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Authors: Joan Barfoot

Some Things About Flying (14 page)

BOOK: Some Things About Flying
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“We are now flying somewhat south of our normal route over the Atlantic.” There is a fresh stirring of unease at this reminder that they are over water. Lila feels it herself, the horror of falling into that cold expanse, sinking irretrievably into a world of strange, unknown creatures, her flesh becoming food for their flesh. She still can't think exactly why this seems worse than plunging into hard, unforgiving earth. The result for passengers is the same, after all, and certainly from the point of view of people going about their business on the ground, it's far preferable. Imagine this huge craft suddenly appearing over land, plummeting through the clouds, wiping out lives instantly vulnerable due to an accident of geography and where they happen to be standing.

There are perilous prospects ahead for various unsuspecting English people. Look out Cornwall, for instance, those quaint little resorts, all the bed-and-breakfasts. Oh, look up, look up!

“We will also be shifting to a lower altitude. In fact you can probably feel this already occurring.” Thank heavens he said that. Otherwise Lila would have sworn they were beginning a slow plunge.

Maybe they are, and he's trying to keep people quiet as long as he can.

Oh, those last moments, heading straight down, terrible seconds! Such turmoil, people scrambling and hurtling about—it's Lila's turn to grasp The Web's hand very hard.

“Again, we're asking everyone to remain in your seats at all times except to use the washrooms. Along with changing our altitude, we anticipate some manoeuvres intended to compensate for any losses of power we experience, and we want to ensure that no passengers or crew are injured during these exercises.” Exercises? Strenuous, hearty, mechanical aerobics that will leave the plane and its passengers more fit at the end?

But okay, maybe that's true. If they do survive, Lila can't imagine who wouldn't be permanently changed in some regard, possibly made stronger.

“Therefore, don't be alarmed by any unexpected movements of the aircraft. We will not be able to forewarn you when some manoeuvres are being attempted, but you should be perfectly safe with your seatbelts fastened. Those of you travelling with children should take particular care to ensure they are well secured.

“Again, your flight attendants are available to provide assistance. We regret the delay in bringing today's in-flight movie to you, but the attendants will shortly be asking you to lower your window blinds and it will begin. If there are further matters about which you need to be advised, we will briefly interrupt the movie.

“Finally, as many of you no doubt know, both this airline and this aircraft have excellent safety records. It is virtually unknown for a plane of this type to experience any sort of crisis that warrants serious alarm.” That sounded like a flat-out lie; possibly because there already is serious alarm.

“Thank you for your patience.” His voice vanishes with a click and once again the cockpit is its own world, where perhaps Frank McLean and Luke Thomas are handing each other high-fives, made mirthful by their hoax, and by hopelessness.

Somewhere towards the end of the speech, maybe when he mentioned the movie, Lila got furious again. Surely they deserve to be told what it means that a wing is on fire. Surely people are owed the right to prepare their hearts for final moments, if that is a possibility at all. It's one thing for that silk-voiced man and his friend—at least she hopes they're not enemies—to have their hands on the controls of the sound system, and on the controls of the plane. But in no way do their hands belong on people's final moments.

And everyone is supposed to obediently lower blinds and watch a Western, however cleverly nouveau? Pulling down blinds hardly puts out the fire, does it? It doesn't go away just because people can't see it.

There are lots of things Lila doesn't look at directly, but they go on anyway. She can scarcely bear to imagine Tom at home and tries very hard not to, but that doesn't mean that isn't exactly where he is: enjoying his fireplace on winter nights, building and fixing this and that (although he claims to be clumsy and unskilled around the house), reading bits of interesting books and articles out loud, sitting in his room of memories admiring his life, lying in his bed, reaching out on occasion, no doubt, touching skin.

Lila can close her eyes like blinds, but sometimes bitter images blaze through her lids anyway.

This is not the time. There is no time.

“I could just spit,” she tells The Web.

“I can tell. You're busting my hand.” But he's smiling. Still, a bit unfair, when she didn't complain at him hanging so hard onto her. “How come you're mad?”

She sighs. “I don't know, really. The business about the movie, I think.”

“Yeah. I wish it wasn't an oater. I sure don't want to go down watching the back end of a horse.” It's a joke, or a brave stab at one, but he's made himself go pale. “Aren't you scared?”

“Sure. Of course. Only, sometimes being scared makes me angry. Because anger feels better, I guess. It doesn't seem as helpless as fear, although”—she sighs again—“I suppose it probably is.”

“Yeah?” He looks interested, and as a result less afraid. “My girlfriend's sort of like that. She goes off the deep end real easy; she says it's better to be mad than sad. That what you mean? Is it some kind of female thing?”

Lila laughs. “It does ring a bell, I admit. What does she get mad about?”

“Me. Our folks. Her job. And she's totally pissed about all this.” When he gestures, Lila sees that the hand she was holding so tightly is tattooed with what looks like a pink peony surrounded by a cluster of green leaves. That can't be right; who'd have a peony tattooed on his hand?

A rosebud on the butt, maybe. Years ago, Lila considered getting one herself, just for the hell of it, because she was tickled by the idea of something privately pretty, but she never got around to it.

This could almost make her weep.

She had no idea she was such a fool.

“Where were—are—you going?” This is a question she failed to ask Adele, whom she imagines headed for some evangelical rally, an international gathering of buttonholing, arm-clutching, redemptive, tragic wackos. Wouldn't that be something to see! Hundreds of muted print housedresses, and dark suits, plain ties, white shirts, all the blissful faces, every one stoned on salvation. Do people like that have theological schisms? Lila bets that if they do, they must be quite fierce and tiny.

“We were going to bum around for a month. Get ourselves together, you know?” Lila does. “Her folks don't like me and mine can't stand her and it's not like we have to care but it gets on our nerves.” He snorts. “Man, who knew about nerves! This is really bad. How about you?”

“The same. My friend and I were going to wander around like you for a couple of weeks. We have family problems as well.” And there'll be more when this is over. What the hell is Tom doing? Craning, she can just glimpse him sucking on a pen. Funny, to be the one avoiding crucial conversations, when usually she's the one who starts them.

Don't get sad, get mad. She'd like to meet The Web's girlfriend.

“Do I have to call you The Web?” she asks. “It makes me feel as if I'm sitting with Spiderman.”

He shrugs. “No. My girlfriend calls me Jimmy. It's my buddies call me The Web.” He grins. “Except when we're at her folks' house, then she calls me The Web, too, because it gets them crazy. And the tattoos and the motorcycle, and they think I'm too old for school. I dropped out of high school and now I'm going back to learn computers. I figure that's the way of the future, right? The thing to get into?”

“It certainly sounds like it.” Literature, either the learning or the teaching of it, is not, in the view of many experts or for that matter of many students, the way of the future. Which may in any case be straight down.

“Yeah. So it's a one-year course, and we figure this is our last chance to get away together. Figure out where we're going, maybe decide to get married, I don't know. We had to go on the cheap, but that didn't hardly matter. Shit.”

Lila pats his hand. Under the peony, or whatever the hell it is, it's a strong, tense, young hand. Rather an appealing hand. She pats it again.

“I drive delivery for a drugstore, and Mel's in a pizza joint, cooking mostly, but it's not so cool any more. We aren't either of us stupid or anything, it's just, in school we could take off on my Harley and ride all over the place, and that's what we really wanted to do, so we quit school so we could keep the bike in shape and have money to keep going. You ride?”

Lila shakes her head. “I'd like to, though.” Suddenly she would, she would. To her surprise, she finds she longs to dress in leather and roll along highways, skin burning from air and speed, low to the ground and exposed. She hasn't thought of this before, but now it's another enormous lost desire to be mourned.

“Too bad. You've really missed something. At least, we're crazy about it. But you can't go forever on minimum wage, taking orders and crap. Anyhow, we might want to have kids, and”—he grins—“they'll need their own bikes. So that's why I'm going back to school. I figure if I can fix bikes, computers shouldn't be that much harder, right? Which is okay for me, but Mel has to keep making pizzas till we work out something better. Anyhow, when we get back we're moving in together, see how that goes.”

He stops, then mutters, again, “Shit.”

“I know.” Lila tries to sound comforting, at least.

He is telling all this as if he's storing it in one of the computers he's been hoping to study. Like Sarah, like Lila for that matter, he seems to feel putting his story into the mind of a stranger will keep him alive in some form. Or like others, he is drowning out the sounds of terror in his own ears.

Jimmy's life, however he has adorned and decorated it, isn't especially unusual, but equally it is, of course, unique. There are dozens and scores of stories here. Like Adele, Lila could go from row to row, seat to seat, grasping arms. Instead of offering salvation, she would demand to hear tales of all these lives.

“You ever hated somebody your kids go out with?”

So much for cheekbones and eyes—naturally he only sees someone maternal in Lila's bones and flesh. But what was she thinking? Surely not something else, not
that
kind of story.

“I don't have kids.” Tom does, though, and has spoken of a couple of completely unsuitable young men, in his view, linked to one or the other of his daughters now and then. “You have to ride it out,” he's said. “If you crack down, it gets worse. What I did was kill the pricks with kindness; that took the shine off.”

“But,” Lila goes on, “I understand it's smart to pretend to like your kids' choices, whether you do or not. Or at least be polite. Otherwise people get their backs up and hang on whether they actually want to or not.” Was that tactless?

“Yeah, I hope I'm that smart when we have kids. Her folks think I'm a loser and mine think she's, I dunno, a slut or something, so I guess that makes us tighter. Not,” he adds quickly, “that we wouldn't be tight anyway. But we know we gotta look after each other, too.”

“That's nice. Looking after each other.”

“Except, you know, it's tough today, for sure. That's why we took turns hitting the can, to get away for a few minutes, calm down. You know how people get on your nerves sometimes, just little things?” Lila nods; she does. “Mel's real hyper anyway, and her legs were bouncing like she was running and it was making me nuts. So she got mad and said at least she should be able to be scared her own way.”

Good for her.

“How long have you been together?”

“Ten years, almost. Since she was twelve and I was fourteen, except for breaking up sometimes when we'd have a fight or want to go out with somebody else. Even so, we always get back. Like, it's not like I don't know she'll be back and she knows I'll be sitting here.” He looks abruptly sad. “At least if we go down, we're going together. You feel like that? With the guy you're with?”

One of the things Lila likes very much about many young men these days is that they know how to ask questions. It seems to her their worlds are bigger than those of older men, including Tom sometimes, who grew up talking about themselves and never stopped.

“The thought crossed my mind,” she tells Jimmy cautiously. “That if this were going to happen, I was glad he and I were together.” She takes note, silently, of her own past tense.

Jimmy and his friend appear to take better account of each other than Tom and Lila do; but then, they've been together much longer than Tom and Lila, who could be their parents. She sighs. “I should get back to him.”

“Yeah, I guess. He's probably wondering.” Not noticeably.

Jimmy looks a bit bereft. Lila pats his slim, flamboyant hand once more. “Your girlfriend will be back any minute.”

“I just hope the Bible babe doesn't get here first, that's all. Thanks for the company. It was nice of you. It was nice meeting you.”

“You too. You'll be fine. We'll be fine.”

BOOK: Some Things About Flying
6.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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