The Quick & the Dead (17 page)

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Authors: Joy Williams

Tags: #Fiction, #Westerns

BOOK: The Quick & the Dead
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Alice decided against sharing the nurse’s tale with Ottolie, who was still formulating another tomorrow for Alice.

“You could be making a sandwich and accidentally set yourself on fire. Do you know how to make a sandwich? You have to preheat the oven to three hundred degrees.”

Corvus appeared in the doorway. Ottolie smiled at her and said, “I think you’re someone else.”

“It’s time for me to go, Ottolie,” Alice said.

“You know when I knew I was a goner?” Ottolie said, “I was about to explain the mountains to a friend. I was about to say, ‘There are the Mustang and the Whetstone Ranges, then, less sharply cut, are the Rincons and Tanque Verde, while soft in the distance loom the noble Santa Catalinas.’ I was about to raise my arm and grandly indicate but I could not raise my arm. I’d forgotten how it was you caused your arm to be raised.”

“I’m sorry, I have to go now,” Alice said. “I’ll see you next week.”

“On the other side of the valley are the Mules, the Dragoons, the Winchesters, and the distant wild Galiuros.” Ottolie pursed her lips. “The distant wild Galiuros,” she called, as if to someone.

As Alice and Corvus were leaving, they passed a lady bent almost double creeping down the hallway, gripping her walker. She was making up her grocery list. “Flour, yeast, raisins,” she said. “Tea, eggs, grits. A good broom. A
good
broom …”

18

C
arter came into the living room and saw the three girls sitting on the sofa.

“So, what are you plotting today?” he said merrily. He felt exceptional after an uneasy week. Donald had encouraged him to go on a fast where he drank nothing but water and ate only a kind of clay, and he felt exhilarated if somewhat weak. The black scorpioid toxins that had appeared in the toilet bowl were—well he didn’t want to dwell on them, but they were damn impressive. Appalling, of course, but now he could understand the quiet pride people could take in the purification of their intestinal tract. He felt wonderful and was quite unaware that he looked haggard and unwell.

Alice looked up at him, startled. Her face was mobile and expressive, and what he saw on it now was dismay and random guilt. She would not do well in a police lineup.

“Mr. Vineyard,” she said.

“Hi,” Carter said, thinking he should start over. They all were looking at him in astonishment. Madness is flight, he always thought when he saw Corvus, such a curious name, though lovely. He’d never understood why Ginger had insisted on the awkward name, Annabel, for their bundle of issue. It brought to mind a dairy.

He looked at his dear Annabel. “Honey,” he said, “I didn’t mean to interrupt.”

“Are you all right, Daddy?”

“I’m
fine
,” Carter crowed. Thank God for Donald and his clay. And Ginger hadn’t visited him for the last several nights. Maybe she was actually … gone. He was cautiously optimistic. The last time she’d shown up, she kept asking, “Do you think I have pretty eyes?” but he’d had the
wit not to look at them, into them, whatever. Her eyes had never been particularly pretty, though he would’ve been out of his mind to have said so. They were normal eyes, he recalled, in no way transfixing.

“We were thinking of going on a camping trip,” Annabel said, “and I was saying I could make a soufflé but—”

Carter frowned. “A soufflé?”

“—but Alice said just hard-boiled eggs.”

“Isn’t it too hot to go camping? Though I don’t mean to block any tendency toward enthusiasm.”

“It’s more of a retreat,” Alice said.

“You’re awfully young for retreats,” Carter said.

“Daddy,” Annabel said, “we are not children.”

“I’d be afraid of the bears.”

“Oh, Daddy.”

“I would.”

“Bears were extirpated from this area,” Alice said, “more than fifty years ago.”

“In my reading the other day, I came across this line by John Muir,” Carter said. “ ‘Bears are not companions of men but tenderly loved children of God.’ ” He directed this to Alice. He liked old Alice.

“What utter crap,” Alice said.

“He was a fine man,” Carter protested. “He began the American conservation movement.”

“I hate people who talk like that,” Alice said. “It mixes everything up.”

“He wrote a very nice book about a dog,” Carter persisted.
“Stickeen.”

Alice was unimpressed. Corvus looked at him and smiled.

“Do you have a dog?” Carter asked.

“No,” Corvus said. For an instant he gazed openly at her face, which didn’t seem quite human to him. Or rather, it
was
human but one that most humans didn’t happen to have. That was preposterous, of course. Suddenly he felt a bit wobbly. What he needed was a big milk shake.

“I should get you all library cards,” he said, trying to shake off what seemed to him a curious numbness. “Wouldn’t you all like your own library card? Many a summer hour was made delightful to me through books as a boy.”

“That was then, Daddy,” Annabel said.

“Well, yes,” Carter said.

“This is now.”

He was reluctant to admit it. He sat down opposite them but, eliciting looks of disappointment, bounded to his feet again. “I didn’t mean to interrupt your deliberations.”

“Here comes Donald,” Annabel said. “He just drove up.”

Donald! In his little lotus white car. Carter’s heart soared. At the same time, he thought he glimpsed a vulture rising on voluptuary wings from the swimming pool, where it had been hunched, drinking. Remarkable, the things that came to drink. Sad, somehow. He excused himself and hurried out to greet Donald, to direct or be directed in their labors together.

“Is he still the gardener?” Alice asked.

“Of course he’s still the gardener. What do you mean?” Annabel was looking at the hiking boots she’d just bought for this expedition. Never in her life had she encountered anything so totally without charm.

“Well, there doesn’t seem much left to do around here. It all looks pretty nice.”

“Some people get very involved in gardening, Alice. It can become a lifelong obsession. Sometimes they just move rocks around together. Donald is a big believer in fighting ass … acid—God, what is that word?”

“Acedia,”
Corvus said.

“That’s right! You are so good, Corvus. You could go on
Jeopardy
or something. It means sloth, right?”

“It means more like experiencing the moment as an oppressive weight. It means listlessness of spirit.” Corvus pushed a fallen wing of black hair behind her ear.

Annabel didn’t know what else to do, so she smiled generously. “Well, he’s got Daddy moving those rocks, all right.”

Alice was inquiring as to what Carter’s occupation actually was.

“He was trained to design things. Not office buildings or skyscrapers but other stuff. Not houses or furniture either, exactly. He was trained to make use of
space
, Alice. But he never did. I guess he and Mommy just wanted to relax. He was asked to design a zoo once. He had some wonderful ideas for it. It was in Newark and had a tropical rain forest wing. It
had mold and microbes and everything. Plus one of those quetzal birds. I remember because I asked for one of its feathers after it died. But I never got one, or if I did I can’t remember what happened to it. But it really was a good zoo. There was an elephant there who painted pictures with her trunk. Watercolors. You could buy them.”

“They made an elephant paint watercolors?”

“She liked it, I think. But they weren’t very good.”

“This was your father’s idea, to make an elephant paint watercolors?”

“Oh no, she’d always painted. She’d been at the old zoo for a long time and she’d been painting there too.”

“Zoos are prisons, Annabel.”

“But that’s just the point. Daddy wanted to make it more pleasant. His idea was to build invisible walls or something so nothing would know it was in prison.”

“ ‘Invisible walls’? What do you think an invisible wall is?” Alice demanded.

“Alice, stop hounding me! She’s hounding me again,” she said to Corvus. She’d heard you could marginalize people by abstracting them in their presence, referring to them to another as though they weren’t there. It was a social skill she wished she were better at. It didn’t work at all with Alice.

“What did the quetzal do? Fly into the invisible wall? Was your father upset when it died? Did he feel he had blood on his hands?”

“Of course not. It could’ve died of old age as far as anyone knew. It just died. Really, you know what you inspire people to do, Alice? Lie. You inspire them to lie. You ask a question and then you get so annoyed when you hear the answer—”

“All answers are annoying,” Alice said.

“My father never designed a zoo, all right? He never did!”

“Did he ever design one of those special rooms in airports where people are escorted to hear the news about plane crashes?”

Annabel looked at her.

“Will anyone waiting for the arrival of Flight 501 please go immediately to the Privacy Lounge,”
Alice intoned. “I wonder what those rooms are like. Do they use them for anything else, or is it all set up for that one specific purpose?”

“You are so heartless,” Annabel said.

“I bet you won’t find any invisible walls in one of those places.”

“If your granny and poppa went down in a place crash, you’d be upset.”

“They haven’t flown in years. It hurts their sinuses. I’d be upset,” Alice said.

“And what about that stupid Sherwin? If flaming Sherwin went down in flames, you’d be upset.”

“I don’t know, actually,” Alice said.

“He is so disturbing. I hate the way he looks at you, it’s such a disturbing look.”

“Yeah, well, I don’t mind that so much.”

“He looks at Corvus in a disturbing way too, I think.”

“That’s because Corvus is so cool,” Alice said lightly.

Corvus shook her head and laughed.

“There’s no way you could have a loving, fulfilling relationship with him,” Annabel was saying. “Plus he’s way old.”

“He’s twenty-six. That’s not even ten years older.”

“He is
lying
,” Annabel yelped. “See, you just bring that out in people. You know what I think of when I see him looking at you? I think ‘white slavery.’ ‘White slavery,’ ” she repeated a little uncertainly. “I think he’d use you to set up a situation for himself. You’d get men for him somehow. You’d be together, which would look weird of course, but that would intrigue certain men he wouldn’t be able to get otherwise with those repugnant looks of his.”

We could be two on a party
, Sherwin had said to Alice,
you and me
.

“Those people are so jaded, you know, it’s hard to know what they really think,” Annabel continued. “Do you ever ask him what he feels? I bet he says, ‘I don’t feel anything.’ I think he’s shy and lonely and used to getting stuff even if it’s not exactly what he wanted. It’s not just the bad skin. One time I had a crush on a football player with bad skin. But he was a football player. And there was a boy who had a limp I liked. One leg was a little bit shorter than the other, but otherwise he was adorable and very, very popular. Sometimes being a little imperfect is interesting, only Sherwin isn’t just imperfect, he’s … they don’t even like women. They think we’re fish or something, they—”

“Fish?”

“Yes, they call us fish, Alice, they have no respect at all.”

Two on a party, and when the party ends you’ll still have a life ahead of you. There’d still be time for another life
, he’d said.

“I wouldn’t even consider friendship with him, if I were you.”

“I don’t,” Alice said. She
had
lost the tiniest bit of interest in Sherwin in recent days, however reluctant she was to admit it. She’d discovered she wasn’t interested in the human mystery. It was the nonhuman mystery that held, if not exactly promise, at least the clues, though they weren’t exactly clues either, and Sherwin with his “You wanna be my girl pupil? You wanna be my Eustochium?” was getting on her nerves. Sherwin, she was beginning to realize, represented the human mystery in one of its most convoluted and self-conscious forms. He said when he left this place, he’d send for her, send her a ticket.
Would she join him there?

“If you got a free ticket to somewhere, would you take it?” Alice asked.

“Oh, I would,” Annabel said. “My God. Out of here? No question.”

“I don’t think I would,” Corvus said.

Living in that Airstream had made her even odder, Annabel thought, but she wasn’t surprised that Corvus wouldn’t accept a free ticket. She’d insist on making her own ticket, out of flattened thorns or something. And it wouldn’t even get her anywhere! Not really. Not to like Rome, say, or Paris.

“I know this is just an imaginary ticket,” Annabel said, “just a ‘what if,’ but are you really going to stay around here forever, Corvus? Won’t Social Services get on your case or something?”

Alice said, “Annabel—”

“Well, I’m just being sensible.”

“Who wanted to make a soufflé on the camping trip?” Alice demanded.

“I mean, the first thing Daddy and I did when my mother died was, we just
fled
. All our stuff was shipped out afterwards, even Mommy’s stuff, which dismayed Daddy, he thought he’d left very specific instructions. I was a little upset at first because we fled like
thieves
, practically, but now I realize a person can’t just continue to adapt
to certain sorrowful locales. If I had to keep driving past that restaurant on my way someplace, over and over that spot on the road, I—”

“Annabel,” Alice said, “when we go on our retreat, we’re not going to talk so much.”

“Oh, it’s fine when you’re talking,” Annabel said. “And why do you keep calling it a retreat? That sounds so moody. Why don’t we just commune with nature? Isn’t that what people are supposed to do when they go camping?”

“We’ll put a mattress in the back of Corvus’s truck and drive as far as we can on one of those fire trails. We’ll spend the first night in the truck, then we’ll hike all day and come back to the truck at night. We’ll try to find that little waterfall.” Like the bighorn, Alice had never seen the little waterfall, while others claimed they had.

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