by Ann Beattie
Sam holds the door open for him.
“I thought you weren’t coming home.”
“I wasn’t. I couldn’t reach her. Thought I’d call from here.”
“Well, you’re not going to believe this, but I was baking a tuna casserole. You can have some.”
“Yeah? That’s good.”
“I’m the perfect little housewife.”
“You ought to go to law school.”
“We went through this before, Charles.”
“I kept after you about the dog and you got a dog.”
There is silence. The wrong example. And speak of the little devil, there he is sauntering into the kitchen, a little late to appear enthusiastic about his homecoming.
“You had a fine time making monkeys of us last night, didn’t you?” he says to the dog.
“Sorry,” Sam says.
“It wasn’t your fault.”
“I know,” Sam says. He opens the oven door and looks in.
“You got a postcard from Pamela Smith. In case you were still worried that she was abducted, or whatever you were thinking. A Special Delivery. Just came this afternoon. I read it. I don’t get it.”
Sam goes into the living room, hands him the postcard. On the front is a statue of The Winged Victory. On the back is written:
L
ARICA
B
E
R
A
T
I
OF MIND AND SPIRIT
N
It is signed, “Pamela Smith.”
“Wow,” Charles says.
“What does it mean?” Sam says.
“Arica’s some sort of therapy, something like that.”
“Oh. You want to eat pretty soon?”
“Yeah. Call me.”
Charles goes into the bathroom and shaves and showers. He pinches the roll of fat around his waist So what?—Ox is repulsive. He saw a picture of Ox in a bathing suit once that made him almost physically sick. So what if he has an inch of fat? He brushes his teeth. He urinates. He used to urinate in the tub, but he didn’t want Sam doing it, and he thought that if he stopped, somehow Sam would sense that he was not to urinate in the tub. At the time, it made sense. He flushes the toilet. He examines his teeth in the mirror. They are fine teeth. He looks at his hair. He should have washed it.
“Dinner,” Sam says.
Charles goes into the bedroom and squirts on deodorant, drops the towel over the lamp. He puts on fresh underwear and goes out to the table.
“That looks very good,” he says to Sam.
“I took the bus to the store. We didn’t have shit.”
“Good idea,” Charles says. He burns his tongue. Damn! It won’t be any fun kissing her with a burned tongue. He glowers at the casserole.
After dinner he ceremoniously pulls a chair up to the phone on the kitchen wall and calls her. He has memorized the number. Or at least he thought he had until a strange woman’s voice answered.
“Hello?”
“Hello. Is Laura there?”
“Not right now.”
“Is she expected back?”
“Yes, but I’m not sure when. Who is calling?”
“Charles.”
“I’ll tell her you called.”
“Are you a friend of Laura’s?”
“I live here.”
“Oh.”
“Good-bye,” the woman says. “Good-bye,” Charles says.
He walks over to the sink, where Sam is doing the dishes. “She’s living with some woman,” he says. “Huh,” Sam says.
“I wonder what’s going on,” Charles says. “She said Laura would call back.”
Sam shrugs; Sam thinks that his affection for Laura is disproportionate.
At eleven o’clock the phone has still not rung. He calls again. The same voice answers.
“May I speak to Laura?”
“Just a minute.”
A long time passes, and then Laura says hello. Her voice is very faint. He wants to shout at her to get her mouth closer to the phone. She always does this; she’s impossible to talk to on the phone.
“Laura. What’s going on?”
“That’s a good question, isn’t it?”
She answered him! He didn’t blow it by shouting that he loved her!
“Talk to me. What’s happening?” Charles says. “Well, as you’ve somehow found out, I’ve left Jim. I’m … living here.”
“You’re living with some woman,” he prompts her.
“Yes. She’s also leaving the man she lived with. She just started graduate school.”
“What about you? What … what are you doing?”
“I was getting ready to go out for a drink with a friend.”
“But have you left him? You’ve left for good?”
“Yes. Look, this isn’t a very good time for me to talk to you. I have to think about some things. I can call you.…”
“When?” he says.
“Well, another time. When I’m feeling more like talking.”
“Who are you having the drink with? You’ll be talking then.”
She laughs. No answer.
“Laura, I couldn’t believe it when I found out you’d moved. I didn’t believe it had happened. Are you okay? Can you just tell me what’s going on?”
“Nothing very mysterious. I wish there was something I could say.…”
“Say anything!”
“How did you get this number?”
“From Betty.”
“Oh.”
Silence.
“You’re okay?” she says.
“Okay? I don’t know how to feel. I’ve got to see you. You’ve got to tell me exactly what’s going on.”
“Charles, I don’t. I don’t mean to sound nasty, but I’m not in the best mood now, and I don’t feel like sorting everything out in a second just so you can know.”
“When would you … when are you going to call me?”
“Soon.”
“You mean not tomorrow?”
“A second was just a convenient way to put it. I’ll call you when I can call you.”
“Laura, shit! I’m sorry if I made you mad, but I’ve got to see you. I stayed away when you went back to him, but now I’m coming over there.”
“If you come over tonight I won’t be here,” she says.
“Then tomorrow. All right?”
“If it means that much to you.”
“It does.”
“I don’t think you’re thinking of me. I think you’re thinking about what’s best for you.”
“I love you!”
Silence.
“I know,” she says. “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
“Where do you live?” he says.
“On Wicker Street—140 Wicker. A small building,”
“Okay. I’ll see you then.”
She hangs up. What went wrong? What’s happening? Where is Wicker Street?
That night he dreams that he is launched in a spaceship to the stars. His mother is there. She is taking a bath on a star. He gets back in the rocket. Mechanical failure! That strange jingling! He sits up in bed, eyes wide open. The dog is walking again, his collar jingling. By now it is clear; the dog has insomnia.
THIRTEEN
J.D. and Sam are sitting in the living room, listening to “It’s Only Rock and Roll” and drinking Bass Ale. Charles had one beer with them when he came home, but wants to be perfectly sober when he sees Laura. He slept only four or five hours the night before, thinking about her, wondering what had made her move, what had stopped her from calling, why he seemed so incapable of impressing upon her, why he had always—almost always—been incapable of impressing upon her that he loved her and had to have her, and when the dog jumped on his bed in the early morning he was actually glad to see it. By now, the dog responds to the name “Dog.” There is something wrong with his mind if he can’t think of a name for the dog. He should get referred to a psychiatrist. “I can�
�t name my dog, Doc.” So many situations he finds himself in remind him of the beginning of a good joke. “And the doctor said …” He should forget about a conventional shrink and let the people in Arica work on him, become a different person. Of course he won’t. It’s going to be all he can do to get up the courage to tell Laura that they must set out for Bermuda. Fly, or take a boat? Die in the air, or sink in the ocean?
J.D. says, “She must have been some chick.” Charles had just told him the outline of his relationship with Laura.
“She’s messed up,” Sam says. “I hope she doesn’t fuck you over tonight.”
“She was okay on the phone,” Charles says.
She was mad at him on the phone. He went too far. Somehow.
For a while, when things were going very well, he’d be talking to Laura and he’d forget she hadn’t been with him all his life. He’d mention kids from grade school and assume she knew them, too, talk to her about how he lied his way out of the Army and forget that he’d never before mentioned the Army to her. She never told him much about her past. Her mother died when she was in high school. He has no idea what happened to her father, whether he is dead or alive. And he can’t remember where she went to high school. In Virginia, but what part of Virginia? She worked as a waitress in high school. A man on the street in New York, where they went for their class trip, gave her his card and told her he wanted to sign her for his modeling agency. She was scared to call him, and is glad that she was. She jumped on the trampoline in high school, wanted to be an acrobat. She was a waitress. Did she ever tell him what waitressing was like, though? Or even a funny story? Doesn’t seem like it. She has a brother who runs a hunting lodge. She has not seen him for years and years. One Christmas he sent her a deer head. She wrote asking for a bearskin rug for Rebecca and got no answer. She met Ox when he was in the Marines, dated him a few times. He remembers, in fact, that they went dancing, and then she forgot about him. By chance, she saw him again a year later. He was married, then, and unhappy. He called her a year after that and said that his wife was in the bin. Then his wife got out of the bin. She lost contact with him. Then he called again, and she went to the house for dinner and never left. Rebecca loved her. That was that Then how could she mind his calling and putting her on the spot a little?
And what else, what else about Laura? That she jumped on the trampoline because somebody told her that she would drive her shinbones into her feet and she wouldn’t grow any taller. She worried that she was too tall. She took photography lessons, but was never very good at it, and there never seemed to be a convenient photo lab to develop the film, so.… And she took dancing lessons, and paid a French woman ten dollars a week to let her stand around her kitchen on the weekends and watch her cook. The French woman was always pregnant, and always out of some spice. Laura tried to have a baby and never did. No, no tests. That was that She went to college for a while. Some day she might go back, to study botany. She could model to make money, but she’d really have to go to New York to do that, and anyway—she was old now, too old to model. The French woman made things with fish heads. None of her professors tried to pick her up, none of them even knew her by name. She said once that she would like to meet Ox’s wife. They became friends. His wife married him because he was captain of the football team. He married her because she was crazy and funny. Laura went to see her, taking food and perfume. Ox drank, had another woman once—at least once—and stopped building houses, lost a lot of business, drank some more, she left. She left for a lot of reasons.
“I left New Mexico for a lot of reasons,” J.D. says. “Shit on me.”
Her hair always crackles with electricity. She puts hair spray on the brush, hoping this will cure it George Harrison is her favorite Beatle. She never had to wear braces. She likes expensive, delicately scented soaps. Her hair is long and wavy. She was so thrilled when she got her own car, even if it was an old car. She got Bs in college. The first drink she ever tasted was at eighteen, a rum collins. Now she drinks scotch. She feels sorry for giraffes. She doesn’t care what’s on her pizza, as long as it isn’t anchovies. She loves Caesar salad, however, and was surprised to find out that crushed anchovies were in it She likes Jules and Jim. She thought about being a filmmaker. She saw Otto Preminger on the street. Of course she was sure. She stirred tiny slivers of meat, almonds, and vegetables in her wok, grew violets the same colors as her round, pastel bars of soap, showered in water too hot for him. She asked, once, why May Day was celebrated. She does not remember names or dates well and is not apologetic about it She has big feet. Big, narrow feet. Butchers are kind to her, men in gas stations clean her windshield.
“What time are you going over there?” Sam asks.
“Around eight Another half hour or so.”
Actually, Laura set no time. He could go right this minute, but he doesn’t want her to think he’s too eager. He is very eager. At work, he thought about going out and buying her a diamond ring, proposing to her on the spot, pushing the ring on as he talked. He had no idea what size ring she wears. Or if she liked diamonds. Ox had given her only a silver band.
“Anybody call me?” Charles asks.
“No,” Sam says. “Unless it was when I was out.”
“How long were you out?”
“To get my check. I don’t know how long. I remember looking at my watch when I got there, and it had stopped.”
“If you want to go out tonight, I’ve got my car,” J.D. says.
“Nah,” Sam says. “I’m happy to sit here and drink.”
“I guess I didn’t tell you,” J.D. says to Charles. “I finally got tires to put on the car, had the guy come around and jack it up and put them on. The next morning when I came out of my apartment there was a kid with a crowbar, getting ready to take it to my trunk. I chased him for two blocks, then didn’t know what I’d do if I caught him. He had the crowbar.”
Charles shakes his head. “Place you live didn’t look like a very bad area.”
“There he was, just getting ready to pry it open.”
“Maybe it was a narc,” Sam says.
“My God. I never thought that. Do you really think that?”
“Got a lot of stuff around?” Sam asks. “Hey—you guys could be narcs for all I know.”
“Sure,” Sam says. He puts his empty beer bottle in line with the others.
“Clever thinking,” Charles says. “You’re under arrest.”
“I’ve got a gun! Don’t make a move!” Sam hollers.
“Okay … I was just thinking,” J.D. says.
“Get your head together, J.D.,” Sam says.
“I wasn’t thinking it seriously,” J.D. says.
“We fooled you, then,” Charles says. “Stick ’em up.”
“Forget it,” J.D. says.
“Narcs,” Sam says. “Jeez.”
“I didn’t really think that,” J.D. says.
“My long-suffering ass,” Sam says. “Narcs!”
“I wonder who becomes a narc nowadays?” Charles says.
“Abbie Hoffman,” J.D. says.
“Your mother,” Sam says to Charles.
“My mother. That would be funny. She’d find the stuff and sit there staring at it, and when they got back she’d be in the bathtub with it.”
“What’s this?” J.D. says.
“His mother is nuts,” Sam says.
“Oh,” J.D. says. “My aunt was.” He opens another beer. “She was a waitress, and she went out into the kitchen and cooked up a whole box of eggs and went out and dumped them on a customer who reminded her of her first husband.”
“How many husbands did she have?” Charles asks.
“Two. The second one was a cop. He’d practice his fast draw on her. She’d be walking through the house, and the gun would be pointing at her.”
“Need we ask what happened to her?” Sam asks.
“She’s milking cows in Vermont.” J.D. takes a long swig of beer. “At Christmas she sent me a picture of her milk
ing a cow, and two dollars. Jesus.”
“Well, we’ve got enough information to run him in,” Charles says.
“Cut it out,” J.D. says. “I never really thought that.”
Charles goes into the bathroom. The toothbrush. He keeps meaning to get Sam a new toothbrush. He takes his own toothbrush down and brushes his teeth. He wants to take the toothbrush with him, to take his toothbrush to Laura’s and put it next to hers and never leave. The other woman’s toothbrush is next to here. Who is she? He combs his hair. It is quite a bit longer now. He can’t tell if it looks good or not. Why is he standing around the bathroom? Why isn’t he at Laura’s? He leaves the bathroom and asks Sam and J.D. if either of them knows where Wicker Street is. J.D. thinks he does and gives directions. Charles has trouble concentrating. There is a ringing in his head. He feels like he might black out. He sits on the floor, hearing J.D.’s voice faintly in the background.