The Manikin: A Novel

The Manikin: A Novel

by Joanna Scott
The Manikin: A Novel

The Manikin: A Novel

by Joanna Scott

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Overview

The Manikin is not a mannequin, but the curious estate of Henry Craxton, Sr. in a rural western New York State. Dubbed the "Henry Ford of Natural History," by 1917 Craxton has become America's preeminent taxidermist. Into this magic box of a world-filled with eerily inanimate gibbons and bats, owls and peacocks, quetzals and crocodiles-wanders young Peg Griswood, daughter of Craxton's newest housekeeper. Part coming-of-age story, part gothic mystery, and part exploration of the intimate embrace between art and life, Joanna Scott's The Manikin is compulsively readable and beautifully written.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781250096500
Publisher: Picador
Publication date: 09/01/2015
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 290
File size: 465 KB

About the Author

Joanna Scott is the author of several books of fiction, including the novels Tourmaline and Make Believe, and the story collection Various Antidotes. She is a recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship and a Lannan Award, and lives with her family in Rochester, New York.
Joanna Scott is the author of several books, including The Manikin, which was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize; Various Antidotes and Arrogance, which were both finalists for the PEN/Faulkner Award; and the critically acclaimed Make Believe, Tourmaline, Liberation, and Follow Me. She is a recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Lannan Award.

Read an Excerpt

The Manikin

A Novel


By Joanna Scott

Picador

Copyright © 1996 Joanna Scott
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-250-09650-0



CHAPTER 1

The winter of 1846, when half of everything alive succumbed to the cold, has been stored for over eighty years in the mysterious mind common to the species, and though the owl didn't experience that winter, she remembers it — the poisonous smell of the air, the frost that pinned feathers to skin, the famine. She remembers that time the way a woman remembers her great-grandmother's death in childbirth. So this year, when summer never properly thaws the land and the tidal pools remain fringed with ice, she knows what to expect. Soon the bay will be frozen shore to shore, the ptarmigan scarce, the predators hungry. The owl understands that to survive she must leave early and abandon the north entirely.

She sounds the alarm at dawn on the eve of the equinox, waits for the flock to gather, and sets off. From Baffin Bay to Island Lake and on toward the great expanse of Lake Ontario, she leads the way. Such a strong, sturdy queen of a bird, and so richly attired: gold-ribbed breast feathers, white coat, brazen, diurnal eyes. Lying eyes. The other owls believe her to be fearless. In truth, danger makes this brave, majestic owl as skittish as a gnat. Crossing the vast expanse of Lake Ontario — this frightens her, though she'd never admit it. They are met midway by a mild squall that gains an unexpected intensity as they fly through it. Bursts of hail scatter the owls, and the last sight the bird has of her mate is his wingtip before the mist sucks him into its center. You should let a storm take you where it will, the bird knows — warp and spin across the sky with the wind instead of trying to resist it. But the squall threatens to pull her downward into the turbulent lake, so she beats her powerful wings against the gusts, hovering while the rain swirls around her. All reason is swept away by the storm, leaving only the frenzied effort of life protecting itself and an insidious, creeping exhaustion.

And then, abruptly, the squall passes and the bird flies on through the drizzle to the southern shore. She alights on a narrow strip of sand, tucks her head between hunched wings, peers out at the water. She wonders whether the others would agree to call this beach their destination. Her tired body tells her to stay here through the winter months, and her instinct to go on fades to a whisper. The waves of the lake teeter and collapse near her feet. Yes, she persuades herself, it seems as safe a place as any.

Then she sees the hen. Just a scrawny red hen that must have wandered away from a nearby farm and comes trotting out of the underbrush to say hello. But to the owl, born and bred in the open tundra where there are few surprises, it seems a phantom bird. A demon. Her own goblin double. She lifts up into the air with a panicked flapping, sideslips until she finds a southward current, and pushes herself through the air as fast as she can go.

She bends east, then southwest, then east again, races along haphazardly, escaping not the killing cold but something else, something unnameable. She doubles the distance southward with her zigzags, unable to stop or orient herself. Hours later, her crazed flight brings her to a mossy hillock rising out of an egg-shaped pond, a safe refuge at first glimpse, with the surrounding woods sparse enough for her to see an enemy. She decides to spend the night here. Come morning, she will set out in search of her flock.

She scratches at the wet ground, her talons hidden by thick trouser feathers. She flaps and wriggles and stomps on the spongy earth until she finds a comfortable position. She folds her wings. She bobs and pivots her head to take in the new landscape — the sphagnum moss beneath her, the sumac and myrtle, the saplings with their burning leaves. Then she blinks her huge eyes slowly and surveys the water, keeping as still as a stone sphinx. This is nothing like her home. But for now she can pretend that she is queen again, that the trees are full of owls and the body of water is her own Baffin Bay. She takes a deep breath and shrieks: Worship me!


* * *

And so Ellen Griswood puts another day behind her, an ordinary day: the kitchen floor was scrubbed thoroughly, the bed linen washed, the clocks wound and antlers dusted and moose-hoof nut dishes wiped clean. Nothing to remark upon. Now that Mrs. Craxton is asleep at last, Ellen may relax. She blows out the candle and moves with her usual confidence across the darkened room — she knows the geography of this bedroom as intimately as she knows the body of the woman she serves, from the horny toenails to the rhythms of the bowels, from the ragdoll legs to the waxy scalp beneath the thin white hair. Over the years, Ellen has learned to divide her attention equally between the house and its mistress and has rarely, if ever, been found at fault. She reminds herself of this as she steps out into the hallway, where she's left a lamp hanging: she's an expert in her way — indispensable. She needn't worry about her position as long as Mrs. Craxton is alive.

And here's the delicious fatigue that proves the hours have been well spent. She turns toward her weariness as she might turn toward the sun on the first warm day of spring, basks in it, retaining just enough strength to drag herself up the two flights of stairs to her bedroom.

The attic room, which Ellen shares with her daughter, is long and narrow, with a sloping ceiling, flowered wallpaper, and a half window at the far end. The twin beds are separated by a table, and in the stingy light cast by Ellen's lamp, the room seems to have the depths of a tunnel that continues beyond the window into the night sky. A desolate space, perhaps, but a haven nonetheless, and if you asked, Ellen would tell you that she'd be content to sleep here every night for the rest of her life.

How different she is from her daughter, who looks forward to the day when she'll sleep between silk sheets on a canopy bed the size of Delaware. That's what eight years at a provincial academy will do to a girl: give her high notions and no useful skills. The insult of Peg's covers still tossed in a frothy mess makes the room seem strange to Ellen, as though she were visiting it for the first time after many years. A regular princess, her daughter, too spoiled even to make her own bed. The never-ending game Peg plays these days is a fatal one: too much time on her hands and no responsibilities. Even now she's probably up to mischief, wandering through forbidden rooms with young Junket, the groundskeeper's son, treating the Manikin as her private property. Nonsense. From start to finish the game of leisure is nonsense, and if Peg doesn't find a proper job soon, Ellen will ... what will she do? She has let Peg have her own way until now, so there's not much possibility for correction. Peg Griswood does exactly as she pleases, with or without her mother's blessing.

After Ellen has slipped into her flannel nightgown and cap and eased herself beneath the icy spread, she hovers in this wakeful temper for a few minutes, thinking about how her influence over her daughter, always precarious, has grown negligible. She's at her wit's end — and at the end of a busy day, as well. She has never been one to trade precious sleep for worry. And remember, Mrs. Griswood, she reassures herself, the sure reward for an honest, hardworking life will be a secure future for both yourself and your child.

Ultimate security is Ellen Griswood's goal — it meant complete devotion to her husband for six short years. Since his death in 1917 it has meant complete loyalty to her employer. Ten years of loyalty, never a lapse. So when she hears, or imagines, Mrs. Craxton's voice whispering her name, a low snap of sound against her ear just as she is drifting to sleep, she responds like a recruit called to attention.

Ellen.

"Ma'am?" she says aloud, sitting bolt upright. The lamp, left burning for her daughter, casts a smoky yellow light, and the room feels more snug now. The house is silent again. It must have been nothing, or, if something, merely the crackle of wind through the hickories. But the possibilities suggested by the whisper have drawn Ellen back to full awareness. Does Mrs. Craxton need her?

As the Manikin's head housekeeper and Mary Craxton's companion, Ellen is responsible for her employer's well-being. What if something has happened to the old woman? Doubtful, Ellen doesn't believe in portents, and the nightly routine guarantees consistency. But the what-if lingers. If Mrs. Craxton needs her and Ellen isn't quick to respond, she'll have to bear the brunt of the old woman's rage. It isn't likely, but it's possible that the imagined whisper had its source in actual distress. Anything's possible in the Manikin, and Ellen won't be able to sleep until she looks in on Mrs. Craxton one more time.

"Lord," she moans in exaggerated misery, weak solace as she descends the back stairwell to the first floor. Inside Mrs. Craxton's bedroom, everything appears undisturbed, but since Ellen has come all this way she will make sure. She leaves her lamp in the hall and drops to her hands and knees, keeping below the line of vision in case the old woman has her night-eyes open. By the time she reaches the bed, her own eyes have adjusted enough to the darkness to make out form, if not precise detail. She sees the stiff billows where the comforter is bunched against the footboard. She sees the crumpled surface on top of the bed. She sees the pillow where Mrs. Craxton's head should be. She sees the carved mahogany bedposts, eagles with folded wings rising up on either side.

Where Mrs. Craxton's head should be. Mrs. Craxton's place is empty. Empty! Neither Mary Craxton alive nor Mary Craxton dead. Ellen's history of competence won't be worth a dime if Mrs. Craxton is missing. It's her job to sustain Mrs. Craxton so the old woman can write her son long, accusing letters while he's abroad and scold him when he's at home. She's been known to work herself into such a temper that she faints; every year their battles are a little fiercer, and with every battle Ellen holds her breath, expecting disaster.

Now here's a disaster, Ellen thinks. Her misperception will pass in a flash. But how brilliantly that flash illuminates her confused fears.

I don't know how it happened, sir. In her mind Hal Craxton sits in his velvet wingback chair, glowering, terrifying. Your mother simply disappeared.

Simply? Simply? Mrs. Craxton simply disappeared? An invalid woman can't just sneak from her bed of her own accord, no more than a newborn infant can walk away from its cradle! Someone must have stolen her, there's no other explanation possible. Someone must have gagged her, bound her, and carried off the bundle of aged flesh into the woods. Mrs. Craxton has been kidnapped, and her son will have to pay a pretty sum of money to get her back! The sheriff will want to talk to you, Ellen Griswood, he'll want to ask you a few questions, so you'd better have an alibi ready. Mrs. Craxton has disappeared, and you're going to have to answer for it!

Exhaustion, Ellen will be the first to point out, can turn the mind into a vessel for delusions. In fact, yes, in irrefutable fact, Mary Craxton is still in bed, asleep, her head sunk so deeply into the pillow that the folds almost entirely enclose her face. Which proves not that Mary Craxton has the magical ability to disappear and reappear at will, but that Ellen was mistaken.

Only now does she consider her compromised dignity. She climbs to her feet, shakes her robe so it falls evenly, and walks from the room. She even lets the latch click as she pulls the door shut. Wake up, you old bat! Briefly, Ellen is possessed by an overpowering anger. The terrible tricks the mind can play. She wants to indulge in hatred, too. But hatred is just another deception, she tells herself. The lie of senseless blame. She has too much sensible sympathy to hate Mary Craxton. Anyway, by the time she reaches her own bedroom again she feels so tired. This fatigue: her own delicious oblivion. Give her a minute to slip back beneath the blankets, and soon she won't care much about anything.


* * *

In 1912, three years before his death, Henry Craxton Senior — founder of Craxton's Scientific Establishment — purchased two thousand acres in western New York State, on the outskirts of the village of Millworth and adjoining state land. The property included a barn and chicken coop, a smokehouse, a gatehouse, and the ramshackle Big House, built in the mid–nineteenth century as a water-cure sanitorium but never fully operational, owing to a continual lack of boarders. When Craxton acquired the deed, the Big House, which he renamed the Manikin after the durable forms used to replace the animal's skeleton in taxidermy, had been sitting empty for nearly two decades. He commissioned the renowned firm of Howe, Partridge, and Stilman to renovate the house — they widened an alcove into a spacious conservatory and knocked down altogether sixteen walls, reducing the number of rooms but enlarging the spaces. Outside, a landscaper planted shagbark hickories in a horseshoe around the front yard, designed a terraced rock garden along the sloping eastern lawn, and crisscrossed the orchards and outlying pastures with paths bordered with currant bushes. The spring was dredged to make a small pool and encircled with a neat brick patio, which was enclosed, in turn, by the full circle of a grape arbor.

Henry Craxton — known as the Founder to his friends and employees — had run Craxton's Scientific Establishment for more than forty years and transformed it from a small taxidermy shop to the largest supply company of its kind. At its height, the company employed three hundred workers, including big-game hunters, botanists, paleontologists, taxidermists, chemists, copy writers, secretaries, and accountants. Major museums around the world depended on Craxton's Scientific for everything from tiny ammonite fossils to dinosaur bones to the full-scale dioramas that were so popular at the time, and Henry Craxton became the Henry Ford of natural history.

After spending most of his life growing rich, the Founder intended to indulge himself. But the Manikin was a greater luxury than he could safely afford. Between the elaborate interior of the house and the grounds, maintenance costs alone exceeded the annual return on Henry Craxton's remaining investments by over five percent. Yet he dipped into his capital without compunction. The Manikin was his reward for success, the refuge that he'd dreamed of for years, splendidly remote, without a telephone or electricity. There were other estates in the area and other society women to quell his wife's boredom, and at her request they kept their home in Rochester so they wouldn't have to brave winter in the country. For Henry Craxton, though, the Manikin represented a last stronghold against the cutthroat modern world, and if he could have sealed himself inside the walls, he would have done so.

Of course he couldn't have foreseen how soon he would be spared the world entirely — he had spent only one full season at the Manikin before he was run down by a mail truck on a day trip he took to Buffalo. Nor had his wife been prepared for the consequences of his death. She was too proud to take a huge loss on the Manikin, so in 1917 she sold the more marketable Rochester home and retired to the country estate to live year-round. As it turned out, she was stuck with the Manikin — an embarrassment, if she'd been willing to admit it, much too large and too isolated. Her bachelor son, Henry Junior — Hal, as he was called — hated it so that he took to traveling, staying away for months, even years, at a time, selling shares in the family business to pay for his tours and leaving his mother to manage the upkeep on her own. Which enraged Mary Craxton, of course, and after she slipped down the front steps and injured her hip, she came to believe that her husband and son had conspired to build this house not as a retreat but as her prison. Like that other Mary in the tower, she mourned her lost life and plotted impossible escapes.

By 1927 Ellen Griswood had been the Manikin's head housekeeper and Mrs. Craxton's companion for seven years, on the staff for ten. She had never lost a day to sickness, nor did she bother to take vacations. She had subdued dust and mold and her employer's fury. Despite the burden of work, she had grown comfortable and couldn't be tempted by a change. She was a domestic servant, no more and no less, and was proud of it. Ellen worked hard, and this became the simple justification for her life.

With Mary Craxton as its captive and Hal away more often than not, the Manikin came to belong, at least in spirit, to the servants. Thanks to Ellen's supervision, the rooms always looked newly furnished, the oak-paneled walls shone a lustrous blond, the mirrors were spotless. Even the animals left in Henry Senior's Cabinet of Curiosities were dusted and their glass eyeballs polished weekly. The gibbons and bats, the giant sea turtle, the macaw, the cougar, the tiny dik-dik, the peacock and quetzal, the crocodile, along with local specimens — a raccoon, a family of striped skunks, two beavers: all continued to look freshly skinned and stuffed, the fur and feathers sleek, as though their memory of life was just hours old.

Only outside did time leave its mark, scratching and clawing at the roof, beating relentlessly against the doors, bubbling the whitewash. Henry Craxton had chosen a harsh climate for his country estate; here in this pocket of northern wilderness, the weather, unlike the housekeeper, was inexhaustible.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Manikin by Joanna Scott. Copyright © 1996 Joanna Scott. Excerpted by permission of Picador.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Title Page,
Copyright Notice,
Dedication,
Acknowledgments,
I: The Long Migration,
II: Beast at Bay,
III: Season of Mud,
IV: Eternity,
About the Author,
Also by Joanna Scott,
Copyright,

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