colin Powell had used to support invasion, had been cribbed from various magazines rather than resulting from independent research.
And so the boy who got through Yale because he was a legacy had as his biggest ally the boy who cheated on his papers and passed others’ work off as his own. How many times had Henry seen that over the years? Was this why he took the invasion personally? Why it made him physically uncomfortable? Why, during his work in the Folger reading room, deciphering Scéla Muicce Meicc Da Thó word by word (and, slow as it was, enjoying it as a form of rejuvenation), he felt the White House over his left shoulder, reminding him how quickly empires fall apart, and how much, perhaps, that collapse hurt even those who tried to take a long view?
—
DURING THE FIRST IRAQ WAR, Jesse remembered his dad telling him a funny thing—that, after missile silos were installed near Omaha, in the fifties, he would be doing something in the field behind the big house, which ran east-west, and he would be okay going west, because he could keep his eye on the horizon, but he would be nervous going east, because he kept sensing a mushroom cloud behind him. He would tell himself not to glance around—to hold off until the end of the row—but more than once he could not resist and looked over his shoulder. And one time he nearly fell off the seat of the tractor: there was a cloud, which he at first saw as a mushroom, that turned out to be a tornado at that moment reaching down. Yes, he had jumped off the tractor and headed toward the house, but he had been more relieved than frightened, not a normal reaction to a funnel.
Jesse never thought that the Iraqis had nuclear weapons or biological weapons. Somehow, the very expanse of the world around him—flat, huge, time-consuming to cross—had dispossessed him of those fears. And anyway, if Saddam had them, Jesse had said to Jen, why didn’t he use them when the Americans threatened invasion? He might have said, “You come any closer and my representative carrying a dirty bomb in his briefcase will emerge from his hiding place in London (or New York City), and take revenge.” But Jesse did think that Saddam had been foolish. He should have put his hands above his head, metaphorically, and said, “I surrender.” Then Bush and Blair would have had no excuse to invade with tanks and bombs and depleted uranium. Jesse was no pushover. He was skeptical about the war, he was skeptical about the peace, and he was skeptical about the skeptics.
But he was especially skeptical when he was sitting at the supper table, listening to Perky and Guthrie discuss whether to join the military.
Guthrie said, “The war is over. Bush said so. The rest is cleanup.”
Perky said, “Not everyone gets sent there, anyway. There’s other places to go.”
“Like Afghanistan,” said Jen. But that was the closest she would get to attempting to dissuade them. She still believed in the Socratic method of child rearing. For both boys, joining the military was an alternative to farming, and the one thing they agreed on was that any alternative to farming was better than farming. Felicity rolled her eyes, adjusted her pony tail, cut a piece off her pork chop, and ate it—chewing it ten times, the optimum for swallow-ability. She was fourteen and disdained her brothers’ views, but welcomed the
m—she had told Jesse around Valentine’s Day that he could leave the farm to her and she would be one of those women farmers like Alexandra Bergson in O Pioneers!, which she had read over Christmas for a school report. She had also said that if he, Jesse, died young (because men always died at younger ages than women, and farmers died younger than other men—it was statistics), she would make sure that her mother had everything she needed, including going to Phoenix for the winter, where she was more likely to find a nice retired man than she was around Denby. Jesse had ceased taking anything Felicity said personally, because she would say anything at all: it depended on what she was reading on the Internet and elsewhere. And she didn’t have many social skills. (Where did that come from? All the Guthries had social skills.)
Guthrie did wolf his food down—his plate was clean, and he was still wiping a piece of bread over it as he talked. He could eat anything in any quantity and never gain a pound, unlike Jesse himself, or Jen, for that matter. Jen said, “You want the last chop? It’s a little overdone.”
Guthrie said, “Like a hundred and fifty soldiers have been killed the whole time. That’s less than one-tenth of one percent.”
Jesse smiled, not about the troops, but because Guthrie had done the math. Guthrie had graduated from high school, just barely, having played on every team with tremendous enthusiasm but not much strength or skill. There was no sport at Iowa or Iowa State anymore that was just fun, because every team was expected to win and to bring in funding. Jesse had heard that the football coach at one or the other of the two was earning a million dollars a year, but the farmers at the Denby Café tended to exaggerate these sorts of things, especially if they themselves were not raking in a million dollars a year—those who were didn’t eat breakfast at the Denby Café. Perky hadn’t graduated yet, but he was doing somewhat better than Guthrie had, with a B average in all subjects, about the same as Jesse at the same age. Guthrie didn’t have Uncle Frank as an inspiration. College sounded boring to him, more classes, more reading, more papers that started with an introduction, continued with a main body, and then ended with a conclusion at the bottom of page two. He hadn’t applied to ISU or UI. When Jen brought it up (only in her Socratic, you-might-consider-this way), he said that there were four community colleges within forty miles—he would decide later. At least every other day, the two boys talked about the military.