“It burns a hole,” she said, “right down through.”
“Yeah? Well well.”
Well well—he’d wondered if she could be persuaded. And so she could. But, he guessed, not without making it into something cosmic. Also rapturous, tragic, et cetera. Anything but casual. Not that casual existed when it came to this kind of business. Boring and silly, or dramatic and painful. Those were the existing categories.
That was the moment when she’d reached across him to cut on the light and got him thinking back to that morning in Beirut. He’d started messing with her again, turned on by the passion, his own wounds, darkness, raw smell of blood, all of that. Carrie responded for a minute, but then she brought it around again: “Clarence, it’s the Lord dealing with me. I don’t know what I was thinking. Look. My life ain’t mine.”
She sat sideways on the bed, letting her hair hang down between her knees, a regular portrait of dejection.
“I believe I’ll start smoking again,” he told her. “It gives me something to do when assholes are going crazy all around me.”
“I had to lose my life in order save it.”
“Hmm…I can’t exactly decode your shit.”
“Look,” she said miserably, “I don’t belong here, I belong to the Savior. In your fancy flesh-world I’m nothing but a ghost.”
“I respect that. Really, most highly.”
“Get down and pray with me.”
Together they knelt by the bed, both of them naked, exactly, Meadows suddenly devised, as you should be naked to kneel down and pray. Carrie reached her hands out before her across the mussed sheets and knotted her fingers together tightly. So Clarence did that too. He felt a draft on his ass. “Dear Father in Heaven, Lord of all,” she said.
“Could we do this in silence?” he asked.
She whispered, “Sure.”
And before a minute had passed, the silence had turned into a charged beautiful moment, and Meadows cleared the spit from his throat and said, “Hey…why don’t you put on your high heels.”
She said, “Okay.”
And then they made love.
“Don’t expect me ever to do that again,” she said immediately afterward, before she’d even caught her breath.
“You are one spun-out monkey,” he said.
“Don’t you see? This is just a flesh feast.”
Flipping and flopping. As quick as they turned him on they switched him off. “I tell you this in a friendly way, Carrie. I liked you the second I met you. But you won’t be seeing much more of me, because you’re dizzy.”
“I understand,” she said.
Then he’d slept, and been visited by the dream. And now he was awake and trying to shake it.
He felt better as soon as he stood up. He walked into the front room. He’d splurged on this two-room suite, but it was either that or leave Carrie’s little boy out in the car by himself. The kid slept now on the couch before the TV, which was running, and on whose screen a weather woman paced sideways from one end of the country to the other, pointing at geography with a stick and smiling falsely, bravely, as if the weather was hopeless. Meadows sat down naked in a cold vinyl chair. The news came on. Not much today. The president planned to make a speech. The pope was in Tanzania. And a hundred American hostages had made it home from Baghdad. Meanwhile, Meadows felt like a hostage himself. Maybe he should get back on the interstate. He wouldn’t sleep any more tonight anyway. If this was the eleven o’clock news, and if he left before the end of it, then by dawn he’d have reached Gualala. And would no doubt start designing reasons to leave.
They’d probably get around to it, but they hadn’t yet passed a law against coming and going. He could visit two days in Gualala and then head back south. He’d stay up there just long enough to make sure Nelson hadn’t starved the garden, and spend some time down in the woods with Billy; with straight-out, mechanical problems and the tools for solving them. Billy was a healing influence, because he lived entirely out of his own stores. Self-reliance, it went deeper than mere independence—it meant, by Clarence’s reckoning, complete balls-out freedom from any other fucker’s will. People wouldn’t have believed it about him, but Meadows was familiar with Emerson’s essays. He revered them, but he hadn’t read them lately. His stomach lurched when he considered the waste of the last few years.
It was a fact that occasionally something, some vague ripple, surged forward out of the past. And then you were dealing with despair.
Cath, his wife—ex-wife—had given him the Emerson book. He’d been fascinated with her when they’d met, because she read such things and seemed to live in two worlds at once—the world of her life, and the world of books in which she found her life explained. Eventually Meadows had seen that the two worlds came together somewhere inside of her and made for tremendous strength when it came to making large decisions, as, for instance, the decision to turn her back on her husband.
And occasionally what surged forward was panic—what is he doing floating around out here in his life without Cath? Seven good years, two on either side of his thirty-six-month naval tour. A couple terrible months off of some legal problems he’d had in San Luis Obispo, when an indoor pot-growing operation in the valley north of there had turned sour. He’d been accused of murdering his two partners and burning up their bodies in the greenhouse to conceal the crime—groundless charges, brought against him just for the nuisance of the thing, and dropped as soon as he’d bankrupted himself on attorneys. Cath knew he hadn’t done it, but she left him anyway. It had been three years since they’d spoken to each other. He was ashamed right now that he’d let his mind go back to her. He tried to console himself that everybody had at least one. One unforgettable wife. One still-burning flame.
He shut the TV off and waited a few minutes in the dark before going back to the bed and laying himself down, as quietly as he could manage, next to Carrie.
He put his hand against the back of her thigh just to feel the warmth. But she was awake, and as soon as he touched her, said, “No.”
He lay still, paralyzed in a way with solitary embarrassment, and reflected to himself that it wasn’t working with people. So he moved instinctively in the direction of avoiding and silencing them. That’s why he’d taken to travelling to foreign waters, to foreign beaches evoking a seamless sameness underneath all thought, taken to spending his winters in foreign places where the language eluded him.
That was supposed to be bad. You were supposed to find people and connect with them—and that was supposed to be good. But what could be worse than this, right here, tonight?
Yet a weight began to lighten in his heart. He had a feeling this was the last straw. Maybe, just by coincidence, for both of them. Possibly she too was facing with relief the prospect that this absurd game between the sexes had finally tapped itself out.
Maybe he should give it all up. Join a monastery. Or confess one or two things to the cops. Certainly he’d strayed far enough to merit a good long stretch in their custody. In either place he might finally come to value discipline, and then go on to make something of himself.
He’d always hated discipline, but he felt he’d met its essence in certain moments of his military training. Discipline consisted of keeping himself separate from whatever thoughts might be passing through his head. He needed that detachment now because he seemed to be reacting to the sadness of turning thirty, and still being at zero, with funky spasms and flashes of religious light. He’d set himself up for all this in ways that were now obvious: spending long days alone on this infinite-feeling highway with nothing to do but point the car and sit there and let his head trouble him with riddles, breaking the trip in odd empty places where he sat by the road to watch the desert or farmland drift around him like a sea, stopping off sometimes just south of Gilroy at a Holiday Inn tricked up to duplicate a Spanish mission, complete with a small chapel whose atmosphere worked on him, just as Karl Marx had predicted, like dope. Surfing was also a case in point. What had s
tarted out as an adrenaline thrill among teenagers constantly partying had turned into a cycle of lonely vigils in a huge blue medium that sometimes lifted and carried him—in the direction of all the beach parties and the sandy skin of young girls, yes, who smelled like marijuana and tasted like beer and salt; toward the high times and flickering fires on the beach, yes; but he never seemed to reach them anymore. He’d at first reached them relentlessly, spent the days racing over the ocean and the nights lying under the stars and seducing some of the world’s loveliest seventeen-year-old females. But he was beginning to reinterpret these triumphs in a way that made them look like failures. Only the waiting, never the waves, had been real. And now it seemed that with the hot little girls he’d only engaged in repeated sorrowful transactions, trading their fake lust for his fake affection.
He wouldn’t have bothered to suggest this woman here was any different, not essentially anyway. But she was more grown-up and felt much more real.
He didn’t know what, besides that fact, had made him decide to follow this thing out. It had just been that kind of day, the wind making the ordinary sand harmful, filling the air with pain, and so on. This had the taste of a regular adventure. He takes on the woman and child forever maybe, or they rob him or he gives them all his money.
As he left the next morning, Clarence said to the kid: “You got a Social Security card? No. You’re not a citizen of anywhere yet. You don’t know how rare you are.”
The boy crawled around on the floor looking for one of his new shoes. Meadows could see it under the couch but didn’t feel like telling him where it was. Carrie sat all dressed up on the bed with her legs tucked under her and her feet, in those red pumps, sticking out sideways, her hands clasped before her, while she looked straight at him and wept. Not trying to make him pay; just honestly grieving.
He stood in the doorway feeling happy that he wasn’t connected with these two. He could make any gesture he wanted to right now. He could piss on the floor. Start a fire in the wastebasket.
“Well,” she said, “you fixed my car.”
“I was born to mess with loose connections.”
“Thank you. You saved us.”
“Where do you get your religion?”
“From the road. From the radio. TV sometimes.”
“You’re not a member of a church?”
“The road is a church.”
“I guess it is,” Meadows said.
Gassing up at the Big Chief a few minutes later, Meadows watched her across the distance of several hundred yards as she came out of the ground-floor suite and packed up little Clarence and drove her limping Dodge from the parking lot of the Super 8 Motel. Tumbleweed bounced along the pavement beside them. A buzzard’s shadow zipped across their path. It was like that.
Not a half hour later, while the day widened over the interstate, he overtook them in the northbound lanes and thumbed the button on the wheel. But the horn didn’t work. Some sort of short circuit, it wouldn’t be much trouble to fix.
He reached the Montanan’s clever cap from the passenger seat and put it on, pulled the brim down low, looked straight ahead as he passed them.
He took 580 when it forked off Route 5 and drove west and down among the Altamont windmills, hundreds of them turning fast, like white whirligigs, on either side of the highway.
The whole thing…he’d been right at the edge of seeing it. Sometimes it seemed as if the outlines, blurred by the activities of dust, suddenly went away. Then the true picture showed itself, utterly simple and vast.
The Mercedes wouldn’t make it over the second bad rut—and a lot of new ones, some almost gullies, had him surmising it must have rained—so Clarence left the car at the head of the drive and came down through the woods walking and blowing his trumpet. He heard deer skittering through the brush, running from the trumpet’s echo at their backs and then panicking to discover the sound suddenly forward of them. He was thinking maybe Billy would hear the horn and meet him halfway. He’d want to hike back up to see the car anyhow. But Billy hadn’t showed by the time Clarence made the cabin.
On the porch Billy stooped above a bucket and splashed rain on his face, waking a little late this morning and still smiling at his dreams.
“Dude! Señor Clarencio! How many women did you soil?”
“Dude!—funny you should ask.”
“I bet. I bet. Did you just hit the coast?”
“Yesterday afternoon.”
“Welcome home.”
“Your road’s worse than ever. Did it storm much?”
“Inch and a half one night last week.”
“I got a 190SL sitting up top of the hill.”
“I’m right with you.”
They took Billy’s International. Clarence drove. “This shit will make you a believer,” he said, plunging into and over the gouges in the track.
“Yeah. One of these days,” Billy said, but he’d been saying so for years and the road just got worse. “Did you hear about the raids in Humboldt?”
“I think it’s over.”
“They spent two weeks tearing up people’s gardens.”
“Yeah. It doesn’t bear on anything I’m into.”
“Really?”
“Really. It was ordered in Washington. Just to show the coke countries we’ll deal with it and no mercy.”
“I felt that whole thing happening, man. I felt a burning sensation in my soul. I wouldn’t want them here.”
“If they were coming here at all, they’d have made it simultaneous.”
“Those G-men are poisonous evil fuckers.” Now, in sight of the convertible Mercedes, the tone of Billy’s voice changed. “They don’t know it, but they are.”
As he walked around the car and looked it over, Billy was plainly so happy he couldn’t discuss the feeling. “Does the top work okay? Any holes?”
“Have to wait for the next rain. She’ll leak in a dust storm is all I know.”
The vehicle was a 1957 with a white paint job over the original blue, faded right through in places, but showing no rust. Billy jacked the hood and held it aloft with one hand and politely refrained from mentioning the black oil sprayed all over the engine compartment.
“Must be some serious warpage there,” Clarence acknowledged.
“It’s not just a gasket thing?”
“I replaced the gasket. It’ll take a whole new manifold.”
“Oh well,” Billy said.
“I figured what the heck.”
“Damn right what the heck,” Billy said, and screamed, “A ONE-NINETY ESS ELL!” and the region immediately surrounding them clenched, paused, then resumed its chattering and foraging. “Let’s go,” he said, and opened the driver’s door.
“You go,” Clarence said. “I gotta see your brother.”
Your fifty-five wheels drive me crazy, Clarence thought: Nelson Fairchild had a sharp mind which he’d twisted, using pills and liquor, into an instrument of torture.
Out of this garden they’d shortly be rich, he and Fairchild. Anyway he himself would see out the year in style. Fairchild would go on sweltering in a self-dug hole. Nelson hadn’t learned to live without—hadn’t grasped the utter necessity of living outside the need of—the great slavers: money, women, euphoria.
Therefore every place was the wrong place.
“Do you know what I would like not to do? I would like not to hang around here,” Nelson said.
“Relax. Hypnotize yourself. Be like them…” Buzzards floated lightly as ashes overhead.
“I’m trying to segue into a confession of what’s happening.”
The breezes through the canyon stoked the gray embers over which Meadows was baking up half a dozen buds in a pie pan. They’d had to move upwind of the plants, closer to the lip and overlooking a great, heady drop toward the creek—the treetops looked from here small and soft, almost like moss—because of the overpowering pungency of the marijuana flowers.
“Do you or do you not have your bong?”
r /> Fairchild handed him the small portable water pipe from his pocket.
“Let’s engage in a little quality control.”
“Control? I wish.”
“You do appear sort of messed-with.”
The boo looked to be drying too quick. Meadows unsnapped the canteen from his belt and doused his hands with water and fluttered his fingers over the coals, steaming the buds a little. One of the buds had blackened on the griddle, and quickly he pinched it up into the pipe’s bowl and held it out smoking to his companion, who hunched and moved sideways like an owl on a branch.
“No, thanks. Not in my present state of mind.”
“You feeling psychotic?”
“Oh, I’ve been having a bad day.”
“Here. Drugs make it all better.”
“I think actually it’s adding up to a bad life.”
“Well, in that case, drugs won’t help. You need a hobby.”
“Can we be serious?”
“We’re testing the dope, Nelson.”
“Sorry.”
“Let’s smell the roses.”
“When I was at school in Carmel there were guys who’d swagger into the bathroom and get you in a headlock while you were innocently standing there trying to pee.”
“Hey, lemme ask you something—”
“Here, just grab my head. Hurt me.”
“—I heard you were the student-body president back in high school. That true?”
“President of the Young Democrats. And my senior year I was editor of the Wharton School’s newspaper.”
“You need an engaging pastime.”
“The Crimson Handjob or some such.”
“You could buy my board and take up surfing.”
“I think we should get out of here.”
“The thing is if you start to understand a sport, you start to understand life.”
“A philosopher of games!”
“Even a spectator sport. I watch wrestling on cable every Thursday night regular as I can.”
“Are you kidding? That stuff is rigged.”
“And everything else isn’t?”
Fairchild laughed and swiftly darkened. “This camp smoke is visible to observers.”
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