Daddy Lenin and Other Stories (9 page)

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Authors: Guy Vanderhaeghe

BOOK: Daddy Lenin and Other Stories
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“I don’t think you’re a horrible person,” Sabrina said. “You think I would have come over here and helped you out if I didn’t think you were a good person? Just like your mother?”

More blackmail. What I wanted to say was,
So, okay, have my mother march into that fucking gym with you. Arm in arm. Just let me off the hook, why don’t you?
Instead, I said, “You know what? I think you better lay off the booze. It’s making you stupid.”

She gave the coffee table on which the bottle sat a petulant shove, skidding it out of reach. “Okay, deal. No more booze. But you’ve got to tell me why you won’t take me to graduation.”

“You’re drunk. Nobody can talk to a drunk. Let’s leave this for some other time.”

“No, I need to know right now. What’s it going to take?”

“What’s what going to take?”

“For you to agree to be my escort. What do you want in exchange? Because I need an escort. Everything will be worthless unless I have an escort.”

“Graduation’s a long way off. Just lay off. I said I’d think about it.”

“What’s it going to take, Billy?”

“This is getting old,” I said. “It’s getting ancient.”

Sabrina heaved herself off the sofa and tottered out of the living room as fast as her bum leg could carry her. I was expecting to hear the back door slam, but it didn’t. I assumed then that the rye had caught up with her and that she had headed for the bathroom to chuck her cookies. But I heard no retching, no gagging, nothing.

I sat listening for a long time but the house remained strangely, unnervingly quiet. Maybe she had passed out in the can. I went to investigate. She wasn’t in the bathroom. That left the bedrooms as possible crash sites; she might have flaked out in one of them. I headed for my parents’ bedroom, worried that she might puke on their mattress, that would take some fancy explaining. No Sabrina.

I turned down the hallway to my bedroom. It was completely dark. I hesitated in the doorway. “Sabrina, are you in there?”

“Yes.” Her voice was faint and shaky.

“Look, you aren’t going to be sick, are you? You haven’t barfed in my bed, have you? Don’t barf in my bed, okay?”

“No.”

“I’m going to turn on the light. Just to make sure you’re okay.”

“No, don’t! Don’t turn on the light!” she cried, but by then it was too late.

I caught a glimpse of small, white, pink-nippled breasts, a cirrus cloud of pubic hair. A hand flew to cup her privates, an arm flung itself across her breasts, crushing, flattening them. The only mildly sexual territory left exposed was her thighs, which were equally plump, but the calf below one of
them was shrunken and wasted, a streak of scar from an operation ran from her knee to her ankle.

The light snapping on seemed to have locked us in place, me hanging in the doorway, Sabrina lying frozen on the bed, her eyes squeezed tightly shut. “Okay, here’s the deal,” she said in a lifeless voice. “You can do anything you want. Just don’t stick it in me.”

Those words unglued my feet from the floor. I backed away slowly, then fled to the living room. I sat there, trying to drive the images of those breasts, that wispy, vulnerable V of hair at the juncture of her thighs out of my brain. Once, she called out, “Billy?” but I didn’t move, didn’t answer her.

A few minutes later I heard Sabrina moving down the hallway, the back door opening and closing.

Sabrina never came back to my house. But at the end of August my mother did. She was just beginning to swim up out of the depths of a profound depression; hour after hour she sat and smoked, toying with and twisting a book of matches. The night before school started, the phone rang some time around midnight. Mother was in bed so I picked up. It was Sabrina. In a quick, urgent burst she said, “You’ve got to promise me one thing. That you won’t say anything to anybody at school about what happened. You do that, I’ll murder you. Or kill myself. I’m not kidding, Dowd. I mean it.”

“I won’t.”

“Swear it, Billy.”

Mother wailed, “Who is it? Who’s on the phone? Is it your father?”

“No, it isn’t! Forget it! It’s a friend of mine! Go back to sleep!”

I lowered my voice. “I swear it. Okay? Now are you satisfied?”

“I thought maybe that was the thing you wanted. I thought it might make a difference to you, how you treated me. My mistake.” The line went dead.

School got underway. The first time I met Sabrina Koenig in the hallway, I acknowledged her with a nervous bob of the head, but it was as if I didn’t exist, she sailed by me without a glance. Several times over the next few months I considered phoning her, but I always found an excuse not to. Also, I was preoccupied with my mother. The series of shock treatments she had had in hospital had wiped out everything that had occurred over the past year, and I spent hours coaching her, rebuilding her memory. My father was still away, working on the bridge-building crew; I was responsible for Mother.

Months went by and then it felt as if it was too late to call Sabrina or to try to make another approach to her at school. She was a proud girl and I was a scared boy. Like so often happens, our friendship died a slow death because nobody intervened in time to heal it.

May rolled around and with it graduation. Sabrina wasn’t the class valedictorian. Maybe she had misjudged her chances in the first place, or maybe she was offered it and turned the
honour down. By July she was gone from Groveland. Where she went I never heard.

It wasn’t until last year, forty years after Sabrina’s departure into the wild blue yonder, that that blank got filled in. I was on a business trip to Toronto, lying on my hotel room bed turning over the pages of
The Globe and Mail
. Normally, I never read anything but the financial and political news, but this time something on the front page of the Arts section caught my eye. My Sabrina, the
celebrated
Sabrina Koenig, was having a show at a gallery that, I gathered from the reporter’s knowing tone, was favoured by collectors, was very high-end. The opening was that night.

Apparently this was
big news
, apparently Sabrina was
the real thing
. The article began with a sketch of her career. Two years as a drama major at the University of Saskatchewan, then a transfer to the Ontario College of Art. After that she moved to England, where she fell in with the Art & Language group and began to make a name for herself as a conceptual artist. But as the clipping from the
Globe
that I still carry in my wallet puts it, “Koenig’s gifts and interests were too varied, too protean to confine themselves to any one theory, practice, or mode of art production.” She designed soundscapes that were played in abandoned grain terminals, “aural universes by turns haunting, whimsical, mordant, terrifying; gorgeous constellations of sound ranging from the lush to the stark.” Her performance pieces were said to “bear comparison with those of Marina Abramovic.” When the Berlin
Wall collapsed, Sabrina moved to the former East Germany, where she became the de facto leader of a group of guerrilla artists who occupied a defunct factory, turning it into an atelier of 16-millimetre film production. The group made a specialty of short films that were outrageous, slapstick parodies of the fashion and art worlds. They presented bizarre fashion shows in which they paraded their hand-sewn costumes before the camera to the accompaniment of breathless commentary, staged elaborate fake art openings where the work of various “art stars” was caricatured. Before long this pack of pranksters became known as Koenig & Company. An Abbott and Costello influence, maybe?

How all this acclaim and notoriety had escaped my notice only highlights the possibility that just like when Sabrina and I had isolated ourselves in a world of our own making, I had withdrawn into my own closet, a cubbyhole so thoroughly wallpapered from ceiling to floor with financial statements and prospectuses, divorce papers and settlements that not even a crack or a pinhole admitted light from the outside world.

It seemed the only thing that the girl who had once liked to draw had not done was paint pictures.

The photograph of Sabrina in the paper filled me with restlessness. I got off the bed and went to the window, peered down at the rush hour traffic streaming down York Street, the clamour of horns and motors gusting up to me. I thought of her photograph in the newspaper, a photograph of a woman whose face was remarkably smooth and serenely confident, her cat-eye glasses and lacquer-black beehive hairdo ironically situating her in a past more distant than the days of our
adolescence, suggesting that she had escaped the limits of both time and geography. She struck me as alien and ageless.

I wanted to see her again. But that wasn’t going to happen. Her picture indicated the distance that had opened up between us, a distance that could never, probably should never be attempted to be bridged. If I went to the opening at the gallery I knew that I would most likely never get a chance to speak to her and if I did, what would I be except another insignificant voice in the chorus? I had had Sabrina to myself for a summer and I preferred the recollection of that to discovering what a tiny memory I was for her. Sabrina had been right all those years ago. To be a success in business, you need a selfish streak. I admit it, I’m a selfish man. I decided I’d rather miss a chance to see her than have my time with Sabrina rationed, than to have to share her.

But I give people their due. I am happy, glad to know that Sabrina took my poor mother’s advice, that she never let anything or anybody hold her back, that she is a going concern, a
thriving
concern, and that Koenig & Company is out there in the big bad world, flaunting the family name, sticking it squarely in everybody’s eye, mine included.

1957 Chevy Bel Air

IN SEPTEMBER 1968
, Reinie Ottenbreit returned to high school for his senior year. A teenager with frank blue eyes, a scallop of toffee-coloured hair artfully arranged on his forehead, and a pair of downy sideburns bracketing a ruddy, docile face, he passed down corridors waxed and buffed to so high a gloss that they swam with a flickering, watery light. As the fluorescent tubes hummed industriously overhead, rude boys who had been amusing themselves at his expense for as long as he could remember called out, “How’s it hanging, Ottenbreit?” or “How’s tricks?” Reinie’s sheepish response was always the same. “Can’t complain.” This was an answer patterned on his father’s style. Karl Ottenbreit had raised his two sons to take life in stride but not to tempt
fate
.

The truth was, Reinie felt pretty much on top of the world. In ten months he would be done forever with school. His feet were set on the straightest of paths. Soon he would be farming with his father. Reinie’s older brother, Edgar, was in his
third year of commerce up at the university in Saskatoon – he had turned his back on a career in agriculture – so Reinie had no rival for the role as his dad’s right-hand man.

But what pleased him most in that year of unalloyed promise was that he finally had himself a car, and not just any car but a beautifully preserved 1957 Chevy Bel Air. Ever since he had turned twelve, Reinie had worked for his father, serious, adult jobs involving the operation of tractors and combines worth a small fortune. For this, his father paid him a small wage because Karl Ottenbreit believed children ought to learn responsibility and the value of a dollar. Year after year, Reinie’s nest egg had grown and, along with it, his manly satisfaction whenever he opened his bank book.

Still, obstacles had to be overcome before his parents relented and gave him permission to buy the car. Reinie’s mother, Mabel, had been the most strenuous in her opposition. Endless family discussions circled about Reinie’s headstrong desire to own an automobile, but in the end he carried the day – with a caveat attached. The Chevy was
not
to be driven to school. Mabel pointed out what folly it would be to waste money on gas, tires, and oil when the Ottenbreits already paid taxes for the school bus that stopped at their gate every morning for the express purpose of transporting Reinie to Waddell High. Her son yielded to the logic of this argument, even though he dimly suspected his mother had other reasons for her objections.

What really worried Mabel Ottenbreit was that indulging Reinie might give rise to talk he was spoiled, even show-offy. A pillar of the Augustana Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod, she knew that a teenaged Martin Luther would never have
been caught dead driving pointlessly here and there all over the countryside just to pass the time, as so many young people did, singing along to the horrible sort of songs you got on the car radio nowadays. Yet after much troubled reflection and soul-searching, she reluctantly waived her opposition, reminding herself that Reinie had always been a good boy. Nevertheless, second thoughts still clung to her. That is why she insisted Reinie take the bus. To keep at bay temptation, the toils, the allurements of sloth and soft living.

Three days of school had passed. Reinie was marking them off on a calendar with the singlemindedness of a jailbird counting down his sentence. That morning he sat at the back of the pumpkin-coloured school bus, as always, alone. Usually he passed the hour-long ride to and from school plowing through reading assignments in useless, bewildering subjects such as English and social studies. But so early in the year teachers were holding off assigning homework. Still, Reinie’s parents had always drummed into him that an hour wasted was an hour forever lost, so with rapt concentration he was studying a Department of Agriculture bulletin. The Ottenbreits prided themselves on being progressive, up-to-date farmers. Karl Ottenbreit often observed to Reinie that the times were changing. There was nothing Bob Dylanesque in this remark, the nonsense disrupting the rest of the world only impinged on Karl when certain offensive programs appeared on the television, and when they did, he promptly switched the set off. It was the business of
farming he alluded to. “I figure you got to be flexible. No sitting back on your heels waiting on the pitch. Better to take a swing and miss than just let the ball blow by.” To this, Reinie would nod sagely, seconding the motion.

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