by Jung Yun
“You should probably leave now, Kyung.”
“How? We don’t even have a car here.”
“I can call you a cab, or there’s the bus stop over by the middle school. The 38 drops off near those hotels downtown.” Gillian lifts a corner of the blinds. The rain is letting up, but the clouds still look bruised and gray, ready to open again. “It’s getting late. They’ll be home soon.”
She has it all worked out for him, as if she’s been planning this for days. They just needed to get past the funeral so she could send him away. If this is going to be their memory of the end, Kyung wants to leave the house like a man, a decent man, but the fact that she went to his father behind his back, that both of them have been keeping a secret from him—it’s a greater betrayal than he ever thought Gillian capable of.
“I still don’t understand how you could do this.”
“I did exactly what you did,” she says, lowering the blinds.
“What does that mean?”
“I asked your father for help because I knew it was the one thing you’d never be able to forgive. But unlike you, at least I got something out of it. Ethan and I might have a chance of making it now.”
She doesn’t sound entirely convinced of this, but she’s right about everything else. He can’t forgive her, no more than she can forgive him, and he understands that she probably planned this too. It eliminated the possibility that either of them would circle back in a moment of weakness, asking for another chance. It made the break clean.
“And my father—he’s, what? He’s just going to live here with the two of you? Pay the mortgage? Babysit my son?”
“I haven’t discussed any of that with him, but he’s welcome to stay as long as he wants.”
“You mean as long as he’s willing to pay the bills.”
Gillian looks out the window again. “I really need you to go before they get here. I’m asking you nicely. If you care about Ethan at all, please don’t let him see you angry again. He’s a little boy, Kyung. Just let him be a little boy.”
* * *
It’s ten past four in the morning when he pulls off the highway into a brightly lit service area. The lot is half-full of trucks and semis, with only a few passenger cars scattered in between. He parks his rental and gets out to stretch his legs, looking up at the open dome of sky. There aren’t any stars in western Pennsylvania. He assumed there would be, but the haze makes it hard to see anything other than a pair of commuter planes blinking red in the distance. Kyung buys a map, a bottle of water, and a pack of cigarettes from a bored-looking girl at the gas station and then walks next door to the diner. The people inside—all truckers, he assumes—look up from their plates when he enters. He hesitates for a moment, sensing that the crowd is rougher than he’s used to. The men are uniformly big and white and burly. They have bags under their eyes and constipated expressions that flicker with curiosity at the sight of Kyung. He’s not in a college town anymore, a difference he can feel as he slides into a seat at the counter and lifts an oversized menu in front of his face. He quickly orders a sandwich to go from another bored-looking girl who might be the sister of the one working next door.
“Coffee while you wait?” she asks.
He’s had nothing but coffee for nearly ten straight hours. Another cup would kill him. “No, thanks.”
The girl seems confused by someone declining coffee at this hour, but she takes her carafe and moves on. Kyung spreads his map over the counter and stares at it, not looking for something so much as trying to avoid being looked at. He traces his route from Massachusetts to Pennsylvania, disappointed that the distance he drove barely amounts to the width of his pinky.
“Waste of time,” he hears someone mumble.
On the other side of the counter, a middle-aged couple sits side by side, stirring their coffee in slow, sleepy unison. Husband and wife, he assumes, because of the matching gold bands on their fingers. They’re also dressed in matching plaid shirts—blue for him and green for her—that appear soft and broken in from years of wear. Both of them are heavyset and unhealthy looking, with oily pink complexions that remind Kyung of lunch meat.
“If all you wanted was coffee, then why’d we even stop?” the man asks.
The woman rolls her eyes and runs a hand through her hair, which looks fried from too many dye jobs and home permanents.
“So?” the man says.
“So, what?”
“So drink it already. Let’s go.”
The woman downs several gulps of coffee and slams her cup on the saucer. She wipes the drops that spilled on her shirt with the back of her hand, camouflaging them into the plaid. “You happy now?”
“No, I’m not happy. We just lost half an hour. I thought you wanted to eat.”
“Oh, quit your bitching.” She peels off some bills from a small wad of money held together by a rubber band and throws them next to their check. “I told you I’d take the next leg.”
They collect their things and head for the door, lumbering single file because they’re too wide to walk next to each other.
As they reach Kyung’s end of the counter, the woman looks at him in passing. “Are we so damn interesting?” she snaps, not stopping or slowing down to wait for his response.
The bell on the door rings as it opens and closes, but Kyung doesn’t turn to watch them leave. He didn’t mean to stare at the couple, but it was hard not to. The farther he drives, the stranger people seem to him, and the smaller the town, the more everyone treats him like some kind of alien, as if they’ve never encountered an Asian person before.
“Husband-and-wife driving teams,” mumbles another man sitting a few stools away. “Now, that’s my idea of hell.”
One of the cooks passes the galley window that opens onto the kitchen. He’s talking to someone Kyung can’t see, laughing as he waves a spatula in the air. How long does it take to make a sandwich? he wonders. He looks around the diner for the waitress, who’s standing outside smoking a cigarette and staring vacantly at her cell phone. He wants to get her attention and ask her to rush his order, but he worries it won’t help. The girl doesn’t appear capable of rushing. Everything she does seems lethargic and slow. She even smokes slowly, blowing misshapen attempts at rings into the air.
“She’s pretty, isn’t she?”
Kyung doesn’t think so, but he nods as if he does.
“Kind of a space case, though.” The man picks at the oozing yellow egg yolks on his plate with a fork. “I asked her for scrambled.”
He glances at the man, alarmed by his overgrown mustache and beard. The cap on his head can’t contain his long hair, which spills out the sides and back in ragged salt-and-pepper strands. Kyung isn’t sure if he’s trying to make conversation, or simply observing out loud. He hopes it’s the latter and returns to his map. He finds Massachusetts again, a small patch of green no bigger than a postage stamp, crisscrossed by red and blue strands of interstate.
“You need directions somewhere?”
Kyung doesn’t need directions so much as a destination. “Maybe,” he says, following a long red line farther and farther west.
“Where you headed?”
“California,” he says, trying it on for size. It’s strange to hear the word out loud, which makes the idea feel more real than it did in the car.
“Oh, that’s easy.” The man doesn’t bother to look at the map. “You’re on 90 now, which’ll turn into 80 soon. You just stay on 80 all the way through Nebraska, and then right before you hit Colorado, it’ll turn into 76.”
“How long will it take to get there?”
“Depends. Which half you headed to? North or south?”
Kyung names the first city that comes to mind. “Los Angeles.”
The man shrugs. “I’ve made it from Erie to L.A. in about thirty-three hours, but I was drinking coffee and pissing in a jug pretty much the entire way. What kind of car you driving?”
He points out the window at the bright yellow Musta
ng he rented. From a distance, the car looks even more ridiculous than it did on the lot, like a midlife crisis on wheels. The only reason he picked it was the price. As long as he was using a credit card that his father had just paid off, he decided he might as well do some damage, which has been his motto for the entire trip. Kyung intends to charge every tank of gas, every pack of cigarettes, every meal, every last everything on his cards. It feels like free money. Fuck-you money.
“A good V-8 like that should probably get you there by Wednesday if you’re in a hurry, but you’re going to be in rough shape for a while. Don’t plan on doing anything for a couple of days besides taking baths and getting back rubs.”
Kyung has no idea what he’s doing, no plan at all. When he left the house, he took a bus downtown and checked into the first hotel he saw. He couldn’t bring himself to unpack his things, so he sat on the bed, staring at the walls, the carpet, the pattern of the bedspread. There wasn’t anything wrong with his surroundings. The room was no different from others he’d stayed in before. He just couldn’t accept that this was where he’d landed, and suddenly, after hours of sitting and staring without purpose, he felt a desperate need to get out. One minute, he was signing the paperwork for his rental car. The next, he was on the highway passing signs for Albany, then Syracuse, then Buffalo. There was something comforting about the drive and being on the open road, which made him feel like he had a place to be, even though he didn’t. He blasted the radio for hours, polluting the car with noise to avoid thinking about his conversation with Gillian. When his head began to ache, he turned off the music and chain-smoked through his open window, littering the black interior with dusty gray ash. The thought of California came to him not long after he spotted the signs for Lake Ontario. It was nothing at first. Just a random idea among many that he initially dismissed, but the farther he drove, the more he began to think: Why not? Why not California? Why not now?
“You headed out there for a visit?” the man asks. He dabs his lips delicately with a napkin, littering his beard with toast crumbs.
“No.” He pauses. “I’m moving there.”
“You’re lucky you’re not towing all your stuff. Might not be easy to do in that car once you hit the Rockies.”
All Kyung has is a suitcase full of clothes. He has no job lined up, no place to live, no other belongings, and once again, he’s living on credit—a thought that begins to weigh on him now. Gillian knows their account numbers and passwords by heart. She could easily cancel every last card in his name when she realizes he’s racking up charges again. Where will he be when that happens? Sitting in this sad little diner? Or stranded somewhere on the side of the road? Kyung shuts his eyes, aware that he’s ruining the idea before it’s even real.
“You okay, buddy?” the man asks.
“Where’s the bathroom?”
“Well—”
Kyung spots the sign on the wall and jumps out of his seat without waiting for an answer. When he opens the door to the men’s room, he’s almost knocked over by the smell of piss, bleach, and urinal cakes. He enters tentatively, scanning the bathroom from floor to ceiling, certain he’ll find something filthy to account for the stench. The room, however, actually seems clean. His only real complaint is the long, shatterproof mirror hanging over the bank of sinks. It’s almost like a circus mirror, the kind that stretches out people’s reflections when viewed from a distance. Kyung takes a few steps toward it, waiting for his appearance to become less distorted. His nose is barely inches from the glass when he can finally see himself clearly. His eyes are bloodshot and he desperately needs a shave, a toothbrush, and a comb. But above all, he looks worried. The wrinkle between his brows where the skin usually creases into a frown—it seems permanent now, as if every fear he’s ever experienced has burrowed into that space. How does he make it stop? All this worrying about other people, worrying about himself, worrying about things that might happen before they even do—what did any of that get him except a life he wants to leave? He washes his face, scrubbing off the grime with flowery pink hand soap. Then he dunks his head under the tap, letting the cold water run over him. He tries not to think about baptisms and the new beginnings they promise, but maybe that’s just what he needs. A baptism in a truck stop bathroom.
When Kyung returns to his seat, his foil-wrapped sandwich is sitting on the counter beside his check, and the man is gone. He isn’t sure why he expected a formal good-bye—they didn’t even exchange names—but he’s sorry that he didn’t get a chance to thank him for the directions. Not hearing another person’s voice would have felt like a gift to him a few weeks ago, but now it seems like all he has. He pays for his food and goes outside, looking up at the sky, which is lighter than it was before. There’s a moody sliver of purple inching up along the horizon, promising sun or rain—he’s not sure. As he walks to his car, he hears someone call out, “Hey, buddy. Buddy.” He turns and sees the man jogging toward him from behind the gas station, zipping up his pants while his unbuckled belt dangles noisily from his waist.
Kyung backs up several steps, not certain where this is headed anymore. “What were you just doing?”
“I tried to warn you, but you got out of your seat so fast. None of us regulars use that bathroom. It smells like a goddamn litter box. We just piss in that field over there.”
“Oh.” He watches the man buckle his belt again, relieved that he isn’t coming on to him. Kyung actually enjoyed their conversation, the relative ease of it. It would have disappointed him if it ended with some sort of awkward proposition in the parking lot.
“Any chance you’d let me bum one of those?” the man asks, pointing at the cigarettes in Kyung’s shirt pocket.
“Okay, sure.” He unwraps the pack and hands him one, not certain if he should stay and smoke with him. He never quite learned the etiquette of smokers, having picked up the habit for a brief period in med school and only starting back up today. Despite smoking a full pack in the car, Kyung still doesn’t know how to hold the cigarette correctly; it feels like an awkward sixth finger that gets in the way. He studies the man for a second as he takes a drag, and then lights one for himself.
“Jesus, these are awful.”
“You mean the brand?”
“No. Cigarettes in general,” the man says, even though he’s smiling. “I quit buying them years ago. Doctor’s orders. Only time I have one now is if I meet a friendly stranger on the road. It’s kind of a love–hate thing.”
Kyung has never heard anyone describe him as “friendly” before. What little effort he made to meet new friends or keep up with his old ones ended when he began dating Gillian. He was content to live in their little cocoon, and after the baby, she was too. From time to time, they went to a party hosted by one of his colleagues from school, but they usually arrived late and left early, citing Ethan as the excuse on both ends. Marriage made them both lazy this way. It was easier to be with someone predictable than to invest the time in figuring out someone new.
“So what’s in L.A.?” the man asks. “You got a job there or something?”
“Yes,” he says. “I’m a doctor.”
“A doctor who smokes—I’ve never seen that before. What kind of medicine you practice?”
“Radiology.”
The fictions keep spilling from his mouth, an alternate reality in which he undoes the choices of his past and imagines what might have been. It doesn’t feel like lying so much as wishing.
“Do you go to L.A. a lot?” Kyung asks.
“I usually head out there about two or three times a year. Seems like a pretty nice city if you don’t mind the traffic.”
“Any place you’d recommend for a newcomer?”
“Well”—the man takes a thoughtful drag on his cigarette— “the Getty, if you’ve never been there before. I’m not much for the art, but the building’s something worth seeing. They have these big plazas and gardens, and you can stand outside as long as you want and look out over the whole city.” He takes
another drag, blowing plumes of smoke through his nose. “I’ve only been there that one time, but if you catch it on the right day when the smog isn’t too thick, you don’t need to see it twice.”
Kyung never would have guessed that this man, who looks like such a particular type, would recommend a museum. “You don’t go to bars when you’re on the road?”
The man’s laugh turns into a phlegmy cough. “That’s a young man’s game, prowling around town. I’m long past those years now. Me, I’m just happy to get a clean room and a hot breakfast the next morning.”
At thirty-six, Kyung wonders if he’s even a young man anymore, if he has the energy or will to do what it takes to live differently. Moving somewhere, finding a job, making some friends—all of it would require him to try. It’s been so long since he tried to do anything, but it doesn’t make sense to change his geography and not change everything else.
“I know you’re probably in a hurry to get going,” the man says, “but you’re barely fifteen minutes away from a real good view of Lake Erie.” He crushes what’s left of his cigarette under his shoe. “You should head out there and take a drive on the shoreline before leaving town. The sun’s coming up soon. It’ll probably be the prettiest thing you see from here to California.”
“Thank you,” Kyung says. He means these words sincerely, almost with regret. He’s embarrassed by how quickly he formed his first impression, and how wrong he was from the start.
By the time he pulls over at an empty lakeside picnic area, the sun appears whole just above the horizon. Bright pink, purple, and orange swaths of color surround it, the entire scene mirrored in Lake Erie below. The man, whose name Kyung wishes he’d learned, was wrong about the view. It’s not the most beautiful thing he’ll see on his drive. It’s probably the most beautiful thing he’s seen, ever. Unlike the pale blue Caribbean beaches he once admired, nothing about this landscape is calm or serene. It looks like the sky is on fire, setting the lake and all the trees ablaze with it. Kyung gets out of his car and sits on top of a splintered wood picnic table, lighting a cigarette as he stares at the violent display of color. The haze he couldn’t see through earlier has settled into a whispery fog, floating above the lake like a legion of ghosts. He takes a photo, moving his phone up and down to change the angle and light. The tiny lens doesn’t do the scene much justice, but the last of his twenty-odd shots turns out to be decent. Not quite vivid or true, but clear enough to help him remember that he was here one day.