Part 12 (2/2)
And now I think I have to start preparing dinner. G.o.d bless Barb's copper-bottomed pots and her spice rack of the G.o.ds.
Sat.u.r.day night 10:30
Okay, Barb's housekeeper will be in at 8:30 tomorrow to clean up the battlefield. I really ought to have known better than to put the twins at the same table as Reg, who's too old and too set in his ways to be comfortable around young children. He tried to keep it together for my sake, but the twins tonight would have worn out an East German ladies' weight-lifting coach circa 1971. They were monsters. In the end I caved in and gave them Jell-O, then packed them off to watch TV.
Barb is going to have my head on a block for teaching them such bad habits.
The good part was that once the kids were bundled off, Reg relaxed and got a bit drunk and picked away at his fettuccine. Jason always told me Reg never drank, but then Jason didn't see his father for so many years. ... In any event, Reg drank white wine, not red, and then tested my grounding in reality by bringing out a cigarette and smoking it as if he'd been born to the task.
”Smoking now?”
”Might as well. Always wondered what it was like.”
”What is it like?”
He chuckled. ”Addictive.”
”There you go.”
I b.u.mmed a cigarette from him and smoked for the first time in twenty years and got the nicotine dizzies. I felt like a schoolgirl. When you conspire with someone like Reg, you feel as if you're committing one serious transgression.
Soon enough the conversation turned to Reg's sorrow about his lost boys - Kent the minor deity and his awful senseless death, and then Jason, but after three months there's simply no new ground to cover. I had the feeling that what we were discussing tonight is almost exactly what we'll be discussing in a decade.
Reg became morose. ”I just don't understand - the most wretched people in this world prosper, while the innocent and the devout get only suffering.”
”Reg, you can spend all night - and the rest of your life, for that matter - looking for some little equation that makes it all equate, but I don't think that equation exists. The world is the world. All you can change is the way you deal with what's thrown your way.”
Reg sloshed around the last bit of wine in his gla.s.s, then knocked it back. ”But it's hard.”
”It is, Reg.”
He looked so d.a.m.n sad. Jason quite resembles his father; I almost wonder if they'd be a.n.a.logs of each other, but tonight there was something new in his face. ”Reg . . . ?”
”Yes, Heather.”
”Do you ever have doubts about . . . the things you believe in?”
He looked up from his gla.s.s. ”If you'd asked me that a decade ago, I'd have turned purple and cast you out of my house - or whatever house we were in. I'd have seen you as a corrupting influence.
I'd have scorned you. But here I am now, and all I can do is say yes, which doesn't even burn or sting. I feel so heavy, I feel like barbells. I feel like I just want to melt into the planet, like a boulder in a swamp, and be done with everything.”
”Reg, I'm going to tell you a story, okay?”
”A story? Sure. What about?” I couldn't believe I was saying the words, but here I was. ”About something stupid and crazy I did last week. I haven't told anyone about it, and if I don't tell someone I'm going to explode. Will you listen?”
”You always listen to me.”
I twiddled a noodle coated with cold Parmesan cheese, and said, ”Last week I phoned Chris, down in California.”
”He's a good boy.”
”He is.”
”Why did you call?”
”I wanted to - needed to - ask him a favor.”
”What was it?”
”I asked him to give me the names and addresses of the people who made the closest match to Jason in the facial profiling index.”
”And?”
”And . . . there was this one guy who lives in South Carolina, named Terry, who's about seventy- five years old, and then there was this other guy, Paul, who lives down in Beaverton, Oregon, near Portland. A suburb.”
”Go on.”
”Well, it turns out this Paul guy has a long but minor record - a few stolen cars - and he got caught fencing memory chips in northern California.”
”You went down there to meet him, didn't you?”
Oh, Heather, you knew it wouldn't be a good thing.
I drove down 1-5 to Beaverton, an eight-hour trip in migraine-white sun, my sungla.s.ses forgotten back on the kitchen counter. In Was.h.i.+ngton state my body started to unravel: my elbows began crusting with eczema just north of Seattle; by the time I reached Olympia, I felt as if my arms were caked in dried mud. I cried most of the way down - I wasn't a pretty picture. People who drove past me and saw me at the wheel must have said to themselves, Boy, sometimes life is rough, and they'd be glad they weren't me.
I found a chain motel on the outskirts of Portland and spent an hour in a scratchy-bottomed bathtub, listening to teenagers party one room over. I was trying to rinse the road trip out of my body, as well as build up the courage to go knocking on this Paul guy's door. I was expecting him to inhabit a mobile home that listed on three wheels, with a one-eyed pit bull and a girlfriend armed with a baseball bat and incisors loaded with vinegar - and this was pretty close. I mean, what was I thinking? I'm just this broad who comes out of nowhere, who knocks on this guy's flaking red-painted front door in the dead-yellow-lawn part of town at 9:45 at night. When the door opened, I was struck dumb, because there before me was Jason - but not Jason - hair too dark, maybe a few years older, and with bigger eyebrows, but it seemed like his essence was there.
”Uh, can I help you? Ma'am?”
I sniffled. I hadn't planned for this moment, and the resemblance to Jason stopped me cold, even though it was the reason for my mission.
He said, ”Okay. I know what this is. You're Alex's cupcake looking to get his leaf blower back.
Well, tell that cheap b.a.s.t.a.r.d that until I see my cooler chest and all the beer that was in it, he's not gonna see his leaf blower.” Paul's voice was higher than Jason's; no similarity there.
”I -” ”Huh? What?”
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