Water Dogs
Page 1
Also by Lewis Robinson
Officer Friendly and Other Stories
Water Dogs is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2009 by Lewis Robinson
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Random House, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
RANDOM HOUSE and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Robinson, Lewis.
Water dogs : a novel / Lewis Robinson.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-1-58836-790-7
1. Brothers—Fiction. 2. Adult children—Fiction. 3. Missing persons—Fiction. 4. Guilt—Fiction. 5. Maine—Fiction. 6. Psychological fiction. I. Title.
PS3618.O33W38 2009
813′.6—dc22 2008016564
www.atrandom.com
v3.1
For CC
It was evening all afternoon.
It was snowing
And it was going to snow.
—WALLACE STEVENS
Contents
Cover
Other Books by This Author
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Acknowledgments
About the Author
1
Bennie didn’t recognize the sound. There were squirrels who sometimes nested in the attic, and barred owls in the nearby woods, and, during the summer, cats in heat prowling the backyard, but the cries he heard were from a place closer to his bedroom. When he was perfectly still, not moving his head on the pillow, every few seconds he would hear the faint crying. He climbed out of bed and crossed the cold pine floor in his boxers. It was still dark out. Standing in the doorway, he listened. It seemed to be in the living room. He felt his way to the standing lamp in the corner and turned the switch, waited, then heard it distinctly, coming from the far wall. He walked closer to the fireplace.
The sound was loudest just to the left of the hearth. He put his ear against the plaster. A gentle bump against the lath, and scratching. He imagined a new hole in the eaves—or an old hole Littlefield hadn’t told him about—and now something trapped inside the wall, crying.
At the bottom of the basement stairs, Bennie grabbed a saber saw and a crowbar from Littlefield’s pegboard, and a pair of canvas gloves and a flashlight from the tool apron. Littlefield would have suggested poison—and he wouldn’t have allowed Bennie to use the saber saw—but Littlefield had gone out to the bar, which meant he was probably now sleeping in his Chevette. When Bennie returned to the living room, he knelt beside the baseboard, listened a final time, then cut a rough rectangle through the plaster. With the crowbar he pried back the lath. He aimed the flashlight into the hole. Eight or ten raccoon eyes looked up at him, little quivering noses pointed toward the light, black fur around the eyes, a stripe of white across the ears and snout. Tiny bandits with miniature claws. They didn’t move much but they continued to chatter and cry. He steered the light around the space within the walls and saw only the babies—nothing larger—so he put on his brother’s canvas gloves, reached through the hole, and pulled them out, one by one, putting them in the cardboard box used for kindling. They didn’t resist, though he felt the light touch of their thin claws. When he’d gotten all five out, he took the box to the porch, set it down, then walked through the breezeway to the barn, where he found the galvanized live-catch trap their sister had once used for opossum in the basement. This plan felt very efficient to him, well conceived. To catch the mother, Bennie baited the trap with an entire tin of sardines. He knew she’d be back. He looked under the eaves and found a hole beside one of the porch’s support columns. He placed the trap next to the cardboard kindling box, on the corner of the porch, beneath the hole.
After switching off all the lights, he got back under the covers. Except for the billowing wind in the spruce trees outside and, occasionally, the steel chime of the bell buoy near Esker Point, all was quiet. Bennie’s skin was still cold from the winter night. He tried to relax. He thought about what a victory this had been—the decision to cut the hole, making it the right size, saving the baby raccoons. He’d find a better place for them. Littlefield would laugh, but he didn’t care. He’d done the right thing.
But crying in that box on the porch until morning—it was the first week of March, still bitterly cold—the raccoons would surely freeze. He shook his covers off again, stood up, and walked outside to retrieve the box. He put it on the kitchen table; the raccoons stayed quiet.
Back in bed, Bennie could hear them crying again. He got up, walked to the kitchen, and put the box in the mop closet, then returned to his room. Done.
Thirty or forty minutes later, the phone rang. Bennie marched back to the kitchen, this time aware of how tired he was, and how few hours remained before sunrise. It was his twin sister, Gwen. She lived in New York.
“Littlefield said you didn’t want me to come home. For a visit.”
“Gwen?” he asked. “Do you know what time it is?”
“For a visit. You didn’t want me around.”
“Gwen, that’s ridiculous. Come home. Of course I’d love to see you. What time is it? Are you drunk?”
“I didn’t think you’d answer the phone.”
“You shouldn’t believe Littlefield when he says something like that. He’s just messing with you.”
“I guess I just wanted to make sure. Could I visit next week sometime?”
“It’s your house, too. Of course you can visit. I’d love you to visit. I’m kind of asleep right now. Can I call you back?”
“Is Littlefield there?”
“He’s out. Down at Julian’s, I think.”
“Julian’s?”
“Eddie’s, the bar. Now they call it Julian’s. Julian is Eddie’s son.”
“Right. That tall guy. I remember him. Really, really tall. Like a freak.”
“I’m asleep, Gwen. Call back tomorrow, okay?”
“Will you pick me up at the airport?”
“When?”
“Next week. When I come.”
“Of course. Good night.”
“I’ll be there for our birthdays,” she said.
Growing up, they’d always celebrated together—they were born only fifteen minutes apart, on either side of midnight. “That’d be nice,” he said. “I’m going to sleep now.”
“Wow. Somebody’s grumpy. Next time, just don’t answer the phone. We’ll all be happier,” she said, and hung up.
As he tried to sleep, he thought about their old family house—its leaky pipes, chipping paint, uneven floors, drafty windows. Baby raccoons in the walls. They called it “the Manse,” which had been a family joke, because the house was not grand or impressive compared to others along the coast, but now that Bennie and Littlefield were in charge, and the porch seemed one or two strong storms away from crumbling
into the ocean, and the old copper pipes were failing, rotting the ceilings and the walls, calling the place “the Manse” seemed sad. The last time Gwen had come to visit them—the previous summer—she and Bennie had been sitting on the porch, drinking beer, discussing Gwen’s latest rationale for living in New York and continuing her quest to be an actress. Gwen said that pretending to be another person was invigorating. Bennie wanted to relate this to his own experience, so after he let his sister finish, he took a big sip of beer and said that paintball was a pretty good outlet for pretending, too.
He told her that paintball taught him to be careful, and patient, and that he and Littlefield and Julian went out together, competing against a group of sea urchin divers at a year-round course called the Flying Dutchman, sometimes going for a full session without taking more than two or three shots. Two or three gumballs, hopefully kill shots, full of bright-colored sludge. They played every Saturday.
When Bennie looked at her after describing this, he knew they were both having the same thought: there’d been a lot of promise, once. According to their mom at least. He’d done pretty well in high school. They were the grandchildren of an original member of the Stock Exchange. But while Gwen had decided at Vassar to be an actress (it took her a few years to get to New York, and she wasn’t doing much acting, but she’d landed two small roles at the Brooklyn Family Theater in Park Slope and she had a gig as a temp at an accounting firm), Bennie hadn’t finished college. He thought there might be a time when he’d start up again—when he would have good ideas about how to put a college degree to use in midcoast Maine—but for now he just wanted to keep the Manse from falling apart. Working at the vet’s office, taking care of the house—that was plenty. He and Gwen were about to turn twenty-seven.
The front door banged shut, and from his bed Bennie heard Littlefield knocking his boots against the wall, depositing, Bennie was sure, lumps of snow on the kitchen floor. Bennie heard the sink faucet turn on, and the clink of a glass. Littlefield tromped into the living room. After a brief silence, he said, “My fucking saber saw. Don’t use my saber saw.”
“I’m asleep,” said Bennie. When they’d moved back into the old house, Bennie had chosen the downstairs bedroom. Most of the time, it was convenient, but there were occasional disadvantages to sleeping near the front door.
“Whoa! Did you cut a hole in the wall?”
Bennie flipped his light on and came to the doorway. “Take off your boots when you come inside.”
Littlefield was poking the ashes in the fire, trying to find the coals. He was wearing a black sweatshirt with the hood up. “Those are my sardines in the trap out there.”
“Has it sprung yet?” asked Bennie.
“That’s no way to catch an animal. Have a heart? Please. Have some balls, Bennie. That’s a better motto when you’re catching an animal. Have. Some. Balls. Some scrotal ballast. I should design a grow-a-pair trap and force you to use it. A giant glue trap—with a guillotine.”
“Did you look closely? Maybe it’s already sprung,” Bennie said, walking to the kitchen. It felt satisfying to ignore his brother’s late-night bluster. Bennie held open the door and they walked onto the porch.
In his underwear, Bennie shone the flashlight at the trap. The beam sparkled on the empty trap’s galvanized metal. “Did you talk to Gwen?”
“No,” said Littlefield.
“She called tonight. She said you said we didn’t want her to visit.”
They walked back inside, Bennie holding the door again. Littlefield said, “No. I told her you didn’t want her to visit.”
Bennie felt a familiar anger rise in his chest. “What? Why?”
Littlefield crumpled newspaper and laid it on the andirons. “Where’s the kindling box?”
“We’re out of kindling,” said Bennie. He grabbed a wool blanket from the back of the couch, wrapped it around himself, and sat in the rocking chair.
“I’ll go chop some,” said Littlefield.
“Hold on,” said Bennie. “There’s some in the kitchen.” He retrieved the cardboard box from the mop closet and brought it to the living room, set it down gently, and opened it. The raccoon babies were clumped together, a mass of wriggling fur, squeaking quietly.
He waited for his brother’s reaction.
Finally, Littlefield said, “Do you see those rats in that box?”
“They were in the wall,” said Bennie. “They were keeping me up. They’re not rats. They’re raccoons.”
“And you put them in that box?”
“I didn’t want you to poison them.”
“They’ll give you roundworm. The grubs can get into your stomach. They eat your kidneys and your heart.”
“The grubs can get in your stomach?”
“If you swallow them.”
Bennie knew it was rarely worth arguing details with Littlefield. He handed him the kindling and said, “I’m just trying to catch the mom. Then I’ll let them all go.”
“Get them the hell out of here. They’re wild animals. They shouldn’t be in here.”
“After I catch the mom I’ll bring them all down to the ravine.”
Littlefield shook his head. He arranged the kindling on top of the newspaper. Bennie closed the box and returned it to the kitchen closet and poured himself a glass of milk. When he got back to the living room, the fire was towering, yellow flames lapping the entrance to the flue. Littlefield was sprawled out on the purple couch, still wearing his boots.
Bennie asked, “Why’d you say that to Gwen?”
“Didn’t you tell me you didn’t want my friends coming around?”
“Just Skunk and those other guys living in his trailer.” Skunk Gould and Littlefield had thrown an impromptu party at the Manse in January when Bennie was away for the night. They’d broken windows in the living room and someone had pissed on the rocking chair.
“And that you wanted to keep the place neater?” asked Littlefield.
“And this has what to do with Gwen?”
“I told her you were dating some girl from Bowdoin. And you didn’t want the house to look too messy. In case you brought her back here.”
“Admit you do want to see your sister.”
“I’d be happy to see Gwen.”
“Admit you’re just being an asshole,” said Bennie. “And for the record, Helen’s not from Bowdoin. She went to Bowdoin College. And she lives in Musquacook. She’s a cook. At Julian’s.”
“Impressive! That’s some real fine cuisine they have down there. I just had their onion rings about an hour ago. Five stars.”
“Screw you. She puts together their dinner menu. That kitchen is actually doing a much better job since she started there.”
“I’m telling you—top-shelf onion rings.” Littlefield kissed his fingertips. “Magnifique.”
“I’m so glad you enjoyed yourself, retard, but that’s the fry cook, not Helen.”
“What a shame,” said Littlefield, closing his eyes.
Bennie wrapped himself in the wool blanket again. He rocked back and forth in the chair, staring at the fire. Both brothers were quiet. Within minutes, Littlefield was snoring on the couch.
2
When Helen had moved to town in January, she’d started working at the restaurant, and Julian, her boss, passed along the following information to Bennie: she ate a PayDay before every shift, she listened to the Smiths, she liked watching zombie movies (Night of the Living Dead was among her favorites), and she’d grown up in Lewiston, the depressed French-Canadian mill town, where her mother still lived. Julian said she and Bennie would make a great couple. Bennie knew Julian was mercenary when it came to women; he suspected that Julian had already taken a crack at her himself and she’d been polite but clear in expressing her disinterest. She’d rejected him so tactfully, Bennie guessed, that Julian had convinced himself he’d never even flirted with her. Julian’s only disclaimer was that she seemed weird. This, Bennie knew, was his way of protecting himself in the event th
at her rebuff of him ever surfaced. “She’s a little odd,” Julian had said while he wiped down the bar with a wet towel. “She’s perfect for you, though. She went to Bowdoin, but she’s not a jackass.”
Bennie had asked about her after seeing her through the glass door to the kitchen, where she pulled orders off the wire. She was tall and had dark eyebrows and straight brown hair, and her skin glowed from the heat of the stoves. His first idea was to catch her on break and ask her to the porch for a smoke, but he knew if he got her onto the porch there might be too much pressure on the conversation; it’d be too quiet and intense, and she’d probably end up asking him how he spent his time and he’d be cavalier, he’d let something slip about hunting, or paintball, or living in his mom’s old house with his brother, who also enjoyed hunting and paintball. He’d learned that the first conversation was especially important—you plotted a course that was difficult to recalibrate—so he knew he had to be careful. He could open with news of his part-time job at the Esker Cove Animal Hospital and Shelter, allowing her to perceive him as a kindly guy with a soft spot for wayward cats and dogs, but follow-up questions about the animals might lead to a description of the crematorium, and perhaps even the specifics of the pentobarbital injections, which, actually, were a large part of his job. He didn’t want to talk about the injections.
He was occasionally struck by how the details of his life didn’t show well. His paychecks from Esker Cove covered his bills, but his bills were small; he lived in his family’s old house, which was falling apart. Guiltily, he liked war games; he’d dropped out of college. He didn’t have a trust fund, but his mother was ready and willing to give him money (to get him “out of a hole”) whenever necessary. She was a therapist. She complained about not having any money but he knew it was there. He never took her up on her offer. He hadn’t felt desperate enough yet.
Helen probably drank wheatgrass and would hate that he smoked. He didn’t smoke, not really—he just smoked out on the porch at Julian’s. In the summer, he liked to smoke and watch the bats on the creek. Just when you thought you’d seen one, it was gone, but then three more would appear, and vanish. After a while, the flecks of brown blurring along the surface of the water seemed to be everywhere. Now, though, the water was frozen and the bats were asleep underground.