Part 8 (2/2)
G.o.d. Now I do feel like I'm prepping for an anger management cla.s.s. But there's no cla.s.s, and if you're still doing what I'm doing at my age, then a cla.s.s isn't what you need. Money, maybe?
Kent got drunk as a log at his wedding, and while I was dancing with a bridesmaid, and he with Barb, he looped past me, stuck his face into mine, and with a hot breath of champagne, chicken breast and vegetable medley said, ”You'll never be rich because you don't like rich people.” And then he whirled off. And he was right: I don't like rich people, with their built-in towel racks that need a heating system that comes from Scotland -Scotland! - with their double-door refrigerators with nonmagnetic surfaces to discourage the use of fridge magnets, and with their Queen Charlotte Islands red cedar shoe closets that smell like saunas.
Here's what I did wrong: I installed the built-in towel racks on the wrong side of the bath, and Les went mental on me because the owner won't surrender the weekly payment until it's done properly. I care but I don't care, but then Les is furious with the universe because his kid has a cataract, so I do care, but then at the same time, for G.o.d's sake, it's just a towel rack for some guy who, for whatever reason, needs to get his jollies with a warm towel every morning. So in the end, it's not possible to care - it's just towels. If Rich Guy uses one towel a day for a decade, it's still going to cost him over eighty cents a towel.
$3,000.00 = 82.
365 x 10
And in any event, best friends don't fistfight over towels or towel racks - or, if I ruled the world, they wouldn't.
Forget about ruling the world, I can barely get the automatic doors at Save-On-Foods to acknowledge my existence. So I have to take what life sends me. I put a smile on it. I seethe. I leave work a few hours early. I get cranked in a downtown parking lot. I fly high and develop elaborate schemes to elevate human consciousness. I come down. I get cranked again, but I suspect the new amphetamine is cut with milk sugar, so I enjoy it less the second time. I think, Wow, have I really watched two sunrises and two sunsets without having slept? I come down hard. I buy clonazepams from Persian twerps. I sit in a cafe and scribble on pink invoice papers.
Off to Mom's. Got to rescue Joyce.
It's the next morning, or at least McDonald's hasn't switched over to their lunch menu yet. A fast- food breakfast; drops of grease have elevated this morning's pink invoice paper into a stained- gla.s.s doc.u.ment.
My brain feels like a cool, deep lake. Did I really sleep for twelve hours? I'll even make it to work by noon today, which will probably put Les in such a good mood that he'll forget the string of six near-satanic messages he dumped into my answering machine.
Well, nephews, when I went to my mother's place last night after Starbucks, your mother, Barb, was there, leaning on the kitchen counter, and the big discussion was about why Reg is such a b.a.s.t.a.r.d, a subject my mother has given much thought to.
As I walked in the door, they both took one look at me, and Mom said, ”You - into the shower right now. When you're finished, change into something from the guest room closet. I've got some cream of cauliflower soup and French bread here. You'll eat some of that, and then you're going right to bed in the guest room. Got it?”
From the bathroom, I heard some of what my mother and your mother were saying.
”Well, you know, the initial attraction was that his family grew daffodils - still grows them. I thought that was so amazing - I thought only good people could grow daffodils.”
”What would bad people grow?”
”I don't know. Bats? Mushrooms? Algae? But daffodils -they're the most innocent flower on earth. They're a member of the onion family. Did you know that?”
”I didn't.”
”Learn something new every day.”
”Aren't narcissus the same as daffodils?”
”They are. Most people think they're different. But they're not.”
”Wouldn't a narcissus be, well, not quite evil, but not innocent, either - vain?”
”Reg had an answer for that. Do you want to hear it?”
”Tell me.”
”He said, 'Who are we to slap the human sin of vanity onto some poor flower that did nothing more than be given a name?'”
”That's kind of nice.”
”He also looked at the flowers at our wedding - anthuriums, ginger and birds-of-paradise - he said afterward that he thought they were 's.l.u.tty.'”
”Oh.”
The two women watched me enter the kitchen. Neither of them had any illusions. Mom said, ”Here's some orange juice. Your system's probably screaming for vitamin C.”
”Jesus, Jason. Shave already. You could sharpen a hunting knife on your five o'clock shadow.”
Mom placed a soup bowl onto the counter. To them it was nothing, but to me this moment was a brief taste of heaven.
Barb asked my mom, ”When did Reg start turning gonzo on you?”
”With religion?”
”Yeah.”
”Maybe a year after Kent was born. There was no specific trigger. Jason, honey, use a napkin, I just washed the floor.”
”Overnight?”
”No. I remember his face hardening about the same time -his cheek muscles losing slackness. It was probably something to do with serotonin. If I'd secretly dosed his coffee with Wellbutrin or another one of these new drugs, we'd still be a functioning happy couple. But instead he just kept losing it and losing it. By the time the kids started school, we were in separate beds. I was drinking big time by then. He liked it because it kept me in one place, and because when I was drunk, he didn't need to speak to me. Not like I wanted to speak with him.”
Cell phone just rang. I have to go. Les says this week's check cleared, so why don't we go have a beer to celebrate? It's 11:00 A.M.
Okay, it's been six days since my last entry in this journal, and I'm going to record what happened as fully as I can remember.
Les and I went for a beer at the Lynwood Inn, a blue-collar place down at the docks beneath the Second Narrows Bridge pilings. I don't know if it was the heat, or that we weren't eating the free chicken wings, but by one o'clock we were blotto, when in walked this wharf rat, Jerry, who I met in court in 1992 - he'd been pulled over in an Isuzu pickup loaded with stolen skis. When the next pitcher of beer arrived, Jerry paid from a big roll of bills. He then said he had a seventeen- foot aluminum boat with an Evinrude SO for sale. It was down on the water and did we want to go for a ride?
The boat was a real sweetheart and dead simple: a hull, an engine, a front winds.h.i.+eld and a steering wheel - basically a Honda Civic afloat on the harbor's brilliant gla.s.sy water. . . salt mist and galvanized metal; propeller blades churning in jade green water cut with pale blue smoke.
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