Jonathan Franzen

Freedom


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she know you were using?”

      “No, I told her I had cancer. She didn’t know anything.”

      “How long did that go on?”

      “Since Christmas.”

      “So she believed you. You created an elaborate lie that she believed.”

      Eliza giggled.

      “Yes, I believed her,” Patty said.

      The father didn’t even glance her way. “And what’s this,” he said, holding up the blue binder.

      “That’s my Patty Book,” Eliza said.

      “Appears to be some sort of obsessional scrapbook,” the father said to the mother.

      “So she said she was going to leave you,” the mother said, “and then you said you were going to kill yourself.”

      “Something like that,” Eliza admitted.

      “This is quite obsessional,” the father commented, flipping pages.

      “Are you actually suicidal?” the mother said. “Or was that just a threat to keep your friend from leaving?”

      “Mostly a threat,” Eliza said.

      “Mostly?”

      “OK, I’m not actually suicidal.”

      “And yet you’re aware that we have to take it seriously now,” the mother said. “We have no choice.”

      “You know, I think I’m going to go now,” Patty said. “I’ve got class in the morning, so.”

      “What kind of cancer did you pretend to have?” the father said. “Where in the body was it situated?”

      “I said it was leukemia.”

      “In the blood, then. A fictitious cancer in your blood.”

      Patty put the drug stuff on the cushion of an armchair. “I’ll just leave this right here,” she said. “I really do have to be going.”

      The parents looked at her, looked at each other, and nodded.

      Eliza stood up from the sofa. “When will I see you? Will I see you tomorrow?”

      “No,” Patty said. “I don’t think so.”

      “Wait!” Eliza ran over and seized Patty by the hand. “I fucked everything up, but I’ll get better, and then we can see each other again. OK?”

      “Yes, OK,” Patty lied as the parents moved in to pry their daughter off her.

      Outside, the sky had cleared and the temperature had fallen to near zero. Patty drove breath after breath of cleanness down deep into her lungs. She was free! She was free! And, oh, how she wished she could go back now and play the game against UCLA again. Even at one in the morning, even with nothing in her stomach, she felt ready to excel. She sprinted down Eliza’s street in sheer exhilaration at her freedom, hearing Coach’s words in her ears for the first time, three hours after they’d been spoken, hearing her say how it was just one game, how everybody had bad games, how she’d be herself again tomorrow. She felt ready to dedicate herself more intensely than ever to staying fit and improving her skills, ready to see more theater with Walter, ready to say to her mother, “That’s really great news about The Member of the Wedding!” Ready to be an all-around better person. In her exhilaration, she ran so blindly that she didn’t see the black ice on the sidewalk until her left leg had slipped gruesomely out sideways behind her right leg and she’d ripped the shit out of her knee and was lying on the ground.

      There’s not a lot to say about the six weeks that followed. She had two surgeries, the second one following an infection from the first, and became an ace crutch-user. Her mother flew out for the first operation and treated the hospital staff as if they were midwestern yokels of questionable intelligence, causing Patty to apologize for her and be especially agreeable whenever she was out of the room. When it turned out that Joyce might have been right not to trust the doctors, Patty felt so chagrined that she didn’t even tell her about the second operation until the day before it happened. She assured Joyce that there was no need to fly out again—she had tons of friends to look after her.

      Walter Berglund had learned from his own mother how to be attentive to women with ailments, and he took advantage of Patty’s extended incapacitation to reinsert himself into her life. On the day after her first surgery, he appeared with a four-foot-tall Norfolk pine and suggested that she might prefer a living plant to cut flowers that wouldn’t last. After that, he managed to see Patty almost every day except on weekends, when he was up in Hibbing helping his parents, and he quickly endeared himself to her jock friends with his niceness. Her homelier friends appreciated how much more intently he listened to them than all the guys who couldn’t see past their looks, and Cathy Schmidt, her brightest friend, declared Walter smart enough to be on the Supreme Court. It was a novelty in Female Jockworld to have a guy in their midst who everybody felt so natural and relaxed around, a guy who could hang out in the lounge during study breaks and be one of the girls. And everybody could see that he was crazy about Patty, and everybody but Cathy Schmidt agreed that this was a most excellent thing.

      Cathy, as noted, was sharper than the rest. “You’re not really into him, are you,” she said.

      “I sort of am,” Patty said. “But also sort of not.”

      “So … the two of you are not …”

      “No! Nothing. I probably never should have told him I was raped. He got all squirrelly when I told him that. All … tender and … nursey and … upset. And now it’s like he’s waiting for written permission, or for me to make the move. Which, the crutches probably aren’t helping there, either. But it’s like I’m being followed around by a really nice, welltrained dog.”

      “That’s not so great,” Cathy said.

      “No. It’s not. But I can’t get rid of him, either, because he’s incredibly nice to me, and I really do love talking to him.”

      “You’re sort of into him.”

      “Exactly. Maybe even somewhat more than sort of. But—”

      “But not wildly more.”

      “Exactly.”

      Walter was interested in everything. He read every word of the newspaper and Time magazine, and in April, once Patty was semi-ambulatory again, he began inviting her to lectures and art films and documentaries that she otherwise would not have dreamed of going to. Whether it was because of his love or because of the void in her schedule created by her injury, this was the first time that a person had ever looked through her jock exterior and seen lights on inside. Although she felt inferior to Walter in pretty much every category of human knowledge except sports, she was grateful to him for illuminating that she actually had opinions and that her opinions could differ from his. (This was a refreshing contrast to Eliza, who, if you’d asked her who the current U.S. president was, would have laughed and claimed to have no idea and put another record on her stereo.) Walter burned with all sorts of earnest and peculiar views—he hated the pope and the Catholic Church but approved of the Islamic revolution in Iran, which he hoped would lead to better energy conservation in the United States; he liked China’s new population-control policies and thought the U.S. should adopt something similar; he cared less about the Three Mile Island nuclear mishap than about the low price of gasoline and the need for high-speed rail systems that would render the passenger car obsolete; etc., etc.—and Patty found a role in obstinately approving of things he disapproved of. She especially enjoyed disagreeing with him about the Subjugation of Women. One afternoon near the end of the semester, over coffee at the Student Union, the two of them had a memorable talk about Patty’s Primitive Art professor, whose lectures she approvingly described to Walter by way of giving him a subtle hint about what she found lacking in his personality.

      “Yuck,” Walter said. “This sounds like