Ordinary People (23 page)

Read Ordinary People Online

Authors: Judith Guest

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Literary, #Family Life

BOOK: Ordinary People
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He folds the newspaper carefully, holds it carefully on his lap, rocking slowly. He is dizzy and sick at his stomach.
“Conrad? What’s the matter?”
His grandfather stands over him, the newspaper in his hand. “Are you all right?”
“I’m all right,” he says. He can hardly hear himself, the sounds inside his head are so loud. His grandmother is there and there is more talking; broken pieces of conversation that he cannot follow. Her hand is on his forehead.
“You don’t feel hot to me. Is it a headache?”
“A headache, yes,” he says, getting up. “I need to go to bed. I’m tired.”
“Let me get you some aspirin. You see? You don’t get enough sleep, and then you work outside and get chilled and overtired.”
“You’re going to bed?” his grandfather asks. “At seven o’clock?”
“I’ll get you the aspirin,” she says.
“Never mind. I don’t need it.”
He heads for the stairway, holding himself stiffly upright. In his mind he sees himself putting his feet, one before the other, on the steps, carrying himself upward. His body feels nothing.
Fully awake, he lies on his side in the bed, memorizing the lines of the desktop, and above it, the half-inch ridge of desk pad, the chair beside the desk, the precise angles of his schoolbooks piled upon the chair. His eyelids feel dry and scratchy.
So safe so safe floating in the the calmest of seas what happened? What happened? A stone bench outside the hospital where they sat for hours soaking up spring and its sunshine Leo with them laughing and joking Karen’s legs swinging back and forth back and forth and the blue cotton dress clings to her slim body her hair long and black freshly washed shines flatly against her skull smiling at him a dimple appears in her cheek what happened? “What happened?” Crawford you liar you promised you said you were never wrong oh Jesus God please I don’t want to think about this let me sleep God let me sleep
 
 
Eyes closed a knee in his back hand at his neck forcing his face into the floor of the elevator rough under his cheek smell of vomit and matted fur “God don’t hurt me” struggles against the indignity his pajamas pulled down around his knees a needle sunk deep into his thigh twists moans and all of it loose like water flowing salt tickles inner edges of his eyes into his mouth twists onto his back arms over his head raw wails of anguish break off in pieces hurt his ears “Baby, it’s okay” Leo is over him lifts coaxing “Let’s get up off the floor huh?” arm around his waist sags heavy his wrist aches where Leo holds him dragged along the watery dark he rolls off Leo’s shoulder to the bed eyes closed hands folded in prayer between his legs can’t look “God don’t hurt me. Please.”
Shock. His mind egg-shaped gray loose tracings of paths over it rat scratchings white hospital gown gentle Leo helps him into it never hurries him old friends in the steel-and-white room greet him with smiles “Here he is just lie back and relax head on the pillow that’s it” get him ready shoot him up so he can’t move can’t get away Leo smiles down at him his face is purple in the light his teeth glitter “Easy now you know it doesn’t hurt” no but afterward exhaustion fatigue that moves outward from the center of him flowing like warm oil in his veins can’t lift arms or legs his ears ring his head light and empty all rat scratchings erased and Leo feeds him “Atta baby eat some peaches. ”
 
 
His body jerks awake. His hand reaches for the lamp. He turns it on; lies motionless in the sudden, bright light. He is in the narrow, twin bed in his grandmother’s spare bedroom. Blue bedspread, blue-and-white-striped wallpaper, blue-and-white rag rug on the floor, everything in order. No good. No good to think about it. About anything. It will not change. Just as before, it is done. He wills his mind to drop him under; to let him pass through into dreamless sleep.
 
 
Sits against the wall cool at his back in only his shorts the door locked testing only testing tension of skin sharpness of blade thin threads of blood well up from scratches his legs his arms have no feeling in them draws the blade down into his left wrist a deep vertical cut the artery bubbles up like a river widens does it again to his right arm warmth and color floods the room he is free at last comforted it crosses his mind to compose himself for dying awkward there is nowhere to put his hands the blood makes everything slippery lies on his side using one arm as a pillow he sleeps and then arms tied his jaw aches something hard pinches his mouth between his teeth “to keep him from swallowing his tongue” they say he knows better it is how they punish you for failure here and someone crying crying “Lord, what has he done? What has he done to himself?”
 
 
He awakens to fear again; his mouth dry. For terror-filled seconds he doesn’t know if it is happening all over again. Or worse, that time has tipped backward and it is happening still. Numb with fear, he scrambles out of bed, pulling his clothes on over his pajamas.
The house is dark. It hovers around him as he fumbles for the stairway, fumbles for his jacket in the downstairs hall closet, quietly feeling for the handle of the front door, to let himself out.
He walks swiftly, without direction. To calm himself. To get away from dreams, because there are worse ones and he doesn’t want to remember them, doesn’t want to think at all, less intense, less intense, but how to do it? To concentrate on that is to at once accomplish the opposite. A phrase attaches itself to his mind: “... Why a kid would want to hurt himself ...” a swift, sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach as he remembers another newspaper article. About him. The police chief was quoted. He couldn’t understand why a kid would want to hurt himself like that. Crawford had let him read it afterward. He had tried to explain that he had not been trying to hurt himself, he had merely been trying to die.
No. You do not slash yourself in a dozen places if you are merely trying to die. Nor do you overlook the full bottle of Valium beside the razor blades in the medicine chest. Not for him that quiet, dream-drifted road outward on sleeping pills. Too easy. And too neat.
Oh, God, why, then?
He stops walking. The sidewalk is shadowy; the air around him still and cold. Stiff, black limbs arch over his head. The black houses crouch, ready to spring. He is shivering, his skin clammy and wet underneath his pajama top, down his back, under his armpits. Freezing out here.
Ahead of him, a car approaches. It pulls to the curb opposite him. Police car. The door opens, and he has a sudden urge to run; swiftly he puts it down. He stands still, shoving his hands into his jacket pockets as the cop crosses the street.
“Where you headed?”
“Nowhere.” He wets his lips nervously. “Just taking a walk.”
“Pretty late, isn’t it? After two. Where do you live?”
“Fourteen-thirty Heron Drive.” He is surprised at how calm, how normal his voice sounds.
The cop frowns. “Long way from home, aren’t you?”
He has given his home address. He takes his hands out of his jacket pockets; lets them hang limp at his sides.
See? I’m harmless. I’m okay.
“I’m staying with my grandparents. On Green Bay Road.”
“Where do they live?”
For a moment, he panics. He cannot remember the number, and he stumbles over the words: “It’s a gray house with black shutters. On the corner of Green Bay and Booth. Fifty-one thirty-five—”
“What’s the name?”
“Butler. Howard Butler.”
“Yeah, okay.” The cop smiles, then. “I know the house. They know you’re out?”
He shakes his head. His hands are sweating. His wallet is back on the dresser, in the bedroom. Suppose they should ask him to prove who he is. Will they take him to the station? Call his grandparents?
“What’s your name?”
“Jarrett. Conrad Jarrett.”
“Well, listen, Conrad, I wouldn’t walk around here this late. Too many nuts in the world, these days. You want a ride back?”
“No, that’s okay.”
“You’d better head back, then. They might wake up. Be worried about you.”
“Yeah, I will.”
They drive off. He lets his breath out slowly, even manages a wave as they signal to him from the car window.
Too many nuts.
Meaning you aren’t one of them. All the outer signs must be right, then: hair cut to the right length, polite answers, expensive suède jacket made in Mexico.
You’re all right kid. Ordinary.
And this event, walking the streets at two o’clock is ordinary, too, but something is wrong about it, something not normal, what is it? He cannot remember. He is shivering again. He wipes his hands on his pants, zips his jacket up tight; turning, he follows the disappearing taillights, two red eyes in the darkness.
 
 
The door is unlatched, as he left it. He slips quietly inside; goes to the kitchen, to the sink, where he hunts in darkness for the faucet and a glass. He drinks greedily, then lets the cold water run over his hands. Still in the dark, he makes his way to the den at the back of the house. No lights. He doesn’t want to wake them. No going back to bed, either. Not safe there. He sits upright in the chair beside the door, his arms along the armrests, not leaning back.
Unforgivable. It is unforgivable. They wrestle with the boat together, the sails snapping like rifle cracks in the wind “Get it down! Get the goddamn sail down!” grabbing at gray a billowing mass sticky and wet against his face it smothers him with its weight a loud crack and the terrible rolling begins everything out from under the water closing over his head he fights his way back to the surface screaming emptied of everything but fear “Buck! Buck!” in front of him a hand stretching out an arm along the upturned hull water crashing against him pushing them apart Buck yells “Kick off your shoes!” mindless he obeys chokes as water closes him off again from the moon from everything they collide in the water Buck grabs his shirt “Hang on, I’m gonna go under, have a look!” he screams at him “Don’t go Don’t go!” and the wind takes it throws it back into his face Buck is already gone and above him the sky lumpy with clouds black it is painful to breathe terrifying he must turn his head away from the dark shape of hull from safety to do it Buck surfaces beside him shaking hair from his eyes gasping “We screwed up this time, buddy! He’s gonna haul ass over this!” They stare at each other and Buck breaks into a grin “Well? You got any ideas?” he shakes his head biting his lips to keep back the terror “Always thinking, aren’t you?” and he finds his voice then “It’s not so goddamn funny, Buck!” he soothes him “Okay, okay. They’ll be looking for us, they’re looking now, for sure, just hang on, don’t get tired, promise?” He says “Don’t you either!” and they stop talking then address themselves to the dull, dogged task of enduring and the clouds level out it starts to rain hours into the night they hang two fish caught and strung off the sides of the boat arms straining hands numb with cold the water is icy laced with foam like root beer “How long you think it’s been? I dunno. An hour? Two hours? Oh, hell, longer than that, don’t you think?”
When did it happen? When did they stop calling to one another from opposite sides of the stern where they hung for better more even balance did he think it was over?
“Man, why’d you let go?”
“Because I got tired. ”
—“The hell! You never get tired, not before me, you don’t! You tell me not to get tired, you tell me. to hang on, and then you let go!”
“I couldn’t help it. ”
“Well, screw you, then!”
Unforgivable and his grandmother crying at the funeral “Poor Jordan, poor baby, he didn’t want to do it, he didn’t want to leave us like this!” and he had answered her saying coldly “Why did he let go, then? Why didn’t he hang on to the boat?”
And he was punished for that because afterward everything made him ill. Food and the sounds of people eating it crushing breaking slurping. Smells. He would lift a glass of orange juice to his mouth inhale the acrid odor of dirt and dying flowers even to think about eating made him gag and for weeks afterward not being able to sleep that was punishment too being forced to submit over and over to a hopeless rerun of that day to what could have been done to make the sum of it different. Nothing. That is the nature of hell, that it cannot be changed; that it is unalterable and forever.
Was it painful? He cannot believe so if it was he would have cried out he would have known it and he could have stopped him he could have said “Buck take me with you I don’t want to do this alone.”
He is awake again.
No more. No more.
He gets up quickly; goes to turn on the television set, kneeling beside it as it warms up. An old set; the images are snowy. The brightness hurts his eyes. He tunes the sound down and goes back to the chair, focusing his eyes in concentration on the screen. His hands smooth the worn denim of his Levi’s methodically as tears fill his eyes, run down his cheeks. He feels the sudden, chill prick as they drop from his chin on to his jacket. Nearly morning now. Outside the window he can see faint streaks of light, separating the trees from their background of sky. Six-thirty already. On the television, a
Sunrise Semester
course in astronomy. Soon the light inside the room will match the grayness on the screen.
He gets up again, to go to the bathroom, taking a leak, washing his hands, staring at himself in the mirror. He can barely make out the contours of his face. His heart is pounding slow and full, keeping time with the cracking headache that has ignited behind his eyes. He leaves the bathroom, going to sit in the hallway, beside the telephone. It will be seven soon. People get up, then. It is not too early to call.
He looks up the number in the book: on Judson Avenue in Evanston, his home number. Waiting, he stares at the faded wallpaper, a pattern of eagles and stars in gold and blue and dull red. As he traces it with his eyes another pattern emerges. Wings and talons, a sideways stripe across the wall. It begins to move and his stomach heaves. He quickly dials the number.

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