by Lynne Hugo
“What? What happened? Was someone breaking in?” Gary’s face reddened deeper than its usual shade. He thinks all my business is his to know.
“Four or five deerflies were in here so I took them out. Back in August. I couldn’t find the flyswatter. I wish you’d put things back where they belong when you come over.”
“Jesus, Mom. I didn’t move your . . . wait a minute. You were shooting deerflies? That’s insane. You could kill yourself.” He stopped for a few seconds, his mouth hanging open and his eyes widening as the idea took hold. He gathered steam and blew. “Wait a minute. Wait just a minute here. Were you trying to—?”
“Gary. You of all people shouldn’t take the Lord’s name in vain, I’m sure. I occasionally miss a deerfly. If I were aiming at a person, any person, I assure you I wouldn’t miss.”
Do you see what I mean about my worst side just popping right out? CarolSue gets all over me about it. “Stop, Louisa!” She says it all the time. “You’re not helping him or you heal.”
Gary’s oval eyes went down to mail slots. “What’s that supposed to mean?” he said, all this time standing over my chair, looming. I could feel my neck stiffening looking up at him at that bad angle, and I didn’t appreciate it.
“Nothing, son. Would you like to give the girls some grapes? They’ll eat right out of your hand. They love their grapes.” Very glad to rest my neck by having a good reason to look away from him, I picked up the plate of green grapes I’d cut in half. Amy hopped into my lap right away, proving my point. Gary backed up, knocking the floor lamp into the wall and startling everyone. It hit the wall, and he caught it before it hit the floor. The rag rug might have kept it from breaking, but I think the shade would have been toast.
“Mom,” he said louder, enunciating as if I was hard of hearing. “We need to think about getting rid of the chickens. They’re too much for you now. They can’t be in the house. I’ve been thinking about the farm anyway. This place has gotten too much for you to handle.”
“Gary, I love you, son, but over my dead body will my girls leave.” I wouldn’t dignify the rest of his opinion.
“Is that a threat, Mom? If you feel like you might hurt yourself, I’ll put you on the crisis prayer list and take you to the hospital until God makes things right. It sounds like a threat to me. I’ll find a safer place for you.” He felt around the holes again, stared at me, and without saying anything more turned and went down the hall toward the bedrooms.
Oh crap, I thought. Here we go.
Within a clock minute, he was back. He didn’t loiter getting to the point.
“Where is Jesus?” he said, his whole self in agitation. I was going to get smart with him about how being a reverend, he should know, but I decided to be kind and give him a straight answer.
“Jesus is in the closet.”
“Jesus is in the closet? You cannot be serious.”
“I think maybe it’s why he never got married,” I said. Poor judgment on my part, but I couldn’t stop my worst side. She does love the openings Gary gives her.
“That is blasphemy. Something is wrong with you. Why is the picture of Jesus in your closet?”
Here’s the story on that picture: last year, after he became Reverend Gary, my son gave me a painting he’d done himself. He got offended almost to tears when I said Elvis looked good as a blonde in drag. I had to apologize many times and explain that all the paintings involving glitter that I’d seen before were of Elvis, which was why I didn’t know this one was Jesus. I pointed out that no one knows what Jesus looked like. This hurt his feelings because the glitter halo was Gary’s creative depiction of holiness, which was the point I was supposed to get. He is so sincere it would never occur to him that glitter might not be a good idea. Mollifying him backfired, though, because he carried out his plan to hang it in my bedroom, to be “the first thing I saw in the morning and the last before I closed my eyes.”
I knew where that idea came from, and it’s an example of chickens coming home to roost. My Harold would say Glitter Jesus on my bedroom wall now is exactly what I deserve for what I made him suffer (he claimed damage to his retinas) during our son’s adolescence. Gary was miserable as a teenager, bony wrists and knees and ankles all going in wrong directions, plus he had trouble making friends. In ninth grade, after writing a report on Van Gogh, he decided his isolation was related to an artistic temperament. He’d always enjoyed art class, too. Like any mother, I ignored his father and evidence—anything for your child to have self-esteem, right?—and built him up with praise as gaudy and ill-conceived as his projects. What else would I do? I loved my son then, and I do now. Different as we are, I know I mustn’t lose sight of all that is good and kind in him, and you mustn’t, either.
Anyway, while death threats from me kept Harold’s mouth shut, I’d display Gary’s dreadful pictures in our bedroom, telling our boy I wanted his art to be the first thing I saw in the morning and the last thing at night. (Anything to keep them out of the living room.) You should have heard Harold when Gary applied to LaGrange Community College to “jump-start” his professional career with an Associate in Studio Art degree. “Now, there’s a surefire moneymaker,” he said in private, way more times than I cared to hear. That man could roll his eyes as well as any woman. Remembering little things like that crumples me inside like the wadded-up tissue that’s stuck in my every pocket to fight the sneak attacks of memory.
Harold had to admit it turned out all right, though he never did give me any credit. After one semester, Gary’s tactful instructor redirected him: had he ever thought about the amount of artistic vision computer graphics required? I’d hoped he’d get a Bachelor’s, and Harold wanted him to study Agriculture, but at least Gary eventually got an Associate in Computer Science degree. And a job. When he married Nicole and then our grandson, Cody, was born, Harold and I thought we’d run the big bases and were home, safe. Life was finally so good that Harold and I joked how great it was that Nicole, not Gary, had decorated their house; we could visit without being blinded.
But I digress. The point is, now I was a widow and had this Glitter Jesus on my bedroom wall, as if arthritis and a double dose of grief weren’t enough to make a body tremble and cringe. I’d never tell Gary that I wanted to remember Harold there beside me, especially horny and passionate and tender, the way he used to be. That I couldn’t possibly, what with Jesus’ hand raised up like a stop sign and a dot of glitter on the pupils of his eyes, giving a woman absolutely no privacy for trying to remember the best times. We all went over the edge after Cody died, but Gary thinking Glitter Jesus was a great gift shows a lot of his brain cells drowned in his tears. Once I even had the thought of getting another goat in hope that an accidental kick to the head might bring Gary to his right mind. Does that sound bad? When you live alone you have thoughts like that and you stop bothering to chide yourself for them.
How could any sane mother tell her son who’s pushing forty-five that she was trying to give herself a little satisfaction, and Glitter Jesus’ eyes staring her down were an inhibiting factor? It would have been about as natural as mentioning it to a stranger stocking shelves in the grocery store. Gary and I have never been alike, but back when we were all of us a family, all of us living our real lives, I’d watch and listen to him and smile, recognizing myself and Harold and our parents in him, the sum different from the parts, yet adding up to our son with an acceptable, even beautiful, logic. Now I couldn’t find anyone or anything familiar in him. Ever since Gary got religion after Cody died, sometimes he looks like Glitter Jesus himself, little pricks of fire centered in his eyes.
On the other hand, what mother should tell her son anything about herself and sex? Even if he hadn’t become Reverend Gary, I’m not that far gone. So I did the next worst thing to telling the truth. I stood up, gave him a kiss on the cheek, and lied. “Gary, this has been a lovely visit,” I said. “Bless your heart.” (CarolSue taught me to say that.) “I’m so glad you stopped by. I hope you remember
to call first next time, because you know I’ve started to get out quite often with my friends. I really need to be getting my supper in the oven about now, and CarolSue is calling at five.” As I said this, I was moving toward the door with my hand on his elbow. His face was a kaleidoscope as I talked, but I never let him get a word in. I might have been actually pushing him to the door. I realize that great mothers don’t do that, but I’m trying to be honest and let the chips fall.
He called the next morning a little after ten, but I didn’t answer the phone. I love that Caller ID gadget. And wouldn’t you know, it was Gary signed me up for it. I know he really tries to be a good son.
* * *
I wasn’t surprised at all when the sheriff’s car bumped down my driveway soon after I didn’t answer Gary’s call. My son is nothing if not predictable. He was probably up until midnight hot-wiring the crisis prayer lists. But I was ahead of him: the hens were in the coop, the yellow kitchen was scrubbed, floor swept—even the cabinets wiped down—dishes out of the drainer. This isn’t easy to do because so many things in my kitchen—oh, say, the red-handled paring knife, the cast iron skillet, the daisy spoon rest, the good spatula—were my mother’s, and I remember them all the way back to when Harold and I were engaged. My mother was making me learn how to cook, and Harold would come early to sit in our kitchen, which just made me nervous because Mom would correct my every other move. Later, he’d praise what I’d made so lavishly that I knew it must have been terrible while he managed to hang around until Mom and Dad couldn’t stay awake anymore. Oh, his kisses were so gentle, like he was afraid I would break. Believe me, I convinced him I wouldn’t. And not that I could say it, but it would have been all right with me if his hands had wandered farther than they did before we were married. It was plain embarrassing, the way I wanted him touching me all over.
Anyway, I’d prepared everything today for unwanted company, even made my bed, and picked up the bedroom in case of a prying glance in there. But I left Harold’s good shoes where they were, still half under his side of the dresser. Really, I should donate them to the Goodwill in Elmont, but the idea of someone filling my Harold’s shoes, well, I just cannot. The bathroom’s cleaned, and I remembered to move Harold’s straight razor from its place on the side of the sink where he’d left it that last morning. I’d replaced it there practically the minute CarolSue left for home after we got through Harold’s service and settling his affairs and she’d satisfied herself that she’d boxed up his things so I wouldn’t have to look at them.
Never an electric shaver for my Harold, not ever since we were first dating did that kind, good man give me beard burn. He’d shave a second time before we went out. He used to bring me daisies because he thought they were my favorite flower. I let him think that: he could pick them for free from the side of the road on his way to our house. Really, I love the scent of Peace roses and when we bought the farm and I ordered a bush from the Burpee catalog, Harold planted it for me. It’s strong and healthy, fragrant with a tinge of lemon like his cologne I loved to breathe in. Oh God, where is my sweet Harold?
The usual ghosts appeared when I dusted the living room, each object reminding me how it came to be part of Harold and me. The pewter-base lamp that was a wedding present from Harold’s aunt Elsie. A polished wood picture frame my parents gave us for our tenth anniversary. The picture of us in it is long faded. The green ceramic bowl I made in a college ceramics class for my father; my mother gave it to Harold when Dad died. And there’s the white afghan that his mother knit for me; I refolded it over the back of Harold’s empty chair. Everything in my house tells the story of what’s gone forever.
Holes in the walls are filled with toothpaste and touched up with yellow highlighter. No, you’re right, it didn’t match the walls that well, but men don’t notice something like that, now do they? I made sure that I had a calendar out on the kitchen table with some fake engagements written in. My hair pinned up with little tendrils left out, and even a makeup job: eyebrows, a touch of shadow, mascara, blush, lip gloss. CarolSue isn’t my sister for nothing. I do so wish she had told her second husband that she hadn’t signed on to leave her family and no, she wouldn’t move to Georgia with him. It’s almost a thousand miles from southeastern Indiana.
I opened the front door and stepped out on the porch when I heard the patrol car tires crunch on the gravel as Gus put on the brakes too hard. He is really full of himself. A mistake to go outside, though. I wasn’t thinking of the heady scent in the air to bring When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom’d to mind and then, O Captain! my Captain! even though it’s a full year now. Or will be next week. The first dark purple buds formed two weeks ago. Another thing I do wish is that Harold hadn’t killed himself in April, right when the earth was rising up a hopeful pale green, bursting into pink and white and lavender, awash in yellow sun after the darkest winter we’d ever known, the winter I was surprised to outlive. It was the insult of spring Harold could not abide. It made me feel guilty that I could, and now I feel guilty that I’ve gone on a year without him, though every day I find another corner of life empty. O Captain.
I can stifle tears. Gus, maybe two hundred sixty pounds of him, labored out of his patrol car. Sheriff was emblazoned along the side of the car in black and gold on a white panel, and I couldn’t help but notice how it contained the word riff. Shorthand for “reduction in force,” the Elmont Herald explained, as half the county was laid off or let go in the past couple of years. Why couldn’t Gus have been? Yes, I blame his interference for driving Harold to kill himself. But maybe it was my fault.
“Morning, Gus. Thought I heard a car out here.” I threw my voice in his direction from the porch as I cleared up my eyes and arranged my mouth into a welcome.
“How’re you doin’, Miss Louisa? You’re lookin’ fine!”
Miss Louisa. That’s rich. “I am fine, Gus. How ’bout yourself?”
“Can’t complain.” All the while Gus kept coming, right on up my worn porch steps.
“What brings you, Gus? Something wrong?”
“Just comin’ by t’see how you’re doing is all. Know it’s comin’ up on the anniversary.”
Puffing fat men don’t pull off casual all that well. He was wearing his glasses today, and they looked tight on his face. I remember when Gus was almost too skinny and not bad-looking even if he did have some acne. Oh, didn’t we all. Even the boys in Vietnam then, like my Harold.
“Well, that’s nice of you, Gus, but I’m okay. Of course it’s hard. I miss Harold and Cody like both my legs have been cut off, but what can you expect when you lose your husband and grandson within six months? I’m doing all right.”
Gus didn’t say a word about how Gary had called him and sent him out here to confirm I belonged in a lunatic asylum. Probably told him that his poor mother was clearly losing her marbles, triggered by the anniversary of her husband’s suicide. Out here the sheriff is the law and the social service system. We don’t have a great tax base in this rural township. What Gus said was, “Mind if I come in and visit a minute?”
I made a point of staring at his waist. “Not comfortable with that gun coming into my house, Gus. Perhaps you can understand since I’ve lost both Cody and Harold.” Now, no gun was involved in either Cody’s or Harold’s death, but I doubted Gus would think that fast. I truly think Gus showers with that gun on. But Gary probably told him he needed to see for himself that the house was filled with guns, chickens, and wanton disrespect for Holy Glitter. I was starting right out by throwing him a curveball about the guns.
Oh, how the struggle wrote itself across his face. It was just like teaching my fifth grade again when one of the boys was looking for a loophole to wriggle through. “Well, now, Louisa, you know it’s my job to be armed. I can assure you I won’t touch . . .”
“Then we can just visit out here, Gus. Nothing nicer than a porch on a spring day.” I felt the seat of the painted rocking chairs, then turned to the door. “No worry, chairs are nice and
dry. I’ll bring us some coffee. Be right back,” I trilled over my shoulder.
“I think it’s kind of chilly for you out here. How about I just put the gun out in the car while I come in. I’ll be on my own time without it, of course,” he said. The agony of defeat.
“Oh my! Bless your heart, I thought you already were. Anyway, I appreciate that.”
I waited while he lumbered back to his car and watched him put the gun in the trunk. When he returned, I opened the door and let him follow me inside. I couldn’t wait to see his face.
“How about that coffee?” I said. I was going to let him have a good look at the house and try to figure out where I had stashed the ungodly menagerie. “Come on into the kitchen and I’ll put on a fresh pot. It’ll only take a minute.”
“I’d love a cup. That’s a glorious picture. Is it new? Don’t remember seeing it when I was here for Harold. You an Elvis fan? I always thought he had black hair. . . .”
His mentioning Harold, meaning how he kept coming here to arrest him—not that there was ever one indictment, not in this county—set my teeth on edge. “Oh yes, it’s a beauty,” I said. “Bless your heart. Gary painted that for me after Harold died. That sweet boy, bless his heart, too, hung it in the bedroom for me, but I’m just not in there all that much, and I decided to put it out here in the living room where I’d see it all day.” Marvelle twitched her tail in amusement from her throne on the back of Harold’s recliner. She and I share a sense of humor, something my son sorely lacks. Sometimes it makes me doubt everything I learned about genetics in biology class.
Gus followed me too slowly to the kitchen. He must have been scouring the place with his X-ray vision while I started coffee in the four-cup electric pot Gary got me for Christmas. Gus got to the kitchen table and sat down. He thought I didn’t see him inch my calendar closer to himself and pretend he wasn’t looking at it. The FBI missed a brilliant operative. I don’t understand how he was able to thwart Harold’s schemes to get revenge on the man who’d killed our grandson, but he did. Or what made him so determined. Did he have to prove that he was a big man because he didn’t go to Vietnam and Harold did? What would Glitter Jesus have to say about that?