Authors: Michelle Huneven
Inspired, Lewis devised a routine. Every night, after AA meetings at the farm, Lewis drove in to Buchanan, to Denny’s, where he sat in booth twelve. Six days a week, this booth was in Phyllis’s section. Phyllis was a skinny bottle-blonde with a chronically bloody nose caused, he was certain, by snorting methamphetamines by the spoonful. Not that he had any proof, but this theory explained her low weight, her frequent trips to the restroom, and her edge, although she was nice enough to him. Phyllis didn’t care if he kept the booth all night. She sat across from him for brief spells, during which she doled out her life’s story in terse sentences, which he, in turn, jotted down and fashioned into a poem. He considered including it in an appendix to his paper “Found Elements in Poetry, Art, and Architecture.” He called the poem “Shit, Yeah.”
I married at fifteen.
Of course I was pregnant.
Did you really have to ask?
You’ll meet Ralph one of these nights
I can’t find a babysitter.
He looked like a lizard when he was born.
Long and lipless.
You bet I’m divorced.
He was a college man, too.
Bad news with a big mouth.
He had forcible sex with my sister.
And my mother.
And me, too, of course.
If that counts.
Rape. Right.
You
are
smart.
He said he’d kill Ralph if I left.
No kidding, I believed him.
His hands had a life of their own,
Snapped off doorknobs.
See this nose?
Feel it.
Feel that?
That’s just how it healed.
One night I put ant poison in his food.
Shit yeah, he got sick.
What’d you expect?
He ate ant poison, for chrissakes.
Phyllis read it over several times. “Pretty bitchin’ poem,” she said.
L
EWIS
wore pressed khakis. A bright white T-shirt. A black linen sport jacket. Black sneakers. His hair was pulled back in a ponytail. In the porch light, framed by the doorway, his face had a carved, princely look.
“Want to get some dinner?” he asked.
“I already ate.”
“I thought we could go to Buchanan. Eat dinner and catch a movie.”
“Wish I’d known. I wouldn’t have eaten that lousy
torta.”
“We can still catch a movie.”
“Come inside,” Libby said, “so I can think about it.” Three steps into the trailer, she stopped. “Maybe you should go along without me.”
He frowned, as if he couldn’t quite see her.
“I’m tired. It’s almost nine. This doesn’t feel good.”
“I’m doing the best I can, Libby. I’ve just been getting work done. I called you, didn’t I? Tonight I decided to take a break. I wanted to do something with you. Take you out for a change.”
“How ’bout letting me in on these plans, so I know better than to eat dinner by myself?”
“I’m sorry. I don’t know what the fuck I’m doing, in case you didn’t notice. I’m no good with this dating stuff. When I used to drink, whatever happened, happened. This is all new to me, doing things consciously. I don’t have the rule book.”
“It doesn’t take much imagination,” Libby said evenly. “If you want to take someone out, you arrange it ahead of time.”
“It wasn’t that premeditated! At eight o’clock, I finished at the damn laundromat. I had clean clothes. I put them on. Lawrence just gave me this jacket. I put it on. And that’s when I thought, Now I can take Libby out. Now that I look halfway decent. Was I supposed to squire you around town in ratty jeans and a T-shirt?”
“Well, I can’t go. Not tonight. I have to get to bed early. I told Joe I’d take him fishing tomorrow at five.”
Lewis looked around him. “May I stay?”
“If you want.” She went into her bedroom and undressed, then washed her face and brushed her teeth. Out on the deck, she found Lewis lying fully clothed on the futon, smoking. She slipped under the covers, curled away from him on her side. The night was noisy with the high-pitched oscillations of mosquitoes, distant traffic, birds and beasts scuttling in the trees. Lewis switched on the clamp lamp and picked up a book he’d left next to the bed, whose pages had grown fat and wrinkly in his absence. After a while, he turned off the light. He stood, took off his jacket and slacks, and hung them carefully over the railing. He crawled in beside her. “Oh, Libby,” he said. “Come over here.”
Her eyes were open. She didn’t move. He clambered over her, kissing her shoulder, licking her neck. “Come on,” she said. “I have to sleep.”
He rolled away. She thought for sure he would leave, fell asleep expecting it, and was wakened, hours later, by a shriek.
She thought at first the noise was a large tree falling to the ground, or a coyote’s otherworldly wail. Only after she’d seized his arm did Libby realized the sound came from Lewis. He was gasping for breath, covered in sweat.
“Nightmare,” he panted. “A curly blond wig was eating me.”
She held him, could feel his heart pounding in his chest. “You’re okay,” she said. “No wigs in sight.”
He smashed himself against her, inadvertently pinching one of her breasts. “Ouch,” she said.
“I was driving a car that was getting more and more stripped down, until it was more like a go-cart. The steering wheel was a screwdriver stuck in the column. I couldn’t steer away from the wig.”
Libby tried to free her breast. “Don’t leave,” he said.
“I’m not going anywhere. You’re squashing my breast.”
“I hate it when you freeze up,” he said.
“Me? Me?” Libby was pushing at him as hard as she could.
“You turn into a rock, a frozen rock in a frozen sea.”
“You’re hurting me!” she hissed, and finally he gave her some room. “And you’re the one who froze me out all week.”
His arms started tightening again. “I know I’m a jerk. An incredible jerk. God. It wears me out.”
“It wears
you
out?” Libby cried. Then, “For God’s sake, stop squeezing!”
“Sorry.” His body was flush up against hers. “Listen.” He spoke into her ear. “I want things to be different. I don’t know if I can manage it, but I want it.”
“Different how?”
His lips moved for a while before any sound came out. “I didn’t expect to feel this way. So attached to you. To like you so much.” As if moved by his own declaration, he began nudging her legs apart. “I don’t want to lose you,” he said. “You’re so good for me.”
They began making love, though all she could think about was how much sleep she wasn’t going to get before she had to pick Joe up. And Lewis was so tireless that she finally had to tell him to go ahead, come without her.
Then he wanted to gab. “Did you ever notice how the Big Dipper is always up there, hogging the sky? Every time I’ve slept over here, that’s all I see,” he said. “We should build a deck on the back of your house, maybe we’d see some other constellations. You awake?”
She didn’t answer, hoping he’d get the hint.
“I could live here, Libby. I could—if you let me.” A moment later, he was snoring.
She was too tired to think clearly. Maybe she didn’t understand some vital part of the evening. The word “scimitar” drifted into her mind. With a scimitar, she could slay Lewis. Off with his head. Like in those fairy tales where the princess sends her suitors on impossible errands. Harness the four winds. Suck up the Seven Seas. Eat a stableful of beef, including hide, tails, and hooves. Everyone who fails is slain. With a scimitar. She did want to live with Lewis. Maybe. Or slay him with a scimitar. One, the other, or both. No way she could fall asleep.
But she must’ve dozed off, because when she next looked at her watch it was 4:12 and Lewis’s side of the bed was empty. He was in the kitchen, dressed and pacing before the gurgling coffee maker.
“Would it be okay if I don’t go fishing?”
“I wasn’t expecting you to,” she said. “Only hoping.”
“I can’t take Red and Joe together, the whole father-son thing. Red’s so nervous around the kid.”
“I don’t think Red’s coming,” she said.
“Yes he is. He told me yesterday.” Lewis poured a cup of coffee.
Libby sat in a chair. She could go to sleep right here. Or maybe she was asleep. She felt a dry peck on her cheek and the door clicked shut.
At the lake, Libby huddled in her flimsy folding chair. The water was very low. Birds pealed in hunger. Red and Joe were a hundred yards away, slip-stitching the air with their fishing lines. A chilly breeze tempered the sun. A bird flew past like a black, disembodied hand waving across the horizon. Bye, bye, bye, bye.
R
ED CAME
into the office and started picking things up—a geode paperweight, a pamphlet, a pencil sharpener in the shape of an orange—and putting them down. Lewis, updating files on the computer, couldn’t concentrate. “You okay?” he asked.
“Fine, fine.” Red lifted a vase off the mantel, studied its bottom. “So what’s cooking with you and Libby these days?”
Lewis groaned. “What, she been boohooing to you?”
“I was hoping we could all have dinner tonight.”
“I haven’t talked to her for a few days.” Lewis squinted at the ceiling, counting how many. “Four or five days,” he added. “I’m probably in purgatory. She wears me out, Red.”
“Relationships do take a lot of time and energy.”
“I hate that word. And besides, it’s not
relationships.
It’s Libby. She so damn oversensitive.”
“
She’s
oversensitive?”
“What, you think
I’m
oversensitive?”
“You?” Red pretended to think. “Oh, no, never. Not you.”
“Trust me. You should try her out for a few days. You’d see.”
“Why doesn’t that strike me as such a grisly proposition?”
Lewis snorted. “I wish you would take her off my hands. You’d be doing me a big favor. You take Libby and I’ll become the monk.” When Lewis stood, his leg was asleep, and he staggered around the desk. “You’d come crying to me, man.” Lewis yawned. He was at Denny’s last night until past three, then up at seven. He wished Red
would leave so he could take a nap, but His Corpulence lowered himself into an armchair and slumped in thought. Lewis straightened stacks of paper, banging the edges against the desktop with percussive glee.
Red glanced at his watch. “Joe’ll be landing any minute.”
“Joe?” said Lewis. “Oh, yeah. Gone, huh?”
“I’m never ready to put him on that plane.”
Red’s sadness was unnerving. Lewis was supposed to be distressed, and Red the steady one. “Hey, Redsy. You want a cup of coffee?”
“I’m about coffee’d out, thanks.”
“You want to, uh, take a walk or something?”
“I thought it’d be good to have dinner with friends, that’s all.”
“Well, all right, already. Why didn’t you say so?” Lewis called Libby at work. “Red Ray requests the honor of your presence at dinner tonight.”
“Tell him thanks,” Libby said, “but I need more notice.”
“Come on, where’s your sense of adventure?”
“I can’t jump every time you say so, Lewis.”
He looked at Red and rolled his eyes. “I’m not asking you to jump—Red is. Just kidding. But seriously, Joe left today and the old man’s moping.”
“I still need advance notice.”
Lewis said, “Okay, okay,” and “Goodbye,” and slumped in the armchair opposite Red’s. “I told you. She’s on a kick.”
“Oh, well.” Red was philosophical.
Now, they were two men with bad posture lost in thought. Lewis had to admit sitting there like that felt good. Guts bulging, mouth-breathing: a form of meditation for sunk white guys. All they were missing were a couple six packs and a wide-screen TV. Red’s eyes grew hooded and even his freckles started to fade. They sat without moving for six, nine, twelve minutes, until the phone rang.
“If Red’s really sad,” Libby said, “is that invitation still open?”
R
ED AND
L
IBBY
took both jars of eggs, the neglected and the cradled, and examined them endlessly, as if rotten eggs were the
prima materia.
The eggs that had been held were now dark gray, with a rim of white froth. The yolks, when they rolled into view, were still
a deep yellow, but their sacs were pocked with gray lesions, knots of stringy membrane. When Lewis shook the jar, there also seemed to be something solid in there, too, like butter forming in a jug of cream. “A whole clot of rot,” he said.
“Joe says it’s the Alien,” Red said.
“A homunculus in vitro,” said Lewis. “The child of your applied touch and affection.” Lewis picked up the other jar. “Ah, the slower, younger brother.” The control eggs still looked like regular eggs, only slightly cloudy, with the smallest fringe of now-pink froth. “I wonder which jar stinks worse.”
“We should probably set them lightly in the Dumpster,” Red said, “and have done with the whole business.”
“Seems a shame to waste two perfectly good Mason jars,” Libby said.
“And a much greater shame to bring them this far and never smell the final product,” said Lewis. “Let’s take them out to the groves and throw rocks at them. Then run like hell.”
“What a boy thing to do,” said Libby.
Lewis held a jar at eye level. “Mustn’t we conclude from this that human touch is harmful and degrading? That prolonged contact leads to putrefaction?”
“You would say that,” Libby said.
A
FTER
dinner, they walked around the boarded-up bungalows so Libby could look them over and pick the one to move onto her land. On closer inspection, the houses were sturdy, simple, ingenious. The architect, said Red, had been a friend of the ranch’s former owner, and he’d used structural elements he’d seen in India and Japan: raising their elevation, extending the beams, placing windows for cross-ventilation. The same architect, said Red, eventually designed the first motel in San Luis Obispo. To open a door, Red pulled out nails with a cat’s paw. He swept a powerful flashlight over bubbling wallpaper and boarded windows. The air was sour, musty, old.
Lewis started sneezing and had to wait outside. He watched as stars came out in the soft violet sky: a tricky pastime. A tiny sparkle. Then nothing. Nothing. Nothing. He’d look away, glance back, and there it was, a pinhole to another, brighter realm.
Libby came up behind him, snaking her arms around his waist.