Distortions
through enough hell now,” Susan Leigh said.
    One night Wally walked through the woods to his parents’ place. His father was lying on his back on the front lawn. “You’ll get mosquito bites,” Wally said, and David screamed because he had not heard him approaching. Wally took a small can out of his shirt pocket and sprayed David.
    “I want to know how it all began,” Wally said.
    David thought that it was a variation of the questions about sex that he had answered when Wally was five and that he had talked about again when Wally was seven because Wally had forgotten it all.
    “In Las Vegas,” Wally said. “Wasn’t that where you met my mother?”
    “Oh. You mean how all
that
began. I thought you were talking about the beginning of life. I told you: I was hitching around the country and I ended up in Reno. It was Reno, not Las Vegas. I was sitting in a place called The Silver Slipper Café. Your mother sat down next to me. She said that she didn’t think that anything in the place was worth eating. I don’t know where the conversation went from there, but she ended up proposing.”
    Wally was silent.
    “Why don’t you go back to school?” David asked Wally.
    “Why don’t we go to Reno?”
    “What for?”
    “Sort of like a second honeymoon or … getting back in touch.”
    “You want us to take you on our second honeymoon?”
    “A family vacation, then. I don’t care what you call it.”
    “Reno is a sleazy place. I don’t want to spend money to get back there. And anyway—your mother isn’t here.”
    “Where is she?”
    “Visiting her sister.”
    “Why do you sound so depressed?”
    “I’m not in a very good mood, Wally. And I don’t really like to be reminded of how your mother picked me up in Reno, Nevada.”
    “Do you think there’s something awful about it?”
    “I just don’t like to think about it.”
    “Do you want me to go?”
    “I don’t care what you do, Wally. It’s your mother who calls the family meetings and who gets all emotional and walks out on both of us. I just want to lie here in the grass.”
    “Well, keep this with you,” Wally said, dropping the insect repellent next to David. Wally walked off. David watched the beam of Wally’s flashlight shining in the woods.
    *
    “You’re really an amazing family,” Dianna Leigh says to Wally. “Like a Salinger family.”
    “Who’s that?” Wally asks.
    “Didn’t you ever hear of J. D. Salinger? The Glass family?”
    “No.”
    “They were this crazy family. My mother gave me the book. She says that Salinger is nuts, too. He runs away if anybody approaches him on the street.”
    “Where does he live? Manhattan?”
    “I don’t think so …”
    “I’ve been thinking,” Wally says. “I don’t think my parents were unhappy until they had me. Because I was a prodigy and all.”
    “That’s not your fault.”
    “I’m going to write her a letter. I think that if they went back to Reno they could recapture something.”
    “That’s romantic.”
    “There’s nothing wrong with romanticism.”
    “I didn’t mean that there was anything wrong with romance.”
    Dianna Leigh pouts; she and Wally have not been getting along well in the tent lately.
    *
    David remembers: “Imagine that you turn on a hose. Imagine your penis as a hose. And the water that sprays out is sperm, those things I just told you about. And the water shoots all over the lawn. Imagine the woman as a lawn. That’s what sex is like, moreor less—watering the lawn.” Even at the time, he realized that he had botched it.
    *
    Wally’s namesake: On vacation, he falls into the Grand Canyon!!!!!!!!! Every year people slip, fall down mountains, into gorges, stumble into snake-infested pools. Well, Wally’s namesake, on a vacation with his wife, twin sons, and his wife’s father, taking a picture, leaning a bit, supporting himself on a fragile tree, falls!!!!!!!!!!!!SzzzzzzzzzzWAAAAAAAAAYAAAAA-AA!!!!right into the Grand Canyon.
    *
    Wally talks

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