Varieties of Exile by Mavis Gallant
Author:Mavis Gallant
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 978-1-59017-423-4
Publisher: New York Review Books
The husband of the woman from whom I rented my summer room played golf every weekend. On one of those August nights when no one can sleep and the sky is nearly bright enough to read by, I took to the backyard and found him trying to cool off with a glass of beer. He remembered he had offered to give me golf lessons. I did not wish to learn, but did not say so. His wife spoke up from a deck chair: “You’ve never offered to teach me, I notice.” She then compounded the error by telling me everyone was talking about me and the married man on the train. The next day I took the Käthe Kollwitz prints down from the walls of my room and moved back to Montreal without an explanation. Frank Cairns and I met once more that summer to return some books. That was all. When he called me at my office late in November, I said, “Who?”
He came into the coffee shop at Windsor station, where I was waiting. He was in uniform. I had not noticed he was good-looking before. It was not something I noticed in men. He was a first lieutenant. I disapproved: “Couldn’t they make you a private?”
“Too old,” he said. “As it is I am too old for my rank.” I thought he just meant he might be promoted faster because of that.
“You don’t look old.” I at once regretted this personal remark, the first he had heard from me. Indeed, he had shed most of his adult life. He must have seemed as young as this when he started out to Ceylon. The uniform was his visa to England; no one could shut him away now. His face was radiant, open: He was halfway there. This glimpse of a purpose astonished me; why should a uniform make the change he’d been unable to make alone? He was not the first soldier I saw transfigured but he was the first to affect me.
He kept smiling and staring at me. I hoped he was not going to make a personal remark in exchange for mine. He said, “That tam makes you look, I don’t know, Canadian. I’ve always thought of you as English. I still think England is where you might be happy.”
“I’m happy here. You said you’d never live there.”
“It would be a good place for you,” he said. “Well, well, we shall see.”
He would see nothing. My evolution was like freaky weather then: A few months, a few weeks even, were the equivalent of long second thoughts later on. I was in a completely other climate. I no longer missed New York and “different things.” I had become patriotic. Canadian patriotism is always anti-American in part, and feeds upon anecdotes. American tourists were beginning to arrive in Montreal looking for anything expensive or hard to find in the United States; when they could not buy rationed food such as meat and butter, or unrationed things such as nylon stockings (because they did not exist), they complained of ingratitude.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Anthologies | Short Stories |
The Tidewater Tales by John Barth(12391)
Kathy Andrews Collection by Kathy Andrews(11321)
Tell Tale: Stories by Jeffrey Archer(8677)
This Is How You Lose Her by Junot Diaz(6431)
The Mistress Wife by Lynne Graham(6241)
The Last Wish (The Witcher Book 1) by Andrzej Sapkowski(5210)
Dancing After Hours by Andre Dubus(5112)
The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen(4091)
Maps In A Mirror by Orson Scott Card(3717)
The Secret Wife by Lynne Graham(3660)
Be in a Treehouse by Pete Nelson(3644)
Tangled by Emma Chase(3565)
Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges(3363)
The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros(3226)
Girls Who Bite by Delilah Devlin(3041)
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms by George R R Martin(3026)
You Lost Him at Hello by Jess McCann(2857)
MatchUp by Lee Child(2691)
Once Upon a Wedding by Kait Nolan(2609)
