Read Know Your Beholder: A Novel Online
Authors: Adam Rapp
Tags: #Fiction, #Humorous, #Literary, #Satire
“You two close?” he asked.
“No,” I said. “Not really. When I was a kid we might’ve been. He used to take me bowling. He was an excellent bowler. Probably could’ve gone pro. So we’d bowl. And there was a period we’d go metal-detecting up in Starved Rock State Park, but that didn’t last for very long. When I got older, we didn’t have many common interests and sort of drifted apart.”
“Sorry to hear that,” Baylor said. “Were you close with your mom?”
“Pretty close, yeah,” I said. “Especially toward the end when she was in hospice.”
Baylor nodded respectfully.
All the things we must survive. The list just keeps growing. The deaths of others and heartbreak and taxes and the slow, deliberate failure of the body. I realized that Baylor Phebe might be eating himself to death, pound by doleful pound. Perhaps he thought that soon he would be with Ellen, their ghost selves reunited in the spirit world. Or is the truth more plainly stated in Baylor’s taxidermy? We are beings who simply expire. Creatures who are killed or die freakishly, without warning, and become blue-faced objects. Things. The only remains our skulls, our teeth, our bones. Calcium and marrow. Some two hundred interlocked artifacts. Left to clatter in a casket or to be anonymously fed to a conflagration, transformed into gray silt, and flung into a dull, disinterested wind.
Hopefully those left behind memorialize us by mounting our bust on a piece of thick, sturdy wood, by keeping an eight-by-ten photograph next to the bowling trophies, by visiting the hunk of chiseled marble marking our grave, by lightly grazing a brass urn with their fingertips.
The following afternoon, Bob Blubaugh knocked on my door.
“Bob,” I said.
He told me that morning there had been a strange man sleeping on the floor of the laundry room, in front of the washing machines. He said that the man told him he knew me. “He seemed nice enough, but I thought I should tell you,” Bob added.
“Was he sort of hairy?” I asked.
Bob said that he was wrapped in some kind of animal skin.
I went down to the laundry room. Glose wasn’t there but I could smell that he had been. I checked the storage room, then the boiler room. No sign. I went up to the porch, half-expecting to find him sprawled on the wicker furniture. But he was nowhere to be found.
The next day, Monday, a piece of Baylor Phebe’s mail was accidentally placed in my mailbox. The return address said it was from Emily Phebe, who I assumed was his daughter in Milwaukee.
I went down to the basement and knocked on Baylor’s door, through which I could hear the ice-fishing video game music.
Glose answered the door. He was holding a Wii controller, and the game was on pause in the background.
“Glose,” I said.
“Hey, Francis.”
I asked him what he was doing in Baylor’s apartment.
“Just hangin’ out,” he replied.
“Just hangin’ out,” I echoed.
“Yeah, just hangin’ out,” he echoed my echo.
I asked him if Baylor knew he was there.
“Uh-huh,” Glose answered. His mouth was a wolflike rictus, his tongue a chalky gray lump. He spoke through soft, lazy consonants.
I asked Glose where Baylor was, and he said, “Rehearsal. First day. You want me to give him a message?”
“No,” I said. “No message.”
Finally, he closed his mouth.
“How did this happen?” I said.
“What?” Glose asked indignantly, almost naively.
“You cohabiting with Baylor.”
“He likes me,” Glose replied.
“Did you knock on his door?”
“He saw me under the tree.”
“What tree?”
“The one in the backyard.”
“The copper beech?” I said.
“Yeah, that big tree. He saw me sleeping under it and invited me in.”
“And then one thing led to another,” I said.
“One thing led to another,” Glose confirmed, “yep.”
I decided against leaving the letter from Baylor’s daughter with Glose. I considered calling the police and pressing charges, but for what? He wasn’t loitering. And Baylor clearly trusted him enough to leave him to his own devices. Technically there was no lease infraction.
“Do you want to do some ice fishing?” Glose asked.
“No,” I said. “No thanks.”
He told me that Baylor said I was pretty good at it.
Before I turned to leave, I noticed the bearskin perfectly centered on the floor, in front of Baylor’s flat-screen.
Glose clocked me looking at it. “Blends in pretty well, don’t it?” he said.
I was furious.
When I got up to the attic I reconsidered calling the police. I even dialed Mansard but hung up, figuring it was a lost cause. Glose was clearly taking advantage of the KINDEST MAN ON EARTH, but until I spoke with Baylor about it, there was really nothing to be done.
I poured two fingers of bourbon and downed it.
And then two more.
And then two more.
Once I was good and silly drunk, for some reason I became overwhelmed with the desire to read Emily Phebe’s letter to her father. I had never opened another person’s mail before and I was well aware of the consequences—mail theft is a federal crime, after all—but the bourbon had obviously gotten my courage up. Why a piece of Baylor Phebe’s familial correspondence was so intriguing to me is anyone’s guess. The man had just opened up to me about his wife, and I’d reciprocated, telling him about my relationship with Lyman and my mother. There was nothing sneaky or duplicitous about Baylor. As far as I could tell he was about as mysterious as a box of baking soda. Perhaps breaking into the Bunches’ unit had unlocked some creepy need to collect more secrets about my tenants.
I steam-opened Emily Phebe’s letter to her father. It was handwritten, maybe four pages, front and back. She had composed it in blue ink and her penmanship was a thing of cursive beauty. I typed it out, adding it to these pages.
Hi, Daddy…
Is Pollard as cold as Milwaukee? I thought global warming was supposed to heat the planet up, not extend these bitter winters. It still feels like the middle of January here, with not much hope in sight. I think we’ve cracked forty degrees only once so far. I wish the spring would come already; it might help me shake this awful mood.
School is good. My sophomores are reading
The Catcher in the Rye
, which always makes for stimulating conversation. It’s the only book on the syllabus that rivals all the vampire and wizard literature. And I’m always surprised at how many kids
don’t
like Holden Caulfield. The class debate about his attitude toward life is enough to warrant a documentary film. And you’d think Holden would have all the boys on his side, but it’s completely unpredictable. This semester, his most staunch supporter is an African-American girl from West Allis named Chiney, who hardly ever talks in class. I think Salinger would be happy. Next up is
Of Mice and Men
, which you know I Love Love Love. It’s a short one, so we’re able to read it aloud in class. I keep trying to lobby the English chair, Dr. Lowry, to start allowing me to add some newer, fresher YA titles to the syllabus, but he always brings up parental concerns and permission slips and possible problems with the board, etc.
It really irks me that we can’t be a little more risky with regard to materials selections. I mean, we’re one of the top private progressive-minded schools in the state! We should be able to feel confident in offering cutting-edge literature to our first- and second-year high school students! It’s not a parochial school! This isn’t the 1950s!
Okay, I’ll gracefully step down from my soapbox now.
So I have a week off for spring break. They scheduled it late this year, for the week of April 14, and I was hoping to come down to see you. I’m happy to sleep on your sofa, but if it’s too cramped I can stay at a hotel. I looked into some of the local places in and around Pollard and they all seem affordable.
Speaking of Pollard, it seems like you’re pretty fond of it, and your new place too. I’m glad you had the good sense to finally move out of that weird truck drivers’ motel, which was costing you way too much money.
Were you able to get any of your taxidermy in there? I hope you at least decided to mount your cougar head—you know how much I love that piece.
I’m so glad you’re enjoying being back in school. That acting class sounds really interesting. What’s this “sense memory” stuff about? Sounds a little like psychotherapy. I’m anxious to hear more. I wonder what Mom would think of this newfound passion of yours? She’d probably get a kick out of it. She always had a flair for the dramatic.
So now the sad stuff:
I’m not going to lie—it’s hard living alone. As much as I hate Cole for what he did—and I do hate the selfish goat—I miss his companionship. I think he’s going to marry that girl he’s with now, Jillian or Gillian or whatever her elfin name is. I found out that she’s only twenty-three. Cole turns forty next month. He’s old enough to be her father. I imagine him taking her to ice-skating lessons and then out for hot chocolate afterward. And then for a winter pony ride at the petting zoo. His little daughter-bride…
I should stop about Cole. It only makes me start to shut down.
I actually got asked out on a date the other day. This new science teacher approached me in the teachers’ lounge. His name is Paul Prisby, which sounds like a character out of a Jules Feiffer comic. He seems nice enough, but I’m not ready. He asked me to dinner but I told him I already had plans. He’s not bad-looking, either. A little balding on top, but that doesn’t bother me so much. He might be eccentric, which could be interesting. What I mean by eccentric is that I saw him carrying a book by Flaubert. We’ll see…
And, Daddy, I feel like I need to tell you this too…I stopped going to church. I’m not saying that I’m giving up on God entirely, just taking a break for a while. Please don’t be too disappointed (I know Mom would kill me). It’s just that I see all those other families in church and I get so angry, which makes me feel like a phony (now I sound like Holden). I’m not saying I’m done with religion forever, only for the time being.
And, Daddy, I want to encourage you to get the Lap-Band surgery. I know your cholesterol is by no means a disaster and your blood pressure has improved, but Dr. Noyes did say that it could add years to your life, potentially many years. Call me selfish, but I’d like to have you around for as long as possible. I know you’ve tried Weight Watchers and didn’t like it, and you’ve cut way down on the calories in other ways (at least you tell me as much!), but unless you start seriously exercising, you’re not going to lose that weight and that’s what Dr. Noyes is most concerned with. Diabetes, heart disease, you know the drill. And I know I don’t need to bring up what happened with Mom. Anyway, can we at least talk about it when I come visit? I promise not to be too pushy.
I know you’re not much for Facebook and the Internet, so I’m doing the old-fashioned thing and including a photo strip. You asked to see my hair back at its natural color, so here it is. I hope you like it. Brown as brown can be. Brown as a squirrel. I think it makes me look older, maybe even a little like Mom.
Anyway, I love and miss you tons. Hoping to see you in a few weeks.
Love,
Emily
She had included a strip of photos taken at one of those instant booths that produce a series of four vertically stacked color snapshots. She was more attractive than I expected, with a pretty, pixie-ish face, dark hair, and warm, round, deep-brown eyes. Doe-eyed, you could say. I guess I’d assumed that she would’ve inherited her father’s considerable size, but unless she is pear-shaped or possesses some sort of unexpected, magnificently large ass, this didn’t appear to be the case.
Somewhat sickened by violating Baylor’s privacy, I carefully returned the pages of the letter and the photo strip to the envelope. I could feel the guilt settling heavily in my bowels. Shame loves the alimentary canal. I used a large blob of Scotch tape, dabbing it along the enclosure line to create some adhesive gum, and resealed the envelope. Then I went down to the front porch and used the master postal key to open the mailboxes and dropped the envelope into Baylor’s slot.
That night I found a bug in my pubes.
I was pissing into the toilet and I screamed like a woman. It appeared to be a small black aphid. And then I found two more in my beard. I combed through it, looking into the bathroom mirror, and saw red bites, fine as pinpricks, then found bites on the backs of my arms too.
I noted my alarmingly dwindling food supply. (Glose.) And the leftover breath and body smell. (Glose.). I recalled all the unflushed contorted turds in the toilet bowl, the foul turbid water, the long black body hairs that had collected in drifts on the bathroom floor. (Glose again.) And Kent’s vandalized bass.
I shampooed my beard and body with the Calming Cleanse delousing system. I lathered up three times, waiting until I was dry and then getting right back in the shower. I scrubbed myself raw. I clawed deep into the whorls of my beard.