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Trespass : a novel
2007
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PART ONE Dark hair and lots of it, heavy brows, sharp features, dark eyes, dark circles under the eyes, dark looks about the room, at the maître d', the waitress, the trolley laden with rich, tempting desserts, and finally, as Toby guides her to the table, at Chloe, who holds out her hand and says pleasantly, though she is experiencing the first tentative pricks of the panic that will consume her nights and disrupt her days for some time to come, "Salome, how good to meet you." The hand she grasps is lifeless and she releases it almost at once. Toby pulls a chair out, meeting his mother's eyes over the truncated handshake with a look she characterizes as defiant. "My mother, Chloe Dale," he says. "Hello," the young woman says, sinking into the chair. Toby lays his fingers upon her shoulder, just for a moment, very much the proprietor, and Salome sends him a weak smile. On the phone Toby said, "You'll like her. She's different. She's very serious." Which meant this one was not an airhead like Belinda, who had ruined an entire summer the year before. On hearing Toby's description, Brendan warned, "Brace up. Young men go for extremes." "That's true," Chloe agreed. "You certainly did." She recollected Brendan's mad poet and the bout with the anorexic alcoholic, but she herself had not been a model of probity--the misunderstood artist who read too much William Blake and spent a semester poring over accounts of the Manson murders in preparation for a series of lithographs depicting dismembered female bodies. The waitress approaches, brandishing heavy, leather-backed menus. Toby reaches for one, so does Chloe. Salome keeps her hands in her lap, forcing the waitress to stretch across the table and slip it in place between the knife and fork. "Can I get you something to drink?" she inquires. "Let's have a bottle of mineral water for the table," Chloe says, "and I'll have a glass of the white Bordeaux." "That sounds good," Toby agrees. "I'll have the same." Salome's eyes come up from the menu and rest on Toby's mouth. "Coffee," she says. She doesn't drink. Is that a good sign? "She lives on coffee," Toby chides indulgently, as if he's letting his mother in on some charming secret. Chloe studies the young woman, who has lowered her eyes to the menu again, a faint smile playing about her lips. She's confident, Chloe thinks. "So, how did you meet?" she asks. "We're in the same poli-sci class," Toby says. "It's a big lecture. I spotted Salome, but we didn't actually talk until we both showed up at a meeting to organize a campus antiwar group." "That's good," Chloe says. "You won't have to go through boring arguments about politics." "What kind of arguments?" Salome asks offhandedly, still studying the menu. "About politics," Chloe replies. "You're already in agreement." The drinks arrive and the conversation is suspended while the waitress pours out the water, arranges wineglasses and Salome's coffee, which comes in a silver pot with a smaller silver pitcher of cream. "Shall I give you a few minutes to decide on your orders?" she asks. "I think so?" Chloe says to her son, who replies, "Yes. I'm not ready yet." All three fall silent, concentrating on elaborate descriptions of food. "What are you having?" Chloe asks Toby. "I'm not sure," he says. "Maybe the salmon." Salome pushes the menu aside, nearly upsetting her water glass, but her reflexes are quick and she steadies it with a firm hand laid across the base. Her fingernails, Chloe notes, are short, filed straight across. For a moment all three are fascinated by this decisive movement--no, the glass is not going to tumble--then, for the first time, Salome directs upon Chloe the full force of her regard. It's unsettling, like seeing a spider darting out crazily from some black recess in the basement. "Why would an argument about politics necessarily be boring?" Salome asks, her voice carefully modulated, free of accusation, as if she's inquiring into some purely scientific matter--why does gravity hold everything down, why does light penetrate glass but not wood. Toby is right. There is nothing ordinary about this young person. "Well, not necessarily," she concedes. "But sometimes when people disagree strongly on principle, and there's no reconciliation possible, it can get pretty dull, pretty..." she pauses, looking for the noninflammatory word ..."unproductive." "Salome loves to argue about politics," Toby observes, temporizing, as is his way. Lives on coffee, loves to argue. Could there be a connection? "I don't actually love it," Salome corrects him. "But when it's necessary, I never find it boring." Fast work. Chloe now stands accused of calling Toby's new love interest boring. She takes a sip of her wine, casting her eyes about the room in search of the waitress. It's an attractive, tastefully appointed room, richly paneled, with dark, solid furnishings, damask cloths, strategic flower arrangements, and the glint of glass and copper. The food is excellent, though, of course, absurdly expensive. She chose Mignon's because she knows Toby likes it, and it's close to the university. She took the train, an hour and a half to Grand Central, and then another twenty minutes on the subway, which put her four crosstown blocks from Mignon's. It's twelve forty-five, she has an appointment midtown with her editor at three thirty, plenty of time for a leisurely lunch with her son and his new girlfriend. It's intended as a treat for them; they're students who eat grim cafeteria food or the cheap and nourishing fare served in Ukrainian restaurants on the Lower East Side. Her eyes settle on Toby, who looks anxious, pretending interest in the menu. She turns to Salome, who is ladling sugar into her black coffee, two full teaspoons. She feels a stab of pity for the young woman, so clearly out of her element and on the defensive. Meeting the boyfriend's mother is never fun; for one thing, one gets to see one's lover transformed into some older woman's son. But it could be so much worse, she wants to tell Salome. You should have seen my mother-in-law, a true harridan, and the worst part was that Brendan thought his mother was fascinating and acted like a giddy puppy in her presence, falling all over himself in his effort to please her. Whereas Chloe is charming, everyone says so, and her relations with her son are genial. These self-congratulatory musings relax her, and when Salome raises her cup to her lips, darting a quick, nervous glance at Chloe over the rim, she sends the girl a sympathetic smile. "You're right," she says. "Politics is serious. Especially in these dismal times." "Can you believe the arrogance of this clown!" Toby exclaims. "Now we don't need the United Nations. The rest of the world is just irrelevant." "He's a puppet," Salome says. "The dangerous ones are standing right behind him." The waitress appears, ready to take their orders. Chloe feels a quiver of interest in Salome's choice; doubtless she is a vegetarian. Toby orders the salmon; Chloe her usual duck salad. The waitress, a bright-eyed redhead--why couldn't Toby fall for someone like her?--looks attentively at Salome, her pen poised above her pad. "I'll have the Caesar salad, no anchovies," Salome says. Very pure, Chloe will tell Brendan. No alcohol, no meat, no fish. The waitress retreats. Toby takes a roll from the bread basket and begins slathering it with butter. "There's going to be an antiwar rally in the park on the fifteenth," he says. "We've got about eighty people signed up already." "Excellent," Chloe says. "I'll tell your father. He's so enraged, he needs an outlet." Toby nods, stuffing half the roll into his mouth. He is always hungry. He developed an appetite when he was fifteen, it's never let up, and he still doesn't have an ounce of fat on him. Chloe takes up the basket and offers it to Salome, who chooses a wheat roll and places it carefully on Chloe's bread plate. If she takes no bread herself, Chloe reasons, the girl will never know her mistake. "Are you majoring in political science too?" she asks, setting the basket close to her son. "No," Salome replies. "International relations, with an emphasis on the Balkans." "How unusual." "She's a Croat," Toby announces. Chloe takes this information in quietly, uncertain how to respond. Does it explain the passion for politics? Are Croats Muslims? "But you don't have an accent," she says. "I grew up in Louisiana," Salome says. Croats in Louisiana? Chloe thinks. "Her father is the Oyster King," Toby says. Chloe takes another sip of her wine, thinking of the Tenniel illustration of the Walrus and the Carpenter inviting an attentive clutch of unwary oysters for a pleasant walk, a pleasant talk, along the briny beach . "What made you decide to come to New York?" she asks. "I got a scholarship." "She's very smart," Toby adds needlessly. "It must be quite a change for you," Chloe observes. "Do you like it here?" For a moment Salome's eyes meet Chloe's, but distantly, disengaging at once in favor of a leisurely survey of the room, as if her answer depended upon the framed photographs of Parisian street scenes arranged along the far wall, the quality of the table linens, the low hum of chatter from the other diners, the neat white blouse of the waitress, who, Chloe notices with relief, is approaching their table, skillfully balancing three plates, on one of which she recognizes her duck salad. For God's sake, she thinks, impatience constricting her throat around a jumble of words that must not be said, I wasn't asking for your opinion of this restaurant. Toby sits back in his chair, his eyebrows lifted in anticipation, waiting, now they are both waiting, for the verdict of this odd, dark creature he has extracted, it now appears, from some refugee swamp and set down before his mother in a perfectly respectable corner of New York. Salome's eyes pass over his attentive face and settle upon her coffee cup, which is empty. She lifts the silver pot and pours a ribbon of black liquid into the porcelain cup. "Not much," she says. *** "You see," Toby chides Salome when they are on the sidewalk watching his mother disappear into the ceaseless flow of pedestrians. "That wasn't so bad." "I don't think she liked me," Salome says. "She likes who I like," Toby assures her, though this is not, strictly speaking, true. He knows his mother won't criticize any friend of his to his face, but that doesn't mean she has no feelings in the matter. He hadn't expected Salome to charm his mother, but he'd assumed they would find some obscure common ground of femaleness to ease the inevitable tension. That hadn't happened, and not, he admits, for lack of trying on his mother's part. Salome leans into him so that he feels the soft give of her breast against his arm. She is embarrassed that she acquitted herself poorly, he concludes, and anxious that he might be displeased. "It doesn't matter," she says. As they turn south, toward the university, she slips her hand into his. At the light she reaches up to touch his cheek, and, when he looks down, rises up on her toes to brush his lips with her own. He accepts the kiss, bringing his hand to her chin to hold her lips to his a moment longer. They have two hours before his roommate will return from his job, and they will spend them sprawled on the futon that takes up most of the space allotted to Toby. It is a perfect fall day, cool and dry; the leaves on the stunted trees plugged into squares of colorless, vitrified dirt along the sidewalk have already turned an anemic yellow. Toby wants to sprint the few blocks to the apartment just to have a few more minutes of being in bed with Salome. He passes his arm around her back, urging her to a speedier pace. The fineness of the bones beneath her skin, the slenderness of her waist, send a shiver of excitement from his stomach to his groin. She is right; it doesn't matter what his mother thinks of her, or his father, or anyone else for that matter. That they will feel strongly, one way or the other, is inevitable, because Salome is so entirely different from any woman he has ever known. Compared to the officious graduates of expensive prep schools who are made anxious by her opinions, the city denizens with their tongue studs and tattoos, the scholarship girls from the Midwest who greet one another with shouts and hugs after an hour apart, Salome is a jaguar among nervous chickens. "Pretty exotic, Toby," his roommate observed upon meeting her. "Are you sure you've got the energy for that?" He doesn't deny that she's difficult. She has few friends, only her roommates, two theater majors she dismisses with a wave of the hand. Her room, formerly a walk-in closet, is hung with embroidered pictures. There's a shelf crammed with statues of her favorite saints and votive candles, which she lights to solicit favors. On Sundays she wraps her hair in a lace shawl and goes off to Mass at the Croatian church on 51st Street, after which she receives her weekly call from her father, the Oyster King. While she talks, Toby stretches out on her narrow mattress, baffled by her harsh, impenetrable language. Her voice rises to a shout, she sounds furious--he can't imagine what it would feel like to address either of his parents with so much force--then abruptly she is calm and affectionate. The conversation invariably ends with what he takes to be cooing endearments. When she waits for him in the coffee shop, she passes the time crocheting lace squares which she will give out to the professors who earn her admiration. Those who displease her must put up with such serious and close questioning that they blanch when they see her hand shoot up in the midst of her somnolent peers. She brings the same energy and essential forthrightness to the minimalist bedroom where they will soon pounce on each other with feline exuberance, tussling for the fun of it. She will start throwing off her clothes as soon as they are inside the door, pulling Toby toward the bed with an impatience that delights him. Her hair falling over his face smells of cloves, the perfume of her skin is complex, warm, spicy. When she wraps her arms and legs around his back, she holds him so tightly he can feel the taut vibration of her muscles, and her breath in his ear is quick and even to the end. As they turn the last corner to the apartment, his mother is the farthest thing from his mind, so it surprises him when Salome says, "What I don't understand is why your mother volunteered your father for the rally. Why doesn't she come herself? Is she afraid she'll get arrested?" Excerpted from Trespass by Valerie Martin All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Fiction/Biography Profile
Characters
Chloe Dane (Female), Artist, Married, Mother, Slowly adjusting to her son becoming an adult; illustrating a new edition of Wuthering Heights; fears her new daughter-in-law is more interested in the family's money than in her son
Brendan Dane (Male), Historian, Married, Father, Chloe's husband; on a sabbatical writing his book about the crusades
Toby Dane (Male), College student, Married, Expectant father, Chloe and Brendan's only child; attending NYU; hastily married his girlfriend when he found out she was pregnant; obsessively in love with Salome; follows her when she leaves to find her mother
Salome Drago (Female), Pregnant, Croatian, Immigrant, Expatraite, Raised in the Croatian expatriate community in New Orleans; learns her mother, whom she believed to be dead, is alive; leaves to find her mother
Genre
Fiction
Domestic
Adventure
Topics
Mothers and sons
Fathers and sons
Artists
Historians
College student
Expatriates
Journeys
Obsessive love
Newlyweds
Family relationships
Secrets
Setting
New York - Mid-Atlantic States (U.S.)
Italy - Europe
Time Period
2002 -- 21st century
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Trade Reviews
New York Times Review
OVER the past 30 years, Valerie Martin's novels and stories, although well received by critics, have made little dent in the public consciousness. The library at the college where I work has no record of her, for instance, and the local bookstore carries hardly any of her fiction, despite Martin's receipt of Britain's prestigious Orange Prize for her 2003 novel, "Property," which beat out work by stars like Zadie Smith, Carol Shields and Donna Tartt. This is too bad, because Martin deserves a wider audience but it can also be a delight for the unsuspecting reader. Coming across her for the first time, you experience the frisson of discovery, especially when you learn that she's written a whole shelf of books, a dozen in all. Martin is an uncompromising, serious writer, concerned with both the eternal verities and what matters right now. She wants to know how the big questions play out in individual lives. "Trespass" begins conventionally enough: boy has met girl and is introducing her to his mother over lunch at an expensive Manhattan restaurant. The mother, Chloe Dale, a successful book illustrator, is a woman of familiar contradictions. A prickly, sequestered, rightminded liberal, she's prone to discounting others. She's also unsettled: a poacher has been stalking small game on her property in a Hudson Valley town, firing his rifle at close range to the house, which infuriates her more than it does her husband, only deepening her anger and frustration. Brendan, her husband, is a shambling, kind hearted academic who spends his days working on a history of the crusades, a book that has occupied him for years and might for years to come. Content, most of the time, to consort with the 13thcentury emperor Frederick of Hohenstaufen, he allows the events of the present day to pass over him like a light breeze. It is the Dales' only child, Toby, a 21yearold student at N.Y.U., and his girlfriend, Salome Drago, a Croatian refugee, whom Chloe is meeting for lunch. Salome is an enigma beautiful, sharp, slightly unmannered, more acerbic than Chloe and similarly unforgiving. Her past is vague, doled out in bits and pieces: her mother and one of her two older brothers died in the Bosnian war; her father, who never remarried, is the "oyster king" of Louisiana; her surviving brother, a mix of muscle and rage, terrifies her. Chloe suspects that Salome is a gold digger, keen to move up in the world on the arm (and bank account) of Toby, whose naïveté and trusting nature are not unlike his father's. When, soon after that first meeting, Salome becomes pregnant, marries Toby and suddenly disappears, Chloe's assessment seems to have been right on the money: "She feels her territory has been invaded and she is under attack. She wants to throw the intruders out, go back to the way things were, but this, she must realize, is not an option, and so she's panicked. ... The outsiders are now insiders, staking their claims." There are many kinds of trespass, Martin suggests, some psychological, some physical and all disturbing. Still, it's difficult to feel Chloe's pain, because it lets loose her prejudices. In creating a character who is probably not unlike many of her readers, Martin is trespassing too, leaving hints that suggest our own selfrighteousness, however well intentioned, may not stand up when tested, as Chloe's won't. It's a disquieting thought, and it persists throughout the second half of the book, when Toby goes after Salome and Brendan goes after Toby. At this point, the spectral bookwithinthe book that has appeared in italicized snippets the anonymous story of an unhappily married Yugoslav woman who is unfaithful to her husband begins to make sense. Once it does, categories like good and bad seem entirely inadequate. "These things always happen in wars," the woman says, speaking of the unspeakable things she experienced during the Bosnian genocide. "It takes the lid off of everything. The ones who enjoy inflicting pain, the torturers who used to confine themselves to abusing animals or their wives can now excite themselves by finding out how it feels to gouge out an old man's eyes or slash a woman's breasts. They come out of the woodwork. Who guessed how many there were? And they all have the same credo: For my just cause the enemy must suffer. His cries of pain are my vindication." The dialogue in "Trespass" can occasionally be stilted, the plot turns a little too convenient and the whole thing wraps up more neatly than the package warrants. Even so, Martin's novel is the best kind of moral fiction, the kind that interrogates morality itself. There are many kinds of trespass, Martin suggests, some psychological, some physical and all disturbing. Sue Halpern's new book, "Can't Remember What I Forgot: What the Memory Fixers Know and You Should, Too," will be published next spring. She is a scholarinresidence at Middlebury College.
Library Journal Review
Chloe Dale, commissioned to illustrate Wuthering Heights, lives contentedly in rural New York with husband Brendan, a history professor writing a book about the Crusades. Their life changes dramatically when son Toby introduces his girlfriend, Salome Drago, a brooding Croatian refugee with a disdain for the conventional. Chloe has misgivings about Salome, suspecting that she has trapped Toby into marriage when she becomes pregnant and the couple moves in. Chloe's nerves are further frayed from living under the same roof with someone who "has yet to bring so much as a dish to the table." Chloe is also disturbed by the presence of a menacing poacher who roams their property with a shotgun. Still another story is woven throughout in short, tantalizing passages. Jelena, Salome's mother, speaks about their family's tragic past, when their town was under attack by Serbs, and Orange Prize winner Martin (Property) describes the horrifying collapse of Yugoslavia in terms of such haunting human stories. Suddenly, the trespassers are no longer girlfriends and poachers but intruders from other countries and other cultures. A major novel; highly recommended for all public libraries. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 5/15/07.]-Donna Bettencourt, Mesa Cty. P.L., Grand Junction, CO (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publishers Weekly Review
This thought-provoking novel by Orange Prize-winning Martin (for Property) opens deceptively, as the quiet story of a mother slowly adjusting to her 21-year-old son becoming an adult. In 2002, Chloe Dane is a loving mother and wife, an artist engrossed in illustrating a new edition of Wuthering Heights and a protestor against the imminent invasion of Iraq. Her husband, Brendan, is a historian who doubts that his work has any value but is generally self-satisfied. When their only child, Toby, a junior at NYU, gets Salome Drago, his Croatian immigrant girlfriend, pregnant and hastily marries her, Chloe fears he was trapped by a calculating woman more interested in Toby's family's impressive house and property than in Toby. When Salome learns her mother, Jelena, whom she believed was killed by Serbs, is alive, she traces her to Trieste and abruptly departs to find her. Toby follows, and when the newlyweds decide to drop out of college and remain in Italy, Chloe sends Brendan to bring Toby home. A tragedy-one very convenient for the narrative-strikes while Brendan's in Italy, paving the way for a startlingly light resolution. Forgiveness doesn't come easy for the characters as they learn that nothing-not family, borders or survival-is inviolable. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Booklist Review
"Winner of the Orange Prize for her 2003 novel Property, Martin is a coolly dispassionate storyteller with a narrative voice that is at once inviting and disquieting. Her latest novel opens as Chloe Dale, a book illustrator whose husband, Brendan, is a college history professor, meets the new girlfriend of Toby, their much-loved only child. Salome, a Croatian refugee whose family settled in Louisiana (her father is known as the Oyster King), met Toby at New York University, where he was instantly smitten, not only by her dark good looks but also by her self-assurance, born of shouldering adult responsibilities from a very early age. Chloe, feeling vulnerable and threatened, immediately dislikes Salome, viewing her as something like a predator. At the same time, a poacher, whom Chloe believes is Middle Eastern, is illegally hunting rabbits in the forest behind her studio; the repeated gunfire only adds to the menacing atmosphere that Martin builds ever so slowly and skillfully. And cutting through the family drama is the voice, rendered in italics, of an unidentified speaker who deliberately if numbly recounts the numerous unimaginable atrocities that occurred on a daily basis in Croatia, forcing Salome's family to flee. Such horrific scenes are frequently juxtaposed, to chilling effect, with those depicting the Dales' comfortable lifestyle. Although her plot takes some erratic turns, Martin effectively frames the immigration debate, implying that even the most well-meaning Americans lack all context for fully understanding, and therefore empathizing with, those for whom survival itself is viewed as something like a miracle."--"Wilkinson, Joanne" Copyright 2007 Booklist
Kirkus Review
What seems at first a tightly focused domestic drama about a middle-aged couple's reaction to their son's new girlfriend broadens onto a large socio-political canvas as liberal values run smack into fear of foreign invasiveness. Chloe, an illustrator working on an edition of Wuthering Heights, and her history professor husband, Brendan, researching a book about the Crusades, live in a comfortably rural setting outside Manhattan. The two are typically self-satisfied, self-aware members of the left-leaning bourgeoisie. Chloe in particular prides herself on her open-mindedness, but she is immediately put off when only son Toby, a junior at NYU, introduces his exotic new girlfriend Salome, with whom he is clearly besotted. Salome, a scholarship student who immigrated to Louisiana with her father and brother after her mother and other brother were killed in Croatia, strikes Chloe as judgmental and possibly predatory. More sanguine, Brendan recognizes with nostalgia the sexual frisson between Salome and Toby. Chloe's unease rises when Toby and Salome start living together. Salome becomes pregnant; she and Toby decide to marry; and all Chloe's alarms go off. At the same time, she feels increasingly threatened by a foreign trespasser who has been shooting rabbits on her land and may or may not have committed several other invasive, violent acts. With Iraq an ever-present backdrop, Martin builds a discomforting sense of menace: Is Chloe paranoid or is the threat real? Even Toby fights his doubts about Salome, especially when she disappears the day after their marriage. She's gone to Trieste to find her mother, who is not dead after all--she tells her story in italicized fragments throughout the novel. Toby soon follows Salome. After Chloe sends Brendan to intervene, her worst fears are realized, however inadvertently, at home and abroad. A brilliant must-read from Martin (The Unfinished Novel and Other Stories, 2006, etc.), who captures the zeitgeist of contemporary America within a deeply personal context. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Summary
Chloe Dale's life is in good order. Her only child, Toby, has started his junior year at New York University; her husband, an academic on sabbatical, is working at home on his book about the Crusades; and Chloe is busy creating illustrations for a special edition of Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights. Yet Chloe is disturbedby the aggression of her government's foreign policy, by the poacher who roams the land behind her studio punctuating her solitude with rifle fire, and finally, by Toby's new girlfriend, a Croatian refugee named Salome Drago. Raised in the Croatian expatriate community of New Orleans, Salome is a toxic mix of the old world and the new: intelligent, superstitious, sly, seductive, and confident. But Salome's past is a mine of dangerous secrets, and the violence that destroyed her homeland is far from over. Chloe distrusts her on sight, and as Toby's obsession with Salome grows, Chloe's mistrust deepens, alienating her from her tolerant husband and besotted son. Rich with menace, the novel unfolds in a world where darkness intrudes into bright and pleasant places, a world with betrayal at its heart. In shimmering prose Valerie Martin raises the question: who shall inherit America?
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