Page 28, “The
Persuasion”
“So
you are Jewish. You’ve got a Jewish
mother.”
“Technically,
yes, except I was brought up Episcopalian. My uncle converted and once Erika
walked into St. John’s, she never looked back. Too bad for me. No dreidls or
Chanukah gelt.”
He
undid his collar button and ran his hand along the back of his neck. Hairy just under the
Adam’s apple like my father. He might as well have taken off his shirt. “So I’m
talking too much. What about you? Parents, grandparents, country of origin?”
I
wasn’t used to being the interviewee—“you ask so many questions,” people said—and
I was particularly reluctant when it came to family. “When
were you born? You first.”
“May
23, 1947. When’s yours?”
I
didn’t know what to say. If I spoke too quickly, he’d think I wanted
to make something of it. If I didn’t acknowledge it and he found out later,
he might think I actually lied sometimes. Later?
I
nodded.
“So?
Yours?”
I
nodded again.
“You
mean...”
I
nodded and pushed away a curl that creeping toward my mouth.
“Really.
How cool is that? We’ll celebrate together next year.” He pumped my hand. "Deal."
“Stop
it.” I pulled back and pointed to the book he’d had under his arm with the
Herald Tribune. “What’s with the Chekhov?”
“It’s
honest. I didn’t bring it to impress you. Double degree from The Sorbonne,
Russian literature and architecture. I started this year at Columbia, by the
way—hey, we might have seen each other last summer. Were you there?”
I
nodded again. “Can’t you tell a story without interrupting yourself?”
“There’s
so much to say, Lois Lane. We’ve got a lot to catch up on.”
“Try
chronological order.”