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Authors: Don Gillmor

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Mount Pleasant (22 page)

BOOK: Mount Pleasant
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“God, Harry.”

“She’ll likely recover completely, the doctor said. The problem is, it sometimes leads to a full-blown stroke.”

The same kind of unstated fear that had sat between his sister and Harry at the hospital now entered Gladys’s eyes. Who would take care of Felicia? Would she be in their home? How insane would she be? How insane would they be? Gladys and
Felicia had never had a warm relationship. Felicia hadn’t overtly disapproved of her, but she had made it subtly clear that Gladys was a disappointing choice. They had little in common. On the other hand, Felicia and Erin had a lot in common and were, after any length of time together, reliably toxic. Harry wondered how any of them would survive this.

“Felicia’s renounced almost everyone in her world. She’s really quite isolated. What’s left?”

“Us,” Harry said.

“Let’s pray for a full recovery,” Gladys said diplomatically. She sipped her wine.

Harry got a wineglass from the kitchen and poured himself some of the Shiraz. “She once told me that she thought she and Dad should have stuck it out. She didn’t think it was a great marriage—it was a terrible marriage—but even so, part of her thinks she would have been better off. When it ended, she lost faith in the institution, I think. She saw marriage as a kind of war—you go out and have affairs and inflict pain on one another and don’t speak for weeks at a time, but at the end, you’re both veterans of the same battlefield. There’s a camaraderie. That’s what unites you: that pain, those wounds, your shared hell.”

“Is that how you see marriage, Harry? A shared hell? Have you lost faith in the institution?”

Harry had lost faith in most institutions. That was one definition of adulthood. “I’ll tell you what marriage is,” Harry said. “When I was a kid, there was a cheesy museum that was on the way to the cottage. We used to pass this homemade sign for it every weekend, and my sister and I kept asking to go, but we never went because my parents were too anxious to have that first drink on the dock. But one day we decided to visit it for some reason. It was essentially in this guy’s house, one of those
original log cabins up there. You walked in and there were the skeletons of two moose. They were lying on the floor in a weird position, and their antlers were locked together. It was wild-looking, maybe thirty feet long, prehistoric. The guy who owned the museum said he found them like that. What happened was two males bumped into each other in rutting season. There’s a female in heat nearby. They fight for her. They charge and engage those antlers. You’ve seen them, they’re huge. Anyway, they get their antlers locked up. They can’t extricate themselves. For a while, they probably keep fighting, pushing and pulling, twisting. But at some point, they run out of gas, they’re exhausted, and they realize they’re stuck. They collapse and can’t get up again. They eat the grass around them. In the morning, they lick the dew. They’re still alive when the wolves find them. It’s a banquet. Two thousand pounds of meat.

“The wolves gather round and start eating them. These enemies. Are they still enemies? Did they come to some kind of understanding while they were stuck with each other, slowly starving, before the wolves found them? Maybe there was some fraternity when the wolves started tearing their flesh. I wonder how long the female moose stuck around. Three days? Three minutes? Can you imagine? One minute, you think you’re going to have the greatest fuck of your life, and the next minute you’re being eaten by wolves.”

“So who am I in this scenario?” Gladys asked. She poured a little more wine into her glass, then topped up Harry’s. “Am I the ungrateful female who abandons them, or is that you and me on the ground, our horns locked, dying.”

“You tell me.”

“I can’t imagine you fighting over me, Harry.”

“Would you find that romantic?”

“As an antiquated abstraction. Not a real fight.”

“I could take Dean if it came to it.”

“Dean?”

“Bang, a fast one right on the beak.” Harry threw a halfhearted punch into the air. “Float like a butterfly, sting like an untenured professor. The junkyard sculptor hits the canvas.”

“He’s one of those narcissists who flirts with everyone. It wasn’t personal.”

“How about Mr. Audubon. Could I take him?”

Gladys was silent for a moment. “You’re not going to use this, are you, Harry? It isn’t going to become a thing between us, is it?”

Harry took a sip of wine. Gladys moved into the kitchen, and Harry sat on one of the stools on the other side of the counter.

“How much are we paying Tommy Bladdock?” she asked.

Harry shrugged. “One point six, one point seven,” he said facetiously.

“Should we be thinking of selling the house?”

“Tommy might find something.”

“He might find himself $5,000 richer. How are we paying for this?”

“We’re running a deficit. Governments run deficits.”

“We’re not a government. Well, maybe the Greek government.”

“If Tommy finds something, we’ll eliminate both the deficit and the debt.”

“If Tommy doesn’t find anything, or if there isn’t anything, or if he finds that there was something but now it’s gone, then he is simply part of our problem.”

Harry stared at the wilting flowers in the vase on the counter and tried to recall their name.

“Harry, I have applied for thirty-six jobs in the last six months. I got three interviews, which ranged from discouraging to
humiliating. It may be that my professional life is over, that if I want to work it will be as a greeter in a down-market cocktail lounge for minimum wage. I’ll come home at midnight, tired and humiliated and near tears, with stories about how everyone at work is a brute.”

Harry’s stomach lurched as he briefly contemplated the secrets they withheld from one another. “What did you apply for?”

“Jobs I didn’t want—school librarian in a rural school district that’s a two-hour drive from here, editing government reports. I applied for things I don’t even know how to do, Internet and web work that is beyond me.”

“Why didn’t you tell me you were applying for jobs?”

“For the same reason you haven’t told me how indebted we are—we both know we can’t bear much more discouraging news.”

She opened a drawer and pulled out the large pan and put it on the stove. She took eggs out of the refrigerator, along with some Morbier cheese and fresh basil. She broke the eggs into a bowl and added pepper and a splash of milk and whisked them for an omelette, then took out beets to make a salad. She toasted some pecans and put butter in the omelette pan. As a cook, she moved with economy and instinctively understood the order in which everything had to be done to be ready at the same time. Her movements were sure and balletic, and Harry had always found his wife in the kitchen quietly seductive. Food as sublimated sex. He remembered Alan Bates lasciviously eating a fig in
Women in Love
, Albert Finney tearing into his dinner in
Tom Jones
. Gladys still had a lightness to her movements, the way she glided, the way her hand came to rest on a beet, caressingly, before the intrusion of the knife.

Lying in bed, awake, Harry deconstructed his life with Gladys in the kind of detail that can only come in a dark, sleepless room after several glasses of wine. The first apartment they shared was above a crummy furniture store. Harry was in his second year of graduate school, and when he rented it the landlord didn’t tell him there was an upstairs neighbour who had no separate entrance and entered through their apartment. The landlord’s name was Cecil LeMay, a corpulent former hippie with an unconvincing ponytail. The apartment had been trashed by the previous renter, but the vacancy rate in the city was essentially zero, and Harry got nervous and felt if they didn’t grab it they’d be out in the suburbs somewhere, renting someone’s basement. But he also saw romantic possibilities in the space. It was large and loftish and in a louche part of town.

Gladys spent four hours cleaning the small, questionable bathroom. They painted the entire apartment off-white (Desert Sunrise). Harry bought two rolls of whimsical pink linoleum and laid it over the decayed brown lino in the kitchen. He replaced four light fixtures. LeMay said he’d pay for half the paint. That was it. “Supply and demand,” he said, a trace of hippie whine in his voice. “I didn’t invent the system, man.”

Harry took the disgusting carpet off the stairs, pulled the nails and staples and did the hot, horrible work of sanding the wood, the mixture of ancient sawdust and toxic oil-based paint settling on his sweating body in the constrained, airless stairwell. He was halfway through painting the stairs an elegant grey (Storm Cloud Steel) when LeMay arrived. “What the hell are you doing?” he demanded.

Improving your slum property, you faux-hippie weasel.

“Where’s the carpet?” LeMay asked with mock incredulity.

“I threw it out.”

“You threw it out? Man, you do not fuck with other people’s property.”

“Capitalism 101,” Harry said.

“What?”

“Look,” Harry said, “it was thirty years old, it was toxic, it wasn’t even carpet anymore.”

“Well, who’s going to compensate me?” LeMay asked. He was wearing a Grateful Dead T-shirt.

“That carpet had a market value of absolutely nothing. It was a health hazard.” Harry was aware that he could, with little effort, sound like an entitled university student, but felt that, in this instance anyway, he wasn’t. LeMay was a creep, and Harry was improving his property at his own expense, and LeMay’s phony counterculture aesthetic irked.

“Well, the value of that carpet might have to come out of your damage deposit.”

“It didn’t have any value. What does have value,” Harry said, “is my labour. Sanding your stairs, cleaning the pigsty that you should have cleaned, painting the walls, installing new floors. How exactly would you calculate that, Cecil?”

LeMay looked up to the iron fire escape that had rusted into an immovable, code-violating sculpture. “I could toss you out on your ass, man.”

“No, you couldn’t,” Harry said. “Have you read the Landlord and Tenant Act? We could stop paying rent and sacrifice live goats in the living room, and it would still take you two years and six lawyers to get us out of here.” Harry had no idea what the Landlord and Tenant Act actually said, but recalled a stoned late-night conversation with a guy at a party who said it was more or less impossible to evict people. Harry hoped this was true.

“You are treading on thin ice, man,” LeMay said, pointing his chubby finger at Harry. “Do not push your luck with me.”

“Fuck you, man,” Harry said, the adrenaline pumping.

This was day twelve of their occupancy.

The streetcar ran all night and shook their bed, and the cockroaches survived the nuclear assault of Harry’s poison. They had been there two weeks when the upstairs neighbour invaded. They were in bed when Gladys heard the slow horror-film march of footsteps on their stairs.

“Harry, someone’s in the apartment.” She sat up, frozen.

The footsteps were ominously heavy on the stairs that Harry had restored. Had he not taken the mouldy brown carpet off, they might not have heard him. Harry grabbed a bathrobe from the hook, which he realized was Gladys’s as he pulled it closed, and went into the hallway, his mouth dry with anticipation. He was heading to the kitchen to get a knife, but the door to the top of the stair opened just then and Harry stood in that dull, bluish light to confront a man with long dark hair and construction boots.

“Whoa,” the man said.

“Get out,” Harry said, as forcefully as possible. A simple, visceral command, issued in a woman’s bathrobe.

“Oh, you’re … I guess LeMay didn’t … Well, he wouldn’t. I live here.”

“We live here.”

“Upstairs,” the man said, pointing to the ceiling. He produced a key and held it up, and then fit it into the locked door in the hallway that Harry had asked about when he looked at the place. LeMay had said, “Oh don’t worry about that.”

“I’m Win Oatley. I live upstairs. Sorry, man. It’s kind of late. LeMay should have told you, but, well …” He went through the door, and Harry heard the sound of the lock sliding back into place. His first thought was of nailing the door shut. He listened to those construction boots walk up the stairs and move loudly across his ceiling.

Gladys was partly dressed, wide awake. “He lives here?” she said.

“Apparently.”

“So he can just come through in the middle of the night? Harry, that is too creepy.”

“We have a lock on this door.” Harry had wondered why there was a lock for the door to the loftish space at the front of the apartment.

“Harry, I’m never going to be able to sleep. I mean the streetcar, the cockroaches, and now some freak basically lives with us.” Gladys was on the verge of tears. “What does he even look like?”

“Some thin guy who listens to Supertramp.”

“Oh, Harry.”

This catastrophe was largely Harry’s fault. He had thought that the location would lend an unearned bohemian quality to their lives, would outweigh the apartment’s obvious shortcomings. He imagined going to Emilio’s on Sunday for espresso and huevos rancheros, and then picking up the newspaper to see which eventless Eric Rohmer film was playing at Cinematheque. He imagined dinner parties and learning to play an instrument.

BOOK: Mount Pleasant
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