by Miriam Toews
“How do you know his name?” asked Hosea.
“I know,” said Mrs. Cherniski. “I just know.”
“But,” said Hosea. “I don’t mean to upset you further, Mrs. Cherniski, but isn’t it sort of a natural thing for dogs to do, especially now that spring is here?” Hosea couldn’t help but steal another peek at the dogs. He turned back to look at Mrs. Cherniski but she was asleep or dead, not moving, anyway—laid out flat now on the wet driveway, basketball shoes pointing up to Polaris, up towards the brilliant blue sky.
Okay, what? thought Hosea. What do I do? “Mrs. Cherniski?” he said, without touching her. “Mrs. Cherniski?” Nothing. Not a peep. She can’t be dead, thought Hosea. Just because of … of Bill Quinn? Hosea got up and began to run. He ran up the driveway and across the yard and into Mrs. Cherniski’s house. The TV was on and the room smelled like vanilla. He found the phone in the hallway and called the hospital.
“Charlie Orson Memorial Hospital, how may I direct your call?”
“What?” said Hosea. Is this a joke? he thought.
“How may I help you? Hello? Hello?”
“It’s Hosea Funk.”
“Oh God, Hosea, not you again. Now what? Do you want to know what we’re serving for lunch? Or maybe—”
“No, no, Dr. Bon—sorry, François—it’s Mrs. Cherniski. You know, the woman who owns the Wagon Wheel.”
“Yes? What about her?”
“She’s lying in her driveway,” said Hosea. “I don’t know if she’s dead or alive. She just collapsed. There’s this dog and—”
“Wait. In her driveway?”
“Yes.”
“At her house or at the Wagon Wheel?”
“House.”
“Okay, I’ll be right there. Go back to her and loosen her clothing and see if you can get her to talk to you. You could try doing artificial respiration. I’ll be there in three minutes.”
Five minutes later Dr. François and Nurse Barnes and Lawrence Hamm, who happened to be the volunteer driver, had Mrs. Cherniski strapped to a gurney and ready to be loaded into the back of the ambulance. The doctor had found her pulse but it was weak and her breathing was irregular and shallow. Thankfully, Hosea had thrown his hat into his car before Lawrence Hamm had driven up. Surely he would have recognized his dead father’s hat and accused Hosea of stealing it right there on the spot. Hosea stood by the side of the road and waved as they drove back to town and then was happy that nobody had looked up at him to see him wave good-bye to an ambulance. “Yes,” whispered Hosea under his breath, and then, “no, no.”
What kind of a … Hosea thought. Well, say she died, say Mrs. Cherniski didn’t make it, at least she’d be rid of that Bill Quinn character. But then again, he didn’t want to wish death upon her, not really, that is. Maybe she won’t die but she’ll be incapable of looking after herself and she’ll have to move in with her daughter in the city. Even if just until July first. By then she’ll be fit as a fiddle and she’ll be able to come back to Algren and work in the café. Hosea looked over at the dogs. Pat was snapping at some flying thing and Bill Quinn was lying in a puddle, asleep. Bill Quinn, thought Hosea. In a strange and stupid way he admired Bill Quinn.
This is ridiculous, he thought. Bill Quinn has got to go. And I have to get to Johnny Dranger’s place and give him the news. Three babies and Max, if he gets here, that’s four in; Leander dead and Johnny Dranger put outside town limits, that’s two out. Two more out and we’re even-steven. If Mrs. Cherniski dies, just one. And Bill Quinn doesn’t count, thought Hosea. He tugged at his chest and gazed up at the sky. He’d stay on course. Things would fall into place. He’d see to it. “Prime Minister Baert,” he rehearsed, “I’m your son, Hosea Funk, Euphemia’s boy. Welcome to Algren, Canada’s smallest town.”
Bill Quinn, roused by Hosea’s voice, lifted his head and stared at Hosea. One watery brown eye closed for a split second and then opened again. But Hosea missed it. He was a million miles away and it didn’t matter how many dirty dogs winked at him from wet ditches. He wasn’t kidding about his plan. It was on.
“Catch a falling star and put it in your pocket,” Hosea sang as he drove up Johnny’s driveway. He’d put his hat back on. “Save it for a rainy day.” He looked up and noticed that the sky had changed. From the colour of toilet bowl cleanser to the colour of dust. Johnny will know what’s up before I even open my mouth, thought Hosea. And it was true. Before Hosea could properly park the Impala in the tiny driveway, Johnny was out of the house and trotting towards him. “So!” he shouted at Hosea from about twenty yards away. “Don’t tell me, I’m out. Or am I in? Was I out or am I out now? In or out? Out or in? What’s it gonna be this time, Your Excellency?”
Hosea smiled and got out of his car. He was about to shake his head and say, “I’m sorry, John, there’s been another mix-up at the top” when Johnny began to shake his head and clear his throat. “I’m sorry, John,” said Johnny, “there’s been another mix-up at the top.” Hosea tried to speak again but Johnny spoke first. “I don’t get it, Hosea, who’s the Mickey Mouse at the top? And at the top of what? The idiot list? I feel like a Fisher-Price farmer with a Fisher-Price barn and animals. Some moron kid plops me onto the little tractor, stuffs me inside the barn, clicks it shut, and moves me to another municipality. Do I look like a little toy, Hosea? Look, look, I bend at the joints. I’ve got arms, for crying out loud, and a hat that comes off.”
Speaking of hats that come off, thought Hosea, and removed his quickly and put it inside his car. He still hadn’t figured out a way of explaining to people why he was wearing dead Leander Hamm’s hat.
“No, I know you’re not, John,” said Hosea. “You’re not a toy.” Hosea didn’t know what else to say. Johnny stood there glaring at him.
“But I’m out, right?” he said. “Out again, isn’t that so, Hosea? Isn’t that what you’re trying to tell me?”
“It’s just that this particular piece of land is, well, has always been, a real trouble spot. It goes back a long way, and the province is still trying to figure out just where it belongs.” Hosea’s hand went to his chest.
“That’s bullshit, Hosea, and you know it. You just haven’t got enough to do, that’s the real problem.”
“Enough to do?” said Hosea. “Enough to do?”
Just then it started to pour.
“Look, Hosea,” said John, “why don’t you come in for a cup of coffee and I’ll tell you what’s wrong with this country. Guess there’s no way you could put me right out of the country, eh, Hosea? Why quit at the municipal level? I’ve always wanted to live in a hot place, Myanmar, say. Or Burma, or is that the same thing? Anyway, why don’t you get your pooh-bah at the top to make a really big mistake and move me and my toy barn and silo and tractor and little horses and cows all the way over to Myanmar?” Hosea looked at Johnny. He noticed Johnny had a strange way of speaking. What should have been the last word of a sentence seemed to become the first word of the sentence after it. Like, I’ll tell you what’s wrong with this. Country guess there’s no way you could—
“I’m just kidding, Hose. C’mon in. You’re not allergic to cats, are you?”
“No. No, I’m not,” said Hosea. I’m just kidding, Hose. C’mon. In you’re not allergic to cats, are you? Hosea repeated in his mind. Maybe he was asthmatic. Maybe it was a breathing problem. Hosea was intrigued with the way that Johnny spoke. Why hadn’t he noticed it before?
“Good. I’ve been having problems with those damn. Cockroaches ever since Yusef. Died Tiny’s not a roach eater so. I’m trying cats.”
By this time they were inside and Johnny had pointed to a kitchen chair. Hosea sat on it. Johnny went over to the counter to make some coffee.
“You mean the Algren cockroach?” Hosea asked.
“The one and only,” said Johnny. “Are there. Others, I mean around here?”
“I don’t know,” said Hosea. His shoulders slumped and he felt depressed. “I guess there could be,” he said.
“Yeah,” said Johnny, “there could be.”
“Johnny,” said Hosea. “I know you want to be the fire chief. I’m sorry, I …”
John turned around. “Hosea,” he said. “I’m a farmer and a widower since the age of. Nineteen I’ve learned not to rely on. Anything, not my cows, not my horses, not my dogs, not my crops, not the weather, not my health, not my friends, not you, not women, not love, not the fire chief. Job I’ve been in and out of this damn town so many times it’s a. Joke I don’t know what the problem is at the top, as you say, Hose, but, you know, I’ve stopped. Caring I think you must have some kind of a plan but what that plan is I cannot begin to imagine. Hosea, in, out, what difference does it make. Anymore, I’m here in the same. Place so I can’t be the fire. Chief I’ll keep putting out fires just the. Same it’s what I have to do doesn’t. Matter what anyone calls me, chief or. Johnny I’m gonna put out fires and if some government pantywaist tells me I can’t, that won’t matter to me. Either a man’s gotta do what a man’s gotta. Do do you understand what I’m talking about, Hosea?”
“Yes,” said Hosea. “Yes, I do.”
“Okay,” said Johnny.
“I didn’t know you were ever married, John,” said Hosea.
“Well, I was.”
“To who?”
“Whom, you mean. To Caroline Russo.”
Hosea thought for a second. “Caroline Russo?” he said. “But she was the girl who died in that house fire years ago, wasn’t she? She was our age?” And then Hosea stopped. “Oh, I’m sorry, Johnny. Caroline Russo? I had no idea. Nobody knew you two were married. I’m sorry, Johnny.”
“Thanks, it’s. Okay it was a long time ago.”
Hosea and Johnny were quiet. Both men had sips of their coffee. Hosea remembered Caroline Russo. She was wild. She was very funny.
“We took the train to the city and got married at City Hall I,” said Johnny. He smiled at some memory. “Guess we eloped.”
“Oh,” said Hosea. He smiled too. “She was a beautiful girl.”
“Oh yeah,” said Johnny. He smiled again. So did Hosea. “So I put out fires.”
“Yeah,” said Hosea. “Yup.” They smiled at each other again. There was no reason to say anything more about it. It was a neighbour’s stubble fire that started it. The fire just got out of control and spread. The kids in the house were drunk and didn’t have a chance. Hosea knew that Caroline Russo was five months pregnant when she died in the fire. Everybody did. Well, everybody did after the coroner’s report. Nobody knew before that. Except Johnny, I guess, thought Hosea. And Hosea knew that Johnny had been one of the lucky ones. He had gone outside to piss or puke, that detail wasn’t ever really clear, and then had passed out in the yard behind the house. But nobody knew Caroline was pregnant with Johnny’s baby. Nobody knew they had married.
“I wanted to tell. People but I didn’t at the. Beginning and then it just sort of got too late to,” said Johnny. “I’m sorry.”
“You don’t have to be sorry, Johnny,” said Hosea.
“Well, I may not have to be sorry about it, Hose, but I am sorry about. It I’m as sorry as they come.”
Hosea put his head into his hands. By moving Johnny out of the town limits he was destroying Johnny’s chance at redemption. And for what? For his own personal gain. For a kid’s dream of meeting his dad. Johnny never got to see his kid, never got to hold him in his arms and protect him from harm, never got to show him off and call him son and sweetheart. Hosea’s head hurt. He would put Johnny back. Somehow. And before July first. Maybe tomorrow. He knew Johnny would just laugh if he said, Oh, by the way you’re back in. He’d have to do it soon, though. And he’d have to get Johnny the job of fire chief of Algren. He was the only man for the job. It was his destiny. And I, thought Hosea, am not God. He took a deep breath.
“So,” said Johnny, “more coffee?”
“You were going to tell me what’s wrong with this country,” said Hosea.
“Right,” said John. “Remember Yusef, my. Lab, the garbage eater?”
“Big, black …” said Hosea.
“Yeah,” said John. “He died in the fall, sudden. Death from lead poisoning.” He smiled.
“Lead poisoning?” said Hosea.
“I shot him,” said John.
Hosea smiled and nodded. “Why?”
“Cancer of the. Throat I gave him two Big Macs, his favourite, put the rifle to his head and … Bam Yusef’s. Gone didn’t even know what hit. Him far as he knew he was eating a Big Mac with special sauce, box and everything.” John shook his head and had a sip of his coffee. “He was a good dog, Yusef.”
“Mmmmm,” said Hosea. He had a sip of his coffee.
“So a couple of months before Yusef died I got Tiny, another black lab, as a. Replacement they became really good. Friends I hoped Tiny would kill cockroaches the way Yusef. Had but no. Dice Tiny’s all right. Not like Yusef, mind you, but Tiny’s got a head on his shoulders and his heart’s in the right place.”
Where had Yusef’s head and heart been? thought Hosea. He had another sip and said, “Well, that’s good.”
“After Yusef died I buried him out. Back it was a hell of a job because the ground was beginning to freeze, but I got him in there and I said good-bye.”
But what’s wrong with this country? thought Hosea. “That’s too bad,” he said. His thoughts turned to Caroline Russo. He remembered her orange lunch box. She had called the colour eldorado nights or eldorado sunset or something like that.
“So about a week ago, when we had the first big thaw, I’m riding in the truck with Tiny and I smell something weird and I look over at him and he’s got blood and hair hanging off his. Snout sure enough we get home, I go out back, and I see that Tiny’s been digging at Yusef’s grave and then I get closer and I see that he’s actually dug him right up and I see that parts of Yusef have been eaten.”
“He’s been eating Yusef?” asked Hosea.
“Yeah! And then I thought back to the day I buried. Yusef had Tiny been hanging around? Watching I knew he was shook up about Yusef. Dying they were good friends there towards the end.”
“But he ate him,” said Hosea.
“Yeah,” said Johnny, and he began to laugh. He sat there laughing and Hosea stared at him. Johnny began to laugh harder and finally Hosea got it. He grinned. He rubbed his hands on his thighs and began to laugh.
eight
Max and Knute had worked out a sort of arrangement. He looked after Summer Feelin’ from quarter to ten in the morning ‘til quarter after two in the afternoon. Those were the hours that Knute worked for Hosea. Although calling it work was a bit of an exaggeration. Mostly it just gave her a break from Tom and Dory and Summer Feelin’. Tom was having more chest pain lately and was feeling depressed. He had quit practising his juggling. He had quit going to the garage to read his veterinarian journals. Dory was worried about him but at the same time she was restless and annoyed. The wallpaper was coming down in sheets all over the house and she’d bought herself a new hammer. Summer Feelin’ was giddy with excitement over Max’s return and was doing a lot of shaking and flapping. Max and Knute hadn’t really talked much about anything. They’d had coffee at the Wagon Wheel together but it was just like always. It was fun at first but then Knute would get a thought in her head and she’d start getting more and more pissed off. The more pissed off she got, the more he joked around. He joked and she glared. And then she got tired of being the sullen, injured one and she said, “Fuck this noise,” and left. She really wanted to hurt him the same way he had hurt her, but she didn’t know how to. The rest of the time, whenever Max and Knute were together, Summer Feelin’ was with them and then, of course, everything was kind of strained. Summer Feelin’ and Max adored each other and Knute hung around saying things like “Watch her head” or “She should eat lunch first.” Tom and Dory were wondering if Max was going to give Knute regular child support money and they also wondered if Summer Feelin’ was going to be safe over
at Combine Jo’s place with all her drinking and lumbering around. The one time Max had been in the same room as Tom, Tom had said, “So, Max, are you still … putting pen to paper? Still looking for someone to publish your … jottings?” And Dory had given Tom a look and said, “It’s called poetry, Tom.” And he had said, “Oh really,” and walked away.
Once Max had asked Dory if all kids flapped as much as Summer Feelin’ did and she had said, “Oh, well, that’s just something she does.”
He had said, “What do you mean that’s just something she does? Shouldn’t it be checked out or something? Has she seen a doctor about it? She looks like a hummingbird, man, she could lift off anytime.” Then Dory had become irritated.
“Max,” she said, “Knutie has been taking very good care of Summer Feelin’ with no help from you. Of course she’s been checked out. She’s fine. And nobody appreciates you, of all people, second-guessing Knute’s efforts.” She paused and then she said, “You can just keep your mouth shut, Buster.”
Max and Knute looked at her. Buster? Knute thought to herself, Dory’s mad.
“Really, Knute, he has no right to come in here and question your ability to parent, I mean …”
And Knute had said, “I know, I know.”
And Max had said, “Sorry, Dory, you’re right. It was just all that fluttering and flapping, you know, I was expecting a back door to open up on her and a battalion of soldiers to jump out with flak jackets and camouflage, with somebody giving her hand signals for lift-off—”
“Oh shut up,” Dory had said and then, “Excuse me,” as she stalked out of the room with her hammer and a pail of plaster.