Frog (34 page)

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Authors: Stephen Dixon

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BOOK: Frog
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there.” “I don't remember saying that. I said ‘Don't let me start' or something, and about something, but I forget what. What's good, what's bad—” “Please, already, shut up. And it's not that my father's on my mind constantly, you know, which I'm sure I've said. It's simply that I want to have him on it less.” “All right. Agreed, in toto. So do I, and I'm not being facetious. That's why I said a half-hour. Maximum. Solely. Fifteen minutes could even do for me. A quick coffee, half of it milk so we can actually drink it in that time. And Monday, what do you say? I can be persistent and unrelenting but I know when a spoon's thoroughly licked, so I won't hammer away at it any longer. You say no now, it's no and no for good. And I was only joking before about marriage and children and loving you and water and empty glasses and phones ringing on my mother's bed table in heaven and so on. I'm—most people know me not like that but as a reasonable conscientious person, practical, effectual, as I said, plenty of common sense. I have to be in what I do and also conduct myself civilly. My company would lose customers by the droves otherwise. People with piles of money to play and lose have a sixth sense about detecting eccentricity in people who speculate for them. But I do want to have coffee and maybe some cake with you. Sandwich or soup if you like. Wine or beer with the sandwich, or even go to dinner with you. Take you out. Nothing fancy but nice. I'm a stocks analyst, by the way. Was your father a stocks analyst or involved with stocks in any way?” “Hated it. No.” ‘Thank God. What'd he do?” “Never mind.” “You're right. And I didn't bring up I'm a stocks analyst to say that I do all right. I don't do all right, quite truthfully, or not as well as I could with what I know, but that's not and could never be the point why I do it. I don't even like what I do that much, so it's even more a mystery why I do as well as I do, or maybe it's the answer. But just when you think you have the answer to something you don't, right? Or that's been my experience, so I'm not a very over-self-confident creature either. But I'm wholly unsuited for my work and would like to do a dozen other things, including serious pottery for a living and sitting home for the next ten years and reading every book I've ever wanted to read but never had the time to and opening my own health food restaurant, but gourmet stuff with me as chef, but you need the principal as well as the interest for that—you've heard that one. But OK, enough there too, and can I say it's all right for dinner, we'll say, Monday night? Of course ‘night.' Dinner, or is it supper, is always at night. ‘Dinner's the one that makes you think twice. But this is ridiculous, for suddenly I think it's supper that some people if not whole sections of the country use as a word for lunch and others use for dinner. But nothing else but that—dinner, supper or even lunch, if you'd prefer. And then, we see it isn't right for either of us—” “It won't be. We can see that now.” “Don't say that. Put a curse on it, of course it'll turn out bad. What I'm saying is if we're both bored flat in seconds, though I know I could never be with you or anyone else, even with someone who didn't say anything. Because even saying nothing would provide me with interest why the person isn't saying anything and is it because of me or the restaurant, let's say, or what? The environs; the weather. What I might remind that person of, for instance, though there I'm only talking about look-alikes or act-alikes, not names. Anyway, that we can't even be acquaintances—and just listen to this common sense talking—we'll call it quits without any farther dramatics, OK?” “Oh shoot. I feel you broke me down where I can't say no. For that's what I want to say. Maybe for the quick coffee you spoke of, just so I'll say to you ‘Howard, Howie, How' till I get it out of my system for now. That's not it. What is? And why'd I even give an equivocal yes? Crazy of me. I'm afraid I'll have to radically change my mind now, Howard.” “Too late. You said it. Don't take it away. It's bad to forswear. And what time? And don't worry. I'll be one-tenth the talker I was today, so you'll have to do most of the conversing while I'm doing the eating and staring. Sorry for that, I know you don't want to hear it, and where should we meet? It's yours to designate. Hey, good word again, right? Oh, sorry again for pretending to sound like a dud. Because I can use the long words with the best of them—I got a liberal arts education, as they say—or almost the best. Like my being such a long-winded prolix lexifanatic bombastic fustian pedantic euphuistic loquacious—and I swear I'm not looking at a thesaurus while I say this—garrulous nonsensical ludicrous ill-devised—I love that one, ‘ill-devised'—unreflective egregious simpleminded—I'm looking for a good one now to end it—prodigiously tropological—I can't find it and don't even know what that last word means; it just came to me, snap, in my head-ignoramus onomatomaniacal-obsessed windbag buffoon fool.”

Olivia writes several poems about her father. Last one goes: “Dear father, padre, in your box, with your holey socks, oh father whose heaven was art (that can't be new but was true for him), marroon muff were you formally buried in? former young lit tough's the rep you're to be stuck with? what's it mean? what it seems, curly thin-skinned hair, most in back and growing out of your shoulders like furry epaulets (boy that's bad so nix the similets), hair info according to those who know your photos, black all that for thought of you broken down and disinterred by vermin and rats worse than the thought of you dead. To be truthfully true for once, the night is night and blue and I am blue and night without the living u, I mean the loving u, no hoax or reflection intended. Mirror, scissors, rocks. Enough, this stuff's, rough. What it means, what's it seem? Further, larder, sucks.” Poems like that. She's a little high. Drank half a bottle of wine at dinner before she sat down in front of the typewriter. More than a little. Before that a scotch sour while she cooked. Before that, over the newspaper, last of last night's bottle of wine, which wasn't much. Didn't know she was going to sit down. In fact, was heading for the bathroom and then bed. Didn't know why she sat down or what she was going to do there. “Well here I am” she said. “Might as well turn on the light. Might as well remove the typewriter cover. Might as well try out the keys to see if they're still stuck. Tap-a-tap. Drier air must've upstuck them. Write something? Ah, come off it, you know I can't write. Letter to the editor protesting the president. A love scene. A death vignette. A poem. You used to. First thing that comes to your head will be the first thing that gets written down, unlike all those other lackluster pieces of the past. The past: “When I was a girl of seventeen, I bit my nails till they were clean.” The past: “Roses have bled, poses are you.” The past: “Evanescent is deceit…” This time do it sponton-asally, fontly, fabuloosely, rapsofollicly, graspberries, doodlewarts. She tears all the poems up, dumps them, most don't make the can. Shouts as she scoops together a handful “Oh frick, bloody you write them—you were the typewriter. But no blood or fugs. Just write one she pleads.” Looks at the typewriter. Nothing happens. “Oh of course.” Puts paper in and stares at it. Still nothing. “That's funny. The keys aren't moving, words aren't appearing, and it's originally your typewriter too, left in impeccable condition, thanks, though not since then professionally cleaned, sorry.” Gets up, gets the wine, sits in front of the typewriter and drinks from the bottle, several healthy belts. “I'm going to get smashed and sick but I don't care. No work tomorrow so I can lose a day. But what about that? You want your little kid getting smashedly sick? Then type, darn ya. A poem, no time for a tome. But no threats. Jest a quest if nothing else, something you did effortlessly. Say, I should've got all that down. Could've been the start or major part or even the whole of my poem. ‘Jest a fest' I could've titled it, or A Poem, No Tome.'” Puts paper in, machine jams. “Oh of course.” Rips all the paper out, little torn pieces she has to scratch out, puts more paper in and waits. Nothing. “Spontofontly then.” Types “Hair's a mess, evening's overdressed, my face a pudge, new moon needs a nudge, a loan, a tome, my drinkdome for a poem. Why must I write in rhyme all the time? Teendrone throwback. Sky's not blue anymore but I still am, blue-who. When I was a whelp and you walked me you always held my hand. ‘Carry me, daddy dog,' I'd sometimes say but you said ‘You'll break this old cur's back.' Some nights when I was supposed to be asleep I imagined that. You collapsed, back broken in two. I'd cry. I'd caused it. My disjoined done-for dad shot through with pain. ‘Soft and small,' you said, ‘my paw fits around yours like a big mitt,' and then you'd kiss it.” Pulls it out, tears it up, holds the pieces over the can and drops them; most fall around it. “Screw ‘em, let ‘em rot.” Puts paper in and types “‘Simplest said gets the best results,' you'd say, so type me, dear old cur, a poem to show you're really around.” Sits back and stares at the typewriter. Keys start moving, words appear on the page. Bing. One poemlike line done, paper shifts two spaces down and over to the margin on the left. More words. All by itself. Bing. Bing. Typing much faster than she ever did, then stops. She rolls it up so she can read it. “In my box, with my hollow (more apt) sox (that's my way, shorter and stronger and then a long explanation about it), maroon muff (watch your spelling, deartest… oops, tupical typo ((there too)) when you're tired and out of pract), curly thinning gray hair just about bald (I forget precisely what you wrote in that last poem but I know I had qualms about the description: too opaque, thus fake), the night is black and black and I am rabble and rats and stink like cat piss and ants and worms, all cradlerobbers and all without my loving you, seeing you, drinking like a fish even (blowing it here), stinking and sinking like one too (actually blew it after the cat piss). What's it mean? Hey, I should talk, for who the heck cares? But we're in touch at last, by golly, I mean ‘at least' and maybe the last, bite our tongues, and any way's a good way if we can't have it the only way, got it? I don't think I do but drat's all. Must paddle back. Life's a hoe. Got my metaballs all botched up. So what. Just over and out, babe, over and out.” She waits; nothing else. She types “Come back…. Then tomorrow night when I'll be straight?… Then straighten out some of what you wrote?… I want clarity, you supposedly always insisted on clarity, and in my state I can't take anything hazy or vague, so maybe just to correct what seem like a coupla misspells?… Then thank you, love you, don't want to push you, goodnight?…” Takes the page out, kisses it, bathroom, pees, does her teeth, bedroom, undresses, puts the paper under her pillow, head on the pillow and is reaching for the night table light switch when she passes out.

It's his seventieth birthday. Actually, last Tuesday was but not everybody could get off from school or work. Eva flew in from one state, Olivia from another, they picked up their mother and drove to the cemetery. Olivia's infant daughter is with them. They called Jerry and he said he'd meet them. “Bring the prayer book,” Olivia said. They stand in front of the grave. Jerry says the prayer book was in his coat pocket but must have fallen out along the way and shows them the hole. He brought three very large black umbrellas, “cemetery umbrellas, which I've collected from some of the fancier funerals I've gone to recently, though I think two of those they wanted them back,” and distributed them. “I wish you all had got to know my other brother and my sister,” he says. “I know this is an odd way to start, especially in this weather when you almost wish you were inside your family mausoleum. But we don't meet much and I never feel enough's been said or felt about them in front of other people so I thought I'd give them a little due before I forget to. Really sweet people, and talented, sensitive. Readers they both were; advanced thinkers for their ages. Possibly I'm exaggerating for Vera, for she was always so handicapped from such an early age that sometimes she couldn't even turn a simple page. I forget if she even liked to have books read to her. I know a pile of them piled up as gifts for her. If she did like to be read to I'm afraid we were all probably usually too busy to except my mother. I wince now when I think of the things we gave her to entertain herself. Leather lacing, for instance, to make scissors holders and coin purses and things for keys. Then she gave one of them to you or you asked for one or were asked by your mother to ask for one or for her to make you one and you said ‘Great work, great.' But what they both could've amounted to we don't even have to say. Anybody could see that for Vera in her preschool photographs before she first took sick. So alert, open eyed. Also in the last ones when she was around postgraduate age, though why we took them I don't know, when she was on crutches, then crutches and neck and back braces because she had so little bone back there to hold up her neck, I think it was. Then bedridden, bed sores, eighty pounds, next week it's seventy-five. She seemed like a big empty piñata whenever I picked her up so my mother could change the bed under her or get the potty out without spilling when it got too filled or stuck. I guess we took the photographs because she was smiling, and who'd want to do anything but encourage that? And also that she thought she looked, all in black and black eyeliner and much brushed and I think dampened-down hair covering her forehead and cheeks and some of her eyes and certainly the front and back neck scars—these pictures when she was on crutches—kind of chic, street-smart and exotic. In one bed photograph, which my mother I just remember kept forever on the pegboard above her own dresser, she had her hand up holding an exercise bar, was in a wrinkled hospital gown, though this was at home, and by ‘wrinkled' I'm not making any criticism of my mother, but the same eyes, look, hair, big clearheaded smile. Black stockings too with the crutches to give her atrophied legs a fuller look, I suppose. And black sunglasses sometimes both in her photographs on crutches and in bed, maybe to make her look sultrier but I think just as much to hide these very dark circles around, by this time, her crossed eyes. Anybody here feel I'm talking on too long or I' m depressing you or your feet are getting soaked, though those umbrellas should be stopping that, let me know or maybe just go back to the cars. No apologies needed. I'd like to stay and finish. So, it was enough to kill you, those two. That they died, in their late, for him, to mid-twenties for her, and then when Howard went it was like being slowly tortured before you were slowly killed. Scratch that. Too literary and not even accurate as a comparison. Whenever I try those I flop. Vera had the tougher of the two lives. I'm talking about her and Alex, and I promise to be quicker and less winding. No childhood almost, while he of course had much more than that. He went to regular school, college, worked as a newsman, saw lots of the world, was starting to be a serious creative person, was once even engaged, I think. Anyway, he knew women, had jobs, got drunk, moved around. She died much too early, which I can say despite all her ordeals and such for twenty years, which might've made me say ‘Come and get me already.' Even cripples and people confined to hospital beds can find companionship and marry and have children if it's not with someone who's permanently bedridden too. Possibly I'm wrong there, meaning they can, though no doubt with help. I've an image of her on the floor once, or maybe this was Howard's or Alex's memory and whichever one told me it told me it a few times. Must be, since I would've been too old to have the reaction I'm now going to convey. And I suddenly remember something which did indicate she was thinking ‘Come and get me already,' or at least once, but it's not what I'm going to say right now. She was on her back and banging the dining room floor hysterically with her heels and hands and shrieking that gives you temporary deafness and her hoarseness. ‘Shut up,' Alex or Howard said, ‘I can't think' or ‘do my schoolwork' or something. I don't remember the last part, just the ‘shut up.' And my mother said to him that it was only a tantrum, let her have it, she deserves it, something like that, and no doubt comforted her, but I think Vera continued to bang and cry. She did this a few times, supposedly, none, I can remember, when I was around, and one time did much worse, which is the time I meant about ‘Come and get me already' Years later, when she was thirteen or fourteen—I was away but Alex or Howard sent me the newspaper clipping—she tried to jump off our apartment building roof and a fireman swung around in a sling and grabbed her. That was the newspaper shot I got, but with the story all wrong. In it they said she was ten, up till then a cheerful neighborly girl, with no seeming meaning to kill herself, and so on. But I'm trying to illustrate something here. Bring it out. What? That the tantrum—that's right—also the suicide try, of course—was because, as my mother explained to Alex or Howard that time, she was so sick of being sick and having no life and going to the hospital every three years or so to be operated on and coming back months later sometimes looking and feeling worse than when she left and being a half-inch to an inch shorter each time and not smarter, her brains drugged duller, scars here and everywhere, a tracheotomy tube in her at home that would last like the last one lasted for months and then left with the tube hole that never seemed to close. It was so ugly. A hole, in your throat, which you always walked around with; just awful. I could barely look at it and for the most part she didn't cover it with anything like a Band-Aid, and I don't even know if she was supposed to. She was sensitive to its looks, you could see that, her eyes always following your eyes and going downcast when you took a squint at it, but maybe she was told to keep it exposed so it could heal faster. My mother, by the way, used to clean the gook out of the tube, and with hydrogen peroxide, I think, dab around the hole. She called it the worst job of her life, suctioning it, and not just because it was her daughter. Gagging work, she said. So, compared to Vera—compared to my mother, even, and that job, besides losing a few kids—we've all lived richly, even Alex. Scratch that too. Too sermony, that ‘because of this we should feel that' and so on. But I should move on before you all drown while you're dying of boredom. I think I've already said that in almost the same way, today or some day close. I think I've already said almost everything a few times or at least twice. I'm not complaining, just saying, but every statement and phrase of mine, including this last one, is beginning to sound too familiar. Anyway, I suppose you know—I know Denise does—how your father felt when Alex disappeared so unexpectedly…. No, that's not the way to start it—so formal—and I can't even talk anymore. It's not that I'm choked up. I actually am, but it's mostly that I'm too tired. I'm in good shape for my age, even if that's not saying much. But this day's been too tough for me, driving here from who knows where, and I better remember later if I want to get home, and just getting my mind set for it. It isn't easy being the oldest child and then the only survivor and also seeing the place where I'll probably be dropped into shortly, even if it's beside them and even if I think later my wife and later still maybe one of my kids will be beside or near me, which doesn't help much to think about either. So, the end. Thank you for coming, and just ‘God love you' to all our relations in the graves here—don't know how else to put it—Momma, Dad and the rest of you, which I think we can say amen to to clinch it, OK?” “Amen,” they all say and he says “If you'll still excuse me, I think I'll drive home rather than to whatever you've planned to do,” and folds up his umbrella, goes to his car in the rain without responding to two of them saying “I'll drive you,” gets in, doesn't turn to or look back at them though they're all waving and saying good-bye, and drives off.

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