You Again: A Novel
3.5/5
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Abigail Willard first spots her from a New York cab: the spitting image of Abby herself at age twenty-two—right down to the raspberry coat she wore as a young artist with a taste for wildness. But the real Abby is now forty-six and married, with a corporate job and two kids. As the girl vanishes into a rainy night, Abby is left shaken. Was this a hallucinatory side effect of working-mom stress? A sign sent to remind her of forgotten dreams? Or something else entirely?
As Abby continues to spot her double around her old New York haunts, she cannot resist the urge to follow her—obsessed with uncovering a mystery deep in her past. Meanwhile, Abby’s life starts to come apart: her marriage hits major turbulence, her teenage son drifts into a radical movement that portends a dark coming era. When her elusive double presents her with a dangerous proposition, Abby must decide how much she values the life she’s built, and how deeply she knows herself.
A New York Times Best Thriller of 2020
Debra Jo Immergut
Debra Jo Immergut is the author of the Edgar-nominated novel The Captives and the story collection Private Property. She has been awarded a MacDowell fellowship and a Michener fellowship. Her literary work has been published in American Short Fiction and Narrative. As a journalist, she has been a frequent contributor to the Wall Street Journal and the Boston Globe. She has an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop.
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Reviews for You Again
13 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5There is the supernatural at work in this book. Abigail, 45, encounters a younger version of herself at 22, who goes by the name of A. Abigail tries to warn A of the problems ahead. For me there was just too much going on to make a cohesive story line.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Abigail is on her way home from work one evening when she sees a young woman on the sidewalk. She's wearing the same pink thrift store coat that Abigail wore in her early twenties and when Abigail gets out of her taxi for a closer look, she realizes that she's seeing herself, twenty years younger. This glimpse of her past sends her into a closer look at her current life - then she was preparing to go to art school with the intention of living solely for her art, but now she's the art designer for a pharmaceutical company, deciding on the exact shade of lavender to use in the packaging for a new drug, or working on the precise shades of pink to use for a brochure illustration of the digestive system. As her sightings of her former self become more frequent and she begins to interact with her, her life begins to spin out of control, the carefully constructed security she's built become less satisfying. At the same time, one of her sons is becoming involved in an antifa group, putting Abigail's values into question and putting her in the path of a seemingly nice police detective.
I'm not sure what exactly was going on for much of this and the possible explanations trotted out at the end of the novel weren't convincing to me. But there's no question that the author had me reading as fast as I could, trying to keep up with the twists and the rapid pace of events. And despite my finding some of the central events utterly unbelievable, this didn't stop me from enjoying the wild ride this novel took me on, which is to say that Immergut has constructed a clever bunch of inter-connected plots and kept them all from falling apart, resulting in a novel that is more entertaining than most.
Book preview
You Again - Debra Jo Immergut
Dedication
For Joe, forever
Epigraph
Time is a river which sweeps me along, but I am the river; it is a tiger which destroys me, but I am the tiger; it is a fire which consumes me, but I am the fire.
—Jorge Luis Borges, Labyrinths
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Epigraph
Part 1: The River
Chapter 1/1/1/1
Chapter 2/2/2/2
Chapter 3/3/3/3
Chapter 4/4/4/4
Chapter 5/5/5/5
Part 2: The Tiger
Chapter 6/6/6/6
Chapter 7/7/7/7
Chapter 8/8/8/8
Chapter 9/9/9/9
Part 3: The Fire
Chapter 10/10/10/10
Chapter 11/11/11/11
Chapter 12/12/12/12
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Also by Debra Jo Immergut
Copyright
About the Publisher
Part 1
The River
1/1/1/1
ABBY, JANUARY 7, 2015
I saw myself last night. I drove right by myself. In a taxi, through a winter rain, coming home very late from work, on a shadowed block southwest of the Holland Tunnel. I gazed out the cab window, worn down from my day, and then suddenly she appeared, emerging from a dark doorway in silver platform sandals and a pink velvet coat.
Me. The way I used to be.
I yelped at the cabdriver. Stop! Please stop! He stopped, and I scrambled to pay him, snagging my tote loaded with unfinished paperwork from the office that I’d packed to not finish at home. And my purse holding cell phone and tampons and hair product, and in its deepest corners, a putty of crushed energy bar and compromised ibuprofen gel caps. I gathered up my bags and I leaped. It was raining, a very suspect sea stretched out between the cab and the curb, so I leaped.
The girl—this glimpse of myself—stood back there at the corner, slipping a coin into a pay phone. The mere fact of that pay phone. Extraordinary.
Then I noticed the man. He must have come out of the doorway too. Still holding the receiver in one hand, she—the girl—me, I mean, me—turned toward this young man, this tall boy, dark animated hair. He crossed to her, walking with shoulders hunched, face hidden under an umbrella, and leaned over her to allow her its benefits.
I gulped air, gawking. My hands felt numb.
They stood under the umbrella, very close together, talking. I glanced at the dented graffitied doorway, and sure, yes, that had been a nightclub and I had done my time in its pounding, dusky rooms, but hadn’t that place closed in the last millennium? Now he turned and saw the cab—my cab—just pulling away from the curb and this guy, this kid, starts to run after it down the block and gives one of those piercing fingers-in-mouth whistles—a practical skill I have always appreciated—and as he runs his umbrella—I can see it’s the five-dollar street-corner type—flips inside out in a gust and shimmers under the streetlight like a wet black lily bloom and I look at her and she’s looking at him and I know that look. Or I should say, I remember that look.
And then. She walks by me, maybe four feet away on the wide watery sidewalk and doesn’t shift her eyes in my direction, not in the slightest. She’s looking down, and I understand why: the silver platforms, the cratered old sidewalk, a broken reef of wooden pallets. She’s picking her way through it, she’s clutching her coat—it’s buttonless and just a little tattered, the color of raspberry pudding, and not waterproof, not warm at all.
I recall precisely how it felt to wear that coat, its chill silky lining, the shiver as you shrugged it over a slip dress. I remember how the wind and the water went right through it. On a raw night, that silky lining could make you feel colder than if you were wearing nothing at all.
The coat was purchased at the Salvation Army on Eighth Avenue and Twenty-Second Street. Still there, I believe.
He is holding the taxi door open. His smile is dimpled, in the shadows, his expression wryly pleased. She climbs in—I climb in!—and he abandons his blown-out umbrella in the curb, bends his lanky self into the back seat, and I can glimpse her legs and those shoes before the door shuts.
The rain taps my scalp with tiny wet fingers, and my nose is dripping. Through the cab window I see them kissing already—her hand—my hand—on his hair, and the car pulls away. And she’s gone.
I’m gone.
I briefly consider running after her.
I quickly release that idea into the rain. By the curb, the umbrella flutters slightly, with a sheen, like a wing just plucked from a prehistoric flying insect. I pick it up. I sniff it. Don’t ask me why. It smells like a wet umbrella. Though it is clearly a bit mangled, I collapse it into my tote. Don’t ask me why.
Peer down the empty street.
Not a cab, not a taillight. Only, a few blocks down, a yellow traffic signal strung in midair, blinking stupidly.
I feel shaky and breathless, slightly dizzy and maybe a tiny bit weepy then. I saw her, it was me. Me. It was most definitely none other. I was beautiful and maybe twenty-two and now I’m gone—that was some vision, some message, and I didn’t get to understand it. The vision vanished and left me soaked and cabless. My husband would be swirling his vodka and ice in front of his laptop. My sons would be rampaging through first-person shooters in their room, flouting school-night guidelines.
And I’m here on this sidewalk, southwest of the Holland Tunnel, so drenched that my best cashmere cardigan is exuding a hint of its mountain goat origins, and my most expensive work heels, the ones I wear only on days when the boss is in the office, are ruined.
I muster my interior subway map and begin walking, a bit wobbly, toward the nearest stop, three blocks away.
My name is Abigail Wilhelm Willard and I am forty-five years old. No, wrong. I am forty-six years old. Not ancient, I suppose, but old enough to forget momentarily exactly how old I am.
I work as a senior art director at the largest pharmaceutical company in North America. I live with my beloved husband, Dennis, and my sweet teenage sons, Pete and Benjamin, in a narrow Brooklyn two-story house with crusty old moldings and chipped marble mantels and a boiler due to break down this winter.
I used to be an artist, a painter of abstracts, mapping my interior life with outbursts of color—that is true. But that was in another life. This life is about my husband and my children and my work. I am known at my office for my ability to slice through bullshit and lay an idea bare and then quickly act on that idea and make it real.
I am not a flake and I don’t see things that aren’t there.
My interior life pretty much stays inside.
And I have never been one to dwell on the past.
And yet. Was it not true that lately I’d been falling into an underworld, just before sleep? Plunging into a fog, where I glimpsed half-remembered shadows so unsettling, they jolted me awake again?
I remember that, when I was her, I lived on Twelfth Street in the far west of Greenwich Village. I rented a room in an apartment, a five-flight walk-up, with a balcony.
It was there, when I was her, that my life split like an atom.
The flash still blinds me. I find it hard to look.
For twenty-four years, I have averted my eyes.
From the session notes of Dr. Merle Unzicker, psychotherapist (CONFIDENTIAL)
A reports a night of wildness with a young man, whom she believes is named Jamie. All she can recall, she said, was the city seen upside down, her head hanging backward over the side of his bed as it shimmied toward the wall.
How do you feel about it, in the light of day, I asked her.
Like this is all I ever want out of life, she said.
ABBY, JANUARY 8, 2015
Whether to tell Dennis about her. What was the name of that tall running boy?
I stared at the side of my husband’s head, his jaw, his familiar shell-pink ear, its curves etched like grooves in my brain from so many nights lying next to him, gazing. His shaggy hair, which every summer still turns deep yellow, as if honoring the memory of his youth on a California marine base, the wild mustard and apricot orchards along the air strip, the surf days at Huntington Beach with his brothers. The five Willard boys had been transplanted from Minnesota’s frozen lakes to the dry flats south of LA, and they grew up hearty and athletic, raised by partying parents on a diet of comic books and Captain Crunch. They all slept as deep as the dead, Dennis most of all. He was the adored youngest son, the only one who had turned his sights east, who somehow wrangled a full scholarship to the graduate program at Rhode Island School of Design, the country’s loftiest art school, driven by some impulse the rest of them simply couldn’t understand.
If he hadn’t met me, at that art school, he’d probably have moved back there, to the baked streets of Tustin, I thought now, as I watched his chest rise and fall beside me. He would’ve married a fellow Californian and lived in a house with a lemon tree.
A finger of urban light trembled on the ceiling above. I was able to dredge up a Jamaican flag. That tall boy had a black-green-gold Jamaican flag over his bed. I never saw him again.
I slipped out from the envelope of warmth—my husband generated enough body heat to melt an ice floe—and padded into the hall to stare into my tote, hung on the banister at the head of the stairs. The umbrella had dripped all over my work papers and turned them halfway to pulp.
Clearly I’d been projecting. Captivated by a moment in some random couple’s life, because it so closely coincided with some deeply embedded memory I didn’t even know I still had. This was ridiculous. I gave up a cab on a rainy night for a memory I’d forgotten?
It almost made me laugh out loud, as I headed into the bathroom for a pee. The silliness of it. Hallucinating about my lost youth, the road not taken, etc.
I washed my hands. I regarded myself in the mirror. Age forty-six, wan with winter, tinge of red around the nostrils, in a blue nightgown, its cotton thinned from many washings.
That girl. That year. How it reverberates in me still, though the precise outlines of its events remain shrouded in my memory, as if half-seen through a storm of dust.
It could have been funny. Leaping out of a taxi into the freezing January rain to gawk at a young girl who looked like me.
I gazed into the mirror, and it felt not funny.
I would have given her a piece of my mind if we had been able to talk.
A piece of your mind. An odd phrase, isn’t it? A mind can’t be divided into pieces. Can it?
In my nightgown, in the rain, I threw the umbrella away, stuffing it deep in the trash can near our front steps. I shivered, looking at the metallic threads twisting under the streetlights, the row houses huddled shoulder to shoulder, faces gleaming wet, the inelegant South Brooklyn jumble, brick and vinyl-siding and brownstone, the muffler shop and the vacant lot. At the corner of Fourth Avenue, a sopping mop of English sheepdog squatted while its owner huddled beneath the awning of the new café.
I stood there staring at it all, in my nightgown, in the rain. A wave of nausea swept through me, then receded.
No, I was not going to tell Dennis, my weary surfer of the days and the years, my hardworking partner in life, waging battles of his own to balance dreams and realities, about this so-called vision, or mistaken impression, or buried fragment reemerged on a slippery Tribeca sidewalk. Chalk it up to a very long day at the office, uncomfortable clothing, shitty weather, and not enough protein at lunch.
Forget it, I told myself, as I climbed back into bed, my gown dotted with cold drops.
I rolled over, plumped up my pillow. Set the alarm for fifteen minutes early so I could race to the deli to buy a clamshell of black-and-white cookies for Benjamin’s ninth-grade bake sale. Went to sleep.
Tried to, anyhow.
January 9, 2016
From: J.Leverett@deepxmail.com
To: Tristane.Kazemy@montrealneuro.ca, GarrettShuttlesworth@physics.humboldtstate.edu
Attached is a compressed folder containing diary entries extracted from Abigail Willard’s hard drive, plus other pertinent docs and images.
Please be aware: while it was launched under the auspices of my office, I am the sole instigator and overseer of this strictly classified investigation. Reply only to this email address, a secure end-to-end encrypted account.
Regarding the session notes
from Dr. Merle Unzicker: Psychotherapy records are protected under HIPAA privacy rules; these in particular, but all files here, are highly confidential.
An additional request: I humbly ask you to excuse the personal nature of my involvement with Ms. Willard, as revealed here.
I’ve recruited each of you because of your specialized expertise. This case has unsettled me, I admit that. My hope is that, through your analysis, the many mysteries about Ms. Willard’s role in the bizarre and deadly events of 2015 will be resolved. Then I can put this matter to rest.
ABBY, JANUARY 12, 2015
Riding in a vanilla-scented sedan with Benjamin, my fourteen-year-old prince of the ninth grade, and Pete, sixteen, a junior, notably sulky. Once again, I’d had a restless night; once again, we got a late start to the morning hurdle sprint, the breakfast, the lunch-packing, the scramble for gear and homework. And so this aromatic car was summoned (plastic air-freshener pod stuck to its dash), another twenty dollars torched. At least I could hitch a lift with them down Flatbush Avenue, and enter the subway six stops farther along my route, fewer blocks to walk through this morning’s cold fog.
Benjamin drummed his algebra textbook in time to the driver’s radio grooves; Pete locked in to his phone.
But as we neared the narrower streets near the school, Benjamin said, What’s going on, Mom?
Red light, blended into the January mist, knots of parents and kids milling on the sidewalk. Pete even looked up from his phone. Whoa,
he whispered.
The street was jammed up with fire trucks and ambulances, so we clambered from the car and walked the rest of the way. Police officers rolled crime scene tape across the school’s entry, the wide sandstone arch carved with laurels and shields and other triumphant Victorian frills. The headmistress, Elizabeth Vong, ushered us and a bunch of others further along—Side door, please, side entrance.
Pete’s ginger-bearded rhetoric teacher—Mr. Lavin? Lavine?—shook his head at us and said, Cleaning staff found a suspicious item in a trash can by the front office . . . they’ve got to sweep the whole vestibule now.
What’s a vestibule?
said Pete.
It’s a severed foot,
said Benjamin, waving his phone. Ethan just texted me, it’s in a Gristede’s bag, and it’s either a foot or a baby.
There’s no foot in the trash can,
scoffed the teacher. Do not monger rumors. Get to class now, boys, the bell is ringing.
MARIAH GLÜCKSBURG IS TALKING AT MOMA,
my cubemate Bethanne announced as the lunch hour arrived. Leaning toward her desktop screen, she grinned adorably at a mini version of herself there, her round face haloed by the dark nimbus of her hair. She was using the computer’s camera to slick on a fresh coat of plum lip color. Come along?
She stood and slung her purse over her shoulder. Bethanne knew I had gone to school with this art-world luminary. She was just trying to be thoughtful.
I smiled and said I had mock-ups to finish. I left a few minutes after she did, decided to trek the eight or ten blocks northwest to a new noodle shop Bethanne had discovered. She was addicted to sleeping with chefs. I objectify them,
she confided. It might be kind of a fetish.
I took her restaurant recommendations seriously. Wind, by now having banished the fog, pushed and pulled me a bit, noontime shadows sliced down from the tall buildings and fell darkly across the avenue. I turned onto East Forty-Seventh and tried to think about Benjamin’s birthday present. What did he say he wanted? A something or other for his gaming console?
And then I stopped.
She was there. I mean, it was me. Again.
She sat on a bench centered behind a wide many-mullioned window.
I had forgotten about the Tradesmen’s Library. An eccentric holdover from a century ago, a private lending library that anyone can join for a small fee. The collection was heavy on early American history and forgotten novels by forgotten authors of the 1940s and ’50s; the air smelled of must and burnt coffee. It was exactly the kind of place that would have charmed me, that did charm me, when I first moved to New York.
Here it was, still extant, a short walk from my office on a block I never visited anymore.
I had discovered the library when I’d started my first job in the city, right after college. I’d head there during my lunch breaks to sit on that bench in that very window. I would read old books and, since they usually weren’t very good books, I’d look up from their pages quite a bit and gaze at the working people passing by in their raincoats, their pumps with the worn heels, their faces with the vertical furrows between their brows, carrying plastic sacks holding their midday salad-bar pickings or last night’s uneaten chicken legs brought from home. I’d swear to myself that I would never end up like them, a tired wage slave searching for a cheap lunch or toting a bag of leftovers from some sad far-flung fridge. Ever.
So now I’m seeing this girl, this girl who is me—no doubt about that face, those hands—and I’m entirely aware of the disdain with which this girl is viewing the office workers walking past, one of whom is me.
Everything else in the city seems to drop away. I long to stop and stare—but I can’t simply stop and stare. So I keep moving, and soon I am circling the block. Every time I pass the library, I slow to look. She has turned back to the book she is reading—a very fat one. I try to spy the title, but can’t.
Sumptuous brown waves, blonder on the ends, gathered in a high loose ponytail. The slight widow’s peak.
The skin, January-pale with faint gray crescents under the eyes, betraying late and sleepless nights.
Strong brown brows, thick fringe of lashes on downturned eyes.
Biting on a thumbnail. The remains of a magenta manicure.
One leg folded underneath her, the other tapping the floor in a chunky-soled shoe.
On turn two around the block, I begin to laugh. What insanity is this? I have discovered a twenty-something girl who looks like I used to look in the Bill Clinton era. She has stolen my 1991 clodhoppers! Maybe she found them moldering in the back of a Goodwill store.
Wait until I tell Dennis. He will find this funny.
On the third pass, I soak up all the details so that I can regale him.
On the fourth pass, she glances up and our eyes meet.
Something lurches, in my brain.
Sliding. Tumbling.
For a beat she regards me—maybe with a flicker of interest, or maybe not. Then she simply looks away, the way you do when you catch a stranger staring. She bows her head back to her book.
My heart folds violently.
What I remember about her. About when I was her. And what I cannot remember. What is beyond recall.
Somehow I steer myself back to my desk. I skip lunch.
SESSION NOTES, Dr. M. Unzicker
A’s boss says a fresh college grad at the entry level needs to make better use of her midday break. Networking lunches, etc. For her future at her job.
This future doesn’t interest her.
She feels she is waiting for something else to happen.
ABBY, JANUARY 20, 2015
Threading through sidewalk bottlenecks to my stop that evening. Clouds collided in the dark gust above Bryant Park. I thought, for the first time in years, of Eleanor Boyle.
She had been my anchor point at twenty-two, when I was that girl. She’d been a year ahead of me at Western New England State, another cash-strapped and ambitious small-town girl who’d opted for the cheap local college while scanning the horizons far beyond it. She landed in New York first. Eleanor swore every other word and she taught me all about clubbing, though we never called it clubbing—maybe the term postdated our actual clubbing days. She wore secondhand silk lingerie, 1930s bed jackets and slips, when we went out, and I’d wear those silver platform sandals, the coat, and underneath an orange jersey dress