House of Heroes

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by Mary LaChapelle




  House of Heroes

  Mary LaChapelle

  Dzanc Books

  Dzanc Books

  1334 Woodbourne Street

  Westland, MI 48186

  www.dzancbooks.org

  Copyright © 1988 Mary LaChapelle

  All rights reserved, except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher.

  The author is grateful for permission to reprint stories that appeared, sometimes in slightly different form, in the following magazines: Northern Lit Quarterly (“Homer”), Sing Heavenly Muse (“The Gate-House”), WARM Journal (“Superstitious”), Redbook (“Accidents”).

  Published 2013 by Dzanc Books

  A Dzanc Books rEprint Series Selection

  eBooks ISBN-13:

  eBook Cover by Awarding Book Covers

  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  TO MY PARENTS,

  CATHERINE REARDON LA CHAPELLE

  AND

  JAMES MICHAEL LA CHAPELLE

  CONTENTS

  Anna in a Small Town

  Superstitions

  The Gate House

  Homer

  House of Heroes

  Accidents

  The Meadow Bell

  Drinking

  The Understanding

  Faith

  Acknowledgments

  HOUSE OF HEROES

  ANNA IN A SMALL TOWN

  I’m waiting in the car outside the Waupaca County jail. My cousin Anna left me here five minutes ago. She needs to check on Mike’s bail and to see if she can talk with him awhile. I had started to get out of the car to go with her, but she said, “Wait here, Jane. I feel so bad about your being involved already.” I couldn’t be sure what she really wanted, or what I wanted, so I made one of those faces I know how to make, where each of my eyebrows goes in a different direction.

  And after she got out, she came over to my side of the car and bent far down to peer into my window. “Really,” she said. “He’s so hung over, he won’t mind sleeping until the bail comes through. Besides, Sunday is the best time to see the zoo; I’d still like to give you the tour.”

  She straightened up, and all I could see were her log-size legs until she walked away. Her softball jacket was shiny blue and said BALDY’S AND MARY’S on the back. I thought about how there wasn’t much reason for her to wear it anymore, and then I could see her from behind pulling at the material in the front of her jacket. Adjusting, not because she was cold, or because it was raining, but because adjusting was second nature to her, always making herself fit, into her clothes, into other people’s cars, or the next room she might enter.

  My cousin is a giant, and you can’t forget that fact while looking at her. I watched her set her feet on the steps to the jail with a sliding motion, smoothly and softly, the way I imagine Indians were taught to step so as not to disturb the forest. Her purse looked like a toy over her wrist, and she took the steps two at a time. But these are details anyone might notice.

  There are yellow leaves stuck to the windshield. One leaf is sliding down a drip of water. It could make me think of a tear, but I don’t want to think about tears, or the gloom inside this car, or the gloom outside of it. I want to know how I got into this? I came here to see Anna; well, this is partly true. I came to direct a mime workshop at the college in Stevens Point, which is only a stone’s throw from Waupaca. The two of us have exchanged a few cards, but basically we haven’t seen each other since her sister’s wedding six years ago. She urged me in every one of her cards to stop in Waupaca if I should happen to pass through. I never encouraged her to visit me, however; I suppose because I was doubtful about her fitting into my little box of an apartment, but also because I am on tour so much of the time.

  Anna called me a week ago. My sister, she said, had mentioned in her last note that I would be coming through. I had forgotten about her voice: it’s like birch bark, rough and smooth at the same time. And we chatted together with the strained feelings of two people who were once close and now aren’t sure why. Finally, she talked me into driving up for the weekend since my workshop didn’t begin until Monday.

  We estimated that the leaves would be peak color for my drive from Chicago, but I was disappointed. The trees were undramatic. If they had changed at all, it was only to a dull yellow like these leaves on the windshield—no reds, no ambers. In fact, there wasn’t a tree along the road that didn’t seem somehow listless in its response to autumn.

  I had hardly come onto her property and out of my car before Anna was there, bending over me. She gave me a kind of hug by putting a hand around each of my shoulders. “Sorry about the leaves,” she said.

  “Why?”

  “Because the rain’s been bringing them down before they’ve had a chance.”

  “That’s not your fault, Anna. It’s been raining in Chicago too.”

  I’d forgotten how different she was from anyone else. She was standing back from me, smiling, but trying not to smile too much. Sometimes her body has an enormous energy of expectation you can almost see, like mercury in a thermometer. It makes me very uncomfortable. When she sensed I was feeling this way, she let go of her excitement and became still before slowly bending at the waist into the trunk of my car. I noticed once again how the movements of her hands were delayed, as if it took longer for intentions to travel the lengths of her arms.

  Her fingers were too large to fit into the grips of my suitcases. And after she had gathered up all my bags under one arm, I had to tell her I only needed one for the weekend; she blushed and put two of them back. “This is it,” she said, extending her other arm over the property. Three years ago she sent me a card on which she had sketched a picture of her land. It was drawn as if from an aerial view, a square, cut into the front of a forest of small, friendly pine trees. Standing in the lot, I could see the pines were not as proportionally small as they had been drawn, and they weren’t friendly. They were stiff and had been planted in rows. The bottom branches were scraggly on every tree, creating, at eye level, a scratched, gray haze. And the upper bulk of the trees was massed together in a unified plan to keep the light out.

  If I ever lived in a forest—and I have thought about it—I wouldn’t live in a pine forest. I’ve never seen much else grow in pine forests, except pines. Whether this is because of the piles of needles, or the lack of light, I don’t know. The kind of forest I would live in would be a great mixture of plants and trees. And if I couldn’t identify everything that grew there, I think I might even find a comfort in that.

  I didn’t know what to say to Anna, so I said, “Just smell that pine.”

  We walked up to the house, which isn’t quite a house yet. She had explained this on the phone, and now she was explaining it again. “Everything’s in the basement while the rest of the house is being built. It’s sealed off, though, and warm.”

  A door was cut into the front blocks of the basement, which were all exposed. It was too small for Anna, as most doors are, so she needed to bow her head and pull in her shoulders to go through. I stopped behind her and waited. When she was inside, I said, “Anna, look.” Then I imagined a door much smaller than my body, and I mimed my way through it. She was laughing as she watched, but her eyes were troubled. My imitation wasn’t right; I could feel it, and she knew it too. And I imagined, even in this case, that she probably felt it was her own fault.

  I tried to smooth it over by switching my attention to her place. Since it wasn’t completely a house yet, it seemed to me a basement apartment. The floors and walls were cement. She had tried t
o warm it up with rugs and hangings, but still the color and the smell of basement blocks were everywhere.

  “This is nice, Anna. And look! A wood stove.”

  “This little fellow,” she said, tapping her knuckles on the pipe, “is going to heat the whole house eventually.”

  “Really!” I made a big deal of it because I knew she must have paid a lot of money for it, and because it was an uncommon thing in the city.

  We drank Leinenkugels, brewed locally. The afternoon was so gray, we needed to turn the lights on, and I wondered if I could already feel so fuzzy from the beer. There was an illustration of an Indian maiden on the label with her arms winding up toward the neck. I was sitting on the couch, and Anna was sitting on an unpacked crate of books she had pulled up to the coffee table, her legs set wide apart with her feet flat on the floor. This is the way I remembered her sitting whenever she had pants on. After many of our exchanges she would say, “God, it’s been a long time.” She would punctuate this by jabbing a little knife into a nut-covered cheese ball she had made, spreading the cheese over another cracker. “Your hair’s so short,” she finally seemed comfortable enough to say to me.

  “Once a harlequin, always a harlequin,” I said deadpan.

  “Harlequin?” she said. “I forget what that is.”

  We talked about Chicago, her old neighborhood and my old neighborhood, high school, and the times we slept at each other’s houses. We didn’t talk about her being a giant. In my family the policy was not to call attention to her differences, but we talked about her among ourselves. Grandma would cluck, “Poor Nanna,” after each visit. I was only eight months younger than she, but even when we were babies, Anna was three times my size. I can still hear my aunt, calling after her as she ran into the yard to play, telling her to be careful of the other children, as if she were a Great Dane loping into the midst of us.

  After Anna told me about her promotion and transfer to the post office in Waupaca, and I tried to explain the different ways I was able to make a living as a performer, there was a lull in the conversation, and the noise of Anna shifting her weight on the book box sounded the way a tree groans just before it falls.

  “I hear you have a boyfriend.” I knew this was going to embarrass her, but I didn’t know how else to break into it.

  She put her hands palms down on her knees. “Mike,” she said.

  “Tell me about him.”

  “He was one of the carpenters working on the house. We got friendly, and then we got close.”

  “Close?”

  She hugged her knees, looked down, and smiled, like it was high school and this was her first boyfriend. I was the one with boyfriends in high school, not Anna. When I slept at her house, she’d pump me for every detail. “What did he say? What did you say?”

  And when I first learned to kiss, I promised I would show her. Setting the stage for her that night was far more dramatic than any real kiss I’d had up to then. I put some red gym shorts over the lamp and a 45 on the player called “The Look of Love.” Her cocker spaniel, Puddles, named because his eyes were muddy pools of devotion, watched the record go around. I had Anna sit on the edge of her bed while I went out of her room to come back in again. Then I walked up to where she was waiting and put a hand on each side of her big face, looked into her eyes and said, “I’m going to kiss you.” She fell backwards on her bed laughing, which was a long fall for her and hard on the bed. Puddles jumped onto her stomach and barked at her. I climbed onto her and tried to throttle her, pleading for her to get serious. The needle came to the saddest part on the record. She sat up and set Puddles on the floor. I imagined I was the most serious kisser. I put my face close to hers. “The first one is the most important. Dry your mouth on your sleeve like I am; our lips have to be dry. Don’t open your mouth and don’t breathe.”

  Even then I knew it wasn’t experience that Anna needed. She never had a boyfriend, she didn’t pretend that she didn’t want one. She approached her makeup like a science. She set her hair, painted her nails, pulled away her eyebrows with melted wax. I remember her identifying the shape of her face from a makeup diagram in Seventeen magazine. She was pleased to find that hers was heart-shaped and from then on would point out other people with heart-shaped faces whenever she saw them.

  I looked at her with her tiny knife poised in the air. She was looking back at me, as if to say, “Don’t think what you’re thinking.” She picked at the label of her beer bottle, sucked in her breath, then let it out. “None of you ever thought I’d be with anyone, did you?”

  “Well, I think we expected it would be harder for you than for some people.”

  “It was. Mike’s the first one, and Mom and Dad won’t admit he exists.”

  “Why?”

  “Because he’s older, because he’s been married more than once, because he’s had some trouble along the way.”

  “He’s not what they expected,” I said.

  “They didn’t expect anything. But now that I have someone, they don’t approve. They’re looking into some book for the right person for me. You’d never find me in those books in the first place. But that’s enough, we don’t have to spend our whole wad on this kind of talk.” She dug into the cheese ball. “It’ll be good just to have some time together. I planned things out. We can change anything you don’t like. Tonight I’ll take you to a good fish fry.”

  “When am I going to meet Mike?”

  “He’s hoping to make it to the fry, but he’s always stuck with a lot of overtime this part of the year, trying to get things built before the cold sets in. Tomorrow we’re going to play an out-of-season softball game.”

  “Why are you going to play out of season?”

  “Baldy’s and Mary’s, the bar that sponsors us, is having a closing-out party tomorrow night.”

  “A what?”

  “When a bar closes, they can’t sell their liquor to the next owner—tax reasons, or something like that. So they have a party and serve it free.”

  “Sounds as though people may be getting a bit drunk.”

  “A bit,” she said. “Then on Sunday I want to take you to the zoo.”

  “Waupaca has a zoo?”

  “Well, it’s a little one, but yeah. It was a community effort. The Lion’s Club sponsored the lions. Other groups sponsored other parts. The hardware store donated cans and cans of paint. The high school kids have done a lot of the painting and help keep up the grounds. I’m surprised you didn’t hear about it in the papers last year.”

  “About what?”

  “Someone tried to kill one of our elks.”

  “I’m not sure what elks are.”

  “They’re like deer here, only bigger. I think these came from Wyoming.”

  “Someone tried to kill one?”

  “Yeah, it was in the paper here for two weeks. A twelvepoint male, a gorgeous animal, something they could have used in a beer commercial. Everybody was shook up. Someone went out there in the night and filled it full of arrows. Three of the high school kids found him when they were doing their chores in the morning. He was still alive, heaving with all these arrows in him, and blood coming out of his nostrils. One of the high schoolers ran to get help. When the vet and the sheriff and the kid came back, they found the other two kids fighting with each other. One of them, it seems, had been running in circles, trying to find a rock or something to end it for the buck. The other one was standing his ground over the thing, telling him he wouldn’t let it be killed…”

  “So the buck’s okay?”

  “Well, he’s alive.”

  I’d been looking forward to a fry at a Wisconsin tavern: the knotty-pine kind we found when we summered at the lake as kids. I’d even mentioned this to Anna on the phone. But she chose a more modern place in Stevens Point, something I might have found on any strip in the Chicago area, a place with anchors on the walls, a circular salad buffet, and a huge fish-tank wall that separated the bar from the restaurant.

  Anna had dresse
d up in an orange silk top she had sewn for herself, and orange earrings that looked diminutive on her ears. While she took great care to make up her face, I decided to follow the cue and bring my black suit out of the car, along with an orange bow tie I use in some of my performances.

  We went together as an odd couple to the Schooner Inn, where it seems the locals were proud to come. Many of the ladies looked as though they had had Friday afternoon hair appointments. Anna, who wears a hairstyle reminiscent of the bouffant she wore in high school, had fluffed hers up, too. She didn’t try to understate her visibility in the way she used to. She did not slouch or talk softly. And there was even one point where she spoke up to me as if I had said something on the subject that needed to be corrected. “All the upstairs doors in my house are going to be custom fit. It’s expensive, but Mike figured out a shortcut, some way that he can use standard doors and add on to them.” I realized she was still troubled by my imitation of her that afternoon.

  In the salad line, she introduced me to two married women with perfectly stiff hairdos. She said, “This is my cousin Jane from Chicago. She’s a visiting teacher at the college.” She didn’t tell them I was a mime, but I had a great inclination to waddle away from the buffet like Charlie Chaplin. When the ladies returned to their table, I could see they were telling their husbands what the story was. The husbands nodded, chewing, and went back to their steaks, reassured. I had the keen feeling throughout the evening that we were being watched, but whenever I looked around, people would look away.

  Anna went into the bar several times to call Mike. Each time she came back to the table flushed. And when I finally asked her what was wrong, she said there were troublemakers in there. I tried to look through the aquarium wall of the bar to see who these troublemakers were, but all I could make out were the reflections in the glass of all the people in the lighted restaurant, as if they were sitting at little tables inside the tank, and the fish were swimming around them.

 

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