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Rabbit Redux

Page 33

by John Updike


  “Jill Pendleton, of Stonington, Connecticut. Don’t know the street address.”

  “Age?”

  “Eighteen or nineteen.”

  “Family relationship?”

  “None.”

  It takes the cop a very long time to write this one word. Something is happening to a corner of the roof; the crowd noise is rising, and a ladder is being lowered through an intersection of searchlights.

  Rabbit prompts: “The fourth person was a Negro we called Skeeter. S-k-double-e-t-e-r.”

  “Black male?”

  “Yes.”

  “Last name?”

  “I don’t know. Could be Farnsworth.”

  “Spell please.”

  Rabbit spells it and offers to explain. “He was just here temporarily.”

  The cop glances up at the burning ranch house and then over at the owner. “What were you doing here, running a commune?”

  “No, Jesus; listen. I’m not for any of that. I voted for Hubert Humphrey.”

  The cop studies the house. “Any chance this black is in there now?”

  “Don’t think so. He was the one that called me, it sounded as if from a phone booth.”

  “Did he say he’d set the fire?”

  “No, he didn’t even say there was a fire, he just said things were bad. He said the word ‘bad’ twice.”

  “Things were bad,” the cop writes, and closes his notepad. “We’ll want some further interrogation later.” Reflected firelight gleams peach-color off of the badge in his cap. The corner of the house above the bedroom is collapsing; the television aerial, that they twice adjusted and extended to cut down ghosts from their neighbors’ sets, tilts in the leap of flame and slowly swings downward like a skeletal tree, still clinging by some wires or brackets to its roots. Water vaults into what had been the bedroom. A lavish cumulus of yellow smoke pours out, golden-gray, rich as icing squeezed from the sugary hands of a pastry cook.

  The cop casually allows, “Anybody in there was cooked a half-hour ago.”

  Two steps away, Nelson is bent over to let vomit spill from his mouth. Rabbit steps to him and the boy allows himself to be touched. He holds him by the shoulders; it feels like trying to hold out of water a heaving fish that wants to go back under, that needs to dive back under or die. His father brings back his hair from his cheeks so it will not be soiled by vomit; with his fist he makes a feminine knot of hair at the back of the boy’s hot soft skull. “Nellie, I’m sure she got out. She’s far away. She’s safe and far away.”

  The boy shakes his head No and retches again; Harry holds him for minutes, one hand clutching his hair, the other around his chest. He is holding him up from sinking into the earth. If Harry were to let go, he would sink too. He feels precariously heavier on his bones; the earth pulls like Jupiter. Policemen, spectators, watch him struggle with Nelson but do not intervene. Finally a cop, not the interrogating one, does approach and in a calm Dutch voice asks, “Shall we have a car take the boy somewhere? Does he have grandparents in the county?”

  “Four of them,” Rabbit says. “Maybe he should go to his mother.”

  “No!” Nelson says, and breaks loose to face them. “You’re not getting me to go until we know where Jill is.” His face shines with tears but is sane: he waits out the next hour standing by his father’s side.

  The flames are slowly smothered, the living-room side of the house is saved. The interior of the kitchen side seems a garden where different tints of smoke sprout; formica, vinyl, nylon, linoleum each burn differently, yield their curdling compounds back to earth and air. Firemen wet down the wreckage and search behind the gutted walls. Now the upstairs windows stare with searchlights, now the lower. A skull full of fireflies. Yet still the crowd waits, held by a pack sense of smell; death is in heat. Intermittently there have been staticky calls over the police radios and one of them has fetched an ambulance; it arrives with a tentative sigh of its siren. Scarlet lights do an offbeat dance on its roof. A strange container, a green rubber bag or sheet, is taken into the house, and brought back by three grim men in slickers. The ambulance receives the shapeless package, is shut with that punky sound only the most expensive automobile doors make, and – again, the tentative sigh of a siren just touched – pulls away. The crowd thins after it. The night overflows with the noise of car motors igniting and revving up.

  Nelson says, “Dad.”

  “Yeah.”

  “That was her, wasn’t it?”

  “I don’t know. Maybe.”

  “It was somebody.”

  “I guess.”

  Nelson rubs his eyes; the gesture leaves swipes of ash, Indian markings. The child seems harshly ancient.

  “I need to go to bed,” he says.

  “Want to go back to the Fosnachts?”

  “No.” As if in apology he explains, “I hate Billy.” Further qualifying, he adds, “Unless you do.” Unless you want to go back and fuck Mrs. Fosnacht again.

  Rabbit asks him, “Want to see your mother?”

  “I can’t, Dad. She’s in the Poconos.”

  “She should be back by now.”

  “I don’t want to see her now. Take me to Jackson Road.”

  There is in Rabbit an engine murmuring Undo, undo, which wants to take them back to this afternoon, beginning with the moment they left the house, and not do what they did, not leave, and have it all unhappen, and Jill and Skeeter still there, in the house still there. Beneath the noise of this engine the inner admission that it did happen is muffled; he sees Nelson through a gauze of shock and dares ask, “Blame me, huh?”

  “Sort of.”

  “You don’t think it was just bad luck?” And though the boy hardly bothers to shrug Harry understands his answer: luck and God are both up there and he has not been raised to believe in anything higher than his father’s head. Blame stops for him in the human world, it has nowhere else to go.

  The firemen of one truck are coiling their hoses. A policeman, the one who asked after Nelson, comes over. “Angstrom? The chief wants to talk to you where the boy can’t hear.”

  “Dad, ask him if that was Jill.”

  The cop is tired, stolid, plump, the same physical type as – what was his name? – Showalter. Kindly patient Brewerites. He lets out the information, “It was a cadaver.”

  “Black or white?” Rabbit asks.

  “No telling.”

  Nelson asks, “Male or female?”

  “Female, sonny.”

  Nelson begins to cry again, to gag as if food is caught in his throat, and Rabbit asks the policeman if his offer is still good, if a cruiser might take the boy to his grandparents’ house in Mt. Judge. The boy is led away. He does not resist; Rabbit thought he might, might insist on staying with his father to the end. But the boy, his hair hanging limp and his tears flowing unchecked, seems relieved to be at last in the arms of order, of laws and limits. He doesn’t even wave from the window of the silver-blue West Brewer cruiser as it U-turns in Vista Crescent and heads away from the tangle of hoses and puddles and red reflections. The air tastes sulphuric. Rabbit notices that the little maple was scorched on the side toward the house; its twigs smolder like cigarettes.

  As the firemen wind up their apparatus, he and the police chief sit in the front of an unmarked car. Harry’s knees are crowded by the radio apparatus on the passenger’s side. The chief is a short man but doesn’t look so short sitting down, with his barrel chest crossed by a black strap and his white hair crew-cut close to his scalp and his nose which was once broken sideways and has accumulated broken veins in the years since. He says, “We have a death now. That makes it a horse of another color.”

  “Any theories how the fire started?”

  “I’ll ask the questions. But yes. It was set. In the garage. I notice a power mower in there. Can of gas to go with it?”

  “Yeah. We filled the can just this afternoon.”

  “Tell me where you were this evening.”

  He tells him. The chief
talks on his car radio to the West Brewer headquarters. In less than five minutes they call back. But in the total, unapologetic silence the chief keeps during these minutes, a great lump grows in Rabbit, love of the law. The radio sizzles its words like bacon frying: “Mrs. Fosnacht confirms suspect’s story. Also a minor boy in dwelling as additional witness.”

  “Check,” the chief says, and clicks off.

  “Why would I burn my own house down?” Rabbit asks.

  “Most common arsonist is owner,” the chief says. He studies Rabbit thoughtfully; his eyes are almost round, as if somebody took a stitch at the corner of each lid. “Maybe the girl was pregnant by you.”

  “She was on the Pill.”

  “Tell me about her.”

  He tries, though it is hard to make it seem as natural as it felt. Why did he permit Skeeter to move in on him? Well, the question was more, Why not? He tries, “Well, when my wife walked out on me, I kind of lost my bearings. It didn’t seem to matter, and anyway he would have taken Jill with him, if I’d kicked him out. I got so I didn’t mind him.”

  “Did he terrorize you?”

  He tries to make these answers right. Out of respect for the law. “No. He educated us.” Harry begins to get mad. “Some law I don’t know about against having people live with you?”

  “Law against harboring,” the chief tells him, neglecting to write on his pad. “Brewer police report a Hubert Johnson out on default on a possession charge.”

  Rabbit’s silence is not what he wants. He makes it clearer what he wants. “You in ignorance over the existence of this indictment and defiance of court?” He makes it even clearer. “Shall I accept your silence as a profession of ignorance?”

  “Yes.” It is the only opening. “Yes, I knew nothing about Skeeter, not even his last name.”

  “His present whereabouts, any ideas?”

  “No idea. His call came through from it sounded like a phone booth but I couldn’t swear to it.”

  The cop puts his broad hand over the notebook as if across the listening mouth of a telephone receiver. “Off the record. We’ve been watching this place. He was a little fish, a punk. We hoped he would lead us to something bigger.”

  “What bigger? Dope?”

  “Civil disturbance. The blacks in Brewer are in touch with Philly, Camden, Newark. We know they have guns. We don’t want another York here, now do we?” Again, Rabbit’s silence is not what he wants. He repeats, “Now do we?”

  “No, of course not. I was just thinking. He talked as if he was beyond revolution; he was kind of religious-crazy, not gun-crazy.”

  “Any idea why he set this fire?”

  “I don’t think he did. It isn’t his style.”

  The pencil is back on the notebook. “Never mind about style,” the chief says. “I want facts.”

  “I don’t have any more facts than I’ve told you. Some people in the neighborhood were upset because Skeeter was living with us, two men stopped me on the street yesterday and complained about it, I can give you their names if you want.”

  The pencil hovers. “They complained. Any specific threats of arson?”

  &. Wiseasses get fragged. You better fucking barricade the whole place. “Nothing that specific.”

  The chief makes a notation, it looks like n.c., and turns the notebook page. “The black have sexual relations with the girl?”

  “Look, I was off working all day. I’d come back and we’d cook supper and help the kid with his homework and sit around and talk. It was like having two more kids in the house, I don’t know what they did every minute. Are you going to arrest me, or what?”

  A fatherly type himself, the chief takes a smiling long time answering. Rabbit sees that his nose wasn’t broken by accident, somewhere in the alleys of time he had asked for it. His snow-soft hair is cut evenly as a powderpuff, with a pink dent above the ears where the police cap bites. His smile broadens enough to crease his cheek. “Strictly speaking,” he says, “this isn’t my beat. I’m acting on behalf of my esteemed colleague the sheriff of Furnace Township, who rolled over and went back to sleep. Offhand I’d say we’re doing a good enough business in the jails without putting solid citizens like you in there. We’ll have some more questions later.” He flips the notebook shut and flips the radio on to put out a call, “All cars, Brewer police copy, be on the lookout, Negro, male, height approx five-six, weight approx one-twenty-five, medium dark-skinned, hair Afro, name Skeeter, that is Sally, Katherine, double Easter –” He does not turn his head when Rabbit opens the car door and walks away.

  So again in his life the net of law has slipped from him. He knows he is criminal, yet is never caught. Sickness sinks through his body like soot. The firemen wet down the smoking wreckage, the clot of equipment along Vista Crescent breaks up and flows away. The house is left encircled in its disgrace with yellow flashers on trestles warning people off. Rabbit walks around the lawn, so lately a full stage, sodden and pitted by footprints, and surveys the damage.

  The burning was worse on the back side: the fixtures of the bedroom bathroom dangle in space from stems of contorted pipe. The wall that took the bed headboard is gone. Patches of night-blue sky show through the roof. He looks in the downstairs windows and sees, by flashing yellow light, as into a hellish fun house, the sofa and the two chairs, salted with fallen plaster, facing each other across the cobbler’s bench. The driftwood lamp is still upright. On the shelves giving into the breakfast nook, Skeeter’s books squat, soaked and matted. Where the kitchen was, Harry can see out through the garage to an N of charred 2 by 4s. The sky wants to brighten. Birds – birds in Penn Villas, where? there are no trees old enough to hold them – flicker into song. It is cold now, colder than in the heart of the night, when the fire was alive. The sky pales in the east, toward Brewer. Mt. Judge develops an outline in the emulsion of pre-dawn gray. A cloud of birds migrating crosses the suburb southward. The soot is settling on Harry’s bones. His eyelids feel like husks. In his weariness he hallucinates; as in the seconds before we sleep, similes seem living organisms. The freshening sky above Mt. Judge is Becky, the child that died, and the sullen sky to the west, the color of a storm sky but flawed by stars, is Nelson, the child that lives. And he, he is the man in the middle.

  He walks up to his battered front door, brushes away the glass shards, and sits down on the flagstone porchlet. It is warm, like a hearth. Though none of his neighbors came forward to speak to him, to sparkle on the bright screen of his disaster, the neighborhood presents itself to his gaze unapologetically, naked in the gathering light, the pastel roof shingles moist in patches echoing the pattern of rafters, the back-yard bathing pools and swing sets whitened by dew along with the grass. A half-moon rests cockeyed in the blanched sky like a toy forgotten on a floor. An old man in a noisy green raincoat, a geezer left behind as a watchman, walks over and speaks to him. “This your home, huh?”

  “This is it.”

  “Got some other place to go?”

  “I suppose.”

  “Body a loved one?”

  “Not exactly.”

  “That’s good news. Cheer up, young fella. Insurance’ll cover most of it.”

  “Do I have insurance?”

  “Had a mortgage?”

  Rabbit nods, remembering the little slippery bankbook, imagining it burned.

  “Then you had insurance. Damn the banks all you will, they look after their own, you’ll never catch them damn Jews short.”

  This man’s presence begins to seem strange. It has been months since anything seemed as strange as this man’s presence. Rabbit asks him, “How long you staying here?”

  “I’m on duty till eight.”

  “Why?”

  “Fire procedure. Prevent looting.” The two of them look wonderingly at the dormant houses and cold lawns of Penn Villas. As they look, a distant alarm rings and an upstairs light comes on, sallow, dutiful. Still, looting these days is everywhere. The geezer asks him, “Anything precious in there, you m
ight want to take along?” Rabbit doesn’t move. “You better go get some sleep, young fella.”

  “What about you?” Rabbit asks.

  “Fella my age doesn’t need much. Sleep long enough soon enough. Anyway, I like the peacefulness of these hours, have ever since a boy. Always up, my dad, he was a great boozer and a late sleeper, used to wallop the bejesus out of me if I made a stir mornings. Got in the habit of sneaking out to the birds. Anyway, double-hour credit, time outdoors on this shift. Don’t always put it in, go over a certain amount, won’t get any social security. Kill you with kindness, that’s the new technique.”

  Rabbit stands up, aching; pain moves upward from his shins through his groin and belly to his chest and out. A demon leaving. Smoke, mist rise. He turns to his front door; swollen by water, axed, it resists being opened. The old man tells him, “It’s my responsibility to keep any and all persons out of this structure. Any damage you do yourself, you’re the party responsible.”

  “You just told me to take out anything precious.”

  “You’re responsible, that’s all I’m saying. I’m turning my back. Fall through the floor, electrocute yourself, don’t call for help. Far as I’m concerned, you’re not there. See no evil is the way I do it.”

  “That’s the way I do it too.” Under pressure the door pops open. Splintered glass on the other side scrapes white arcs into the hall floor finish. Rabbit begins to cry from smoke and the smell. The house is warm, and talks to itself; a swarm of small rustles and snaps arises from the section on his left; settling noises drip from the charred joists and bubble up from the drenched dark rubble where the floor had been. The bed’s metal frame has fallen into the kitchen. On his right, the living room is murky but undamaged. The silver threads of the Lustrex chair gleam through an acid mist of fumes; the television set’s green blank waits to be turned on. He thinks of taking it, it is the one resaleable item here, but no, it is too heavy to lug, he might drop himself through the floor, and there are millions like it. Janice once said we should drop television sets into the jungle instead of bombs, it would do as much good. He thought at the time the idea was too clever for her; even then Stavros was speaking through her.

 

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