Suicide Woods

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Suicide Woods Page 6

by Benjamin Percy


  He upended the coffee table. He tore gouges in the couch from which white foam bulged like striations of fat. He knocked over the fridge with a crash that shook the floor. He bashed the faucet from the sink and water shot to the ceiling and there flattened into a shimmering circle that rained down on him. He ripped pictures off the walls. He brought the pistol to his mouth and gnawed at it until his tooth broke. In this way he went through every room, his throat ragged with screaming, his great shaggy arms slashing this way and that. And then, with nothing left to destroy, he shoved through the door, splintering it from the hinges.

  In the yard he swung his arms at nothing. He wanted only to hurl the weight of his anger, to make bloody ribbons of the air. When that exhausted him, he fell to all fours and clawed and chewed at the dirt as if to blame it for being a reminder of what form they would all—whether man or beast, stone or plant—return to eventually. And then he was done, utterly spent and alone. His tongue lolled as he breathed raggedly in the half dark, a muddy line of drool streaming from his mouth.

  From the forest came the sound of an owl hooting. Its low-noted voice sounded sad. Or maybe the bear was so sad that everything would seem that way to him, from the reddest sunset to a toad crushed into gravel by a tire.

  He looked back at the house. It looked too small to have ever contained him, and it seemed to shrink farther and farther away as he watched it now and understood that he was falling out of one life and into another. He held out his ruined hand toward the house, then let it fall.

  He would not resist the pull he felt. He followed his mandate and went crashing and yowling into the dark mouth of the forest to which he belonged.

  Dial Tone

  A jogger spotted the body hanging from the cell tower. At first he thought it was a mannequin. That’s what he told Z-21, the local NBC affiliate. The way the wind blew it, the way it flopped limply, made it appear insubstantial, maybe stuffed with straw. It couldn’t be a body, not in a place like Redmond, a nowhere town caught between the Cascade Mountains and the desert flats of eastern Oregon. But it was. The body had a choke chain, the kind you buy at Pet Depot, wrapped around the neck and anchored halfway up the steel ladder that rose twelve hundred feet in the air to the tip of the tower, where a red light blinked. Word spread quickly. And everyone, the whole town, it seemed, crowded around, some of them with binoculars and cameras, to watch three deputies scale the tower and then descend with the body in a sling.

  I was there. And from where I stood, the tower looked like a great spear thrust into the hilltop.

  Yesterday—or maybe it was the day before—I went to work, like I always go to work, at West TeleServices Corporation, where, as a marketing associate, I go through the same motions every morning. I hit the power button on my computer and listen to it hum and mumble and blip to life. I settle my weight into my ergonomic chair. I fit on my headset and take a deep breath, and, with the pale light of the monitor washing over me, I dial the first number on the screen.

  In this low-ceilinged, fluorescent-lit room, there are twenty-four rows of cubicles, each ten deep. I am C5. When I take a break and stand up and peer into the cubicle to my right, C6, I find a Greg or a Josh or a Patti—every day a new name to remember, a new hand to shake, or so it seems, with the turnover rate so high. This is why I call everyone you.

  “Hey, you,” I say. “How’s it going?”

  A short, toad-like woman in a Looney Tunes sweatshirt massages the bridge of her nose and sighs. “You know how it is.”

  In response I give her a sympathetic smile before looking away, out over the vast hive of cubicles that surrounds us. The air is filled with so many voices, all of them coming together into one voice that reads the same script, trying to make a sale for AT&T, Visa, Alaska Airlines, or Sandals Resorts, among our many clients.

  There are always three supervisors on duty, beefy men with mustaches. Their bulging bellies remind me of feed sacks that might split open with one slit of a knife. They wear polo shirts with “West TeleServices” embroidered on the breast. They drink coffee from stainless steel mugs. They seem never to sit down. Every few minutes I feel a breeze at the back of my neck as they hurry by, usually to heckle some associate who hasn’t met the hourly quota.

  “Back to work, C5,” one of them tells me, and I roll my eyes at C6 and settle into my cubicle, where the noise all around me falls away into a vague murmur, like the distant drone of bees.

  I’m having trouble remembering things. Small things, like where I put my keys, for instance. Whether or not I put on deodorant or took my daily vitamin or paid the cable bill. Big things too. Like, getting up at 6:00 a.m. and driving to work on a Saturday, not realizing my mistake until I pull into the empty parking lot.

  Sometimes I walk into a room or drive to the store and can’t remember why. In this way I am like a phantom: someone who can sink into the floor or float through walls and find myself someplace else in the middle of a sentence or thought and not know what brought me there. The other night I woke up to discover I was standing in the backyard in my pajamas, my bare feet blue in the moonlight. My hands held a shovel.

  Today I’m calling on behalf of Capital One, pitching a mileage card. This is what I’m supposed to say: Hello, is this ________? How are you doing today, sir/ma’am? That’s wonderful! I’m calling with a fantastic offer from Capital One. Did you know that with our no-annual-fee, no-hassle-miles Visa Signature card, you can earn 25 percent more than regular mileage cards, with 1.25 miles for every one dollar spent on purchases? On top of that, if you make just three thousand dollars in purchases a year, you’ll earn twenty thousand bonus miles!

  And so on.

  The computer tells me what to tell them. The bold sections indicate where I ought to raise my voice for emphasis. If the customer tries to say they aren’t interested, I’m supposed to keep talking, to pretend I don’t hear. If I stray too far from the script and one of the supervisors is listening in, I will feel a hand on my shoulder and hear a voice whispering, “Stay on target. Don’t lose sight of your primary objective.”

  The lights on the tops of cell towers are meant to warn pilots to stay away. But they have become a kind of beacon. Migratory birds mistake them for the stars they use to navigate, so they circle the towers in a trance, sometimes crashing into a structure, into its steadying guy wires, or even into other birds. And sometimes they keep circling until they fall to the ground, dead from exhaustion. You can find them all around our cell tower: thousands of them, dotting the hilltop, caught in the sagebrush and pine boughs like ghostly ornaments. Their bones are picked clean by ants. Their feathers are dampened by the rain and bleached by the sun and ruffled and loosened and spread like spores by the wind.

  In the sky, many more birds circle, screeching their frustration as they try to find their way south. Of course they discovered the body. As it hung there, turning in the wind, they roosted on its shoulders. They pecked away its eyes, and they pecked away its cheeks, so that we could see all of its teeth when the deputies brought it down. The body looked like it was grinning.

  At night, from where I lie in bed, I can see the light of the cell tower—through the window, through the branches of a juniper tree, way off in the distance—like a winking red eye that assures me of the confidentiality of some terrible secret.

  Midmorning, I pop my neck and crack my knuckles and prepare to make my sixty-seventh call of the day. “Pete Johnston” is the name on the screen. I say it aloud—twice—the second time as a question. I feel as though I have heard the name before, but really, that means nothing when you consider the hundreds of thousands of people I have called in my three years working here. I notice that his number is local. Normally I pay no attention to the address listing unless the voice on the other end has a thick accent I can’t quite decipher—New Jersey? Texas? Minnesota?—but in this case I look and see that he lives just outside Redmond, in a new housing development only a few miles away.

  “Yeah?” is how he answers the
phone.

  “Hello. Is this Pete Johnston?”

  He clears his throat in a growl. “You a telemarketer?”

  “How are you doing today, sir?”

  “Bad.”

  “I’m sorry to hear that, sir. I’m calling on behalf of—”

  “Look, cocksucker. How many times I got to tell you? Take me off your list.”

  “If you’ll just hear me out, sir, I want to tell you about a fantastic offer from—”

  “You people are so fucking pathetic. You are the worst of the worst.”

  Now I remember him. He said the same thing before, a week or so ago, when I called him. “If you ever call me again, you worthless piece of shit,” he said, “I will reach through the phone and rip your throat out. That’s a promise.”

  He goes off on a similar rant now, asking me how can I live with myself, if every time I call someone they answer with hatred?

  For a moment I forget about the script and answer him. “I don’t know,” I say. It’s an excellent question, one I struggle with every day.

  “What the—?” he says, his voice somewhere between panicked and incensed. “What the hell are you doing in my house? I thought I told you to—”

  There is a noise—the noise teeth might make biting hurriedly into melon—punctuated by a series of screams. It makes me want to tear the headset away from my ear.

  And then I realize I am not alone. Someone is listening. I don’t know how—a certain displacement of sound as the phone rises from the floor to an ear—but I can sense it.

  “Hello?” I say.

  The line goes dead.

  Sometimes, when I go to work for yet another eight-hour shift or when I visit my parents for yet another casserole dinner, I want to be alone more than anything in the world. But once I’m alone, I feel I can’t stand another second of it. Everything is mixed-up.

  This is why I pick up the phone sometimes and listen. There is something reassuring about a dial tone. That low purr, constant and predictable. More and more people are eliminating their landlines and going wireless, but I will never do that. I need the dial tone. It makes me feel connected, part of a larger stream of sound that tributaries the world. No matter if you are in Istanbul or London or Beijing or Redmond, you can bring your ear to the receiver and hear it.

  I listen to the dial tone for the same reason people lift their faces toward the moon when in a strange place. It makes them—it makes me—feel oriented, calmer than I was a moment before. Perhaps this has something to do with why I drive to the top of the hill and park beneath the cell tower and climb onto the hood of my Neon and lean against the windshield with my hands folded behind my head to watch the red light blinking and the black shapes of birds swirling against the backdrop of an even blacker sky.

  I am here to listen. The radio signals emanating from the tower sound like a blade hissing through the air or a glob of spit sizzling on a hot stove: something dangerous, about to draw blood or catch fire. It’s nice.

  I imagine I hear in it the thousands of voices channeling through the tower at any given moment, a digital switchboard, and I wonder what terrible things could be happening to these people that they want to tell the person on the other end of the line but don’t.

  A conversation overheard: “Do you live here?”

  “Yes.”

  “Are you Pete Johnston?”

  “Yes. Who are you? What do you want?”

  “To talk to you. Just to talk.”

  Noon, I take my lunch break. I remove my headset and lurch out of my chair with a groan and bring my fists to my back and push until I feel my vertebrae separate and realign with a juicy series of pops. Then I wander along my row, moving past so many cubicles, each with a person hunched over inside it—and for a moment West TeleServices feels almost like a chapel, with everyone bowing their heads and murmuring together, as if exorcising some private pain.

  I sign out with one of the managers and enter the break room, a forty-by-forty-foot room with white walls and a white dropped ceiling and a white linoleum floor. There are two sinks, two microwaves, two fridges, a Coke machine, and a SNAX machine. In front of the SNAX machine stands C6, the woman stationed in the cubicle next to mine. A Looney Tunes theme apparently unifies her wardrobe, since today she wears a sweatshirt with Sylvester on it. Below him, blocky black letters read, WITHCONTHIN. She stares with intense concentration at the candy bars and chips bags and gum packs, as if they hold some secret message she has yet to decode.

  I go to the nearby water fountain and take a drink and dry my mouth with my sleeve, all the while watching C6, who seems hardly to breathe. “Hey, you,” I say, moving to within a few steps of her. “Doing all right there?”

  She looks at me, her face creased with puzzlement. Then she shakes her head, and a fog seems to lift, and for the first time she sees me and says, “Been better.”

  “I know how you feel.”

  She looks again to the SNAX machine, where her reflection hovers like a ghost. “Nobody knows how I feel.”

  “No. You’re wrong. I know.”

  At first C6 seems to get angry, her face cragging up, but then I say, “You feel like someone is holding you down and poking you in the forehead or the chest over and over and over and over. That finger keeps tap-tap-tapping. Dozens of times, hundreds of times, thousands of times. You can feel the pain adding up, and you want to scream because you know that after a while that finger is going to jab through your skin and crack through your bone and finally dig all the way through you.” I go to the fridge labeled A–K and remove from it my sack lunch and sit down at a table. “Something like that, anyway.”

  An awkward silence follows, in which I eat my ham sandwich and C6 studies me closely, no doubt recognizing in me some common damage, some likeness of herself.

  Then C6 says, “Can’t seem to figure out what I want,” nodding at the vending machine. “I’ve been staring at all these goodies for twenty minutes, and I’ll be darned if I know what I want.” She forces a laugh and then says with some curiosity in her voice, “Hey, what’s with your eye?”

  I cup a hand to my ear, like: Say again?

  “Your eyeball.” She points and then draws her hand back as if she might catch something from me. “It’s really red.”

  “Huh,” I say and knuckle the corner of my eye as if to nudge away a loose eyelash. “Maybe I’ve got pink eye. Must have picked it up off a doorknob.”

  “It’s not pink. It’s red. It’s really, really red.”

  The nearest reflective surface is the SNAX machine. And she’s right. My eye is red. The dark, luscious red of an apple. I at once want to scream and pluck it out and suck on it.

  “I think you should see somebody,” C6 says.

  “Maybe I should.” I comb a hand back through my hair and feel a vaguely pleasant release as several dozen hairs come out by the roots, just like that, with hardly any effort. I hold my hand out before me and study the clump of hairs woven in between the fingers and the fresh scabs jeweling my knuckles and say to no one in particular, “Looks like I’m falling apart.”

  Have you ever been on the phone, canceling a credit card or talking to your mother, when all of a sudden—with a pop of static—another conversation bleeds into yours? Probably. It happens a lot, with so many radio signals hissing through the air. What you might not know is, what you’re hearing might have been said a minute ago or a day ago or a week ago or a month ago. Years ago.

  When you speak into the receiver, your words are compressed into an electronic signal that bounces from phone to tower to satellite to phone, traveling thousands of miles, even if you’re talking to your next-door neighbor Joe. Which means there’s plenty of room for a signal to ricochet or duplicate or get lost. There are so many words—the ghosts of old conversations—floating around us.

  Consider this possibility. You pick up your phone and hear a voice—your voice—engaged in some lost conversation, like that time in high school when you asked Natasha Flatt o
ut for coffee and she made an excuse about her cat being sick. It’s like a conversation shouted into a canyon, its words bouncing off walls to eventually come fluttering back to you, warped and soft and sounding like somebody else.

  Sometimes this is what my memory feels like. An image or a conversation or a place will rise to the surface of my mind, and I’ll recognize it vaguely, not knowing if I experienced it or saw it on television or invented it altogether.

  Whenever I try to fix my attention on something, a red light goes on in my head, and I’m like a bird circling in confusion.

  I find myself on the sidewalk of a new hillside development called Bear Brook. Here all the streets have names like Kodiak and Grizzly. Around me are two-story houses of a similar design, with freshly painted gray siding and stone entryways and cathedral windows rising above their front doors to reveal chandeliers giving off constellations of light. Each home has a sizable lot that runs up against a pine forest. And each costs more than I would make in twenty years at West TeleServices.

  A garbage truck rushes past me, raising tiny tornadoes of dust and trash, and I raise my hand to shield my face and notice a number written on the back of it, just below my knuckles—13743—and though I am sure it will occur to me later, for the moment I can’t for the life of me remember what it means.

  A bird swoops toward a nearby house. Mistaking the window for a piece of sky, it strikes the glass with a thud and falls into the rose garden beneath it, absently fluttering its wings; soon it goes still. I rush across the lawn and into the garden and bend over to get a better look at it. A teardrop of blood runs from its eye. I do not know why, but I reach through the thorns and pick up the bird and stroke its cool, reddish feathers. Its complete lack of weight and its stillness overwhelm me.

  When the bird fell, something fell off a shelf inside me—a nice, gold-framed picture of my life, what I dreamed it would be, full of sunshine and ice cream and go-go dancers. It tumbled and shattered, and my smiling face dissolved into the distressed expression reflected in the living room window before me.

 

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