| An
excerpt from Jonathan Carroll's |
Jonathan
Carroll interview |
| The
Wooden Sea |
|
Chapter
1: Old Vertue
"Let's
have another round here, Jimmy!" croons King Cholesterol down at the end
of the bar. He with the rosy nose and enough high blood pressure to launch him
and his whole family tree to Pluto. Gratification, mass, texture. The heart
attack that'll nuke him will last a few seconds. The cold beer in thick mugs
and perfume of grilling T-bone steaks are forever until he dies. It's worth
the trade-off. I'm with him.
My wife Magda says
getting me to understand is like throwing peas at a wall. But I understand fine;
I just don't usually agree. Old Vertue is a perfect example. One day
a guy walks into the station house leading a dog the likes of which you have
never seen. It's a mixed breed but is mainly pit bull covered by a swirl of
brown and
black markings so he looks like a marble cake. But that's where his normal stops
because this dog has only three and a half legs, is missing an eye and breathes
weird. Sort of out the side of his mouth but you can't really be sure. The way
air comes out, it sounds like he's whistling "Michelle" under his breath. There
are two deep raised scars across the top of his head. He's such a mess that
all of us stare at him like he just arrived from Hell on the Concorde.
Fucked up as he
looked, the dog wore a very nice red leather collar. Hanging from it was a small
flat silver heart with the name "Old Vertue" engraved on it. That was how it
was spelled. That's all; no owner's name, address or telephone number. Only
Old Vertue. And he's exhausted. In the middle of everyone there, he collapsed
on the floor and started snoring. The guy who brought him in said he found the
dog sleeping in the middle of the Grand Union parking lot. He didn't know what
the hell to do with it but was sure it was going to be run over napping there
so he brought it to us.
Everyone else thought
we should take it to the nearest dog pound and forget about it. But for me it
was love at first sight. I made a bed for him in my office, bought dog food
and a couple of orange bowls. He slept almost continuously for two days. When
awake he lay in his bed and stared at me with gloomy eyes. Or rather eye. When
someone in the office asked why I kept him around, I said this dog has been
there and back. Since I'm Chief of Police, nobody protested.
Except my wife.
Magda believes animals should be eaten and can barely stand the nice cat I've
had for years. When she heard I was keeping a three legged, one-eyed marble
cake in my office she came by for a look. She stared at him for too long and
stuck out her lower lip. A bad sign. "The more goofy they are, the more you
like them, huh, Fran?"
"This dog's a veteran,
Honey. He's seen battle."
"There are kids
starving in North Korea while you're serving this mutt food."
"Send those kids
over here -- they can share his Alpo."
"You're the mutt,
Frannie, not him."
Standing nearby,
Magda's daughter Pauline started laughing. We looked at her with surprise because
Pauline doesn't laugh at anything. Absolutely no sense of humor. When
she does laugh it's usually at something weird or totally inappropriate. She's
a strange girl who works hard at remaining invisible. My secret nickname for
her is Fade.
"What's so funny?"
"Frannie. He always
goes left when everyone else goes right. What's the matter with your dog? What's
he's doing?"
I turned around
just in time to see Old Vertue die.
He had managed
to stand but all three of his legs were trembling badly. His head was down and
he swung it back and forth like he was saying no.
Typically, Pauline
started giggling.
Vertue stopped
shaking his head and looked up at us. At me. He looked straight at me and winked.
I swear to God. The old dog winked at me as if we shared a secret. Then he fell
over and died. His three legs twitched a few times then curled slowly in towards
his body. There was no question where he'd gone.
None of us said
a thing; just stared at the poor old guy. Finally Magda went over for a closer
look. "Jeez, maybe I shouldn't have said such mean things about him."
The dead dog farted.
A long one -- his last breath going out the wrong door. Moving back fast, Magda
glared at me.
Pauline crossed
her arms. "That's so weird! He was alive two seconds ago and now he's not. I've
never seen anything die."
One of the few
advantages of being young. When you're seventeen, death is a star light years
away you can hardly see through a powerful telescope. Then you grow older and
discover it's no distant star, but a big fucking asteroid coming straight at
your head.
"Now what, Doctor
Doolittle?"
"Now I guess I
gotta go bury him."
"Just make sure
it's not in our backyard."
"I thought under
your pillow would be good."
We locked eyeballs
and smiled at the same time. She kissed the air between us. "Come on, Pauline.
We've got things to do."
She left, but Pauline
hesitated. As she moved slowly toward the door she stared at the dog as if hypnotized.
Once there she stopped and stared some more. Outside my office there was a sudden
big burst of laughter. Obviously Magda telling the others the sad news.
"Go ahead with
your mother, Pauline. I want to wrap him up and get him out of here."
"Where are
you going to bury him?"
"Some place down
by the river. Give him a nice view."
"Is that legal
to bury him there?"
"If I catch myself
doing it, I'll arrest me."
That broke her
trance and she left.
Even in death the
old guy looked beat. Whatever kind of life he'd had, he got to the finish line
on all fours (all threes) with nothing left. He used up everything he had. That
was clear after one glance at him. His head was turned into his body; the thick
pink scars on top were vicious looking things. Where the hell had he gotten
them?
Bending down, I
gently wrapped the ends of the cheap blanket around his body and slowly rolled
him into it. The body was heavy and loose. His one good front paw stuck out.
Maneuvering it back inside the blanket, I stopped and shook it. "My name is
Frannie. I'm your paw bearer today."
I lifted the bundle
and went to the door. Without warning it swung open and patrolman Big Bill Pegg
stood there, trying hard not to smile. "You need help, Chief?"
"No, I've got him.
Just open that door wider." A bunch of people stood outside and applauded as
I passed.
"Very funny."
"I wouldn't start
a pet shop if I was you, Fran."
"Waddya got there,
pigs in a blanket?"
"Nice guest --
you invite him in and he drops dead."
"You guys are just
jealous he didn't die in your office." I kept moving. Their laughter
and jokes followed me out the door. Old Vertue was not light. Lugging him to
the car wasn't the easiest thing I'd done that day. Once there, I lowered him
onto the trunk lid and fished car keys out of my pocket. I slipped one into
the lock and turned but other than the click, nothing happened. The body held
the lid down. Hefting him up over a shoulder, I turned the key again. The lid
popped up. Before I had a chance to do anything, a loud voice a foot away from
my left ear boomed "Why you putting that dog in your trunk, Frannie?"
"Because it's dead,
Johnny. I'm going to go bury it."
Johnny Petangles,
our town idiot, went up on his toes and leaned over my shoulder for a better
look. "Can I come with you and watch?"
"No, John." I tried
to push Vertue against one wall of the trunk so he wouldn't slide around when
I drove, but someone was in my way. "John, move! Haven't you got anything
to do?"
"No. Where are
you going to bury him, Frannie? In the graveyard?"
"Only people get
to go there. I haven't decided yet. Would you please move over so I can get
him settled here?"
"Why do you want
to get him settled if he's dead?"
I stopped moving
and closed my eyes. "John, would you like a hamburger?"
"That would be
very nice."
"Good." I took
five dollars out of my pocket and handed it to him. "Eat a hamburger and when
you're done, go up to my house and give Magda a hand bringing in that firewood,
okay?"
"Okay." Holding
the money in his hand he didn't move. "I'll be very quiet if you let me come
with you."
"Johnny, am I going
to have to shoot you?"
"You always say
that." He looked at the Arnold Schwarzenegger watch I had given him a few years
before when he was going through a Terminator phase. "How long do I have
before I go over to your house? I don't want to eat too fast. I get gas."
"Take your time."
I patted his shoulder and moved to get in the car.
"I didn't know
you had a dog for a friend, Frannie."
"Dogs know how
to love, John. They wrote the book."
Driving away, I
checked in the rearview mirror. He was waving at me like a child would -- his
hand flapped up and down.
Magda believes
you can tell a person's personality by what is lying around in their car. Stopped
at a light on April Avenue, I looked down at the passenger's seat and saw this:
three unopened packs of Marlboros, a cheap cell phone mangled from having been
dropped often, a paperback collection of John O'Hara short stories, and an unopened
envelope from the town hospital containing the results of a barium enema. In
the glove compartment was a tin of "Altoids" breath mints, a videotape of Around
the World in 80 Days and CD's of 70's disco music no one but me wanted to
hear. The only interesting things in the whole car were the Beretta pistol under
my arm and the dead dog in the trunk. The contents depressed me. What if we
were living under Mount Vesuvius and at that moment it decided to blow again?
Lava and ash would kill and perfectly preserve me in my two ton Ford coffin.
Thousands of years from now archaeologists would dig me up and guess who I was
judging by what was around me: cigarettes, KC and the Sunshine Gang, the results
of an asshole exam, and a dog carcass. What's My Line?
Where was I going
to bury Old Vertue, and with what? I had no tools in the car. I'd have to go
home first and get a shovel out of the garage. I took a quick left and headed
down Broadway.
On his eightieth
birthday, my father swore he would never again read a set of instructions. He
died a month later. I say this now because I had used the same shovel to bury
him. People thought I was cracked. Cemeteries have backhoes for that purpose
but I thought there was something ancient and good about making my father's
final bed. I couldn't say Kaddish, but I could scoop him a hole with my own
hands. In the middle of a hot summer day I dug his grave with a smile on my
face. Johnny Petangles sat on the ground nearby and kept me company. He asked
where we went when we died. Bangladesh, if we're bad, I said. When he didn't
understand that I asked where he thought we went. Into the ocean. We turn into
rocks and God throws us into the ocean. Was that where my father was now, hiding
some Greek kalamari? Driving along, I wondered what Johnny would have said about
where dead animals go.
The two way radio
crackled. "Chief?"
"McCabe here."
"Chief, we've got
a domestic disturbance up on Helen Street."
"Schiavo?"
"You got it."
"All right, I'm
near there. I'll take care of it."
"Better you than
me." The dispatcher chuckled and clicked off.
I shook my head.
Donald and Geraldine Schiavo, nee Fortuso, had been my classmates at Crane's
View high school. They were married right after we graduated and had been at
war ever since. Sometimes she hit him on the head with a pot. Sometimes he hit
her on the head with a chair. Whatever was closest. For years people had pleaded
with them to divorce but the two lovebirds had nothing else in the world besides
their hatred so why should they give that up? I would guess once a month their
mutual simmer turned to boil and one or the other got dented.
A group of neighborhood
teenagers were standing on the sidewalk in front of the Schiavo house laughing.
"What's up, troops?"
"Fuckin' Star
Wars in there, Mr. McCabe. You shoulda heard her screaming before. But it's
been quiet for a while."
"They're resting
between rounds." I walked up the path to the door and turned the knob. It was
open. "Anyone home?" When no one answered I said it again. Silence. I walked
in and closed the door. What first struck me was how clean and nice- smelling
the house was. Geri Schiavo was a sloppy, lazy woman who didn't mind having
a house that stunk. Ditto her husband. One of the annoyances of prying them
apart month after month was going into their house which invariably smelled
of b.o., rooms where windows had been closed too long, and old food you didn't
ever want to taste.
Not this time.
A new store had opened recently in town that sold a wide assortment of exotic
teas. I don't drink tea but found as many excuses as I could to go in there
just to enjoy its aroma. After my initial shock wore off at the order and shine
in the Schiavo house, I realized it smelled like the teashop. A potent wonderful
fragrance that gave your nose delicious things to think about.
The surprises didn't
end there either because the house was empty. I moved from room to room searching
for Donald and Geri. Nothing had changed since the last time I visited. The
same cheap couch and prehistoric Barcalounger sat side by side in the living
room like bums at rest. Family photographs on the mantle, a scrawny piss-yellow
canary hopping around in its cage, all the same. But there was that orderliness
and shine to everything I had never seen before in this house. It was as if
the couple had prepared everything for a party or an important visit. But as
soon as they had everything ready, the owners left.
I went to the basement,
half-worried that down there would be a rough answer to the mystery upstairs:
both Schiavos hanging from matching rafters, or one standing over the other's
body with a gleeful look on their face and a gun in their hand. Didn't happen.
The basement was only full of tidily stacked magazines, old furniture, and junk.
And even that had been neatly arranged in a corner. Down there it smelled good
too. It was the damnedest thing. What the hell was going on?
Their backyard
was as big as a bus stop but the lawn had been mowed. I had never seen the grass
out there less than five inches high. I'd once even offered Donald the use of
my lawnmower, which he grouchily rejected.
Back in the house
I sat in the Barcalounger to think things over. And almost went right on my
ass when it tipped all the way back on non-existent springs. Touch and go for
a few seconds, I managed to wrestle the thing back upright. That's when I saw
the feather.
There was a sealed
up fireplace on the other side of the room. As I fought gravity to get the stupid
chair back on earth, I saw a flash of incredibly bright color on the floor in
front of the fireplace. Wiggily-knee'd from the battle, I went over to the feather
and picked it up. About ten inches long, it was a mixture of the most brilliant
colors imaginable. Purple, green, black, orange -- more. I couldn't imagine
a more inappropriate object to be in the house of these slobs but there it was.
I stared at it while I called the station house and told Bill Pegg what I'd
seen.
"That's a new one.
Maybe they got beamed up to the mother ship."
"Captain Picard
wouldn't want them on the Enterprise. You've gotten no reports,
Bill? No car crashes or anything?"
"Nope. Wouldn't
it be great if they died? No more having to go up there. No, nothing's come
in."
"Call Michael Zakrides
at the hospital and check with him. I'm going home to get something and then
down to the river. Call me on my pocket phone if you hear anything."
"Okay. What'd you
do with the dead dog, Chief? Why don't you leave it for the Schiavos for when
they get come home. Put it in their oven! That would shut Geri up for
five minutes."
I flipped the feather
back and forth in my fingers. "I'll talk to you later. Hey Bill, one more thing--"
"Yeah?"
"Know anything
about birds?"
"Birds? Jeez, I
don't know. Why? What about 'em?"
"What kind of bird
would have feathers about ten inches long and be incredibly colorful?"
"A peacock?"
"I thought of that,
but I don't think so. I know what a peacock feather looks like. This isn't it.
Peacock feathers are more symmetrical in their marking. They have that big circle
on them too. This isn't one."
"What isn't?
What are you talking about?"
I snapped out of
it, realizing I was thinking out loud as I stared at the feather. "Nothing.
I'll check with you later."
"Frannie?"
"Yes?"
"Put the dog in
the oven."
I hung up.
How could so many
colors exist on one thin feather? I couldn't stop looking at the damned thing
but knew I had to get moving. Outside again, a couple of the kids from before
were still standing around, probably hoping for more Schiavo fireworks. I asked
if they'd seen anyone leave the house before I arrived. They said no. When I
told them the place was empty they couldn't believe it.
"There's got to
be someone in there, Mr. McCabe. You shoulda heard them screaming!"
I took out a pack
of cigarettes and offered them around. "What'd they say?"
The kid took a
light from me and blew out a line of smoke. "Nothin' special. She was calling
him an asshole and a creep. But loud. Whoa, loud! You could have heard
her downtown."
"And him? Did Donald
say anything?"
The other kid lowered
his voice four octaves and got a look on his face like he was about to be the
life of the party. "Bitch! Fock you, stupid figa! I do what the
fock I wan'!"
"Fic? "
"Figa. It means,
you know, pussy in Italian."
"What would I do
without you guys? Listen, if you see either of them come back, call me on this
number." I handed one my card.
"What's that?"
He pointed to the feather.
"Beautiful huh?
I found it on their floor." I held it up. We all silently admired it.
"Maybe they were
doing something in there with feathers, you know, like kinky." The boy beamed.
"You know when
I was a kid, the kinkiest thing I ever heard about was people dress up in leather
suits and whip each other. I almost had a heart attack. But you guys know more
now than Alex Comfort."
"Who's he?"
Back in the car,
I slid the feather carefully under the sunshade over the driver's seat. Why
was the front door of their house open? And the back door? No one leaves their
doors open any more, not even in Crane's View. Donald Schiavo worked as a mechanic
at Birmfion Motors. I called there and talked to a secretary who said he'd gone
out for lunch four hours ago and hadn't come back. The boss was mad because
Donald had a 4X4 still up on the rack and the customer was waiting.
I shrugged it off.
The Schiavos were somewhere. They would turn up. Driving home, I tried to remember
where in the garage I had put the shovel.
An hour later I
struck another tree root and flipped out. Flinging the shovel away, I put a
filthy hand in my mouth and bit myself. I hadn't been this frustrated in ten
weeks, give or take a few. My plan had been so simple: drive down to the river.
Find a nice spot, dig Old Vertue a hole, drop him in, sweet dreams, go back
to the office. But I'd forgotten they were laying pipe by the river and what
with all the men and equipment around, it was no place for a dead dog and me.
So I drove around
in the woods way back behind the Tyndall house and looked till I found a prime
place. Sunlight danced down through the leaves. It was quiet except for gusts
of wind through the leaves and birds singing. The air smelled of summer and
earth.
I was in such a
good mood that I started singing "Hi Ho Hi Ho it's off to work we go" as I stabbed
the shovel into the soft ground. Five minutes later I hit the first root, which
turned out to be as thick as the underground monster in Tremors. Undeterred
(Hi Ho Hi Ho), I shrugged and began digging in another place. But it turned
out, gee whiz, there were tree roots all over that old forest. And as
Old Vertue stiffened in the trunk of the car, my anger stiffened into a rage
hard-on thirteen inches long.
When I had finished
chewing my hand and smoking three cigarettes I thought very slowly and with
forced calm: I will try one more place. If that doesn't work . . . And
this is what's interesting: furious and frustrated as I was by the earth's unwillingness
to accept my hole, not for a minute did I consider taking the dog's body to
the pound and having it cremated. Old Vertue had to be buried. He had
to be laid in the ground with gentleness and care. I didn't know why that was
fixed solidly in my brain but it was. I didn't owe him anything. No years of
close companionship, a great friend whenever I was alone and down, summer days
tossing him a stick in the backyard. Man's best friend? I didn't even know him.
He was just an old fucked up dog that happened to die on my office floor. Sure,
part of it had to do with what Magda had said -- I like losers. Most of the
time I was on their side. Failures, liars, empty skulls, drunks and felons--
bring them on; I'll pay for their drinks. Old Vertue seemed to be all of the
above wrapped in one. I was sure if he'd been human he would have had a voice
like a coffee grinder and a brain brown from abuse. But there was something
more to his having entered my life. If you asked what I'd be lying if I said
I knew. All I was sure of was I had to take care of his burial and I was determined
do that. So I put my temper back in its box and picked up the shovel again.
This time it worked.
Digging a deep
hole takes more effort than you think. Plus it does a big bad number on the
skin of your hands. But I found a spot a few feet over that let me go down as
far as I wanted without putting any more obstacles in the way. When I was finished,
the hole was about three feet deep and wide enough. He would be all right here.
The most interesting
thing was what came up on the shovel with the last scoop. On top of the dark
dirt was something much brighter, almost white. It was such a vivid contrast
that no one could have missed it. I lay the shovel down and reached for whatever
it was. At first I thought it was a stick that had been bleached of all color.
About ten inches long, it was silvery gray and jagged at one end, as if it had
been attached to something larger but been snapped off. As I brought it up closer
for a better look, the silver became a kind of creamy white and it wasn't wood
but some kind of bone.
No big deal. Forests
are full of animal bones. I even smiled thinking I had upset one animal's grave
digging a place for another. The final outrage -- a squirrel can't even rest
in peace these days. Call the ASPCA! Cruelty to dead animals.
Pauline was interested
in zoology. I thought she might like a look at the bone, so I slipped it into
my pocket while walking back to the car to get Old Vertue.
Popping the trunk,
I got a jolt looking in. Lying on his side, his eye had opened and the dog was
staring right at me. No matter how in control you are or used to being around
bodies, getting a look from the dead is never home sweet home. There's still
enough life in those eyes to make you lick your lips and turn away; hoping when
you look again somehow they will be closed.
"I'm just going
to put you to bed, Vertue. It's nice here. It's a nice place to stop." Sliding
my hands under his body I lifted him out of the trunk. He felt heavier than
before but I assumed that was because the digging had tired me. My arms shook
slightly as I carried him. The sunlight through the trees went on and off my
shoes. Carefully stepping into the hole, I laid him down as gently as I could.
The body was twisted a little and I rearranged it. The eyes were still open
and the tip of his tongue came out the corner of his mouth. Poor old guy. I
stepped out and picked up the shovel, ready to start tossing dirt in on him.
But things still didn't seem right. I had an idea. Back to the car where I pulled
the long feather from beneath the sunshade.
I slipped it under
his collar. Like an Egyptian king going to the hereafter surrounded by his worldly
possessions, Old Vertue now had a beautiful feather to carry along. It was getting
late and I had other things to do. Quickly filling the grave, I tamped it down
as best I could, hoping another animal wouldn't catch the scent and dig it up.
That night at dinner
Magda asked where I'd put him. After I described my adventure in the forest,
she surprised me by saying, "Would you like to have a dog, Frannie?"
"No, not particularly."
"But you were so
nice to him. I wouldn't mind having one. Some of them are sort of cute."
"You hate
dogs, Magda."
"That's true, but
I love you."
Pauline rolled
her eyes and dramatically stomped off to the kitchen carrying her plate. When
I was sure she was out of earshot I said, "I wouldn't mind having a cat."
My wife blinked
and frowned. "You already have a cat."
"Well, then I wouldn't
mind a little pussy."
That night after
a visit from my favorite pussy on earth, I dreamt of feathers, bones and Johnny
Petangles.
Next morning the
weather was so beautiful I decided to drive my motorcycle to work instead of
the car. The end of summer sat on the town. It was my favorite season. Everything
summery is richer and more intense then because you know it will all be gone
soon. Magda's mother used to say a flower smells sweetest when it's just begun
to rot. A few of the horse chestnut trees had already begun dropping their spiny
yellow buckeyes. They hit the pavement with a crack or clunk on cars. When a
breeze blew it was thick with the smell of ripe plants and dust. The dew hung
around longer in the morning because the real heat of the day didn't start until
hours later.
I have a big motorcycle
-- a Ducati Monster -- and the evil "Fuck me -- I'm a God!" sound of its 900cc
engine alone is worth the price of admission. And there is nothing more pleasant
than driving it slowly through Crane's View, New York on a morning like that.
The day hasn't started yet, hasn't turned the sign in its front window to read
"OPEN" yet. Only diehards are out and about. A smiling woman sweeps her front
doorstep with a red broom. A young Weimaraner, its stump tail wagging madly,
sniffs garbage cans placed at a curb. An old man wearing a white ball cap and
sweatsuit is either jogging slowly or walking as fast as he can.
Seeing someone
exercising immediately inspired me to think of French crullers and coffee with
lots of cream. I'd stop and get both but there was one thing to do first.
After a few slow
lefts and rights, I pulled up in front of the Schiavo house to see if anything
had changed. No car was parked in either the driveway or near the house. I knew
they owned a blue Mercury but no blue cars were in sight. I tried the front
door. It was still open. We'd have to change that. Couldn't have a thief going
in and stealing their painting-on-velvet of the Bay of Naples. I'd send someone
over today to put temporary locks on the doors and leave a note for the elusive
Donald and Geri. Not that I cared either about them or their possessions. Standing
with hands in my pockets looking around, it was too beautiful a morning to have
a weird little mystery like this to think about, especially when it had to do
with those two jerks. But it was the job to care so I would.
My pocket phone
rang. It was Magda saying our car wouldn't start. She was the Queen of I Hate
Technology and proud of it. This woman did not want to know how to work a computer,
a calculator, any thingamajig that went beep- beep. She balanced her checkbook
doing multiplication and division with a pencil, used a microwave oven with
the greatest suspicion, and cars were her enemy if they didn't start immediately
when the key was turned. The irony was her daughter was a computer whiz who
was in the midst of applying to tough colleges that specialized in the field.
Amused, Magda stared at Pauline's talents and shrugged.
"I drove that car
all day yesterday."
"I know, Poodles,
but it still doesn't start."
"You didn't flood
the motor? Remember the time-"
Her voice rose.
"Frannie, don't go there. Do you want me to call the mechanic or do you want
to fix it?"
"Call the mechanic.
Are you sure you didn't-"
"I'm sure. Know
what else? Our garage smells great. Did you spray air freshener in there? What
did you do?"
"Nothing. The car
that was fine yesterday won't start, but the garage smells good?"
"Right."
One beat. Two beats.
"Mag, I'm biting my tongue over here. There are things I want to say to you
but I'm holding back--"
"Good! Keep holding.
I'll call the garage. See you later." Click. If she hung up any faster I would
have given her a speeding ticket. I was sure she'd done something wicked like
flood the carburetor. Again. But you cut deals with your partner in marriage;
they give you longitude and you give them latitude. That way if you're lucky,
you create a map together of a shared world both can recognize and inhabit comfortably.
Work that morning
was the usual nothing much. The mayor came in to discuss erecting a traffic
light at an intersection where there had been way too many accidents in the
last few years. Her name is Susan Ginnety. We had been lovers in high school
and Susan never forgave me for it. Thirty years ago I was the baddest fellow
in our town. There are still stories floating around about what a bad seed I
was back then and most of them are true. If I had a photo album from that time,
all of the pictures in there of me would be either in profile or straight on,
holding up a police identification number.
Unlike miscreant
me, Susan was a good girl who thought she heard the call of the wild and decided
to try on being bad like a jeans jacket. So she started hanging around with
me and the crew. That mistake ended in disaster fast.
In the end she
reeled away from the smoking wreck of her innocence, went to college and studied
politics while I went to Vietnam (involuntarily) and studied dead people.
After college Susan
lived in Boston, San Diego and Manhattan. One weekend she returned to visit
her family and decided there was no place like home. She married a high-powered
entertainment lawyer who liked the idea of living in a small town by the Hudson.
They bought a house on Villard Hill and a year later Susan began running for
public office.
The interesting
thing was her husband, Frederick Morgan, is black. Crane's View is a conservative
town comprised mostly of middle to lower middle class Irish and Italian families
not so many generations removed from steerage. From their ancestors they inherited
an obsession with close family ties, a willingness to work hard, and a general
suspicion of anything or anyone different. Before the Morgan/Ginnety's came,
there had never been a mixed couple living in the town. If they had arrived
in the early 60's when I was a kid we would have said nigger a lot and thrown
rocks through their windows. But thank God some things do change. A black mayor
was elected in the 80's who did a good job and graced the office. From the beginning
townspeople realized the Morgans were a nice couple and we were lucky to have
them.
After they moved
to Crane's View and Susan heard I was chief of police apparently her reaction
was to cover her face and groan. When we met on the street for the first time
in fifteen years she walked right up and said in an accusing voice "You should
be in prison! But you went to college and now you're chief of police?"
I said sweetly
" Hi Susan. You changed. How come I can't?"
"Because you're
horrible McCabe."
After being elected
mayor she said to me "You and I are going to have to work together a lot and
I want to have a peaceful heart about it. You were the worst boyfriend
in the history of the penis. Are you a good policeman?"
"Uh huh. You can
look at my record. I'm sure you will."
"You're right.
I'll look very closely. Are you corrupt?"
"I don't have to
be. I have a lot of money from my first marriage."
"Did you steal
it from her?"
"No. I gave her
an idea for a TV show. She was a producer."
Her eyes narrowed.
"What show?"
"Man Overboard."
"That's the most
ridiculous show on television--"
"And the
most successful for a while."
"Yes. It was your
idea? I guess I should be impressed but I'm not. Shall we get to work?"
At our traffic
light meeting that summer morning, we finished with my giving Susan a briefing
on what had been going on in town police-wise the last week. As usual she listened
with head down and a small silver tape recorder in hand in case she wanted to
note anything. There really was no interesting news. Bill Pegg had to remind
me to tell her about the disappearance of the Schiavos.
"What are you doing
about it?" She brought the recorder to her mouth, hesitated, and lowered it
again.
"Asking around,
making some phone calls, putting locks on their doors. It's a free country,
Mayor, they can leave if they want."
"The way they left
sounds pretty strange."
I thought about
that. "Yes, but I also know the Schiavos and so do you. They're both emotional
wackos. I could easily imagine them having a big messy fight and storming off
in opposite directions. Both probably thinking 'I'll stay out all night and
scare 'em.' The only problem being neither thought to lock the doors before
they left."
"Ah love!" Bill
said, unwrapping his mid morning sandwich.
"Did you talk to
their parents?"
Bill spoke around
a mouthful "I did. Neither have heard a word."
"What's the usual
time frame for filing a missing persons report?"
"Twenty four hours."
"Frannie, will
you take care of that if it's necessary?"
I nodded. She looked
at Bill and voice faltering, she asked if he would leave us alone for a moment.
Very surprised, he got up quickly and left. Susan had never done that before.
She was as up front and direct as anyone around. I knew she liked Bill for his
wit and candor and he liked her for the same reasons. Asking him to leave meant
something big and probably personal was about to land in that room. When the
door closed I sat up straighter in the chair and looked at her. Suddenly she
wouldn't meet my stare.
"What's up, Mayor?"
I tried to sound light and friendly -- the milky fuzz on top of a cappuccino
you tongue through before getting to the coffee below.
She pulled in a
loud deep breath. One of those breaths you take before saying something that's
going to change everything. You know as soon as it's out your world will be
different. "Fred and I are going to separate."
"Is that good or
bad?"
She laughed, barked
really, and pushed her hair back. "That's so you, Frannie, to say it
like that. Everyone I've told so far says either 'the shit!' or 'poor you' or
some such thing. Not McCabe."
I turned both hands
palms up like what else am I supposed to say? "He's going off to grow chili
peppers."
"What? "
"That's what my
first wife said when we split up. There's this primitive tribe in Bolivia. When
one of its members dies, they say he's gone off to grow chili peppers."
"Fred hates chili
peppers. He hates all spicy foods." It was clear she needed something safe and
inane to say to pole-vault her over the painful admission she had just made.
That's why I tried to help with the chili pepper remark.
"How do you feel
about it?"
She worked on a
smile but it didn't work. "Like I'm falling from the top of a building and have
a few more floors to go before I hit?"
"It would be unnatural
if you didn't. I bought a coatimundi when I broke up and then forgot to feed
it. Do you think the separation's final or are you just taking it out for a
test drive?"
"It's pretty final."
"Your doing or
his?"
Her head rose slowly.
She stared at me with flames and daggers in her eyes but didn't speak.
"It's a question,
Susan, not an accusation."
"Was your breakup
your fault or your wife's?"
" Mine I guess
mine. Gloria got bored with me and started fucking around."
"Then it was her
fault!"
"Blame is always
convenient because it's so decisive: My fault. Your fault. But marriage is never
that clear cut. He pisses you off here, you piss him off there. Sometimes you
end up with a toilet bowl so full neither of you can flush it."
That conversation
made me miss and realize again how grateful I was for my wife. It made me want
to see her immediately so I went home for lunch. But Magda wasn't there and
neither was Pauline. Different as they were, the two women liked hanging around
together. Anyone would like hanging around with Magda. She was funny, tough
and very perceptive. Most of the time she knew exactly what was good for you
even when you didn't. She was stubborn but not unbending. She knew what she
liked. If she liked you, your world became bigger.
My first wife,
the inglorious Gloria, shrunk the world like heavy rain on leather shoes and
made me feel like I no longer fit in it. She was beautiful, endlessly dishonest,
bulimic and as I later found out, promiscuous as a bunny. At the end of our
relationship I found a note she had written and in all likelihood left out for
me to see. It said, "I hate his smell, his sperm and his spit."
Eating lunch alone,
I contentedly sat in the living room listening to my thoughts and the buzz of
a lawnmower someplace far away. If her marriage was really finished, I did not
envy Susan the next act of her life. In contrast, I was at a place in my own
where I didn't envy anyone anything. I liked my days, my partner, job, surroundings.
I was working on liking myself but that was always an ongoing, iffy process.
Over the friendly
smell of my bacon, lettuce and tomato sandwich, an increasingly pungent fragrance
of something else began to butt in. I didn't pay much attention while eating
but it became so pervasive as I slipped an after lunch cigarette between my
lips that I stopped and took a long serious sniff.
The nose can be
like a blind mole brought up into the sunlight. Below ground -- in your unconscious
-- it knows exactly what it's doing and will guide you: That stinks -- stay
away. That's good -- have a taste. But bring it aboveground, demand to know
What's that smell, and it moves its blind head around and around in
confused circles and loses all sense of direction. I asked out loud "What is
that fucking smell?" But my nose couldn't tell me because that smell
was an incomprehensible combination of aromas I had loved my entire life. This
is a crucial point but I don't know how to describe it so it makes better sense.
A whore I visited
in Vietnam always wore a certain kind of orchid in her hair. Her English was
minimal so the only understandable translation she could come up for the flower
was "bird breath." Naturally when I got back to the States and asked, no one
had ever heard of a bird breath orchid. And I never smelled it again until that
afternoon in my living room in Crane's View, New York, nine thousand miles from
Saigon. Naturally my brain had long ago put the aroma in its dead letter file
and forgotten about it. Now here it was again. Remember me?
But it was only
one in a swirling, illusive combination of cherished smells. Cut grass, wood
smoke, hot asphalt, sweat on a woman you are making love with, Creed's "Orange
Spice" cologne, fresh ground coffee . . . my list of favorites and there were
more. All of them were there together at the same time in the air. Once
it had my full attention, neither my conscious nor unconscious mind could believe
it.
I had to stand
up, had to find where it was coming from or I'd go crazy. The trail led to the
garage. I remembered that in our conversation earlier, Magda had said how good
it smelled in there. What an understatement! No room freshener out of a can
could have matched that deliciousness. Cloves now, the warm healthy smell of
puppies. Pine, rain on pine trees.
The car was parked
there looking friendly and cooperative. Hadn't the mechanic come yet? If so,
why wasn't Magda using it now? The smell of new leather, a new book, lilacs,
grilling meat. I kept a toolkit in the trunk. I hadn't tried to start the car
yet but since I was standing right there, why not get out the toolkit just in
case?
What registered
first -- what I saw or smelled? I opened the trunk. The intensity of the odor
multiplied by ten. And lying in there was the body of Old Vertue. Again. Under
his red collar were the feather from the Schiavo house and the bone I had found
in the hole I dug for him.
Copyright
(c) 2001 by Jonathan Carroll All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce
this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
Jonathan Carroll
grew up just down the Hudson from BookSense.com's home in Tarrytown, NY! He
now lives Vienna.
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And, like a really good dream, this book stays with you a long time.” - Paul
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