October Light (45 page)

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Authors: John Gardner

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BOOK: October Light
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“I like you a lot,” the Graham boy said.

“Listen,” the girl said, “I like you
too
.” She looked at him hard.
“Really.”

The boy with the long black hair—Albert—came vaguely from the restroom and started across to the table then paused, undecided, looking at his friends. He changed his course and came slanting toward the booth, dragging a chair with him. “Mine I join you?” he said. It was barely intelligible. When he sat he'd have fallen if Emily hadn't caught him, laughing.

“Albert, you're drunk,” she said.

“When I ever make it with you I wasn' drunk?” he said. He put his hand on her muscular upper thigh and she gently pushed it off. As if to make up for it, she held her drink to him, Scotch or Bourbon. James filled his wineglass, then on second thought let it stand and filled his pipe. Like a mother, Emily was helping Albert drink.

“You got every right to kick her out, by tunkit,” Bill Partridge said.

“It's hahd to say,” he said. His vision was giving him a good deal of trouble. He looked at Henry Stumpchurch, closing one eye, hoping to get Henry's judgment, but Henry was asleep. Merton sucked at his bottle, then set it down. Albert leaned his head against Emily's shoulder. Gently, laughingly, she pushed it away, balancing him like a toy, and got up to put a quarter in the jukebox. What came out was violins. She came back and picked her glass up, drained it in a gulp, and went back to the bar to fix another. When she was seated with them again, she smiled and moved her chair close to Albert's, then moved his head, with her two hands, to her shoulder.

Merton said absently, studying his bottle, “It's a rare man would put up with it.” He nodded to himself.

“She does her pot,” James said, “—or did till it come to that TV.”

Bill Partridge looked angry. “Hell, James, you
know
that ain't true.”

“What?” he said.

“She tricks you, James,” Sam Frost said gently, evading his eyes. “You know she does. Been doin it all along.”

James raised his glass, waiting. It struck him that he had, in fact, known it all along.

“Never trust a woman,” Bill Partridge said. “It's like the time Judah Sherbrooke found his wife in the pottin shed—”

“What you mean, tricks me?” James said. Behind him—troublesome background noise—the fatter of the Bennington girls was saying, “That's a very positive feeling, really.”

“Tell him,” Merton said.

“Well, you know how it is,” Sam Frost said. “The little woman's got a habit of listening on the phone.”

James drank, then waited. He stared at his knuckles to keep things in focus.

Sam looked at the table. “That time you took that ad in the
Pennysaver
for someone to help with chores … You know why you never got a nibble?”

He waited on, his body growing heavy, heating up with rage.

“Ever time your phone rings
our
phone rings,” Sam said, apologetic, “and naturally the little woman listens. You know how women are. Sister of yours claimed you was legally required to hire by ‘fair employment.' Wouldn't consider a soul that wasn't Negro or female.” He shook his head.

“She'd nevah do that,” he said. “Sally's a fair-minded woman, always was.” His teeth clamped tight. She'd do it. Hell yes! His childhood burst back over him, his big sister Sally running to the mailbox ahead of him, looking at his mail before he could. He remembered her selfishness, how if she ever got a candybar she'd share it with nobody, sneak it away to her room and you'd never know she had it. He'd never have done such a thing in a hundred years. It was animal, someway. Turned his stomach. He remembered how she lied. He'd never known such a liar, he could hardly believe it—neither could his mother or father. He remembered how she'd sneak away to Ralph Beeman and later Horace, go climbing out the window in the middle of the night, and offer him, her little brother James Page, cash money to keep her secret. He'd refused, indignant, and she'd sworn she'd break his arm. He'd believed she'd do it—he believed it yet—and so, though he'd have told if they'd asked him straight out, nobody asked and, ashamed of himself, he
had
kept her secret. He remembered how she'd flounced. She'd been a beauty in those days. Young gentlemen came flocking like dogs around a bitch in heat. And he remembered how she'd sing dirty songs in the kitchen when she was taking her bath, songs their parents didn't know were dirty, though
he
did, because she'd explained them to him, teasing him with sex the way she teased all the others:

I have a little cat, and I'm very fond of that,
But I never had a bow-wow-wow!

Washing her armpit, she'd raise her arm so that her titty showed, and knowing he was watching she'd roll her eyes at him and wink. Their mother had had some sense of it. “James,” she'd snap as if the whole thing was his fault—he was five, maybe six—“get out there and bring in that kindlin!” James Page's face was burning now, less at his old sister's treachery than at his own pure damn stupidity. Lucky he hadn't known it when he chased her up the stairs with the fireplace log. He'd've popped her one certain.

“That's nothin,” Merton said. He sighted down the hole in his beer bottle.

James' heart was hammering, painful.

Stumpchurch slept on.

Sam Frost took a breath, looked sadly at the ceiling. “Little woman was in charge of the fund raisin for the Republican Potty,” he said, and sighed again. “Called you up for help and it was Sally answered.”

“Go on,” James said. His legs began to tremble.

“Said you want home,” Sam Frost said, mournful. “It want the truth. Little woman could hear you hollerin in the background.”

“She wouldn't do that,” James said, eyes bugging.

Sam looked at the table. “Mebby not, mebby not. Mebby the little woman heard wrong.”

James Page turned his head away, shudders running over him like electric shocks. The Graham boy had his arm around the taller girl, his hand half an inch below her breast. “You know what I'd really like?” he said.

“What would you?” she said.

“I'd really like—” He moved up his hand. “I'd
really
like—”

“We're from different worlds, my darling,” she said, and closed her eyes.

Bill Partridge lit his pipe. “Sister of mine did a thing like that,
I'd shoot her,” he said.

3

James Page had no slightest intention of shooting his sister when he started
up thhe mountain, though he did have—teeth chattering, legs and arms
atremble—the fixed intention of knocking the door down and belting her one.

Driving wasn't easy. The truck kept wandering all over the road,
lighting up weeds and trees and fences first on one side, then on the other, and the wind
the wind hurled leaves and twigs at his windshield—the rain had stopped, for the time
being—and every now and then a gust would catch hold of the truck and throw it
sharply toward the ditch. He hung onto the steering wheel with all his might, his left foot
riding the clutch, his right foot unsteadily pumping the accelerator, and he kept one eye
squeezed tightly shut since the wine, besides souring his stomach and giging him a
headache, made him see things in twos. for all his difficulty staying on the road, he was
driving so fast he scared himself. The road leaped toward him as if the truck were doing
ninety, and once when he went off the shoulder he cried out, yet he refused to slow down,
driven on by anger, merely spit to the left and clenched his teeth all the harder and hung
on more tightly ot the steering wheel. Just past the Crawfords place a motorcycle all at
once came out of nowhere, roaring straight at him, so frightening the old man that his hair
stood on end. he jerked the steering wheel and plunged off the road on the right-hand side,
throwing up leaves left and right like snow, then jerked back just before he came to a tree
and shot clear over off the left-hand side—the motorcycle wobbled crazily, slid, shot
by him, then righted and steadied itself and roared on down the mountain—and in the
nick of time the old man jerked the wheel again and got back onto the road unharmed, or
almost unharmed, the left from headlight cocked at an angle, the fender acrumple from
snapping off a post. “God damn son of a bitch!” he screamed, and he was shaking
from head to foot, yet even now he drove faster than he dared, like a man gone insane.

that, of course, James reflected, dubious. Mr. Rockwell put people in his pictures—real people, many of whom James Page had known: his cousin Sharon O'Neil a time or two, Lee Marsh's wife and Mrs. Crofut, once or twice Grandma Moses herself. No harm. But of course Mr. Rockwell had always meant no harm, which was why he'd achieved it. He'd meant to paint the way things could be, he'd explained once to the schoolchildren, and to paint how some of the time, if people will stay awake, things actually are. People always thought of him as a happy man, and he had been, in a way—all his friends right there around him, and getting paid for doing what he would've done anyway—but there was another, less cheerful side to him, they said in Arlington; there were times he seemed weighed down with grief, they said, and James had some evidence that it was true.

Perhaps all Vermonters were inclined to be pessimists, but the painter had not only expected the worst, he'd brooded on it. “The country's ill,” he'd said one time, sitting on the porch at Pelham's place, James Page standing below him with a glass of ice-tea. (James had come to Pelham's delivering wood, and Mrs. Pelham had asked him if he'd mind a little tea.) “The country's ill,” the man had said. “Christianity's ill. Sometimes I feel a little shaggy myself.” They'd all laughed, including the painter. But a few minutes later, getting into his truck, James had looked at the tall, skinny artist, and he'd understood by the expression on the man's face in repose that he'd been dead serious, at least about the country and Christianity: that for all his easy ways, his security in this safe, sunlit village in Vermont where they were still in the nineteenth century, he was worried, smoking day and night just like Ginny, and now and then frowning the way Ginny would sometimes do when she wasn't aware you were watching her. The man had painted as if he had a devil in him, so people said that knew him, sitting or standing there legs akimbo, straight pipe clenched in his long, yellow teeth, small blue eyes glittering. Painted as if his pictures might check the decay—decay that, in those days, most people hadn't yet glimpsed.

“Tell me the story about the parson,” Dickey said.

James turned, eyebrows lowered, shifting his gaze reluctantly from his daughter's face. “Parthon?”

It was a warning he should have heeded. On the hairpin curve half a mile from his house he gave a hard jerk to the steering wheel and nothing happened—rain had made the concrete pavement slick—and as if in slow-motion he saw the guardrail coming, white as old bone, and with his heart in his mouth, spitting to his left and yelling “Shit, shit,
shit!”
he felt himself going over, the guardrail parting like papier-mâché, and knew that, incredibly, it was curtains. Whether he was thrown from the truck or blown from it when it hit and exploded he would never know; all he knew was that when he came to, blinking, the truck was noisily burning, fifty feet below him, farther down the mountain, and he was sitting, with no damage but a bleeding nose, some bruises and cuts, in the crotch of an apple tree. He was still sitting there, whimpering and swearing—it was raining again, and cold as December—when Sally's minister and the black-eyed Mexican came and found him.

“Good God,” the minister said, not swearing but expressing a firm belief, shining the flashlight up into his eyes as if he were an owl on a rafter, “it's a miracle!”

“Miracle my God damn ath,” he said, crying. “Pure luck.” He felt his mouth with his hand and realized he'd lost his teeth.

The priest was laughing—standing there with his arms hanging down, black eyes glittering from the glow of the fire—laughing at him. “Good luck or bad?” he said. When he thought back to it, later, James Page could see that the Mexican had meant no real harm by it. He must've looked a sight, sitting there in the rain with his shoes off—where they'd gone he had no idea—his false teeth missing, scratches going out from his mouth like a clown's painted frown. Still laughing, the Mexican reached up toward him as his father had done, more than two-thirds of a century ago, inviting him to jump. “I can manage,” he said angrily, but found he could not and, in spite of himself, took help.

When he was on the ground, standing in the ice-cold wet in his socks, tears still streaming down his face, he stared at the fire, his jaw working, his legs so trembly he could barely stand up, and saw his whole life there, going up in flames. “Damn truck want even paid for,” he wailed.

“Oh come on now, James,” Sally's minister said, “that truck's as old as I am!”

“Want
paid
for, I told you,” he said, turning on the man, enraged.

“Well, you're still alive. That's all that counts.” “Ith it?” he yelled. “Ith it?
Ith it?
We'll
thee
about that!” What he meant by it the blind fools had no idea. They understood merely that the accident had made him temporarily crazy, as indeed it had, he himself would know later. What he meant was that his heart had gone black as pitch, and for good reason: the truck was uninsured. He'd worked all his life like a God damn slave and he was poor as a churchmouse, too poor to buy insurance for a God damn used truck, and sick and old and full of pain besides; all that had once made him think life worthwhile was gone, vanished as if it never had been: he'd killed his own firstborn miserable son and would have shot himself then if it hadn't been that others were dependent on him; and these smug, rich preachers could stand looking down at his life on fire, stand there in their God damn shiny shoes and their citified suitcoats, immigrants both of them—one of them for sure—living off their wholly fictitious God and the fat of the land, laughing while his God damn life burned up, and above them on the road people gawking like his ruin was a sideshow at the fair, carlights and a blue police-car flasher lighting up the mountain and the cemetery perched among the trees above, stones just the color of the guardrail he'd smashed—under every tombstone the remains of some poor, once-unhappy human being—think of it! think of it!—a thousand, thousand cemeteries, and under every stone in every one, some poor damn bastard who'd lived a life of, for the most part, misery, lied to and cheated and teased by false hopes … What he meant was: he had decided to shoot his sister.

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