The Hole

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The Hole Page 11

by David Halliday


  “Why would I do that? I got enough problems.”

  “Have you made a decision yet?”

  Cathy shook her head. “Sometimes I think I’ll go with Terry. But then Johnny looks so lost. I mean, we went out for a year and a half. I owe him something. Then I think I’ll go back to Johnny but I feel so bad about Terry. He is a real neat guy. And we have a lot of fun. Or at least we used to. Why don’t you take one of them?”

  Adelle shook her head. “No thank you. I can get my own boyfriends.

  Besides, I can’t stand Johnny. You can’t trust him.”

  “How can you say that?”

  “And Terry is crazy about you.”

  “Why don’t you trust Johnny?”

  “Open your eyes, kid!” Adelle then glanced over at the door of the restaurant where Detective Kelly and Mary Hendrix were leaving. “There they go.”

  “Isn’t that guy a cop?” Cathy asked.

  The Barbershop

  “Kids these days have no respect, Sam.” George snipped gingerly around Sam Kelly’s ear.

  “They’re not all bad,” Sam responded, his eyes closed. God, if George stopped talking, I could fall asleep.

  “I’m not saying all,” George continued, chewing on some gum as he talked, “but they have no fear. We’re leaving the world in these kids’ hands. They’ll wreck it in no time. Civilization is coming to an end. Dark days ahead. Like the other day I asked a couple of kids to move away from the shop. They scare off my other customers. And you should have heard their language. If my old man caught me talking like that to my elders I would have been dragged out to the woodshed.” The detective laughed. George pulled his scissors back and, looking in-to the mirror, continued to speak.

  “I know I sound like an old crank, Sam. But why aren’t these kids in school?”

  “Summer vacation,” the detective offered.

  “Working then? Why aren’t they working? Too damn lazy. Everything handed to them. And they always seem to have money. They’ll never get a job if their parents keep throwing money at them.” 81

  The detective opened his eyes and looked around the shop. It was empty.

  “What do you know about Joe Mackenzie?” he asked.

  “Joe Mackenzie.” George thought about the name for a few moments.

  “Old Joe. Not too much. He comes in here once a week for a trim. Works over at the plaza as a security guard. Nice old guy. Doesn’t talk a lot.

  Had some kind of trouble with Ontario Hydro a few years ago.”

  “What do you know about his wife?”

  “Has old Joe done something illegal, Sam? Doesn’t seem like the type of fellow to break the law.”

  “Neighbors have been throwing trash down his well,” the detective said.

  “You don’t say,” George responded as he returned to the meticulous manicuring of the detective’s head. “Why would they be throwing garbage down old Joe’s well? Did he do something to piss someone off?”

  “Not that we know of.”

  “He never talks about his wife, Sam,” George added, snapping his gum. “Jesus, I didn’t even know the old guy was married. Does he have any kids?”

  “A couple. His wife ran off with them years ago.” George loosened the apron around the detective’s neck as he measured a straight line across the bottom of his hairline.

  “Ran off on him. Old Joe didn’t seem like the sort. I figured him for a boring past. Old Joe has a history. Who’d she run off with?”

  “We’re not sure,” the detective replied, speaking to the reflection of the barber in the mirror opposite him.

  “What’s the garbage in his well got to do with his wife running off?”

  “Nothing,” the detective replied. An interesting question. Must remember to jot that down.

  George, snapping his gum, reached for a brush and swept the loose hairs off the detective’s neck. Then he briskly flung the apron off and shook it over the floor.

  “That’s quite an investigation you’re running,” George said with a smile and snapped his gum. “Where’s it headed?” The detective smiled. Another good question.

  CHAPTER NINE

  Apache Burger

  Cathy sat on the hood of the car. She looked out over Lake Ontario, her hair waving in the light breeze that blew off the cold gray water.

  Johnny leaned against the side door of the Mazda, his back sheltering a match as he lit up a cigarette.

  “You want to get back in the car?” he asked, flipping a used match in-to the sand and making a second attempt, this time successfully, to light his cigarette. Weren’t they down here to get some things straightened out between them? I hate this melodrama. Flowers, sunsets, waves crashing on the shore. Let’s just get in the car and do it.

  “Doesn’t the water look like molten steel?” she asked, smiling and shaking the wind from her hair. “It looks solid. I can almost imagine walking across it. It’s looked this way for hundreds, even thousands of years. Isn’t that mind-boggling?”

  “Fascinating,”

  Johnny muttered, spitting out smoke.

  Fucking fascinating!

  Cathy turned and gestured to Johnny for a cigarette. He took one out of his package, lit it off his, and still leaning across the hood of the car, handed it to Cathy.

  “It’s like time traveling when you look out into a body of water,” she said, turning back to the lake.

  “Time traveling,” Johnny muttered. He turned and looked back over the sight of the now defunct psychiatric hospital. All boarded up.

  Where’d they put all the loonies? The hospital was being transformed into a community college. Better dressed inmates. How was he going to tell his parents that he’d been kicked out of university? The best thing would be to take the Mazda and disappear. Go to California. Make a life someplace warm. But he didn’t have enough money for that. Cathy must have some dough.

  Cathy turned to Johnny. “Don’t mope. I told you that we weren’t going to mess around when you asked me to go for a ride.”

  “Why’d you come then?” Johnny demanded, his petulant voice beginning to irritate her.

  “I wanted to talk. You’ve been gone a long time and I think there are issues we should address.” She was careful with each word. She didn’t want her voice to slip into the southern belle accent she fell into when she was anxious.

  “Well, you didn’t have that attitude the other night.” Johnny shot the words out of his mouth like he was a gun. Giving me a hard-on thinking about it.

  “That was a mistake.” Cathy slipped off the hood and onto the beach, her arms crossed. She stepped toward the lake. “I had the nightmare again last night.”

  “What?” Smoke came out of Johnny’s nose and tossed and twisted in the wind off the lake. He added with a shrug, “Maybe you should see a shrink.”

  Cathy stepped back and leaned on the car. She sucked on her cigarette.

  Smoke seeped through her clenched teeth, softly swirling, framing her face. Johnny reached into the car and turned on the radio. I can’t stand this shit. Better to listen to some tunes.

  “Everything seems quite lovely at first,” she began. The Beach Boys song “Good Vibrations” drifted out of the car. “The long grass is waving back and forth. Butterflies are slow dancing in the wild flowers. It’s dark but the full moon is creamy soft. I am holding someone’s hand. I can’t see who it is but I feel so happy. And then I trip. The hand releases me.

  As I fall to the ground, the earth opens up and I begin to fall down this dark hole. Falling slowly back and forth like a leaf floating from a tree. I try to scream but instead of my cry coming from my throat it rises from deep inside the hole. It’s as if I am falling into myself. I fall and fall.”

  “And then you wake up,” Johnny added impatiently as he climbed onto the hood of the car, his legs dangling over the edge. How many times do I have to listen to this shit? He slid off the car and attempted to put his arm around Cathy but she shrugged it off, continuing to stare out at
the water.

  “I was scared,” Cathy said, her shoulders trembling.

  Johnny smacked his hand on the hood of the car. The sounded jolted Cathy as if she’d been slapped on the back of the head.

  “The dream doesn’t mean a thing,” he said. “Dreams never do. It’s what happens when your eyes are open that counts. When I was at university there were all these inbreeds walking around analyzing each other.” He grabbed Cathy’s chin and turned it to his face. “Everyone is a fucking cripple, they’d cry. She blames her mother. He blames his father.

  Everyone’s got to find someone to blame. We’re all damaged goods. So what! Let’s just get on with what’s left of our lives. Who knows when the expiry date will appear? Let the party begin.” He kissed her hard on the lips.

  Cathy pushed Johnny away. “I can’t be that way.” She turned her back on the car. The Animals’ “The House of the Rising Sun” began to play.

  “What way?” Johnny grabbed her arm and twisted Cathy around.

  “Look at life honestly. Look at it right straight in the eye. We’re all living 84 on the Titanic. This time, there are no survivors. No time left for mourning.”

  Cathy pulled Johnny’s hand off her arm and glared at him.

  “Honesty! What do you know about being honest?”

  “So this is the way it’s going to be?” he asked, biting down angrily on his lip.

  “Did you get a job yet?” Cathy shot back.

  “I’m trying,” he responded defensively, his eyes dropping momentarily. “It isn’t as easy as you think. Just because you’ve got that shit job at Apache Burger, you think anyone can get a job. And look at your parents. If you were stuck, they’d give you anything. My folks are counting the days until they can get rid of me.”

  “You’re not trying hard enough,” Cathy screeched. “And it’s not a shit job. I like it. People come from all over the city to eat the onion rings at Apache’s. Last week a couple of players from the Maple Leafs showed up. We took pictures of them with the staff.”

  “Losers,” Johnny muttered. This isn’t working! He took a deep breath and lowered his voice. “Ah, shit, Cathy, what am I going to do? When my parents find out that I screwed up, they are going to go ballistic. It was just so boring. I had a psych class in this auditorium with a thousand other students. I could never stay awake. Half the class was dozing off. You should see the number of essays they expected. I had this philosophy prof who gave us an assignment the second day of class. What is the meaning of nothing? That’s what he wanted and he wanted it in less than thirty words. What are you going to say in thirty words about nothing? I could have said it in one word.”

  “You’ve got an excuse for everything.” Cathy flicked the ashes off her cigarette then drew smoke deep into her lungs. Terry was right.

  Johnny flicked the ashes of his cigarette into the air. The breeze blew it back at him.

  “Shit!” Johnny swept the ashes off his trousers.

  Cathy laughed. “You’re such an idiot.”

  Johnny smiled sheepishly, then climbed back onto the car. Cathy loved Johnny when he didn’t try so hard to be cool. She loved the little boy in him. She wasn’t so sure about the man he was becoming. Maybe he will never become one.

  “Sometimes I wish there was just you and me and the highway,” Cathy said wistfully.

  Johnny was about to respond but did not. Somewhere inside him he knew that Cathy would not be going with him down the highway.

  Something told him he didn’t want her in his future. He wanted her now, on her back.

  “Everything is too complicated,” Cathy continued, the southern belle accent slipping into her voice. “You, and me, and school, and my family, and the whole fucking world. Stop. I want everything to stop for a few moments so I can catch my breath.”

  Cathy sucked on her cigarette. She looked into the sky.

  “Are you going back to school next year?” Johnny asked.

  Cathy shrugged her shoulders. “My parents want me to graduate from high school, but I don’t know. What’s the point? The cook at Apache’s is this Egyptian guy. He’s got a degree in Engineering. He went to school in Moscow. He says the people there are lonely. Drowning their emptiness in vodka. The women laughed hysterically when he touched them.

  The children bruised their knees on the cobblestone. Every night the men were passed out in the streets. He told me that you could hardly breathe with the desperation”

  What the fuck does that mean? He drew on his cigarette. “I heard that you and Terry were an item after I left for college.” Cathy turned away. “Who told you that?”

  “I just heard it. Well, is it true?”

  Cathy bowed her head and moved slowly away from the car toward the edge of the lake. “What if it is? It’s not like we’re married.”

  “I thought we had an arrangement.”

  “You’re the one who said we could see other people,” Cathy responded, turning sharply around and looking at Johnny.

  “Then it’s true,” Johnny cried.

  “And you didn’t see anyone?” Cathy replied, her shoulders stiffening.

  “That kid is such a slug,” Johnny said, his jaw clenching like a fist. “I’ll deal with that little motherfucker.”

  “You’ll do no such thing,” Cathy screamed at Johnny. “You will not touch Terry and he’s no slug. He’s real smart. He’s on the honor roll at Michael Power, which you never were and he writes stories. Interesting stories.” Cathy turned back to the lake. “He wrote this story about meeting God when he was a little kid.”

  Johnny fell back on the hood of the car laughing. “God!”

  “I liked it,” Cathy said.

  “He’s just trying to get into your pants.”

  “He doesn’t have to try,” Cathy responded angrily, walking down the beach toward the water.

  “Wait a minute!” Johnny cried, following behind her. Grabbing Cathy’s arm, he swung her around.

  “That hurts!” she cried.

  “Have you been doing that little slug?”

  Cathy pulled away.

  “That’s my business,” she said, sucked deeply on her cigarette before flicking it into the water.

  “You slut!” Johnny cried. He threw her onto the sand and began to undo his jeans. “You’re my girl!” I’m taking what’s mine.

  Ginger Cookies

  Detective Kelly knocked on the back door of the house at 36 Botfield Avenue. He waited. A moment later a middle-aged woman in a brown smock answered the door. He introduced himself and showed his badge.

  “I rang the front buzzer,” he said.

  “Oh.” The woman smiled. “That hasn’t worked for years. I keep telling Frank that we should get it fixed but he keeps putting me off. Something about a box being hidden behind the walls of our basement.” The woman explained that she was doing housework and invited the detective in for a cup of tea if he didn’t mind a little mess. He stepped inside the house and was escorted to a small kitchen. The woman put a kettle on the stove.

  “Mrs. Gray,” the detective began. She insisted that he call her Ruth.

  “I’m Sam,” he added.

  Ruth smiled. “Sam. That’s a lovely name. We had a dog once named Sam. A collie.”

  “I was hoping that I could talk to your husband.” Mrs. Gray explained that her husband was visiting their daughter that afternoon. He cut her grass. It kept him busy now that he was retired.

  “Do you have any other children?” he asked.

  “A son. We lost him when he was a child.”

  “I’m sorry, Ruth.”

  “That was a long time ago, Sam.” She smiled, though he detected a break in her voice as she spoke. “He was always rebellious. The police said that he would return but he never did. I know that we weren’t to blame but I can’t help wondering if there wasn’t something I could have done, something I could have said. You don’t have any word on him, do you, Sam?”

  The detective shook his head. “How old was
your son when he disappeared?”

  “Nineteen.”

  The kettle whistled. Ruth got up and filled the teapot. She placed two cups on the table and then brought out a plate of cookies. Kelly took one of the cookies. It was stale.

  “I hope they’re not stale. Frank buys them. Always trying to cut corners. It’s not easy since Frank retired, making ends meet. Thirty years as an accountant. Most of our savings were used up trying to find Johnny. He would be in his forties now. It’s hard to believe.”

  “You must have married young,” the detective said with a smile.

  Ruth blushed. “Yes, I was. Eighteen years old when Johnny was born.

  We had to get married. Nothing to be proud of, but I never regretted it. If only we could live those days again. I would have done things differently.”

  The detective nodded. “I guess we all would.”

  “Frank’s not in any trouble, is he?” Ruth asked.

  “No, Ruth,” the detective responded, shaking his head. He sipped at his tea then took another bite of his cookie. “I love stale cookies.” The woman smiled apprehensively.

  The detective spoke. “We have a report, actually it’s quite an old report, about a man dying up the street. Heart attack. He was discovered by someone named Gray. The writing was pretty messy so I think it was Gray. Couldn’t make out the first name. I’m checking out all the Grays in the neighborhood.”

  Ruth shook her head. “I can’t remember Frank mentioning anything.

  But then he’s pretty quiet. Doesn’t tell me everything. I wish he told me more. Men keep too much inside. I read that in a magazine at the doctor’s office. The article said that it shortened their lives, keeping everything inside. Do you believe that, Sam?” Sam took out his pad and scribbled something down.

  He looked up. “I don’t know, Ruth.”

  “Do you talk to your wife about your work?” Ruth asked, then apologized. “I hope I’m not being too personal, Sam.” Sam smiled. “Not married.”

  “Oh,” Ruth responded. “My, Sam, you don’t look like a bachelor.” Sam laughed.

  “Frank and I were downtown on Saturday if that helps.” Ruth looked across the table at the detective.

 

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