front of his brain by being on the Cape and eating outdoors. His parents always made sure their summer rental had either a patio or porch so they could have breakfast outside and read the paper with Al, ignoring Griffins pleas to finish so they could go to the beach. He and Joy had used Al Fresco back in their L.A. days, but it wasnt that great a joke and had naturally fallen into disuse.
Still, he was a little hurt when Joy said, Al who?
I dont know about yours, he told her, but my days begun poorly.
I know, Joy said, sounding exhausted now. She called here, too. The semesters officially over, I guess.
Griffin had put off introducing Joy to his parents for as long as possible, explaining that they were involved in a particularly acrimonious divorce. But I am going to meet them, right? shed inquired, already suspicious. I mean, they are your parents. He suggested, How about at the wedding? and shed laughed, thinking he was joking. Down the years shed gotten on well enough with his father, though he could never quite seem to place her, even when she was standing next to his son. Living two thousand miles apart, they saw each other infrequently, of course, but each time they met, his father acted more delighted and charmed than seemed natural. Is it my imagination, Joy said after their second meeting, or had he forgotten me entirely? Griffin told her not to take it personally. At the end of each semester his father still didnt know his students names, except the two or three prettiest girls.
His mother was a different story. Though polite, shed never made a secret of her low opinion of Griffins choice of a mate. Where did she do her graduate work? was the first thing shed wanted to know when Griffin called to say he was engaged. For her there was no greater barometer of personal worth. Moreover, when she asked people this question, they generally asked her back, and she got to say her doctorate was from Yale; if they didnt ask, she told them anyway. In Joys case, shed been expecting UCLA or Southern Cal. Griffin had anticipated this question, of course, and reminded himself there was no reason to be embarrassed to answer it, though naturally he was. Hed taken a deep breath and explained that Joy had gone directly to work after getting her undergraduate degree and that she had a good job, one she enjoyed. Yes, but what sort of person doesnt do graduate work? His mother inflected the word person ever so slightly, as if to suggest that anyone who didnt go to graduate school might belong to neither gender, or perhaps to both. Poor Joy had spent the first decade of their marriage trying to get her mother-in-law to think better of her, the next trying to fathom why that wasnt happening and the one after that pretending it didnt matter. Of late she seemed to favor getting an unlisted phone number.
On their honeymoon, shed paid him an unintentional compliment by asking if there was any chance hed been adopted. Back then he bore little physical resemblance to either parent, though over the last two decades that had changed. His hair had thinned in the exact same pattern as his fathers, and his nose, delicate when he was a younger man, had started to dominate his face as well. Hed kept in reasonably good shape by jogging and playing tennis, and he didnt weigh much more than he had when they married, but the weight had subtly begun redistributing itself, his torso becoming noticeably concave (again like his fathers), as if hed been kicked in the chest by a horse. With the exception of the small mole that bisected her left eyebrow and had appeared on his own in his thirties, his mothers genetic gifts were more temperamental, if no less disturbing for that, and Joy had conceded long ago that there was no chance hed been adopted. Thats your mother talking, she was fond of observing whenever he was unkind or snobbish,