Authors: Steven Barthelme
Bill went to the bookstore. Once a week. He had his eye on a girl there, a slow thin girl who worked in the bookstore.
“Can I help you,” the girl said.
“Yes, please take me home,” Bill said.
“Sure,” the girl said.
“What?”
“I get off in an hour.”
I have been following women around bookstores for twelve years, Bill thought, in the car. The girl came out and got into the car, and they drove to her apartment which was full of hateful, expensive furniture and liquor bottles facing front. Bill had four drinks and made love to her.
“Stay the night,” the girl said.
Bill thought about it for an hour and then said, “I can’t. I want to, but I can’t.” Everything about the apartment was wrong; the toothpaste was on the wrong side of the bathroom sink.
Bill bought a gun, .38 caliber. It smelled good. Maureen returned it and got his money back. $199.95.
The dentist told Maureen she needed some work. An assistant took it all down. At the reception counter Maureen wrote out a check and asked for a chart of the proposed work and charges.
The woman behind the counter looked up at her. “May I ask what you want it for?” she said.
“What?”
“May I ask why you need it?”
Maureen dropped her cigarette onto the carpet, grinding at it with her shoe. “Sure, honey, it’s because it’s my teeth and my money.”
In the lobby of the building she called Bill from a pay phone. He was at work. She was crying.
“They want nineteen hundred dollars. They want to butcher my teeth. They want to fix—my teeth don’t hurt. Why do—I’ve got three month’s worth of appointments,” Maureen said.
“I’ll pick you up,” Bill said.
“I’ve got my car.”
“I’ll pick you up anyway. Call them back and cancel the appointments. We’ll try another dentist. Second opinion, like that. Fifteen minutes.”
Maureen made a meatloaf and a salad.
“Thanks for dinner,” Bill said, after they had finished.
“Is she pretty? How old is she? Did you tell her about us? Is she good at it? Screwing? Better than me? Is she blonde? What’s her name? Don’t tell me. Is she more beautiful than me? I don’t want to know anything about it,” Maureen said.
Bill felt sick to his stomach.
“Did you have a good time?”
Maureen went to a bar with one of the law clerks from the office. He was short. Maureen was older and taller. When he began telling her about his “mistress” she excused herself and went home.
“This is not working,” she said, at the kitchen table. “We’re going to have to try something else.”
“One little slip?” Bill said.
“That’s not it,” Maureen said. “It’s more than that. I’m moving.”
“I think you’re right,” Bill said. “I think we should get two apartments, like we talked about.”
“I mean moving out of town. I’m leaving town. I’m going back to school.”
“Wait. Now wait—”
“No waiting. I thought today maybe six years from now I could meet you on a street in Mexico, you know, outside a ‘little bar’ or something, and then we’d have a lot to talk
about, we could go to the beach and screw and talk all night long.”
“It’s movies,” Bill said. “It won’t happen.”
“It could happen,” she said. “That’s the point.”
Bill shook his head.
“It won’t happen
this
way, that’s for sure,” she said.
“It’s crap,” he said.
“There’ll be iguanas. And those funny birds, yakking.”
“Maureen—”
“You won’t even bitch about the sand,” she said. “The waves will make those wave noises. There’ll be wind. There’ll be colored lights. You’ll be crazy and happy again. There’ll be cliffs. Cliffs behind us. Cliffs.” Dark hair. Green eyes.
She was a nice wife, even liked me for a time. I enjoyed her company, and in the early days, when sleeping together had this scorched-earth sort of magic, we mistook that for love. But the magazine articles she sometimes gave me didn’t make sense to me. I could never find a description of what it’s like. One summer a twenty-two year old girl came to work at the bank as a teller—I was training them then—and she was pretty and young and below her wide, flat forehead her gaudy green eyes had a hint of confusion or even hurt in them. I was seduced; she was interested. I waited for her to arrive at work in the morning and maneuvered to be by the elevator or in the corridor, for two minutes of her. We went to lunch a few times, talked at some dreary bank parties. Unable to touch her, I stood against a white wall in some excessively carpeted middle management home, talking to her, staring, trembling. I want. That is what it is like. Insufficiently tidy. It’s unkind to ask a man to have feelings. This is what I was thinking, standing in the rain, the day the cat came back. But that was later.
At work people say I’m “distant,” my family was sort of cool and rational—I mean they weren’t always playing kissy face with one another—and last winter when my wife left, she said living with me was like living in dry ice. “You’ve no feelings,” she said, and I told her that that wasn’t logical, that it was only reasonable to assume that, in regard to feelings, everyone had an exactly equal amount. She said, “See what I mean.” One of those things women say when they’re angry.
When she left me the cat, asked me to keep it for her, she said, “Maybe old Rilkey will teach you something.” I thought maybe she had a boyfriend, one who didn’t like cats, not that I blame him. Talk about cold. They really do look for someone who can’t stand them, and then just jump up on his lap. This cat wasn’t so bad. I’d always hated its name, though, so I started calling him “Slick.” It took him three or four months to learn it, not because he was stupid, just because he was obstinate. Last week in the floods, his obstinacy almost got him killed.
It rained for six days. Lawns were like sponges, the air in the house was thick and wet, streets were impassable and everywhere there was mud. By the time the cat dragged himself in on the fifth day, I’d given him up for drowned. He was soaked, black fur lying flat in little gobs all over his body so that it didn’t look like fur anymore. I loved him. That’s a feeling, isn’t it?
It was a Monday, June 9, when it started raining. I let Slick out in the morning when I left for work. My wife used to put him out at night but I never do unless he makes himself such a pain I can’t stand it. Anyway I let him out and left for the bank. I’m a loan officer. You get callous after years of listening to people’s troubles, especially when you can’t always do what they want. They lie to you, anyway. Hell, if it was my money, I’d just give it to them, like I did when I was a teller. It’s only paper. That’s how everybody who works in a bank thinks, and why sometimes you just take some of it home. Sometimes you give it to other people.
About three that afternoon, Becky, my assistant, told me there was a storm coming in and a few minutes later, as if on cue, the world got dark. Out my windows, low black clouds. I left early.
When I got back to the house, Slick wasn’t around, but
I didn’t notice until around eleven-thirty that night when I went into the kitchen and mixed my nightcap—a tall Scotch and water. I carried the glass over and opened the back door and whistled. By then it’d been raining seven hours straight, so I figured he’d be in the garage, contrite for staying out so late. I whistled again, stood by the door. Took a sip of the drink. Suit yourself, I thought. I stood a minute and listened to the thunderstorm.
That was one thing we used to do together sometimes, my wife and I, if there was a storm, we’d have a drink and leave the door open, cut the lights, watch the lightning and listen to the rain. And smoke, before we quit smoking.
The next morning, Tuesday, it was still raining and the cat still wasn’t back when I left for work. I drove to the office under the gloomy, gray skies listening to the rain beating on the windshield and the ripping sound the car tires made on the wet streets, thinking. I have crooked little feelings, I guess, nothing you could write a magazine article about. Not like these people with these giant, rectangular emotions that sound like volumes of an encyclopedia. Guilt, Hysteria, Independence, Joy, Loss, Zed. Rot.
Sometime that morning I told Becky that my cat was out in the rain overnight. “Slick?” she said—I didn’t even know she knew his name. “You didn’t go out and find him?” It was strange to me that she would get so excited. I said, “Becky, it was pouring. I wouldn’t know where to find him, anyway. I don’t know where he goes.” The look on her exquisitely made up face, framed in blonde-edged brown curls, was dismissive, damning.
“I whistled for him,” I said, raising my voice. All along the hall there, the clerical people were looking at me, so I tried to speak normally. “I was out calling him and calling him, for
an hour.” But she knew I was lying, she’d turned back to the computer by then.
The weather was making everybody edgy. I did like the cat, a great deal. It was just the way I understood things—cats went out and later they came back. They’re animals. You don’t ask them where they’ve been and what they’ve been doing. Next thing you know the cat’ll be telling me I’ve got to learn to “let go” and “share my feelings” and “cuddle.” Jesus.
At home that evening I went out and called for the cat from both the kitchen door, that opens into the garage, and from the back bedroom windows, at the opposite end of the house. Then I remembered that once when we had first had the cat, when he was just a few months old, a kitten, pint-size, he was gone overnight and my wife and I had found him the next day, up on the roof of the house, whining. I found him, actually, and my wife gushed on and on about it, and I felt like a hero.
So I pulled on my raincoat, and got out the big red umbrella, and I got outside in the rain and walked back and forth around the house looking up on the roof. Of course Slick wasn’t up there. Dumb, I thought. The cat’s not on top of something, he’s under something somewhere. I went out and called him again around midnight, but he didn’t show, so I had an extra Scotch and went to sleep.
By Wednesday morning it had been raining solid for two days and the TV morning show and my soggy newspaper were talking about how many inches of rain it was and how the ground was saturated and the two rivers were cresting north of town. Water was driving snakes and deer into people’s yards and so on. My house smelled damp, muggy; you couldn’t get away from it. In the neighborhood, water was standing everywhere, and the little creek had turned into an ugly torrent. The
underpass on the street that I usually took to work was full of water. You could just see the tip of the black and white stick, the flood gauge, and the stick was six feet. I had to drive about ten blocks up, past the park, to get across under the Loop.
All the way into work I dreaded Becky asking me if I had found the cat, and that was the first thing she said. When I told her I hadn’t, she frowned and went back to her keyboard. Outside the windows, gray sheets of water coming down. We didn’t talk again all day, until close to five when she was packing up to leave.
“You know, sometimes they get up under the house,” she said. “Is there a space under your house?”
I said there was, but it was probably a bog by now. I told her I would look there, with a flashlight.
Even when it’s dry, you have to get down on your belly to look under the house, but I had promised Becky. When I got home and the cat was still not back, I changed into some jeans and a sweatshirt and put my raincoat on over that and went out in the rain with a flashlight to the place in the back garden where there’s an opening in the outside wall down to the space under the house. The garden was full of water.
I slid through the mud and into the opening, my face about ten inches into the two foot high space under the house. You could see fifteen or twenty feet to either side. Rusty pipes hung under the floor and pools of oily water filled in the low spots and cobwebs glistened with drops of condensation in the flashlight beam. There was a thirty-year-old Coke bottle and a big pipe elbow with a crack in it. A rotting magazine. Spiders. A rat, fur flat and soaking wet. Dead. I pulled back out from under there.
My clothes were drenched by this time, and the whole front of me was so filthy I felt like a kid. I rolled over in the
water in the garden to get mud all over the back of me too. I was laughing, taking a mud bath. I sat up against the back wall of the house and shielded my eyes with my hand to look at my neighbor’s house. He has a better life than I have, I thought, and he’s a Republican. It’s not supposed to be that way. He even loves that fetishistic little dog. Think I’ll just sit here until my cat comes home. I tried to pick up some mud, but it drained through my fingers, so I dug down and got drier dirt, and brought it up and compressed it into a clod, and threw it at his house. Clods for clods, I thought. Cat’s dead. Life is stupid, most of it.
On Thursday it was still raining, and I didn’t go to work. I started in, drove down the service road along the Loop until, near the cross street I’d found to get under the freeway, I saw a dead cat, an orange tabby, lying out from the curb, splitting the water running in the gutter. The service road was wide and ran beside a flat, empty park. Not far away, the same creek from near my house ran parallel along the other border of the park.
I jerked the car over, stopped, and got out. The cat’s thick orange and white fur lay almost flat, like carpet. A big cat, stiff, not as big as Slick. It was pretty far from home. As I stood there in the rain, the weirdest thing happened—I almost started to cry. Now, my wife was right, actually, about my not having feelings, because I just don’t. I remember one time she read me a magazine article about how the average man is five foot ten and cries once a month. I thought, Once a month? You’ve got to be kidding.
I couldn’t go to work, so I picked the orange cat up and set it on the grass, so no one would hit it, then got back into my car and drove home, wishing I had a cigarette the way you wish for a cigarette after a few years of not smoking, wistful, wanting to be some way you used to be.