1
The Moustache The Moustache by Robert Cormier
At the last minute Annie couldn't
go. She was invaded by one of those twenty-four-hour flu bugs that sent her to
bed with a fever, moaning about the fact that she'd also have to break her date
with Handsome Harry Arnold that night. We call him Handsome Harry because he's
actually handsome, but he's also a nice guy, cool, and he doesn't treat me like
Annie's kid brother, which I am, but like a regular person. Anyway, I had to go
to Lawnrest alone that afternoon. But first of all I had to stand inspection.
My mother lined me up against the wall. She stood there like a oneman firing
squad, which is kind of funny because she's not like a man at all, she's very
feminine, and we have this great relationship -- I mean, I feel as if she
really likes me. I realize that sounds strange, but I know guys whose mothers
love them and cook special stuff for them and worry about them and all but
there's something missing in their relationship. Anyway. She frowned and
started the routine. "That hair," she said. Then admitted:
"Well, at least you combed it." I sighed. I have discovered that it's
better to sigh than argue. "And that moustache." She shook her head.
"I still say a seventeen-year-old has no business wearing a
moustache." "It's an experiment," I said. "I just wanted to
see if I could grow one." To tell the truth, I had proved my point about
being able to grow a decent moustache, but I also had learned to like it.
"It's costing you money, Mike," she said. "I know, I know."
The money was a reference to the movies. The Downtown Cinema has a special
Friday night offer -- half price admission for high school couples, seventeen
or younger. But the woman in the box office took one look at my moustache and
charged me full price. Even when I showed her my driver's license. She charged
full admission for Cindy's ticket, too, which left me practically broke and
unable to take Cindy out for a hamburger with the crowd afterward. That didn’t
help matters, because Cindy has been getting impatient recently about things
like the fact that I don't own my own car and have to concentrate on my studies
if I want to win that college scholarship, for instance. Cindy wasn't exactly
crazy about the moustache, either. Now it was my mother's turn to sigh. 2
"Look," I said, to cheer her up. "I'm thinking about shaving it
off." Even though I wasn't. Another discovery: You can build a way of life
on postponement. "Your grandmother probably won't even recognize
you," she said. And I saw the shadow fall across her face. Let me tell you
what the visit to Lawnrest was all about. My grandmother is seventy-three years
old. She is a resident -- which is supposed to be a better word than patient --
at the Lawnrest Nursing Home. She used to make the greatest turkey dressing in
the world and was a nut about baseball and could even quote batting averages,
for crying out loud. She always rooted for the losers. She was in love with the
Mets until they started to win. Now she has arteriosclerosis, which the
dictionary says is "a chronic disease characterized by abnormal thickening
and hardening of the arterial walls." Which really means that she can't
live at home anymore or even with us, and her memory has betrayed her as well
as her body. She used to wander off and sometimes didn't recognize people. My
mother visits her all the time, driving the thirty miles to Lawnrest almost
every day. Because Annie was at home for semester break from college, we had
decided to make a special Saturday visit. Now Annie was in bed, groaning
theatrically -- she's a drama major -- but I told my mother I'd go anyway. I
hadn't seen my grandmother since she'd been admitted to Lawnrest. Besides, the
place is located on the Southwest Turnpike, which meant I could barrel along in
my father's new Le Mans. My ambition was to see the speedometer hit
seventy-five. Ordinarily, I used the old station wagon, which can barely
stagger up to fifty. Frankly, I wasn't too crazy about visiting a nursing home.
They reminded me of hospitals and hospitals turn me off. I mean, the smell of
ether makes me nauseous, and I feel faint at the sight of blood. And as I
approached Lawnrest -- which is a terrible cemetery kind of name, to begin with
-- I was sorry I hadn't avoided the trip. Then I felt guilty about it. I'm
loaded with guilt complexes. Like driving like a madman after promising my
father to be careful. Like sitting in the parking lot, looking at the nursing
home with dread and thinking how I'd rather be with Cindy. Then I thought of
all the Christmas and birthday gifts my grandmother had given me and I got out
of the car, guilty, as usual. Inside, I was surprised by the lack of hospital
smell, although there was another odor or maybe the absence of an odor. The air
was antiseptic, sterile. As if there was no atmosphere at all, or I'd caught a
cold suddenly and couldn't taste or smell. A nurse at the reception desk gave
me directions -- my grandmother was in East Three. I made my way down the tiled
corridor and was glad to see that the walls were painted with cheerful colors
like yellow and pink. A wheelchair suddenly shot around a corner,
self-propelled by an old man, white-haired and toothless, who cackled merrily
as he barely missed me. I jumped aside -- here I was, almost getting wiped out
by a two-mile-an-hour wheelchair after doing seventyfive on the pike. As I
walked through the corridor seeking East Three, I couldn't help glancing into
the rooms, and it was like some kind of wax museum -- all these figures in
various stances and attitudes, sitting in begs or chairs, standing at windows,
as if they were frozen forever in these postures. To tell the truth, I began to
hurry because I was getting depressed. Finally, I saw a beautiful girl
approaching, dressed in white, a nurse or an attendant, and I was so happy to
see someone young, someone walking and acting normally, that I gave her a wide
smile and a big 3 hello and I must have looked like a kind of nut. Anyway, she
looked right through me as if I were a window, which is about par for the
course whenever I meet beautiful girls. I finally found the room and saw my
grandmother in bed. My grandmother looks like Ethel Barrymore. I never knew who
Ethel Barrymore was until I saw a terrific movie, None But The Lonely Heart, on
TV, starring Ethel Barrymore and Cary Grant. Both my grandmother and Ethel
Barrymore have these great craggy faces like the side of a mountain and
wonderful voices like syrup being poured. Slowly. She was propped up in bed,
pillows puffed behind her. Her hair had been combed out and fell upon her
shoulders. For some reason, this flowing hair gave her an almost girlish
appearance, despite its whiteness. She saw me and smiled. Her eyes lit up and
her eyebrows arched and she reached out her hands to me in greeting.
"Mike, Mike," she said. And I breathed a sigh of relief. This was one
of her good days. My mother warned me that she might not know who I was at
first. I took her hands in mine. They were fragile. I could actually feel her
bones, and it seemed as if they would break if I pressed too hard. Her skin was
smooth, almost slippery, as if the years had worn away all the roughness, the
way the wind wears away the surfaces of stones. "Mike, Mike, I didn't
think you'd come," she said, so happy, and she was still Ethel Barrymore,
that voices like a caress. "I've been waiting all this time." Before
I could reply, she looked away, out the window. "See the birds? I've been
watching them at the feeder. I love to see them come. Even the blue jays. The
blue jays are like hawks -- they take the food that the small birds should
have. But the small birds, the chickadees, watch the blue jays and at least
learn where the feeder is." She lapsed into silence, and I looked out the
window. There was no feeder. No birds. There was only the parking lot and the
sun glinting on car windshields. She turned to me again, eyes bright. Radiant,
really. Or was it a medicine brightness? "Ah, Mike. You look so grand, so
grand. Is that a new coat?" "Not really," I said. I'd been
wearing my uncle Jerry's old army-fatigue jacket for months, practically living
in it, my mother said. But she insisted that I wear my raincoat for the visit.
It was about a year old but looked new because I didn't wear it much. Nobody
was wearing raincoats lately. "You always loved clothes, didn't you,
Mike?" she said. I was beginning to feel uneasy, because she regarded me
with such intensity. Those bright eyes. I wondered -- are old people in place
like this so lonesome, so abandoned that they go wild when someone visits? Or
was she so happy because she was suddenly lucid and everything was sharp and
clear? My mother had described those moments when my grandmother suddenly
emerged from the fog that so often obscured her mind. I didn't know the
answers, but it felt kind of spooky, getting such an emotional welcome from
her. 4 "I remember the time you bought the new coat -- the
Chesterfield," she said, looking away again, as if watching the birds that
weren't there. "That lovely coat with the velvet collar. Black, it was.
Stylish. Remember that, Mike? It was hard times, but you could never resist the
glitter." I was about to protest -- I had never heard of a Chesterfield,
for crying out loud. But I stopped. Be patient with her, my mother had said.
Humor her. Be gentle. We were interrupted by an attendant, who pushed a wheeled
cart into the room. "Time for juices, dear," the woman said. She was
the standard, forty- or fifty-year-old woman: glasses, nothing hair, plump
cheeks. Her manner was cheerful but a businesslike kind of cheerfulness. I'd
hate to be called "dear" by someone getting paid to do it. "Orange
or grape or cranberry, dear? Cranberry is good for the bones, you know."
My grandmother ignored the interruption. She didn't even bother to answer,
having turned away at the woman's arrival, as if angry about her appearance.
The woman looked at my and winked. A conspiratorial kind of wink. It was kind
of horrible. I didn't think people winked like that anymore. In fact, I hadn't
seen a wink in years. "She doesn't care much for juices," the woman
said, talking to me as if my grandmother weren't even there. "But she
loves her coffee. With lots of cream and two lumps of sugar. But this is juice
time, not coffee time." Addressing my grandmother again, she said,
"Orange or grape or cranberry, dear?" "Tell her I want no
juices, Mike," my grandmother commanded regally, her eyes still watching
invisible birds. The woman smiled, patience like a label on her face.
"That's all right, dear. I'll just leave some cranberry for you. Drink it
at your leisure. It's good for the bones." She wheeled herself out of the
room. My grandmother was still absorbed in the view. Somewhere a toilet
flushed. A wheelchair passed the doorway -- probably that same old driver
fleeing a hit-run accident. A television set exploded with sound, somewhere,
soap-opera voices filling the air. You can always tell soap-opera voices. I
turned back to find my grandmother staring at me. Her hands cupped her face,
her index fingers curled around her cheeks like parenthesis marks. "But
you know, Mike, looking back, I think you were right," she said, continuing
our conversation as if there had been no interruption. "You always said
'It's the things of the spirit that count, Meg.' The spirit! And so you bought
the baby-grand piano -- a baby grand in the middle of the Depression. A knock
came on the door and it was the deliveryman. It took five of them to get it
into the house." She leaned back, closing her eyes. "How I loved that
piano, Mike. I was never that fine a player, but you loved to sit there in the
parlor, on Sunday evenings, Ellie on your lap, listening to me play and
sing." She hummed a bit, a fragment of melody I didn't 5 recognize. Then
she drifted into silence. Maybe she'd fallen asleep. My mother's name is Ellen,
but everyone always calls her Ellie. "Take my hand, Mike," my grandmother
said suddenly. Then I remembered -- my grandfather's name was Michael. I had
been named for him. "Ah, Mike," she said, pressing my hands with all
her feeble strength. "I thought I'd lost you forever. And here you are,
back with me again..." Her expression scared me. I don't mean scared as if
I were in danger but scared because of what could happen to her when she
realized the mistake she had made. My mother always said I favored her side of
the family. Thinking back to the pictures in the old family albums, I recalled
my grandfather as tall and thin. Like me. But the resemblance ended there. He
was thirty-five when he died, almost forty years ago. And he wore a moustache.
I brought my hand to my face. I also wore a moustache now, of course. "I
sit here these days, Mike," she said, her voice a lullaby, her hand still
holding mine, "and I drift and dream. The days are fuzzy sometimes,
merging together. Sometimes it's like I'm not here at all but somewhere else
altogether. And I always think of you. Those years we had. Not enough years,
Mike, not enough..." Her voice was so sad, so mournful that I made sounds
of sympathy, not words exactly but the kind of soothings that mothers murmur to
their children when they awaken from bad dreams. "And I think of that terrible
night, Mike, that terrible night. Have you ever really forgiven me for that
night?" "Listen..." I began. I wanted to say: "Nana, this
is Mike your grandson, not Mike your husband." "Sh...sh..." she
whispered, placing a finger as long and cold as a candle against my lips.
"Don't say anything. I've waited so long for this moment. To be here. With
you. I wondered what I would say if suddenly you walked in that door like other
people have done. I've thought and thought about it. And I finally made up my
mind -- I'd ask you to forgive me. I was too proud to ask before." Her
fingers tried to mask her face. "But I'm not proud anymore, Mike."
That great voice quivered and then grew strong again. "I hate you to see
me this way -- you always said I was beautiful. I didn't believe it. The
Charity Ball when we led the grand march and you said I was the most beautiful
girl there..." "Nana," I said. I couldn't keep up the pretense
any longer, adding one more burden to my load of guilt, leading her on this
way, playing a pathetic game of make-believe with an old woman clinging to
memories. She didn't seem to hear me. "But that other night, Mike. The
terrible one. The terrible accusations I made. Even Ellie woke up and began to
cry. I went to her and rocked her in my arms and you came into the room and
said I was wrong. You were whispering, an awful whisper, not wanting to upset
little Ellie but wanting to make me see the truth. And I didn't answer you,
Mike. I was too proud. I've even forgotten the name of the girl. I sit here, wondering
now -- was it Laura or Evelyn? I can't remember. Later, I learned that you were
telling the truth all the time, Mike. That I'd been wrong..." Her eyes
were brighter than ever as she looked at me now, but tear-bright, the tears
gathering. "It was never the same after that night, was it, Mike? The
glitter was gone. From you. 6 From us. And then the accident... and I never had
the chance to ask you to forgive me..." My grandmother. My poor, poor
grandmother. Old people aren't supposed to have those kinds of memories. You
see their pictures in the family albums and that's what they are: pictures.
They're not supposed to come to life. You drive out in your father's Le Mans
doing seventy-five on the pike and all you're doing is visiting an old lady in
a nursing home. A duty call. And then you find out that she's a person. She's
somebody. She's my grandmother, all right, but she's also herself. Like my own
mother and father. They exist outside of their relationship to me. I was scared
again. I wanted to get out of there. "Mike, Mike," my grandmother
said. "Say it, Mike." I felt as if my cheeks would crack if I uttered
a word. "Say you forgive me, Mike. I've waited all these years..." I
was surprised at how strong her fingers were. "Say, 'I forgive you, Meg.'"
I said it. My voice sounded funny, as if I were talking in a huge tunnel.
"I forgive you, Meg." Her eyes studied me. Her hands pressed mine.
For the first time in my life, I saw love at work. Not movie love. Not Cindy's
sparkling eyes when I tell her that we're going to the beach on a Sunday
afternoon. But love like something alive and tender, asking nothing in return.
She raised her face, and I knew what she wanted me to do. I bent and brushed my
lips against her cheek. Her flesh was like a leaf in autumn, crisp and dry. She
closed her eyes and I stood up. The sun wasn't glinting on the cars any longer.
Somebody had turned on another television set, and the voices were the show-off
voices of the panel shows. At the same time you could still hear the soap-opera
dialogue on the other television set. I waited awhile. She seemed to be
sleeping, her breathing serene and regular. I buttoned my raincoat. Suddenly
she opened her eyes again and looked at me. Her eyes were still bright, but
they merely stared at me. Without recognition or curiosity. Empty eyes. I
smiled at her, but she didn't smile back. She made a kind of moaning sound and
turned away on the bed, pulling the blankets around her. I counted to
twenty-five and then to fifty and did it all over again. I cleared my throat
and coughed tentatively. She didn't move; she didn't respond. I wanted to say,
"Nana, it's me." But I didn't. I thought of saying, "Meg, it's
me." But I couldn't. Finally I left. Just like that. I didn't say goodbye
or anything. I stalked through the corridors, looking neither to the right nor
the left, not caring whether that wild old man with the wheelchair ran me down
or not. On the Southwest Turnpike I did seventy-five -- no, eighty -- most of
the way. I turned the radio 7 up as loud as it could go. Rock music -- anything
to fill the air. When I got home, my mother was vacuuming the living-room rug.
She shut off the cleaner, and the silence was deafening. "Well, how was
your grandmother?" she asked. I told her she was fine. I told her a lot of
things. How great Nana looked and how she seemed happy and had called me Mike.
I wanted to ask her -- hey, Mom, you and Dad really love each other, don't you?
I mean -- there's nothing to forgive between you, is there? But I didn't.
Instead I went upstairs and took out the electric razor Annie had given me for
Christmas and shaved off my moustache.http://www.mrswatersenglish.com/2014/05/40-excellent-short-stories-for-middle-school/
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