The Paris Review

Failure to Thrive

WILLA C. RICHARDS

Alice read John Mark’s letter, her eyes narrowed, as I paced our tiny apartment. The envelope contained instructions for retrieving two sets of human remains from the University of Florida. I sometimes worked for John Mark, the director of the Milwaukee Public Museum, in exchange for modest paychecks and access to the museum’s research collection. I often did the jobs the museum interns refused to do, like retrieving artifacts originally accessioned by the MPM from other institutions and bringing them back to Milwaukee. I hadn’t taken one of these jobs since before Tess was born, afraid to leave her or Alice, but we were so poor we had begun to eat only the casseroles Alice’s mother sent over in weekly batches.

Alice tossed the letter on the coffee table. She wiped a bead of sweat from her forehead. I thought about how sweaty she used to get after her long runs up and down the Beerline. How good her skin tasted. I couldn’t remember the last time she’d gone running.

“So you want to go?”

“I don’t,” she said.

“I’ll drop you at your mother’s, then.”

Alice’s mother refused to speak to me because we’d had Tess out of wedlock. Once, she’d called the apartment, and when I picked up the phone, she whispered, You’re my penance, William. She loved Tess, it was obvious, but she acted as if Alice were a single mother. Their relationship had become fraught.

“Like hell you will,” Alice said.

I threw my hands up. “What then? We need this money.”

“Shush,” Alice whispered. “You’ll wake her.” She was right; Tess began then to make low, wet noises from the other room.

I went to get her but Alice said, “She’s fine.” She wanted Tess to learn to calm herself down. Were babies even capable of that kind of thing?

The windows let too much of the winter into the old apartment. To compensate, we had two space heaters near our orange couch and an electric blanket under which Alice was hunkering. She looked highly flammable. The cold crept up through my sock-feet and I started shivering so I went to the couch and Alice held the blanket up for me to come underneath with her. Even though she kept a whole cushion between us, I was grateful. It reinvigorated my efforts.

“Come with,” I whispered.

“Fine,” she said. “I’m sick of being here anyway.”

“Where?”

She gestured around. The space heaters hummed incriminatingly.

“This crappy apartment. Milwaukee.”

“A trip will be good for us,” I said. “We can see the ocean, maybe even some mountains on the way?”

She shrugged and I felt a surge of hope.

“Even if we leave, we’re still stuck here.”

I cringed but said nothing. Though we’d both been born in Wisconsin, I knew Alice had always dreamed of living in some ocean-side city where the weather was less hostile, or at least more predictable. She said she wanted sunshine every day. But then we had Tess, the progress on my dissertation slowed to a halt, and Alice put school on hold indefinitely. Sometimes I was scared she was right; maybe we were stuck.

The lights flickered and went out. Snow on the power lines. I wanted to

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Acknowledges
The Plimpton Circle is a remarkable group of individuals and organizations whose annual contributions of $2,500 or more help advance the work of The Paris Review Foundation. The Foundation gratefully acknowledges: 1919 Investment Counsel • Gale Arnol

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