Fluorocarbons. Agent Orange. Parablendeum. How does it get so delicious?â âMore?â Abbottâs daughter says, holding up her empty cup. âThey do something to it,â his wife says, âbut they donât add anything. Iâm not saying itâs health food, but I know itâs natural. Pure Vermont maple syrupâwhat did you think that meant?â Abbott disappears into his office, where, after establishing a particularly strong dial-up Internet connection, he learns, at age thirty-seven, that real maple syrup is, after all, just maple sapâfrom a treeâboiled down. (Native Americans taught the early settlers how to make it. For a sugar maple tree, youâll need about thirty-two gallons of sap to make a gallon of syrup. Itâs a good idea to strain the finished syrup through cheesecloth to remove any debris or crystallized minerals.) Here he is, suspicious of trees. He hunches over the laptop in his darkened office, chastened and contrite. Outside, someone is mowing in the rain. Abbott knows you canât just believe. He knows you canât just not believe.
29 Abbott and the Infestation
Every Sunday morning Abbott retrieves from the end of the driveway a newspaper in a blue plastic bag. Every Sunday morning he pulls the plastic bag off the newspaper and drops it into a low kitchen drawer containing nothing but blue plastic bags. This morning he opens the drawer with his foot and tosses the balled-up bag into the drawer, which is, Abbott now sees, filled completely with blue plastic bags. This morningâs blue bag falls slowly onto the pile, then slides and tumbles out of the drawer and onto the kitchen floor. It stretches out nearly to full length. A draft of air nudges it across the tile. Abbottâs dog jumps back and yelps, in all likelihood waking the child. Abbott looks down into the heaping drawer of weeks. This is how you know that you have Time in your house; you discover its shed skins. He places the thick newspaper on the counter, where it will remain until it is recycled. He gets down on his knees by the drawer. Who else is going to do it? He opens a blue plastic bag and begins to shove the other blue bags into it. The opening is small, so the work is painstaking. When heâs finished, he ties the top of the bulging bag in a knot and tosses the whole year into the garage. Today heâll deal with shit, snot, piss, blood, vomit, rust, and rot, but they wonât be bad in quite the same way that this is bad.
30 On Conservation
All day long Abbott and his wife have been arguing. By evening there is a fragile truce. The daughter has been put to bed, though her singing and babbling are audible on the staticky monitor. âI forgot to even ask you about the butterflies,â Abbottâs wife says, conciliatory in word if not tone. They are together in the family room, a designation they actually use. They are sitting as far apart as possible on the devastated couch, purchased at a furniture warehouse years ago, when Abbott was in graduate school, and now draped like a corpse by a mail-order cover. Besides Abbottâs cocktail, the couch is the only adult item in the family room, which this and every evening looks as though robbers have ransacked it in an urgent search for a small and valuable item. Books, toys, coins, buttons, beads, and costume jewelry lie strewn across the stained carpeting. Itâs almost impossible not to fight with your life partner in this room. Abbottâs wife has asked, sort of, about Abbottâs trip to the butterfly conservatory, an outing he took this morning with their daughter but did not discuss afterward with his wife because she was too busy reminding him of things about which he did not need to be reminded. Today was Abbottâs first trip to the butterfly conservatory. His wife has been twice before with theirdaughter, and she has reported that the conservatory is âneatâ and âkind of
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