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Boy becomes man. Evil bosses, Victorian landladies, eccentric aunts and uncles abound. |
Prologue We always arrived before dawn. The Robertson Stone Works was in the bottom of a cavernous quarry on the edge of town and on moonless mornings it was pitch black outside the building. You could see orange points of light as men smoked cigarettes in randomly parked cars, but that was all. The light on the outside of the Works was burned out and nobody cared enough to change the bulb. Robertson would have ordered somebody to do it but he never arrived until well into the daylight hours. When the time came, the day shift men, pale from long hours inside the building, emerged from their rusted pickups and old sedans and shuffled into the huge wooden warehouse like structure. Other dust covered and pale men exited into different rusted cars and pickups and sped away. When the time clock was working we punched in. Normally it wasn’t. We said fuck it and let Gabby the foreman try and figure out who was on time and who wasn’t, and he never did. Gabby was a big fat bastard who only left his desk for lunch or when production was too slow and he needed to crack the whip. He could really make us move when he had to. I rode my bike to work whenever I could. I rode through rain, stinging wind, and snow. I was postal on that bike. I even rode on ice. I couldn’t afford a car, and on top of that I hadn’t driven in a really long time. When I was younger I caused an accident that turned me off driving for good. When the weather was downright dangerous, I had to take the bus. It had blue lights on the inside and reminded me of one of those tunnel nightmares I just couldn’t shake. I always sat in front, near the exit, where I could bolt at any minute if I had to. That way I could listen to news on the driver’s radio too. He let me out about a half mile from the Works, way off his normal route, and I walked through an industrial park that had passed the day when people manufactured things there. It had become just warehouses for stuff shipped over from China. There was never a soul around at that time of morning, not even a trucker. When I rode my bike I’d roll in and chain it to the building. None of the other guys rode bikes, but most of them were not above stealing something to sell. They were some of my only friends in the world, but they still ranked pretty low on my ethics scale. I didn’t blame them for their situation because I was helping to put them in it. Out of revenge, two of us had been sabotaging Robertson Stone Works for a couple of years and it was really beginning to show. Our paychecks were starting to bounce left and right and sometimes these guys didn’t have any money. We were stonecutters. We took large pieces of stone and made them into smaller pieces that fit logically into the world. We cut windowsills, carved fireplace mantles and park benches, and cut stone panels to cling to the outsides of skyscrapers. We carved replacement pieces with fancy Latin names for churches and university buildings. Stone is cut wet or dry. We had big saws that cut rough stone blocks into panels and workable pieces. The blades had small diamonds embedded on the end of them- that’s what did the cutting. If the friction of the blade on stone got the diamonds hot they would wear away faster or break off. Water was sprayed on the saw blades to keep them cool. The men who ran the saws were called ‘sawyers’. Those of us who were carvers or ‘hand workers’ cut and carved stone with hammers and chisels and smoothed it down with grinders. We did all our work dry and made a lot of dust. To make a piece of stone smaller you need to cut it down chip by chip or grind it off into dust. We made quite a mess. I know I run the risk of going Moby Dick and getting into minutia, but I want you to understand about the dust. I won’t bore you by talking about dry cracks or feldspar or Vitruvius or bush hammers. But you need to know a little about stone shops and dust in order to understand my world. Like how when we came in on a Monday morning, all the dust in the air had settled on the floor. Intricate patterns would be imprinted on the cement floor where insects and mice had crawled around. Courting and mating rituals and death sprawls were all imprinted in the dust, as if we were visiting a recently unearthed archeological site. Epic battles between individuals were recorded, with the vanquished sometimes lying dead, covered in a fine layer of dust. Teddy, Robertson’s slow nephew who worked as the janitor, would sweep them all away into the pages of history when he arrived. We went into the break room and started the coffee first thing every morning. We’d bought everything for the break room ourselves, including the coffee maker. Robertson was way too cheap to buy anything not directly related to production. Vince Potter, Colfax, and me, the three carvers on the day shift, would each grab a cup and then head out to our benches to see what the guys from the night shift had produced. We kept our tools and all the information we needed for the current job at our bench. We each shared a bench with a guy from the night shift. That was all I shared. Under no circumstances would anyone from the night shift use my stone carving tools. They were all I had from the first stone shop I’d worked in, and just holding them brought back memories of better times. We called the night shift guys the Van Men, because the three of them lived together in a camper van. They called it the ‘sin bin’ whenever they referred to it, and they seldom spoke to anyone but each other. Their work habits were nothing if not irregular. Some nights they would get more done than we imagined possible from one shift. Other nights it was clear they hadn’t even touched a tool. Sometimes direction disappeared with the sun and we would come in to find an entire job cut perfectly backwards. The night shift foreman was afraid of them. They listened to speed metal on the radio and he though they were devil worshipers. No matter what they did he never said a word. He had a wife and kids and figured that one of those freaks would have no remorse about killing him if he got on their nerves. If they could live together in that van a prison cell would be like a busman’s holiday. Vince Potter was the senior stonecutter and in charge of the day shift. Once we had our coffee and figured out what the Van Men had or had not done, Vince would plan out our day and we would begin. Don’t for a minute think of romantic images of men carving stone- bearded artisans hungering to bring out the soul of the rock. Artists make terrible cutters. They can’t read tape measures and they don’t like to make the same piece twice, let alone twenty times. We had a couple of them try, but they didn’t work out. There’s no romance in cutting stone for buildings. Romance is for the people who get to live and work in them. You can wax poetic on limestone and read Ruskin, but you won’t be anywhere near the mark unless you understand the dust. We were working on a remodel of a housing project. It was an enormous job. The city was trying to spruce the place up with low brick walls next to all the sidewalks and around all the dumpsters. They were going for some kind of European look by tearing the siding off all the buildings and replacing it with stucco. We had to make limestone caps for all the new walls. The caps had to be heavy enough so that two teenagers couldn’t lift them off and use them as weapons. The walls were really just bulletproof places for the cops to hide behind when they went on drug busts. The straight cap pieces were simple but the ones that went around the corners required a lot of cutting and grinding. The air cleaning equipment at the Works was broken and no one would fix it unless cash was paid up front. That wasn’t about to happen. Word had gotten out to all the trades that the Works weren’t in the best financial shape. All the dust I made grinding stone just hung in the air. I was engulfed in a cloud of dust. When I looked up I couldn’t see Colfax standing ten feet away from me. He was making dust too. On my bench the dust was six inches deep. When limestone dust is fresh it flows in you hand like water. It feels lighter than cotton candy. I was just about finished with one of the corner pieces when I looked up and saw a white speck buzz past me. A fly coated in dust. When a fly gets caught in a stone ship its fate is sealed. It flies around and maybe bothers a couple of people. It lands and flies away and keeps collecting dust. And then, one time when it lands, it discovers it can’t take off again. Its wings have collected too much dust for it to ever fly again. I’m sure it tries. But it can only walk around, collecting more dust, until it suffocates or gets buried alive. I stopped and watched the fly. It buzzed past me a couple of times, confident in its fly ness, still naïve about its future. It flew further down the shop, through the cloud of dust Colfax was making. And then it was gone. I stood for a moment, waiting to see if it would return. But it must have kept going I returned to the piece I was working on, and on to more pieces. But really all I could do the whole day was ask myself why in the hell there were miles of green fields under the beautiful blue skies. Chapter 1 It was only after Thahn and Le Han Nguyen’s unborn baby died that Colfax and I decided to shut down Robertson Stone Works. We let Vince Potter in on the plan, but he wanted no part of it. I think the writing was on the wall for Robertson with or without us, but at least by playing an active role in the decline of something we were given the illusion of power and control. The real power was in the hands of Gerald Robertson the Fourth, the owner. We called him Four. He was the great, great grandson of an Englishman who had come to this country knowing only how to carve stone and worked his ass off to make that skill into something. The first Gerald’s stone carving tools were proudly displayed in the office lobby for all to see. It you had handed them to Four he wouldn’t have known the business end of them. His father, Gerald the Third, could not have been more different. Everyone called him Jerry. He had overseen the expansion of Robertson into one of the most successful stone companies in the Midwest. If there was a large building project in the area that needed stone, Jerry would get the call. Even then he would help load a job on a truck or run a saw when things got really busy. But Jerry had a stroke and everything went to hell. The day after Four put Jerry in the ground he decided that technology was going to save us all, even though there was no one that needed saving at the time. We were going to become the most technologically sophisticated stone shop in the Midwest, whether there was a demand for something like that or not. Four would go to all the trade shows and come home with the great news that he had finally found the precise combination of equipment that was going to turn the company back on the path to prosperity. Meanwhile, the back yard of the Works became an expensive graveyard of outdated and underused stone working equipment. All the skilled stone workers who had served so faithfully under Jerry resigned one by one in disgust. Only Vince Potter remained. Three generations of building a company were squandered in just a few years. After Four spent all the company savings on worthless equipment, he became brutal in trying to keep the company alive. The only bills certain to be paid every month were the taxes, utilities, and his salary. Everything else was up for grabs. This included the company’s share of the health insurance. Thahn came to Robertson through a state program that helped companies hire refugees and people seeking political asylum. After Jerry died and all the old timers quit, Four used the program as our number one recruiting tool. We quickly became an international stone shop. Every applicant we got was a repressed political minority, even if it was a Brazilian guy pretending to be from Venezuela. Most of the men were so desperate they would tell you anything to get a job. Some would swear they had ten years experience in a technologically sophisticated stone shop and they next day we would discover they didn’t even know how to read. We started almost everybody at the beginning. Lesson number one- this is a piece of stone. It comes out of the ground. We make things with it. Despite the setbacks, there were a few who were productive from the word go. Thahn was one of them. We taught him how to operate a saw and he quickly became skilled at it. He showed up every day on time and cut pieces of limestone with exacting precision. We loved him for it because the closer his cuts were to being exact the less work we had to do to make the pieces ready to ship. Thahn’s family had fled from Vietnam a few years after the war. The communists had held his father after they had taken over. The men had come to the door of their house and asked him to join them for a little reeducation. They said he would only be gone for ten days, but they held him for over two years. His ‘Ten Vietnamese Days’ became a bitter joke among the family. On the day our sabotage began, Colfax brought over a piece of stone for me to measure. It was cut wrong. The day before, I had also gotten a piece of stone from Thahn that was cut wrong. This had been occurring on and off for a week, and we thought gloom and doom. We were sure he had grown bored and was going to leave us. Colfax and I walked over to him at the saw. Thahn was measuring another piece to cut. He had already cut it once, too long, so he was lining it up to recut it. We steered him into the break room and sat him down. He didn’t look bored at all. He looked lethargic, defeated. His shoulders slumped down and it seemed like any minute he would slide right out of the plastic chair and onto the floor. I got him a glass of water. “What’s going on lately buddy?” asked Colfax. “So many wrong pieces.” Thahn’s English had improved, but there were still many things he had no words for. He looked at us and must have understood that we cared. He took a deep breath, as if in preparation. “The baby,” he said and then paused. “The baby die before time.” “Your wife was pregnant?” I asked “Yes.” “And you didn’t tell us?” “It was not time.” I looked at Colfax, who was stunned. “We were wanting for it to be later to tell.” Colfax had a couple of kids. I didn’t have any. I’d met and fallen in love with a woman, but it didn’t work out. “How many months along was she?” asked Colfax. “I am thinking five.” “So she miscarried.” “Yes, mis carry.” Thahn took out his cigarettes and lit one up. He took a couple of deep drags, but then set it down in the ashtray and put his hand over his face. He began to cry. It was odd to see someone cry in a stone shop. The place was so damn full of machismo. I’d seen a guy nearly tear his thumb off and still not shed a tear. He took the more manly way out and simply lost consciousness. Colfax rested a hand on Thahn’s shoulder. Thahn put his head down on the table for a moment and breathed as deeply as he could. “Did she go to the doctor? To get care before the baby is born?” “One time. But they say that insurance no pay and give us bill. And we are thinking maybe no pay until baby is born.” Four had not paid the company’s share of the premiums, even though he had collected the money from our checks. This had happened before. We were familiar enough with it to understand that you could still go to the doctor and they would still bill the insurance company if you asked them to. How could Thahn have known this? He wasn’t the one to rock the boat and ask the question either. “I am home and she is…bathroom… and blood. Ambulance man say baby could be alive…” Colfax looked over at me again and shook his head. He sat down next to Thahn to offer support. Thahn put his head down on his arms and wept long sobs. I had to leave before my head exploded with anger. What little patience I had left for the Works vanished with that conversation. I went outside and grabbed a hammer and smashed the piece of stone Thahn had cut wrong. It broke in half on the first smack and I attacked the pieces until they lay scattered across the floor. I pounded them smaller and smaller until I ran out of steam. Vince Potter stood and watched me wreak havoc. When I was through, I took him into the break room and we explained everything to him. Chapter 2 Colfax had been an accountant before he became a stonecutter. He was a prodigy in his company, with brilliant new ideas and methods for steering the company finances. But the pace was too fast for him and he pretty much stopped sleeping. He had a nervous breakdown and got fired, or the other way around. He was kind of vague on the topic. He ended up sitting around his house getting fat. His wife encouraged him to get back in the game at a smaller company, but he just couldn’t bring himself to do it. One day when he was leafing through the paper looking at the classifieds he noticed his hands. It's not that he had never seen them before, he had just never thought about using them to make a living. He wasn’t sure what he could do, but he was excited anyway. He got up and searched the house for his wife, finding her in the back yard watering the flowers. “I want to work with these,” he said, holding out his hands in front of her like a child showing his mother something he had just discovered. She took a good look at him to see if he was serious. “Fine,” she said. “Can we just not lose the house? The kids are too old to be moving them around.” He never worked another day in an office. Colfax came up with the plan to ensure the collapse of the Works. I won’t pretend to understand it. He buddied up with the guy Four brought in to do the accounting and soon he knew almost everything there was to know about the financial goings on at the Works. The company was getting progressively worse. Colfax crunched a bunch of numbers and came up with a percentage of pieces that would have to be done wrong in order for us to bankrupt Four. The accountant would bounce all these ideas about saving the company off Colfax, who encouraged him to pursue only the really bad ones. On our end it was pretty simple. For each piece of stone we cut or carved there was a printed sheet of paper with all the measurements needed to fabricate the piece correctly. This was called a ticket. If you change just one of the crucial numbers on the ticket the piece will be no good when it goes to the jobsite. The contractor will be mad, of course, because he’s been waiting for the pieces to arrive and he’s under pressure to get the job done. Now he has to send back the information on which pieces are done wrong and what changes they need to have done to them. Which gives us more numbers that can be manipulated and the inevitable gray areas that come up in any communication. These were taken advantage of to produce a little more chaos and a few more pieces done incorrectly. Which, in the end, boiled down to there being no profit on the job. That was our goal. To erase all profit while making the mistakes appear to be random human error. We would do this until we had bankrupted the company. We made the pieces but we didn’t make the tickets. We needed one of the draftsmen to help us out with that. We found our man in Kevin. He was young, fresh out of technical school. He was excellent at drafting but his social skills were non- existent. He was either in awe or scared to death of the stonecutters. Every time we walked into the drafting room, he jumped. We told him Gabby, the fat foreman, was slowing us down. We wanted him to make us copies of all the tickets so we could plan our days without him. That way, we told Kevin, we could get even more done. He thought that was a great plan, and was amazed we were so loyal that we would work ahead. We told him not to tell anyone about it, that our extra work was just our way of saying thanks to Mr. Robertson. He promised to keep it a secret. When he gave us the tickets, we would change some numbers and then distribute them. Then, when the pieces were cut, we would replace them with the real tickets Gabby had distributed, with the right numbers on them. That way, all the mistakes looked like human error. We began our plan with hopes for a swift end to the company. We even began to look for a better job someplace else for Thahn. But the battle turned out to be a lot longer than expected. It came with all the self-doubt of any extended campaign. Four kept coming up money to fund the company when, according to Colfax, there shouldn’t have been any more left. He was astounded. Six months into our sabotage operation, and countless wrong pieces, the company was showing no signs of damage at all. We knew Four was up to something, but we just didn’t know what it was. We were the ones who began to show the strain as our plan dragged on and on. Smuggling in bogus tickets and finding the right moments to switch them was nerve wracking. In the break room we had to listen to guys bitch about Gabby chewing them out for cutting pieces wrong. They felt certain they had read the ticket right and were pissed off when he presented them with a ticket that clearly showed they were in error. To top it all off, we realized we had grown accustomed to being together in the shop and enjoyed each other’s company. Thahn and LeHan had a baby boy the following year, and he could not have been happier. Vince Potter was just a few years away from retirement and there were no other stone shops around he could go to. Cutting stone had been his entire life. He didn’t have a wife or family, and was unsure what he was going to do if he didn’t have a stone shop to go to every day. I knew Colfax went through his moments of doubt as well, remembering the pace of the accounting world to which he might have to return. He had sudden panic attacks when he worried about losing his house and having to move his kids out of their school. He was deathly afraid of their being traumatized and never forgiving him for it. But we kept at it. We knew Four would never change and this was our only chance at some kind of cosmic damage control. He still went to all the trade shows, still bought the latest and greatest equipment, even as our plan slowly began to work and our checks began to bounce. We would just keep making pieces wrong for as long as it took. And then we would have brought some kind of justice to bear. It wouldn’t be the clear-cut revenge we had envisioned in the beginning, but it would be revenge nonetheless. Chapter 2 I waited tables on the weekends. There was a legal settlement against me because of the car accident and my wages were garnished pretty heavily. It left me with enough money to pay the rent and buy groceries, but not much else. I got the job as a waiter so I could have enough money to learn to fly airplanes. Also, to try and save a little for an uncertain future. My Uncle Peter, whom everybody called Unc, got me the job. He and my father had run and auto body shop for years and knew just about everybody in town. When I told him I wanted to get a second job he called Joe, a friend of his who owned the restaurant. I’d been to prison and I didn’t even have a high school diploma, so it wasn’t like I could just waltz in anywhere, fill out a job application, and get hired. Unc helped me out with stuff like that because my parents weren’t around anymore. After I got in trouble they retired to Arizona and I hadn’t seen them in years. Unc wasn’t soft on me. He was the reason I ended up in prison in the first place. I’d run away and he spent a lot of time and money to track me down and make sure I was punished for what I did. It was the right thing to do. Unc lived in a world where there weren’t many gray areas. Any action you took was either right or wrong and you were responsible in the end. He just wanted me to pay for what I had done, literally, so that I could prove myself worthy of rejoining society. That’s the kind of level he worked on. The restaurant was on the opposite side of town from the Works. It was an old stone barn that had been converted into a bar and grill and at the time it was the hippest place in the city. It had that warm and cozy feeling from the stone and timbers and the old flags and farm implements on the walls. The chef bought most of the ingredients locally and made magic every night. People waited for open tables and raved about the food. They came back again and again. To top it all off, the place was haunted. A couple of drunken Irish laborers had fallen to their deaths when they tried to ride the length of the place on the hayfork. They were mischievous ghosts, and there were no shortage of drinks named after them. It was a Friday night and we were jam-packed. We had the fish fry crowd along with the regulars who wanted to see what the chef had dreamed up for the day. A middle-aged couple came in and asked for a table. The host told them it would be about an hour wait. The woman thought it was too long, but it was her idea to try out the place instead of their normal Friday night supper club, so she could hardly back out. At least that’s what she told me when she came to visit me in the hospital. They found a place at the bar where they could pass the time. The woman was getting on in years but she could still spruce herself up. At the place they normally went for fish, on the other side of the city, she still drew looks from a lot of the guys. She was the only one of her group who could still respectably get away with a short skirt after two kids. She was depressed. Call it mid-life, whatever. She didn’t think her husband had any passion for her anymore. She’d been trying to do a few things to get his attention, but so far nothing had worked. Some new outfits, some new dishes of her own at home- even dragging him out to a couple of romantic movies. All wasted effort. He was busy thinking about anything but her and she was getting panicky that she might never get his flame restarted. She thought if they went to some fresh surroundings he would look around and see that she was still way above average in the looks department. He’d once again start to appreciate her. But as soon as they walked into the place she realized what a fool she was to pick a hot spot. Pretty young women immediately surrounded them. She realized she was going to spend the whole night watching her husband check them out. If his flame did restart she knew it wasn’t going to be because of her. She was wishing she had stuck to their routine and was trying to not cry in frustration. She knew if she started to cry her mascara would run and she would look totally silly. The younger women hardly wore any makeup these days- just naturally beautiful. She started to get paranoid, thinking one minute that everyone was staring at her in pity and the next that no one even knew she was there. The hour wait for the table sounded like an eternity. At the end of the night her husband would turn to her say he really liked the place and they should try coming back more often. She suffered in silence, realizing all they ever did at their regular supper club was talk to the same damn people about the same silly things. Even at home they never talked about anything important anymore. She had ordered a drink when they sat down and all of the sudden it was all she could think about. She was parched. Her throat was tight and starting to burn. As soon as she got her first drink she was going to order another one. There was a guy over in the corner playing piano and singing and all the beautiful young women were singing along. She was so goddam old she didn’t recognize a single song. And her husband was doing nothing to get her that drink. Ed was bartending that night. He was busy, downright swamped. Stuart, the part time day bartender, was a worthless piece of shit who left the bar in total disarray. He never prepped the bar for the evening rush even though he had plenty of time and knew Friday nights were hectic at best, impossible at worst. He said he was afraid to go in the storeroom alone because of the ghosts. Ed had heard a lot of bullshit excuses for laziness in his day, but that one took the cake. Besides, the ghosts were all right as long as you weren’t afraid of them. They seemed to sense when someone was uneasy and play on that. Ed told Stuart he had to make peace with them None of that was important at the moment. One of the beer kegs was empty and the rail whiskey was almost gone and who knew where it was hidden in the storeroom this time. And, there were no olives. Ed was about 6’5”, easy 275. He was in college, throwing shot put for the track team and double majoring in chemistry and biology. He had a wife at home with morning sickness. He didn’t have time or energy to waste picking up after some punk ass part timer. He decided the next time the bar wasn’t perfectly prepped he was going to shove Stuart’s gelled up little head into a blender and not let up until he was just holding neck. To top it all off he hated Friday nights. This ‘get em in, feed em, get em out’ mentality appalled him because he loved to chat with people as much as he loved to make them their drinks. He didn’t even open his mouth on Friday nights. And now, of all things, the other bartender was late for her shift. He had five drinks going and they were all fucked up. And the lady who ordered the martini with olives was trying to stare him down. And you know, sometimes it was just too goddam bad. He didn’t have olives at the moment. It wasn’t the end of the world. He speared a couple of mushrooms on a blue plastic sword and plopped them in her drink. At best maybe she looked around and saw that he was really busy and lived with it. He picked up the drink, hoped for the best, and walked it over. I was back in the kitchen. It was a sea of stainless steel and tile and awesome cooking equipment hanging everywhere. Even our uniforms were pretty cool, dark, with a kind of ghost motif floating up through them. Whoever ordered the fish fry got Cole slaw, French fries, and rye bread. We prepared it in advance so all you had to do was write up a ticket and grab for stuff. Unbeknownst to me, my waiter’s folder- the mini organizer I carried all my order tickets in- had wedged its way up to the top of my apron pocket. It was on the verge of falling out, but since I was leaning against a table filling bowls of Cole slaw, I didn’t notice. We were just about out of bowls and Melissa, the waitress working with me, asked me if I would run downstairs and get more. We’d been working together for a couple of years now, and I knew I had feelings for her. She was beautiful, so I didn’t know if it was just that or something more. The wait staff had gone out a couple of times as a group, but other than that I’d never seen her outside of work. I’d never been brave enough to ask her out. I backed up from the table and walked about six steps before my folder fell from my apron, spilling my tickets everywhere. On instinct, I bent down to pick them up. I didn’t look around to see I was kneeling right in front of the heavy double swing door that led from the bar area to the kitchen. Just about the very same instant Ed arrived with the woman’s drink. The sight of the mushrooms made her lose it. She wanted to be calm and quiet, but she heard herself blurting out “I wanted olives! Its bad enough I have to wait you can’t even make my goddam drink right!” Her husband turned to look at her, shocked. A couple of people near her turned too, but because of the piano and all the singing she went unnoticed for the most part. Now she couldn’t help but tear up. She felt like she just wanted to crawl away and die. She wiped at her wet eyes, smudging mascara all the way back to her temple. Ed heard loud and clear. Bad enough he was working alone. Now people couldn’t even be civil, let alone empathetic. “You want olives? I’ll get your fucking olives.” He turned and walked the length of the bar in three strides. He’d completely forgotten about looking through the port hole window in the door before swinging it open, just to make sure no one was on the other side. In his enraged mind he was already trying to locate the olives in the damn mess they called a storeroom. His adrenalin was running so fast that when he got to the door he lifted up his massive leg and kicked it open with all his might. I only had four more tickets to pick up. I was reaching for one that fell near the door when for a split second I saw my arm fly awkwardly back at me. The next instant I was unconscious, as the door slammed against the left side of my face and then into my chest. My hand was shattered and my face was cut clean from my hairline to my eyebrow. I broke a couple ribs from the impact and a couple more as I bounced down the six cement steps. I landed in a heap at the bottom and dislocated my shoulder. Ed no more than had the door open and he was calling 911. I regained consciousness for about ten seconds and there was Melissa, standing above me. An angel that smelled of fried fish and perfume and cigarettes. And then, it all went black. Chapter 3 I woke up in the ambulance, but this time there were no peaceful images. Just two guys hooking me up to every conceivable thing in their converted van. They were keeping an eye on my vital signs and trying to figure out what my broken ribs were doing to my insides. I was a little panicked until I thought of Chauncey Stigand, this British soldier who did a lot of big game hunting in Africa. I had read about him at the University library where I hung out on weekends sometimes. One time a rhino caught him and pretty much ripped off his left breast. As his muscle was hanging there, he sat down and calmly waited for a while to see if he was going to spit up blood. If he had, it meant his lung was punctured and there was no sense in making a big effort to save him because he was a dead man. Lucky for him it wasn’t. He lived through that one, but wasn’t so lucky when the Dinka tribesmen put a dozen spears through him. I tried to reach up and touch my lip to see if blood was coming out of my mouth. One of the guys told me to relax and pushed my hand back down to my side. We were almost to the hospital. I could still smell the restaurant, but now it was all mixed in with medical equipment smells. It kind of confused me. I was going to ask the guy a question, but I couldn’t put the words together. Then, I lost it once again, drifting off. I didn’t wake up again until I was in a hospital bed. A nurse in a purple uniform was adjusting a bag hanging above me. My curtains were drawn back and outside I saw a med flight helicopter landing. Several people ran out to it as it touched down. It looked like they were really excited to get on and take a ride, like the kids at the county fair. But they took out a patient and ran inside with him. The nurse looked down at me and saw I was awake. She smiled. She tried to speak to me but she was far away, like she whispered from one end of a tunnel. She looked over me and spoke to someone on the other side of the bed. I turned my head and saw Unc, studying the nurse as she spoke to him. I could hear him a little better as he responded to her. He talked so damn loud I probably could have heard him from the grave. Whatever he was saying didn’t register, and I drifted off again and slept on and off for a couple of days. Unc sat next to me most of the time. My grandparents were odd people who spent a lot more time worrying about the going’s on at their current church than they did about the welfare of their ten children. Unc was the oldest. My father was the last, the ‘love child’. Although with grandma you’d have been hard pressed to hear any talk of love that didn’t begin or end with a reference to our savior Jesus Christ. They were great attenders. Grandma drug grandpa to pretty much every revival in a three state area, regardless of the cost or time away from their kids. The whole damn lot fell to Unc to sort out. He ran the house with a discipline that was quite unusual for a kid. Nothing was wasted, whether it be words or money or excess feeling. All my aunts and uncles grew up and went to college or into the military and scattered to the far corners of the globe. Grandma gave all the credit to Jesus. Grandpa had worried himself into sickness and was long dead. Only Unc, my dad, and Aunt Elizabeth stayed in the area. Unc never married. He’d raised an entire family by the time he was thirty five and it made an odd duck out of him. I think he equated marriage with more kids, and he wasn’t interested. Aside from that, he was grumpy and stubborn and I’m not really sure who would have put up with him. Unc worked in an auto body shop as soon as he was able to get out of the house. He learned everything he could about cars while helping to support his brothers and sisters. My grandparents were failed farmers at best, and couldn’t keep the family afloat without a lot of help. Grandpa couldn’t keep a regular job because it interfered with the revival schedule. They were famous for accepting whatever charity they could, never missing a free meal for the family at a local wedding or funeral. My father was a fast talking businessman from birth. He talked Unc into forming a partnership and starting their own body shop. They got the place up and running then Dad branched off into new cars, real estate, towing, etc. He was a hell of a businessman. Unc ran the shop like he had the family, and his employees were loyal to him because he made sure they were taken care of. I began working there as soon as I was old enough to bring the guys tools and sodas. Dad and Unc were going to groom me to take over the whole operation, but I messed up and never made it that far. Unc never spent a dime. He hunted a lot in the fall, and had a big garden that kept him occupied the rest of the year. He invested and made and invested it all again. Aside from making sure his brothers and sisters had enough to eat, money never interested Unc. He was there in the hospital room when I came to once again. He was fidgeting around as only a once busy guy could. Hospitals made him nervous too. With all the illness and accidents that go along with raising nine kids and running an auto body shop, he’d spent too much time in hospitals. He saw I was awake. “Know where you are kid?” “Ho…” I tried to speak but I couldn’t get the word to form. He went outside and got the nurse to bring in some water. I drank it and she asked how I was feeling. She ran down the list of my injuries for me after I told her where I hurt. “You want a pain shot?” she asked. “Yes please.” “It’s right in your IV. Just press the button when you feel you need it.” My hand felt like it had been run over. Every breath brought sharp biting pain to my chest. “They didn’t know a couple of times kid. Thought maybe one of those ribs stuck right into ya. And maybe your brain had gotten messed up. I called your dad, but he ain’t comin. Wouldn’t let me talk to your mom neither. Who knows what he told her. Blood don’t matter you know. You can be my blood and still be rotten. You all have a way of proving that.” “Glad to be alive Unc.” “Yeah, I’m glad you made it through. I called up Joe right away and told him that he was a rotten piece of shit for having a door like that. You know he already changed it. Knocked out that damn stone he was so proud of. Now he’s got the in and out doors separate and a big window in each one. Too late for you though.” I took another drink of water but didn’t say anything. It hurt too damn much to talk. “Jees, the way they lined up to visit you’d think you were on your death bed like Gramps. Except people actually came to tell you goodbye. Damn, that still breaks me up remembering. I don’t care what you think of a guy in life. If he’s dying, don’t you owe it to him to stop and say goodbye? It ain’t like he’s not about to get punished shortly for the stuff he did in his life. But to be dying and everybody knows it and nobody comes. I never left his side all the way until the end and nobody came. And he was in pain too. It woulda helped, some visitors. Ease his mind. Listen kid, I don’t care. That’s just plain rotten.” I looked around the room. It was large and I was the only patient in it. The nurses had even taken the time to display some cards and flowers that I had gotten. There was a nice big TV and everything, even a private bath. “Unc. How’d I get this room?” “Listen, I got the room. You ain’t never shared a room before. No sense in starting now.” I had shared a cell when I was in prison, but he never brought that up anymore. I was the kid who was supposed to go on to college and then come back and run the company. To him it was like I was kind of still that kid. He’d blanked out a lot of minor details like the fact I never went to college and he sold the business when my father and mother moved to Arizona. I couldn’t tell if it was the drugs or just the way my head was working after the collision with the door, but his picking up the tab for the room really hit me. I felt like crying, but I did my best not to since crying wasn’t an acceptable thing for a man to do in Unc’s world. “Thanks Unc,” was all I could manage to say. I gave myself another pain shot. It helped, but the level of the world got strange. I felt like the bed was tipped on its side and I was sliding out. I grabbed on tight to the metal rail and drifted off into my drug-induced sleep. It was the first time I could remember going to sleep in a hospital bed since the car accident. I dreamt about the accident a lot. All of the dreams were about corners that came up too fast and when I woke up my mouth tasted like dead leaves and dirt. Chapter 4 Melissa visited me the next day. I knew I was in love with her from the moment she stood above my damaged frame. My head was really cloudy from the trauma and the pain meds, but it was clear to me now what I felt for her. I hadn’t felt this way for anyone since Unc had brought me back from England years earlier. There were lots of strings attached to feeling like this and I was confused about it. Melissa was in school, finishing her master’s degree in art history. Tall, thin, brown hair and silver eyes. Comfortable in her second hand clothes and college town surroundings. She was originally from some fancy place out east somewhere. She brought me a card and some flowers and wore a wry kind of smile when she walked in. “I know, I know,” she said as she held up the flowers for both of us to examine. “Don’t let them erode you fragile male self confidence. They’re really for the room anyway.” She set them down in the middle of the table opposite my bed and arranged them so they stood just right. Then she walked over to the bed and gave me a kiss on the cheek. I had a huge chunk of my hair shaved off where they gave me stitches on my forehead. I must have looked like the victim of a drunken barber. She sat down in the chair next to me and brought out some books from her duffel bag. “I don’t know if you read much, but you’ll need something to do for a while.” She set the books down on the bedside table. There were a couple of thick novels and some poetry. She didn’t specify any order for the books. “Just don’t sit around and watch TV. Pretty soon you’ll be like those dorks at the student union obsessed with their soap operas. It’s beyond pathetic.” I adjusted myself up in bed and winced from the pain, which hit me unexpectedly hard. I saw stars. Melissa jumped up from her chair and helped me get comfortable. We moved my pillows around until I was in a tolerable position, with my club hand wedged between the metal rail and my knee. She sat on the edge of the bed and took a soft hold on my good hand. “We really thought you were gone. After a minute you were lying there, completely still. Everybody was afraid to move you- we thought you might fall apart or something, I don’t know. None of us had every seen anybody really hurt before. It was pathetic. Nobody even thought to go out in the dining room to see if there was a doctor or nurse in the place. How ridiculous all of us.” She looked stressed remembering it. We sat silent for a moment, surrounded by my tubes and wires and readouts. “Unc said they weren’t really sure if I was going to make it when they got me here,” I told her. They couldn’t tell if my ribs were stuck in me.” “Unc. Was that they old man who made us all leave?” “Did he do that? Yeah, that’s him. He can be a little protective. I’m his only family around here anymore and he’s used to taking care of people.” “Where are your parents?” she asked and then backpedaled. “You know, I’m sorry. That’s really none of my business.” She looked at me more closely for the first time. I was intimidated by the brightness of her eyes. She squinted them together tightly, did a double take, and laughed. “When I close my eyes like this, you look like a man in sections," she said. "You’ve become a Picasso.” “I take it that’s not good.” “Good or bad is irrelevant. The point is not to be a Picasso forever. One needs to regain wholeness at some point. Or you become a Munch.” “I plan on it. At some point I want to grow old enough that the wrinkles will cover my scars.” “Then you’ll look like Picasso as an old man. Reality mirroring art will become reality mirroring the creator.” “Whatever I can do to help it along.” My food tray arrived but I wasn’t hungry, so I let Melissa eat whatever she wanted. We talked about her thesis, which she was on the verge of finishing. It was about art from some period in England when there were consumed by good and evil. It didn’t make much sense to me. I had lived in London for years, but I didn’t tell her. That would have taken more explaining than I had energy for at the moment. She had to go teach a class, so she packed up her duffel. “You know,” she said as she stood in the doorway, “when you were lying there and I ran down the stairs you thought I was an angel. Do you remember?” “No, I’m sorry, I don’t.” “You were so earnest about it. You really thought I was an angel. Rest well, I’ll come back again.” Chapter 5 The doctors worried about me, so they kept me there. They stood at my bed and talked about head trauma and the risk of collapsing lungs. The operation to repair my hand had been quite delicate and they were worried about the healing process. If I got an infection or bumped it against something, it was possible I would not gain full use of it anymore. It didn’t really matter to me. I’d never carve stone again in this lifetime. Even with two perfectly good hands the constant vibration of hammer and chisel is tough. With a hand as badly damaged as mine, impossible. Unc came to see me every morning. He grilled the doctors to make sure I was getting the best care possible. He would bring me carryout from the restaurant he ate at every day. His own kitchen was immaculate and he kept it that way by hardly ever using it. He was a perfectly good cook, even in a time when cooking was considered a womanly thing. With nine other mouths to feed, he had to learn to be a good cook. But why cook for just yourself? He liked to eat out where they knew him as a regular. His favorite place was a café in the little village near his house. The village was being swallowed up rapidly by the development of the city and even Unc’s farm was now surrounded by tracts of houses. I’m sure the city would have taken his land for development if it had been somebody else. But Unc had so many favors owed him by members of the municipal leadership it was safer for their personal reputations to just let him live the rest of his life there. When you tow cars and can keep your mouth shut about what you see, you’re a valuable man. Sometimes Melissa would visit in the afternoon and bring me more books. She showed me pictures of the art she was studying too. The paintings were kind of weird with lots of snakes and apples and regret. She’d try and explain it all to me, and I think it helped her to understand better. She told me more about herself too. Her Connecticut upbringing and how when she told her parents she was going to study in the Midwest they laughed and asked her questions as if she were going to study in central Africa. I didn’t offer up too much about my past. I knew she had to be curious, but luckily the conversation never went in that direction. Colfax wandered in on the next Saturday, flowers and card in. “Don’t get any ideas chief, the wife sent these.” “Already learned,” I told him, “they’re for the room.” “Yup.” He sat them on the table next to the flowers Melissa had brought. He walked over to the window and looked out at the helipad. “Four is really pissed off that you had a second job. For some reason that SOB thinks we should show absolute loyalty to his cause. If he only knew, huh.” “No kidding.” “He asks my why on earth you didn’t just work overtime at the shop. So I tell him when your check is no good it doesn’t matter if the number is bigger. Damn if he didn’t think that was funny one bit. So how are ya?” “Too sore.” I said. My club hand rested against the metal pole on the bed, the way Melissa and I had positioned it the first time she came to visit. It was the most comfortable there. Colfax wasn’t shy about it. “Let’s unwrap that baby and have a look.” “I’m done Colfax, no need to ooh and ahh over it.” “Come on. I didn’t come here to gossip like church maids. Besides, it’ll give the nurses something to do when they have to wrap it back up.” I hadn’t seen my hand. I listened to the doctor explain in great detail what damage had been done and how they had tried to fix it, but I hadn’t the guts to look at it when the nurses changed the wrapping. I held it up and undid the hook that kept the bandage wrapped tight. Colfax helped me unravel it. I felt oddly removed from the whole scene, as if we were looking at somebody else’s injury. My head was goofy a lot like that since the accident, but I didn’t want to tell the doctors. They might keep me forever, running test after test until I died of old age. My thumb was exposed, unharmed, but after that every turn of the wrap revealed another injury. There were stitches running up the side of three fingers and metal pins sticking out the points. My whole hand was black and blue and there was some dried blood on it. I didn’t recognize it as my own. Colfax gently lifted it up and looked at it more closely. He frowned. “Yeah, no kidding. You’re done.” “Four can be pissed, but it doesn’t matter. Even if I get back the motion those fingers will never hold a chisel again day after day. Time to move on to something else.” “No, no, no. We’ve got a role for you to play. This minor setback doesn’t mean we’re done.” The nurse came back in. “Had to show it off, did ya?” “Yeah, the tubes and wires weren’t enough to convince him I got hurt.” She left to get a fresh bandage. “Come talk to me when you get out.” I promised I would. Chapter 6 When none of the doctor’s doomsday prophecies for my body came true they finally let me out. Unc gave me a ride back to my apartment. It was a gloomy, early fall day and the sky was spitting rain sideways. After making sure I had my key he dropped me off outside the subdivided house. He never came in to see the place. It pissed him off his own brother let his kid live poor while he lived in some kind of a stucco mansion in the desert. Unc had seen pictures of my mom and dad’s house and I guess it was pretty nice. That wasn’t the reality of the situation, but Unc saw it that way. And when he sized something up there was no sense in trying to convince him otherwise. I lived in a working class neighborhood on the east side of the city. I rented part of a farmhouse that was the first home in the neighborhood. It had long been subdivided into three units and I had half of what used to be the ground floor. The rent was cheap because the landlord was kind of out of it. He bought the place when it was a fading Victorian beauty that needed a little TLC to bring it back to its full glory. Instead, he took out every bit of style the place had. That which he couldn’t drywall or panel over he left, much to his dismay. His name was Mel Beecher and he was an architectural integrity serial killer. Mel owned four or five other houses he’d butchered in the same way. Even from my limited knowledge of architecture it was clear the house had been a real gem. I took the apartment for two reasons. First, the outside of the house reminded me of my time living in London. The brick was the exact same color of all the houses in my neighborhood over there. Second, it had a gorgeous carved marble fireplace. The man who created it must have been at the height of his skill. It was a white marble with green accents and the entire surround was carved in a nature theme. The curves in it were elegant and if you looked at them long enough the flowers really seemed to be blossoming. I could sit and look at it for hours and the next day find some small detail I hadn’t noticed before. The fireplace still worked too. Mel had never blocked it up. It had probably never occurred to him that anyone would want to sit and watch a fire. Mel wasn’t into that. The rest of the apartment contained as much cheap plastic crap as he could cram into it. I didn’t really care. The place I stayed at in London was so fantastic I was doomed to second best no matter where I lived. Marjorie Powell, my landlady, was from another time. Not literally, like we were born again or anything. She just lived like a Victorian in the latter part of the twentieth century. Whatever chaos had come into being since the death of Victoria never got past her brick walls. Small detail, mind you, that the walls were put up right after WWII. The hospital had given me a little bag to take home. I had my get-well cards and my medications tucked inside, including tons of painkillers. I still hurt like hell, especially my ribs. But I didn’t like taking the pain pills because they made my head feel even foggier than it did from the collision with the door. I took just enough of them to take the edge off the pain. The nurses kept the flowers and passed them around. I’d been gone for a while, but nothing had changed. My upstairs neighbor threw away the little food in the fridge that was going to go rotten. I never had much of an appetite, so I didn’t keep food around. I ate my lunch and we ate as we worked at the restaurant. That was about all. I was just about to light a fire when Unc called. “Hey, I just remembered. It’s your birthday.” “No Unc, not til Friday. It’s only Wednesday.” “No, no, no. You remember. They only run it on Wednesday and Saturday, so it’ll have to be today. I don’t believe in belated luck. O’s at ten.” “Yeah, okay. I’ll be there.” O’s was an Irish bar downtown that had been named O’ something’s at one point or another. During the Vietnam War protests the students set a car on fire right below the sign. The only part of the name that didn’t get burned was the O. Shortly afterward the owner sold out to a couple of Greek brothers. Nobody really cared what the original name was, so it was just called O’s. The bar’s main claim to fame was the front picture window, which had survived since the turn of the century construction of the building. The window had a bunch of stained glass four leaf clovers on it and the brothers guarded it like the sacred shrine it was. The Irish on the police force used to watch over it during street filling events, but they had dwindled to the point where the brothers were the only ones who cared that the window survived. They stood on the sidewalk in front of it with baseball bats whenever they felt it was necessary. I showered. It was tricky with my smashed up shoulder and hand, but I managed. They gave me a contraption to put over my hand so I didn’t bump the pins in my fingers. I chucked it as soon as I left the hospital. It didn’t matter to me how my fingers healed. I figured whatever job I was going to get now wasn’t going to need a delicate touch. I wasn’t supposed to get the stitches in my face wet, but I didn’t care. I stood under the shower for a long time, relieved to finally get the restaurant grease off me after all those days. I’d promised Melissa I would call her so she could take me out for a post hospital celebration. It wasn’t the perfect first date, Unc and Melissa and me, but it was what we had. I didn’t get out too often. I figured I’d get out even less now that I was about to be unemployed. I called her and she said she’d meet us there. I told her the reason would be self- explanatory. I took the bus downtown because my bike was still at the restaurant. I couldn’t have ridden it anyway. I knew people who could ride one handed, but I wasn’t one of them. My hand started to hurt with every beat of my heart, so I took one of the painkillers. My head was still feeling strange. Couple that with the medication, I wouldn’t have been very safe on a bike anyway. Unc was there when I arrived. O’s was labeled a dive bar, but really it was just beautifully built in the first place and had never been updated. It didn’t get cleaned very often either. The whole place had yellowed, inside and out. The clear part of the front window was permanently brown from years of cigarette smoke. The clovers had gone from a bright Kelly green to a dark forest green. I walked in and said hello to the brothers and a few other people in the bar. Except for his café, this was the only place Unc and I ever went to. He parked his Cadillac in front and none of the cops ever gave him a ticket. When he got out of hand every now and then the brothers were patient and never roughed him up. They would calm him down and get a cab and then pull his Caddy around back for the night. O’s was an easy place to blend in. My blood pressure dropped just by walking in the place. After my years of hiding out in London, a place like O’s was a real treasure. Unc was on his barstool, glass of scotch in hand. Next to him was a neatly stacked pile of five hundred lottery tickets. My birthday present. “Get him one of these,” Unc said, holding up his drink. “Unc, I’m on this pain medication and I’m probably not supposed to drink. As a matter of fact, I’m sure of it.” “Bah, its your birthday.” There was no sense arguing. Not one of the nine younger siblings had ever won an argument. Even if he was mellowing a little in his old age, I didn’t think I was going to be the first. I sat down and drank. There wasn’t a whole lot to say. “Your dad call?” he asked. “Nope.” “Son of a bitch. I told him to call. Bet your mom don’t even know.” My mom was a sweet person who never challenged my dad. He didn’t beat her into submission or anything. It was just the way she’d been raised. Her parents were quite old when she was born and raised her in a house that ignored the reality of the outside world. They taught her that the wife never questioned the husband. They probably tried to teach her the sun revolves around the earth too. I didn’t understand why she couldn’t change with the times and it really pissed me off. But that was how she lived, and I certainly couldn’t change it. “I think she tried to call a few times on my birthday,” I told Unc. “You think?” “Yeah, you know every now and then I would get a phone call and no one would say anything, but they wouldn’t hang up either. I got a feeling maybe she was just checking, saying Happy Birthday in her own way. So I told whoever it was on the line how I was doing and what was going on in my life. Don’t know if it was her.” “Maybe it was her.” "Yeah, I don't know." We sat together in silence and drank after that. There wouldn’t be much to say until ten thirty two when the lottery numbers were announced. About ten twenty five Unc would tell one of the brothers to turn the TV station for him. Most of the time it was on some kind of sports channel and people got damn mad when the game they were watching was suddenly flipped over to the end of the news broadcast. Of course, those people hadn’t slipped a little something extra to the brothers when they ordered their first drink. Unc demanded total silence from the crowd so he could hear the lottery numbers read off as well as see them on the screen. Of course, this led to some pretty nasty scenes, especially the year he interrupted the overtime football game. A group of college guys turned the place upside down. We missed the lottery entirely and who knows how much Unc paid the brothers to fix the damage. Or where in the hell the lottery tickets ended up. Thank god nobody came up with a winning ticket. Unc would have hunted that person down to the end of the earth just to reclaim the money that was rightfully mine. About ten fifteen I told Unc I’d invited Melissa. The painkillers and scotch were interacting strangely inside my damaged head, and I didn’t feel like myself. “Melissa. She the one who brought you flowers? The waitress?” “Yeah, she’s the one.” “Seemed nice. Pretty smart to be hanging out with the likes of you.” “What kind of shit is that? I tried to attract the dumb fat ones but the bus didn’t go out to the trailer park.” “Always a smart ass, ain’t ya. Just cuz somebody lives in a trailer don’t mean they’re dumb.” “Yeah, you’re right.” "Damn straight I'm right. Smart ass." We drifted back into silence. Melissa showed up on time. Thankfully, the bar was pretty quiet. Unc introduced himself again, even though they’d met at the hospital. Melissa sat down next to us and ordered a glass of wine. She had a present for me and was about to get it out of the bag when the lottery came on. Unc stood up and raised both of his arms. “Everybody quiet!” The five people or so in the bar looked at him strangely and then obeyed more out of curiosity than anything else. When you’re a student and an older person tells you to do something, the natural instinct is to obey. Unc’s pen and paper were ready. The first numbered ball rose up in the tube and the finger with the perfectly polished fingernail was seen rolling the number into view. The black 15 stood in stark contrast to the white ball. Unc wrote down that number, as well as the next five and then quickly double and triple checked before they went to a commercial. Then, as the brother changed the TV back to the sports station, Unc thanked everyone for their cooperation and bought them all a drink. He turned back to us. “Happy Birthday Tim!” He raised his glass. Melissa and I raised ours and she echoed the sentiment. We all drank. Unc divided the lottery stack into three and we began to check our tickets against the numbers he’d written down. A basketball game played silently above our heads once again, and someone played an entire Van Morrison album on the jukebox. We checked them all once and then Unc made us check them through a second time. The painkillers must have been wearing off because I was getting that warm and comfortable feeling from the scotch. My head still felt like someone had taken it off and put it back on cockeyed. A few of the tickets matched some numbers and we won about fifty bucks. Unc gave me a fifty and gave the loser tickets to one of the brothers, who threw them away behind the bar. “When are you gonna break down and just give me the five hundred instead. It’s my gift. Don’t I get to say if I’d like a cake and some cash?” “Did that girl get a say when you got in that car? Just think what the payoff would do for her. Haven’t you learned a damn thing?” I had no reply. Thankfully, Melissa didn’t ask any questions. We drank the whole night. With her next to me, I felt more awake than I had in a really long time. Even the carefree way she leaned against the bar caught my eye. She’d never been to O’s before. As the night progressed she looked around and talked about the decoration inside the building and what it was trying to copy and why. A dive bar had never been more interesting. The brothers stood with us and listened to her talk. They bought us drink after drink just to hear Melissa expound a little more on the artistic theme of travel inherent in the riverboat mural painted on the ceiling of the dining room. As we stood and talked I realized this was the closest I’d come to feeling like a family in a really long time. It was like we had all gathered together after a long separation to once again enjoy each other’s company. The bar closed way too quickly for me. We helped Unc into a cab. He’d behaved himself, but drank way too much to drive home. One of the brothers got in the Caddy and drove it around the back once again. Melissa and I stood in front of the bar, both still warm from the glow of the liquor. I could feel the pain in my hand start to rear up, but it would have been rock star like of me to take a painkiller now. “Walk you home?” I asked. “Sure.” The night was crystal clear and there was a chill in the air. My steps had begun to feel like each required a great effort. I didn’t try to hold her hand or put my arm around her or anything like that. I was feeling drunk and kind of goofy and I didn’t want to come off like some horny, crippled guy on the make. After the warmth of the bar, the cold air felt hostile and lonely. She lived about ten blocks away on the top floor of an apartment complex. We walked together in near silence and stood at the entrance when we arrived. As I reached out my hand she leaned in and kissed me on the cheek, and then she was gone. Walking back downtown to catch my bus, the streets were still full. Boisterous students, middle-aged drunks, and a few people out walking their dogs in the middle of the night. I stood at the bus stop with a group of students, all of us headed out of downtown to where we could afford the rent. When the bus came I had to sit way in the back. The house was quiet when I got home and I slipped in without making any noise. When I crawled into bed I took out one of the books Melissa had given me. It had a bunch of crazy sculptures in it that looked like nothing I had ever seen before. Feeling pretty sober, I took one pain pill and drifted off into my drugged sleep. This time, my nightmares were full of smashing cars and dead babies. Everything was a strange and exaggerated shape. |