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Extract: Page 2 of 6
While he was gone, I went back and forth to school,
dropping my books on the polished hall table with a bang. Neither
Mrs. Clay nor my father let me go out in the evenings, except to the
occasional carefully approved movie with carefully approved friends,
andto my retrospective astonishmentI never flouted these
rules. I preferred solitude anyway; it was the medium in which I had
been raised, in which I swam comfortably. I excelled at my studies
but not in my social life. Girls my age terrified me, especially the
tough-talking, chain-smoking sophisticates of our diplomatic circlearound
them I always felt that my dress was too long, or too short, or that
I should have been wearing something else entirely. Boys mystified
me, although I dreamed vaguely of men. In fact, I was happiest alone
in my fathers library, a large, fine room on the first floor
of our house.
My fathers library had probably once been a sitting room, but he sat down only to read, and he considered a large library more important than a large living room. He had long since given me free run of his collection. During his absences, I spent hours doing my homework at the mahogany desk or browsing the shelves that lined every wall. I understood later that my father had either half forgotten what was on one of the top shelves ormore likelyassumed I would never be able to reach it; late one night I took down not only a translation of the Kama Sutra but also a much older volume and an envelope of yellowing papers. I cant say even now what made me pull them down. But the image I saw at the center of the book, the smell of age that rose from it, and my discovery that the papers were personal letters all caught my attention forcibly. I knew I shouldnt examine my fathers private papers, or anyones, and I was also afraid that Mrs. Clay might suddenly come in to dust the dustless deskthat must have been what made me look over my shoulder at the door. But I couldnt help reading the first paragraph of the topmost letter, holding it for a couple of minutes as I stood near the shelves. continues . . . |
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