The Petty Details of So-And-So's Life (17 page)

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Authors: Camilla Gibb

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Psychological, #Sagas

BOOK: The Petty Details of So-And-So's Life
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In lieu of words, Emma started doing strange things like throwing textbooks at him and, once, a pot full of chili. Rather than react, Andrew withdrew. He used expressions like “acting out” and Emma looked at him with narrow, cat-like eyes as he spoke with all the disapproval of a school principal. His dispassionate reasoning was like gasoline on her fire and she screamed at him in the hope of waking his soul. Nothing. No sign of heart, either angry or forgiving. No emotion whatsoever—Where's your feeling? you bastard. It's all ambition with you, and no soul.

Blue, on the other hand, was all soul and no ambition. He kept dreaming over and over that Niagara Falls was drying up, throwing less and less water over its shoulder every year. He had tried to warn people but no one would listen. Worst of all, Emma laughed and told him that waterfalls only ceased when people had given up crying—when it had become so futile that there was no more point to letting go. He left the couch and stood for hours under the great wall of spray. He stood there at least once a day that winter, convinced that every day there was less and less water. He stretched out his tongue and he was sure
he tasted salt.
Tears
, he thought, thinking of what Emma had said. But it can't be. If the fresh water turns to salt, we're all ruined. But if we stop crying, the water will dry up all together. Either way, we're sunk.

Over the winter, things calmed to a dull roar. Blue's eardrums were numb from the sound of falling water and the only thing he could hear was the call of the wild.

On Valentine's Day he decided to look for love. He went to the butterfly conservatory, where he hadn't been since he was a child. The woman behind the counter looked at the boy who was six foot two and two hundred pounds and hesitated as she handed him his change. She looked at him like she was afraid he would open his mouth and spit a room full of rat poison, or pull an Uzi out of his biker jacket and hold her hostage while he let all the butterflies go free.

He wanted to reassure her. Tell her he loved butterflies, and only wanted to stand among them. Perhaps he would sketch some of them in his sketchbook later like he had done when he was a child. “I used to come here with my dad when I was a kid,” he tried to explain. But it was too late, he'd been defeated by the threatened look in her eyes, and rather than enjoy his moments beyond the turnstile, he looked down at the ground in a room full of fluttering wings.

The truck seemed to be the only good thing in his life at that moment. It toughened him to sit inside steel casing, it made a man out of him when he drove. But his days as a tow-truck driver had been numbered from the start. There was a lot less cruising for chicks with a cup of coffee gripped between his thighs and a lot more arguing with people in suits than he had bargained for. He thought tow-truck drivers were cool until he realized they were only cool to themselves. Everybody else treated them like scum. Like piranhas. He wasn't quite ready to be universally despised.

He stared through glass at a crusty row of chrysalises hanging on for life. He watched a new butterfly box her way out of her prehistoric sarcophagus, emerge a hesitant, slippery beauty. He saw freedom, and resolved then and there to make like a monarch and migrate. Emma had done it. His trip might be the end of him, but he didn't care. What mattered was direction.

Trespassing

Over roast pork in a dark, wood-panelled dining room on Easter Sunday, Annelisa was frothing at the mouth over Andrew's acceptance to Stanford. Her baby boy had a brilliant future ahead of him. “I'm so proud of you,” she repeated.

Andrew blushed in silence, and Emma audibly wrestled a piece of pork fat between her teeth. Nothing felt right. Not the meat in her mouth, not the pictures on the walls, not Andrew beside her, not the words coming from Annelisa's mouth. All the pieces were the same but they just didn't seem to add up the way they once had.

She could see Annelisa was gearing up for one of those nauseating rides where she determined everyone's lives according to her own fantasies. I see where Andrew gets his ambition, Emma thought for the thousandth time, as Annelisa turned to her daughter, mapping out her life for her as well. She was keen to see Rebecca go to med school. Probably hoped she'd become a brain surgeon. Emma watched Rebecca as she arranged the peas on her plate in a straight line and sent telepathic messages to the potatoes on her plate.
Go away
, Emma could hear her saying.
I don't eat you. I don't eat much at all
. Emma kept
watching as Rebecca's pupils darted back and forth and Annelisa persisted: question after suggestion after question.

Just when it looked to Emma like Rebecca was going to blow, Russell interjected and said, “Just give her time.”

Emma waited for Annelisa's reaction. Watched and waited as Annelisa's knuckles turned white. “Time?” she shouted at Russell. “You sound just like her father.”

Confused, Emma slumped back in her chair. She stared at Annelisa; she looked around the table at all their faces as if she were looking through a one-way mirror. Through the glass, their features were distorted and enormous, all big hair and big teeth and pupils stuck on overdrive. They looked ugly, foreign.
Foreign
was her father's word, although she'd never understood his meaning of it before. Emma had heard him use it against people she thought looked exactly like him. But perhaps this is the way Oliver saw himself in the world. Like he was the last surviving member of a species roaming around a planet populated with otherworldly pretence.

She stared out the kitchen window. She saw Oliver there, lurking in the vegetable garden, feet hovering just above the spot where lettuce would eventually grow. He rolled his eyes and Emma was relieved. At least somebody, even a deadbeat dad hanging over a vegetable patch, understood. She was, after all, her father's daughter.

“You know what, Annelisa …” Emma began saying, much to Andrew's horror. “I don't think you give a shit about anyone's welfare or happiness. All you care about is superficial markers of status: credentials, class, material stuff. You'd like Rebecca to be a doctor even if she was prescribing herself a thousand laxatives every day.” Emma touched her lower lip. She wondered if Oliver had actually said the words: poked his head through the kitchen window and blurted them out.

“Emma! How dare you. When we've given you a home.”

“I'm not an orphan,” Emma said defensively. “I do have parents. I do come from somewhere,” she said.

“Andrew?” she said later.

“Yes,” he replied, his tone terse. He still hadn't forgiven her for her dinnertime outburst.

“Russell isn't Rebecca's father?”

“He's our stepfather.”

“So he isn't your father either?”

“No.”

“Why didn't you ever tell me that?”

“Because it's irrelevant.”

Irrelevant?
The truth was, the more she saw, the more she realized they weren't a family at all. It was all an illusion and Emma had bought it wholesale. What's that thing they say about castles in the sand? she wondered, as she stared at the ceiling. Does it mean that one swift kick from a bully on the beach can destroy everything you think you have? Does it mean that without cement foundations your house is likely to crumble?

“You know, Andrew,” she eventually began to speak. “You just can't keep building a skyscraper without scaffolding, especially when people are questioning whether the whole building was ill-conceived and structurally unsound in the first place.”


What
are you talking about?” he asked her.

She shook her head. “I don't know. My dad lost all sense of the third dimension—perhaps I wasn't even born with it.”

“You don't make any sense to me any more,” he said in frustration.

“Did I ever really?”

“If you are so hell bent on ruining things, Emma, I'll leave you to it.”

“Ruining,” she muttered to herself. “I make ruins.”

Waking up alone in the dull morning light she packed a duffel bag full of clothes and books. She tiptoed out of the house for fear that the whole building was going to come crashing down on top of her. There were footsteps in the vegetable garden. The prints of well-worn running shoes. She stepped in, bare-soled and angry, and looked through the dirty kitchen window for one last time. She had just enough sense left to put the rock in her hand back down.

West

All men seemed to be heading west. Andrew off to California, and now Blue, who'd announced he was sick of living in a hell hole, was going to travel across the country in search of somewhere or something better.

He never said he was going looking for his father. Elaine didn't know it, Emma might have been able to guess, but even Blue wasn't sure if that was the motivation. What he felt was scattered. He hadn't given up on his father at all. He'd just lost him. He'd stayed away for too long, and Oliver had disappeared. He'd gone searching and come up with nothing. In the coffee shop he'd asked the regular customers, asked them again and again, asked them until one of them finally gave him an answer. Truth or lie, it didn't matter, it was an answer he was after.

“I think I heard him talkin' about goin' out west,” a construction worker with a harelip had said. “But the guy's nuts. Always mumbling about something or other.”

The spectre of Oliver hung haunting in the West, because it had to hang somewhere, and Blue didn't know which way to turn. Some cat named Fucked Up had grabbed a hold of the end of his ball of yarn and was tearing through the streets of the city leaving him thin and
stretched to his limits. He felt like lime-green thread lying on cold pavement. Pointless wool spaghetti. No sauce and not enough for a meal.

As he was boarding the bus, Elaine handed her son a bagged lunch like he was a kid going off to summer camp. It was a sad peanut-butter gesture—a tragic miscalculation.

“See ya later,” he said, with a wave over his shoulder as he boarded the bus.

“Call when you get there, won't you?” Elaine pleaded.

“Yeah, yeah, Mum. Don't fuss,” Blue responded.

Although she was relieved he was going, doing something other than sitting on the couch as he had for the past several months, she was worried about him. It wasn't easy having an angry young man living under the same roof, punching holes in the walls, plastering over them, and then punching holes in them again. He was looking more and more like his father every day and God knows that wasn't a sight she wanted to see every night when she got home from work. But he'd stopped talking altogether lately, and that was what worried her most.

A week before, he had walked in at dinnertime and simply announced that he was moving to Banff. Elaine, nearly choking on a Brussels sprout, had said, “If that's what you want to do, Blue. But you do realize it can get awfully cold, don't you?”

“At least I'll be able to get a fucking job there. Better prospects than this shit hole,” he had said.

“Tell Em she can keep my truck for me. Drive it out and see me when she gets back—that is, if she ever gets back,” he had said the day before he left, tossing Elaine the keys. “But tell her not to drive it like a girl, okay?”

“Are you going to tell your sister you're leaving?”

“I don't really think she'll give a shit,” he replied.

Feeling guilty, he did call her later that evening though. “Em, I'm thinking about going out west for a while. Making some money, getting the fuck out of this place.”

“But for how long?” she asked, her heart sinking.

“Dunno.”

“Won't you be lonely?” she said sadly. “I mean, I would be lonely.”

“I'm used to it. Doesn't matter where you are.”

“I guess so. But at least you've got family, people who know you here,” she tried, grasping at straws.

“Right,” he said, making no effort to mask the sarcasm.

She knew he was right: they were not much of a family, and she'd hardly been much of a sister to him of late. “And what about Dad?” she asked.

“What about him?”

“Have you given up on him?”

“Why are you asking?”

“Just wondering. I mean if you go, he won't know where to find you if he chooses to show up again.”

“Thought you didn't give a shit.”

“Just taking inventory, I guess. I don't know who's here and who isn't anymore.”

“I've gone looking, but I can't find him.” Blue didn't say he sensed this absence was different, but Emma could hear it in his voice. Up until that point she'd always expected that they would eventually hear from Oliver again. That he would call Blue from a payphone somewhere and say, “Lou! Come and have a steak with your old man.” Or call Emma and say, “Telephone banking, that's where it's at, Emma,” and ask her whether she'd finished her useless degree yet. In Blue's voice, though, she heard the possibility that this time he might have disappeared for good.

Emma hated to admit it to herself, but the thought of oceans and worlds between her and Oliver offered some relief. Maybe he's even dead, she thought, swallowing guilt.

“Will you write to me?” she asked Blue.

“I'm not much of a correspondent, Em. But I'll read if you write.”

“But how will I know if you get my letters if you don't write back?”

“Booly boo,” he said.

“Uh-huh,” she nodded. She'd have to listen to him in a previous tongue. A language they'd shared before words were intelligible; one they used now when words didn't make enough sense. “Aren't you going to miss me?” she asked hopefully.

He didn't know quite how to respond. He had, after all, been missing her for years.

Blue gave his mother a peace sign from behind the green glass of the bus window. He saw her clasp her arms across her waist and start to cry. She looked sad, his mother, she looked tragic. He couldn't stand to see it. He gave her a final nod, stuck his Walkman on, threw his coat over his head, inhaled the stale smell of tobacco from the lining of his coat, and closed his eyes.

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