Lenore sits a quarter mile away in the new section. She’s seated on the frozen ground, inside a newly opened grave. Most likely, the burial is tomorrow and they brought a backhoe in today to carve out a hole for the vault. She’s roughly twelve feet down and she doesn’t know if this is a standard depth these days or if this is a double grave, purchased by someone thinking of the future, making room for the family.
She’s lowered herself down by a black nylon climbing rope tied to a neighboring gravestone, a granite number, a simple greyish rectangle that rises vertical out of the earth and is cut with names and dates. She’s dressed in the requisite black and she’s done all the necessary prep work—planted a mike in the abandoned railroad car labeled “Pachinko Brothers Bale Wire,” oiled and slapped a fresh cartridge in the Uzi, popped a megadose of crank.
Now she’s humming. She’s got her two index fingers extended like drumsticks and she’s flailing away at her knees in perfect syncopation. There isn’t a missed beat, a balked strike. She’s keeping a countertime with both her feet. And her teeth are doing a continual bite, grab, and release, over and over on her upper lip.
Images keep passing through her mind, not thoughts, but random flashes, synaptic snapshots of faces and landscapes, lighting for a millisecond, vanishing, being replaced by the next picture. She can’t really get a fix on any of them, but it’s not like she’s making a legendary attempt. She lets them come and go, tries to grab what she can. It’s like trying to stare at a series of unconnected billboards set on the side of an interstate that she’s burning up in some supercharged Porsche.
Her mother’s face. The whiteness of Woo’s belly. Cortez’s book trunk. Ike’s post office shirt, freshly washed and pressed and draped over a coat hanger suspended from the hinge of his bedroom door. Zarelli’s plate of manicotti the last time they had lunch at Fiorello’s. Her father’s arm, slung awkwardly over his face, blocking his eyes, as he lay on the bed, on top of the covers, for an after-supper nap, 1972. Her own body, naked, reflected back at her from the bathroom mirror, her skin looking suddenly grey, dry to the point of flaking away, dissolving into a granular pile on the cold tiles below her feet.
She brings her hands away from her knees, looks at them, turning them over and over, front to back to front. Then she brings her right hand up to her ear, resecuring the small receiver that never fits very well. She hears a ghostlike undercurrent, not static, but more likely the wind pushing through the cavity of the bugged boxcar.
She thinks that there are people, maybe the majority of people, who would be tentative about sitting alone, inside an open grave, in a deserted cemetery, after midnight. Ike, for one. Ike would be going over the edge about now, she thinks. Ike’s nerve would have started slipping as he came through the wrought-iron gates.
But it doesn’t bother Lenore. The fact is, she has a tough time even acknowledging an idea of the supernatural. Stories about ghosts, demons, ghouls, vampires, zombies—they all strike her as stubborn remnants of a more primitive time. Useless, superstitious fear. A throwback that society can’t seem to shake. Generation after generation of people clutching onto memories of these shadowy myths that, like the appendix, we keep being born with, though their use is so far gone we can’t even recall it.
There are things to be frightened of in this life. She’d be the first to acknowledge that. The average person should probably be frightened of a guy like Jimmy Wyatt. No question. A mute sociopath known to veer into rage. A guy who could conceivably come at you across a crowded coffee shop some dull morning and jam his fork into your throat. Jimmy Wyatt is a tangible force. He can be seen, touched, smelled. He has a verifiable history of random violence. There are odds that he could cause you long-lasting trauma. A person should fear a Jimmy Wyatt.
The average person should have a rational fear of cruising Bangkok Park at night. Of finding the lump under the skin. Of the bomb raining down on urban centers across your country. Of the banks bolting their doors and your money long gone. Of losing your ability to control the crank, or the men around you, or your hold on a dicey and cold philosophy that you’ve staked a lot of faith on, that you’ve used as a reason for moving.
For the last half hour, Lenore’s body has been having small seizures of some kind. It’s like her nervous system gets this surge of too much juice, too many signals. Her hands flail out to the side. One foot starts to tick in spasm. A corner of her mouth tugs downward. Her shoulders shoot back like a wave has hit her chest.
She has feared this all along and now it’s finally arrived. She thinks she should be experiencing at least some slight relief that what she’s dreaded is here. The waiting can end. The subconscious, ongoing anxiety can cease. The worst has happened.
She thinks suddenly of Hitler on the last day of his life, deep in the bunker below the Reich Chancellery. She’s read that at the end, the Führer was out of it, heavily sedated by his personal doctor, maybe not even completely aware that the ball game was just about over, the Russians just a quarter mile away, their shells arcing that distance and bursting on the ravaged streets of Berlin above his head.
How different. It’s just the opposite for her. There’s no sedation, but rather a siege of input, a blitzkrieg offense against a tangled, overused system of nerves, so raw from six months of nonstop overload that the nerves are perpetually hyperstimulated, they no longer know any other mode of perception. I don’t need the receiver, she thinks, just my own ear. I don’t need the binoculars, just my given eyes. Take everything in and then take some more. Which is the worse fate, she wonders, the bang or the whimper?
It’s like being in a bunker. Only smaller. The Führer’s digs were a penthouse suite compared to this hole. Looking at the wall of dirt to her left, she can see earthworms frozen in mid-burrow. Something about this strikes her as wrong, a primal violation of some obscure law of nature.
Still, she likes the location. She’s only yards from her parents’ grave and it begins to occur to her that this waiting period is a perfect time to speak with them, to send her thoughts into the ground, a simple straight line through the terra.
Isn’t this funny, folks, I want to say it’s your firstborn. But there was Ike, and though I know one of us had to come first, right now I can’t remember who that was. I’m sure you told us. I’m sure we would have asked. The thing is, this makes me wonder what else I’m destined to forget before I join you guys. The thought doesn’t bother me as much as I’d have expected. Forgetting, I mean. You know, really, there’s a peace to it. Forgetting. There’s a consolation in forgetting.
When you die, do your memories cease? I’m betting they do. I just have this feeling. Do you guys have any memory left? Does it leave you instantly, the brain waves cease and zap, that whole lifetime pool of images is excised? Or is it a gradual thing, a fading, a leakage, until there’s only one image left, one utmost picture? What would the picture be for each of you? Ma? Dad?
It’s so goddamn, excuse me, but so weird what I suddenly flashed on. What the last memory would be for me. What would you guess? Ma? Dad? Listen, it’s not what you’d think. You’d expect something significant, right? Something that changed or shaped a lifetime, some event or moment that altered a course, changed a direction, made an impression so pervasive that you grew into a different person. Something that provoked evolution.
But that’s not it at all. No way. I’m sitting here, in a cold, empty grave in St. James Cemetery, waiting for God knows what to happen to me. To take a life or two. To end my own. But what I’m thinking about, what I’m recalling, picturing, bringing up, so clearly, so unbelievably clear, in my head is our kitchen in the old house. Our museum-piece kitchen, an exhibition out of 1950s American Television Sitcoms: Linoleum greyand-red-checked floor, those four metal-legged chairs with the smooth, cool, dull-white Naugahyde backing, the metal-legged table with matching dull-white Formica top, the overstuffed, paisley-covered rocking chair that was Gramma’s, wasn’t it? And next to it, a little, black, wiry magazine
holder stuffed with Life and The Saturday Evening Post. The silver-scrolled radiator in the corner that really pumped out the heat—remember Ike huddling next to it, mornings in the winter? That old white Norge refridge with the heavy pull-out handle. I built my first muscles opening and closing that monster. Mounted on all the walls are those old cream-colored real-wood cabinets with black handles, the inside shelves all lined with left-over wallpaper, that blue and white Colonial design, an early American man and woman sitting at a table having tea. Or I always thought it was tea. And, though I doubt I ever told you, Ma, I always thought the couple was George and Martha Washington.
I see the whole scene in the dim light of a late November evening, like this one. It’s five, five-thirty, and you’re waiting for Dad to get back from the corner market, you’d run out of milk, I think it was. You’d run out in the morning and the milkman wasn’t due for another day. Remember milkmen? Dad comes through the door, whistling, carrying a brown paper bag filled not only with a gallon of milk, glass bottle, but some Corncakes and Old Fashioneds for later on in the night. And as you take the unexpected treat out of the bag, you give him this mock, scolding smile. So endearing. That’s the only word that fits now. Endearing.
Ike’s at one end of the kitchen table, scrunched up in the chair, reading, lost as always, deep into, what was it—yeah, a Hardy Boys book, The Sinister Signpost. And I’m at the other end, supper plate pushed to the side, doing my math homework, printing numbers, with a pencil, on a white, lined piece of paper pulled from a black-marbled-cover spiral notebook, all those confetti-ish scraps running down the left-hand margin.
Dad sits in the old rocker, spreads The Spy open in his lap, the sports page, as you go about the last preparations for dinner. This is what I remember. This would be my last memory to fade at my death: You turn from the stove, casually, whipping potatoes, and ask Dad if he’s heard anything yet on the supervisor job that opened up last month down at the station. He doesn’t look up from the paper, but answers that, yes, they offered it to him, and he turned it down. I look up from my math homework, I instantly launch into a study of your face, Ma. You pause, then nod, your head bobbing for an extended few seconds, in time to the rhythm of the potato-whipping motion that your hand and arm are making. Dad, you add the last comment, one you’d probably said before: No better way for a man to lose his friends than to become their superior.
The words still ring, carried by your changeless voice, always, in my head.
Ma, you served dinner. Meat loaf. Dad, you tossed The Spy on top of the Norge and took a seat. Ike reluctantly, slowly, put aside Frank and Joe Hardy—I always wanted, still want, to ask him why the signpost was sinister. I moved my math text onto the radiator, felt its heat, and put it on the seat of the rocker. We dug into the meal. Warm and delicious as every one you ever served. The night went on.
All three of us, you two and me—Ike, I think, was probably unaware of the exchange—agreed it was the right decision. For Dad. For my father. I still think it was. But I learned something in that moment, seated there at the kitchen table. And I learned it in that way where it never leaves you, it becomes a permanent, central part of your essence. I learned a truth in a moment of epiphany.
And the truth was: There are people who want love. And there are people who want power.
And it occurs to me now, sitting in this awful open grave, sitting at the same level, in the same ground, where my parents, my flesh and blood, are buried, that the reason this would be the last memory to fade from my brain is that it was the moment when I changed. If you can stand the triteness of this thought: it was the line of demarcation between my innocence and my adulthood.
The standard way to mark that passage, that dividing line, is sexual. Maybe the first menstruation. Maybe the loss of virginity. These were secondary events for me. Because I’d already made a choice. For whatever reason, I was a changed girl. I wanted power. To the exclusion of all else?
You two tell me.
I am so cold right now. I have pushed my body, my nerves, to a point where some kind of collapse seems to be imminent. I don’t know what I feel anymore. And I’ve got neither the energy nor, really, the desire to find out, to find a system that might bring me back, full circle.
A few weeks back, Ike said to me, in his kitchen now, I don’t know what we were talking about, but he quotes some writer he likes. He says—“I believe in the politics of the lamb.” And the stupidity of that statement made me enraged, made me want to leap across the table at Ike, my brother, the last person I have left, and choke him. I can’t even talk to him anymore. Ike. Gentle, mutton-headed Ike.
Remember, Ma, a popular term of my childhood—Crisis of Faith. Capital letters. I don’t believe in anything anymore, except will. And I’m losing the hold on that. Mother. Father. Words. It’s all come to a head. I’m winding down. I’ve got maybe enough muscle and meanness and piss for one last seizure. And there are some fuckers about to be on the receiving end of that idea that took me, that entered me. Of that word: Power.
A sound cracks in her ear. A door being opened. Large, metal. Into a hollow-sounding interior. Obscuring echoes. Her fingers stop drumming. The deal makers have entered the Pachinko Brothers train car.
She hunches herself up a bit in the grave, brings a hand back to the earpiece, brings her teeth together, and listens:
ROURKE: Okay, listen up. The two parties in this transaction should be here any minute. I don’t want any screwups—
WILSON [exasperated]: Billy, please …
ROURKE: Let’s just run it down. The three of you did a walk-through, right? Okay, and Bromberg’s patrolling the new section and Jacobi’s got the old?
WILSON [amused]: Patrolling. For Christ sake, Billy, talk normal.
ROURKE [angry]: Talk normal, I ought to smack your head, talk normal. This is not a goddamn mail route, you little bitch. This is not screwing around. You didn’t see the two gooks he brought to the bar, okay? Where did these fuckers come from? This was not in the plan. We’re his brokers. He was supposed to come alone. Get that goddamn flashlight out of my eyes.
[More sounds of jostled, echoing metal. Feet climbing up into the train car]
ROURKE [mockingly polite]: It’s the chauffeur. Donna, take the man’s lantern. That’s a beauty, that’s like a real railroad job there. Now, give me your hand, there you go. Where’s the boss?
MINGO: Give me the lantern.
ROURKE: I get it. Signal time. Like Paul Revere. Wasn’t that the guy? Paul Revere?
MINGO: Where’s your guy?
ROURKE: Be here any minute. And who do we have … Mr. Cortez. And his associate, Jimmy, isn’t it? Here, let me give you two a hand up.
Graveyard’s full of bodies tonight.
[Rourke’s awkward laughter. Hollow, metal echo]
CORTEZ: Where is he?
ROURKE: Expecting him any minute. Once he gets here this shouldn’t take a second. I assume, I mean, the briefcase—
CORTEZ:—is none of your concern at the moment, Mr. Rourke. When I see the product, you will see the money.
ROURKE: Of course, sure, listen, I was thinking, maybe the way to do this, just to make sure there are no mistakes and it’s all handled professionally—
[Laughter]
ROURKE: Why’s he laughing? Why’s your driver there laughing?
CORTEZ: Mingo, please. Go on, Mr. Rourke. [Quiet for a moment. Foot shuffling]
ROURKE: I thought maybe I’d stay in the middle, here, and you and your people could stay to one side, and then, when they get here, him and his people, they could stay on my opposite side. If that’s all right with everyone? We could pass the cases back and forth through me. You know, broker.
CORTEZ: No objection.
[Indiscriminate noise]
ROURKE: Bingo, here they are now. Gentlemen, good to see you.
[Climbing up on metal, movement, coughing, repositioning of bodies]
ROURKE: Beautiful, so we’re all here, tremendous. Mr. Cort
ez, this is the Paraclete. Mr. W, I’d like you to meet Mr. Cortez.
CORTEZ: A pleasure to finally meet.
PARACLETE: Likewise.
Lenore’s whole body seizes up. The voice enters her ear and it’s like she’s been smashed across the back of the head with a board, a fat, sturdy two-by-four out of nowhere. No preparation, no time to flinch. Just a pure impact against her fragile skull.
It’s Woo’s voice. Absolute certainty. The Paraclete is Woo.
Lenore comes up onto her knees, hugs the Uzi to her chest, starts to rise, and hears:
CORTEZ: Who’s the hostage?
WOO: A visual aid, if you will. I thought you might like to see what my product can do.
CORTEZ: [possibly to Rourke]: I’ve seen. All over my streets lately. There was no talk of this. There was no mention.
WOO: Yes, I understand there was some [pause] confusion concerning the samples that were sent to you—
CORTEZ: Who is he? Untape the man’s mouth. This was not part of the plan.
WOO:—but I thought you might like to witness the process, as they say, up close and personal. Our guest for the evening is a former associate of Mr. Rourke. A fellow letter carrier. Mailman, as they say.
She grabs the rope and starts to climb out of the grave, frantic, all panic and no finesse. Back on the surface, she swings the Uzi on its strap around to her back and falls on her stomach. Rourke’s sidekicks are definitely out there somewhere and who knows what kind of backup Cortez or Woo has planted.
Box Nine Page 32