Read C4 Issue 1: Winter 2011 Page 5


  She steadies herself on the bed and examines her strawberried knee.

  “Let’s go,” I say again, and my voice cracks. Her eyes snap forward and I clear my throat. I lead her out. We shake against each other, all the way to the car.

  Something tells me that no matter how drunk she is, she will remember this in the morning. She will remember this forever. We will remember this forever. We will live quietly with this between us, like the box of black wigs and costumes that separates our sections of the closet.

  On the slow, drunk drive home, I think how surely some other version of me tried to rescue her. And another one succeeded. A version of me charged across the room and ripped Chewbacca’s mask off, to reveal this man or that—I imagine a friend, an enemy, Rodney. I will never know who he was, because I will never ask. But some version of me knows, the version who tore the mask off, bloodied the nose, carried the girl through the clapping crowd and home for a bath and bed. A version of me heard a different play, different lines. A version of me stood still because he was too embarrassed to move, a version of me stood still because he was disgusted and felt she deserved whatever she got, a version of me stood still because his heart had broken. A version of me went nuts and stabbed Chewbacca with a kitchen knife. A version punched the black-eyed P, so we never got this far. A version of me, oh desperate me, punched Holly years ago, so maybe maybe maybe she wouldn’t do this again. They all got sick at the end of the night. Predictable. Disorder.

  I get Holly home and she takes a long shower and together, we fall into bed. I take a long shower and together we fall into bed. We take a long shower and together we fall into bed. Together, like always, we fall into bed.

  __________

  James’s recitations are from: Stoppard, Tom. Arcadia. London, New York: Faber and Faber, 1993. 1.4, pages 47-48.

  The Comforts of Home

  by Anne Leigh Parrish

  In the Finger Lakes town of Dunston, New York, the spring rain had fallen for four straight days and was falling again when the old man moved in. He carried one box at a time from the trunk of his Cadillac while Beau stood across the street and watched. He wondered what it would be like having an old man in the trailer park. Everyone else was younger. Beau and his wife, Eldeen, were in their twenties. The people next to them were about the same age, with four kids who slept in bunk beds in their living room. On the other side of them was a gay guy who worked at Target, and next to him was a retired cop. No one was friendly or even nice, something Eldeen often complained about.

  The old man was careful as he hauled his boxes inside. Beau had seen old men like that in Iraq, setting out their fruit in the market, their veined hands slow and sure. The younger men’s hands were fast and reached his way to greet or beg, or sometimes were hidden deep in the pockets of their Western pants, which made him go quiet and cold wondering what they’d pull out.

  Beau wished he had his old slingshot. Even a small rock would make a big noise on the metal siding of the old man’s trailer. The old man might hit the deck, thinking he was being shot at. That would be something to see.

  The old man hauled another box to the trailer and stumbled on the top stair. Beau laughed. He couldn’t help it. He’d always found that kind of thing funny. Once, Eldeen stumbled and he laughed for about five minutes. She didn’t talk to him then for three whole days.

  The old man appeared in the doorway, stared down at his car as if he’d forgotten what he was doing, and went back inside. Beau wondered if he were loopy. His own grandfather had lost his marbles in his early seventies and imagined a whole family of people who’d never existed. Eldeen said he couldn’t have suffered from Alzheimer’s in that case, because if he did, he’d have forgotten people, not made them up. Eldeen thought she knew what she was talking about because of her leg. Suffering might give you wisdom, Beau thought, but then again, it might not.

  Eldeen drove up in their pickup truck. She was a pretty woman with wavy brown hair she liked to put clips in. Today they were shaped like strawberries. She’d had to go to the grocery store, and he didn’t want to go along. Grocery shopping was the most boring thing he’d ever done. Eldeen didn’t mind it. She went up and down the aisles talking to herself, commenting on the prices of things, wondering aloud if she should make this or that for dinner. He used to tell her not to, because people looked at her.

  “They look at me anyway,” she said, again because of her leg. Sometimes she used a crutch with a brace that went around her upper arm. It caused a sore just above the elbow, so she only used it when she had to.

  Eldeen got out of the truck.

  “Who’s that?” she asked Beau.

  “Beats me.”

  “Must be a new neighbor.”

  “Must be.”

  Eldeen limped across the road. It was a fairly wide road, and it took her a little time. When she reached the old man’s car, he came down the stairs and shook Eldeen’s hand. Eldeen ran her fingers through her hair, something she did when she was nervous, then pointed behind her. That’s us, just across there, Beau imagined her saying. Oh, yes, it’s a nice little place here, isn’t it? Eldeen was upbeat. A little too upbeat at times. The old man lifted his arm toward his open door, and they both went inside. She didn’t come out for several minutes. Why, if this isn’t the cutest old place you have here! Folks that lived here before weren’t too neighborly. Eldeen had tried to make friends with them, too. She and the wife had had words in the end, about what Beau didn’t know. Eldeen appeared in the door of the old man’s trailer, then limped down the three concrete steps that all the trailers in the park had, across the road, and up the stairs to her own home.

  Beau brought in the groceries from the truck. At the store someone else loaded them for her, and then Beau was always home to bring them inside. Beau had been discharged from the Army for over six months and still hadn’t found work. He spent a lot of time eating cereal and watching the news. Eldeen kept the books for a liquor store three days a week. They’d asked her to go full-time. She didn’t care to, but would if need be. “And you know what that means,” she said. She threatened to turn all household chores over to him. Beau hadn’t handled a broom, vacuum cleaner, or dirty dish since he returned. Before he enlisted, he helped out a lot, even though he had a full-time job then as a cashier at the drug store.

  With the recession the only place hiring was the gun factory, and Beau didn’t want to think about guns. A guy he’d gotten close to in Iraq shot himself in the head one night after another guy they’d sometimes played cards with got blown up in a roadside bombing. Beau had tried to wrench the gun free from the dead guy’s hand, and couldn’t. He didn’t remember trying to remove the gun. The whole thing was a blank. Someone else had told him what he’d done. He’d tried to put it together, make sense of his action, and couldn’t.

  “Maybe you were only trying to help him. Maybe you didn’t know he was already gone,” Eldeen said. Beau thought it was possible. His uncle, the one who lost his mind in Vietnam, sat around his parents’ basement and played Russian Roulette with his sidearm. One day the uncle was passed out drunk and Beau took the gun and threw it in the creek. He wasn’t accused of taking it because everyone knew the uncle wasn’t right in the head. It was said that he had hocked it, or locked it up some place he couldn’t remember. Eldeen kept a nine-millimeter in the drawer of her bedside table. “In case we get robbed,” she’d said. Beau thought she was nuts. For one thing, she didn’t know how to use it. For another, they didn’t have anything someone would risk getting shot at to come in and steal. He’d like to get rid of that gun, too, and knew he’d have to explain himself to Eldeen. So, the gun stayed put.

  Summer came, and everyone’s windows opened. The trailers were in a tight cul-de-sac and sounds normally kept inside leaked out. From the cop’s place came classic rock. The big family had Disney tunes. The Target guy, when he was home, liked opera. Only the old man kept quiet. Beau was charged with keeping the grass cut along the common strip, and
once, as he pushed his mower, he leaned in close under the old man’s kitchen window and heard a talk radio program discussing the pros and cons of uniform health coverage.

  One evening Eldeen and Beau sat on their stairs and watched the twilight fall. He took her hand in his, and after a moment she took it back and ran it through her hair.

  “Guess what?” she asked.

  “Can’t.”

  “I asked Sam if you could drive their delivery truck.” Sam was Eldeen’s boss at the liquor store.

  “I don’t want to drive a truck.”

  “He said he’d see what he could do.”

  “I don’t need his charity.”

  “It’s not charity if he’s paying you.”

  Her eyes were different, he thought. They had a quiet, private look to them that wasn’t there before.

  Beau kissed her neck. “You worry too much. Everything will be fine.”

  The old man came walking down the road. He had on khaki pants and a pressed shirt. He saw Eldeen and Beau, and made his way over to them. Eldeen smiled. The old man held out his hand to Beau.

  “Clifford Benderhoff,” he said. Beau shook his hand.

  “Beau,” he said.

  “Lovely night.”

  “Yeah.”

  “Just out taking my constitutional.”

  “Right.”

  Mr. Benderhoff shifted his focus from Beau to Eldeen. “Well, good night,” he said.

  “Good night,” said Eldeen.

  Mr. Benderhoff went briskly across to his own trailer.

  “He talks like a professor, doesn’t he?” asked Eldeen.

  “If you say so.”

  “He used to teach college, you know. He told me so that first day.”

  Beau snorted. Someone was pulling Eldeen’s good leg. No one who used to teach college would end up living in a trailer. Beau didn’t know why the old man would say such a thing to her, and figured he might be a little loopy after all.

  After that, Eldeen looked out for Mr. Benderhoff. She brought him bland casseroles and cheese bakes, stuff Beau couldn’t imagine a guy with no teeth would manage, given how hard and chewy everything Eldeen made was.

  “What makes you think he has no teeth?” Eldeen asked. She was at the sink in a sleeveless top with a little lace collar that made her look cute.

  “So, he’s got teeth. How come you gotta feed him all the time?”

  “Hon. It was last Tuesday, Thursday, and today.”

  Beau scratched his chin. He was growing a beard. Eldeen said once that she liked beards.

  “Where’s his family to feed him?” he asked.

  “Widower. Daughter all the way out in California.”

  “He should move out there. Old people need lots of sunshine.”

  “He’s not that old. Just seventy-two.”

  “That’s pretty old, if you ask me.”

  Her expression said she wasn’t asking him, and wouldn’t.

  * * * *

  The first time Eldeen visited Mr. Benderhoff, he said she should call him Cliff, short for Clifford. He invited her to sit in a chair by the living room window. Nearby two other chairs were wrapped in old blankets. Boxes were stacked against the far wall, and a robust ivy plant sat on the kitchen table and trailed down to the floor. Cliff saw where she was looking and explained that he’d had the plant for many years and had taken it with him every time he moved. She asked why he moved so often, and the slow wandering of his clear blue eyes, as if he were struggling to make sense of his new home, said he was lonely. Eldeen understood about loneliness. It had been hard having Beau overseas. He was gone a total of four years, with only one visit home in between. Then she found that in some ways she was lonelier after he returned than before. She thought it was a matter of getting used to one way of life, then having to get used to another one all over again. Cliff offered a cup of coffee which she declined. The next visit she accepted, and on the third he asked if it were too early in the day for a small whiskey. She didn’t think it was. By then Cliff had arranged his things in a very homey way. The kitchen table had red placemats. The trailing ivy now sat atop the entertainment center and reached its way towards the light from the nearest window. The two wrapped chairs were gone and replaced with a new sofa. A round coffee table stood in front covered with neatly laid out magazines whose titles Eldeen had never seen, The New Yorker, Atlantic Monthly, The Economist, and one she did know, Arizona Highways. Eldeen asked if Cliff had been to Arizona and he said, yes indeed, several times. He was looking at a little place out there where he’d go for good, as soon as some of his investments came due in the fall. Though Eldeen had only known him for a week or two, she was sad to think he’d be gone that soon.

  * * * *

  Beau’s friend Ty lifted his beer and took a long swig. The backs of his hands were spotted with orange, red, blue, and black. His head, which was shaved, had dots of green. Beau tried to think how paint had ended up there and didn’t ask. Ty was working on another canvas, a deep swirling thing that had no beginning and no end. Beau thought it wasn’t so hard to do, throwing paint around like that.

  “Old lady with the geezer again?” Ty asked.

  “Yup.”

  Ty burped, leaned back on the sofa, stared at the ceiling and said, “You should give her a kid.”

  Beau had had the same thought. A kid would keep Eldeen at home, where she belonged. This attachment to the old man was just her needing to take care of someone. Beau could take of himself, so he wasn’t a good substitute. Women needed to nurture and tend. If he couldn’t talk her into a kid, then he’d suggest a puppy. If she didn’t want a puppy, then she could plant a garden.

  “Guy got any money?” asked Ty.

  “Who?”

  “The geezer.”

  “Doubt it.”

  “That’s his Cadillac over there, right?”

  “So?”

  “Looks pretty late-model to me.”

  Beau finished his beer. He had an urge to throw the bottle at their old television set. “Why the interest in his assets?” he asked.

  “Well, if he’s as cultured as the old lady says, maybe he’d like to buy one of my paintings.”

  Having those crazy, loud swirls of color in such a small space would be a lot to take. Beau said he didn’t really think so and got them both another beer.

  * * * *

  Finally Beau had to tell Eldeen to stop talking so much about the old man. She was always going on about how interesting he was and how many places he’d been. Beau said if that were so, then why didn’t he take himself off for a long visit somewhere? Eldeen resented that Beau treated Cliff as if he were a nuisance when he was anything but. And it wasn’t as if she were neglecting anything there at home. Wasn’t his dinner always made and his clothes always washed? Weren’t the rugs vacuumed and the dishes always done? And wasn’t she bringing in a paycheck when he wasn’t even looking for work? It was the way she was leaning so defiantly on her crutch that made Beau see he had to do something, so he invited her to dinner at Madeleine’s.

  “Oh, my god, did you get a job?” she asked. She ka-thumped her way across their tiny living room and put her arms around him in a three-way hug—her, him, the crutch, which fell to the floor. He accepted her embrace. Her face was shiny and full of light.

  “No,” he said.

  “So, why...”

  “Can’t I do something nice for my own wife once in a while?” He hadn’t meant to sound defensive. She picked up her crutch.

  “That’s a pricey place. Are you sure it’s a good idea?” she asked.

  “It’s a great idea. Now, do you want to go or not?”

  “Of course I do, Pumpkin. It’ll be awesome.”

  And it was, until Beau had too much to drink. He was a beer man, unused to hard liquor, and while Eldeen sipped her Bordeaux, Beau downed the whiskey sours. He got giggly, romantic, and surly, all in a row. Then he apologized at length in the truck as Eldeen piloted them through the country da
rkness. Part of the restaurant’s charm was that it was out of the way, in a restored farm house that had once been owned by one of county’s wealthiest families. Beau reminded her of this as they drove, then leaned against the window and fell asleep.

  Back at the trailer, he snored in his seat. Eldeen couldn’t wake him. It was late, she was tired and put out by his behavior that evening, though the food had been awfully good. She’d ordered a beef dish she couldn’t pronounce and found it one of the tastiest things she’d ever eaten. She nudged Beau again with no luck. She thought of poking him hard with the rubber tip of her crutch. She didn’t want to leave him there all night in case it got chilly, which it probably wouldn’t, but still, it didn’t seem right.

  The lights were on in Cliff’s trailer. Eldeen made her way over, knocked, waited, and then knocked again. Cliff came to the door and said he’d been reading on his chair and must have dropped off. She explained the problem.

  “Oh, my dear, what a bother for you! Of course, I’ll be right over,” Cliff said.

  He took a moment to get out of his frayed blue bathrobe and into a pair of jeans and a flannel shirt. The jeans were a surprise. He looked good, she thought, strong and capable. Just the other day he’d mentioned that he still went to the gym three days a week and worked with weights. Eldeen admired him for wanting to stay in shape.

  Cliff wrestled Beau out of the truck, leaned him on his shoulder, and walked him to the front door.

  “Oops,” Beau said. “Oopsie-doopsie.”

  Cliff guided Beau down the hall to their bedroom and shoved him onto the bed. Then he lifted his legs off the floor and got him in the middle, away from the edge.

  “Hey, Baby, what say you get naked, get in here, and give your old man a blowjob?” Beau mumbled.

  Eldeen’s face burned. Cliff pretended he hadn’t heard a thing. Back in the living room he said, “Don’t be hard on him in the morning. He’ll feel rotten enough.” Eldeen noticed that she’d stained her dress at the restaurant. It wasn’t a new dress, but it was one of her favorites, a little yellow jersey with embroidered roses around the neck. She stepped out of her white sandals, wriggled free of her crutch and sat down. Cliff sat down, too, on the sofa opposite her. The propped up crutch fell loudly to the floor. Cliff reached for it.