by Robert Riche
What Are We Doing in Latin America
(A Novel about Connecticut)
Robert Riche
New York
To Fran
CHAPTER I
I am sitting here on the throne in the downstairs bathroom trying to decide whether it would be more dignified to shuffle ten feet across the tiles to the closet and fish out a roll of toilet paper from the bottom shelf, or call out for help to my wife who I can hear in the upstairs bathroom over my head, standing, it sounds like, in front of the mirror, most likely in her robe and bunny slippers, putting the finishing touches to her lips and eyelids.
It’s a big decision, because I am trying to do everything these days the way someone like, say, Donald Trump would. With charm, but at the same time, with firmness of purpose—and, most of all, with dignity. At least, not shouting, for Christ sake. Or arguing. I am very, very conscious of my dignity lately, ever since the president (CEO) of the company I work for, and whom I report to, told me in the hall outside his office two weeks ago that I lack it. Dignity.
“Are you kidding, Frank?” I said. We’re on a first name basis, and until that moment I had thought we were on fairly informal and friendly terms. Which, of course, was my mistake, because thinking that, somewhere along the line I obviously must have had the bad judgment to stop worrying for a moment or two about how I looked or was acting in front of him, and must have dropped my guard sufficiently to let slip some kind of smart remark that I probably thought was hilarious at the time that maybe didn’t go over all that well. Maybe this happened more than once. As a matter of fact, I can recall at least one instance, now that I think of it, sitting in his office and looking at him across that scallop of desk he presides over, and becoming aware that although his lips were pursed into something resembling a smile, he was managing to frown at the same time, as though experiencing gas.
Anyway, obviously his perception of me was different from my perception of myself, which was quite a shocker, as I have never thought of myself before now as not being dignified. As a matter of fact, my perception is that I tend to make a fairly strong and favorable impression on most people. I have a good height, being a little under six feet, reasonably trim, slightly heavier than I’d like to be, but at my age of 49, a few days away from 50, it gives me a kind of substantiality that I confess I’m rather fond of, suggesting perhaps a gourmet’s appreciation of a decent bottle of wine and a nicely prepared veal chop in a light cream sauce. I have a college education, a liberal arts degree from Amherst, which I value as highly as Frank does his business degree from Lackawanna School of Business & Finance. I play a fair game of tennis. I ski. I try to keep up on world affairs. I try to read contemporary fiction, and not just the best sellers. I even work at reading the poems in The New Yorker.
Still, the awful part is, he could be right.
Otherwise, how explain the fact that even as I ponder these matters astride the throne my mind is conjuring up a scene in which he is here in my house—which he is not, of course—and walks in on me in the bathroom—because the door is not locked (in fact, it is ajar)—and catches me with my pants down to my ankles hobbling over to the closet for the toilet paper (because I have almost decided now not to call my wife) and I turn and see him there, and instead of cringing and covering up and making silly gulping ingratiating noises as any normal human being come upon in such circumstances would, I simply hoist my hind quarter haunch just a fraction of an inch higher, and flash the old moon right in his face.
Forty-nine years old, practically 50, an Amherst graduate, an executive, and I have thoughts like that.
Well, a crap’s a crap, and not a bad time to ponder the darker side of one’s consciousness, when you get right down to it. As I am doing now, and apparently with a somewhat salutary effect on the old bowel, too, as I take a deep breath, press, exhale. Uh-h-h-h-h. Oh, boy. Wow. Now, there’s dignity for you. And a real pleasure, I don’t mind saying. In fact, what else is there in life, really, as downright satisfying?
Which is an indication in itself—the fact that I pose such a question—of the low point to which I have sunk. I am depressed. Generally. Or maybe just apprehensive. Thinking about things—of my son, in particular, the uneasy suspicion growing that we are not going to have an easy time with him, now that he is fifteen, going on sixteen.
Fear for his future well-being is with me often these days, and particularly at this moment, as we prepare to drive him today up from Fairfield County along the rural back highway that follows along the banks of the Housatonic River to the sanctuary of an Eastern prep school that we were able, with some difficulty, to get him accepted into.
We are leaving in an hour. Which explains perhaps better than anything else the loose bowel. Also, the crimped feeling in the middle of the chest, the roiling intestine, the shifty eyes, and racing pulse. It means so much to me, and to my wife, to have it work out.
But, even so, back to the immediate urgent concern. I am faced with making a decision that will get me up off the throne and back into the world of action again.
In the wicker wastebasket under the sink directly in front of me, I descry two, no, three! pieces of crumpled Kleenex, relatively clean except for some lipstick smears on them the color of my daughter’s “pink frost lip gloss.” By rolling forward on the balls of my feet and extending one arm to perch a fist on the floor in a lineman’s crouch I can reach in and pluck the tissues out, shaking loose a couple of strands of entangled blonde hair, and I have just solved my most immediate dilemma, and if not in the most dignified manner, at least, no one will ever know, thereby proving the old New England adage of my mother’s, “Where there’s a will there’s a way.” Also, “Necessity is the mother of invention.” Probably there are a couple of others.
My son is in his room, at this moment filling the old camp trunk we hauled out of the attic for him. His room is apart from the house, in the space which we had converted into a loft, over the garage. Well, the garage below isn’t really a garage anymore, either, since my wife three years ago appropriated it as her photography studio. (As a consequence, my car, and hers, too, both sit in the driveway in front of what is now the downstairs studio/upstairs loft bedroom, bleaching under the glare of summer sun and rusting out in winter’s ice, snow and salt.)
Pants buckled up now, I am debating whether it’s too early to go out and offer to help my son with his trunk when the question is decided for me by a sudden blast of sound coming from his room, 180 decibels of “The Grateful Dead” descending over our lawn and proclaiming to the neighbors on both sides that it will be a few hours yet before his departure. (I think it’s “The Grateful Dead,” though it could be “Rush.”)
I get out to the garage-upstairs loft bedroom fast, because I know that the phone will ring in another second or two, with Chet Dowd, my next-door neighbor, the airline pilot, calling to ask (in a nice way, though with an unpleasant whine in his voice, not at all, I don’t imagine, like the mellowed-out tone he must reserve for announcing the weather and altitude over the intercom system of the Boeing 747 that he flies) if there isn’t something I can do about tuning down that racket from my son’s room.
This has happened before, more than once. I don’t blame Chet. If his kid, who is only eight, were to blast the airwaves with his stereo I probably wouldn’t like it any better than Chet does. Better that he should call me than call the cops (anonymously), and then have the cops cruise into the driveway in one of their black and white patrol cars with the lights flashing.
(“We’ve had a complaint, sir—” “What’s that? You’ll have to speak up, officer. I can’t hear you!”)
Chet is a nice guy. Really. When we moved into our h
ouse six years ago, it was Chet who ambled over while we were in the midst of moving a stove up the back steps and ceremoniously draped around my wife’s neck a lei of only slightly wilted blossoms, which he explained to both of us is the traditional symbol of greeting in Hawaii—as if we hadn’t ever watched television, or before that, Pathe newsreels as far back as 1950. The lei was made of real flowers, and he claimed he had been keeping it in the refrigerator just for us since his return from his last flight to Honolulu three days before. My feeling at the time was that he hadn’t really brought it back with us in mind, because he hadn’t met us yet, and as a matter of fact, couldn’t have even known that we would be moving in on that particular day. No. Rather, I think, he simply had brought it back to his wife Jane, (whom, in another one of my inelegant fantasies, I could envision him having had a fight with before departure), and upon his return Jane obligingly had worn it around her neck with nothing else on except a pair of spike heels (while they made up), and then, having grown tired of that, had stuffed it in the fridge where it remained in only slightly deteriorated condition for an occasional heady sniff, until we arrived and the inspiration hit Chet to offer it as a traditional symbol of greeting.
Nice as he is, Chet and I are not close. We are cordial, however, always waving at one another over the top of the hedge between our two properties, and shouting above the roar of either his or my power lawn mower, “How ya doin’?” I can’t imagine us having much in common, unless, of course, I were to fly to Hawaii and he were to be piloting the plane, in which case a mutual interest in flight safety, I would hope, would unite us in a common bond.
He got his start as a pilot in the Air Force flying bombing missions over North Vietnam, a subject that Jane says to this day he won’t talk about. While he was doing that I was living in Paris, France, not making the best use of my B.A. from Amherst, but spending a lot of time in French cafés assiduously avoiding the entreaties of my father to come back home and go to work. It was a period when I felt above any notions of going to work. With a few thousand dollars from cashed-in savings bonds that my parents had been amassing for me ever since my first birthday, I was able to spend a year in Paris, wearing a beret and smoking Gauloise cigarettes, absolutely convinced in my own mind that I was about to become a major young poet. In actuality, I hardly wrote anything, mostly sleeping until noon and spending the evenings with a coterie of like-minded American pals, all of us feeling invincible and superior while we sipped Pernod and watched the sidewalk crowds shuffle by. It was a time when my parents feared that I was going to renounce my American citizenship and become a French emigré, a notion I didn’t totally discourage. I could have done anything, it seemed to me at the time. Certainly it did not seem at all necessary to form any long-range ideas to conform with anything my father had in mind. I actually did manage to complete a half dozen poems, sonnet exercises and rondels, which were no good at all, but were not so bad but what I was able to get them published in a mimeographed folio that about eight of us similar-minded non-working Americans living in the sixième put out (three times) that year (and only that year). It was called Odéon, and somewhere in the house I have several copies, the pages of which have long since turned brown and fall apart now when you open them. I have never published a poem since.
Entering my son’s room is a little like entering a cavern deep below the surface of the sea. Certainly the blast of noise from within exerts a comparable increase in pressure on the ears. It is almost impossible to see anything without a torch, because my son has Scotch-taped cardboard posters over all the windows, and it is pitch black inside except for the red glow of a lamp with a blanket thrown over it and a candle that flickers regardless of the time of day or night in the top of a coffee can on a shelf. You reach the heart of this subaqueous domain by penetrating layers of drapes that have been stapled to the ceiling, entrance slits at variance with a straight line, so that you have to zig to the left, then zag to the right, peeling aside one tie-dyed sheet after another before you are actually inside. There is an aroma suggestive of the sea, as well, somewhat like dried seaweed? Not, please, marijuana. Raspberries. My wife gave him a packet of raspberry-scented incense sticks for his last birthday, one of which is smoldering now in a dish on the floor next to the mattress he is sitting on cross-legged, Buddha-style. He looks up disinterestedly as he sees me, the way I remember that hoboes used to look up from their bonfires at new arrivals to their railroad camps in old Preston Sturges movies.
“Can you turn that thing down a little bit?” I cup hands to mouth so as to be heard.
Resignedly, and with no change of expression, he rolls over onto one hip, and reduces the volume. I have confirmed his negative expectations, as we both must have known I would.
“How ya doin’? Packed and ready?” It comes out with a false heartiness, the way I sound when I hail Chet Dowd over the hedge.
“Yeah.” Like a stone dropping into a well.
“I’ll help you take down the trunk.”
“I can do it.”
“I know you can, but I’ll help you.”
“Oh, all right.”
He shuts off the stereo, and disconnects some wires. “Will my stereo ride all right?” he asks.
In response to even such a simple question as this, I experience a momentary elation; that he is actually seeking my opinion on something.
“We’ll put a blanket under it. It’ll be all right.”
Manhandling his trunk to the top landing of the staircase that runs up along the side of the building, I can’t imagine how he would have gotten it down by himself. But he is strong, and there is nothing that he is not willing to attempt. I have seen him stand on his hands, and do ten push-ups with his body pointing straight up at the sky.
I follow his lead in getting the trunk down, partly because somebody has to take charge, and he seems to assume the responsibility, and partly because I am not quite sure of just how to go about it, anyway. He seems to have a feeling for it. He takes the leather handle on his end in one hand, and I do the same, feeling that two hands would be better, but not wanting to appear less able than he. We start down the steps, with me below. Most of the weight is being supported by me, but actually, this is the easier end because at the top you have to bend over, holding yourself back while pulling up. But the weight of the thing is enormous, and I find myself being pushed hard against the cedar railing, which, in spite of the discomfort, I am grateful is there, since a crushed rib is certainly preferable to a broken collarbone as a result of a plunge fifteen feet over the side to the ground.
Unfortunately, before we can attain the bottom of the stairway the head of a minutely protruding nail catches in the fabric of my new gray flannel trousers, purchased just yesterday so as to impress the poohbahs at the fancy prep school we are to be driving to in a short while.
“Hold it! Wait!” The nail is caught, I can feel the tension around my thigh, but with no damage done as yet.
“I’m caught on a nail.” I grunt it out, struggling to hold firm, and still. But the ineluctable momentum of the trunk forces me to stagger backward and downward to the next and bottom step. There is the sound of ripping flannel, and instantly the feel of cool air on groin.
“Oh, Jesus! Hold it, I said!” Immediately, by implication, throwing blame onto my son. A loathsome impulse; I am aware of it, even as I express it, which irrationally has the effect of further augmenting my rage.
“Let it down!” We are at the bottom of the stairway. Roughly I drop my end on the ground.
I look down at the front of my pants, at the rip running from the pocket to the top of the fly. “Agh-gh-gh-gh!” I rage at the world, which for the most part is blocked off by the back of my house from which my wife, brandishing a nail file in one hand, now emerges in a gray flannel suit that matches my pants.
“Need any help!” she calls.
“Agh-gh-gh-gh-gh!”
“What’s the matter?”
“Look!” I scream. The ripped flap o
f flannel exposes powder blue boxer shorts matching the color of the glorious Indian Summer September sky.
“Oh, my goodness,” my wife says, nail file frozen in midair. “Your new pants.”
“This goddamn trunk!” My rage is so great I can only gurgle. The trunk is standing on its end on the ground, my son still up on the stairway, one hand resting on top of it, his expression now not quite so much indifferent as, rather, gleeful.
“They were brand new,” my wife adds.
“I know what they were!” I realize that I must be bellowing, because Chet Dowd’s head appears over the top of the hedge by the side of the driveway.
I turn to my son. “Wipe that smirk off your face!” I manage a wave at Chet. “How ya doin’, Chet?” And covering my wounded pants with both hands, I steal toward the house, three-quarter backside toward Chet, with this terrible inescapable image in my mind’s eye that everything has turned out exactly as Frank, the Chief Executive Officer at my place of employment, might have predicted it would.
CHAPTER II
We are on our way, up the two-lane back road alongside the tree-shaded Housatonic River above Kent, driving toward the private boarding school that will cost me $11,000 a year for the next three years, where my son will be obliged to learn algebra, French, history, English, art and how to say, “Yes, sir,” and look you in the eye, and not mumble, and wear gray flannel trousers and a blazer.
Good luck. I have changed my own trousers and am feeling better.
My daughter is with us. She who wears the pink frost lip gloss. She is wearing it today, I can see in the rearview mirror, in the hope, no doubt, that it will serve as an enticement to some poor lonely prep school freshman, already homesick and wandering forlornly about the greensward in front of the administration building.
My daughter is the one who should be going off to prep school. She approves of the whole idea, imagining it as a glamorous world of rich kids who go to Jamaica on spring vacations and Chamonix to ski at Christmas. She is half right. But since she is the one who gets all A’s and B’s, instead of C’s and D’s, she gets to stay home. There is no justice. Next year maybe, if Frank gives me a raise.