The Hundred-Year House

The Hundred-Year House by Rebecca Makkai Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Hundred-Year House by Rebecca Makkai Read Free Book Online
Authors: Rebecca Makkai
Tags: Fiction, Literary, General, Historical
mail, followed by the contract to complete two more books before the end of summer. One was another Melissa book, this time about her work backstage at the school play, and one was a Cece book. “I loved the detail about her poetry business!” Frieda said. “I think you’ll have a great ear for her.”
    The whole week had been hot, but Doug made himself exercise anyway, circling the grounds and stretching. Behind the big house, he stopped to do the back releases Dr. Morsi taught him, then stepped on the fountain lip to stretch his hamstrings.
    Miriam had been digging at the back of the fountain, and he nearly stepped in the hole. Apparently she’d been out here breaking old plates when she noticed a different shard, a red and white one, sticking out of the dirt. She’d pulled it out and dug around and found more—not just that one pattern but dozens of other colors of porcelain and glass and terra cotta. She’d excavated about two cubic feet back there. Her own archeological dig. “It’s like the house is giving me pieces,” she said. “Like they’re growing from the ground.” (“Or like someone had a really bad temper tantrum once,” Zee said. “And broke all the china in the house.”)
    He’d remembered to bring bread crumbs, and he dropped them in the three koi ponds. How long did koi live? Eighty years?These ones were enormous and mottled and drowsy, and he liked to imagine Edwin Parfitt feeding them his leftover breakfast.
    At the south end of the property, he toed helplessly at the foundations of the studios Gracie tore down in the seventies, when they were past repair—the long one that must have housed several artists, and the small one behind that. Both lay far enough back that the remains weren’t eyesores, and Gracie seemed content to wait for erosion and vegetation to swallow them. Even farther in the woods stood a granite statue of a squatting bear, about three feet high, moss covering its right flank. Doug sometimes rubbed its head for good luck. What else were statues for? The one surviving studio, on the other end of the property behind the vegetable gardens, had long ago been converted to a groundskeeper’s shed, but Zee remembered her father referring to it as the composer’s cottage—which was the only reason Doug hadn’t cut through the padlock and scoured the walls for Parfitt-era graffiti.
    As he rounded the big house, he saw Sofia heaving paper grocery bags from the back of her van to the garage floor. The driveway was eerily empty: Gracie and Bruce off on separate golf dates, the Subaru with Zee in the city, Case’s BMW zapped by the Greek gods. Doug offered to help, but Sofia shook her head. Then she said, “This is ridiculous that Mr. Breen wants.”
    There must have been twenty bags, from several different stores—Jewel, Dominick’s, Sunset, Don’s. He righted a Jewel bag that had fallen and saw it was full of blue cylinders of Morton’s table salt. So was the next bag over, and the next.
    “He is for the end of the world,” Sofia said. “On the New Years.”
    “He’s . . . stockpiling salt for the end of the world?”
    “Is for take the water out of the food.”
    “Wow.”
    “Yes, is wow.”
    Doug held up his hands as if to say, Hey, he’s your employer,not mine. Although Sofia probably saw them all as family, saw Doug as part of this entitled clan as much as anybody. And really, he was. Who was he kidding? Yet as he headed back to the coach house, he felt the urge to call over his shoulder that he’d gone to a crappy public school, that he never had a decent bike, that he was raised on off-brand TV dinners.
    Up in the kitchen, he opened a beer and watched Sofia out the window. He could hear her grunting from all the way up here. No, that wasn’t right. She was too far, and it was coming from downstairs.
    He went back down and found Miriam sobbing on the sunporch, her face folded into her arms on her card table. He tried hard to walk away.
    “Hey,” he

Similar Books

Tempting Fate

Carla Neggers

Flail of the Pharoah

Rosanna Challis

Maxine

SUE FINEMAN

Limbo

A. Manette Ansay

Pushing Murder

Eleanor Boylan

Hot Water Music

Charles Bukowski