1638 lines
72 KiB
Plaintext
1638 lines
72 KiB
Plaintext
The Longest Distance
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(c) 1992, D. W. Boynton
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I
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The night Maggie Whitehurst hanged herself, I was sixty
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miles away, fishing with her husband. Well, her estranged
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husband, as they say on the television news.
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I spent a lot of time cleaning in the months following the
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final divorce decree. I cleaned the house. I mean all of
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the house, scrubbing the little brown stains out of the
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corners of the bathroom. I scrubbed the floors of the
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kitchen and the utility room on my hands and knees with a
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brush, then waxed the floors to a brilliant shine anyone who
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watches daytime television commercials would have been proud
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of. I could see myself. I shampooed the carpets, bought
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new curtains for the bedroom, and a new bedspread. I had a
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dent bumped out of an old Mustang I had picked up cheap in
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the Auto Trader, and then had the whole car painted metallic
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red. I always wanted a red car, and I always wanted a
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Mustang. I scrubbed as much of the corrosion as I could
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from the brightwork of my little boat, replaced the
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refrigerator in the kitchen, and painted the trim on the
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duplex I shared with my friend, Wesley Chin. I'm not sure
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exactly what caused my sudden interest in cleanliness, other
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than some Freudian reaction to one of my father's favorite
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sayings about "getting one's house in order". I also ended
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up cleaning out my desk at the television station where I
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worked. That wasn't my choice, though. It was theirs,
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after management decided they didn't like my face much
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anymore, either.
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Sagging ratings at six and eleven brought in a consultant
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from Iowa, who hooked up a pack of "viewers" to a machine
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that measures "Galvanic Skin Response". In short, my
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picture on the screen didn't make their palms sweaty enough.
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They brought in the latest blow-dried model from Dubuque to
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replace me, at about half the cost. They were, however,
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perfectly willing to pay me for the eighteen months
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remaining on my contract - provided, of course, I did not
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seek employment at one of the two other network affiliates
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in town. I had no desire to do so. At thirty seven years
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of age, and after fifteen years in the business, I was just
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about televisioned out.
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My friend Wesley told me I was a very lucky man. He was
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referring to two things. First, thanks to the contract
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payout, I was not in any immediate need of work, and could,
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in fact, live very comfortably for the next year or so doing
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absolutely nothing, or as he put it, "less than nothing".
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"Doing nothing," he said, "implies that you are unemployed,
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and have no desire to seek employment. I would suggest that
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you really work at doing nothing. You have gone through the
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hit parade of stressful situations in the past few months."
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He counted them off on his fingers. "One, you have gone
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through a separation and divorce. Two, you have lost your
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job. Three, you've moved to a new home, and four, you have
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substantially changed your lifestyle. You need therapy,
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Brad. A little short-term stress reduction wouldn't hurt.
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Of course, being the manly super-hero you are, that is
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unthinkable. I'm suggesting you really revel in the
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nothingness of the things you do. Get plenty of sleep,
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drink plenty of liquor, if that's what you want to do, and
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generally clean out your head as well as you've cleaned up
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the apartment. Jesus, If you really want to clean, come on
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down to my place."
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He also said there were much worse places to be single and
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thirty-seven than Virginia Beach, Virginia in the
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summertime. Wesley was referring, of course, to the large
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number of tourists who populate the beaches in the
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summertime. Many (I have it on good authority about half)
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of these tourists are women, who seek the sun and sand the
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city's tourism bureau is fond of publicizing in its
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brochures. I have lived in Virginia beach an even dozen
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years, and have never seen any of the places where all of
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these beautiful pictures are taken. I firmly believe the
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photos are taken somewhere else. Hawaii, for instance, then
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plugged into the Virginia Beach literature. The brochures
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show blue, blue cloudless skies, with romantic couples
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silhouetted toasting each other with wine, looking out over
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a white beach with multi-colored umbrellas. In reality, the
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weather comes pounding out of the mountains, then comes to a
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screeching halt when it hits the confluence of the
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Chesapeake Bay and the Ocean, leaving the sky an interesting
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shade of orange at times. When I was a reporter, I used to
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do stories this time of year about elderly people who didn't
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have or couldn't afford to run their air conditioning. This
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time of year was tougher than the cold days of winter. Air
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conditioning for them is just as much a necessity as a
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furnace in the winter. Nothing moves then, the winds die,
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and the air fills up with the gunk and smutch of industry
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and autos. The temperature goes up and up into the mid-
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nineties, along with the humidity. The beach isn't even
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real. Most of the sand is trucked in from well inland,
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since the spring storms wash away most of what's there every
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year, right up to the boardwalk's seawall. And God forbid
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any of the city's police officers catch you with a wine
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glass anywhere near the beach.
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Virginia Beach is not Hawaii. It's not Florida, either, if
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only because its season is different. It is mostly a
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summertime resort, mostly for middle-income and working-
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class people from New York, Pennsylvania, and for some
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reason I cannot fathom, Canada. The signs welcoming you to
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the city ("World's Largest Resort City") are in both English
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and French, and many of the hotels fly both United States
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and Canadian flags out front, in respect for our neighbors
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to the north, and their strange colored currency. But it is
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home, and has been for the past ten years.
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Wesley says the normal reaction of many men in my position
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would be to take my little red Mustang down to the beach,
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find myself one or more young women around the age of
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twenty, and have myself one hell of a summer. Frankly, the
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thought of doing that would scare me to death. For one,
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what would you talk about afterward? The latest "Guns and
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Roses" album? The latest hits on MTV? The prospect did
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nothing for me. I had, however, gone surf fishing once or
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twice along the tourist strip, and had noticed that a large
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proportion of the women were single, and appeared to be
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between the ages of say, thirty and forty, well within the
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range of my consideration. My shrink says that's progress.
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Yes, I have a shrink, too, and Wesley says that's progress.
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My wife, well now ex-wife, Barbara, had decided our life
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together was not moving forward quickly enough to suit her.
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Whatever the hell that means. She wanted more of a
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commitment. Marriage is a commitment, I told her. When the
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time came for Barbara and I to settle up the inventory we
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had acquired in twelve years of marriage, guilt played
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heavily in my decision to be the one who moved out, leaving
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a good-sized home, the "good" car, and much of the furniture
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in her name. I retained the interest in a rental property I
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had invested in with Wesley, my old car, and the boat.
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Wesley already lived in the lower floor of the duplex. When
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the tenant upstairs moved out, I moved in on a "temporary"
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basis, and paid our little partnership rent at the going
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rate, six-month lease and all.
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Wesley Chin got in on the ground floor of the computer
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revolution. He's a year older than I am, but looks ten
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younger. Early in his career, his expertise led to a pair
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of college texts, one a simple introduction to computers,
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for most any "Computer Science 101" class, the other a
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highly technical, graduate level text on networking
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computers, linking several machines, or several hundred, or
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several thousand together. It's how, for example, K-Mart
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World headquarters in Troy, Michigan, can tell when a
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package of chewing gum is sold at the store in Boca Raton,
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Florida. Although he keeps telling me he's overdue to crank
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out a third textbook ("Alternate Reality is the hot new
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area," he says), he makes a good living by keeping the other
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two current. A "second edition" and "third edition",
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updating the techno-world of computers do well in killing
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the used book market for college students, and they keep the
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cash register ringing, money flowing into Wesley's bank
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account. The Mexican restaurant he bought from the
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royalties also helps. It's called "Chin's Tijuana Palace",
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and to my knowledge, it's the only Mexican restaurant that
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serves fortune cookies with the check. It's on the tourist
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strip, Atlantic Avenue, which runs right along the line of
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big hotels on the oceanfront. The tourists like gimmicks,
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and it's something they remember to tell their friends when
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they head back to Montreal, Albany, or Harrisburg.
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It had been one of those hazy, humid, close kind of
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Saturdays in late July at Chesapeake Beach. Not much wind
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to speak of, if at all. Being outside on days like this
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makes me feel as if I need hot rocks and branches to beat
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myself with. Compared to some parts of Virginia Beach,
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Chesapeake Beach is low-rent. The big cedar jobs on stilts
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line the ocean beaches; four, five, six bedroom homes that
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cost several hundred thousand dollars, only get used in the
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summertime, and cost a bundle to insure because of the
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hurricane threat every year.
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Chesapeake Beach faces the bay instead. The residents
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mostly live here year-round in everything from cinderblock
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huts to homes of a little (but not much) more substance.
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The houses here are older, shorter, squatted between the
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dunes and scrub, out of necessity, taking the full brunt of
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spring's northeast winds. The tourist strip and the
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tourists are right around the corner, but they're mostly out
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of sight, and mercifully, don't wander much to our stretch
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of sand.
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Wesley and I had been doing some work on the upper deck that
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sits atop the duplex we share facing the bay. Ours was not
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on stilts, sitting far enough from the shore that we had a
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wide beach, and few spring flooding problems. We became
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partners in the house a couple of years back, introduced by
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a real estate agent who puts together such deals for rental
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properties. It was sweaty work. A section of the deck near
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the wall was beginning to rot. Even the green salt-treated
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lumber has trouble holding up to the heat and humidity along
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the water. Owning a waterfront house here means constant
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maintenance. Inside, the big Kenwood was locked in to WNSB.
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Herbie Mann was driving the big E-V speakers with just
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enough power to go cruising by flute. We were both covered
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with sawdust kicked up by the table saw downstairs.
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We were working up an appetite, and had been discussing the
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merits of a bushel of clams and a bucket of ice-cold
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Stroh's. A few of the other people from up the beach had
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wandered by, offering carpentry tips in exchange for cold
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beer. As the work wound down, Bill and Ramona Baker had
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fetched the clams, Pete and Sharon Crosby had rolled up with
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more beer, Tom Scott showed, and we wound up sitting on the
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deck, clams on the Weber Kettle, watching the dirty pink
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sunset. The party, if you want to call it that, turned into
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one of those events where people drift in and out, catching
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up on the latest neighborhood gossip, bitching about what
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the city council is up to now, coveting their neighbors
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spouses, and discussing in no particular order, the middle
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east, the American League East, the city's poor excuse for
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garbage collection, and traffic on the expressway. I
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suppose we topped out at about fifteen or twenty people,
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although there were never more than eight or nine around at
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a time.
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Around eleven, the married couples had tottered off to their
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kids and to sleep in preparation for early tee-times and
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early church services in the morning. Only the three
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bachelors were left; Wesley, Tom, and me, staring out at the
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boats that bobbed out around the islands of the Chesapeake
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Bay Bridge-Tunnel, that seventeen-mile span that crosses
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over and under the mouth of the Bay. A breeze had come up,
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blowing the pollution into someone else's air. You could
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smell it. Rain was maybe eight hours away.
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Wesley is short, compact, and muscular, sort of like a
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fire plug with black hair and glasses. Tom is tall and
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lanky, with red hair, and an ever-present sunburn. Aside
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from the fact that he's a very liberal attorney, an officer
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in the Virginia Chapter of the American Civil Liberties
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Union, he could be the kind of good ole boy with a full
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rifle rack in his Ford pickup. His neck is that red. His
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rifle rack, however, is full of fishing rods, with a tackle
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box in the capped bed.
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"Must be good fishing tonight," Wesley commented, looking
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out at the boats around the bridge islands.
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"The bluefish are running," Tom said.
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"They sure would taste good for Sunday dinner," Wesley said.
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They both looked at me.
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"You guys want to go fishing, take the boat, I can take a
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hint," I pulled the keys out of my pocket, and tossed them
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to Tom.
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"Aw, come on Brad," Wesley said. "come with us. Blow some
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stink off."
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"You are incredibly confused, my confusing friend. Fishing
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does not blow stink off, Wesley. Fishing puts stink on. I
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am not interested tonight. If you two want to go, take
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off."
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Wesley glanced at Tom, and smiled. "Is Robin working at the
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marina tonight?"
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"I think so."
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"Fuck you both," I said. "let's go." Tom grinned, and got
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his gear and a jacket from the truck. Wesley locked up.
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The marina, and its adjacent pier, is about three-hundred
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yards down the beach at Lynnhaven Inlet. It was not planned
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the way it looks, it just sort of grew the way it did. The
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old plank pier goes back to the forties, and sticks some
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two-hundred feet into the Bay, adjacent to the inlet. At
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the foot of the pier stands the bait shop and office, built
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sometime in the fifties. The sixties brought the first of
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the docks, and a small Butler building as a service
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facility. The seventies, however, saw the marina business
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mushroom. Newer concrete piers with big timbers and
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galvanized bolts holding it all together. A modern brick-
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and-vinyl-sided building for lockers, shower facilities, and
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a fish market that will clean what you catch, or sell you
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what you didn't. The next step was to be a restaurant and
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small motel, that no doubt, would grow on into the next
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century. You couldn't build it from scratch the way it had
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grown unless you had quite a vision, and a lot of money.
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We walked. By the time we got there, it was about eleven-
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thirty, and the complex, "Bubba's Lynnhaven Fishing Center",
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was busy with a wide variety of fisher-folks: the wealthy,
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in their designer clothes with little animals on the
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pockets, taking the Bertram for a late-night spin, whole
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families of the poor, mom and dad and the kids, both black
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and white, hoping to catch Sunday's crab dinner from the
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pier, using chicken necks tied to a string, and the three of
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us, somewhere in the middle, lined up to buy bait. Robin
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was, indeed, working.
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Robin Williams (I swear) is a big, tall lady who manages the
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place for Ed Shaw, known to his friends as...you guessed it,
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Bubba. She has very short black hair, and strong features.
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This particular evening, she was barelegged, wearing red
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shorts, an Old Dominion University sweatshirt, and
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surprisingly clean white Reeboks. Her features are angular
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enough to look a little masculine, although there is nothing
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at all masculine about the legs, or the way she filled the
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sweatshirt. She is very tan, with a scattering of freckles
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across the bridge of her nose, darker tan than mine, and I
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had been working at it pretty good, It made her cool blue
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eyes look very vivid, and her teeth look very white. You
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would not confuse her with the comedian, despite the name.
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Thirty? Maybe, give or take five to seven either way. Hard
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to guess her age because her face had that sharply-chiseled
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look that doesn't show much decay between eighteen and forty
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or so.
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I met Robin when I first got the boat, about the same time
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as the duplex. It was a 1947 twenty four foot Chris-Craft
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cruiser, purchased from a family up on the Eastern Shore.
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It was not in good shape. The family had used it as a crab
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boat. With the help of the mechanics at the marina, we had
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swapped the old mill out with a new Ford four-cylinder,
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scrubbed most of the pea green paint off the mahogany,
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updated the instrument cluster with digital units, and
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repaired or replaced most of the brightwork with original
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pieces they had helped me track down. Robin wrote the
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receipts for the checks I had stroked to fill this hole in
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the water. She also helped me christen the little tub, the
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"Talking Head", a television term for the tight shots of
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faces you see most often on news broadcasts. Robin thought
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it an amusing name, since "head" is the nautical term for
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"toilet". The boat still needed a lot of work, but then, so
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did I. Two years ago, when I first met her, Robin also
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sported a yellow wedding band on her left hand. That
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adornment had recently turned up missing. I was curious,
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and frankly, interested.
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"Brad! Brad Streeter!"
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I knew without looking that the voice that came across the
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crowded shop was Bobby Whitehurst's. I had not seen him in
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some time. I turned to greet him, wondering what kind of
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reception I was going to get, not exactly knowing if I was
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going to be greeted warmly or slugged in the face. He was
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smiling. I was relieved.
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"Bobby...good to see you." It was not particularly good to
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see him. So I lied. "You coming or going?" I hoped he was
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coming, and going home to his wife.
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"Going. You know, the blues are running." He jerked a
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thumb out toward the bay.
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"Yeah, I heard," I motioned at Wesley and Tom, across the
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shop. "Bobby Whitehurst...I think you've met Wesley. This
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is Tom Scott." Bobby shook hands with Tom, nodded
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recognition, then shook hands with Wesley. "Bobby lived
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next door when I lived with Barbara," I said, to no one in
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particular.
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"We've met each other once or twice around the courthouse,"
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Tom said with a grin.
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"More than that," Bobby said. "This old boy took one of my
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clients for a bunch of money."
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"Now, Bobby," Tom said. "He shouldn't have locked them out
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of their house."
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"It was his house, and they hadn't paid the rent."
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"You guys gonna try this one again here, or are we gonna
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fish?" Wesley said with a smile.
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Bobby looked at Tom, holding his fishing pole and tackle
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box. "You guys going out?"
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"Sure," Tom said. "Want to come along? The beer is cold."
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"Sure. Beats cleaning out my boat by myself afterward."
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So the four of us piled into my boat, and cruised out the
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inlet, headed for open water. Once we were anchored near
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the bridge, Wesley and Tom sat on the bow, casting out into
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the pilings nearest the island. Bobby and I sat at the
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stern, casting the other direction. Bobby is a good-looking
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fellow, with close-cropped blond hair. Tall, loud and
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gregarious. The Whitehursts were Virginia born for
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generations back, from that hardy, earnest, hungry stock
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which had scared the living hell out of the federal troops
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they had faced during the War Between the States. He was a
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year or two younger than me, his eyes a pale, watery blue,
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blonde hair thinning a little. I guess you'd say he had a
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little bit of a baby face. Since I'd known him, he'd tried
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a beard once or twice, but always shaved it off, because he
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said it made him look like a leftover from the sixties.
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Bobby and Maggie, Barbara and me. The four of us were
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pretty much inseparable when we lived next door to each
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other. Vacations together, holidays together, Saturday
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night dinners together. There's an interesting phenomenon
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about married couples. When one marriage goes down the
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hatch, the strain is usually too much on the "couples
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friends" they've developed. I hadn't seen Bobby since I
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moved out of the house.
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"How's Maggie?"
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An embarrassed smile. "She moved out about six weeks ago.
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Went to stay with her folks in North Carolina for a while."
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That's the other thing about separation and divorce. It's
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contagious. "Temporary or permanent?"
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"I don't know." Bobby sat down in a heap on the seat at the
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stern. "Said she needed some time to get some things
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straight, and put some things behind her. I offered to take
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some time off...to go on a cruise, or a vacation somewhere.
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Maybe a trip across the country. She said no, had some
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things to take care of at home with her dad. Said she
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wanted to get rid of some demons..." His voice trailed off.
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He looked me in the eye for the first time since we met at
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the bait shop. "I think she's going to file for divorce,
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and she just wants me to get used to the idea."
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I can't exactly say it was a shock. Maggie and Bobby had
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their share of problems, even back in the days when the four
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of us were running around together. Bobby has never had
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|
what you would call a booming law practice, although he is
|
|
an above average attorney when it comes to civil matters.
|
|
His has always been a one-man office, with a part-time
|
|
secretary to answer the phone when he's off to court, or
|
|
looking up old deeds, or doing all those things attorneys
|
|
do. When he was between secretaries, Maggie helped out,
|
|
that's how they met, but mostly she stayed home. Bobby had
|
|
turned down several offers to join other firms, both big and
|
|
small, always saying he'd rather be his own boss. The fact
|
|
that Bobby always seemed to be struggling was the source of
|
|
much friction between Maggie and Bobby over the years.
|
|
Maggie would see people her age at the sort of parties
|
|
lawyers and their wives attend, and wonder why she and Bobby
|
|
didn't have a home on the beach, a Mercedes in the driveway,
|
|
and a condo on the ski slopes at Masanutten or wherever. In
|
|
short, Maggie thought Bobby didn't try hard enough...didn't
|
|
"apply" himself enough, as she used to say. But they had
|
|
always hung in there, apparently until recently.
|
|
|
|
He spat over the side, downwind, with excellent accuracy and
|
|
velocity. "I can't stand moping around like this," Bobby
|
|
said, and turned to holler at Wesley and Tom on the bow.
|
|
"Hey, guys, you getting any nibbles? Brad. Tell them about
|
|
the time the four of us..."
|
|
|
|
And so it went for the next couple of hours. The time we
|
|
hiked all over Washington, D. C. sightseeing in the
|
|
sweltering summer heat. The time we went to the Outer Banks
|
|
of North Carolina, rented a cottage on the ocean, got drunk,
|
|
and staged "West Side Story" on the beach in the moonlight,
|
|
ending up in the surf singing, "When you're a Jet you're a
|
|
Jet all the way..."
|
|
|
|
We tried the windward side of the island. We tried the
|
|
leeward side of the island. We went out to deeper water, we
|
|
headed north nearly to the Eastern Shore, and tried the
|
|
shallows. The crabs chewed up the bait over and over again.
|
|
|
|
By five, we had just about given up. The east sky was
|
|
getting brighter, and we headed south, back to Bubba's,
|
|
throttled down through the "no wake" zone at the mouth of
|
|
the inlet just as the sun began to come up over the horizon,
|
|
and idled down into the slip. Robin was waiting for us at
|
|
the top of the dock, arms crossed. She was not smiling. A
|
|
white Virginia Beach Police car was parked on the gravel
|
|
near the dock. As soon as Tom tied up, Robin called to
|
|
Bobby.
|
|
|
|
"Bobby," she called out. "These officers are here to see
|
|
you."
|
|
|
|
The four of us looked at each other. Bobby shrugged, and
|
|
said, "Maybe I'm being served with papers for one of my
|
|
cases. It happens sometimes."
|
|
|
|
The officers were a Mutt and Jeff team. The uniformed one
|
|
was a tall and skinny dark-haired fellow with a perfectly
|
|
tailored uniform. The plainclothes officer, or detective,
|
|
or whatever, was blond, short, and stout. Jeff spoke to
|
|
Bobby.
|
|
|
|
"Mister Whitehurst?"
|
|
|
|
"That's me," Bobby said.
|
|
|
|
"We need to speak with you for a moment." He said to Robin,
|
|
"May we use your office?"
|
|
|
|
"Of course," she said.
|
|
|
|
We went to the bait shop, Bobby into the office with Jeff,
|
|
looking confused. Mutt stood near the patrol car, drinking
|
|
coffee. Robin shot me a look that said something was very
|
|
wrong. We could hear the detective speaking to Bobby, but
|
|
could not make out what he was saying. He was speaking in
|
|
very low, very soothing tones. There was no mistaking,
|
|
however, the anguish in Bobby's voice when he shouted, "Oh
|
|
no!"
|
|
|
|
Then we heard Bobby talking very low, his voice barely
|
|
audible over the hum of the fluorescent tubes. It was quiet
|
|
for another moment. All four of us were bug-eyed, staring
|
|
at the office door when Bobby stepped out the door, and said
|
|
very quietly, "Maggie is dead. They say she killed herself
|
|
last night out at her father's place."
|
|
|
|
Then he began crying. Big, racking sobs. The kind that
|
|
don't let you catch your breath. He walked outside, sat
|
|
down on the step, and kept on crying. The four of us looked
|
|
at each other. Thank God Robin was the only one of us who
|
|
had any idea of what to do. She sat down on the step next
|
|
to Bobby, put her arms around him in a big hug, and the two
|
|
of them rocked, back and forth. She stroked his hair, and
|
|
whispered something into his ear, over and over.
|
|
|
|
My mind was somewhere else, I guess. Actually, my mind was
|
|
in several locations at once. There was another reason I
|
|
wasn't surprised Maggie had left Bobby. She had fallen out
|
|
of love with Bobby several years before. I knew this
|
|
because she had told me so in the bed we had shared for a
|
|
very brief period following my separation from Barbara. For
|
|
a while, I believed she would leave him, I would leave
|
|
Barbara, and we would get together.
|
|
|
|
My shrink maintains that men are rarely ready to throw a
|
|
marriage into the dumper until they have found a new person
|
|
to begin a relationship with. I thought about this a lot,
|
|
because I somehow had it in my mind that after the papers
|
|
were signed, and my marriage to Barbara finally consigned to
|
|
my past, I could begin over again with Maggie Whitehurst,
|
|
that she would leave Bobby, and we would have something. I
|
|
played and replayed a lot of scenes in my head concerning
|
|
myself and Maggie. I wondered often how things might have
|
|
been different. Or better. Or at least feel better. I
|
|
wondered if I would ever see her again. I wondered if I
|
|
should call her. I sometimes wondered what would have
|
|
happened to my marriage if I had spent the same amount of
|
|
energy on my relationship with Barbara that I spent on
|
|
fantasizing about the past and possible future with Maggie.
|
|
I wondered if it made any difference at all. The
|
|
relationship with Maggie began about two months after
|
|
Barbara and I split, and ended just before the final decree
|
|
was signed. Maggie decided she could not take the stress of
|
|
carrying on with her best friend's husband, although their
|
|
relationship was not what it had been when I was living with
|
|
Barbara. I don't know how it could have been. The whole
|
|
thing wasn't doing much for my mental health, either.
|
|
|
|
As they say, it's all water under the bridge now. There are
|
|
a lot of bridges in Virginia Beach. And one whole ocean
|
|
full of water.
|
|
|
|
|
|
-0-
|
|
|
|
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
The Outer Banks of North Carolina is one of the more
|
|
beautiful places on the continent. Getting there from
|
|
Virginia along route 168 is not exactly picturesque. It is
|
|
one of the most boring 90 minute trips through truck farms,
|
|
tobacco fields, small towns, and Seven-Elevens on the face
|
|
of the planet. The fields are only broken by an occasional
|
|
ramshackle house or mobile home...each with its own
|
|
satellite dish out back. All of a sudden, when you're
|
|
thinking you will drive smack into a telephone pole just for
|
|
a little excitement, the road takes a big turn to the left,
|
|
and you get a breathtaking view of Pamlico Sound, and the
|
|
bridge that crosses it into the Outer Banks.
|
|
|
|
When the Wright Brothers travelled this way from Dayton to
|
|
turn bicycles into flying machines, the Outer Banks wasn't
|
|
much different than the rest of the area, it simply faced
|
|
the Atlantic Ocean instead of a creek or the Pamlico Sound.
|
|
It's mostly scrub pine and dunes, all feeling (quite
|
|
justifiably) like a good wind could blow it all away rather
|
|
quickly. There is substantially more to blow away now than
|
|
there was then. Those same cottages that line the ocean
|
|
beach in Virginia Beach also form a queue along the
|
|
shoreline here. So do small cinder-block motels, and tall
|
|
name-brand hotels, small mom-and-pop grocery stores, and big
|
|
state-of-the-art strip shopping centers. That wind is also
|
|
the fear many of the people who live here have, and why the
|
|
threat of a hurricane sends many of them miles inland when
|
|
one approaches, almost annually. Of course, it was the wind
|
|
that brought the brothers to North Carolina in the first
|
|
place. It's usually gentle, but constant. On this day, it
|
|
was neither. Each new detonation blew the dingy clouds at a
|
|
good clip out over the ocean. It was unusually chilly, with
|
|
the threat of another downpour at any moment. It was
|
|
Tuesday, and had been raining off and on since mid-day
|
|
Sunday. The signs along the highway warned of stretches
|
|
with water over the roadway.
|
|
|
|
The Pamlico Sound stretches all the way back up to Virginia,
|
|
a straight shot by water, or up the banks by land, but
|
|
either route is blocked by the Back Bay National Wildlife
|
|
Refuge, and a state park. You can go into, but not through
|
|
that area back into Virginia, unless you have a permit.
|
|
Those permits are jealously guarded by the Virginia
|
|
Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, and the U-S
|
|
Department of Interior. The officers of both agencies
|
|
patrol the dirt roads through their domains. If you've got
|
|
a permit, it cuts the trip by more than half. The rest of
|
|
us endure the haul through the country, where among the
|
|
locals, the word "shit" grows to six syllables.
|
|
|
|
Maggie's funeral was scheduled for a small chapel at the
|
|
south end of Kill Devil Hills, as far south on the Outer
|
|
Banks as one can go without heading for Hatteras. With the
|
|
rain still falling every now and then, my progress down the
|
|
highway was not delayed considerably by the tourists who
|
|
flock to this area this time of year. I was early. They
|
|
were holed up in the stilted cottages, playing gin rummy,
|
|
waiting out the weather. In the winter, the area's
|
|
population can almost be counted on both hands and feet; on
|
|
a sunny summer day, there's gridlock on the pair of two-lane
|
|
highways that span the north-south length of the Banks. I
|
|
had already made arrangements at a nearby hotel for an
|
|
overnight stay after the service.
|
|
|
|
Like most of the newer permanent-looking structures in the
|
|
area, the Morehouse Funeral Chapel was a brick and vinyl-
|
|
sided building, red brick below white siding. Perhaps
|
|
because of the progress I had made on highway, I was one of
|
|
the first to arrive. I parked the Ford in the scrabbly
|
|
oyster-shell lot, and walked into the building.
|
|
|
|
The funeral director - I guessed he was the owner of the
|
|
establishment - was a short, stubby, balding man in an ill-
|
|
fitting, shiny blue suit. He stood by the front door, and
|
|
spoke in the soft, soothing, perpetually eternal, always
|
|
very personal voice men of his profession cultivate.
|
|
|
|
"Hello, mister..."
|
|
|
|
I stuck out my hand. "Streeter. Bradford Streeter. I'm
|
|
here for the Margaret Whitehurst funeral." He ignored the
|
|
offer to shake hands.
|
|
|
|
"Of course. What a tragedy."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, a shock."
|
|
|
|
"...a young woman from people like that, with everything
|
|
they have going for them. I simply cannot understand what
|
|
would cause a woman like that to...well, to..."
|
|
|
|
"Kill herself?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, yes. With so much to live for."
|
|
|
|
"Obviously, mister...Morehouse?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes. Ronald. Ronald Morehouse." He offered his hand. I
|
|
had given up, so I ignored it, wondering where it had been
|
|
lately.
|
|
|
|
"Obviously, mister Morehouse, Maggie did not agree with your
|
|
assessment of her assets." I did not mean it sarcastically,
|
|
simply as a statement of fact.
|
|
|
|
His smile was strained, but properly noncommittal. The last
|
|
thing he wanted was a discussion like this one was quickly
|
|
turning into, talking about the reasons people voluntarily
|
|
end up as his customers. So I obliged, and steered the
|
|
conversation away from the direction it was headed. "Do you
|
|
know Maggie's family well?" For all the time the four of us
|
|
spent down here on one lark or another, we had never visited
|
|
them, had never stopped by for dinner, coffee, or even to
|
|
say hello. Nor had Maggie spoken much about them, save for
|
|
her mother, who was dead. Her father had remarried, and I
|
|
knew she had a sister named Madeline.
|
|
|
|
Mister Morehouse's eyes brightened, and he jumped at the
|
|
opportunity to gossip a little. "Most people here do. I
|
|
went to school with Margaret's father, Samuel, both here,
|
|
for high school, and at Chapel Hill, at college. The
|
|
Leonard family has lived in Pamlico County since, well,
|
|
since before the War Between the States. In banking, most
|
|
of them, with the exception of one or two. Sam Leonard is
|
|
the president of the big bank in the county, over in Manteo.
|
|
He's on the school board, and heads up the planning
|
|
commission, too, in Tuttle, where the farm is."
|
|
|
|
"Then you knew Maggie?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, my heavens, yes. Both she and her sister. Went to the
|
|
same church, Pamlico First Baptist." He smiled. "Sweet
|
|
little girls, both of them. Well-behaved, beautiful
|
|
children. Little angels. It was a real tragedy when their
|
|
mother died."
|
|
|
|
"That would have been..." I was sandbagging.
|
|
|
|
"Roberta. Roberta Bass Leonard. Oh my, I remember when she
|
|
and Sam were married. It was still the biggest wedding I've
|
|
ever seen. Miss Roberta was from Raleigh, Sam met her up at
|
|
school. She ended up involved in most everything. The
|
|
library board, ladies' church group, the Youth Fellowship,
|
|
and the Girl Scouts. She loved those little girls to
|
|
death."
|
|
|
|
"Maggie certainly thought highly of her mother. She was
|
|
killed in an automobile accident, correct? I think I
|
|
remember Maggie mentioned that."
|
|
|
|
"Yes. The girls were...let's see. Margaret was about
|
|
twelve, and that would have made Madeline about ten.
|
|
Terrible thing. Miss Roberta just lost control of the car
|
|
somehow on a rainy night on her way inland back to the farm
|
|
after a church dinner. It was between Manteo and Tuttle.
|
|
Ran off into the woods, and hit a big oak."
|
|
|
|
"Must have been tough on the whole family," I said.
|
|
|
|
Morehouse winced, and nodded his head. "Just about killed
|
|
old Sam. He was all weepy for about two years after the
|
|
accident. Until he noticed Teresa."
|
|
|
|
"Maggie's Stepmother," I said.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, she was Sam's secretary at the bank. Put new life in
|
|
him, that's for sure. Took him in tow. Didn't give him
|
|
enough time to feel sorry for himself. Teresa was a young
|
|
thing, pretty as a picture. She was only twenty-four when
|
|
she married Sam."
|
|
|
|
"Strike it rich?"
|
|
|
|
"You mean was she after his money? Well, maybe at first,
|
|
but by the time she married him, I think she'd changed her
|
|
mind about that. Sam was pretty well into wallowing around
|
|
in his sorrows. I think Teresa looked at it as a challenge,
|
|
to bring him back to life." The old man frowned in thought,
|
|
choosing his words carefully, then spoke slowly. "She
|
|
married upward, but she grew into it pretty well. She's no
|
|
Miss Roberta, but she's done pretty well in fitting in where
|
|
she can. Keeps Sam out of trouble."
|
|
|
|
"What kind of trouble?"
|
|
|
|
He smiled, only slightly. "Most all kinds," he said. His
|
|
tone left no doubt that the conversation was over. "Would
|
|
you like to view the departed before the service begins?
|
|
I've got to take care of some other details. He opened a
|
|
door to an office, and called to a younger man. "Ronnie,"
|
|
he said, "Come watch the door while I make some phone
|
|
calls." He pointed down a short hallway to what looked like
|
|
two chapel rooms. A younger version of Mister Morehouse,
|
|
with a little better head of hair, took his place by the
|
|
door to greet the public.
|
|
|
|
I walked into the "viewing room". Maggie's coffin, open,
|
|
stood in front of blue curtains trimmed in black. A copper-
|
|
colored lamp stood at either end of the coffin. About forty
|
|
chairs were arranged in the room, four rows of five on
|
|
either side of a center aisle. A small podium was to the
|
|
left of the coffin. The floral blanket read, "Daughter". A
|
|
few other standard-issue funeral arrangements were spread
|
|
around the floor, on stands nearby, and around the sides of
|
|
the room. An elderly couple sat in the second row on the
|
|
right. They both watched me as I entered, and walked up to
|
|
the side of the casket.
|
|
|
|
I am never prepared to "view the departed". I think "stare
|
|
at the corpse" is perhaps a better phrase. It's one of the
|
|
more deranged rituals of life we put ourselves through, or
|
|
that others choose to put us through. I, however, am a man
|
|
who does what's expected, so I walked over to the casket to
|
|
say goodbye to Maggie, and stood, hands clasped behind my
|
|
back, looking down at her.
|
|
|
|
She was not a small woman, but she looked small lying there
|
|
in a box. Five foot six, maybe. Better than average looks,
|
|
but not drop-dead beautiful. On a street, in a supermarket,
|
|
most men would not give her a second look. Not until she
|
|
turned her full attention on you. Then, you noticed the
|
|
shine in her very, very green eyes, the way the light
|
|
reflected off that auburn-colored hair. She most often wore
|
|
it pulled back, in a pony tail, a french braid, or
|
|
something. You imagined it down, down to her shoulders,
|
|
because that's how long it was. When you spoke, her eyes
|
|
never left yours, she hung on every word, and touched you
|
|
when she made a point. That's what you remembered most.
|
|
The touch, the touch that said for that one fleeting moment,
|
|
you were someone special.
|
|
|
|
It was that touch that made you, in solitary intervals,
|
|
remember the shape of her legs, her lips. Well, hey. I'm
|
|
not talking about you, I'm talking about me. I'm talking
|
|
about what happened to me when I was around Maggie
|
|
Whitehurst. I will not flatter myself to think that she was
|
|
as intrigued with me as I was with her, except perhaps for a
|
|
short time.
|
|
|
|
I was not used to seeing her dressed as she was today, like
|
|
this, in a plain blue business suit, with a high-necked
|
|
blouse, no doubt to cover the rope burns on her neck, and
|
|
who knows what they did at the morgue. Her hair, though,
|
|
was every bit as beautiful down as I remembered seeing it on
|
|
those few occasions. She made a good-looking corpse, but
|
|
the problem was, she looked dead. No matter how good the
|
|
job the embalmer does, how "lifelike" the corpse looks, it's
|
|
still a corpse. Whatever life was in that vessel has indeed
|
|
"departed", perhaps gone to another, depending on your
|
|
spiritual view, but certainly gone from this life forever.
|
|
|
|
I would have preferred to have remembered Maggie differently
|
|
than this. She had her faults, but she was as full of life
|
|
and honesty as any person I have known, or am likely to
|
|
know.
|
|
|
|
Our affair had started as one of those couples trips, in
|
|
fact, the last one the four of us ever took, late last
|
|
summer. We went to the Outer Banks often over the years we
|
|
had known each other, renting a cottage for a weekend, or
|
|
sometimes a week. This time, it was a week-long trip after
|
|
Labor Day, after the rental rates dropped. The cottage was
|
|
a good one, an expensive one, a modern one, two stories, all
|
|
light woods, formica, chrome and glass. It went for
|
|
thirteen hundred dollars per week during the season. This
|
|
particular week, the rate was four hundred dollars. A white
|
|
gazebo atop a dune overlooked the Atlantic. We arrived on
|
|
Friday night, with enough time to unpack and cook dinner on
|
|
the barbecue, and take a little walk on the beach before
|
|
turning in.
|
|
|
|
All the next day, Saturday, we had done the usual things,
|
|
spent a little quiet time after breakfast, visited some of
|
|
the shops along what passes for the waterfront strip, even
|
|
visited the Wright Brothers Museum for the third or fourth
|
|
time. We saw a movie, ate dinner at one of the better
|
|
restaurants, and went back to the cottage, all of us a
|
|
little tipsy. Barbara and I had a good time, I think. At
|
|
least I did. We did not act like husband and wife toward
|
|
each other, we acted as friends. I knew our marriage was in
|
|
trouble, and had been for some time. It was The Thing we
|
|
didn't talk about, the big elephant in the living room that
|
|
you put a doily and a vase of flowers on, make it look like
|
|
it belongs, like it's part of the furniture, but no one ever
|
|
says, says, "What the hell is a fucking elephant doing in
|
|
the living room?"
|
|
|
|
There was always a certain amount of sexual tension involved
|
|
in these foursome outings, working at a very low, almost
|
|
subconscious, level. Sometimes, we would swap spouses for
|
|
shopping trips, museum visits, or even an occasional movie
|
|
that the odd couple wanted to see. Sometimes, Maggie and I
|
|
found ourselves holding hands as we walked along the beach,
|
|
or in the theatre. I know Bobby and Barbara did the same.
|
|
We had never acted on any of this, except to speculate once
|
|
or twice about what the neighbors might think if they saw us
|
|
paired off this way. It was, at the most, titillating,
|
|
flirtatious, and fun. The fact that any one of us could be
|
|
a little excited by holding the opposite's spouse...I always
|
|
found slightly amusing.
|
|
|
|
I honestly did not know that Bobby and Maggie's marriage was
|
|
in trouble, as well. I thought I sensed some distance, some
|
|
withdrawal on the part of one or both of them, but I figured
|
|
I was probably projecting some of my own problems on them.
|
|
So I filed it away. Barbara and I had our own things to
|
|
deal with, or I had to deal with what our situation was
|
|
becoming, perhaps a friendly disengagement, but a pending
|
|
parting of the ways, nonetheless.
|
|
|
|
That night, after falling asleep in bed next to Barbara, I
|
|
dreamed of reaching out, waking her, and telling her gently
|
|
that she was my friend, and that I recognized her pain.
|
|
That if being with someone else, or simply being away from
|
|
me would relieve that pain, I would do what I could to help.
|
|
I just needed a sign from her that it was all right, that a
|
|
separation would be a good thing, a comfortable thing, that
|
|
it would relieve what I was feeling, too. I was not at all
|
|
sure that would be the case. If, as my friend, she could
|
|
reassure me about it all, it might be a bit easier. I
|
|
awakened damp with perspiration, and a bit frightened.
|
|
|
|
So restless, I had decided to walk up to the gazebo, have a
|
|
smoke, and stare out at the ocean for a while. The gazebo
|
|
was about a hundred feet from the beach, and the roar of the
|
|
surf was deafening. In supposing I would be unnoticed,
|
|
either by Barbara, or by Bobby or Maggie, though, I was only
|
|
partially right. Maggie found me. Lost in my own thoughts,
|
|
she sneaked right up.
|
|
|
|
"What are you doing out here?" she shouted.
|
|
|
|
I turned with a start. "Having a smoke, clearing out my
|
|
head." We were both yelling over the insistent rush of the
|
|
surf.
|
|
|
|
"But not your lungs, huh?" She laughed, and moved closer.
|
|
I was the only one of the four of us who smoked. It was a
|
|
constant source of needling from Maggie.
|
|
|
|
I shrugged. "Everyone has an addiction or two. I'm just
|
|
happy mine isn't for cute ten-year-old boys."
|
|
|
|
She gave a impish grin, and a sly wink. "Won't Barbara miss
|
|
you? Aren't you two doing what people come down here for?
|
|
A little romance? A little heavy breathing?"
|
|
|
|
I took another drag of the cigarette, and exhaled heavily.
|
|
"Not this time, Maggie. It hasn't been that way for a
|
|
while."
|
|
|
|
"I know. Me neither," She said. The silly, mocking tone
|
|
disappeared quickly, and she turned to stare out at the
|
|
ocean, the waves breaking endlessly upon the beach.
|
|
|
|
"Maggie," I said, "you go through cycles in a marriage. Up
|
|
a little, down a little. Does it all average out? It was
|
|
the argument I'd given Barbara. If not me, who? If not
|
|
Barbara, who? Who would love me? Who would care about me?
|
|
Why could I not bring myself to face facts? I threw the
|
|
cigarette butt down in mild disgust, and stepped on it.
|
|
|
|
Maggie kept staring out at the ocean for a few more seconds,
|
|
before she turned, and touched my arm. That touch. "Not
|
|
this time, Brad. I think Bobby and I have pretty well
|
|
bottomed out. Bobby keeps looking for the 'big score', the
|
|
deal that's going to get us out of debt, let us...let
|
|
him...feel comfortable enough to start a family, to get on
|
|
to where we need to be, something more. He says he keeps
|
|
looking for it, he promises he'll keep looking, but I'm sure
|
|
he's not convinced it's what he wants. He's comfortable in
|
|
getting by, keeping the bills paid. He doesn't want to get
|
|
ahead. I'm tired of treading water, Brad. If you don't
|
|
move ahead, you sink. I'm sinking." She squeezed my arm
|
|
for emphasis. "I can feel it. Unless I get out of this
|
|
marriage and move ahead, I'm going down for the third time.
|
|
I can't do that. I won't do that. How about you and
|
|
Barbara?" she asked, an eyebrow raised. "Are you going to
|
|
give it a 'little time'?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm a patient guy. But you know Barbara better than me," I
|
|
said. "You two shop, and lunch, and do all that female
|
|
bonding stuff. You tell me. Tell me the truth."
|
|
|
|
"You don't want the truth, Brad. You're too busy being
|
|
patient, and good, and kind, and it's not what you are at
|
|
all. You're too busy working at being the good guy. You're
|
|
too busy trying to be the one who's right, the wronged man,
|
|
the stoic figure who can hold his head up high, beat on his
|
|
chest, and say 'this marriage didn't fail because of me! I
|
|
did nothing to bring this upon myself!' You're so busy
|
|
working on that, because you've given up on the
|
|
relationship. You're already working on how you'll see
|
|
yourself after it breaks apart. You want the truth? Okay,
|
|
the truth is maybe you could have saved it. Just maybe
|
|
Barbara wouldn't have drifted away if you had spent a little
|
|
more time on the relationship, instead of working fourteen-
|
|
hour days. Maybe Barbara didn't care if you were a big-
|
|
time, high-paid network correspondent by the time you were
|
|
forty, like you did. Maybe, just maybe, Barbara wants a
|
|
full-time husband, who hangs out around the house, fixes the
|
|
busted faucet, and makes babies with her. The truth is that
|
|
you don't have any time left. She's going to pull the plug,
|
|
Brad. She's waiting for the right time, but she's going to
|
|
pull the plug, you big jerk, and you know it. It's not if
|
|
anymore. It's when. You're a nice guy, and she doesn't
|
|
want to hit you while you're down, but it's coming. Not
|
|
tomorrow, not the next day, but soon."
|
|
|
|
I snapped at her. "You're full of shit." Of course, she
|
|
was right, not only right, but it was a direct hit. Mine
|
|
was only what the military people call a secondary
|
|
explosion, but that was about all I could think of to say at
|
|
the time. Denial may not be a good thing, but it has its
|
|
handy uses.
|
|
|
|
Maggie moved closer to me, and put her arm around my waist.
|
|
I could smell the citrus of her perfume, even above the
|
|
wind. Instinctively, I pulled her closer, turned her to
|
|
face me, and put both arms around her.
|
|
|
|
"The truth," she said, "is that you are a nice guy, and not
|
|
at all stupid about what's going on." Another squeeze.
|
|
"And the truth is that I wish I had you, your drive, where
|
|
you will be some day, and that Barbara had Bobby." She
|
|
buried her head into my neck, sighed, and shuddered a
|
|
little. "It sure would make a lot more sense that way."
|
|
|
|
We held each other for a very long time, just standing there
|
|
in the gazebo, holding on. What happened that night,
|
|
between the two of us, was really irrelevant to what was
|
|
about to happen to the four of us. Whether we made love, or
|
|
not, the fates of our respective marriages were already in
|
|
the cards, and we all knew what they were. Maggie and I
|
|
were simply fellow travelers on roads that converged for...a
|
|
short time? I didn't know just then. I did know that I had
|
|
thought about taking Maggie's hair down all night. So I
|
|
did.
|
|
|
|
And so, after my separation from Barbara, Maggie and I
|
|
became lovers for a few months. It would not last. I knew
|
|
that then, but I let it happen anyway. When a person's
|
|
world is falling apart, as I felt mine was at the time, that
|
|
person will grab on to anything, using Maggie's metaphor, to
|
|
keep from going down that third time.
|
|
|
|
Maggie spoke the last words either of us said that night.
|
|
|
|
"Hold on," she said. "It's going to be a bumpy ride."
|
|
|
|
-0-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
I would have liked to have thought my relationship with
|
|
Maggie broke faith with no one. But certainly, Bobby would
|
|
have felt betrayed, had he known. I was still not sure he
|
|
didn't know about it.
|
|
|
|
Barbara broke the news on a Sunday night in August, while we
|
|
watched the late news. Usually the paragon of fashion, even
|
|
in leisure, she had been moping around all weekend in a
|
|
sweat shirt and ratty shorts, speaking in monosyllables, and
|
|
saying over and over again she didn't feel well.
|
|
|
|
I said, "Are you feeling better?"
|
|
|
|
She said, "No."
|
|
|
|
I said, "Still feeling lousy?"
|
|
|
|
She said, "Yes."
|
|
|
|
I said, "Is something wrong besides feeling lousy?"
|
|
|
|
She said, "Yes. I want a divorce."
|
|
|
|
Well, hey. I was the one who asked. I did not sleep well
|
|
that night. Barbara slept on the couch, I guess. I packed
|
|
and moved on Monday, first into a hotel on the strip, then
|
|
into the duplex above Wesley on the weekend. I got an
|
|
attorney, signed the separation agreement, and sulked for
|
|
two months. I worked a lot, putting in sixty, seventy hour
|
|
weeks, volunteering for all the overtime I could get at the
|
|
television station. I sifted through records at
|
|
courthouses, drove to Richmond once or twice, and broke
|
|
several big stories about corruption and crime. When it
|
|
feels like someone has taken your world, turned it upside
|
|
down and shaken it, it's comforting to have something
|
|
familiar to turn to. For me, it was my work. It always had
|
|
been. It was one of the problems, according to Barbara.
|
|
|
|
Anyway, after a couple of months of pouting, I was at the
|
|
mall one Friday night, aimlessly shopping, wondering if
|
|
spending money would make me feel better, watching people,
|
|
and still pouting, when I ran into Bobby and Barbara. We
|
|
made small talk. Funny how you can share the most intimate
|
|
things as couples, but feel awkward when one of the four
|
|
wheels falls off.
|
|
|
|
I caught them up on "what I was doing with myself", looked
|
|
at my watch, and ducked into a movie theatre quickly, to see
|
|
a picture I cared nothing about, just to get out of the
|
|
awkwardness of the situation.
|
|
|
|
The next afternoon, I fell asleep with a beer on the couch
|
|
while watching a football game I cared nothing about. There
|
|
was a knock at the sliding glass door that awakened me. I
|
|
looked at the clock. It was about six. I opened the
|
|
curtains, and there stood Maggie on the deck, almost
|
|
silhouetted against the purple fall sky, wearing a denim
|
|
jacket, a plaid flannel shirt, and white twill slacks. The
|
|
breeze off the bay was chilly with the sun down, and blew
|
|
her hair around her neck.
|
|
|
|
"Where's Bobby?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"Gone to Charlottesville for the football game," she said.
|
|
"He's getting drunk with the good old boys. He'll be
|
|
driving back in the morning."
|
|
|
|
"Where are you?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"Here." Nothing ruins a rhetorical question like a literal
|
|
answer. "Will you do me a favor?" she asked.
|
|
|
|
"Sure. What?"
|
|
|
|
"Kiss me. Hold me. Make love to me."
|
|
|
|
I stepped out onto the deck, and took her into my arms. We
|
|
kissed, and then I took her hand and led her to my bedroom.
|
|
|
|
-0-
|
|
|
|
"Isn't this where we're supposed to say, '...gee, she looks
|
|
so life-like,' or something?"
|
|
|
|
I turned toward the voice, and looked into Maggie's green
|
|
eyes. Same hair, same mouth, same green eyes. Younger, but
|
|
not by much. A little hipper-looking. "Hello, Madeline,
|
|
Brad Streeter," I said, offering my hand. "Sorry to trash
|
|
the script, but she doesn't look too life-like to me. She
|
|
looks dead."
|
|
|
|
"Yep. Dead," the woman said. She took my hand in a firm
|
|
grip. "Friends call me Mary. Mary Leonard. Sister of the
|
|
deceased." She winced. "Sorry about that crack. I'm not
|
|
sure I know how to act at these things."
|
|
|
|
I nodded. "Death affects people in different ways."
|
|
|
|
I looked around the chapel. It was filling rapidly. Not a
|
|
big crowd by my standards, but probably large enough for
|
|
Tuttle, North Carolina.
|
|
|
|
Mary was wearing a black dress, knee-length, fairly plain,
|
|
but elegant. What you would call a cocktail dress, I guess,
|
|
under other circumstances, but suitable for mourning.
|
|
|
|
"You were Bobby and Maggie's neighbor, right?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Are you the one she had the affair with before she and
|
|
Bobby split?"
|
|
|
|
A direct question deserves a direct answer. When in doubt,
|
|
tell the truth. "Yes," I said.
|
|
|
|
"Want to sit?"
|
|
|
|
"Okay." She led the way to the back of the folding chairs.
|
|
We sat in silence, although I have to admit I took a good
|
|
look at her once or twice. The resemblance was striking.
|
|
|
|
Barbara joined the party just as the organ music began.
|
|
|
|
She looked better than I had seen her in some time. Of
|
|
course, I had not seen her at all for about six months or
|
|
so, since the hearing to finalize the divorce. She nodded,
|
|
and mouthed "Hello" as she walked to the front. She was
|
|
wearing a navy suit, with a white blouse, dark stockings and
|
|
black pumps. She had let her hair grow, and had darkened
|
|
the color. It had always looked sort of dishwater blonde.
|
|
Now it looked a pleasant light shade of brown.
|
|
|
|
I thumbed through the program for the funeral. The Reverend
|
|
M. Scott Thomas would be presiding, with Jessica Copal at
|
|
the keyboard. Bobby arrived in a three-piece suit, followed
|
|
by a gray-haired man, with what I was learning were Leonard
|
|
eyes, immaculately dressed in a pinstriped number, and a
|
|
much younger blonde woman in a black dress. I assumed they
|
|
were Maggie's father and stepmother. Ms. Copal launched
|
|
into "Amazing Grace", a few moments later, the Reverend
|
|
Thomas appeared from behind the blue curtain.
|
|
|
|
Mary Leonard looked at me, and at eyebrow went up.
|
|
"Showtime," she said.
|
|
|
|
Bobby sat in the front row, next to Barbara, on one side of
|
|
the aisle, old man Leonard and the woman on the other. One
|
|
glance between Bobby and the Sam Leonard said it all. Mary
|
|
Leonard said no more.
|
|
|
|
-0-
|
|
|
|
Jessica Copal was competent at the keyboard, but the good
|
|
reverend Thomas was boring as hell. It became immediately
|
|
obvious that he had never met Maggie, Bobby, maybe not even
|
|
old Sam Leonard. The only thing he got right was what a
|
|
waste it all seemed.
|
|
|
|
Bobby and Sam Leonard were still glaring at each other when
|
|
they and four other men loaded Maggie up into the hearse.
|
|
The rain had stopped for now, but it looked as if it could
|
|
start up again anytime. The wind was still blowing pretty
|
|
strong. I was getting into my car when Mary Leonard trotted
|
|
over to the passenger's side, and put her hand on the
|
|
handle.
|
|
|
|
"Mind if I ride with you?"
|
|
|
|
"No problem," I said. "I kind of figured you'd be riding
|
|
with your father, though."
|
|
|
|
"He's got whatshername to ride with."
|
|
|
|
"Right. Whatever." I crossed over to her side of the car
|
|
and opened the door.
|
|
|
|
The two Mister Morehouses, Senior and Junior, handed out the
|
|
little magnetic flags to put on our cars, and reminded us to
|
|
turn on our headlights for the trip to the cemetery. A gray
|
|
police cruiser sat in front of the hearse. Ronald Senior
|
|
said we'd be going to the family burial plot, off a main
|
|
road near the Leonard Farm, that we'd be running stop signs
|
|
and traffic signals, and to stay close to the car ahead.
|
|
|
|
Mary and I rode in silence for the first couple of miles
|
|
through farmland. I felt compelled to make pleasant
|
|
conversation. When you don't know what to talk about, talk
|
|
about the other person.
|
|
|
|
"Maggie didn't talk about her family much," I said, hoping
|
|
that didn't sound like some kind of judgment.
|
|
|
|
"She hadn't been close to any of us for some time," Mary
|
|
said. She continued to stare out the window.
|
|
|
|
"What I mean is," I said, "I don't know much about your
|
|
family. Mister Morehouse said your father is a banker."
|
|
|
|
"That's right," she said. "He's got more money than you can
|
|
imagine."
|
|
|
|
I smiled, a little. "I can imagine quite a bit."
|
|
|
|
"Well," she said, "He's got more than I can imagine, or most
|
|
of the folks around here can imagine."
|
|
|
|
"What do you do?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"A little of this, and a little of that," she said. "Right
|
|
now, I'm working at a dress shop at one of the hotels."
|
|
|
|
-0-
|
|
|
|
|
|
"It was awful," she said finally, pulling a cigarette from
|
|
her purse, Marlboro, if it matters, and lighting it with one
|
|
of those slender little precious metal lighters with the
|
|
little roller-thing on the side. Almost startled, she
|
|
looked at me quickly. "Is this alright? Smoking in your
|
|
car, I mean."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," I said, and fished a Salem out of my sport coat and
|
|
lit it with my Bic. "You mean Saturday," I said.
|
|
|
|
"Yes. Daddy called me at about two Sunday morning. I mean,
|
|
I knew she'd been depressed, but I didn't think she'd do
|
|
something like this. I still have a hard time believing
|
|
she's gone."
|
|
|
|
"You two were close?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"Not exactly. But we'd gotten closer since she'd come
|
|
down."
|
|
|
|
"How long had she been down here?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"About six weeks. She was still making trips to Virginia
|
|
Beach to see a therapist, and I really thought she had been
|
|
making some progress. She talked about the future, what she
|
|
wanted to do after the divorce was final." She shook her
|
|
head. "Did you know she wanted to paint?"
|
|
|
|
"No, but I knew she had some talent in that direction."
|
|
|
|
"She wanted to paint." Mary Leonard was crying, watching
|
|
the tobacco fields go by.
|
|
|
|
At the cemetery, it was the standard stuff. Ashes to ashes,
|
|
dust to dust. The Reverend Thomas' standard protestant
|
|
graveside speech. I kept hoping it wouldn't begin raining
|
|
again. After the final "amen", Mary plucked a rose from one
|
|
of the wreaths, and the workmen began cranking the coffin
|
|
into the ground.
|
|
|
|
Barbara, who pretty much had ignored me up until now, walked
|
|
over to where I stood with Mary.
|
|
|
|
"Mary Leonard, my ex-wife Barbara. Barbara...Mary."
|
|
|
|
Barbara said to Mary, "I was saddened to hear about your
|
|
sister's death. As I'm sure Brad has told you, we were very
|
|
close with Maggie and Bobby."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," Mary said. "Very close. Excuse me, please. I've
|
|
got to speak with some friends." Tight smile, and poof.
|
|
Gone.
|
|
|
|
Barbara turned to me. "How have you been doing, Brad?"
|
|
|
|
"Unemployed, but well. You?"
|
|
|
|
"I read about your loss in the paper. I'm sorry, Brad. I
|
|
know your job meant a lot to you. I've been well. I'm
|
|
studying for a real estate license."
|
|
|
|
"Not great lately, but not a bad business to be into around
|
|
Virginia Beach," I said. "Was the split between Maggie and
|
|
Bobby nasty?"
|
|
|
|
"Not really, she just packed up the car, and left one
|
|
afternoon. She waited for Bobby to get home, and told him
|
|
she needed to get away for a while."
|
|
|
|
"Her sister said she was still seeing a therapist at the
|
|
Beach."
|
|
|
|
"I think so, but to tell you the truth, we haven't talked
|
|
much since...since you moved out and all."
|
|
|
|
"Yeah, I know how it goes." I couldn't help but wonder how
|
|
much Barbara really knew about what had happened between
|
|
Maggie and me.
|
|
|
|
The crowd was thinning quickly. Probably the weather. I
|
|
offered to buy Barbara dinner. She politely declined. Mary
|
|
Leonard had vanished. I watched Barbara get into the big
|
|
Mercury alone, and drive away. Even the Reverend Thomas had
|
|
split. It was me, the old couple, and the two cemetery
|
|
workers, who were just starting to fire up the backhoe a few
|
|
yards away. It was close to five o'clock. I walked over to
|
|
the Mustang, and drove away.
|
|
|
|
Seven-Elevens grow like weeds in this part of the world. If
|
|
it looks like any development is coming soon anywhere, the
|
|
Southland Corporation cranks all the numbers into its
|
|
massive mainframe computer somewhere and decides it's time
|
|
for another Seven-Eleven, or maybe two or three. In some
|
|
suburban areas, they're built right across the street from
|
|
one another, so that you don't have to make a left turn to
|
|
pick up the bread and milk on the way home. Left turns are
|
|
bad for business. As I approached civilization and the
|
|
hotel, I pulled into one and picked up a cold six of
|
|
Stroh's. Better than paying ten bucks for it at the Armada.
|
|
I parked the Mustang, and threw my sport coat in the back
|
|
seat, along with my shoes and socks. I rolled up my
|
|
pantlegs, popped the top on a cold one, stuck another in my
|
|
pocket, and walked down the beach.
|
|
|
|
I don't know how far I walked, maybe five miles, or maybe it
|
|
seemed like five miles. It was one beer's worth. I walked
|
|
to where the hotels stop, and the beach houses begin. I sat
|
|
on the beach, and stared out at the surf for a good long
|
|
time. I finished the first beer, dropped the can into a
|
|
barrel, and opened the second. It was warm. There were
|
|
dynamics at work here that I didn't understand. Bobby and
|
|
Sam Leonard. Maggie and Mary. Maggie and Mary and their
|
|
stepmother.
|
|
|
|
I told myself it was none of my business. I told myself the
|
|
relationship with Maggie, whatever it had been, had been
|
|
over long before she had made the decision to leave this
|
|
world. Maggie did not love me, did not know me well enough
|
|
to love me, or me her. But it hadn't been that long. And I
|
|
had to admit that whatever misguided feelings I had about
|
|
love, I had felt as if I loved Maggie. Or could love her.
|
|
Or wanted to love her. Or something. Whatever it was, it
|
|
hurt. So I cried the tears of loss, and pain, and a little
|
|
guilt, too. For what might have been with Maggie, and with
|
|
Barbara, and with the other women I had known in my
|
|
lifetime. The sky was beginning to clear. I walked back to
|
|
the car as I finished the second beer, and grabbed my coat
|
|
and the remaining four-pack out of the back seat. When I
|
|
got back to the room, I put the beer on ice in the sink and
|
|
took a long, hot shower. I shaved, dressed in white slacks
|
|
and a polo shirt, and went downstairs for dinner. It was
|
|
about eight-thirty.
|
|
|
|
-0-
|
|
|
|
As I passed the bar headed for the dining room, it was the
|
|
same hoarse, rough sounding voice from the funeral home.
|
|
|
|
"Hey, Streeter." Mary Leonard was positioned at the end of
|
|
the bar, with a view of the entry into the dining room. She
|
|
still wore the black dress from this afternoon, but she
|
|
didn't look like she was mourning anymore, it really looked
|
|
like a cocktail dress. She was sitting with legs crossed,
|
|
smoking a cigarette. An empty glass stood on the bar.
|
|
|
|
"Hello, Mary," I said. "Buy you a drink?"
|
|
|
|
"How about a drink and dinner?" She arched one eyebrow.
|
|
|
|
"Okay."
|
|
|
|
She picked up her purse, and we went into the dining room.
|
|
I followed, and noticed that Mary had not only the same
|
|
coloring, but much the same shape as her sister. Where
|
|
Maggie was soft, however, there seemed to be just a little
|
|
bit of an edge about Mary. She may have been Maggie's
|
|
younger sister, but she looked just a little older, a little
|
|
more worldly, if that makes any sense. We were seated at a
|
|
table near the window. The dark clouds still hung over the
|
|
ocean to the east, but it was obviously clearing to the
|
|
west, because the setting sun outlined long shadows in
|
|
orange across the beach. Mary ordered another drink, a
|
|
vodka tonic. I ordered another beer, Stroh's if they had
|
|
it, Bud if they didn't. The waiter said he'd be right back
|
|
with a Bud.
|
|
|
|
"The service was nice," she said, while we waited for our
|
|
drinks. "The day turned out nice, at least." She was
|
|
looking out at the ocean.
|
|
|
|
"I got the impression that the minister didn't know Maggie
|
|
well," I said.
|
|
|
|
"Not since we were kids."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you're right. It was a nice service." A brief lull,
|
|
as both of stared out at the ocean. "Does your father get
|
|
along with Bobby?"
|
|
|
|
"Daddy doesn't get along with much of anyone," she said as
|
|
the drinks arrived. The waiter placed them atop the
|
|
obligatory napkins, and departed. "Especially Bobby," she
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
"Do you know why?"
|
|
|
|
"Bobby was a little older than Maggie. Daddy was always
|
|
real protective of the two of us. Didn't want us to go on
|
|
dates until we were sixteen, and didn't really want us to do
|
|
it then, either, but you can't exactly tell a sixteen year
|
|
old girl not to go on dates, for Christ's sake. So Daddy's
|
|
little girls were growing up, and Daddy didn't like it one
|
|
little bit. I would hear them fighting when she came home
|
|
late from her dates. I could hear him yelling at the boys
|
|
out in the driveway, and I could hear him yelling at Maggie
|
|
downstairs after they left." Mary took a large swallow of
|
|
the vodka tonic. "He called her things like 'slut' and
|
|
'whore', and wanted to know every little detail of every
|
|
date."
|
|
|
|
"Was your stepmother much help?"
|
|
|
|
"No. I always felt like she married Daddy for the money.
|
|
She treated us alright, she never hurt us much, but she
|
|
wouldn't stick up for us like Mother. Still doesn't, much.
|
|
Mostly when Daddy got into one of his moods like that, she'd
|
|
just leave the room and go upstairs and take a sleeping
|
|
pill. Teresa just doesn't care about us much one way or
|
|
another. Well, I mean, didn't...I mean..." Her voice was
|
|
quivering a little. "God, she's really dead. Maggie's
|
|
really dead, just like Daddy said." She stared out the
|
|
window for a couple of seconds, then polished off the drink.
|
|
|
|
"Do you want to order?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"Order me another drink, please," she said, putting the
|
|
glass back on the napkin. "And I'll look at the menu after
|
|
I get back from powdering my nose, having a good cry, and
|
|
blotting up the mess." She rose quickly, and left.
|
|
|
|
I motioned to the waiter, and ordered another drink for
|
|
Mary. I'd pass this round. The eastern sky was dark now,
|
|
and I could see the lights of the ships running up and down
|
|
the coast. Coal carriers, mostly, taking Virginia coal to
|
|
South America. I was attracted to Mary. She had a sharp
|
|
tongue and a quick wit. Was it that, or the fact that she
|
|
resembled Maggie a lot? Was I attracted to Mary, or Maggie
|
|
all over again, or just any woman? How well did I know
|
|
Maggie? How well had I known any of the women who had been
|
|
in my life, including my wife?
|
|
|
|
Doctor Al Avery, my shrink, says I should ask myself
|
|
questions like this. Well, he doesn't exactly say it,
|
|
rather, he asks questions like this, and expects me, by
|
|
osmosis, to ask them to myself. I'm never sure if they're
|
|
real questions, or rhetorical ones. Shrinks never tell you
|
|
what to do, they simply ask questions that lead you to
|
|
believe they're telling you what to do. "Are you saying I
|
|
should think about this more?" I say. "What do you think
|
|
about that?" he replies. This type of behavior is known as
|
|
"analyzing the analyst", and is frowned upon by virtually
|
|
the entire analyzing community. But then, we were talking
|
|
about me, and not them. Go figure.
|
|
|
|
Mary returned, cigarette in hand, and plopped down with a
|
|
great exhalation of air.
|
|
|
|
"Well," she said, "I'm glad that's over with. I'd been
|
|
wondering when the good cry was going to come."
|
|
|
|
"Feel better?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"For now. Probably not for long."
|
|
|
|
The waiter returned to take our order. I ordered a steak,
|
|
medium rare, while Mary perused the menu. She ordered
|
|
stuffed flounder. The waiter nodded his approval, clicked
|
|
his ballpoint, offered me another beer, which I declined,
|
|
and left.
|
|
|
|
"So why did Maggie move back here?" I asked. "Why not move
|
|
in with you, or with some friends, or out on her own?"
|
|
|
|
"She was going to move in with me," Mary said. "Or that's
|
|
what she told me. But she said there were some things she
|
|
had to do first."
|
|
|
|
"If the relationship with your father wasn't good, moving to
|
|
the farm couldn't have been much fun," I said.
|
|
|
|
"I don't think it was. Daddy didn't really want to take her
|
|
back, but Teresa talked him into it."
|
|
|
|
"Teresa talked him into it? Your stepmother?"
|
|
|
|
"Yeah."
|
|
|
|
"Why?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't exactly know," she said. "Maybe she wanted to make
|
|
up for not being there before."
|
|
|
|
"Before when?"
|
|
|
|
"When daddy cut Maggie off and kicked her out. I mean, she
|
|
was ready to move out and tell him to stuff it anyway. But
|
|
she moved up to Williamsburg, and started going to William
|
|
and Mary studying art, and she got involved with some boy up
|
|
there. Brian something was his name. Daddy didn't like it,
|
|
so when he got her grades, and they weren't what he thought
|
|
they should have been, he cut off her money, and told her
|
|
not to bother coming home."
|
|
|
|
"What did she do then?"
|
|
|
|
"Got a job as a legal secretary, and met Bobby at a real
|
|
estate closing. He was sweet, and polite, and romantic. He
|
|
treated her real nice at the time, took her places, sent her
|
|
flowers, and all that shit."
|
|
|
|
I had heard the story of how they met, but I didn't know the
|
|
background. The waiter served salad.
|
|
|
|
"Daddy got real mad. See, he wanted her to come crawling
|
|
and begging back home, saying she was sorry for how much
|
|
she'd screwed up her life, and would he please take her
|
|
back, and how she'd be a good girl and all that crap," Mary
|
|
said. "She didn't do it. She got a job, trained herself,
|
|
really, found a guy and married him real quick, just to have
|
|
someone to take care of her. And Bobby's real sweet, but
|
|
he's sort of a...Bubba, you know? Like there's all these
|
|
guys who go out and drink beer on Saturdays, and watch
|
|
football games, and do all that guy stuff? And about every
|
|
other one of them is nicknamed 'Bubba'? Well, Bobby is a
|
|
'Bubba', whether that's his nickname or not. He's just a
|
|
good ole boy lawyer, looking for the big score that will
|
|
keep him in Budweiser and big screen, satellite dish
|
|
football games for life. And fishing, of course. And
|
|
Maggie finally decided she wanted more. She thought she
|
|
deserved more, so she left him. She was going to figure out
|
|
a way to go back to school. She was going to get a job
|
|
here, and start going back to the community college, then
|
|
transfer the credits back to William and Mary, or NC State,
|
|
or somewhere else."
|
|
|
|
"I didn't know she was that unhappy with Bobby," I said.
|
|
|
|
"Bobby's a real hard guy to get mad at," she said. "He's
|
|
just so darned...amiable, is that the word?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, good." The waiter appeared with our meals, and made
|
|
the appropriate little flourishes as he put them in front of
|
|
us. Mary stubbed out her cigarette. "Bobby is a nice guy,
|
|
just not very ambitious, or romantic, or loving, or
|
|
intimate. Maggie was his wife, and he expected to keep the
|
|
house, look good at parties, and give him a little roll in
|
|
the hay once or twice a week. She got tired of it."
|
|
|
|
Maggie didn't talk about your father much. Or you, either,
|
|
for that matter."
|
|
|
|
"That's not surprising. We weren't very close for a long
|
|
time. At least not until recently." The liquor was
|
|
beginning to catch up with her. 'Recently' came out 're-
|
|
schent-lee'. She finished up the glass.
|
|
|
|
"That's what you said. Things got better when Maggie moved
|
|
back?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes. She said she was going to move in with me, like I
|
|
told you. We were going to be roommates." The word "told"
|
|
came out "tole".
|
|
|
|
"Really?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but then she went and killed herself. But enough
|
|
about me and my dead sister. Let's talk about you and my
|
|
dead sister." Mary was now more than a little drunk. "So
|
|
how was she in bed? Maggie, that is."
|
|
|
|
I winced. "Mary, I do not embarrass easily, but you're
|
|
testing the limits here. Do you really expect me to answer
|
|
that question?"
|
|
|
|
"I suppose not. She said you were pretty much a gentleman,
|
|
and that you didn't tell anyone. She said you were..." She
|
|
was groping for a word.
|
|
|
|
I helped her. "Discreet."
|
|
|
|
"Yeah. That's it. Discreet." It came out 'dish-kreet'.
|
|
Learn a new word every day.
|
|
|
|
"So you said you and Maggie were getting closer?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
She looked out the window at the ocean, then back at me.
|
|
"Let's say we had some things in common."
|
|
|
|
"Like what?"
|
|
|
|
"The men in our lives. Or maybe I should say the man in our
|
|
lives."
|
|
|
|
I twirled the cocktail napkin I had been playing with. "I
|
|
give up," I said.
|
|
|
|
She smiled a silly, drunken smile. "Why, silly, Daddy, of
|
|
course. He was screwing both of us when we were kids.
|
|
That's why she's dead. She was going to confront him."
|
|
|
|
|
|
-0-
|