L
Milk-Chocolate Parts
Faced with the landlord surprise,
Jack decides that he’d better see Audrey off. He wanders back to the tile steps
feeling like he’s been caught having a party while his parents were off on
vacation. And then he realizes that this is not a metaphor at all – he has had a party, has screwed one woman
in Thompson’s shower, another in his bedroom. His mistress in his bedroom. After wearing his best clothes. Jesus. By any measure, he has broken the
house-sitter’s code.
Jack
closes the front door and spies Thompson’s shoulder over the top of the great
white couch. He’s about to tap said shoulder when he hears snoring. Though
seated in an upright position, ostensibly watching ESPN, Thompson is sound
asleep.
Poor guy. Must have been a hell of a flight.
The thought is followed by its logical succedent: Where’s the wife and kids?
Jack
realizes he’s pretty pooped himself. He stops by Thompson’s room to pick up a
bathing suit and towel, then trudges to the roof for a session in the hot tub,
followed by a nap on the chaise lounge.
“Are
we assuming that sunburn red cancels out pumpkin orange?”
Jack
is surprised to find himself still on the roof, his shoulders tender from UV
assault. He rolls over to find the adjoining chair occupied by the more
standard version of Thompson: shaved and sharp in blue jeans and a red
Guayabera shirt.
“But
I gotta tell ya, even for an Oompah-Loompah, that orange chick was hot. Where’d you dig her up?”
Jack
mutters the phrase “Monkey Tribe,” under the assumption that this will explain
everything.
“You’re
babbling, my friend. Hey, can I buy you dinner? You know, for not burning down
my house?”
Jack
sits up and rubs his eyes. “Sure. Sounds good.”
“Fantastic,”
says Thompson, finally making with the GQ smile. “Can you dash through the
shower in fifteen minutes? I am damned hungry.”
“Um,
sure.” Jack stands, revealing a skin tone that looks like a salad of radish and
marmalade.
“And
for God’s sake,” says Thompson, “wear a long-sleeve shirt.”
Subjecting
his burnt back to the shower spray is a trial, but later, cruising Highway One
in Thompson’s Carrera, the wind blows under his shirt, tickling his tender hide
in a delightful fashion. A few miles south, they pull into the Seascape
neighborhood and a resort called Sanderlings, where they sit at an outside
table under a parasol heater. Their vista takes in a large cliffside lawn
bisected by an artfully winding path. The ocean beyond serves up a million
diamonds of dappled sun.
“They
do weddings out there,” says Thompson. He’s quiet for a few seconds, then snaps
into a digression. “They had this big storm a couple years ago, and even after
it cleared out the waves were crazy and high. Some bride in Monterey was posing
at a spot near the rocks when a wave rose up and just took her away. She
drowned, a half-hour after getting married.”
Jack
remembers the story, and it still gives him the chills. Thompson’s attention
shifts to the waiter.
“Hi.
How about some crab cakes to start, and I’ll have the Forest Meridian
Chardonnay. Jack?”
“Oh,
um. Can I get a double latte?”
“Absolutely,”
says the waiter. “I’ll be right back.”
Thompson
takes a sip of water and gives Jack an appraising look. “Beyond the orange
skin, mi amigo, there is definitely something different about you. You’ve
become a Santa Cruzan, haven’t you?”
Jack
has been running a low-level inner debate that just now is coming to a head.
He’s got enough dirt on this dude to sink a Senator. For once in their sketchy,
one-sided relationship, he can say whatever the hell he feels like.
“I
think it’s more that I’m getting laid.”
Thompson
lets out a laugh loud enough to upset the conversation of a family dining
across the patio.
“Oh-hoh!
My friend Jack. You’ve been playing the beach mansion for all it’s worth.”
Jack
sees the not-so-subtle jab at his lack of babe-landing skills, but also
realizes that it’s absolutely true. “That’s the oddest thing of all. Audrey –
the orange one – she seems to have fallen for me before she had any idea about
the house. Hell, before she had any idea about me. It really confused me.”
“Ah-hah!
I know that feeling. You are
automatically suspicious of a woman who likes you, because obviously she has no
taste in men. Right?”
Jack
laughs. “That it so it. And then,
somehow, a second one came along.”
Thompson
slaps the table, jangling the silverware. “You nailed two chicks in my
household? Where’d you find this one?”
“She
was visiting friends in town. I met her on the beach, right outside.”
“Woo-hoo!
Nothin’ like home delivery. Details? Details?”
This is one of those locker-room
conversations, thinks Jack. Details, details. “She had this air of class
about her. Maybe even a little stiff, so you make certain assumptions.”
“Like
she does it missionary only,” says Thompson. “And she weeps afterward. And then
writes about the experience in her journal: ‘Jack and I made love this evening.
He was so tender.’”
“Wow.
You’re like, a student of the gender.”
“I
love women – they’re so pathetic.”
“Well,
anyways, once in the bedroom, this one was a banshee: screaming, swearing,
ripping clothes…”
“Oh!”
says Thompson. “The naughty librarian, nothing better. Was she Catholic?”
“Close.
British.”
“Really?”
“One
of those posh London accents. Like… Elizabeth Hurley.”
Thompson’s
smile begins to shrink.
“It
was Brigit.”
Jack’s
ready for a long walk home, maybe even a pop in the nose. What he gets is a
whole bunch of nothing. Thompson stares at the table, rubs his chin, breathes
in like he’s going to say something but doesn’t. Finally he rises, turns
carefully from his chair and walks down the path to the wedding site, settling
on a bench that faces the ocean.
The
waiter arrives, looking puzzled.
“Um…
he’ll be right back,” says Jack. The waiter leaves their beverages. He has seen
this scenario before – his restaurant seems to be a hot-spot for breakups – but
he can’t imagine that Antonio Banderas out there just got dumped by this schlub.
Jack
sips at his latte, trying to figure Thompson’s response. This utter neutrality
was not even on the list. Five minutes later, he’s halfway through his latte
and Thompson seems to have turned into a bronze. Jack heads down the path and
stops at the end of the bench, a safe distance away. He’s about to say
something when he finds rivulets tracking Thompson’s face.
“I’ve
lost her,” he says.
“Well
sure. When she found out you were married…”
“Esmerelda.
I’ve lost Esmerelda.”
Jack
eventually convinces Thompson to eat something. He picks at a plate of pesto
ravioli as Jack lays into an Idaho trout with rosemary potatoes. He is much
encouraged when Thompson’s eyes glimmer and he lets out a laugh.
“You
and Brigit. Damn, Jack. I didn’t know you had it in you. Was it kind of a
revenge fuck?”
“Oh
yeah. She insisted we do it in your bed, in front of your family photos.”
“Man!
Women. What did she do when she found out about me?”
“Jumped
in the ocean.”
“I’m
flattered. And you jumped in to save her? And she was so grateful she jumped
your bones?”
“Yep.”
“You
know, I think you did me a favor. I needed to clear Limey Girl from the
situation – but any attempt at direct communication would have been one more
step toward divorce.”
Jack
gazes over the cliffs, where the faint green light of a ship is inching across
the black horizon.
“How
did she find out?”
“Bloody
fucking cell phone,” says Thompson. “That’s the one contact I allowed Brigit.
Toward the end she was getting pretty desperate, and a wife notices how many times
a day her husband ignores an incoming call. And, a guy’s gotta take a shower
sometime, right? So I’m in Milan, merrily scrubbing away at the hotel, and a
text message buzzes in. Ezzie launches into spy mode at the same time that
lovely Bridgey launches into nude photo attachment mode. She also scrolls
through three preceding messages – all of them highly suggestive, and Thompson
is officially FDA-rated dead meat.
“Ezzie
is scary-cool in situations like this. She wanted so bad for Sanja and Nikola
to enjoy the rest of the trip that she managed not to let on. When we arrived
at JFK, she sent the kids off to a playground, turned to me very calmly and
said, ‘Here’s the deal: I know about Brigit. I’m taking the kids to Madison to
stay with my folks. You’re going the hell home, and you will wait to hear from
me. As far as the kids will know, we’re just extending their vacation. Do all
of this or I will call a divorce lawyer to-morrow.”
“Wow,”
says Jack. “Ice in the veins.”
“She
is a mightily strong woman. And I am up against it.”
Thompson
pierces a square of ravioli and chews at it like he’s ingesting some
bitter-tasting medicine.
“I’m
not sure I’m getting this,” says Jack. “Wasn’t there trouble in your marriage
already? Isn’t that why you were with Brigit?”
“That’s
the usual assumption. But no. A couple of little kids do suck a bit of the
romance out, but nothing tragic or unexpected. Nothing to… God, Jack. It’s
Ezzie, and Nikola and Sanja. I can’t… I feel like I can’t breathe.”
Thompson
is butting up against tears again, and you can tell he’s sick of the fight. His
jaw tightens up, and his eyes wander around the patio.
Jack
finds himself thinking like Ben. What
does this person need right now? What can I do to help him? He takes
another bite of his trout (he is really
enjoying this trout) and takes a long time to chew it, giving Thompson time to
get somewhere else. Jack looks inside and notices a large fishtank in the
lobby, a trio of orange clownfish conducting a pas de trois against the dark
rocks. He clears his throat, feeling like he’s about to give a speech.
“Thompson,
I feel like I owe you an explanation. You left one person here to look after
Big… um, your house, and you have come home to someone who’s much different.”
Thompson
smiles, well aware of Jack’s ploy. “For one thing, I left a Caucasian and came
back to a cantaloupe.”
Jack
laughs. “You got me there.” Then he considers where this story begins. “You
told me to check out the Aptos Coffeehouse. So I did, and I ran into a guy I’d
seen on the beach the night before. His name was Ben, and he was a life coach.”
“…and
that is how Audrey and I ended up arriving at Big Brown with orange skin.”
Thompson
raises an eyebrow. “Big Brown?”
Jack
laughs. “Yeh. That’s what the locals call it.”
“Isn’t
that a racehorse?”
“Coincidence.
As you may suspect, it’s not exactly a term of endearment.”
“Like
‘Big Brown Dookie.’”
“Somethin’
like that. Funny, though. They like it a lot better once they get inside. Ben’s
the biggest convert of all.”
“Ben
sounds pretty fucking cool.”
“Oh,
he is. Without seeming to have done much at all, he has utterly transformed my
view of life.”
“I
think it’s pretty amazing, Jack. When I saw you in Depoe Bay, I thought, God,
this guy looks pathetic. And it
occurred to me that a few weeks in ‘Big Brown’ might do you some good. But holy
shit! I don’t think I’ve ever had a
month like your month.”
“I
somehow doubt that,” says Jack.
“Well,
okay. A month I can remember. Hey! Can we hitch a ride?”
He’s
calling to a young Latino driving a golf cart beach shuttle. The trailer is
occupied by an elderly couple, with room for more.
“Sure!”
says the driver. “Gotta go right now, though.”
“Just
paid our bill,” says Thompson. “Come on, Jack – and bring your drink.”
Jack
gathers up his Long Island iced tea and jumps on board. They face sideways as
the cart drops into a canyon covered in pampas and cypress trees. They come out
at a concrete pad before a wide beach, the near horizon peppered with fires in
concrete rings. Thompson slips the driver a ten and leads Jack to a ring at the
far edge, accompanied by two white beach chairs.
“That’s
what I love about this place,” says Thompson. “They always assume you’re a
guest, and treat you accordingly. And I tip accordingly, which nicely seals the
deal.”
Jack
focuses past the fire on a thin white stripe that represents the breakers.
“I
fucked you over pretty good, didn’t I?” says Thompson.
Jack
is struck nearly dumb, but quickly recalls his pledge to ballsy honesty.
“Yes.”
“In
fact, my friend, you may be
responsible for my impending divorce. Follow me on this. When all that shit
came down at C-Valve, I truly expected the hammer to finally get me. Hell,
maybe I wanted the hammer. I saw a
lot of people at Enron tossed overboard while I slipped through unscathed. But
Jack Teagarden – there was a man so
tortured by conscience that he wanted the hammer even more than I did. I began
to suspect that, this time, I didn’t even have to lie my way out. All I had to
do was nothing. And it worked. After that, I believed that I was bulletproof –
that no matter what crimes I committed, there would come along a Jack Teagarden
to save me. The very week of your so-called layoff, I went on that trip to
Portland and met Brigit.
“Now,
please understand this: I’m an extremely good-looking man. Over the years of my
marriage, I have fought off many an offer. But dammit! A man gets tired of
saying no to perfectly good pussy. ‘Oh, pussy? No thanks. Been tryin’ to cut
down.’ So the redhead with the fine white ass and the Spice Girl accent makes
me an offer, and for once I accept. And I’ll tell ya, it was powerful. You screwed two women this month, you know how it feels. Wasn’t it powerful?”
“Yes,”
Jack admits. “You fucker.”
Thompson
takes a moment to luxuriate in his Manhattan. “Yes. I was a fucker. I deserve every epithet you can come up with. And I
owe you for fucking Brigit. Now, if she starts any trouble, I’ve got something to hold over her head. It ain’t much, but I’m
desperate.”
He
takes a moment to laugh at his own pathetic situation.
“You
know, I have always had it easy. I could give you this epic sob-story about
growing up poor in San Antonio, with parents so goddamn Mexican I couldn’t
stand it. A maid and a gardener, for Christ’s sake. A maid and a gardener! But
fuck all that, because I knew early on that people liked me for no particular
reason. My good looks and charm made them feel better about the world in
general, and that’s all I really needed. When they found out I was also good at
math… Fuck! Every goddamn college in the country wants a good-looking Latino
with a spreadsheet for a brain. I used what God gave me – I used it in spades.
“Now,
if you plot this Great American Dream on a grid, this story should end at a
blonde white girl with a tight ass and a talent for blow jobs. I went to the
University of Wisconsin, which was fucking beautiful, because it’s like a
thousand miles directly north of San Antonio. Many years later, I’m celebrating
my freshly minted MBA with a drunken cruise in downtown Madison. It’s getting
late, we’re all desperately hungry, and Becca, a white blonde girl with a tight
ass and a talent for blow jobs, says she knows this late-night tapas joint. I’m
consuming a sangria and some dish having to do with lamb and paprika when this
old guy starts playing flamenco guitar, this old woman starts singing in
Spanish, and upon this tiny, much-abused stage appears the most gorgeous
assemblage of milk-chocolate parts that the world has ever seen. And her
dancing! I am absolutely no expert, but even as performed by homely women, flamenco is unbelievably
sexy. She came out afterwards to watch the other dancers, I left my table –
much to the chagrin of Becca – and bought her a drink. You’d expect some exotic
story, but she was a Madison girl, born and bred, one of the few old-money
black families you’re bound to find, had just received a bachelor’s in dance
from my very college. She took one of those semester-abroad things to Spain,
and came back absolutely obsessed with flamenco. At this point, she was working
on something pretty provocative, taking a basically improvisational art form
and applying it to an evening-long story based on a play by Federico Garcia
Lorca. Ruffled a lot of feathers in the flamenco community. As our conversation
deepened, this was the thought that formed in my mind: You have found someone better than anyone else you will ever find.
And that open-mouthed laugh that seemed to embrace the world, those long,
graceful fingers that lit upon my arms like butterflies. I spent my summer
taking in these small aspects of her, and falling in love.
“A
couple of months later, my career took off so quickly that we had to make some
fast decisions. Another geographical irony, eleven hundred miles directly south
to work for Enron in Houston. For Ezzie, the move offered some appealing
enticements, notably a much stronger Hispanic culture that offered many more
venues for her work. She also knew that flamenco didn’t offer the kind of
steady income that was at least possible
in ballet or musical theater, so maybe having a newly rich boyfriend wouldn’t
be so bad. Or, a year later, a rich fiancé. Or, a year later, a rich husband.
Five years later, she was pregnant with Sanja, and ditched the whole thing for
motherhood. Then came Nikola, then came the scandal, then came California.
Nowadays, she figures when the kids are off to school, she can start back in to
flamenco, and someday she wants to start her own troupe. Unless.”
That
last word says a lot, along with Thompson’s gaze, his brown eyes reflecting the
orange coals of the fire. He hasn’t really said much about the kids, but
perhaps the guilt there is too great, even for a bulletproof man. Jack offers
him another out.
“So,
is it all right if I wait till tomorrow to move out? I’ve got a bit of loading
up to...”
“No,”
says Thompson. “You like the place, right? I mean, it’s been good for you,
right?”
“Well…
sure.”
“Why
don’t you stay? In fact, I’ll pay you to stay. Forty dollars a day, a little
walking-around money. And dude, don’t worry – I won’t be crying on your
shoulder. I’m going back to work on Monday, and I’m sure it’s gonna be hella
busy. But… it would be nice to have someone else around the house. It’s
awfully… big.”
Jack
doesn’t know what to say, but just then a meteorite etches the sky with a long
green streak.
“Holy
shit! Did you see that?”
“I
think I did,” says Thompson. “And I wished on it, too.”
“What
did you wish for?”
“Can’t
tell you. Ruins the wish.”
Jack
thinks about it. Why the hell not? Whatever’s in the air around Big Brown has
been good for him. Respond to things in a
real fashion, said Ben.
“You
got it.”
“Fuckin’
ay,” says Thompson. “See? God even sends meteorites just so Thompson Flores
gets his wishes.”
Jack
laughs. “You are a cocky
son-of-a-bitch.”
“And
the more you insult me,” says Thompson, “the better I feel.”
M
Apologetic Syllables
Thompson keeps his word, almost too
well. He is a ghost in his own house, disappearing before dawn, not returning
till after midnight. Jack knows this pattern well: overwork as a distraction.
And a procrastination. Because work is eternally noble, that tireless pursuit
that one undertakes because the world demands it, because one must pay one’s
bills, because the children require food and health care and IPods. That’s why
it makes such a solid rationale when you’d really
like to avoid an unpleasant task, like facing the wife you have just betrayed,
like beginning the painful process of retracking four lives that have just been
derailed.
On
the more selfish side, Jack is glad for the freedom to behave just as he had as
a house-sitter: to lollygag, to walk along the waves, skipping rocks; and to
let his brain ramble like a leashless terrier over the second half of his life.
That’s how he thinks of it. This is intermission. His life as an accountant is
now over, and his task is to pick a new identity for Act Two. He gives Ben the
credit for leading him to this idea, because it is not an idea he could have had two months ago.
Meanwhile,
Jack has yet another date with the thrift stores, because Ben has instructed
him to assemble his own tuxedo. In his Internet searches, he discovers that the
tuxedo, like Jack, is in a period of flux. For a while, people were entirely
forgoing the classic bowtie, opting for an unadorned collar buttoned to the
top. (He recalls David Letterman picking out Tom Hanks at the Oscars and
saying, “You couldn’t wear a tie?”) The new trend is a standard necktie, worn
with a standard collar, but tucked into a matching vest. Jack suspects that
this will play right into his strategy.
He
begins by rifling the racks of suit jackets at three different thrift stores.
He has nearly lost the thrill of the hunt when he strikes gold: a classic tux
jacket with single-breasted notched satin lapels. The lining bears a tag from a
rental shop, just over the likely reason for its exile: a large white stain,
anathema to prom dudes and bridegrooms but no care for Jack. The cost is an
entire 15 bucks. The jacket is a little tight in the shoulders, but for 15
samoleans Jack will just have to deal.
From
there it’s on to retail. Jack locates a discount men’s store where he finds a
snow white vest with a fetching crosshatch pattern. The box also contains a
matching bowtie and the trendy midget necktie, pre-knotted, with a clasp for
easy hookup. At an adjacent department store he finds a snazzy pair of Italian
dress pants. In the area of shirtness, he makes his play for rebellion. He
purchases a black dress shirt, hoping to shake up the salt-and-pepper in a
spicy fashion.
Ben
arrives at Big Brown in a classic tux, underpinned by a low-cut silver and blue
vest with matching bowtie. The surprise is a gray felt fedora, with a hatband
made from the same fabric as the vest, and a plume fashioned from the last six
inches of an ostrich feather. As they head off, Ben offers an encouraging
critique of Jack’s class project.
“Somewhere
beneath that nerdish exterior lies an artist. You have rejected the norm and
gone for your own unique melange. I am mightily impressed. So what’s your
analysis of my creation?”
“Hmm,”
says Jack, pretending great deliberation. “Classy and retro. The conservatism
surprises me, but the little touches – especially the peacock feather – are
very nicely done.”
“Excellent!
Just what I was going for.”
Ben
is clearly in a good mood, but it’s different than his usual. The trip over the
Santa Cruz Mountains is a quiet ride, and his mind seems fully occupied. They
pull into the clean metal-and-glass skyscrapers of downtown San Jose, each
building sporting a red corporate logo, like a handkerchief in its top-floor
pocket. Many of the names are vendors that Jack used to see on his quarterly
reports.
Ben
works his way to a parking garage and circles all the way to the top. Jack gets
the strategy right away: why hunt around for a space when there’s an elevator
anyway? It also affords another cool view: the white webs of the federal
building across the street, the new Hilton rising like a stalk next to the
convention center, the stout, regal Fairmont standing sentry over the green
oval of Cesar Chavez Park. They leave the elevator at street level and walk
north along the light rail tracks, crossing at the cobalt cube of the San Jose
Rep and entering a Thai restaurant. The walls are covered in bamboo screens and
tropical-looking art. The hostess leads them to a table in the corner, which is
already occupied by a dark-haired woman in a black pantsuit. She spots Ben and
flashes a broad smile.
“Hi!
I’ll have you know, I’ve been waiting an entire three minutes. You owe me,
buddy.”
Ben
kisses her on the cheek and sits. “What say I buy you dinner?”
“Oh!
Big spender.”
“This
is the aforementioned Jack. He’s a virgin.”
“Hi,”
says Jack. He takes her hand for a moment and sits down. “I think he means
opera virgin.”
“I
should hope so! I’m Barbie.”
“Barbie’s
with the opera.”
“Yes!”
she says. “And tonight will be a perfect beginner for you, like an appetizer
plate. Some mozzarella sticks, some oysters, a veggie platter. Ha!”
Barbie
talks with the energy of a New Yorker, her words gathering force and speed
until she has to release the pressure with a puppy-dog yelp of a laugh. She has
a round face, a broad nose, and dark eyes that squint when Ben makes her laugh,
which is often.
Ben
recommends the mango fish and pad Thai; being no fool, Jack goes with precisely
that. Ben’s also pushing the Thai iced coffee.
“This
being opera, I want your nerve endings wide open,” he says. “So Barbie, they’re
not going to miss you at the dinner?”
“Oh!
I just can’t do these things. Too much small talk, and Lord knows I don’t need
the calories.”
Ben
laughs. “Barbie and I are tennis partners. It’s my job to run her utterly
ragged, so she can maintain the integrity of her wardrobe.”
“He’s
a slavedriver! I can’t even remember the last time I won a game. Ha!”
Jack
takes a few sideways glances to figure Barbie’s figure. She’s large-breasted,
which sometimes creates the illusion of fat-ness, but her stomach and hips seem
to be what you would call “well-trained.” She is, indeed, a big-boned gal. When
she places a hand on his, he thinks he’s been caught.
“It’s
so nice to meet a fresh recruit, Jack. But I’ve really got to go. Post-opera,
Mister Ben?”
“The
Wailing Wall?”
“Ha!
I’ll be there. Bye, boys.”
She
walks away, looking a little rushed and nervous. Jack settles down to his pad
Thai. The peanut sauce connects with all the right taste buds.
“Barbie’s
on the production staff,” says Ben. “I knew she couldn’t stay – that’s why I
offered to buy her dinner. Ha! But she’s so busy I have to grab some face-time
whenever I’m able. Hope you don’t mind.”
“No,
no. God, I love this stuff.”
“Had
the feeling you would.”
They’re
far ahead of schedule, so they dawdle over dessert – sticky rice with yet more
mango – as Jack updates Ben on Thompson’s pending tragedies.
“Egad.
He has really dug himself a pit,
hasn’t he? Well, if it gets you a little more beach-time, what the hell.”
“I
must admit, that was my exact thought.”
By
the time they finish, the air outside has taken on both cold and moisture,
draping halos over the streetlights. They navigate the circle of palms outside
the art museum and pass the Fairmont to find a parade of elders heading down
Market in formal wear.
“Like
a geriatric senior prom,” Ben chuckles. “The gala dinner is at the Fairmont,
and then they hike to the California Theater for the performance. I call it the
March of the Penguins.”
“That’s
good!” says Jack. “You are a witty devil, young man.”
“Young
man!”
Jack
is thankful for the crowd. The tux is still a new idea for him, and he feels
like a wolf who has found his pack. They cross to First Street, round the
corner at Original Joe’s restaurant, and wind up outside the California, at the
northern tip of the nightclub district. Jack has seen the impressive vertical
sign dozens of times, the letters spelled out in white bulbs, but has never
given the interior much thought.
And
what an interior. The entrance hall
is high and mighty, bathed in golds and reds – a broad Persian rug underneath,
a high ceiling ribbed with beams of Oxford brown, long chandeliers emanating
Italian light. A crowd gathers around a man playing a large organ. It sounds
like a carousel. Someone in the crowd shouts “All skate!”
“The
California is an old film palace, built in 1927,” says Ben. “That’s why they have the Wurlitzer here.
This place sat fallow for decades, until the city and David Packard, the
computer heir, decided to return it to its original grandeur. And this,” he gestures toward the hall, “is
just the beginning.”
They
climb the broad staircase to find a mob of socialites in the upstairs reception
area, sipping champagne and chatting up what seems like an actual storm. Ben
stops to study the crowd, launching into lesson mode.
“In
understanding your cause, Jack, I realize that I have spent a lot of time on
the rastafarian/bohemian/beatnik side of the equation, and I didn’t want you to
think that there weren’t similar delights to be plucked from the land of the
hoity-toit. There are, of course, many people who are here mainly to be seen.”
“And
to have their cleavage seen,” says Jack.
“Yes! But I would bet that even the
sixty-year-olds with the teenage breasts have a sincere affection for this
artform, because there is passion in
opera, and violence, and good old-fashioned smut! Not to mention
heartbreakingly beautiful music. Be forewarned, however. Do not listen too
intently; don’t get intellectual about it. Just soak it in. I think you’ll like
it.”
They
head downstairs to a side entrance. The theater’s interior is so stunning that
Jack can’t quite maintain his balance. He decides to keep his eyes on his
shoetops until they are safely seated. Once there, he lifts his gaze to the
ceiling and finds one half of an African sun, rays of gold, orange and brown
slithering toward the stage like desert snakes. The proscenium arch is outlined
with Hellenic figures in gold plate. The ceiling over the balcony is covered
with rough geometrics, painted in Western shades of green, brown, rusty red.
“This
theater is…”
“Yes
it is,” says Ben. “Seventy million dollars’ worth. And wait till you hear the
acoustics.”
Jack
glances at his program, filled with foreign words. He expects to be entirely
lost.
“I
expect you might feel a little lost,” says Ben. “Now, just to be clear, if you
were at an actual opera, they have
translations above the stage – supertitles – so there’s no reason you can’t
follow the story. With a recital, however, you are sadly out of luck.
Fortunately, you are seated next to a genius.” He pulls a small notepad from
his breast pocket. “I brought this with me, and I will sketch a few notes as we
go along. You will find a handy floor light next to your seat.”
“Oh.
Okay.”
The
audience starts applauding, for no apparent reason, but then the conductor, a
white-haired man with finely rimmed glasses, pokes his head over the railing of
the orchestra pit. Two tall men walk to center stage, both wearing dark suits,
and the conductor starts the unseen orchestra into a slow, sweeping intro. To
Jack, it sounds like a sunrise. The black man, looking a bit like the pop star
Prince, sings in a high voice to the other man, who has an olive complexion and
curly hair, and responds in a lower voice. It seems as if they are telling
stories to each other. Ben hands him a note: They’re talking about a hot chick.
The
next performer is a slender Indian woman in a gown of burnt orange, singing
from an opera called La Traviata. She
begins with a stunning fusillade of notes that rankles Jack’s ears – he’s not
used to such high, piercing sounds. Then she stops suddenly, and goes into a
dreamy, waltz-like ballad. Ben’s note reads, She’s hot for a guy, but doesn’t want to give up her independence.
Jack thinks immediately of Audrey.
The
next piece is from Il Trovatore
(which sort of sounds like “troubador”) and features a chorus of two dozen
singers. The men are in tuxes, the women in various ensembles of black. Two of
the men push carts onstage holding anvils. This seems very odd, until the
refrain arrives and the men pound on the anvils with hammers. Jack recalls the
tune from a TV commercial; the familiarity gives him a small thrill, an island
upon which his hard-working senses can rest.
At
the end of the anvil song, a slender woman in a spangled white dress comes out
to sing to the chorus. What’s with all
the skinny women? he thinks. Aren’t
opera singers supposed to be fat? The woman has dark, angular features and
an Italian-looking nose with a slight hook, giving her the appearance of a sexy
witch. Next to the white chocolate of the Indian woman’s voice, hers is a dark
mocha, and she seems to be telling them a story filled with foreboding. Ben
finally scrawls a note and passes it Jack’s way: Downtrodden rebels led by a charismatic witch. And yes, you’ve heard
the Anvil Chorus before.
It
goes on this way for an hour and a half, different people singing, Ben
summarizing the action. The music grows on Jack, and he begins to understand
some of the things that the singers are after. Many of their notes have little
lives all their own, growing and lessening like restless creatures. The best
singers fashion their songs into conversations, as if they are simply talking
in music and this is a perfectly normal way to behave.
Soon
they are down to the final piece. A man and a woman enter the stage; the man
carries a chair, which he places at a spot that seems to be preordained. The
man has a medium-sized torso and legs, but his chest is quite broad; he has
thick, slightly wild brown hair, and the kind of neatly trimmed beard that
seems typical of opera singers. The woman is short and busty, dressed in a
blueblack sequined jacket and a long, dark skirt with a slit along one leg. She
has thick, dark hair arranged in a fanciful up-do, dark eyes, a broad nose.
When the man comes to take her hands she smiles, her eyes squinting
pleasurably. He gestures toward the chair; she sits to listen to him.
The
man’s voice – what they must call “tenor” – has a bright resonance that stands
out from the others. With a gun to his head, Jack would say that it has a
“ping,” an electric quality that slices through the air. He reaches the crest
of the song, a melody that rises and falls like an arch, holding his arms as if
he’s about to embrace someone. Ben passes Jack a note: Trying to impress hot neighbor-chick with life story.
He
ends with a grand flourish. After the applause, the woman rises to tell her own
life story. But of course, thinks
Jack. This is every first date I’ve ever
had. She is timid, unsure, but her emotions seem to take hold of her; as
her singing rises in force Jack notices something extraordinary about the
woman’s voice. It’s nearly radioactive. It doesn’t merely slice the air like
the man’s voice, it spins wildly, like those whirligig rockets that shoot away
from the center of pyrotechnic explosions. The woman shapes her phrases like
the other singers – lessening, growing, slipping away, returning from nowhere –
but she gives no indication of working
at this, and somewhere through the Italian words, Jack understands her
completely. She is smitten with this new man, but also afraid – that he will
discover some dark, secret thing about her, that she will scare him away. As a
poker player would put it, her “tell” is her tremendous passion – it’s not
entirely appropriate to the moment. She seems to realize this herself; at the
end of the aria, she rambles into a string of small, apologetic syllables.
The
audience responds with thunderous applause; several people down front stand
from their seats. The woman keeps her eyes on the tenor, staying in character. It must be very difficult, thinks Jack, to take all that love without exploding into
ecstasy. Finally, the orchestra starts back up, and the man sings a swaying
melody, the tone of which is something like, “What are you worried about?
Everything will be fine!” (Oh yeah, he’s in love.) The woman joins in, and then
they do an unusual thing: they link arms and walk offstage. Even after they’re
out of sight, they continue to sing, the woman rising to a high final note, the
man just beneath her. The notes go on and on, and when they finally cut off the
audience lets out a roar, punctuated by individual exclamations of “Ho!” and
“Woo!” A woman behind them yells “Brawvee!” which makes no sense at all. The
man and woman return onstage for their bows; after a moment, they’re joined by
the rest of the evening’s performers. The audience rises, section by section,
until they’re all on their feet.
The
applause goes on for a long time. Jack finds his arms tiring out, and as he
lets them dangle for a moment he realizes that he has not yet received his note
from Ben. When he looks to his left, however, he finds Ben transfixed by the
scene, clapping wildly, tears streaming down his cheeks. This opera is strong medicine, thinks Jack. He shakes his arms and
goes back to clapping.
They
follow the crowd as it oozes from the theater, and Ben cuts left to the
restrooms – a welcome vision for Jack, who has watched 90 minutes of opera
directly following an enormous Thai iced coffee. Back in the hallway, Ben leads
him outside to a patio area covered in squares of blue-gray granite. Ben stops
to study a wall fountain, rivulets of water murmuring a tall rectangle of black
stone.
“That
last piece,” says Ben. “Puccini. La Boheme. The Garret
Scene. Most astonishing stretch of melody in opera. Three ‘hit
songs,’ one after the other: ‘Che gelida manina,’ ‘What small, cold hands’; ‘Mi
chiamano Mimi,’ ‘I call myself Mimi’; ‘O soave fanciulla,’ ‘Sweet, beautiful
girl.’ The poor poet Rodolfo discovers a neighbor girl, Mimi, whose candle has
blown out. He tells her of his life. ‘I am a poet. How do I live? I live!’ She
tells him of her life as a seamstress, and all the sweet little things that
bring her joy: the rooftops of Paris, the first light of spring, rosebuds in a
vase. What she doesn’t mention is that she is dying of consumption, which is
why she pays such close attention to these small things. And then poof! Rodolfo
and Mimi are in love, and they run off to the Café Momus to join their friends.
Love happens very quickly in the opera. It’s partly a technical problem. It
takes much longer to sing words than to speak them, so everything must be
compressed. But still, it’s always a… surprise… when it comes.”
Ben
is lost in the fountain, an unfocused stare attached to a non-functioning face.
“Ben?
Is there… I mean, all evening, you’ve been… Ben, what the hell is wrong with
you?”
Ben
snaps out of it, and laughs at Jack’s outburst.
“I’m
not entirely certain, but I think I’m in love.”
Now
it’s Jack’s turn to lose focus. This is nowhere close to the answer he
expected.
“How?
I mean… Really?”
Ben
throws up his hands, helpless.
“Her
name is Gina Scarletti. She lived next door to me, when we both had families.
Now her kids are all moved out, and her husband passed away a few years ago.
She’s a gorgeous, gorgeous woman – classic Italian, Sophia Loren with a Bronx
accent. All those years ago – I mean, you can imagine how dreamlike that part
of my life seems to me – Gina and I indulged in a playful, over-the-hedge
flirtation. Nothing unseemly, just a little break from our all-encompassing
marriages. After the fire, I lost track of her. I guess I didn’t really want
any reminders.
“So
there I am at the jam party, partaking of my hookah next to the fireplace. You
and Audrey were off fucking in the secret garden – and don’t deny it, I saw you
take her there. So I’m just sitting there people-watching, and the crowd in
front of me seems to part, and who should appear but Cleopatra, dressed as Gina
Scarletti. Or perhaps vice-versa. I have never seen anyone so beautiful in all
my life. We talked for hours. And get this: she lives two houses down from
Terra! I must have driven past her front porch a hundred times. She runs a
training center for horses – show-jumpers. You’ve probably seen all the little
fences and hedges. A New York Sophia Loren Cleopatra who rides jumping horses.
I have got to be making this up.
“Hours,
hours later, we were out on the lawn and down to a single musician, a mandolin
player. Poor guy was half asleep, but somewhere in his dreams he was playing an
old country waltz. I took Gina’s hand, she curtsied, and we waltzed around the
lawn like we’d been doing it all our lives. She was so light in my hands, like
an armful of wind. The sky began to brighten, and our mandolin player leaned
against the porch and fell asleep, the instrument still in his hands. I looked
over Gina’s shoulder, saw a sliver of sun over the hilltop, and I kissed
Cleopatra. We walked to her house and fell asleep on the couch.”
Ben
is eyeing the fountain again, as if it contains a high-def replay of the scene
he’s just described.
“I’ve
seen her several times since and…” The tears creep in on Ben’s voice, forcing
him to push at his words. “I never expected
this, Jack!”
He
sits on the ledge before the fountain and wipes at his eyes.
“Big
goddamn baby,” he mutters.
Jack
doesn’t know the proper response to tears of joy, so he sits next to Ben and
stares at his hands. A door opens, followed by the tapping of high heels on
granite. Jack looks up to find Mimi. Mimi! The woman with the radioactive
voice.
“Yaknow,
I warn you and warn you about the garret scene, but you never listen. Ya big
softie!”
The
woman leans down to kiss Ben on both cheeks. Her hair is spangled with glitter.
She turns to reveal banners of blue eye-shadow. Stage makeup. A little bit
scary.
“He
could never handle Puccini. That Giacomo could take a Scandinavian fisherman
and make him weep like a menopausal mother-of-the-bride. Ha!”
Jack
freezes. What kind of funhouse has he been thrust into?
“That
was… you?”
“Barbie’s
the best,” says Ben. “Best goddamn singer I’ve ever heard. And you didn’t even know it was her, did
you?”
“I… No.”
“Ha!” says Barbie. “Our little
plan worked.”
Jack
scratches his head, feeling murky.
Ben
rises from the ledge and smacks Jack on the shoulder. “Never assume that
someone you meet under mundane circumstances might not be capable of
extraordinary things.”
“You
tricked me.”
“Yes.
But we did not lie. I simply asked
Barbie to be a little vague about her job description. All the assumptions were
yours.”
Jack
can’t help himself. He stands and gives Barbie a kiss on the cheek.
“You were glorious.”
Barbie
begins to blush. Given how many times she must have heard similar compliments,
this seems odd.
“Also,”
says Jack, “Uncle Ben is in love.”
“No!”
Barbie squeals. “You are? Really?”
“Stool
pigeon!” says Ben. “Rat fink!”
“Crybaby!”
says Jack.
The
three of them sit before the Wailing Wall as Ben tells the story once more.
N
The Size of a Pencil
He wakes up. Three devils watch him
from the opposite wall. He has grown accustomed to their morning sneers, their
wild hair and mascara’d eyes. Since Thompson’s return, Jack has been sleeping
in Nikola’s room, across from a poster of the punk group Green Day. How an
eight-year-old has developed this attachment is a mystery. But the bed is
incredibly comfortable (no doubt thoroughly researched by Esmerelda the
supermom), and Jack has never slept better.
He
is conscious, however, that he is sleeping among shadows. Nikola should be
here, hammering away on his Guitar Gods video game, ignoring his mother’s
commands to get ready for school. Whenever Jack considers these absences, he
develops a painless but bothersome pressure in his forehead that makes him
squint. He thinks of the pleasure-squint belonging to Barbie the opera singer,
and decides that this is something much different. He has become a human
barometer.
Jack
stands in the shower, looking out over the beach. Sometime this month the false
exhibitionism stopped bothering him. In its place he found the shower’s central
idea: a chance to embrace the outside world even as one prepares to enter it.
He lathers the soap between his hands, raising it to his nose to take in the
aroma. He has developed a fixation for handmade soaps, this one a lemon verbena
purchased at a farmer’s market in Soquel.
The
barometer begins to hone in on its target. An overheard answering-machine
message revealing that Esmerelda has hired a private tutor, determined to keep
the children in Madison through the holidays. And Thompson, despite his great
show of emotion at Sanderlings, has apparently done nothing about it. Jack
realizes that none of this should be his concern, but the forehead barometer
says otherwise. Arriving on the first floor, he is surprised to find Thompson
next to the whitewater, wrapping himself in a windbreaker, laptop case lolling
at his feet like an affectionate puppy.
“Wow,”
says Jack. “You’re still here.”
“Yeah.
Got a presentation at eleven, and it was easier to polish the spreadsheets at
home base. How you doin’? Is the bed and breakfast meeting your expectations?”
“Where
do I begin?” says Jack. He’s about to follow with laudatory details, but
Thompson will soon be out the door and the barometer needs feeding. “Hey, I
know work is pretty crazy, but have you had a chance to talk to Esmerelda?”
Thompson
gives him a cold stare. “What’re you, my mamasita?”
Jack
begins to melt into an apologetic stance, but then Thompson busts out laughing.
“Dude!
You are such an easy mark. Don’t ever lose that gullibility, man. It’s
beautiful! See ya.”
And
he’s out the door, getting into his Carrera, repeating the word “mamasita” and
chuckling. Having successfully dodged the question. Jack feels like a sitcom
wife, left at the door without a goodbye kiss.
Despite the
squinting, these are good days. Ben is largely absent, spending his every free
minute with Sophia Loren de las Salinas. This has left a large space in Jack’s
days, but he finds himself embracing it, his mind simmering with a slow warmth.
His thoughts feel simultaneously slower to arrive and sharper when they get there.
It could be that he has become a shaman. As Barbie would say, Ha!
After his
two standard two bagels and mango nectar, Jack fetches the pressure washer from
the garage and attends to his morning chore: turd removal. He wheels it onto
the deck, attaches the hose and cranks up the preposterously annoying engine.
He holds the wand until the hoses work out all their air bubbles and then takes
to the railings, where the seagulls love to congregate and shit. After that, he
runs the deck two planks at a time. He’s nearing a cutout in the house wall
when he realizes that he’s cornered a salamander, a yellow-gray critter, four
inches long, flicking his tail in great alarm. No wonder, thinks Jack. This
has got to be like a class-five hurricane. He sets down the spray wand and
picks him up. Being a salamander, he doesn’t put up much of a fight.
“Sorry, little dude. We gotta find you a new
place.” He carries him to the edge of the deck and drops him onto a spread of
ice plant.
“Come back
in half an hour.”
At noon, the
day turns fairly amazing. A bright late-fall sun breaks through the fog to pull
the temperature into the low seventies. Jack abandons shirt and shoes –
inordinately proud of the tan that he has developed – and walks toward the
cliffs of New Brighton. The waves have lain out an even spread of medium-sized
rocks, many of them in the shape of perfect skippable discs. What’s more, the
waters of Monterey Bay are remarkably quiet, smooth as a lake. After a couple
of warmup tosses, Jack winds up on a big yellow-brown stone, leans far over and
tosses a hard sidearm. The result is stunning, a dozen even skips that cover
the length of a football field. He’s pretty certain that he could not actually
throw a rock that far without the help of the water. He’s pondering the physics
of this thought when he spots a tiny square of paper flapping around on the
sand. It seems to be alive. He leans down to find a monarch butterfly,
struggling to work the wet sand from his wings. Jack imagines he’s been
ambushed by a breaker.
He recalls
an urban myth about touching a butterfly’s wings – that this somehow disables
them – so he digs in from either side and carries the butterfly aloft on a
mound of sand. He walks uphill past the break line and sets the pile down, then
blows on the butterfly until he comes to rest in a scoop of warm, dry sand.
“Dude! Be
patient. Let the sun do its work. You’ll be fine.”
His next
client lies a hundred feet away. A pack of pelicans are conducting bombing
raids on a spread of water; directly landward of this commotion, Jack finds a
strip of silver the size of a pencil, flopping on the sand. The anchovy looks
quite alarmed (although, of course, fish always
look alarmed), and Jack realizes he must act quickly. Out there, this one might
serve as an appetizer to a pelican, but out here
he dies for sure. Jack leans down to pick him up, then carries him toward the
water.
“Dude! Try
to stay away from the big birds.” And he tosses him in.
Toward the
cliff’s edge, Jack finds another perfect stone. It skips twice, then rockets
off of a wave like Evel Knievel. At the base of the cliff he finds White
Horse’s latest creation, a thin seven-foot
column of rocks, and as he’s meditating on this he thinks, Shaman? I’ve become St. Francis!
He finds a
rock and moves it around on the top of another rock, until he senses something,
like a bolt slipping into a latch. He lets go. The rock stays in place. The
barometer in Jack’s temple ticks forward. A bath of warm mango nectar floods
his frontal cortex.
Late that
night, Jack prepares for bed, the friendly devils of Green Day eyeing him
curiously. Jack hears the click of the
front door. He attempts a trick of telekinesis, drawing Thompson toward the
coffee table, where he has “accidentally” left out the case that holds a DVD of
Esmerelda’s performances. A minute later, he hears the familiar grind of guitar
strings, the stamping of feet.
Jack is so
thrilled at this new talent of his that he fears he won’t be able to sleep.
After twenty minutes, the music clicks off. He hears the beep-tones of a cell
phone, followed by Thompson’s voice, colored with anxiety.
“Hello…
Ezzie?”
Silence.
Too much silence.
“I miss you
too.”
The
barometer opens up. The squint retreats from Jack’s eyes. He bids the three
devils good night, and drifts away like a rescued anchovy.
O
Chinese Puzzle Box
“Look. I realize I have no right to ask this, but could you…?
Could…? Shit! Would you take me on a romantic date?”
“Hi
Audrey.” Jack is feeling grateful for caller ID. “Any specifics on that?”
“You don’t
know? I wanted you to just know.”
Jack takes
a second to analyze this request, but his brain is not getting far.
“Jack?”
“Look.
Audrey. I am always delighted to hear
from you, but you gotta admit, this is a little outside your usual behavior. So
rather than expecting me to read your mind, could you just… tell me what you
want?”
“Just tell you? Just like that? Just ask
for what I want? That’s insane! Dinner, in a real restaurant. I’d like you to
dress up nice – no tie, no suit, just nice. And then, most of all, I’d really
love it if you would dance with me.”
That last
one seems highly unlikely. But Jack knows that he is never, ever going to say
no to Audrey LaBrea.
“So when
would you like to…”
“Two
hours?”
“Really? I
mean… really?”
“Um… yes?”
Audrey’s voice sounds like the voice of someone who is chewing her fingernails.
“Will you
have any respect for me if I admit that I, in fact, am doing nothing on a
Saturday night?”
“Will it
get me a date?”
“Yes.”
“I will
respect your brains out, honey.”
“Well
then!”
“But until
I give the word, let’s pretend that I am a lady.”
“Of
course.”
Ill-informed
about Monterey restaurants, Jack negotiates a rendezvous at the Sanderlings.
The drive down is foggy and chill, so he rules out any ideas of patio seating.
He’s waiting next to a gas fireplace outside the entrance, enjoying a salted
hot chocolate, when Audrey makes her appearance, wearing a long purple coat
with a fake fur collar that frames her face in the manner of a czarina. Jack
greets her with a half-dozen white roses. Audrey responds with a smile she’s
been saving since high school.
“The lady
requested romance?”
“Yes. But I
didn’t expect the gentleman to go for extra credit.”
“Get used
to it, honey.”
He kisses
her and takes her inside, where they’re seated across from the fishtank. The
orange clownfish seem like old friends.
“Red or
white?” he asks.
Audrey
sniffs at her roses. “Unless I miss my guess, they’re white.”
“The wine.”
“Oh! How
about red? I want to feel toasty.”
Audrey
removes her coat to reveal a little black dress, with the emphasis on “little.”
Jack finds the oxygen getting a little thin. When the waiter arrives – a
Japanese man named Jun – Jack orders a Stag’s Leap cabernet.
“Very
good!” says Jun. “I’ll be right back.”
“You know
wine, too?”
“I am
entirely faking it, honey. But Thompson has a lot of Stag’s Leap around the
house, and it seems to be good stuff.”
“Okay,”
says Audrey, laughing. “I’ll stop peeking behind the curtain.”
“Thank you.
And speaking of peeking, that dress… Well, if I was gay, I’d say it was fabulous!”
“If you are gay, you’ve been doing a tremendous
job of faking it.”
“During
sex, I just imagine that you’re Ben Affleck.”
Audrey
laughs for a long, long time. It almost seems like she’s using it for therapy.
The barometer ticks on.
“So how did
you find this place? It’s lovely.”
“Had a
meeting here with a heartstricken friend.”
“My
compliments. I love the ultrasuede shirt, by the way. It goes so well with your
eyes! Oh Jack, I don’t know if I tell you enough, but… I know I’m undependable,
but I like you so much that I don’t want to see you too much, because I’ve seen
the terrible things that familiarity does to people. Isn’t that awful?”
More puzzle
pieces. But he has his instructions, and psychoanalysis is anything but
romantic. He sees the word swordfish
and decides that he would like to eat exactly that.
He hadn’t
really investigated the dancing part, but it turns up right on schedule,
nonetheless, adding to the growing veneer of his romantic competence. A
three-piece jazz combo kicks up in the lounge, not thirty feet from their
table, and Jack notices Audrey’s attentions drifting that way all during
dessert. After signing the credit slip (feeling grateful for the per-diems he’s
been getting from Thompson), he stands and says, “Would the lady care to dance?”
“The lady
would,” says Audrey, and they stroll to the lounge, a tasteful cubbyhole of
blonde woods and pastel paintings of tropical birds. Audrey deposits her purse
at a table and proceeds to a broad square of hardwood next to the piano.
Jack doesn’t
know much of dancing. He went to a few dances in high school, and did manage to
find the occasional female to join him in the sea of couples. But they never
did anything terribly creative. It was largely an excuse to wrap your arms
around a member of the opposite sex, to feel their breathing, smell their hair,
touch their limbs, and to sway in a nondescript clockwise drift, careful not to
bump into the other couples. A few of his schoolmates – largely the music geeks
and cheerleaders – were into the retro swing craze then sweeping the teen
population. Their kicks and whirls seemed to Jack like a foreign language, and
he envied their grace and rhythm.
With
Audrey, doing not much is really not a bad alternative. He’ll stand there and
stare at her if she wants him to. But he suspects she’ll want more. He does
know enough to at least strike the right posture: left hand holding hers, right
hand resting on her waist. He has never actually done this before, but he’s
pretty sure he saw it in a movie. It does make a certain sense – it gives him
the feeling of steering them forward, like a small ship. Predictably, things
with Audrey are never going to be that simple.
“Will you
spin me?”
“I’m not
sure I know how.”
“First,
lift my hand to about six inches higher than my head. Then, draw it forward,
away from us, and follow my spin. You might also give a little push on my waist
to give me a little momentum. One, two, now!”
Jack feels
more like follower than leader, but the trick seems to work. Audrey completes
the spin and returns, his right hand settles back on her waist. She smiles.
“Good boy!
I think you might be trainable.”
After a few
more spins, she introduces a second move. They separate, facing each other, and
join hands. Jack pulls her into a spin to his right, holding his left hand over
her head, and pulls it back down to wrap her in his arms. After a pause, she
spins back out to the starting position.
This is
when the barometer ticks forward and Jack begins to get ideas. Wrapping, then
unwrapping. Audrey is a Chinese puzzle box; it is Jack’s job to tie her into
knots, and then to undo those knots. On their next foray, they wind their
linked hands around each other’s necks, then release and run their hands along
each other’s arms, until their fingers catch together. The barometer recognizes
immediately that this has led them away from the starting position: he is
holding her right hand in his right hand. He solves this imbalance by pulling
her into a spin along his front, releasing his hand so he can receive her arrival
– left hand to right, right hand to left. Two times later, Audrey changes it
up. They repeat the neck-wrap, but they hold the position, walking a
half-circle, tango-like until he stops and she continues, walking around his
back, accepting his left hand with her right and returning again to the
starting position.
Each time
Jack accomplishes a move, he is greeted by a wider smile. The band keeps
playing, the blood moves quicker, and Jack begins to create. At the starting
position, he crosses hands with Audrey (enjoying her look of surprise) and
spins her around, creating a whirl of arms over her head like the spokes of an
umbrella. Then he steps to one side and walks her around, ending with an
accelerated spin that leaves Audrey breathless. Next, he places her right hand
behind her back, reaches around to take it with his right and unwinds her like
a top. Then he realizes that he can turn a spin into a double or a triple just
by speaking the number to his partner. Losing himself in the flurry, he begins to
do things that he can’t explain. In the midst of a spin, he passes her hand to
himself, behind his back. A little later, he decides that he should spin at the
same time that Audrey is spinning, and somehow the geometry works, contrasting
orbits that cancel each out.
After that,
he begins to discover the nuances. His leads become more forceful, assured. He
reels her further out and brings her in faster, catching her waist and letting
the gravity carry her around. He begins to understand the position of his feet,
squaring them to the task. He learns to savor the time between spins, holding
Audrey closer, pressing the back of her hand to his chest, changing up the
pattern of his steps and feeling Audrey match them, as if she, too, has a
barometer. To smile, to laugh, to steal a kiss. As the band plays the final,
tinkling stretches of “I Left My Heart in San Francisco,” he tells her that she
must have faith, then braces his knee and lowers her into a dip that touches
her hair to the floor. Her expression is half panic, half ecstasy as he holds
her there a full three seconds.
“Absolute
trust,” he says. She relaxes and smiles. He kisses her and pulls her back to
her feet, acknowledging the ache in his legs. They return to their neglected
table, where their Irish coffees have gone completely cold. Audrey refuses to
let go of his hand.
“How did
you do those things?”
“I had no
idea I could do any of that.”
“Give me a
tender, tender kiss.”
Which he
does, their lips barely touching, then pressing together for a lovely second.
When he pulls away, she opens her eyes.
“Now I want
you to come to Monterey with me.”
An hour
later, they are pushing into the familiar animal territories of intercourse
when she places a hand on his chest. “Slowly, gently. Not always, honey. Just
tonight.”
In the
morning, Jack comes downstairs to find a humble living room with cream-colored
carpets and walls of Tuscan orange. A pile of photography books, neatly fanned
out on a coffee table made from a slice of redwood burl. A wreath of seashells
over the fireplace. Pastel posters from art and wine festivals. And the best
thing of all, a fresh pot of coffee and a coal-black mug from the Monterey
Aquarium, holding down the corner of a neatly written letter.
Dearest handsomest Jack:
I want to thank you so much for last night. You are a
phenomenal man, and the way you learned to dance so quickly – unless you’re
taking secret lessons at Arthur Murray, I think it’s some kind of miracle.
I must now admit, I was using you for a bit of
therapy. My rather colorful last name comes from Tiger LaBrea, my third husband
– the last man to court me before I lost my belief in romance. He was a
newspaper reporter in Las Vegas. Last week, I learned that he had been shot and
killed, apparently for a story he wrote on gambling-industry corruption. I was
devastated, and I suppose I wanted to revisit some of that romance. Tiger loved
to dance.
I am amazed at your humanity, your warmth and
elegance, and I believe that once I come out from this cloud of grief, I will
have to acknowledge the idea that I am falling in love with you. Give me a call
in a few days, and this time the dinner’s on me.
Love—
Audrey
PS I’m
running late. Could you feed the pigeons? (Gray container next to coop.)
Jack reads the letter a
second time, then fills his coffee mug and carries it onto the small backyard
deck. Against the fence he finds what looks like a dresser with all the drawers
taken out, covered in chicken wire. A dozen stout-looking pigeons in various
combinations of blue stand stock-still in the foggy air. Jack finds a large
metal scoop in a covered wastebasket full of grain, fills it up and tips it
into a metal feeder hanging on the chicken wire. The grain spills into a
trough-like device inside the coop, and the pigeons scramble for position,
grunting and flapping. Ah, thinks
Jack. Now I am their god. Now they love
me as much as Audrey LaBrea.
The
word “love” strikes a membrane in his forehead and rings out like a drumhead,
sending a chill across his shoulders and down through his thumbs. He digs the
scoop back into the grain and presses the lid back into place.
P
A Cleansing Galumph of Bloodrush
His next meeting with Ben comes on
a Sunday afternoon. A thick fog hangs over town, turning everything mystical
and Londonesque. Jack walks the front of the Safeway, hands stuffed into his
jacket, enjoying the smell of the Christmas trees still rolled up and bundled
on the walk. Then he hears the sound of jazz, which seems like a pleasant
enough idea, until he realizes that it’s live
jazz, and this means that he will have to listen to that corny singer again. In
a time when he has learned a certain positivity toward so many things, why does
he hold on to a petty hatred of this man’s singing? Or is it right to dislike
bad things? He makes a note to bring this up with Ben.
Jack
steps inside just as Ray, the singer, starts in to butchering an old Cole
Porter song, “True to You in My Fashion.” The original is sharp, deft, witty.
Ray’s version is a piece of roadkill that has attached itself to the fender of
a Jeep and is now being dragged through the mud. And now (his thoughts growing
more bitter by the moment) Jack finds that Ben is nowhere to be found. He
orders an Indian Malabar from Cher, whose everbright smile makes valiant battle
against his oppression. The photos over the brew stations have been replaced by
children’s drawings. After he finds his cup under a turkey dressed as a
ballerina, Ray steps aside for a cornet solo by John, which immediately
improves the atmosphere. As Jack stirs the sugar into his brew, he spots an
older gentleman across the room, grinning at him broadly, wearing a blue plaid
shirt that seems familiar. When the man lifts a two-fingered salute, Jack
realizes that something may be up. He circumnavigates the bar to inspect.
“Is
that… Is that Ben?”
“It
is,” reports the familiar grumbling baritone. But the voice comes from a forest
that has been clear-cut.
“You
shaved!”
“I
did?”
“What
for?”
“Best
reason of all,” says Ben. “Mah woman requested a clearer landing approach.”
Jack
sits down and stares. “Wow. You look twenty years younger.”
“Well!
There’s another benefit.”
“I
don’t know if I like having a life coach with no facial hair.”
“Ha!
I may not be hirsute, but I remain astute.”
“You’ve
been sitting here rehearsing that.”
“Yes.
So. How is my fellow young man?”
“Doing
pretty well. But tell me, should I feel bad for loathing Ray’s singing?”
Ben
gives a glance to the far corner, where Ray has taken up a fresh assault,
rolling forth Cole’s notes with all the panache of a soiled gray carpet.
“You
mean Ray, the middle school principal, who devotes his free time to Habitat for
Humanity?”
“Oh,
you’ve gone and ruined it for me now.”
“Doesn’t
change the fact that he’s a lousy singer,” says Ben. “And believe me, no one
with ears would disagree with you. But it does make it easier to take. You see
how that works? No one’s all good, no one’s all bad. And you can loathe Ray’s
singing all you want, as long as you’re not cruel enough to tell him to his
face. I mean, look at him.”
Ray
ends the last phrase and the corners of his mouth lift into a beatific grin.
Jack takes a swallow from his Malabar, thinking about a plethora of things he
might discuss with Ben, but finds that his friend is lost in the guitar intro
to “Stardust,” stroking his chin as if he still had a beard.
“I
was thinking about proposing to Gina.” Ben smiles and turns to take in Jack’s
response. Jack is fairly certain that he looks stunned.
“Really?”
“Yes.
Really. So what do you think?”
“You
want… my opinion?”
“Yes.
Everyone gets a vote. Am I being a foolish old man?”
Even
minus the beard, Jack finds this position intimidating, so he decides that he
needs a time-out. “Excuse me,” he says, and goes near the band – where Ray is
preparing to do awful things to Hoagy Carmichael – to fetch a cup of water. But
it’s ice water, and he drinks it too fast, and it gives him a small case of
brain-freeze. When it clears, Jack realizes that this is precisely where he
will find his answer. The barometer. He lets his eyes fuzz out to an empty
focus, and allows his thoughts to swim around like clown fish in his frontal
lobe. Halfway back to the table, he feels the words approaching his mouth.
“I
don’t know much about how love… operates,” he says, sitting down. “All I really know is, I don’t think that there
are any iron-clad rules to the phenomenology. It is perfectly reasonable for
someone to go thirty years with no romantic connection whatsoever, and then to
reunite with someone and propose to her within a month. And I would never think of you as a foolish old
man.”
Ben
offers a look of admiration and surprise. “Perhaps today, I should be paying you.”
Jack
laughs. “So what’s the count on this little poll of yours?”
“One
for, none against,” says Ben. “You’re the only one I’ve asked.”
And
this, for Jack, is an astounding piece of information.
Jack
is about to enter Big Brown when he hears a voice from the heavens.
“Jack!
Dude!”
He
looks up to find Thompson’s head and shoulders edging over the railing. He is
shirtless, and a stream of smoke is trailing from the top of his head.
“Yeah!?”
“Come
on up! Oh, and bring a couple of beers!”
“Um…
okay!”
Jack
makes the convoluted trek to the rooftop (thinking elevator, elevator) and finds Thompson in the hot tub, smoking a
cigar the size of a small zeppelin. The tip has developed an ash two inches
long, but Thompson is too happy to notice.
“My
man!” He takes one of the beers and gives it a long pull.
“Ah!
Thanks, man. Hey, remember when you left that DVD of Esmerelda in the player
last week?”
“Oh.
Sorry. After all the stories, I got curious.”
“No!
No problem. In fact, the opposite: it inspired me to get off my ass and give
her a call. We’ve been talking every day since, and get this – I’m going to
Madison for Christmas! I’m gonna see my kids!”
“Thompson!
That’s fantastic!”
“It
certainly is.” Thompson settles back in the water and savors a drag from his
cigar. The ash is now three inches and teetering. He points it at Jack. “Hey!
You know what? Let’s go celebrate. Let me take you to Capitola for some
seafood.”
“Sure.”
“Ready
in an hour?”
“Yeah.”
“Fan-tastic,”
says Thompson. He turns to retrieve his beer, and the enormous ash falls into
the water. Jack thinks of mentioning it, but then, that’s what filtration
systems are for.
Jack
cannot help replaying the old thought: hanging out with the cool kid, rolling
into Capitola Village in Thompson’s Porsche. There were several years during
which Jack could have purchased a similar car, but he never believed he could
carry it off. A biker with an enormous Fu Manchu backs out of his space just in
time for Thompson to roll on in. There’s a full hour left on the meter, plenty
to get them to the 8 p.m. cutoff. And this, thinks Jack, is what it’s like to
be Thompson Flores. He leads them into a restaurant with moss-green walls and
Italian menus printed in cursive. Jack gets chicken breasts stuffed with chunks
of portobello mushroom. Thompson orders grappa for both of them, and Jack downs
three glasses with dinner. By the time they’re finished with the spumoni,
Jack’s feeling a little light-headed. Heading outside, he gives Thompson a
punch on the shoulder, very boy-like, and Thompson punches him back. Jack
notices all the good-looking women on the street, most of them checking out
Thompson, but two or three saving their looks for the clean-cut sidekick.
They
venture next door to the Fog Bank, a saloon covered floor-to-ceiling in
well-worn varnished wood. A band wanders over to their instruments, and soon
the air is filling with edgy blues, the kind associated with extremely hip
black people, the city of Chicago, summertime barbecues and trips across the
country on a Harley-Davidson. Thompson gets a pitcher of beer and tips his mug
in Jack’s direction.
“To
my sexy flamenco-goddess wife.”
“Hear
hear.”
Thompson
downs his beer in three swallows and fills it back up. “Goin’ to Madison! Goin’
to see my babies!”
“Awesome!”
says Jack. He realizes he’s getting drunk now, and losing vocabulary.
“Awesome!”
“Yes!”
Thompson takes another long drink, then folds his arms and studies the floor,
which has filled with dancers.
“Man!
Lots of talent in this bar.”
“Talent?”
“Har!
The Boy Scout, he does not know his urban lingo. That’s the word we dawgy dawgs
use to describe comely females: ‘talent.’”
Jack
scans the bar and catches several appealing fragments: halter-top cleavage,
curve of shaking ass, slice of breathless smile. Men feed on these portions all their lives and are never sated,
says his brain, sounding strangely like a Chinese philosopher. And this is what
comes from his mouth:
“Dude!”
“Allow
me to pour you another beer,” says Thompson.
“But
I haven’t finished this one.”
“So
finish that one. Keep up!”
Jack
– who will later realize he’s got to
kick this habit of following orders – downs the final half in a chug. The
carbonation rises into his nose, making him laugh. When he recovers, another
full mug has made its way into his hand.
“Hey
Jack. I feel like dancing.”
“Sorry.
I only know how to lead.”
Thompson
breaks up laughing, exactly like a drunk guy.
“You are a card. How about those two over
there? By the wait station. Curvy, curvy blonde – that one’s mine. And the
slender brunette in the cowgirl hat? That’s yours.”
“You mean you’re just going to go
up and talk to them?”
“That’s
usually the best approach.” He crosses the floor in three big strides, teeth to
the front. At his first word, both girls smile. The back of Thompson’s head
bobs slightly, in the manner of a car dealer giving a pitch, and then he’s off
with the blonde, bumping parts and laughing. She gives off a milk-fed radiance:
bright blue eyes, grippable seal-like geometrics. The brunette places her hat
on the bar and walks his way with a devilish smile. She’s got a light
complexion, dark eyes and long, straight hair – a taste of Shania Twain.
“Hi.
I’m Bobbie. You’re Jack. Your pal says you could use a dance.”
Jack
would disagree except that he doesn’t. He follows Bobbie into the crowd and
soon they’re twisting and shaking to a jump tune, lost between the guitarist’s
sharp edges and the singer’s hallelujah shouts. A couple of minutes later, the
drummer rallies them into a tornado of sound and brings it down with a
breakfast-cereal crunch. Bobbie gives Jack a well-exercised smile and brushes
her hair back. The drummer counts into a slow, crawly blues.
“Do
ya slow dance, Jackie?”
“Do
I!” He takes Bobbie’s right hand with his – like they’re shaking on a deal –
and pulls her into a spin. He realizes this is a move he’s never done before.
To Bobbie’s great credit, she follows easily, and comes back smiling.
“Wow!”
Great teeth, thinks Jack.
“I
hope you don’t mind being thrown around a little.”
Bobbie
lets out a happy growl.
“Oh,
you’re in for it now,” says Jack, and takes her into a double spin.
It
hardly seems possible, but an hour later they’re still at it. Jack’s limbs feel
so loose they’re about to fly off, and he and Bobbie are sweating up a mutual
storm. They’re dancing close as the band winds up a slow, slow ballad. Jack
holds Bobbie’s waist, reading the movements of toes, feet, legs, pelvis through
the fibers under his fingertips. The band cuts off, leaving the singer to a
single ghostly line, and then they announce a break.
“Shew!”
says Bobbie. “Let’s get some air.”
“Sounds
good,” says Jack. He fans himself with a hand to illustrate.
They
take a small back door onto a balcony overlooking the lagoon. A pack of ducks
and gulls float in their direction, hopeful for handouts.
“Oh!
The air feels so good. I haven’t danced like that in years. You’re an excellent lead, Jack. Do you take classes?”
“Um…
a couple.” He has a fleeting thought of his red-headed teacher – but his
thoughts are soon re-focused on the pair of lips pressing against his own,
which feels quite pleasant. Bobbie backs off suddenly and covers her mouth, as
if she’s concealing Exhibit A.
“Oh,
Jesus. I’m so sorry!” After she recovers her bearings, she sets her elbows on
the railing and fixes a sad gaze on the Venetian-style cottages across the
beach. “It’s so true – all the good ones are taken.”
Does she know about Audrey? “I’m…
sorry?”
“Oh,
no, it was all me.” says Bobbie. “No need to apologize.”
He’s
deciding whether to say that he wasn’t
apologizing when Bobbie places a hand on either of his pectorals.
“Your
fiancée is such a lucky girl.”
“I’m
sorry?”
“Now
come on, Jack. Don’t ruin my impression of you. You’ve really got to behave now
or…”
She
turns to re-establish some distance but catches her heel on a plank and
stumbles forward. Jack catches her and they’re kissing again, this time much
more operatically. Then Bobbie is off and talking again.
“I
am so sorry, oh shit I am drunk and
I’m being a bad, bad girl. Look, I better leave. Thanks, Jack. Thank you, thank you for the dancing, and you, um,
give me a call if you get divorced someday. Not that I want that! Bye, honey.”
She
gives him a kiss on the cheek, slips through the doorway and is quickly
swallowed by the crowd. Jack stands with his back to the railing, stupefied,
entranced by the full moon over the roof. Three minutes later, a whiff of cigarette
smoke drifts over from the next balcony and Jack finally gets the idea.
Thompson got Bobbie to dance with him by telling her that this was his last
night out before his wedding. He’d like to be pissed off, but the ruse is so
beautiful he starts laughing instead, like a crazy man, scaring away all the
ducks and gulls.
He’s
still chuckling when he re-enters the bar. He looks for Bobbie, and is not
entirely surprised to find no sign of
her. What is surprising is the
complete lack of Thompson, or the curvy blonde. The only thing left is the
cowgirl hat, a chocolate-brown number with a braided black band, sitting atop
the bar like an abandoned pet. Jack considers the ethics of the situation, then
takes the hat by its brim and heads outside. Ransom.
The
unkindest absence of all comes from the Porsche, which means that Jack is
walking home. He places the cowgirl hat atop his head. It’s a little small, but
he tries to balance it as he tracks the long uphill out of the village.
At
New Brighton Beach, he cuts across the railroad tracks to the parking lot, and
is about to descend the stairs when he’s greeted by an old malady: a form of
cardiac arrhythmia that locks his heart into an accelerated beat. The only
remedy is to take a seat and wait it out. Coated silver by the moon, he sniffs
the hat, which is too new to have much Bobbie
to it, and has the usual, terrible thought: what if his heart never slows down?
What if he dies right here? But the thought has lost its edge from overuse, and
it’s no surprise when his heart delivers a cleansing galumph of bloodrush and kicks back down to a normal rate. Soon
he’s off to the beach, slogging the wet sand as his Italian dinner sits on the
bottom of his stomach like a chunky piece of furniture. The sight of Big Brown
is quite a relief.
As
he boards the deck, Jack catches a faint light seeping from the living room.
The barometer clicks on with a whirr, hindered only slightly by grappa and
beer, and tells Jack to slow down. He creeps up to a tiny gap in the vertical
blinds and peers in to find Thompson sitting on the great white couch, his head
flung back in pain.
Or…
not. Just above the coffee table, Jack finds the broad white moon of a female
ass, and a satellite of tousled blonde hair bobbing over Thompson’s lap like a
piston.
Jack
finds the sight both titillating and amusing – his own private porno – but he
senses that he might feel differently in the morning. For the moment, he
decides that he should sneak through the side yard and take a nap in his car.
Q
Clenching of Innards
He wakes at the first hint of
light. Someone has placed a set of encyclopedias on his stomach. He could be
wrong about this. When he opens the door and struggles to his feet, he realizes
it may be an inside job. He feels like he’s about to give birth to two large
bricks, or a typewriter. He waddles to the door and up to Nikola’s room to
sleep.
Or
not to sleep. He lies on his side and shifts around until he’s comfortable, but
a few minutes later the bricks congregate against his ribs. So he turns to the
other side, shifts again – and again the bricks. He pops an Ibuprofen, to no
effect. His stomach begins to produce ungodly sounds, like a hot spring at
Yellowstone. He pops two Rolaids, to no effect.
A
couple of bleary, blurry hours later, the sun fires a dozen stripes through his
Venetian blinds, and he begins to shiver. Not the playful shivers that make
your mouth go huh-vuh-vuh. These are rabid creatures, coursing from toe to
shoulder in waves of ticcing fiber. He issues commands for this behavior to
stop, but the troops are in full rebellion, running back and forth like little
hyper insects.
A
half hour later, a brief respite allows him a trip to the restroom. The world
is terrible, out of focus. He can barely stay standing long enough to finish
peeing. Fluids, he thinks. Fluids. He stumbles downstairs to the
fridge and finds the last half-carton of orange juice, takes heaping swallows
whenever the dreaded shivers leave the field, whenever the bricks force him
awake.
Minutes
later – or an hour – he has to pee again. This time the standing is more
difficult, and he realizes that he may have to throw up. This is not an
unwelcome idea. He recalls a case of food poisoning that cleared up directly
following a vigorous puke. He assumes the position, embraces the porcelain god,
feels the upsurging magma, the ab muscles in rebellion, the throat turned
inside out and… nothing. So these are the
dry heaves, he thinks. Fucking
useless. All the horrible loss of control, all the awful clenching of
innards, none of the results.
After
a minute – or an hour – he levers himself to his feet, pees some more, and
staggers back to bed, where he is immediately beset by the biggest wave of
shivering yet. He fears it will never stop, and finds himself emitting
full-body groans, just like the ones you hear in movies from desperately ill
people. This is not just bad, he
thinks. This is bad acting. He knows
by now that this is a virus, stomach or intestinal. It is likely the sickest he
has ever been.
The
shivering stops. The sweating begins. It pours off of him in sheets.
Uncomfortable as hell. He grabs a towel from the dresser, strips off and wipes
himself down. Three minutes later, he is newly soaked. Fluids. Fluids. He drinks the orange juice dry. Opens the window,
lies naked on the bed. The breeze is cool, but has absolutely no effect. He
sweats. He makes calculations. He needs to be naked, but he also needs to leave
the door open. If he passes out, if this fever turns bad, if Thompson comes
home, he needs to be able to see his condition. Call the paramedics. He will not be one of those tenants discovered
behind a locked door only after his carcass starts to smell.
A
few minutes or hours later, he wakes to the sound of tearing plastic. A man
stands at his bedside, opening a small bottle, offering him a cup of liquid.
It’s strong, cherry with a touch of licorice. The man speaks the words
“saltines” and “orange juice.” Jack moans and shifts his bricks. The man
disappears.
When
he wakes, the window is dark. He finds saltine crackers on the nightstand and
chews three of them down. He opens a carton of orange juice and drinks half of
it. It feels like liquid gold. It occurs to him that the sweating has stopped;
this thought carries the force of a biblical miracle. He tries to stand. His
legs ache terribly, as if he has been running laps up and down the beach. The
shivering. He drags himself to the window and closes it, pops an Ibuprofen to
some effect, then returns to bed and manages an hour of sleep before baby brick
1 and baby brick 2 wake him up again.
Jack
spends the next day almost entirely in bed; he begins to sweat again, but
chases it off with the Nyquil. His muscles continue to ache from the previous
day’s shivering, so he pops an Ibuprofen. His stomach gurgles; he takes a
couple Rolaids. His nightstand is a pharmacy, a squad of medicinal soldiers
awaiting their assignments. At noon, he finally has a decent bowel movement,
and the bricks begin to fade.
The
next morning – is it Wednesday? – he gathers enough energy to shower, and to
shave his three-day beard, to dress and to look something like a human being.
He spots the cold sores at the corner of his lip – fucking inevitable – and drafts a tube of Blistex for his
nightstand. Then he heads downstairs and finds Thompson eating toast.
“Oh…
hi.”
“Dude!
Good to see you up. I was worried about you. Stomach flu?”
“Um…
I think. Thanks for the Nyquil and… stuff.”
“No
problem.”
“Oh,
and… was I…?”
“Butt
naked! Yes. Can’t blame you. You were burning up, bruddah. Nothing I haven’t
seen in a locker room.”
“I…
I…” He has talked too much now, and feels winded. “Better go… back to bed.”
“Hey
Jack. When you get back up, could you take a look at something?”
“Sure.”
“Cool.
I’ll leave it on the table. Now go to sleep, buddy.”
“Yeah.
Will.”
Jack
turns and begins the Everest-like trek back up the stairs.
When
he wakes back up, two hours later, he feels the energy again, and realizes that
he needs to get up and about. The bed is turning magnetic, and he needs to work
up some circulation. He takes another shower – feeling a little excessive about
it – and puts on some jeans and a sweatshirt. He’s about to leave the house
when he recalls Thompson’s request, fetches a manila envelope from the kitchen
table, then pitches it onto the passenger seat as he gets into his car.
At
the coffeehouse, he feels like a Cro-Magnon trying to navigate modern English.
But he does manage to obtain a magic Peruvian and a can of mango nectar. Fluids. He uses the nectar to down
another Ibuprofen, takes a sip of the Peruvian for a chaser and opens the clasp
on the manila envelope. He pulls out a sheaf of papers.
Numbers.
More than he’s seen in months. He takes another sip of coffee and smiles.
“It’s
a quarterly analysis. They’re way behind on everything. First they had to scour
all the books after that SEC fiasco, then they had to re-format the system to
fit the new procedures, and then they
had to accommodate Thompson’s so-called second honeymoon. Also – and this is my
favorite part – it turns out that yours truly was the lynchpin to the whole
department, and they just haven’t found a way to make up for my loss.”
Jack
punctuates this last point by firing a stone over the water. It spells a
perfect low arc, spinning like a flying saucer, touches lightly to the surface
and takes ten evenly portioned skips.
“Amazing!”
“Isn’t
it though? Numbers! I am digitally, narcotically high.”
“No!
I mean that throw.”
“Oh.
Thanks. Not exactly a talent that you can brag about. It gives away the fact
that I have way too much time on my
hands.”
“But
what if you had all that time and you really sucked at skipping stones?”
“Point
taken.”
“The
quarterly is so far behind that they gave Thompson absolute discretion to
contract out the work. He doesn’t even have to tell them who’s doing it, since
the department has to double-check the work anyway.”
“Why
does everyone trust that guy?”
“I
don’t know, but it’s nice for once to be the beneficiary.”
The
beach is veiled in low-lying clouds of gun-metal gray. Every few seconds a random
raindrop strikes his jacket. Jack spots another stone and picks it up, rubbing
the sand from its surface.
“Oh,
um,” says Ben. “Any idea what time it is?”
Jack
digs his phone out of his shirt pocket and flips it open.
“Well
for heaven’s sake.”
“What?”
“Apparently,
I left this thing off all week.”
He
turns it on. A swirl of red smoke gathers and dissipates, revealing the company
logo, and then it flashes to his main screen.
“One
thirty five.”
“Oh.
Thanks. I have an appointment at four. So let me ask this: Any sense that
Thompson is using this assignment to buy you off again?”
“I
don’t… think so. What with the beach vacation and me screwing his mistress, I
think we’re pretty even. And to come up with something this complicated for a
buyoff – that would be like one of those wacky JFK theories.”
“Maybe,”
says Ben. “But maybe it just inspired him to lean in your direction. And to
take a chance by using an illicit source like yourself. No offense.”
“None
taken.”
“As
opposed to a more standard contracting firm.”
“Hmm.”
Jack slips the edge of the stone against his index finger, is about to let it
fly when the flat space between the breakers closes up. “Well. I also offer a
certain insider’s knowledge of the company. And of course, all of these procedures
are the ones I was pushing for.”
He
stops to look at the rock. It’s a white quartz. A perfectly round, moon-shaped
white quartz.
“Holy
shit.”
“What?”
“The
night I got sick. Thompson’s wife agreed to let him visit for Christmas, and we
went to Capitola to celebrate. The last time I saw him, he was dancing with
this blonde, and then when I got home, the blonde was giving him a blow job.”
“Holy
shit,” says Ben. “Wow.”
They
return to their strolling. Ben seems very intent on analyzing this latest development.
Jack wonders if Ben has a barometer.
“This
housemate of yours is… complicated.”
“You’re
being very generous. But there is a juicy paradox here. For a low-down dawg who
cheats on his wife, he can be surprisingly thoughtful. At the awful awful hell-point
of my illness, he apparently went out to the store, bought me some orange
juice, saltines and Nyquil and delivered it to my bedside. This despite the
fact that I was contagious, sweating like a pig and buck naked.”
Ben
takes a few steps, shaking his head.
“Wow.
Wow.”
“So
I guess you’re right – at least part of this offer is driven by guilt.”
“Yes.”
Jack
sees a trough smoothing out between the breakers and fires the white quartz. It
flies low to the surface, takes a thirty-foot skip over a wave and settles to a
stop in a little trail of dimples. Then he has a heart attack.
He
freezes, suspecting arrhythmia, but then he remembers the phone tucked away in
his shirt pocket. It’s vibrating. He digs it out, flips it open, and realizes
they’ve just come astride a gap in the cliffs, which has opened up his
reception. The vibrations continue, and the screen totes up the messages: 8, 9,
10…
“Holy
shit.”
Ben
steps up to investigate. “Is it radioactive? Is it gonna blow?”
“No.
But it’s up to sixteen, seventeen… Oh, I guess that’s… Whoops! Eighteen,
nineteen…”
“Holy
shit. What is it all?”
“I
have my suspicions. Tell you what. Why don’t we find a good resting spot, and I
will give you a recitation.”
Ben
claps his hands together. “Splendid!”
A
few minutes later, they arrive at a set of wide steps next to the pier for the
Concrete Boat. Ben takes a seat halfway up.
“Oh,”
says Jack. “Is this it?”
“I
think it’s suitably theatrical.”
Jack
stands in the sand before the lowest step and flips open his phone.
“Thank
you, thank you.”
“I
wasn’t clapping.”
“That’s
all right. I’d like to start with a work I have titled ‘Shitload of Text
Messages.’ It’s sort of a found poem.”
Jack
punches the first message:
“Ah!
Audrey: Howz trix, shweet shtuff? Like to
take me up on that dinner?”
“Yes!
Woo-hoo!”
“Please!
Quiet in the hall. Audrey again: Yo,
Bubba. Free food & u might get lucky. OK, u WILL get lucky.”
“Yoo!”
“Silence!
Audrey: Tiny red dress, lots of leg, lots
of cleavage, no panties.”
“Ow!”
“Horny
old man. Whoa. Brigit: Hi. Long time no
c. Been busy. How u? Audrey: What up,
honey? UOK? Brigit: Testing? U there?
Audrey: Bebe! WTF! Pay attention to me.
Brigit: RU OK? Brigit: Too weird 4U? I guess I understand. Audrey:
Jesus Jack! Where the hell RU? Audrey:
Well fuck u then.”
“Ha!”
“Audrey:
I’m sorry. But I’m horny, dammit!
Brigit: I thought we could at least be
friends. Verizon Wireless: New Tigers
Woods Golf, now avail… Whoops. Audrey: Will
suck yr cock like sucking ice cream through a straw.”
“Yes!”
“Brigit:
Bloody hell. I give up. U CA boys are
fucked up. Audrey: OMG, RU sick? Now
I’m worried. Let me know if u need anything. XXBJ.”
Jack
snaps his phone shut, and Ben serves up a proper applause. “Author! Author!”
“Quite
the social experiment,” says Jack.
“Yes.
All the little self-propelled assumptions. Notice the endings, where Audrey
landed back on genuine concern and Brigit opted for dismissal.”
“You
really like the idea of me and
Audrey, don’t you?”
“I
just like the idea of Audrey. And my second piece of advice is: take the job.”
Jack
leans against the seawall, careful of creosote. “You think so?”
“You’ve
made some remarkable changes, my friend. Now that you’ve pushed yourself
against all these lifestyles, I think it would be good for you to have a taste
of your old life and see what you think.”
“And
what of the fornicating Latino?”
Ben
wags a fingers. “Be very careful
messing in other people’s marriages. You never know what’s really going on
there, and how they’re going to react to outside interference. Besides, you
never know. Maybe seeing those kids will set him straight.”
“I
wouldn’t bet the farm on it. I’m beginning to think that Thompson is just a
wild raging dick. I’m beginning to think that, given the chance, that boy would
screw Audrey, would screw Cher the barista, might even screw Gina Scarletti.”
“Anybody would screw Gina Scarletti.”
“Says
the horny old man.”
“I
am.”
R
Key Lime Tarts
Hi.
Sorry no response. Been sick all week.
Oh God! So sorry I went off like
that. Can u forgive me?
Absolutely.
Its just that guys disappear on me
sometimes.
Wouldnt have left phone off so long
but it was a bad bug.
Better now?
Much.
“Is this the home of Audrey LaBrea?”
“Ohmigod!
Are you okay?”
“Yeah.
All better now. Well – tired.”
“I’m
so sorry! I told you to fuck off, didn’t I?”
“You
did.”
“You
don’t know how many places a woman’s mind goes when she’s not getting a
response.”
“Ha!
I do now. But you figured it out by the end. You get bonus points for that.”
“Good!”
“You
still have to take me to dinner, though.”
“How
about tonight?”
“This
is so sudden!”
“Yeah-yeah.
Drama queen. It’s just that I’ve got something special in mind. And it’s right
in your ‘hood.”
“Coolness.
When do you want to roll by?”
“How
about six?”
“Pigeons?”
“Nope.
I keep them home in the winter.”
“Okay
then. You and me. No birds.”
“Seeya.
Um, housemate around?”
“Nope.
Gone for the holidays.”
“Good.
I want to scream.”
“Mother!”
“Drama
queen.”
Jack
has just begun to dig in to the blessed numerals of C-Valve when Ben calls to
request an emergency meeting. He zips up in his Miata, hardtop thankfully
attached. When Jack hops in, Ben hands him a cup of coffee that turns out to be
fresh-brewed Peruvian.
“Suh-weet!”
“Good
listening requires wakefulness.”
“Confucius?
Gibrahn?”
“Haas.
Benjamin.”
The
comment turns out to be irrelevant, considering the lack of anything coming
from Ben’s mouth that Jack might listen to. He drives them silently into Santa
Cruz, silently up Graham Hill Road, past Roaring Camp Railroad and into Henry
Cowell Redwoods State Park. Then he walks them silently past the ranger
station, silently past the picnic area and into a small amphitheater built
around a fire pit. The benches are constructed of logs, a quarter of them
chopped out to provide a seat and a back support.
Ben
gestures Jack to the front log. He settles in at a reclining angle, feeling
like he’s at the dentist. Ben perches on a tree stump which seems to have been
placed there precisely for people to perch upon. Behind him rises an enormous
redwood. The base is hollowed out, its cave-like inner walls charred black, an
example of the tree’s remarkable ability to survive fires. Trying to ignore the
dampness seeping into his Levi’s, Jack decides that the irony is too obvious to
point out.
“Yes,”
says Ben. “I noticed the fire tree. Didn’t plan it that way.”
Jack
sees no need to respond, since the man can obviously read his thoughts. Ben
launches into his story sans prologue.
“She
talked me into a ride. It was inevitable. She was nice enough to give me an
aging mare, Christeltine, wide-backed and comfy like an old couch. Next to
Gina’s mount, an auburn jumping filly with the grand appellation of Fajamur’s
Rose, Christeltine looked like a horse made of mud, but still she was more than
I deserved.
“We
rode across Old Stage Road into Foothill Estates, full of ranch houses
interbreeding with McMansions, which is not as bad as it sounds. At the top of
the uppermost court there’s a path that cuts between two properties and through
a gate into the foothills. Gina reassured me that the landowner was a client,
and had granted free passage to all equestrians in the area.
“By
this time, my buttocks were really barking, but I was determined to keep going
until we reached some paradisiacal spot. Fortunately, it didn’t take long in
arriving. We crossed the face of the hills, all the grass turning that lovely
pure green from the rains, the trail cutting through in a strip of sandstone
blond, and then we boarded a ridge that seemed to extend from the hills like an
index finger. At the tip of the finger stood an enormous live oak, witchy
branches elbowing their way to the sky in all directions. We stopped underneath
to look out over the Salinas Valley, the broad swale of forlorn, plowed-over
rectangles, the frame of green hills at either side, a tiny slip of blue at the
ocean tip, a sky fanned over with horsetail cirrus. It was like a paragraph
from a Steinbeck novel, and I could hear the old rascal saying Now!
“I
managed to sidle old Christeltine up to Rose’s vastly superior frame and wrap
an arm around Gina’s waist. She leaned over and gave my cheek a feathery kiss.
“Here
I wax poetic. Quoth I: ‘I would never, ever have dreamed this in a million
years, me and the impossibly beautiful Gina Scarletti on top of the world.’
“‘Especially
not on horseback,’ she said, and laughed that husky laugh that turns
sexagenarians into adolescent butter.
“And
quoth I: ‘Gina, I know I’m tempting fate by attempting to extend a miracle, but
do you suppose we could make this last a little longer? Perhaps until the ends
of our lives?’
“Having
no other safe way of doing it, I had placed the ring on my pinkie finger, and
then secured it in place with an utterly phony bandage. For the previous hour,
in fact, said ring had been digging into said pinkie with great enthusiasm,
helped in great part by my amateur death-grip on Christeltine’s reins.
“All
worth it, of course. As I unwound the bandage and revealed that rock, Gina fell
right to pieces. Her eyes angled up at the corners with great delight, but then
they filled with water, her face folded in on itself and she began to sob.
Naturally that set me off, old sap
that I am, and we just sat there for the next ten minutes, leaning our heads
together, crying our eyes out.
“Eventually
I managed to capture a breath and force out some words. ‘Do I take that as a
Yes?’ She gave me her answer with all the subtlety of an umpire calling strike
three: ‘Yes!’ Then quoth I, ‘We are so
pathetic!’ Which sent us into uncontrollable laughter. And if you’ve ever
sobbed and laughed at a run like that, you know how exhausting it is.
“I
wouldn’t have blamed the horses if they had bucked us off and run for their
freedom. But we had stopped over some lovely deep grasses, and they seemed
quite content to stand and nosh. We eventually recovered our senses, I managed
to get the ring onto Gina’s finger, and we straggled home. When we arrived, we
settled the horses into their stalls, collapsed on Gina’s couch and shared a
brief smile before falling asleep. When I awoke – full darkness blanketing the
windows – it occurred to me that I might have dreamt the whole unlikely
episode. But then Gina came to, and gave me a big fat kiss.”
Ben
is a gifted storyteller, and by the end Jack is feeling a little teary-eyed
himself. The only thing he can think to do is to hop over and give Ben a
high-five (something he was never very good at) and then to give him a manly
bear hug. He manages to say, in a Jewish mother’s voice, “My little boy,
getting married!” which cracks them up good, and then they drive into Felton
for a pizza.
So what r u up to? Seeing anyone?
Yeh. Shes erratic, but never boring.
What about u?
Me 2! Sort of an old flame. Hes very
kind.
Im so glad we both have someone. I
hate it when these things get unbalanced.
Not that these things happen much!
I hope not! Would give me a heart
attack. But it sure was fun.
It was smashing, honey.
I love when u text in Brit.
Its me first language. Yank.
Jack guides Thompson’s
Porsche into a parking garage, and he and Audrey descend to Cedar Street. A
block east, the shops along Pacific Avenue are fairly booming with commerce,
the Christmas rush fully underway. Audrey wears a long scarlet coat to go with
the tiny scarlet dress, to go with the hair, the candy-colored lipstick, the
high FM pumps. She is RED, and Jack, in a black suit and red tie, takes her
hand, hardly believing that this package of lusciousness is allowing herself to
be seen in his possession. When they stop at the intersection, she spins to
plant a kiss firmly on his lips. He is a figure in a fashion commercial, the
lights of traffic teasing the periphery of his vision. A man in a pickup lets
out an old-fashioned hoot and Audrey breaks off, laughing.
“I’m
sorry. I’m just… All that radio silence last week. You scared me, honey, and
now I’m afraid I can’t control myself.”
“That’s
very unfortunate,” says Jack, not meaning a word. He takes her elbow and guides
her across the street.
“You
didn’t help matters any, driving me here in a Porsche. Are you trying to make
me uncontrollably hot?”
“You
are already uncontrollably hot, honey.”
“Why
thank you. You got some kinda blackmail on this dude?”
Jack’s
feeling brazen. “I witnessed Mr. Flores receiving a blow job last week from
some blonde coed. He…”
She
puts a finger to his lips. “Not right now, honey. Save the nasty for later.”
Says the Queen of Nasty. He’s feeling
oddly impatient. Perhaps it’s the constant stage-direction, the constant
randomness. Wasn’t he ecstatic just three minutes ago?
They
arrive at Audrey’s choice, a cozy little bistro called Café Limelight. The
walls are high and burgundy. A kitchen counter runs the length of the room. A
blonde in a yellow dress is setting up her keyboard.
“Suzanne?”
“I
looked up her schedule on the Web,” says Audrey.
They
rush over and clog up the kitchen traffic by giving Suzanne boisterous
Monkey-style hugs.
“What
a treat!” says Jack. “You sing, we eat.”
“You’re
rhyming!” says Suzanne. “I hope I last through dinner. I just drove up Highway
One and boy are my arms tired.” The lack of laughter sends her down that
dreaded path of joke-explanation. “You know, because of the windy… roads.”
“Oh
yeah,” says Jack. “Yeah, that’s a workout. We’d better find a table and leave
you to your work.”
“Thanks.
And thanks for coming.”
The
café is run by a married couple, genuine foodies who invest their dishes with
small, thoughtful touches. Jack gets a focaccia sandwich with salmon and red
peppers, with a side of pickled mushrooms. Audrey gets a Caesar salad with
locally caught anchovies and parmesan cheese grated right at the table. They
follow with key lime tarts topped with custard, and meanwhile find their
occupation in starting the applause at the end of Suzanne’s songs (dinner
crowds being not always attentive to their musicians).
In
her charming, off-beat manner, Suzanne introduces the next song. “I think it’s
time for me to play you a Christmas song, but I really only know one. So if you
don’t like this one, you’re out of luck.”
It’s
something called the Christmas Waltz. Jack’s never heard it, but it seems to
register with Audrey, whose emerald eyes get big with recognition. She turns to
Jack and says, “Dance with me.”
Jack
wonders how they’re supposed to waltz in such a small space (and how he’s supposed
to waltz at all), but Audrey seems
content to sway on the one and the three, in a few square feet next to
Suzanne’s amplifier. Jack moves his hands to lead Audrey into a spin, but she
stops him, resting her head on his chest and holding him tighter. He brushes
his face against her hair, which smells like vanilla and cinnamon, and kisses
her at the end of the song.
After
that, Audrey is strangely silent, holding Jack’s hand under the table, kissing
him on the cheek, sipping from a glass of dessert wine. Suzanne finishes her
set with the anti-romantic “Hallelujah,” takes Jack’s check for another CD
(this one headed, almost treasonously, for Portland) and hugs them both
farewell. She is driving the next morning for Eureka, working up the coast to
spend Christmas with her family in Seattle.
As
they exit onto the sidewalk, Audrey stops, pregnant with words she cannot
speak, her eyes flashing with mad thought.
“Where?
Where? Have to find… Oh! I know. Come.”
It’s
yet another ride on the Audrey Express. She pulls Jack south across Mission,
then a block east to the town clock, which looks so traditional it ought to be
on Disneyland’s Main Street. She leads him onto the ledge around its perimeter
and gives him another of her devastating kisses.
Audrey
pulls back and smiles, looking at him so intently that he feels a little
hypnotized.
“This
is shocking news, Jack. Jack. I love you, Jack. I’m in love with you.”
He
marvels at the ease of his response.
“And
I’m in love with you.”
“Are
you? Are you really?”
Jack
smiles, and kisses her on the tip of her nose.
“Of
course.”
“Thank
God!” says Audrey, and slings her arms around him.
Jack
peers over Audrey’s shoulder. It’s nine-fifty-two, December 16.
S
The Cowgirl Hat Conspiracy
It’s
Christmas morning, and Jack is bathing himself in numbers. He realizes that
some people would look askance at this, would whisper the word “workaholic,”
but let them celebrate their way – all he wants for Christmas are long columns
of integers. Until his cell phone rings.
“Thompson!
How’s the great white north?”
“Unbelievably
freakin’ cold, my friend. I had completely forgotten.”
“You’ve
been Californianized.”
“And I’m a
Texan. And a full-blooded beaner.”
“Well I
wouldn’t say that.”
“But it’s
true!”
“Yes, but I wouldn’t say it.”
“Smart man,
gringo.”
“So how are
things going? How’s the wife and kids?”
“Ah, Jack.
I can’t tell you how good it is, watching those little velociraptors tear into
their presents. They’re so damn cute, I can barely believe I made ‘em.”
“And the
wife?”
“I have won
her over. So much so that they are all moving back, as of January tenth.”
“Fantastic!”
“And you
have to move out.”
“You
bastard! Kidding, kidding. I couldn’t think of a better eviction.”
“Thanks,
man. You having a good Christmas?”
“Yes. I’m
working.”
“I knew
it!”
“And, I’m
almost done.”
“Wow. That is phenomenal. I knew you were the one to get us out of
this shithole. I have got to figure
out how to get you back full-time.”
“Maybe an
alias and plastic surgery?”
“On the
other hand, it’s Christmas! Have some fun, wouldja?”
“Audrey’s
coming over this afternoon.”
“Ah, the
Oompah-Loompah with the fine ass. I want you to screw her in every room of the
house. I want those pheromones floating around when my wife gets home.”
“Yes, sir!
Hey, and congrats again. Glad to hear things are working out.”
“Thanks,
dude. See ya!”
“Ciao!”
Jack folds
his phone and immediately wonders where he picked up a word like “Ciao.” A
half-hour later, his right hand is dancing over the number-pad on his laptop,
just like old times. He flips a page on the spreadsheet and realizes that it’s
the last – and that it only contains one entry. Several finger-twitches later,
he is entirely done with the project. He misses it already.
He looks up
for the first time in quite a while and discovers an astounding amount of
sunlight flooding the windows. He checks the clock, finds that he’s got two
hours before Audrey, and gets up to pull on his sweatshirt.
After a
week-long storm that pounded the coast with rain and left dustings of snow on
the coastal mountains, the beach looks like it’s been scrubbed clean by a
hundred thousand housemaids. The sunshine is brilliant, the water as flat and
calm as a koi pond. The storm has left little mounds of rocks every hundred
feet, and Jack finds bits of sea glass, tucked among the pebbles like hard
candy. He was only planning a brief hike, but the introduction of treasure
keeps him going, all the way to the cliffs of New Brighton. There he finds
enough rock-stacks to populate the state legislature, and wonders if White
Horse was out here during the rainstorm. He crouches beneath the tallest and
tries to fit it into the screen of his camera phone. When he sees the results,
he indulges in a hearty curse.
“Damn!”
“Not
workin’ out for ya?”
His eyes
are fixed on the nothing-looking blobs on his phone screen. “I swear these
things are protected by a curse. They refuse to show up on photos.” He punches
the erase button and looks up to address his interloper, a thin woman with
milk-white skin, oval-shaped eyes and long, straight hair. Failing to come up
with a name, he announces their place of meeting.
“The Fog
Bank!”
“Bobbie,”
she says. “And you’re Jack.”
“Um, yeah.
So what brings you to the White Horse Jenga pile?”
“You know
White Horse?”
“Sure. He’s
a legend.”
Bobbie smiles.
“And yet, you didn’t notice that he was in that band we were dancing to?”
“No shit!”
“Rhythm
guitar.”
“I guess I
had more important things to look at.”
“Uh-oh.
Smooth talker.” She smiles broadly, re-introducing him to those dimples. As if
to catch him in the act, she says, “So how was the wedding?”
“Hmm. Which
direction you headed?”
“All the
way back to Rio del Mar. This walk is my Christmas tradition, before my family
stuffs me like a piñata. We call it the Cliffenbock.”
“Ha! A
noble brew – and a long hike! But I’ll need most of it to explain that night.
Shall we?”
It takes a
half mile and a thorough cross-examination before Bobbie accepts Jack’s story.
In a sense, he respects that. He’s already seen too many idiot girls buying
everything that Thompson has to sell.
“So back
then, you and Audrey were just dating. And now you’re more serious.”
“She’s
coming over for Christmas supper.”
“My timing
sucks.”
“Your
disappointment flatters me.”
“Finding a
non-gay man who can dance is not that easy.”
Jack laughs
and pauses to pick up an aqua-colored chip ribbed with bottlecap threads. He
hands it to Bobbie.
“Thanks!”
“For your
troubles. For your friendship.”
“Stop being
so nice, Jack. You’re breaking my heart.”
Thankfully,
she appears to be kidding. He finds a perfect disc of black stone and scores a
seven-hopper on the smooth water.
“Oh, sure,”
says Bobbie. “You can skip stones, too. Is there anything you’re not good at?”
“Well right
now I’m not very good at being employed. Hey, how’s your curvy blonde friend?”
“Oh,
Kirsten? I’ve only seen her once since then. She is wildly in love. I’m
surprised you didn’t know.”
“Why?”
“‘Cause
she’s hung up on your friend. Tony Banderas.”
“Um.
Pardon?”
“Sounds
like a pain in the ass to me. He always has to come over to her place. At least
until the divorce comes through. I know he’s your friend, but I don’t trust
that guy.”
Jack laughs
much too loudly, trying to hide his great surprise. He suddenly feels like he’s
treading in dangerous waters, and had best keep his mouth shut.
“Yeah,” he
says. “There’s a reason he’s getting divorced. Or two. Or three.”
“That’s
what I told Kirsten. Sexy man, but much
too smooth. Watch out, sistah! Hey, this is totally off the subject, but have
you seen my hat? I thought I left it at the Fog Bank, but…”
“I’ve got
it.”
“You do!
Well that was kinda silly.”
“I was
kinda drunk.” Jack bends down to fetch a postage-stamp square of green glass.
“And it just looked so… lonely. Plus, I had this vision of roaming the
countryside, trying it on the heads of different women until I found my
Cinderella.”
Bobbie
slaps him on the shoulder. “Watch it,
prince. You’re getting a little too charming. Any chance I can get it back?”
“Excellent
chance. Follow me.” He takes a sharp left, and soon they’re climbing the back
deck of Big Brown.
“Holy crap.
So the story is true. I told Kirsten she must have been hallucinating.”
“Yup. It’s
Big, and it’s Brown.”
“And
frankly,” says Bobbie, “kinda ugly.”
“I have
mixed feelings about it myself.”
“So why do
you stay here?”
“It comes
with a beach.” They round the corner, and Jack looks up at the enormous
chocolate walls. “Plus a boatload of intangibles that I really can’t explain.”
He asks her
to stay on the porch while he fetches the cowgirl hat from his front closet.
When he returns, she’s writing something on a small slip of paper. She hands it
to him, then takes the hat and places it on her head.
“Ah! Now I
feel complete. That’s my phone number. If things don’t work out with Audrey. Or
even if they do; you can never have too many friends.”
“Sure.”
Jack tucks it into his pants pocket. “It was great running into you, Bobbie.
Have a great Christmas.”
“You too,
Jack.” She looks off into a middle distance, as if she’s processing something,
then returns to Jack. “Could you… give me a few spins for the road?”
“Spins?”
“It’s a big
porch. We could probably manage it.”
“Oh. Okay.”
Jack takes
Bobbie’s hands, finds an old Bonnie Raitt tune running through his head and
leads her into a series of the moves he learned with Audrey. He feels the same
remarkable sense of balance and gravity from their meeting at the Fog Bank, and
is soon tossing Bobbie around the tiles with abandon. They begin to laugh at
their own synchronicity, and they keep going until Jack runs out of ideas. He
warns her ahead of time, imagines the song coming to an end and drops Bobbie
into a dip. Balanced across Jack’s arm, the world an upside-down kaleidoscope,
Bobbie sees a beautiful redhead, perched on the second step with a pet carrier,
wearing a look of extremely pressurized calm.
“Hi,” says
Bobbie. “You must be Audrey.”
“I ordered
these little message carriers online.” Audrey holds a small aluminum tube with
a clip to one side. She hands Jack a pen and a tiny slip of paper. “So the idea
is, we write down our Christmas wishes, and Mamet and Cigarette will fly them
to the heavens.”
She leans
down to write something. Jack writes, I
want Audrey to forgive me for dancing with strange women on my porch.
Audrey takes the slips, folds them up and tucks them into the tubes, then clips
the tubes onto the right leg of each pigeon. Then they stand and, on the
customary count of three, loft their charges skyward. The birds circle twice
and head southeast along the shore.
“I never
get tired of that,” she says. Then she swats Jack on the arm with surprising
force.
“What the fuck were you doing? Don’t make me get jealous. I fucking hate that, so don’t even get me
started.”
Jack keeps
his arms at the ready, in case she goes for another strike.
“Do you
want an explanation? Or is that just going to piss you off even more?”
Audrey sits
in a patio chair and folds her arms very tightly. “Is it a good story?”
“Yes.”
“It better be.”
“After
Thompson found out he was going to see his kids at Christmas, he took me out to
celebrate. We ended up at the Fog Bank, where Bobbie and I did some dancing.
And I ran into her just now on the beach.”
“And just had to take her to the house?”
“Yes. I had
her hat.”
“Why?”
“She left
it at the bar.”
“And you should have left it there, because
that’s the first place she would have looked for it. But, you took it home, because really you wanted to see Bobbie
again. Am I right?”
Perhaps
it’s because he’s tired of having no good answer to the Cowgirl Hat Conspiracy,
but Jack feels his blood rising. “So let me get this straight. At a time when
you made your appearances in my life whenever the fuck you felt like it, I was
supposed to sit next to the phone and await your summons? You’re awfully fond
of your independence, sweetcakes, and that’s just dandy, but you have to let
other people have theirs, too, or it really doesn’t count.”
Audrey stomps off to the
railing and releases a filthy, muttered stream punctuated by the letters F and
K. And K. Jack thinks it best to leave her alone for a while. After a minute,
she turns and yells.
“This is
what I fucking hate! This is how it starts. One person says I love you, the
other agrees, and then everybody proceed directly to the bickering and mutual
disrespect. I have had way too much
of this shit!”
Jack
advances to a safe middle distance, which places him next to the tiki god.
“This shit
is exactly what it’s about, Audrey. We have to learn how to fight.”
“How about discussing?”
“No.
Fighting. I love you because you’re passionate, and I want to fight with you. Be real with me. And tell me this: Am I
going to see more of you now? Are you going to stay connected? Because when a
woman tells me she loves me, that’s what I expect.”
Audrey
takes a long breath, and seems to calm down. “Are we going to be exclusive?”
“Yes.”
“Well, then
– yes.”
“Good! Now,
are you going to kiss me?”
Audrey
shoots him a simmering look. “Oh, I’m going to do a lot more than that.” She
begins to remove articles of clothing as she charges in Jack’s direction.
“Jesus
Christ!”
“Exactly,”
says Audrey. “’Tis the day of our Savior’s birth.”
“Well thank
the Lord. How did we end up in the hot tub?”
“Hell if I
know. But what I do know is, if you ever have the opportunity to go straight
from fighting to fucking, you should always
take it.”
“Jesus. I
think I hurt my ankle.”
“Wouldn’t
be surprised.”
“I love
you, Audrey. And I’m sorry about the… incident.”
“Next time
you dance with another woman – preferably at some public event where I, too, am
in attendance – try not to look so damn good while you’re doing it.”
“Can’t help
it. I had an excellent teacher.”
Audrey
gives him a wary look. “You’ve been hanging out with Thompson too much. You’re
starting to talk like a dawg.”
“Yikes!”
Jack fishes his sweatshirt out of the water and tosses it onto the rooftop with
a splop. “Speaking of, the wife and kids are moving back home in a couple of
weeks. Which means I’m out.”
“Aah! I’m
gonna miss this place.”
“I get the
feeling I might be back. I have discovered some things about Thompson that do
not bode well.”
“A dawg’s a
dawg, honey. Never changes. That’s why I stick with monkeys. And in case I
forgot to mention it, I love you, too."
Jack kisses
her. “Thank you.”
“Because
you’re a monkey’s monkey.”
“I’m
honored.”
Audrey
wraps Jack up in her arms and stretches her legs into a ballet pointe just above the water. “But since
your time is running out – and since I have a few days off work – you mind if I
spend a few days here at the mansion?”
“Did you
bring any clothes?”
Audrey lets
fly with a witchy cackle. “Who the hell needs clothes?”
T
Munchies, Smokes, Drums
Considering the subterfuge he is
being forced to undertake on behalf of his philandering host, Jack is feeling
much more at ease driving the Porsche. It’s a gorgeously sunny afternoon, and
he’s downshifting the upgrade at the south end of the Pajaro Valley, the somber
green hills spotted with broccoli crowns of live oak. He’s on his way to the
great New Year’s Spectacular at Terra and Ivan’s, and the owner of the Porsche
isn’t due home till the second.
He
tops out onto a long straightaway bracketed by strawberry fields, the
gray-green stacks of the Moss Landing power plant looming on the horizon. This
particular piece of road comes with a musical trigger: “Me and Bobby McGee,”
some line about losing a girlfriend in Salinas. He pictures a baby-faced Kris
Kristofferson, driving this same stretch, sometime in the early sixties, never
dreaming that the lines he was putting together could someday touch the lips of
a million singers, notably one named Janis.
This
thought, like so many others, veers onto Audrey – the days spent in slow motion
at Big Brown, like a couple of rich newlyweds. He had always wondered if their
chemistry would fade without the elements of surprise and gymnastic sex, and
now he has his answer. They spent languid hours together, making unhurried
love, drifting into easy pursuits: a full ten frames of bowling, a DVD and
popcorn on the great white couch, a rainy-day soak in the hot tub, the long
beach-walks that you read about in personal ads. Not that the surprises were
completely gone; at the end of one beach-walk, she pulled him behind one of
White Horse’s larger constructions for a virtuosic blow job.
He
figures that this last thought is what has led him onto the shoulder, until he
realizes that he’s not on the
shoulder. The sudden thumping is coming from a flat tire on the Carrera’s right
side. He pulls to the shoulder, exclaiming, with an operatic intensity of
feeling, “Oh fucking great!”
He
rolls to the flattest spot on the turnout and sits at the wheel, rearranging
his priorities. Arriving at party on time – gone. All bets off. Take care of
the car, Jack. Jack. Right – jack.
He
flips the trunk release and steps out, the breeze of a passing truck whipping
his hair. Surveying the trunk, he spots a handle near the frame and yanks it,
relieved to find that the tire-shaped hump in the floor actually does contain a
tire – one of those junior-NASCAR temporaries that hardly befits a Porsche. He
undoes the brace, lifts out the spare and deposits it next to his right front
tire, which is now as flat as the bottom of a tennis shoe.
Jack.
Lug wrench. Both sides of the trunk contain built-in compartments. He flips the
left-hand latch, opens the panel like a door on a hinge and finds a burgundy
leather pouch. A pouch that might contain tools. He pulls a zipper along the
top to reveal a messy array of DVDs in jewel cases. The cases bear white
file-folder labels, each of them marked with the name of a woman: Shari,
Therese, Juliana, Meghan, Johanna, Brigit (Brigit?) and, at the far left,
Kirsten. The bag contains one other item: a bottle of Viagra.
“Holy
shit,” says Jack. He re-zips the pouch, returns it to the compartment and
closes the panel. Then he opens the right-hand compartment, finds the jack and
lug wrench, and sets to his work. Priorities. All bets off.
The
temporary spare and its red-letter warnings confine him to the driving style of
a 65-year-old school principal, so the early evening is nowhere near as fun as
the late afternoon. This is especially true of the farm road, with its rain-puddle
gouges and metal ridges parading as speed bumps. Terra and Ivan’s driveway is
stacked up with cars, so he parks near the entrance, in a patch of tall weeds
behind a long-drydocked motorboat. He inches around to the passenger door and
is pulling out a sushi platter and a bottle of Gewürztraminer when a new-model
white VW Beetle pulls in and parks at the other side of the entrance. The
driver looks like Audrey, but the car doesn’t match.
“Hi
Jack.”
It’s
Brigit. (Brigit?) She stands in the center of the driveway wearing a red
Santa-hat and a pink ski jacket, holding a bottle of peppermint schnapps. It’s Brigit.
“Going
to give us a kiss then?”
He
sets the sushi and wine on the ground and walks slowly toward the mirage.
Brigit sets down her bottle and spreads her arms. Jack hugs her and kisses her
on the cheek. She kisses him on the lips and smiles.
“If
you could see the look on your face.”
He manages
to separate himself, as if he fears falling under some voodoo spell.
“I don’t…
understand. You’re… What are you doing here?”
“I’m here
for the party, you goof.”
“Okay. Um…
Why?”
She wraps
her arms around herself and laughs, then takes off the Santa hat and gazes
skyward.
“What an
awful lot of stars you have in Salinas! Gorgeous. Oh, um… well. I’m here to see
Thompson.”
“Okay.
Why?”
She slaps
him on the chest and laughs. “You haven’t figured that out by now? ‘Old flame’?
‘Very unexpected’?”
“You’re
really not telling me…”
“I’ve hit
the jackpot… Jack. It’s quite stunning. The impetuous fool hopped a flight to
Portland one day, took me out to dinner and told me that he’s divorcing his
wife. We’ve been chatting ever since, and now he’s talking about moving to
Portland.”
“I can’t
believe it,” says Jack.
“I know!
It’s such a…”
“I can’t
believe that you’re one of the idiots.”
“Beg
pardon?”
“I had you
pegged as a smart girl who got fooled. Once. Now it turns out you’re an idiot.
And you know I think I’ve finally got this thing figured out. For every
raging-dick superdawg like Thompson, there have to be thirty-two complete
fucking idiot women to fall for his act.”
Brigit’s
eyes are wide with insult. “How dare you talk to me like…”
“Oh! You
Brits are so charming. You actually
say things like ‘How dare you.’ That is so
adorable!”
“I… I would
never expect this from you, Jack.”
Jack waves
toward the approximate direction of Wisconsin. “That asshole is in Madison right now, begging his wife for mercy, making
plans for her and the kids to move back into the mansion.”
Brigit
produces two precise blinks. “I would assume he wants to get everything back to
normal before he informs her of his long-range intentions.”
Jack brings
his face closer to hers, like a baseball manager arguing with an umpire. “That
cock-and-bull story he gave you, Bridgey? That’s the same one he gave to the
Santa Cruz bimbette he’s been screwing all during the holidays.”
“I…”
“On the way
here, I discovered a stash of DVDs in the trunk of Thompson’s Porsche, marked
with the names of three dozen women. What do you suppose those are? Movie
rentals? Oh, but don’t worry. One of the names is Brigit.”
Brigit
begins crying.
“Look, I’m
sorry,” says Jack. “You caught me off-guard. This nasty little… pageant keeps
growing on me. I guess it…”
Brigit
begins sobbing. Jack goes to touch her shoulder but she smacks him away.
“I thought you were a gentleman. But I
don’t suppose a gentleman goes about shagging his friend’s lovers.”
The sheer
illogic hits Jack like a splash of ice water. He raises an index finger at
Brigit’s nose, and tries his best to speak calmly.
“Look. As a
guy, I kind of like that horny bastard. It’s one hell of a show, and forgive me
but driving his Porsche, living at his beach house and screwing the occasional
leftover mistress beats the hell out
of my old life. But if you think I’ve got enough imagination to come up with
thirty amateur pornos in a burgundy leather pouch – next to a bottle of Viagra,
I might add – you are giving me much more credit than I deserve. Meanwhile,
I’ve got a party to go to. Ta!”
He fights
the urge to slap her silly, then fetches his wine and sushi and heads for the
front porch. He’s so intent on the conflict behind him that he almost runs into
the giant serpent that seems to have swallowed the front walk. It turns out to
be a long tubular tunnel, constructed of plastic camping fabric stretched
around five-foot hoops. The mouth of the great beast has suctioned itself to
the front door, so he assumes it’s the only way in.
Jack
assumes a Grouch Marx stoop and ventures inside, carefully balancing his sushi
and wine. Toward the end, the tunnel grows increasingly dark. The porch climb
is a game of blind man’s bluff, but eventually he locates the front door,
gropes for the knob and pushes his way inside.
Seated on a
large pillow, surrounded by lava lamps, is Willie. He wears a lime-green warmup
suit, and his hair is greased and spiked upward like a growth of cactus. The
rest of the ensemble includes oversized circle spectacles, pointed Vulcan
Spock-ears, a red clown’s-nose and, around his neck, a large clock on a chain,
in the style of the rapper Flava Flav.
“Dude!
You’re late. Late I tell you. You are so
late. Here – have a toke on this. It’ll make you not care about being late.”
He hands
him a pipe shaped like a penis.
“Hey!” says
Jack. “I remember this one.”
“We call
him Dick Johnson. Sucking cock ain’t so bad when Dick’s on the job. Omigod! I
am such a homo.”
“Don’t ask
don’t tell. That is quite a tunnel out there.”
“Thanks! I
found it at an Army surplus store. I guess they used it for training or
something. This is the first time I managed to get some use out of it.”
Jack
finishes a healthy toke and has already half-forgotten his fight with Brigit.
“Hey, so
where do I go from here?”
Willie
waves his fingers, like a magician in mid-conjure, and opens a curtain to his
left, revealing a dark tunnel three feet high.
“Follow the
signs, O traveler. Especially the sign to the munchies, because you probably
don’t want to cart that sushi around. Unless you’re trolling for a whale. Har!
Hey, can I grab a couple of those? I’m hungry.”
Jack tips up
the plastic cover; Willie grabs a tuna and a California roll. He heads through
the drapes and receives a shock when his knees start making sounds like small
firecrackers. He reaches down to discover a wall-to-wall carpet of bubble-wrap,
then continues forward, crackling as he goes.
Fifteen
feet on, he butts up against another curtain, pokes his head through and finds
a small compartment that seems to serve as an intersection. An LED flashlight
dangles from the ceiling, illuminating a signpost affixed to a Christmas tree
stand. The post holds four arrowed signs reading Munchies, Smokes, Drums and Playroom.
Jack follows the munchies sign, a slight leftward shift, and enters another
tunnel, this one a foot deep with Styrofoam packing peanuts.
He comes to
another curtain and enters a low, dark room lit entirely in red: red lamps, red
Christmas lights and the kind of red flashers that you would find on a cop car.
The room is ringed with large cushions, and upturned milk crates serving as
tables. At the far end is a long, low coffee table covered with platters of
food.
As Jack is
setting down his sushi, a figure unfolds itself from the far side of the table.
At first it appears to be an extremely large snake, but the scales turn out to
be the red sequins of a floor-length evening gown. The wearer owns an extremely
lengthy physique, a quality somewhat furthered by a high bouffant of
fire-engine red. The face is large, also, and equine, adorned by horn-rimmed
spectacles with flashing red lights, a long Roman nose and a generous mouth
done up in cherry-red lipstick. The voice that arises from said lips is
surprisingly deep.
“Sushi!
Fish are ugly. If fish could really see
each other, they would never breed. Maybe that’s why the female fish lays down
the eggs somewhere, and then the male fish comes along later to spread the
sperm. They can’t stand the sight of each other! But I do like to eat them.
Because they’re ugly. And they taste good.”
“You’re
Terra’s brother, right?”
“Yeah. They
call me Troll. I have no idea why.”
“So you’re
in charge of the food?”
He blinks
several times, as if Jack has asked the most preposterous of questions. “Is
anybody really in charge of anything? There’s no control in this world. All you
can do is react. We’re all just a bunch of valence electrons looking to land
somewhere. I’ll bet there are other civilizations. That’s what the Northern
Lights are about. Signals.”
This last
thought freezes Troll in his tracks; he seems to be too enchanted with the
image to speak or move. Jack takes it as an opening.
“I think
I’ll head for the smokes.”
Troll snaps
back into motion, as if Jack has flipped a switch.
“What a fantastic idea! Follow me.”
Jack
follows Troll’s sequined butt through the peanuts, through the intersection and
rightward into a tunnel containing hundreds of black balloons. When they
surface at the far end, Jack finds that he can stand up, which is a great
relief. The space here is a full ten feet high, if only four feet wide. The
length is a matter of some speculation. The ceiling is lined with theatrical
spotlights, shooting multicolored beams into a thick band of smoke. Jack and
Troll wander about 20 feet before they find Ben, sitting in an arm chair, next
to a patio table wrapped in aluminum foil. Ben is taking hits off his hookah
pipe, and wears a bright orange safety vest and hard hat bearing the logo of
the Caterpillar Tractor Company. Sitting on a barstool next to him is Ivan,
wearing a Mickey Mouse hat with fake whiskers attached to his cheeks. Stuffed
between the fingers of his oversized white gloves is a remarkably obese joint
-–what a devotee might call a “fatty.” He passes it to Troll, who takes a
grateful hit.
“Ben!” says
Jack. “So how come no one told me there was a theme?”
Ben takes a
deep pull from his hookah and tries to sound mysterious. “Every Wonderland
needs an Alice. Have a hit, Alice.”
Jack takes
a drag and proceeds directly to a fit of coughing.
“Oh!” says
Ben. “Sorry. No flavored tobacco tonight. We’re all pretty determined to get
wasted. Speaking of, let’s open up that wine!”
“Feed your
head!” squeaks Ivan, nibbling at his gloves.
Ben takes
out a Swiss Army knife and makes quick use of its corkscrew attachment. He
takes a healthy swallow and proclaims, “That’s sweet!”
“Gewürztraminer,”
says Jack, proud of his elocution. “I like my wines sweet and white.”
“Like your
women.”
“Amen.”
“I myself
prefer a zesty Italian chianti.”
“A
well-aged chianti.”
“Touché.”
Troll slams
a hand on the table. “Please! Two languages at a time. Chianti sounds like a
new sportscar. Gewürztraminer sounds like a villain in a science-fiction movie.
You’re tearing me apart!”
“You’ll
have to forgive Troll,” says Ben. “When he gets intoxicated, his line of
discourse is like a feather in a high wind.”
“Hey!
That’s my job.” Willie pops through the smoke, scratching at a Spock-ear.
“You’ve
abandoned your post,” says Ben. “You kwazy wabbit.”
“I’m
lonely.”
“Understood.
I…” Ben stops and cocks an ear. “Methinks I hear drums.”
“Monkeys!”
says Willie.
“Girl Monkeys,” Ivan squeaks.
“Have to
it, men!” says Ben. Troll leads the charge, clomping forward in a pair of
size-15 pumps, and the rest is something like a football squad running an
obstacle course. The stretch of tunnel to the drumming area seems to be empty,
except for faint beams of light striping the floor. Once they break the beams,
however, the secret is revealed: a long line of electronic porch frogs that set
in to croaking like it’s high mating season at the swimming hole.
They
re-emerge in what was formerly the TV room – the only room in the house that
seems to have been left at its normal proportions. A logical decision,
considering the now-familiar gathering of congas, djembes, bongos, toms and
percussion accessories. The walls are laced with white Christmas lights, but
the three lamps have been de-shaded and outfitted with blacklights. This has an
especially haunting effect on Terra, who is done up entirely in white: a
Victorian bridal dress, a tiara with trailing veil, elbow-length cocktail
gloves and whiteface geisha makeup. The lights have a different effect on
Constance, who is done up completely in stripes of red and white: striped hose,
striped skirt, striped sweater and one of those goofy-high top hats, like the
one worn by the Cat in the Hat. Thanks to the blacklights, she is only half
there.
The two of
them work a samba pattern over the congas. The boys scatter to their
instruments. Jack takes a first stab at Ivan’s new dombek, which offers a
resounding bass at its center and pleasant ringing qualities at its rim – an
even wider pitch-range than the djembe. He’s deep into a chaotic solo when
Audrey pops through the entrance and springs to her feet. She is dressed as a
belly dancer: a top of spangled copper rings, bare midriff, a gold-colored
skirt riding dangerously low on her hips, and sheer veils trailing all around.
Jack abandons his dombek to plant her with a freeway kiss. When they’re done,
she rewards his attentions with a blacklit Cheshire Cat smile.
“Are you
enjoying our Wonderland?”
“Oh I am,
definitely. But who are you?”
She shakes
her hips, setting her spangles clattering. “I’m the dragon lady.”
“The
Jabberwock! Kind of a stretch, but all things considered…”
“I breathe
fire,” she says. “So be careful. Who’s the British lady out front?”
Jack has
already worked out his calculations, and is quick with his response.
“That is one of Thompson’s mistresses.”
“Plural.”
“Multitudinous.
She apparently believes that he will be showing up tonight. Which is news to me
– but then, I’m not sleeping with him.”
“You’re
about the only one. Come on, sugar,
let’s drum.”
Audrey
heads for the percussion basket, ties on the goat’s-hoof anklets and plays her
part, gyrating around the room, making sure that her hips get as much work as
her feet. Jack hides his erection behind a large conga as the tempo speeds up
into a windstorm. Twenty minutes later, the whole thing collapses under its own
rapidity.
“Oxygen!”
shouts Terra.
“Food!”
shouts Ivan.
“Appendectomy!”
shouts Troll.
Jack
follows Audrey’s golden ass through the hall of frogs. They emerge at the
intersection, where they discover a blonde girl kneeling at the signpost. She
spots a belly-dancer crawling her way and unleashes a rather stunning
big-toothed smile. She has cutesy baby cheeks and eyes of radiant sky-blue.
“Hi! I’m
new here. What would you recommend?”
“Are you
sober?” asks Audrey.
“Stone
cold.”
“Ah, a
pity. I’d recommend the smoking room. Crawl this way.”
So now Jack
is crawling behind the blonde. Not quite the golden ass of Audrey, a bit on the
economy size, but the tight jeans are working hard to provide him with a
pleasant view. A view that he’s seen before, rising as a full moon over
Thompson’s coffee table. Holy shit! He’s surrounded.
They drift
through the smoke to find Ben and Gina
in the armchair, making out like teenagers. Gina wears a chocolate brown
cowgirl jacket, a crisp white blouse, wraparound leather miniskirt and black
stockings leading to coffee-colored cowgirl boots with gold trim. Jack is
growing increasingly understanding of Ben’s enchantment.
“Hey you
two,” he calls. “Get a room!”
Ben breaks
off their kiss and laughs. “We’d have
a room, if it weren’t for you meddling kids!”
Gina
unleashes the husky laugh that Ben talks about incessantly. “Ha! All those
years, I wondered what was going on at that hippie-house down the road, and I gotta
tell ya, it’s even loopier than I expected.”
She’s
family now, so Jack gives her a kiss on the cheek. “Welcome to the Monkey
Tribe.”
“Thank
you!”
“Now we
need something for Kirsten to smoke.”
Ben offers
up the ceramic penis pipe. “Willie left this one fully loaded. Feel free.”
Kirsten
takes the pipe by the scrotum and threatens to turn into a girl made entirely
of Jell-O.
“If you’ll
forgive the… aesthetics,” adds Ben.
Oh she’s familiar with the aesthetics, thinks
Jack.
“So
Kirsten,” says Audrey. “Don’t mind my asking, but who are you here with?”
Kirsten
wraps her lips around the penis-head, then talks through her exhale, producing
a voice that might very well belong to a Jabberwock.
“I’m
meeting Thompson. He told me to meet him here. Confusing directions!”
Ben laughs.
“Old Stage/New Stage?”
“Oh my God! I must have done three laps before
I got it right.”
Ten minutes
later, Audrey is chewing on a shrimp cocktail when she begins the expected
interrogation.
“So you
know Kirsten?”
Jack takes
a time-consuming mouthful of egg roll. “Not that I don’t love any chance to bring this up, but Kirsten is pals with Bobbie,
the woman I was dancing with on the porch.”
“Ah! And
you also know the Brit in the driveway?”
“I ran into
Thompson and Brigit in Oregon. Which is how I got my house-sitting assignment,
which is how I met Ben, which is how I met you.”
“Hmm. A
rather pivotal personage in our personal histories.”
“Watch it,
honey. You’re alliterating all over the buffet.”
Audrey
toothpicks another shrimp and chews it down, ruminating all the while.
“Being
Thompson’s chief of staff, have you ever thought of warning these women?”
“Ben seems
to think it would be a bad idea. And he’s probably right. I gave it a try with
Brigit earlier; having just driven from Portland in pursuit of her delusions,
she reacted as if I were something she had just stepped in.”
Audrey
ruffles a hand through Jack’s hair, a token of affection for which he is most
grateful.
“Judging by
the presence of both of them,” she says, “I believe our man Thompson has a
death wish. Hey! Before the shit hits the fan, let’s check out the playroom.”
“After
you.”
Audrey
kisses him on the neck. “I know why
you want me to crawl in front of you, and I want you to know that I greatly
appreciate it.”
They return
to the intersection then keep straight on into a long tunnel covered in
ping-pong balls. Audrey puts an extra waggle in her get-along, and Jack
encourages her with a spank.
The
playroom is another midget-cave, six-foot square, lit with colored disco
lights, underlain with mattresses. The mattresses are covered with foot-wide
plastic playballs, maybe thirty in all, with a pair of three-foot beach balls
to act as king and queen. Audrey dives forward, scattering spheroids in all
directions.
“This is
fantastic! Omigod!”
Jack slides
in after, more intent on playing with Audrey.
“I don’t
know,” he says. “Do you suppose there’s much privacy to be had here?”
“Are you
nuts? Not that I don’t appreciate the idea, but someone could come busting
through those curtains at any second.”
“Which
makes it all the more exciting.”
“Jack! What
have I done to you? You used to be such a Boy Scout.”
He lowers
the strap on Audrey’s top and nibbles on a nipple. “Boy Scouts gotta earn their
merit badges some way.”
“You are a
bad boy and don’t stop that because it feels wonderful.” She reaches down to stroke his crotch, but stops when
she hears a high-pitched whimpering.
“Is that
you?” asks Jack.
“Well I’m
sure glad it’s not you,” says Audrey.
“Wait a minute. If this is the back bedroom, then the window should be right
behind this curtain.”
She finds a
spot where two blankets overlap, pulls them apart to reveal Venetian blinds,
then peeks between two of the blinds and lets out a gasp.
“Oh my
God!” she whispers.
Jack slips
in next to her and takes a look. Brigit is standing with her hands on the edge
of the hot tub. She’s still wearing the pink jacket, but her panties and jeans
are around her ankles, her white ass aimed at the Salinas foothills. Thompson,
clothed in a long woolen coat, is fucking her from behind.
“Juh-ee-sus!” whispers Audrey.
Hearing
Brigit’s familiar pantings, Jack feels an odd twinge of jealousy. This feeling
lessens greatly when Audrey takes his hand and slides it beneath her golden
skirt.
The climax
of their hurried session arrives with the wail of a saxophone, followed by a
steadily expanding drumbeat. After reattaching all of her clothing, Audrey
takes a peek out the window and discovers that their personal porn stars have
vacated the carport.
“Show’s
over,” she says. “Let’s go drum!”
Jack
finishes buckling his belt and smiles, then waves her into the tunnel.
“You’re
insatiable,” says Audrey.
After
ping-pong balls and frogs, they enter the drum room to find a short, stocky man
with spiky blond hair standing at center, blowing free-form variations on a
baritone sax as the Monkeys maintain a rolling beat. Audrey grabs a pair of
hand cymbals and continues her belly-dancer act. Jack feels a tingle of
possession, knowing that those fleshy acres are all his. He sidles next to
Constance, who is working a pair of congas like a short-order cook flipping
hotcakes, and taps at a pair of bongos as he gets the lowdown.
“His name’s
Mack,” she reports. “He came from Modesto with Terra’s cousin Shannon – the shy
djembe in the armchair.”
Jack sifts through
the blacklight fuzz to find a handsome, big-boned Irish girl in the far corner
with a head of thick burgundy hair and a fetchingly upturned nose. She pats her
drumhead every few seconds, like a swimmer dipping a toe into the water.
“Willie did
this with electric guitar once,” says Constance. “It works well as long as you
stick to one instrument. This guy
rocks!”
Mack has
worked himself into a Coltranean lather, bending backward to release a long
scream to the ceiling, then tucking himself back together to drop sweet little
blurts into the stew, sweat beading up on his forehead. Freed of the chordal
restraints of bandmates, he must be in riffer’s heaven.
Jack lends
a lusty eye to Audrey, who is swinging her hair like a banshee as she punishes
a tambourine. The illicit sex and costumery has delivered her to a realm even
further out than her usual extremes, and he loves her even more for that rare
capacity. He flexes his fingers and sets to work on his bongos.
With the
novelty of the saxman, the session continues for another half-hour. Mack takes
a deep inhale and blows his way through a final fusillade, hands flying over
the keys, then literally screeches to a halt and stands bent over, gasping for
breath. The Monkeys abandon their instruments to pound him appreciatively on
the back.
Long lost
in his rhythmic pursuits, Jack is surprised to find Brigit kneeling next to the
armchair, chatting with Shannon. He feels very uncertain as to where he stands
in this situation. He has dared to mess with a British woman’s delusions and
now, thanks to Thompson’s outdoor ministrations, has been proven “wrong.” With
Kirsten somewhere along these catacombs, he may soon be proven “right” – and
it’s very dangerous to be right. He notes that Constance and Willie have met at
the tunnel entrance and are about to assume a crawling position, so he rushes
in beside them and tries to lose himself in the herd.
Sated with
pot, sex and drumming, Jack is now craving food, so he returns to the munchies
room and finds that several others have beaten him there. He locates a salad of
chicken curry, mushrooms and beans and falls in love, perching on a cushion as
he wolfs down a heaping bowlful. Mentally speaking, he has had just enough pot
to be dabbling with that time-wormhole phenomenon, but otherwise seems to be
floating along rather nicely. But where the hell is Thompson?
“So Ben
tells me you’re his A-one pupil.”
Gina
Scarletti has shuffled next to him with a plate of eggplant casserole. She
smiles, causing her dark eyes to arch upward in a most fetching fashion.
“I suppose
I am,” says Jack. “Did he give you any reasons?”
“He says
that you see things that the average person doesn’t. And you’re amazingly
adaptive.”
“I wish
there were some things I could see at this party.”
“Ha!
Judging by your date, I’d say you’re seeing plenty.”
“Amen,
sister,” says Jack. “But there are other things. Demons in the walls.” He waves
his fingers, spooky-like.
“Ah. So can
I ask you something?”
“Sure.”
“Am I doing
the right thing? Marrying Ben?”
“No.”
This serves
to widen Gina’s eyes – yet another touching effect.
“To call
what you are doing ‘right’ is to compare it to an answer on a history test. It
demeans the size and wonder of the thing. You are not just getting the best man
in Northern California, the most evolved
human being that I know, you are getting someone whose very spirit grows miles
wider whenever the subject of Gina Scarletti comes up. And, in a way, you’re
saving his soul.”
Gina hides
half of her face with a hand, feigning embarrassment. “You certainly have a way
of putting things.”
“Thanks.
I’m also stoned. But also grateful. You have shed a ton of light on the life of
a great man, and we are all enjoying the fireworks.”
Gina kisses
him on the cheek. “Thanks, Jack.”
“You’re
welcome. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to see about getting much more
stoned.
“Before you
find the demons in the walls.”
“Exactly.”
Jack
trudges through the Styrofoam snow to the intersection, where the floor is
losing the battle to ping-pong balls, black balloons and packing peanuts. He is
arrested by the image of two butts – one red and spangled, the other bearing a
long coat-hanger mouse’s tail – gathered at the entrance to the front tunnel. A
steady crackling emanates from said tunnel, as if someone were rhythmically stomping
on a pile of leaves.
Jack
approaches the pair and asks, “What goes here, lads?”
“Shh!” says
Ivan. “You don’t want to interrupt the show. Here…”
He offers
the lower curtain-crack (the upper being occupied by the red queen). It takes a
few seconds for Jack’s eyes to adjust to the eery lava-lamp glow, but gradually
he makes out a pair of thick white legs, spread in a vee across the mouth of
the tunnel, and a darker figure like a tree-trunk between them, pounding away
like a battering ram as the bubble wrap cries out in fits of static.
“Ho-lee
shit,” Jack murmurs.
“Whatever
are you looking at?”
It’s that
posh British accent again, always tickling at his ear. He realizes that he has
just been vested with tremendous power. He is the only thing standing between
Brigit and the truth. Make some horrible ruckus, tackle limey-girl to the
ground, and the awful vision of boyfriend’s dick pounding another’s pussy goes
away, an unfounded myth. Jack steps aside and cedes the peephole.
Brigit
bends to the spot, levels her eyes to the gap and peers in as Jack ticks off
the Five Steps of Carnal Shock. Eyes adjust. A smirk at the sight of a humping
couple. Sudden identification of Latino male buttocks. Increase in heart rate
and respiration.
The next
step is the wild card: big flaming confrontation or crestfallen retreat? Brigit
goes for the latter, breathing in hard pants, wiping her face with a hand and
racing toward the smokes tunnel. The intersection turns into an audio chamber.
The left channel brings an accelerating drumbeat of popping bubble wrap; the
right a high-pitched sobbing; the left a duet of moaning female and grunting
male as orgasm arrives; the right a mournful whimpering.
“Bra-voh!” whispers Troll, eye still fixed to
the upper gap. He sees Jack and says, “What’s wrong with Spice Girl?”
“Nothing I
can fix. Because I’m right.”
“Yaknow,”
says Troll. “Sometimes you don’t make sense.”
Red queen
and dormouse trundle off to the munchies room for a post-coital snack. Jack
considers his situation, and realizes that sooner or later he has to go after
Brigit, because even though he’s right, he’s all she’s got.
The
barometer cranks up to full squint as Jack crawls into the black balloons,
thinking what a perfect symbol they make for smokers’ lungs. Brigit is nowhere
among them, so he continues into the colored fog, detecting a cat-like mewling
from the far end. He finds Audrey in the armchair, Brigit strewn across her lap
like a Pietá. It’s the redhead menage a tois of his dreams, only Brigit is
hardly up to it, her head nestled against Audrey’s bare shoulder as she cries
out all her stupid mistakes. The similarity of the two is uncanny; a
psychoanalyst would have a field day with this. He crouches beside the chair to
get the lowdown from Audrey.
“How is
she?”
“From what
I’m assuming just happened, better than I
would be.”
Brigit lets
out a fresh gush. “Oh Jack! You were right. Oh God oh God oh God. Could I be
any more of a…of a…” And then back to Audrey’s shoulder.
“Besides
the sheer logistics,” says Audrey, “I’m wondering how he’s doing this physically.”
“A little
pharmaceutical assistance,” says Jack.
“Oh that’s just lovely.”
Brigit
raises her head and aims a red-hot stare down the tunnel.
“Fucking bastard! Too bad I can’t fuck his
house-sitter again.”
She returns
to her principal occupation of moisturizing Audrey’s shoulder. When Jack lifts
his eyes to Audrey’s face, he can see the little bits of revealed truth
striking her surface like asteroids.
“Only knew
her from Oregon?”
“I…”
“Leave,
Jack. Get out.”
“Are you…”
“We’ll be
fine here, without you, Jack.”
He backs
through the fogged spotlights like a rock star being booed off the stage. For
two weeks, one time in his entire life, he was a dawg, and now he will be
punished. He takes a last glance at the belly-dancer belly that he may never
touch again. It really is a shame.
He crawls
as morosely as one can through the black, black balloons, and emerges at the
intersection to find Kirsten curled up next to the signpost, sound asleep. He
sits next to her and notices that one ample white breast is hanging out of her
low-cut sweater. After some deliberation he reaches over to see if he can pull
her sweater back into place, but Kirsten grabs his hand and pulls it directly
to her nipple.
“Naughty
boy!”
Seeing that
her eyes are still closed, he says, “Kirsten? It’s not Thompson.”
“That’s
okay.” She cultivates a sleepy smile. “We just had some tequila shots, and I
just feel like fucking everybody. I think I just fucked some bubble wrap!”
She
giggles, then seems to droop back toward sleep. “Awfully tired, though.”
“Honey? Can
I get you to crawl a little further?”
“Will you
fuck me?”
“Sure.
Right after we crawl.”
“Hoh-kay.”
She flops
onto her hands and knees like a drunken seal, then slogs her way through the
ping-pong balls. At long last she makes it to the playroom and swan-dives onto
the mattress.
“Fuck now?”
“Sure,
honey. But first let’s get you a pillow.”
“Ooh!
Nasty!”
“Right.” He
finds a cushion against the wall, lifts her head and slips it underneath.
“Silly!”
says Kirsten, grinning into the cushion. “S’posed to put it under my ass.”
“I’ll be
right back,” he whispers. “I’m going to get you some toys.”
Kirsten
raises one fist and says “Yes!”
By the time
Jack hits the ping-pong trail, she’s already snoring. Then he hears the sound of
angels singing.
After the
frogs announce his approach, Jack pokes his head into the drum room to find
three white bowls on a table, glowing in the blacklight. The white queen, the
March hare and the mad hatter run short, thick rods around their edges, producing
pure beams of sound that mix and blend in the air. Then the rod-bearers begin
to sing along, matching the tones of the bowls and then drifting high and low
to create grand choral harmonies. A male voice quivers in and out of
dissonance, creating an edge that sounds like Scottish bagpipes.
Ah, thinks
Jack. A balm for my wicked, wicked soul. He settles on a couch, dangles his arm
over the side and is surprised when his fingers settle on the tip of a bottle.
Even more surprised when he fishes it up and finds his Gewürztraminer, still
half-full. The bottle speaks to him. It says, Drink me. So he does.
Jack comes
to at the sound of Mack’s saxophone, running up and down the angel-chord like a
caffeinated mountain goat.
“Oh my
God!”
This
declaration comes from a woman just entering the room: burgundy-haired Shannon,
the sax-player’s girlfriend.
“I was
crawling past the signpost, and someone reached out of the wall and grabbed my
ass! When I turned around, all I could see was this crazy smile, and this man asked
me if I wanted to fuck. Like he was asking me for the time! So I… I got here as
fast as I could.”
Terra
raises a finger very queen-like and says, “There is a dawg loose among the
monkeys!”
A short
scream emanates through the tunnels, and soon the frogs are announcing another
entrance: Constance, minus the mad hat, her blonde hair flying all over the
place.
“Dammit!
Dammit!” She stands and claps the dust from her clothes. “I went to get some
munchies, and some A-hole was hiding under the table. He grabbed my leg, and
then made several very specific anatomical suggestions. When I realized it
wasn’t you, honey – no offense…”
“None
taken,” says Willie.
“…I
scrammed on outta there.”
“Okay,”
says Terra. “It’s obvious we’re not going to have any peace till we find this
character. Why don’t we spread out through the tunnels? If anybody spots him,
just let out a monkey-yell and wait till the rest of us get there.”
The Monkeys
express their unity of purpose by letting out high-pitched chimp noises. Jack
follows the caravan, feeling a little too drunk to be very effective, and takes
a left toward the playroom – mostly because he has to use the adjacent
bathroom. When he pops in among the playballs, he finds Gina Scarletti, playing
with a Slinky.
“Hey.
What’s all the hubbub?”
“Apparently,”
says Jack, “there is a pervert afoot.”
“Thompson.”
“Oh. Ben’s
told you?”
“The man’s
a legend.”
“Well,
after screwing his way through two mistresses, he is now prowling the tunnels
looking for more.”
“Ah. The
demon in the walls.”
“Exactly.
And the demon’s got Viagra.”
“Oh,” she
says. “That’s just lovely.”
“So where’s
Ben?”
“At my
house, getting more wine.”
“All things
considered, maybe you’d better go there too.”
“Ye-es.
There’s a back way to my house through the garden. God, what a jerk.”
“Amen.”
He escorts
Gina to the intersection (thinking it more seemly this time to crawl ahead of the woman). Gina takes a left
toward the front door; Jack continues to the smoking room to check on his
redheads. He hasn’t heard any monkey noises, so perhaps Thompson has given up
on his quest.
The smoking
room is bereft of anything – even smoke. Jack sits in a chair at the
foil-covered table to catch a breath. He takes a pull from the hookah pipe and
gets nothing. Then he notices that the curtains behind the table have been
messed with, revealing a strip of window glass. He pulls on one side of it and
finds a rather stunning sight.
An
impressive fire fills the spirit garden pit, unleashing long whips of orange
flame. Just over the fence, he sees the silhouette of Gina Scarletti’s hair.
She holds up her hands to either side in a posture of surrender.
On the far
side of the fire is Thompson Flores, fully naked, his skin colored orange by
the flames, his right hand stroking a massive erection. He teeters in Gina’s
direction like a Frankenstein’s monster, wearing a look of demonic possession.
Whether from sheer fright or the surrounding fences and bushes, Gina appears to
be frozen in her spot.
Jack shakes
the window, searches for handles or latches, but can’t seem to get it unlocked.
He’s too far away to be heard, and a dash through the tunnels would take too
long.
When he
looks back outside, he finds that Thompson has shifted his attention – and for
good reason. Audrey has appeared before the statue of Lakshmi, dancing like
Salome as she pulls the veils from her outfit and tosses them, one by one, to
the ground. This, thinks Jack, is precisely what I deserve.
Audrey
undoes her top and flings it to the ground at Thompson’s feet, beckoning him
forward with the general motion of a backstroke. When he turns to look back at
Gina, Audrey calls him again, then turns around, bends over at the waist and
pulls off her skirt.
This,
finally, is too much to ignore, and Thompson walks her way, like a man in a
dream. By the time he arrives, Audrey has dropped to her knees. She welcomes
his cock with both hands, and gives it a couple of pulls before inserting it
into her mouth. Thompson arches backward in ecstasy, eyes toward the stars.
Jack has
always made fun of dramatic types who use the phrase “like a knife through the
heart,” but now he knows exactly what they mean. He can’t seem to breathe, and
has the sudden urge to punch a fist through the window.
Which is
when a phantom-like streak of pink flies from the bushes and a shower of red
sparks explodes over Thompson’s head. He takes a single step and keels over,
crashing to the ground. Jack realizes he’d better get out there; he
speed-crawls the murderously convoluted tunnels, sprints across the lawn and
bursts into the garden.
Thompson is
out cold, flat on his back over the concrete pentagram, his forehead marked by
a lightning-shaped line of blood, his penis still straight as a flagpole.
Audrey, still naked, kneels at his side, a finger to his throat.
“Pulse is
okay. He’s breathing all right. We’d better get him a blanket. My God, would
you look at that thing?” She gives
his erection a slap; it bobs back and forth like a punching clown. “Fucking
asshole. Hi honey.”
Jack wraps
her in a hug. “You are even more amazing than I thought.”
“I am really sorry about the fellatio. I was
working on short notice.”
Brigit pops
in next to them. “And I am really
sorry about that garden gnome.” She unzips her pink jacket and offers it to
Audrey.
The Monkeys
arrive one at a time, and Audrey has to tell the story several times over.
Constance arrives with a blanket for Thompson, which forms a low-lying tent
over his still-hard member. Ben shows up five minutes later, surprised and
ashamed that he wasn’t there in his fiancée’s moment of need, but Gina seems to
have recovered.
Jack
fetches Audrey’s golden skirt, then leads her off to the fireside to warm her
up.
“For a
second there, I thought you had dreamed up the ultimate payback.”
“It did cross my mind,” she says. “But don’t
worry, I’ll get over it. Brigit filled me in on the details: knight in shining
armor, live sex show, revenge fuck, one-time thing…”
She gives
his cheek a light slap. “But no more of that! I do not henceforth want to be
the green monster.”
“Deal.”
Audrey
looks back at the slumped form on the pentagram. “Meanwhile, what do we do with
the porn star?”
“Well.
Assuming he imbibed as much tequila as Kirsten, I think he’ll be out for a
while.”
Terra
arrives to hijack their conversation. “So he probably… won’t remember a lot of
this?”
“Nope,”
says Jack.
“And he’s…
sort of at our mercy. Or lack of same.”
Audrey
smiles. “What are you thinking, white queen?”
Terra’s
eyes glint in the firelight. “It seems that Constance, at her tutoring center,
does a lot of art projects, and she happens to keep her supplies in her van,
and among said supplies she just happens to have a box of permanent markers.”
“Ooh!” says
Audrey. “The white queen is eee-vil!”
Through the
saving graces of a hay-cart, and the sliding properties of a woolen blanket
over hardwood floors, the Monkeys are able to drag Thompson into the playroom
and lay him out along the mattressed floor. Terra brings in a bright desk lamp,
providing an operating-room clarity, then whips aside the blanket. Thankfully,
the erection has subsided.
The female
Monkeys gather at all corners of Thompson’s impressive physique and set to
their work. Audrey chooses the nether strata of the abdomen, drawing an arrow
toward Thompson’s dick and labeling it Weapon
of Mass Destruction. Constance uses his chest to construct a brief timeline
of the night’s events: 8:30 p.m.: shags
Brigit in carport; 10 p.m.: screws Kirsten in front lobby, and so on. Terra
applies a series of insults along his legs: Too
bad such a looker has to be such an asshole!
Gina, who
used to work as a nurse, spends this time tending to the point of gnome impact
on Thompson’s temple. After they turn him over, she inscribes a heart on his
left buttock that reads T.F. loves T.F.
Upon the right buttock, Shannon pens Viagra:
The Evil Blue Pill. Brigit uses Thompson’s broad back to write a letter of
apology to Esmerelda: I fell for him
twice, and I believed his lies about you. I hope you can forgive me, but I do
believe you’re better off without him. I have been an awful person, and I
promise never to do something like this ever again.
Kirsten
lies five feet distant, buried by playballs, snoring away like a buzz-saw.
“Found his
clothes!” says Ivan. He tosses a series of damp articles into the room.
“Well,”
says Audrey. “We definitely should get him dressed. Best to keep him from
discovering our work for as long as possible.”
The logical
manner of delivery is the Porsche. After three cups of coffee, Jack navigates
Highway One, careful of the temporary tire, while Audrey enjoys the distinct
privilege of following them in the Hummer. Thompson shows small moments of
wakefulness, but only enough to shift his position on the passenger seat.
They pull
up to Big Brown as the sky is lightening with pre-sunrise. Jack undoes
Thompson’s seatbelt and is swinging his legs out when Thompson snorts awake.
Audrey dashes from the Hummer to run interference, popping between them and
putting a hand on Thompson’s cheek.
“Morning,
honey. We had to drive you home.”
Thompson
manages a bleary smile. “Did we have fun?”
“Oh, we sure
did, honey. You fucked me in the ass right in front of the whole party. It was
quite a show, you porn star.”
Thompson
grins, which causes his eyes to close. “Sweet!”
“Now I want
you to try to stand with us, honey. My friend and I are going to help you
inside.”
Jack pulls
up the hood of his sweatshirt to hide his face. They prop up one shoulder
apiece and shuffle Thompson up the tiled steps, around the whitewater and onto
the great white couch. Audrey pulls a blanket over him as Jack goes to the
kitchen for grocery bags. He’s halfway up the stairs when Audrey calls, “What
are you doing?”
“After that
graffiti job you Monkey Girls just did, I am not staying here.”
The two of
them manage to pack up Jack’s possessions in a matter of ten minutes, and are
soon headed out the door.
“Farewell,
Big Brown,” says Jack. “I’ll miss ya.”
“I will
too,” says Audrey.
They pile
into Jack’s compact and are ready to go when he stops and puts the car back
into park.
“Sorry.
Forgot something.”
He returns
to the Porsche, opens the trunk and leans inside. Audrey takes a moment to flip
down the car visor and make use of the built-in mirror.
“Yikes,”
she mutters. “Lost cause.”
Jack hops
in and hands her a leather pouch. She turns it over to find a Porsche logo.
“What’s
this?”
“That,”
says Jack, “is insurance.”
Jack
remembers frighteningly little of the drive back to Salinas. He does recall
hitting that same straightaway and singing “Me and Bobby McGee,” but the rest
is a blur.
He wakes up
in the playroom between Audrey and Kirsten, and for just a moment he thinks
that something exotic has happened. But the epic party comes back in a flood,
and he kisses Audrey to consciousness. They pop out of their cave to discover
that they can stand, that Wonderland is undergoing a thorough deconstruction.
All blankets and curtains have been folded and stacked, tunnel floor materials
swept into Hefty bags, motion-detector frogs lined up along the conga drums,
and all that remains is a skeleton of small red-and-white fences, the kind used
in horse-jumping competitions.
“So now you
know,” says Terra. She exits the bathroom in jeans and a plaid shirt.
“Actually, loading those fences into my truck is the next assignment. But
first, let’s get you some fresh-brewed coffee!”
Audrey
smiles. “You are a goddess.”
“Queen,
goddess – it’s all the same to me!” Terra recites, and promenades to the
kitchen.
Audrey and
Jack sort their way through the fences to the dining room table, somewhere near
the former munchies room. Brigit sits at a table with Ivan and Troll, chewing
on scrambled eggs and sausages.
“So Jack,”
she says, trying out a Mafia accent. “Did you take care of that thing for me?”
“Bada-bing!”
says Jack.
“The body
has been disposed of,” says Audrey.
“Thank
goodness!” says Brigit, in British. And may I once again issue thirty-two
brands of apology for all the havoc that I have wreaked. Me and my bloody
ginormous piehole.”
“Yes,” says
Audrey. “But enough! I am officially finished hearing about Jack and other
women.” She grabs Jack by the ear. “Isn’t that right, Mister Teagarden?”
“Yes,
mistress.”
“Good.” She
releases him and gives his ear a kiss.
“God,” says
Brigit. “Wouldn’t you love to be a
fly on the wall when Thompson strips off for his shower?”
“I can’t imagine,” says Ivan.
“I should
certainly hope you can’t imagine!”
Terra sweeps in with a pair of steaming mugs.
“Oh! That
reminds me,” says Jack. “I have some souvenirs.” He heads for the playroom and
returns with the leather pouch, then sorts through it and hands two DVDs to
Brigit.
“I’m just
guessing here, but I’d say that Thompson was a bit of a hidden-camera freak. If
it makes you feel any better, you’re the only one who got two DVDs.”
“I’m so bloody honored. I suppose I would be
smart to toss these before I get another beau.”
“And here’s
one for Audrey,” says Jack.
Audrey
stares at the case, wearing an extremely puzzled expression
“Don’t
worry,” says Jack. “I’m also betting he has cameras all over Big Brown. He must
have caught us doing a few ‘scenes.’”
“Well!” she
says. “I am both flattered and completely creeped out.”
Jack lifts
out one last DVD and holds it like a winning raffle ticket.
“I swear
it’s not me,” says Troll.
“I don’t
know,” says Ivan in his pirate voice. “Ya looked pretty sexy last night.”
A big
blonde train wreck staggers from the playroom, shading her eyes from the
sunlight. “Where’s Thompson?”
Terra walks
over to help her toward the kitchen. “It’s a long story, honey. Why don’t you
sit down and I’ll get you some coffee.”
“And later
on,” says Audrey, “we’re gonna watch some videos!”
The
Monkeys, being polite monkeys, fight hard not to laugh.
U
Cioppino and Mineral-Talk
He’s
back to the Starbucks in Cupertino, and back to the numbers: the
spring-training stats of the San Francisco Giants and Oakland Athletics. Barely
enough to whet the appetite of his deprived left hemisphere (he’s been reading
a book on brain function), but he’s afraid to look at the stocks. It’s too
close to the pathos of his pre-Aptos life, and it’s already scary enough just
being here at this same table, gazing across the street at that same Calderian
fountain. He does find some satisfying sense of mathematical process in
earned-run average and on-base percentage. Perhaps he could get a job with the
Bill James Baseball Abstract.
He
is not drinking an Americano. After
the coffee bar at Aptos, he would not be caught dead with one. He’s drinking a
chai. This serves as a spicy little reminder that he is fundamentally a
different person. This and the occasional spicy text message from Audrey. He
will never, ever see the world in the same way. He thinks of the burning house,
in the falls at Multnomah. He thinks of the Imp of the Perverse. He thinks of
Ben saying, “Don’t you dare.”
Still.
He finds himself at war with several real-life enemies. The door that Thompson
opened with his exquisite quarterly analysis has not been slammed shut, thanks
to the artistic endeavors of the Monkey Girls. He envisions his immaculate
report circulating the halls at C-Valve, its creation credited to some phony
accounting consultant dreamed up by Thompson.
His
severance package runs dry in two months, which will severely curtail his
ability to throw money into the black pit that used to be his house. Thanks to
the global plunge in housing prices, his suburban ranch-style abode – smack in
the center of what was once the most costly real estate in the world – is now
worth less than the money he still owes on it. He is not alone. Foreclosures
pepper the Valley like rapidly breeding feral cats. After severance comes
unemployment insurance. Whether this will be enough to fund an
already-questionable enterprise, is… questionable.
Meanwhile,
what will he do with his life? He wants to be worthy, he wants his talents to
be exploited. He wants to contribute.
Even the lofty endeavor of making love to Audrey LaBrea is not quite enough.
Jack
returns the sports section to the newspaper holder and deposits his cup in the
wastebasket. Then he heads for De Anza Boulevard – named for a Spanish pioneer
– and the dreary walk home. He’s just passing the library when his cell phone
goes off. He finds a bench near the fountain and answers.
“Hey! Ben!”
“How’s the
Silicon Valley outcast?”
“Ha! Yeah.
Just thinkin’ about that.”
“Good!
We’re on the same wavelength. Hey, any chance you could run by the house
tonight? Seven o’clock? Gina gets these urges to prove her heritage, and
tonight it’s cioppino. I think we’re gonna need some help.”
Even as he
speaks, Jack is forming the kind of agenda fully rationalized by this offer. To
drive the hill early (to beat the traffic), to walk the beach, to grab a
Peruvian at the coffeehouse.
“I’m there!
Only… where’s there?”
“That’s
right! You’ve never seen the place, have you? The address is seven ninety eight
Lusterleaf Drive. You take State Park off the highway, and…”
“Stop right
there. I’m at the library. I’ll look it up.”
“Oh, you
crazy kids and your Internet. But give me a call if you get lost. It’s a little
tricky.”
“Will do.”
A dinner
invitation might seem pretty pedestrian, but for Jack it offers the opportunity
to answer a mystery. So open about every other aspect of his life, Ben has
never had his A-one pupil over to his place of residence. Jack takes the
familiar route toward Big Brown, heads left at the turnoff instead of right,
zips through the intersection at the Safeway, finds Lusterleaf three blocks
uphill and takes a right. The street follows a serpentine path into the Aptos
hills, offering stunning vistas of the beachside neighborhoods across the
freeway. Just before the surface turns to gravel, Jack spots a dirt driveway to
his left marked 798. He follows it down, around and up to a three-level
structure of steeply angled roofs and cedar-shake siding.
When he
arrives at the top of the front steps, he finds a large deck running in a
backward el along the length of the house. The surface is cut out every 15 feet
to make way for five different trees: a live oak, a madrone, a big-leaf maple,
a bay and a redwood. The live oak is massive, spreading its branches over the
corner of the el in a protective umbrella. As he nears the porch, Jack notices
the condition of the surface, coated with a golden tan stain that makes the
wood look like new.
The wide
front door is hewn from redwood burl, treated with a dark varnish that gives it
the look of unsweetened chocolate blushing in embarrassment. The door is
bracketed by tall, narrow windows emanating a blue light. Looking closer, he
finds that the light comes in circles. Ben opens the door and catches him in
his study.
“Yes!
Bottles. Cobalt. Can’t tell you how much pretentious French water I had to buy
to fill up these cabinets. Then I sealed up the back with Plexiglas. You should
see them in the morning when the sun cuts through. Yowza!”
“Hi Ben,”
says Jack.
Ben laughs.
“Forgive me. I turn into a freakin’ tour guide around here.”
Jack finds
his nostrils filling with tomato, garlic, oregano and ocean.
“Wow! That…
Wow!”
“We’re just
about to eat. Come on in and greet the girls.”
Jack notes
the plural, which is quickly explained by the sight of Suzanne Brewer at the
counter, filling a wine glass. Out of her usual retro gear – into a pair of
jeans and a white sweater – she looks like a drab cousin of herself.
“Suzanne!”
Jack storms over to give her a hug. Gina Scarletti, shadowing the stovetop,
feigns annoyance.
“Not even
married yet, and already being
ignored.”
Jack’s not
biting. He needs to hear of musical adventures. “Going north or south?”
“North,”
says Suzanne. “Ben came to Mr. Toots last night and insisted I stay in town for
this dinner.”
“I’m so
sorry I missed you! I haven’t checked your website for a while.”
“No sweat.”
She lifts her fingers in a spell-casting wave. “We will get you eventually.”
Jack
U-turns to give Gina a kiss on the cheek. “Sorry, Gina. How are you?”
“Well now I’m fine. Hmm. I think it’s about
ready.”
Jack takes
note of the stove area, which is surrounded by walls of brick the color of
sunshine. “Wow. Pretty cool.”
“Salvaged
from an apartment building in Tacoma, Washington,” says Ben. “Circa 1913. They
had a fire five years ago – too much water damage to salvage the joint. Got
those bricks for a song.”
“Wow,” says
Jack. “So you did this all yourself?”
Gina
chuckles. “You ain’t seen nothin’
yet. Tell you what. Why don’t we do this buffet-style? Everybody grab a bowl.”
Jack
fetches a bowl from the table and Gina fills it up, ladling from the bottom of
the pot where all the sea-creatures lurk. His first few bites draw calamari,
mussels, clam and some kind of whitefish. The broth is a thick, creamy red with
an irresistible tang.
“Mamma
mia!” he says. “This is heaven.”
“Grazie,”
says Gina. “Once in a while, a gal’s gotta prove she’s Roman Catholic.”
“So where
are you headed next, Suzanne?”
Suzanne has
to wait until she finishes with a chunk of eel. “San Rafael. This groovy hippie
bookstore where they host regular concerts.”
“God bless
Marin County. Geez, I might just drive up. I been trapped in Silicon Valley,
and I’m starved for culture.”
“I’d love that!”
“Besides, I
don’t know too many musical geniuses. I’m just trying to tap into your power.”
“Power’s
feeling pretty weak lately.”
“Suzanne
has had some auto misadventures,” says Ben.
Jack offers
an empathizing wince.
“I am so going to pay you back for that
alternator,” says Suzanne.
“You are not going to pay me back,” says Ben.
“And that’s an order.”
“Jerk,”
says Suzanne. “Always forcing his generosity on people.”
The talk
continues as the bellies expand, further assisted by Caesar salad, tiramisu and
a quartet of cappuccinos that Ben proudly concocts with his home espresso
machine. At the peak of group satiation, Ben makes a small theatrical
production out of folding his hands, and returns to his tour-guide patter.
“Well! Now
that we’ve got you too stuffed to make a run for it, I have a little
show-and-tell. Please – follow me.”
He walks
them around the corner and flips on the light, revealing a room with some
astounding features. The back wall, ten feet high and thirty long, is covered
in two-foot squares of slate, gray and black with hints of russet, sienna,
occasional veins of green. The colors change as you walk past, like oil spilled
on asphalt. Running along a horizontal line at the midpoint of floor and
ceiling is a series of checkerboarding squares – one under, one over –
displaying surfaces of vibrant, otherworldly color.
“Welcome to
the batcave,” says Gina.
“Forgive
her,” says Ben. “I spent many more years with this wall than with Gina, so she
is painfully jealous. In fact, I spent most of the ‘80s on this. Each of the
squares holds a particular mineral found in the United States. As part of my
post-traumatic therapy, I ventured to various dig-your-own sites across the
country, then brought my treasures back here for slicing, polishing and
fitting. Did all the work right in this room. I have since moved the equipment
to the garage, for which Gina is very grateful.”
He approaches
the first square, a cloudy pink resembling frozen grapefruit juice. “Rose
quartz. The Grafton Mine, New Hampshire.”
The next
square offers lava-lamp rings of black and green, a deep hue the color of
shamrocks. “Malachite. Bill’s Gems and Minerals, Magdalena, New Mexico.”
Square
number three is a sky blue, ranging to the kind of purple that same sky would
offer up an hour after sunset. “Labradorite. The Woodward Ranch, Alpine,
Texas.”
Number four
serves up rings of blood red, cream white and several shades between.
“Carnelian, a variation of chalcedony. Place called the Rockhound – a bed and
breakfast, believe it or not, in Gila, New Mexico.”
The fifth
square is a bright yellow, with shadings of pumpkin. “Limonite. Tempe, Arizona,
the Fat Jack Mine. The place was, quite literally, a dump: piles of crystals
that gold miners tossed aside on their way to the good stuff.”
He leads
them through ten more squares, then sits them around a long glass coffee table
spotted with white, green and brown. Gina serves them a dessert wine in tiny
glasses.
“I hate to
pack any more information into my small, small brain,” says Jack. “But what’s
the deal with this table?”
“Ah yes!”
says Ben. “Got this from a shop on the Oregon Coast. A young lady there took
bits of sea glass and encased them in clear casting resin. From what I
understand, you pour the stuff into a mold, let a layer of it dry solid, then
scatter bits of glass and pour another layer, et cetera. It is, however,
extremely toxic. You have to be awfully careful.”
“Awesome,”
says Jack.
The
cioppino and mineral-talk have left everyone a little sluggish, and the
conversation comes to a halt. Ben lets the pause have its way for a while, then
sets down his glass and places a hand on either knee.
“All this
rock stuff has little to do with the reason for this gathering. But for anyone
who sees the house for the first time, it’s a bit of a necessary evil.”
“Nonsense,”
says Gina. “He cherishes any opportunity to show off his rocks.”
“There are
so many places to go with that comment,”
says Jack. “But I am just going to pass.”
Ben breaks
out his trademark laugh, a husky growl. “I thank you for your discretion. And
now, it’s time for me to spill my guts, and tell you a story that may have
considerable bearing on your respective futures.”
There is,
actually, one connection between this story and the story of the wall. Rocks.
Soon after the fire, I rented a cottage near San Gregorio, and I made it my
assignment to walk the beach every day. I think you know, beaches are tonics,
and I sorely needed to keep moving or die. I began to tire of the beach at San
Gregorio, though, and I began to wander south, eventually to discover the beach
where we do the house-burnings. For a man desperately seeking respite, that
beach was a godsend. The sandstone cliffs were high and grand, and blocked out
the treacherously evil world, leaving me alone with my thoughts. And I began to
find some fascination with the rocks that washed up at the ocean’s edge. I
began to take interesting specimens home, and found a guidebook so I could put
names to their faces. Rocks were something I had never really considered
before. I began to notice that a lot of my fellow rockhounds were older men,
and came to the conclusion that this interest was related to an increasing awareness
of mortality. Rocks are the oldest things that we come into contact with, and
they are everywhere around us.
You’ve seen
how it is on that beach. The surf can be savage, especially in a storm. I found
additional diversion in the objects that washed up. Pieces of sea glass, the
occasional Japanese net float, life jackets, surf boards, a paddle, a buoy –
one time an entire rowboat. Having no desire to drag a boat up a trail, I left
it there, and the next day it was gone. I indulged in the happy vision of some
local teenager finding it on Pescadero Beach and rowing it all around the
lagoon.
On a day in
late autumn, I was walking along the shore, returning to the trail, when I
spotted a yellow rope sticking out of the sand. Well! Naturally I had to inspect,
and when I gave it a tug, up came one corner of a fishing net. Well of course then I had to find out what was in the
net. Problem was, the net was buried in a layer of rocks just beneath the sand.
I set to work digging it free, but I kept jamming my fingertips against the
rocks. It was pretty brutal. And it was getting dark. And cold. A jogger
cruised by, giving me a look like I was crazy. Then I caught a sharp edge with
my index finger and began to bleed.
None of
this mattered. Certain treacherous thoughts kept me from leaving that beach. If
I came back the next day, the net, like the rowboat, would be gone. If I read
in the papers about some surfer digging up Jimmy Hoffa’s mummified corpse. Or a
Japanese sub from WWII. Or a monstrous fish long thought to be extinct.
So I dug.
And I pulled on the net. And dug some more. And shook my aching fingers, tossed
aside a thousand pebbles, and cursed. And dug some more. I was almost set to
call it a night when I gave a powerful, pissed-off yank and it all came up:
sand, rocks, fishing net, and one blue-and-white, mid-sized plastic cooler.
Well
whoop-di-freakin’-do. Right? Local Man Unearths Pastrami Sandwiches. But of
course by then I had to know the
exact depth of my defeat, what species of moldering, chitter-infested former
picnic lay inside. So I held my breath and gave the latch a tug. A quick check
with my keychain flashlight revealed beer. To be exact, a twelve-pack of
Budweiser. My relief at the absence of spoiled foodstuffs introduced a very bad
idea into my head. I was going to get
something for my labor.
I rescued a
can from the soggy, disintegrating carton, reached for the tab and found
nothing but smooth surface. So I turned it over and found the same thing. It
was like finding a baby with no belly button. Then I noticed how light it was –
not at all like something holding a liquid. I tried the flashlight again, and
found a seam across its midsection. I gave a nudge here, a tug there, then
grabbed the bottom half as I unscrewed the top. I pulled the two halves apart
and discovered that each contained a tightly packed roll of paper. Prying the
top roll from its container, I saw the face of Benjamin Franklin and nearly
passed out.
I lugged
the cooler to the top of the trail, set it on my passenger seat and drove home.
When I arrived, I had to remind myself that a man carrying a cooler is not an unusual or suspicious sight. Once
inside, I locked myself in the bathroom, shut the window and counted my booty.
Two hundred and twelve thousand dollars.
The next day,
I worked up the nerve to abandon my cooler – deep in the corner of my bedroom
closet – while I went to the library at Half Moon Bay to search the newspapers
for any crime that might match up with my treasure. I found nothing. Then I
checked out every book I could find on crime in general and bank robberies in
specific. When I got home, I allowed myself one quick peek at the green, just
for reassurance. I immediately made it a rule: one peek only, once a day, and
only when no one else was around.
About one
thing, I had already made up my mind: I was keeping it. Screw this bullshit Boy
Scout ideal of turning it in to the authorities. This came nine months after
the fire, and it provided more than just a little karmic payback. It convinced
me that the world was not composed entirely of treachery and disaster, that to
every great tragedy there might be an unexpected windfall, a sunny day that
takes away your breath. Maybe a beautiful woman who makes your heart do
gymnastics. And that these – or even
the possibility of these – were the reasons you went on living.
So I took my robbery books
to the general store, ordered a huge cup of java and dove in. The patterns were
immediately clear. Those who gave themselves away did so in the classic ways:
rivalry with cohorts, too many witnesses (too many mouths) and, primarily,
ostentation. Blessed with a situation in which I was absolutely alone in the
world, and had no witnesses to my find, I had only one problem to prevent: no
showing off. And I had one quite famous example to follow: The Great Train
Robbery, in which the British perpetrators kept their secret for decades simply
by giving away no sign of financial gain.
I kept my
job. I kept my little cottage. For the big layouts, I continued using my
checking account. But for everyday expenses, I dipped into the cooler.
Groceries. New tires. Dinner on a Saturday night. Only a psychic could have
detected a difference in my spending patterns – and even that could be
explained by a larger-then-expected insurance settlement.
Meanwhile,
my checking account grew, and eventually I was able to move to Aptos, to take
on the mortgage payments for this house, to pay for tuition and textbooks, and
eventually to earn my psych degree at UC Santa Cruz. After that, I became a
life coach.
Suzanne and
Jack are both feeling a little astonished and disoriented – and halfway
expecting Ben to confess that he made it all up. This is not the kind of thing
that happens in the life of a real person. It’s apparent from Gina’s bemused
expression that she has already heard the story. Ben is taking in their
reactions with an excited attention; he has obviously had few opportunities to
relate this particular series of events. He takes a sip from his wine and
plants it on the table, signalling the second phase of his presentation.
“So here’s
where I get all Wizard of Oz on your ass. I have had occasion to give out
portions of my cooler fund to noble causes. One of these was Barbie, when she
first moved to New York to further her career. The money comes with the
understanding that it will be used in the same manner that I used it. Just for
the everyday stuff. You want a new car, you save up your own money, and write a
check from your account. No spending large amounts of cash. No ostentation.
Jack
realizes that Ben is giving them instructions.
He feels a flush of heat rising to his face, and takes a sip of wine just to
have something to do. Ben shifts so he’s facing Suzanne across the table.
“Suzanne, I
don’t need to explain my decision to include you. You are extraordinarily
talented. Your pursuit of your dream is both inspiring and courageous. It was
the news of your recent travails, in fact, that inspired me to fast-forward
this meeting. I was originally going to wait until after the wedding. But when
I saw how dire your situation was…”
“I…” That’s
all she can get out, because she’s crying.
“I’m giving
you twenty thousand dollars. I’m giving the same amount to Jack.”
Despite
proverbial mandates regarding gift horses, Jack is unable to keep the word from
his lips. “Why? I mean, why me?”
“Well may
you ask. Your cause is not so clear-cut as Suzanne’s. But I do believe there’s
something equally of value at stake. I realize that our New Year’s escapades
cost you any future you might have had with numbers. But I think that you don’t
appreciate your own talents. I am a pretty keen observer of human intuition and
empathy, and am generally able to recognize those who have exceptional skills
in these areas. That’s you, Jack. I believe you were a savant just waiting for
the right opportunity to blossom – for the right disaster to thrust you out of
your comfortable existence. The way you took in all of these different lives –
the monkey, the burner, the opera patron – mulled them over, adapted to them,
understood them. In an earlier time, you would have been drafted into a life as
a shaman.
“So that’s
what I’m doing. I’m drafting you. And I know all about your house, your
mortgage, your severance deadline. That’s why I want you to move here, to this
house. I’ll be moving to Gina’s ranch, but we’d prefer to hang onto this place
till the market improves. So we’d like you to be our caretaker, to keep my
mineral squares polished – and to keep a room open for Suzanne, whenever she’s
in town. Meanwhile, I would ask that you take some classes in psychology,
occupational therapy, sociology. Find your niche. You have talents, Jack, and
I’m betting the remainder of my treasure on your devoting those talents to the
betterment of your fellow Californians. Is this all acceptable to you?”
This should
be a difficult and complicated decision. This should take days. But the
barometer in Jack’s head has lined up to perfection, and the gathered light
from 15 mineral squares is brewing inside his brain.
“Yes.”
Ben raises
his glass and stands. Suzanne and Jack follow.
“To your
futures. Your brilliant futures. Gina – the containers?”
Gina goes
to the pantry and returns with two ordinary-looking red aluminum toolboxes.
“So not
that I don’t appreciate it, honey, but any reason for this fancy-ass lunch?”
Jack gazes
past Audrey’s shoulder at the pier outside. A squad of sea lions are waddling
along a series of rafts, begging scraps from the Cannery Row tourists.
“What?
Can’t spend a Benjamin or two on my honey?”
Audrey
smiles in her most appealing fashion. “I’m just concerned about your near
future.”
“Came into
a windfall,” says Jack. “I’ll be staying at Ben’s place for the next couple of
years. Rent-free. And I’m going back to school.”
“Psychology?”
Jack halts
a forkful of salmon. “Someone told you?”
“We’ve all
known it, Jack. For a long time.”
Jack
laughs. “Well I wish someone woulda told me.”
Audrey
chuckles. “We didn’t want your girlfriend to get jealous.”
“Numbers?”
“Long may
she weep.”
V
Beltaine
Jack sits
in a big leather armchair, reviewing his mineral squares like a king surveying
his crown jewels. What makes him feel even more imperial is the occasional
glimpse of Audrey, shuttling between bedroom and bathroom, trying on clothes.
The day’s activities are both formal and casual, and Audrey is taking a
bicameral approach: one distinct outfit for each. Every three minutes, Jack is
treated to a new ensemble, like a pasha reviewing his harem. But Jack has a
major disadvantage: he is so enchanted by the contents, he couldn’t care less
about the packaging. This is not a problem for women. He has watched gal-pals
critiquing each other’s dresses with a frankness that would send a Marine into
tears.
Between
outfits, he reads from a psychology textbook, Mind in Motion. He was able to get in just under the wire for an
introductory course at Cabrillo College, and he can’t quite believe his luck.
The instructor, Paul Giacometti, is also the author of the textbook – but no
vanity project here, it’s used in colleges across the country. The man is
brilliant, and brilliantly funny. For a three-hour evening class, this is
crucial. Plagued by a down-cycle that hits every day at 7 p.m., Jack
occasionally nods off, anyway, but retains every shred of the lecture, as if
he’s just taking it in through the barometer.
The
students are accustomed to excitable continuing-ed types – going back to school being much more
stimulating than having been there all your life. Even so, he’s in danger of
developing a reputation. He chats with “Dr. G” after class, totes around
elective books from the library, and gives class-time answers so elegantly
constructed they may as well be converted to sonnets. He almost feels like he
should tone down his participation so as not to be labeled a showoff (or, God
forbid, a “tool”).
“Jack,”
said Dr. G. “Yours is an exceptional mind. God knows how you’ve come from the
world of accounting with so many intuitive skills. But I have learned not to be
surprised at anything accomplished by the human brain. I want you to do me a
favor, however. I know it’s tempting to back off during classtime, so you won’t
be seen as a teacher’s pet. Well, to put it in modern parlance, screw that. I
want to challenge these kids. Anytime I can take these ideas into a dialogue
with a talented student, it makes things that much more interesting. Who knows?
Maybe we can fool them into thinking they’re watching something on YouTube.”
Jack is
amazed at the feats performed by the human brain, and how quickly it has taken
the place in his heart previously reserved for numbers. As he waits for Audrey,
he re-reads the account of an author who suffered a stroke and lost all of his
language skills. The man painstakingly reconstructed them, using a completely
different section of the brain, and then went back to writing novels.
“So?”
She stands
at the end of the frosted glass table, wearing a black floor-length gown. The
fabric gathers at the center, just beneath her décolletage, and falls in smooth
folds to either side, a series of arched upside-down V’s, one within the next.
Jack is having a hard time finding his breath.
“That’s it.
That’s the one.”
It’s the
first of May, so naturally the weather is stunning.
“What is it
with you and that song?”
The trigger
between Kris Kristofferson and the Moss Landing straightaway has become so automatic
that Jack doesn’t even know he’s singing. And there’s one other connection.
This is the spot where the Imp of the Perverse made his first appearance,
daring him to slam into the grill of that approaching truck. Do that now and
the carnage includes Audrey. How horrible would that be? Throw in two beloved daughters. He still can’t imagine how
Ben made it out alive.
“Jack?”
Now he’s
whistling.
“Wow.
Sorry. I get so deep in my head these days I just end up being… rude.”
Audrey
snakes a hand into Jack’s hair and gives him a scalp-scratch. “My absent-minded
professor. Considering what day it is, I’ll let you pass.”
“It’s
momentous. Monumental.” Jack slips into a weepy falsetto. “My little boy,
getting married!”
Audrey
gives his scalp a push. “Goofball. I love you.”
She does
this all the time – inserts the three magic words where you least expect them.
It never fails to send a buzz through his neurons.
“Why, if I
wasn’t driving…”
“You’d
what? What exactly would you do?”
“I… I…”
“Oh, yeah.
Big talker. So easy to just begin your sentences and let the resident pervert
fill in the blanks. Well I’m not
driving, so I’m going to do this.”
She undoes
his fly, pulls out his prick and gives it a few tugs.
“I might
even do this.”
Audrey
arranges herself so she won’t muss her dress, ducks her head under Jack’s arms
and gives a few tentative licks before swallowing the head.
“Now I know
who you are,” he says.
“Mmm?”
“The Imp of
the Perverted.” He adjusts his left hand on the wheel, wraps his right around
Audrey’s upraised ass, and tries his best to focus on the road. Meanwhile, he
works up a story to tell the police, should that become a necessity.
“Audrey,
have you ever thought of getting married again?”
Audrey
turns her head to respond, looking very much like she’s talking into a
microphone.
“Is this
really the best time to discuss this?”
“You have a
distinct rhetorical advantage.”
“Good
point.” She gives him a squeeze, then continues her ministrations between
phrases.
“I do not
believe… that ‘the fourth time’s a charm’ is the generally accepted proverb…
Besides, you and I… have such a deep gravitational pull… that I am not
particularly concerned about making it official… Let’s give it… mmm… another
year and talk about it then. By the way…” She pauses both activities in order
to catch her breath. “I am not
telling this story to our grandchildren.”
The
combination of artful fellatio, thoughtful discourse, the open road and the
buzz from Audrey’s vocal cords has Jack close to coming.
“Audrey…
darling? We’ve got three lanes now. I think if you add some handiwork…”
Jack pulls
to the center lane, just in case, and he explodes into Audrey’s mouth. She
stays there a while, determined to keep him clean for the day’s activities.
Finally satisfied that she has dispensed with every available sperm, she
carefully tucks him back into place, just as a highway patrol car passes them
on the left. The driver, a steel-jawed white guy with the requisite police
mustache, gives a brief blast on the siren. The catch in Jack’s breath goes all
the way back to that sex-talk from his sixth-grade Sunday School teacher, but
when he looks over, the cop is giving him a shit-eating grin and a hearty
thumb’s-up.
Now he’s
got another challenge: keeping to the road as he and Audrey suffer one of those
uncontrollable fits of laughter. Once he recovers, Jack finds sand dunes to his
right and realizes they’re in Seaside, ten minutes past their turnoff.
“Looks like
we’re taking the back way, honey.”
Audrey puts
on a miffed expression. “I don’t know what
it is lately with you and directions.”
The road
from Monterey to Salinas has become one of Jack’s favorites, a series of long,
serpentine curves whose roadsides remain green for most of the year, thanks to
the invading fogs. They have taken it twice before from Audrey’s place to the
Monkey Tribe. Their little escapade, however, has cost them the cushion that
Jack so carefully built into their schedule, so they pull into the farm road at
the exact time reported on the wedding invitation. Both sides are filled with
parked cars all the way back to Gina’s house, so they have to park there and
take a hurried pace toward Ivan and Terra’s.
As they
near the hedges at the end of the drive, they hear live music. Jack spots
Suzanne, seated behind her keyboard at the far left corner of the lawn, wearing
yet another early-sixties dress, a black stripe working a spiral from shoulder
to hem against a white background. The lawn is striped in white plastic folding
chairs, twelve rows of ten each, with a wide center aisle. The left and right
margins are ringed by White Horse’s rockstacks, a half dozen on either side,
the size of humans. At the front, he has created a wide altar, ten stacks lined
up together like the pipes of an organ, fronds of pampas stationed like flags
at their bases. At the end of the aisle stand two figures, facing each other,
the left fashioned from light-colored rocks, the right from darker specimens.
Just to clarify the point, someone has affixed white and black ribbons to their
respective “necks.”
The place
is packed. Jack and Audrey slide into the back right-hand row. Jack notices
that the rockstack to his right is festooned with wildflowers, their stems
inserted into every available crevice, and takes a look around to see that all
the other stacks are similarly outfitted.
“Beautiful
flowers!” says Audrey.
This causes
the woman in front of them to turn around. It’s Constance.
“Thank
you.”
“Oh!” says
Audrey. “It must have taken you forever. They’re wildflowers, right?”
“Yes! Only,
wildflowers don’t keep like florist flowers, so I had to gather them all this
morning. Fortunately, I’m kind of a buff, so I know all the local colonies.
Let’s see…” She points to Jack’s rockstack as she names the varieties.
“California poppy, buttercup, Indian paintbrush, iris, larkspur, the very
specific Point Reyes meadowfoam, and, believe it or not – that plain little
yellow one there – the common monkeyflower.”
“Genius!”
says Jack.
“I thought
it was a nice touch. We had to take an extra trip to Moss Landing to get it –
it’s a marsh-dweller – but really, I had
to have it. You might have guessed this, but the strewing of flowers is a pagan
tradition for both weddings and May
Day, and we wanted to keep it as local and native as possible. Except for the
flower-girl petals – but even those are from Gina’s rose bushes.”
Willie
ducks his head into the conference and offers a not-so-subtle stage aside. “I
am so glad you two came along. She’s
been dying to tell someone all this
stuff.”
Constance
slaps Willie on the head and then kisses the spot that she slapped. The music
stops, and an extremely cute, befreckled redhead proceeds to the head of the
aisle, carrying a large wicker basket.
“Oh!” says
Constance. “That’s Terra’s granddaughter, Erin. Isn’t she a doll?”
Erin nods
toward Suzanne like a pro, and Suzanne lights into an unexpectedly Mozartean
divertimento, providing just the right playful air. Not happy to be a mere
postal carrier of petals, Erin dances and spins down the aisle, tossing
handfuls of red and white into the crowd, occasionally landing a few on the
actual bridal path. As she reaches the end, she turns the basket upside-down,
gives the bottom a thorough spanking to unloose all hangers-on, then accepts
her hard-earned applause and sprints offstage to her waiting mother.
Suzanne
waits a few seconds, nods toward someone in the farmhouse window, and launches
into one of her originals, “David.” The intro is a slowly rocking boat, built
on the particulars of Suzanne’s lush chords. She enters as if she’s halfway
into a conversation, asking questions of a one-man audience.
i am afraid
i have
nothing of worth to bring you
they all
say
i couldn’t
be the one
i am alone
with no one
to come beside me
all have
forsaken
and left me
with my thoughts
The chords
are thickening and building like stormclouds and now they burst into chorus,
Suzanne releasing long, angelic notes.
but you see
beyond my broken reflection
you see
behind my lies
you see
beyond our limitations
you see my
heart
The words
are too direct for poetry, but set upon the fingerbeds of the keyboard they become poetry. Jack has never quite
understood this process, and resolves to do some reading on it. Suzanne settles
to an instrumental, working the chorus in broad, spaced-out strokes, and Terra
appears at the front porch in a dress of kelly green, white and green ribbons
woven into her blonde ringlets. As she descends and crosses to the altar, Jack
realizes it’s the dress of the white queen from the New Year’s party, dyed
green. She comes to a stop between the matrimonial rockstacks and raises her
arms, evergreen ribbons trailing from her sleeves. The music stops.
“May the
place of this rite be consecrated for the forces of nature. We gather here in a
ritual of love, with two who would be wedded. Ben and Gina, please come forward
and stand before us.”
She reaches
into a velvet sack at her waist and extracts two brass discs connected by a
leather strap. She dangles them from the strap, lines up their edges and
strikes them together, sending a high, sweet tone over the lawn.
“Would you
please stand?”
As he
rises, Jack is surprised to hear neighing, and the stamping of hooves. He turns
to find two tall horses at the end of the driveway, their manes braided with
ribbons of red and green. The far horse bears the auburn coat that must belong
to Fajamur’s Rose. Its companion is a chestnut with a white diamond at the
center of his forehead.
Suzanne
launches a repeat of her chorus as the horses advance to the aisle, revealing
their riders. Atop the chestnut is Ben, wearing a black western suit with a
felt hat, a vest with embroidered patterns in gray, a long silver watch-fob,
and a bolo tie looped through a rhombus of turquoise edged in silver. He looks
remarkably calm in the saddle, thanks to much personal tutelage from the bride.
Atop
Fajamur’s Rose, naturally, is Gina Scarletti, wearing a cream-colored pantsuit
with ivory cowboy boots, a gold necklace with a jade pendant, and a white
duster with Celtic curlicues in moss green. Her hair is tied back with a
scarlet scarf that trails behind her in the wind.
“The scarf
is a Celtic thing,” whispers Audrey. “The bride always wears one article of
scarlet.”
“Blood,”
says Jack. “The maidenhead.”
“No
maidenhead today. Although her name is
Scarletti.”
“Touché.”
The horses
arrive at aisle’s end and settle in as Suzanne returns to the conversational
tone of her verse.
i am aware
of your
creative hand
but I don’t
understand
why you’d
form me to your plan
i am amazed
as you draw
me closer to you
and my
performance yields
to your
consuming love
She returns
to the chorus, then weaves it all into a grand, peaceful fade of sound as Ben
and Gina smile at her from their mounts. Terra begins the applause – mostly to
let everybody know it’s okay to clap – and the congregation follows.
Ben
dismounts. He hands the reins to a teenage blonde in British riding gear, who
leads the chestnut to a spot at the far right. The groom offers Gina a hand
down (though she hardly requires one), and she hands the reins to a brunette,
similarly attired, who leads Fajamur’s Rose to the left. Terra unties a stick
from her waist and extends it toward Ben, who digs into his vest pocket,
extracts two gold rings and slips them over the tip.
“A willow
wand,” whispers Audrey.
Ben and
Gina stand before their effigy rockstacks and face each other. Ivan, clothed in
a dark green robe, comes to take the willow wand and hand Terra her bodhran.
She lifts the two-headed tippler and brings it down over the drumface,
unloosing a brief roll of thunder before each of her declarations.
“Be with us
here, O beings of the air. With your clever fingers, tie closely the bonds
between these two.”
Roll.
“Be with us
here, O beings of fire. Give their love and passion your own all-consuming
ardor.”
Roll.
“Be with us
here, O beings of Earth. Let your strength and constancy be theirs for as long
as they desire to stay together.”
Now she
strikes the bodhran with three resounding thumps.
“Blessed
Goddess and Laughing God, give to these before you, your love and protection.
And all those gathered shall say, ‘Blessed be.’”
The response
is a dud – only a dozen in the crowd realize they’re supposed to repeat the
phrase. So Terra restates it.
“And all
those gathered shall say, ‘Blessed be!’”
The
congregation shouts back like they’re at a pep rally: “Blessed be!”
“That’s
better,” says Terra. She hands the bodhran to Ivan, takes back the willow wand
and returns to Ben and Gina, who are trying very hard to look at each other
without laughing or crying.
“Place your
right hands over this wand and your rings, his hand over hers.”
They do. Ben
takes the opportunity to sneak a kiss.
“Now, now,”
says Terra. She sets herself and speaks to the couple.
“Above you
are the stars. Below you are the stones. As time passes, remember: Like a star,
your love should be constant. Like a stone, your love should be firm. Be close,
but not too close. Possess one another, but be understanding. Have patience
with each other – for storms will come, but they will go quickly. Be free in
the giving of affection and warmth. Make love often, and be sensuous with each other.
Have no fear, and do not allow the ways or words of others to give you unease,
for the Goddess and the God are with you, now and always."
Terra
raises her eyes toward the audience and says, “The handfasting ritual now calls
for a pause of five heartbeats.”
She places
a hand on her chest and waits, then takes a ring from the wand and hands it to
Gina.
“Is it your
wish, Gina, to become one with this man?”
Gina smiles
and answers, “Yes.”
“Then place
the ring upon his finger.”
She does
so. Terra hands the second ring to Ben. The ring holds a green gemstone.
“Is it your
wish, Ben, to become one with this woman?”
The
enthusiasm of his “Yes!” brings titters from the audience.
“Then by
all means,” says Terra, “place the ring upon her finger.”
He does so.
Terra holds their hands together and addresses the congregation.
“Do any say
nay?”
She waits
two heartbeats, then raises her arms to the sky. “Then, as the Goddess and the
God and the Old Ones are witness to this rite, I now proclaim you husband and
wife.”
Ben doesn’t
wait for an invitation. He jumps to Gina’s side, drops her into a dip and gives
her a good working-over, to a burst of applause and hoots. Ivan dashes behind
the altar, jimmies with something, and two dozen burly pigeons take to the air,
circling the farm three times before departing for Monterey.
“Well!”
says Jack.
“The whole
damn coop,” says Audrey, and smiles.
Suzanne
starts into a stride piece that turns out to be “Makin’ Whoopee.” Ben and Gina
separate and race to their respective mounts. They saddle up and trot away down
either side of the lawn, then meet up at the head of the driveway and gallop
away toward Gina’s house.
“Fan-tas-stic!” says Jack. “What a show.”
As the
dustclouds settle, Terra gives the bodhran another roll, and Suzanne stops
playing.
“Friends!
We are not finished. Our resident artist, White Horse, constructed this ring of
rockstacks as a one-time installation. He now asks that we destroy them. But
please do not bury any small children!”
Terra sets
down the bodhran and stands behind the bridal stack as Ivan stands behind the
groom. They count three and send them crashing together in a merry clatter.
Troll and White Horse see to the altar, toppling the dozen component stacks
toward the matrimonial pile. All around the lawn, the guests shout with glee as
they knock their stacks to the ground. Jack turns to get in on the fun, but
finds his stack has been neatly dismembered by Constance and Willie, who are
now hopping around it in a victory dance.
“Goddamn
Monkeys,” he mutters.
The crowd
is near-riotous with destructive energy, but fortunately other activities have
been prepared. Next to the gate of the spirit garden, the Monkeys have erected
a Maypole. The pole itself turns out to be a ten-foot bay branch that Ivan
discovered, freshly fallen, while hiking in the woods. They have posted the
base deep into the ground and affixed two dozen multicolored ribbons to the
tip. After much coaching from Terra, they manage to get one person assigned to
each ribbon, twelve of them parading in a clockwise circle, the other twelve
walking counter as they weave in and out of the opposing traffic. A few pileups
ensue, and much giggling, but soon they strike a good rhythm, and as Suzanne
kicks in with a mazurka the rainbow weave works its way quickly down the pole.
Jack spends five minutes navigating a ribbon of lollipop red, then waves Audrey
over for relief. Audrey hands it over to Constance, and returns to find Jack
giving Suzanne a secret salute.
“All right,
pal. What’s this thing between you and Suzanne? You seem awfully chummy lately.”
“We’re
planning a bank robbery. Gonna take the money and hide out in Cancun.”
Audrey
slaps him on the rump, which really is no punishment at all. A welcome
distraction arrives in the person of Gina Scarletti. Audrey goes for the ring
finger.
“It is an emerald. Stunning!”
Gina, who’s
been smiling for hours now, manages to smile even wider. “When you marry a
rockhound, a boring old diamond just ain’t gonna cut it. Fits the May Day
thing, too. Nice work with the pole!”
Jack kisses
her on the cheek. “You’ll be happy to know, there were no fatalities.”
“Thank goodness.”
“Hey Gina?”
says Audrey. “I was curious… You’re pretty new to all this hippie-dippie Monkey
stuff. How did you settle on a pagan wedding?”
Gina
laughs. “First, may I say how happy I am that none of my devoutly Catholic
relatives are alive. But you know? I’m kind of secular to begin with, and then
I had a long talk with Terra, and when she showed me those vows… they’re
gorgeous. I did make a couple of changes. Some of the language was a little too
Dungeons and Dragons. And there was this reference to ‘non-believers.’ I get
enough of that crap from the
Catholics. The other thing was, so much of our wedding traditions are pagan to
begin with. Like the cake ceremony – the knife represents the man entering the
woman…”
“Yowza!”
says Audrey.
“I know. And the tossing of the garter was
the way that an outgoing priestess would pick her successor. Oh look! Here
comes the cake now.”
“Have you
and Ben made any agreements?” asks Jack.
“One smudge
apiece.” She trots to the table, where Ivan is preparing an enormous burnt
almond cake for penetration.
After the
Maypole ribbons have reached their end – a squad of four guests gathered around
the pole lacing the last few feet by hand – Willie and Troll dig the pole out
of the ground and hoist it onto a pair of brackets on the garden fence. It
looks like a prize fish. Then they rake the dirt while others bring rocks from
the ruined stacks and build a ring ten feet in diameter. The rest of the
Monkeys attack a woodpile under the carport and eventually assemble a huge
stack of timber at the center of the ring.
When
everything’s set – Willie and Ivan lurking with cans of lighter fluid – Terra
stands before the ring, plays a roll on the bodhran and throws in one of her
keening soprano yelps. The party guests -–many of their formal outfits gone
completely to pot – gather before their priestess like a football squad
awaiting a pep talk.
“The
Beltaine – bel for ‘lucky,’ taine for ‘fire’ – was lit on May Day in Ireland
and Scotland to celebrate the conquering of the dark by the light, as the
months of sunshine finally arrived to warm the fields. The Druids believed the
Beltaine to be a magical act, an attempt to bring the sun’s light down to earth.
The May Day celebration signalled a time of fertility and unbridled
merrymaking. Monkeys?”
The Tribe
unlooses its usual squealing chatter.
“Thank you.
And later, young and old would spend the night making love in the Greenwood. Or
perhaps, the Scarletti Ranch.”
She stops
for the expected hoots and hollers.
“Most would
say that our bride and groom are in the September of their lives. But tonight,
at least for one night, we invite them to revisit the green landscapes of
spring, a time of new and invigorated love. Huzzah!”
The crowd
echoes “Huzzah!” Ivan and Willie pour their lighter fluid along the base of the
pile, and Terra uses a long barbecue lighter to begin the blaze. Amid the
shouts, Jack hears Terra say, “And let’s hope to God the fire department got my message.”
Beer and
wine and herb circulate through the gathering as they stand around the
Beltaine, talking, laughing, yelling, dancing. At sunset, most of them have
disappeared inside, to a very promising pot-luck buffet. Jack finds Ben
standing near the garden gate, watching two stripes of tangerine, the sun
sinking below the horizon, the fire sinking into coals.
“Oh Captain
my Captain!”
“Young man
knows his Whitman,” says Ben.
“I shorely
do.” He gives his mentor a hug and holds it for a while. “I can’t tell you how
happy I am for you.”
Ben smiles.
“Multiply that by ten, and you have the groom’s happiness. That creature in
white atop that monumental piece of horseflesh. That’s my wife, for Christ’s sake.”
“You are
one lucky bastard.” He claps Ben on the shoulder and turns to study the coals,
a broad ring of pulsing orange hearts.
“Ben, I
don’t know if I ever told you the story…”
“How you
were going to kill yourself?”
Jack
laughs. “You’re a goddamned Jedi, old man. Yes. I was going to hurl myself over
the Multnomah Falls.”
“Wow!
Pretty dramatic for an accountant. Why didn’t you do it?”
“I had one
leg up on the wall when a beam of sunlight landed on a rock mid-falls. It
looked like a burning house. I think what saved me was curiosity. I had to
figure out if that meant something.”
Ben looks
at him with something like wonder, the fireglow murmuring in his eyes. “That’s
it, then. You are a shaman.”
“But…” Jack
pauses to assemble what he wants to say. “I guess I wanted to thank you for
saving my life. When I saw your grief at the beach that day, when you told me
‘Don’t you dare,’ I knew that I would never respond to that impulse again.”
Ben throws
a pebble into the coals just to kick up a spark. “That’s funny. Here I thought
it was you who saved my life.”
“Really?”
“Really. I
knew you were a special one the moment I saw you on the beach, watching that
wounded bird. I’ll bet you didn’t think I remembered that.”
“No. I
didn’t.”
“I thought,
that man is both troubled and magical. And as I worked with you, and brought
you to all these strange new worlds, I took the fascination in your eyes and
used it to rekindle my own spark. Even the insightful and enlightened among us
can forget to look at things with fresh eyes. It was soon after your entrance
into my life that tremendous things began to happen to me, concluding with the
vision of Gina Scarletti dressed as Cleopatra. Perhaps without my new eyes, I
would not have seen her.”
“No,” says
Jack. “You would have seen her if she
were dressed as Ichabod Crane.”
Ben lets out
the old husky laugh. “The prophet speaks. But the thing is… I was ready for her. I was prepared to
consider the previously unthinkable idea of being utterly happy.”
Ben puts
his left hand on Jack’s elbow, and with his right gives him an old-fashioned handshake,
the gesture of his generation.
“One more
thing, young Jack. I know that this career-switch will cause you some
consternation. It’s a little scary, re-making yourself. And you probably think
that making love to Audrey LaBrea is not enough to justify your existence. But
let me tell you this: making love to Gina Scarletti is more than enough to justify my
existence. So I think you’re wrong.”
He stops
and cocks an ear toward the house.
“What?”
says Jack.
Ben takes on the look of a
starving man who smells barbecued ribs. “Drums!”
“Well let’s
get to it!” says Jack. He turns toward the porch.
“Wait!”
says Ben. “They say that a man going on a long journey, or a dangerous
undertaking, can better his chances by jumping three times, backwards and
forwards, over the Beltaine.”
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