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CHAPTER 9


Date: 2015-10-07; view: 582.


There remained the matter of Cranston, Rhode Island, a city slightlymore to the south of Boston than Ipswich is to the north. After the debacleof introducing Jennifer to her potential in-laws ("Do I call them outlawsnow?" she asked), I did not look forward with any confidence to my meetingwith her father. I mean, here I would be bucking that lotsa loveItalian-Mediterranean syndrome, compounded by the fact that Jenny was anonly child, compounded by the fact that she had no mother, which meantabnormally close ties to her father. I would be up against all thoseemotional forces the psych books describe. Plus the fact that I was broke. I mean, imagine for a second Olivero Barretto, some nice Italian kidfrom down the block in Cranston, Rhode Island. He comes to see Mr.Cavilleri, a wage- earning pastry chef of that city, and says, "I would liketo marry your only daughter, Jennifer." What would the old man's firstquestion be? (He would not question Barretto's love, since to know Jenny isto love Jenny; it's a universal truth.) No, Mr. Cavilleri would saysomething like, "Barretto, how are you going to support her?" Now imagine the good Mr. Cavilleri's reaction if Barretto informed himthat the opposite would prevail, at least for the next three years: hisdaughter would have to support his son-in-law! Would not the good Mr.Cavilleri show Barretto to the door, or even, if Barretto were not my size,punch him out? You bet your ass he would. This may serve to explain why, on that Sunday afternoon in May, I wasobeying all posted speed limits, as we headed southward on Route 95. Jenny,who had come to enjoy the pace at which I drove, complained at one pointthat I was going forty in a forty-five-mile-an- hour zone. I told her thecar needed tuning, which she believed not at all. "Tell it to me again, Jen." Patience was not one of Jenny's virtues, and she refused to bolster myconfidence by repeating the answers to all the stupid questions I had asked. "Just one more time, Jenny, please." "I called him. I told him. He said okay. In English, because, as I toldyou and you don't seem to want to believe, he doesn't know a goddamn word ofItalian except a few curses." "But what does 'okay' mean?" "Are you implying that Harvard Law School has accepted a man who can'teven define 'okay'?" "It's not a legal term, Jenny." She touched my arm. Thank God, I understood that. I still neededclarification, though. I had to know what I was in for. "'Okay' could also mean 'I'll suffer through it.'" She found thecharity in her heart to repeat for the nth time the details of herconversation with her father. He was happy. He 'was. He had never expected,when he sent her off to Radcliffe, that she would return to Cranston tomarry the boy next door (who by the way had asked her just before she left).He was at first incredulous that her intended's name was really OliverBarrett IV. He had then warned his daughter not to violate the EleventhCommandment. "Which one is that?" I asked her. "Do not bullshit thy father," she said. "And that's all, Oliver. Truly." "He knows I'm poor?" "Yes." "He doesn't mind?" "At least you and he have something in common." "But he'd be happier if I had a few bucks, right?" "Wouldn't you?" I shut up for the rest of the ride. Jenny lived on a street called Hamilton Avenue, a long line of woodenhouses with many children in front of them, and a few scraggly trees. Merelydriving down it, looking for a parking space, I felt like in anothercountry. To begin with, there were so many people. Besides the childrenplaying, there were entire families sitting on their porches with apparentlynothing better to do this Sunday afternoon than to watch me park my MG. Jenny leaped out first. She had incredible reflexes in Cranston, likesome quick little grasshopper. There was all but an organized cheer when theporch watchers saw who my passenger was. No less than the great Cavilleri!When I heard all the greetings for her, I was almost ashamed to get out. Imean, I could not remotely for a moment pass for the hypothetical OliveroBarretto. "Hey, Jenny!" I heard one matronly type shout with great gusto. "Hey, Mrs. Capodilupo," I heard Jenny bellow back. I climbed out of thecar. I could feel the eyes on me. "Hey-who's the boy?" shouted Mrs. Capodilupo. Not too subtle aroundhere, are they? "He's nothing!" Jenny called back. Which did wonders for my confidence. "Maybe," shouted Mrs. Capodilupo in my direction, "but the girl he'swith is really something!" "He knows," Jenny replied. She then turned to satisfy neighbors on the other side. "He knows," she told a whole new group of her fans. She took my hand (Iwas a stranger in paradise), and led me up the stairs to 165A HamiltonAvenue. It was an awkward moment. I just stood there as Jenny said, "This is my father." And PhilCavilleri, a roughhewn (say 5'6" 165-pound) Rhode Island type in his lateforties, held out his hand. We shook and he had a strong grip. "How do you do, sir?" "Phil," he corrected me, "I'm Phil." "Phil, sir," I replied, continuing to shake his hand. It was also ascary moment. Because then, just as he let go of my hand, Mr. Cavilleriturned to his daughter and gave this incredible shout: "Jennifer!" For a split second nothing happened. And then they were hugging. Tight.Very tight. Rocking to and fro. All Mr. Cavilleri could offer by way offurther comment was the (now very soft) repetition of his daughter's name:"Jennifer." And all his graduating- Radcliffe-with-honors daughter couldoffer by way of reply was: "Phil." I was definitely the odd man out. One thing about my couth upbringing helped me out that afternoon. I hadalways been lectured about not talking with my mouth full. Since Phil andhis daughter kept conspiring to fill that orifice, I didn't have to speak. Imust have eaten a record quantity of Italian pastries. Afterward I discoursed at some length on which ones I hadliked best (I ate no less than two of each kind, for fear of givingoffense), to the delight of the two Cavilleris. "He's okay," said Phil Cavilleri to his daughter. What did that mean? I didn't need to have "okay" defined; I merely wished to know what ofmy few and circumspect actions had earned for me that cherished epithet. Did I like the right cookies? Was my handshake strong enough? What? "I told you he was okay, Phil," said Mr. Cavilleri's daughter. "Well, okay," said her father, "I still had to see for myself. Now Isaw. Oliver?" He was now addressing me. "Yes, sir?" "Phil." "Yes, Phil, sir?" "You're okay." "Thank you, sir. I appreciate it. Really I do. And you know how I feelabout your daughter, sir. And you, sir." "Oliver," Jenny interrupted, "will you stop babbling like a stupidgoddamn preppie, and-" "Jennifer," Mr. Cavilleri interrupted, "can you avoid the profanity?The sonovabitch is a guest!" At dinner (the pastries turned out to be merely a snack) Phil tried tohave a serious talk with me about you-can-guess-what. For some crazy reasonhe thought he could effect a rapprochement between Olivers III and IV. "Let me speak to him on the phone, father to father," he pleaded. "Please, Phil, it's a waste of time." "I can't sit here and allow a parent to reject a child. I can't." "Yeah. But I reject him too, Phil." "Don't ever let me hear you talk like that," he said, getting genuinelyangry. "A father's love is to be cherished and respected. It's rare." "Especially in my family," I said. Jenny was getting up and down to serve, so she was not involved withmost of this. "Get him on the phone," Phil repeated. "I'll take care of this." "No, Phil. My father and I have installed a cold line." "Aw, listen, Oliver, he'll thaw. Believe me when I tell you he'll thaw.When it's time to go to church-" At this moment Jenny, who was handing out dessert plates, directed ather father a portentous monosyllable. "Phil . . . "Yeah, Jen?" "About the church bit.. "Yeah?" "Uh-kind of negative on it, Phil." "Oh?" asked Mr. Cavilleri. Then, leaping instantly to the wrongconclusion, he turned apologetically toward me. "I-uh-didn't mean necessarily Catholic Church, Oliver. I mean, as Jennifer has no doubt told you, we are of theCatholic faith. But, I mean, your church, Oliver. God will bless this unionin any church, I swear I looked at Jenny, who had obviously failed to coverthis crucial topic in her phone conversation. "Oliver," she explained, "it was just too goddamn much to hit him withat once." 'What's this?" asked the ever affable Mr. Cavilleri. "Hit me, hit me,children. I want to be hit with everything on your minds." Why is it that at this precise moment my eyes hit upon the porcelainstatue of the Virgin Mary on a shelf in the Cavilleris' dining room? "It's about the God-blessing bit, Phil," said Jenny, averting her gazefrom him. "Yeah, Jen, yeah?" asked Phil, fearing the worst. "Uh-kind of negativeon it, Phil," she said, now glancing at me for support-which my eyes triedto give her. "On God? On anybody's God?" Jenny nodded yes. "May I explain, Phil?" I asked. "Please." "We neither of us believe, Phil. And we won't be hypocrites." I think he took it because it came from me. He might maybe have hitJenny. But now he was the odd man out, the foreigner. He couldn't look ateither of us. "That's fine," he said after a very long time. "Could I just beinformed as to who performs the ceremony?" "We do," I said. He looked at his daughter for verification. She nodded. My statementwas correct. After another long silence, he again said, "That's fine." And then heinquired of me, in as much as I was planning a career in law, whether such akind of marriage is-what's the word?-legal? Jenny explained that the ceremony we had in mind would have the collegeUnitarian chaplain preside ("Ah, chaplain," murmured Phil) while the man andwoman address each other. "The bride speaks too?" he asked, almost as if this- of allthings-might be the coup de grace. "Philip," said his daughter, "could you imagine any situation in whichI would shut up?" "No, baby," he replied, working up a tiny smile. "I guess you wouldhave to talk." As we drove back to Cambridge, I asked Jenny how she thought it allwent. "Okay," she said.
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