by Earl Emerson
“You’re not going to tell me to have faith in God, not after what He’s done to you?” We’d spent so much time avoiding talk of religion and any discussion of her impending death that I was almost as embarrassed by my statement as she was.
Even though we both knew I was lashing out at her in order to fend off inquiries about my own problems, she said, “What’s God done to me? I’ve had a wonderful life.”
“I love you, Mom, but you’re forty-one years old, you’ve lived most of your life in poverty. You don’t even own a car. You’re dying of cancer. I don’t call that being watched over by God. I just don’t.”
“Are you saying if I had a Mercedes, that would be a signal God was taking care of me? Don’t be silly. My life with you was a miracle. I’ve been blessed.”
“Your life with me was a struggle.”
“Don’t ever start feeling sorry for me or yourself, Jason. You were born in the wealthiest country in history. Most people on this earth survive on less than two dollars a day. Thousands of children starve to death each day, and we all march ahead as if it isn’t happening. Don’t ever feel sorry for yourself. And as far as me dying at forty-one? It’s only been the last hundred years or so women even lived this long.”
She stared at me, her gray eyes more earnest than ever. “Jason, don’t ever feel sorry for me. I don’t.”
“Okay.”
After checking out of the hotel, we drove to the Grand Coulee Dam and spent an hour at the visitors’ center, then walked along the sidewalk on top of the dam and took the tour inside. Everything about the dam fascinated my mother: the immensity, the historical footnotes concerning the construction, the permanence. On the way home we explored Native American hieroglyphics in the boulders off the highway and hiked up into the caves with a smattering of other intrepid travelers. Later we had dinner in Wenatchee, a good-sized agricultural town just this side of Blewett Pass, where she ordered a salad but then had it boxed up on the pretext that she’d eat it later.
I’d taken this trip in the mistaken belief that travel might clear my head, but the longer we stayed away from home, the more antsy and chaotic my thoughts became, until I thought I was going mad. Four people—no, six people—were dead, and had I done things differently, they would all be alive still. My primary character trait these days seemed to be paralysis.
Ted Tronstad had gone from being a small-time prankster and troublemaker to being a thief, then from a possibly accidental killer to an intentional one. A smarter, more confident Jason Gum could have stopped every one of those deaths.
Mom didn’t wake up until I was driving up the hill into West Seattle. “Going to be a nice evening,” she said, sleepily. “The pollution always makes the sky pretty.”
“Yes, it does.”
The way I saw it, I had three choices.
I could turn the bonds over to Tronstad and Johnson and wait to see what transpired.
I could do something to stop Tronstad, either by myself or in conjunction with Robert Johnson.
I could go to the authorities.
Each alternative involved risk. If I turned the bonds over to Tronstad, the odds were he would try to get rid of me as an unwanted witness, maybe by firebombing my car or my house. If I stopped him, Johnson’s euphemism for killing him, I would become what he’d become. I knew I couldn’t live with that. If I went to the authorities, I would most likely end up in a cell.
I carried my mother’s bags upstairs, made certain she was secure, kissed her brow, then went back out to my car, half expecting Tronstad to be lurking about, though he wasn’t.
When I parked in the short driveway in front of my garage door, Mrs. Macklin was staring at me from her front doorway, one of her unshaven adult sons alongside. “Good evening, Mrs. Macklin. What’s going on?”
I glanced to my right and saw what I should have seen when I pulled up.
My living-room window had a long crack running from bottom to top, and the drapes had been pulled off the wall.
35. MADE THEM SENSE OF NONE
“HARRY TOOK ME to the fabric store to pick up some more green yarn for the Cottage Rose potholders I’m crocheting for Christmas presents,” Mrs. Macklin said. “Then we stopped by the Safeway for some lima beans and raisins. Oh, and I had to get me some lottery tickets and cigarettes, too. But the line wasn’t so long as usual. We couldn’t have been gone more than an hour. When we got back . . .” She began weeping, her lower lip twitching.
“Somebody broke in?”
“They broke my back door. You should have been here. I can’t watch this place all by myself. I have to go out sometime, don’t I? I don’t even want to think what they would have done if I’d been home. A helpless woman all alone.”
“When did this happen?”
Her son piped up, “A few hours ago. I have a case number if you want to call the officer who came out. She said you could call day or night. I didn’t know whether to leave or not. You going to be around?”
“I’ll be here.”
“You sure?” Mrs. Macklin said.
“I’m sure.”
Inside, the two rooms I’d cleaned after the first burglary were the worst, as if he wanted to break my spirit by destroying what I’d already tried to remedy. He’d shattered, bent, destroyed, stepped on, torn, shredded, peed on, or stolen everything of value. He’d taken each piece of silverware and bent it in half. My dresser drawers had been flattened.
In the garage the wallboard had been torn open with a shovel, a task that must have taken a good deal of time and made a lot of racket. Mrs. Macklin could hardly have thought I was remodeling, and she must have been home during some of it. There’d been a small fire in the center of the living room on the carpet, a calling card of sorts. He had tapped it with water from a pan, then collapsed the pan and left it on the charred carpet.
He’d apparently toyed with the idea of burning the place down, arrested no doubt by my remark about the bonds being flammable.
I formed a large pile of throwaways on the covered concrete patio out back. If I’d had any doubts this was Tronstad’s handiwork, they were dispelled when I checked my in-line skate collection hanging on the wall in the garage and found he’d taken a cigarette lighter and melted a hole in the toe box on all four pairs. The garage still reeked of melted plastic.
I should have called the cops three days before, when he attacked my mother—she never did call them back. If I had, he might be in custody by now. I might be, too.
He’d scrawled filth on the walls with shoe polish, scattered clothing across the floors, and had even taken the time to write balloon captions on one high school photo of me and a girl named Pamela. The balloon over my head said, “Watch out for me, babe, I steal from my friends!” The balloon over hers said, “Such a tiny dick.”
It was eight when I started cleaning. By ten-thirty I had the bedroom pretty much put back in place, though it would need a new carpet, dresser, and mattress. I found two sheets he’d neglected to slash and put them through Mrs. Macklin’s washing machine; he’d cut the cord on mine. In fact, he’d cut the cord on every electrical appliance in the house.
Coming back from doing my laundry, I found Sonja Pederson’s official SPD business card stuck in the back door. Considering how each had evolved, it was hard to explain why our few brief meetings had endeared Sonja Pederson to me, but they had. Then in one of those strange coincidences you don’t think can be real even as it’s happening, there was a knock at the front door. “You decent?”
Sonja Pederson stepped through the doorway. “This is bad. Somebody spent a lot of time here.”
“Mrs. Macklin said she was only gone an hour, but I figure they were in here all afternoon, saw her leave, and then went over there.”
“That’s how we figured it, too. I’m sorry to barge in on you. I recognized the address when it came over the radio. The neighbor said you were out of town. If you don’t mind, I thought I’d give you a hand.”
“Really?”
/> “You are alone here, aren’t you?”
“I’m alone.”
“Your neighbor seems to think . . . well, she’s under the impression this might have been done by one of the scores of older women you have wild orgies with at all hours of the day and night.”
“You hate me, don’t you?”
“Because of Iola? Don’t be absurd. I never blamed you. Men are helpless when a woman wants something from them.”
“Your stepmother ever do anything like this?”
“Once she beat on a guy’s car with a tennis racket. Did quite a bit of damage, actually.”
“What happened?”
“My father took care of it. Then he took Iola to Hawaii to patch things up. That’s their routine. He makes her mad. She goes off with a guy. He scares the guy away. Then they patch things up.”
“Why do they stay together?”
“I don’t know why he stays. I assume she stays because he’ll have money when Grandpa passes on.”
“So you came because you think she did this?”
“She was at work. I checked. I came because I want to help. If you’ll let me.”
“I’ll let you if you don’t put me in any thumb locks and try not to kick me in the nuts.”
She laughed.
She picked up a clock that had been stepped on until its innards were herniating out the sides. “So, where are we? What do you want me to do first?”
She was wearing her uniform, shirt, badge, gun belt, and, if I wasn’t mistaken, a bulletproof vest underneath. When I told her she could use the bedroom to change, she went in and removed her vest, rebuttoning her shirt and strapping her gun back on.
“Thanks for coming,” I said.
“You’re welcome.”
We worked together for half an hour. Little was said. At eleven-twenty a middle-aged African man showed up at the front door with a box of pizza.
“I hope you don’t mind,” Sonja said.
“At least let me pay.”
When he’d gone, she carried the cardboard box to what was left of the sofa and said, “I ordered the biggest one. I didn’t know how hungry you might be.”
I wasn’t hungry at all, but I sat next to her anyway.
She said, “When I was twelve my father took me to Japan on a business trip. The young people all wore these goofy T-shirts with English writing on them, only none of them made any sense. They said things like ‘All my life is a lovers.’ Or ‘Let’s not throw; don’t throw litters the way.’ Every time I have pizza I think of one that said, ‘We die mango pizza for.’ ” She laughed. “None of them made sense.”
“Made them sense of none.”
She laughed again, and while I couldn’t laugh along with her, I liked it that she was trying to cheer me up by laughing at my anemic joke. Like a pair of hoboes at the city dump, we camped on the foam bleeding out the cushions and arms of my sofa. At least I felt like a hobo. With her uniform shirt and gun, she still looked very much like a Seattle cop, albeit a sexy Seattle cop.
36. GUM APPEARS TO BE A SIMPLETON
LIKE ALL HUMANS, my psyche required intimacy—not mere physical intimacy, but intimacy in the realms emotional, spiritual, and moral. For me, right now, moral most of all, because I was floundering along the margins of corruption without a compass.
Although I desperately wanted to talk to somebody about my problems, the particulars kept me from it. I didn’t know how to discuss my current situation without confessing to complicity, forced or otherwise, in a series of odious crimes.
I’d been about as close to obtaining emotional sustenance from Iola as a dog walking across a college campus was to obtaining a bachelor’s degree. My time with Iola had provided nothing but short bruising periods of athletic sexual congress followed by long sessions of her blathering, which included unfounded and plain wrongheaded opinions on world politics as well as not-so-veiled references to her promiscuous sexual history, followed by a half hour or so of walking around the house in the nude while she commented freely on my lack of sophistication, and then, more often than not, a second session of sex, generally angrier, more vigorous, and more resigned than the first.
While these assignations had slaked my lust, they’d left me feeling emptier and more alone than I’d ever felt, like a man on a raft drinking seawater, which filled your stomach but left you thirstier than when you started. Sadly, my debauched enterprises with her stepmother had squelched any chance of romance with Sonja. I knew that.
Yet it was closing in on midnight, and here she was in my house, just her and me. I had a fleeting thought that maybe she was as batty as her stepmother and that she was the one who’d trashed my house, but I dismissed it.
Despite my yearning for companionship, I did not feel completely comfortable about her motives. First, there was the possibility that she was interested in me solely because her stepmother had been interested, and that Iola, Sonja, and myself were playing out some demented Olympian psycho-sexual family drama, that I was cannon fodder in a twisted scheme I would never fully comprehend. Even though I had no facts to support such a belief, it dogged me.
As we sat side by side on the sofa and gobbled pizza, another more likely and equally jaded vision began coursing through my brain. Sonja goes into her boss’s office, and there are FBI agents huddled around a pile of notes and fact sheets. Sizing her up, they review her brief record with the SPD and ask her where she sees herself in ten years. She admits she has ambitions. They invite her to sit down. They ask if she knows a man named Gum. She admits she does. They ask if she can get close to Gum, if she believes she might coax him into saying things he would never admit in public. She says Gum appears to be a simpleton and she believes conning him might be possible. They ask if she is willing to wear a wire.
The whole idea of Sonja remaining in uniform as she bumped around my place made more sense when fitted into this whacked-out scenario. What a coup it would be in court when she testified that I’d confessed while she was in uniform—badge, gun belt, and nightstick in place.
Even though I wasn’t hungry, I ate three slices of pizza, feeling my stomach grow tight, a pleasant and lusty feeling, one I didn’t have often, as I watched my diet. I set my plate aside and straightened my legs, leaning back on the sofa. Sonja did the same, our legs splayed out like a couple of drunks in front of a football game. “Too bad about all this,” she said.
“He got everything I own except that car out there.”
“Renter’s insurance?”
“Thanks for the tip. I’ll sign up tomorrow.”
“Sorry. You have any idea who might have done this?”
“I know exactly who did it.”
She sat upright, pulled out a small notebook and a pen, then paused. “You’re not going to tell me, are you.”
“No.”
The drapes were nailed up and closed now, the front door locked, the only light in the room emanating from a bare bulb I’d screwed into a lamp I’d rewired. The stark light cut across Sonja’s face, accentuating her one dimple. Faintly, I could smell perfume mixing with the aroma from the pizza. “Let’s get this cleaned up, then,” she said. “At least so you can have somewhere to sleep.”
As we started to get off the sofa, our heads moved closer, and in one of those split-second decisions that come back to haunt you when they go wrong but seem like utter wizardry when you think of them, I clasped her shoulders and kissed her. I could tell she wasn’t surprised. She kissed me back, and despite my best intentions, all the purity of heart I’d been storing up for her vanished in a heartbeat as I began comparing her lips and body to her stepmother’s. Her stepmother had been rapacious, greedy, all tongue, a pair of huge, spongy knockers thrusting against me, greedy hands diving for my belt buckle, while Sonja may as well have been a high-schooler on her first date.
When we parted I wanted to swim in the blue of her eyes. I wanted to tell her that, too, but it would have sounded as if I’d lifted it from the Italian movie I’d hear
d it in, the one my mom and I watched our last night in Winthrop.
We went back to work, and from time to time she showed up in the doorway of the bedroom to show me a damaged utensil and ask if I wanted to keep it or pitch it. Unable to afford replacements immediately, I kept once-round pots now squashed into oblongs, forks with the tines bent, and knives doubled over like old men walking in the wind. I would re-form them later.
It was almost two when I went into the kitchen and found her on her hands and knees scrubbing the floor with a wet rag. There had been no sound in the house, no music, just the euphony of our work: the tinkling and clinking of silverware, the splashing of water in the sinks, the scuffling vibrato as I dragged broken furniture out of the house. Except for a garbage bag full of broken dishes and a broken cabinet door, the kitchen looked almost new. I was bowled over by how much she’d accomplished.
“I’m going to have to stop for tonight,” I said.
She sat up on her heels. She’d taken off her gun belt and uniform shirt. Underneath she wore an almond-colored camisole. “You look beat.”
“I am.”
She got up and walked with me into the living room, where we sat heavily on the ravaged couch in the approximate positions we’d taken up earlier. With the bare lightbulb behind her, she looked incredibly graceful, her neck long and swanlike.
“Do you have to work in the morning?” I asked.
“Not till noon.”
She leaned toward me. “Maybe I should leave,” she said.
I let her statement hang in the air, savoring the ambiguity. She hadn’t said, “I need to get out of here.” Nor had she said, “I’m going home now,” or “I can’t stay a minute longer.” She had said, “Maybe I should leave.” Maybe. I felt like a kid at Disneyland at the end of the day, worn to a frazzle and receiving an implied offer of one more ride. Maybe we still have time for Magic Mountain.
Without thinking, I leaned into her and we kissed for so long I lost track of time, our bodies molded against each other. And then she leaned back and began pushing up her camisole, and I was on top of her and she was kicking her shoes off and we were against each other, our bodies hot from the work and the electricity that had been humming between us all night.