16
In the end I went. What choice did I have?
I was afraid of what Eric would say to the police, and Alma’s
vehemence, however puzzling, was irrefutable. I had to trust that
she was right, that I was being paranoid, and that if I wasn’t,
Eric would not be so stupid as to act now. One seldom truly
believes that the worst will happen.
Before I left I apologized again.
She winked forgiveness. “Friends must be honest
with each other, mustn’t they?”
I told her I would call her once I touched
down.
“Do not concern yourself with me,” she said. “Put
me out of your mind.”
“You know I won’t be able to do that.”
“Do your best, Mr. Geist. Enjoy yourself. As the
saying goes, we have only one life to live.”

FATHER FRED was at the baggage claim to greet
me.
“Welcome home,” he said.
In the years since I had last seen him he had
fallen straight into middle age: his face seamed, his eyebrows the
color of Spanish moss. We embraced, and through his coat I felt
bone.
“I was going to take a taxi.”
“Your mother told me. That’s why I’m here.”
I’d forgotten what a crazy driver he was. We hit
the interstate going ninety, giving us three quarters of an hour to
talk. I asked after the church, after people close to him. When we
got around to discussing the memorial, he employed his usual tact,
never a bad word, although it was clear my mother had run him
ragged.
“It’s a blessing,” he said, “if for no other reason
than it’s brought you back. I was afraid I wouldn’t get to see you
before I left.”
“So,” I said. “California.”
He nodded.
“What’s in California.”
“This time next year, a lovely Catholic school near
Santa Barbara will be in need of a principal. I’ll be doing some
teaching, too. They have an olive grove on the grounds. I went for
a visit, and I’m pleased to report that the climate reminded me of
Rome.”
“... sounds wonderful.”
“Joseph,” he drawled, “you never were much of a
liar.”
Whatever ill will I’d felt upon getting the news
from my mother had long since dissipated, certainly after I’d come
through the revolving door to find him waiting for me. My urge to
fix him in place was selfish, not to mention futile, and I wanted
very much to be happy for him. I worked to muster more enthusiasm.
“It won’t be the same without you,” I said.
“Oh, I don’t know about that. One thing I’ve
learned over the years is that it’s impossible for a clergyman to
overstate his own insignificance.”
“And Mater Dei?”
“Father Martin’s taking over. You’ve met him, I
assume.”
The other priest had freckles and blunted critical
thinking skills. “Once or twice.”
“He’s extremely popular, as I’m sure you’re aware.
Almost every parish around here has been going downhill over the
last five years. Ours is one of the few exceptions, and he gets all
the credit for that. He has a background in computers. He made us a
website, if you can believe it. I have an e-mail address
now.”
“I didn’t know. I would have written.”
“I’ve always had a phone.”
“Mea culpa.”
“At any rate, I’m very comfortable leaving the
community in his hands. For all intents and purposes, it’s already
in them. What the Church needs now is new blood, people who can
restore some of the trust that’s been lost. I’ve had many good
years here, and now things have changed. All part of His plan. I
know you don’t think there is a plan, but someday you’ll
see.”
“You think?”
“I do. But either way, I believe God appreciates
the fact that you’ve given Him a good deal of thought.” He smiled,
flicked on his turn signal. “Even if you came out wrong in the
end.”
As we left the interstate and headed along
Riverfront, a light rain began to fall. We came to the place where
my brother drove off the road, and Father Fred pulled over and cut
the engine. Wet shadows streaked the interior of the car.
“I come here to reflect sometimes,” he said.
“It’s not very scenic.”
“No. But it helps me remember.”
I said nothing.
“I’ll miss this place,” he said.
“I never have,” I said.
“You will.” He started the car. “Someday.”
THE MEMORIAL TOOK PLACE that afternoon in the
church social hall. The aforementioned photo of Chris sat out on a
stand near the entrance. Taken his freshman year of high school, it
captured him in all his fresh-faced glory. There was a guestbook. I
sat toward the front, where I wouldn’t have to talk to people as
they entered.
The turnout was much larger than I’d expected,
close to forty, wives and children accompanying men my brother had
grown up with. Father Fred spoke first, warmly recalling Chris’s
service. Then came the school friends, telling stories about the
teenager they remembered and the good times they’d had—stories
intended to be funny but that for the most part came across as
elegies to adolescence. As per my mother’s description, everyone
had changed, few for the better. Tommy Snell was indeed as bald as
his father; so was Kevin Connar, plus he had a gut the size and
shape of a compost heap. I overheard someone whisper that he was
gettin the gastric bypass.
My mother’s friend Rita Green recited a selection
from Housman’s “To an Athlete Dying Young.” I was impressed by this
until I realized that Father Fred had chosen the readings. She then
presented, on behalf of the ladies’ sewing circle, a check in
support of Children’s Hospital, and a wall hanging of a lighthouse,
which, she explained, symbolized the presence of lost loved ones in
our lives.
I glanced at my father. He, too, had aged. No
longer the ox-like tyrant of my memory, but loose, soft, inert.
He’d barely spoken to me since I’d gotten home, barely spoken at
all. I wondered what he made of the people standing before him,
evoking his dead son, singing of what had been and what would never
be. If he heard an indictment, he did not show it. Sometimes I
envied him: his was an unexamined life, and therefore a more
peaceful one than I could ever have.
The ceremony ended, and I told my mother I’d see
her back at the house. I asked Father Fred to drive me to the
cemetery, where I could pay my respects in private, with words of
my own, or in silence if I so chose.
STANDING IN THE KITCHEN, my ear plugged to block
out the noise of the reception, I phoned Alma several times that
evening. Nobody ever answered, and each time I returned to the
living room feeling incrementally more tense. By nine o’clock a
handful of people remained, circling the crudites and a
skinned-over bowl of onion dip. Tommy Snell did his best to engage
me in a conversation about insoles. I told him it was good to see
him and again made my way to the phone, sitting down alone at the
breakfast table and trying to think of what I could possibly do for
her from this far away. Most likely she wasn’t picking up because
she was in the throes of an attack—which, while upsetting to
imagine, was far better than the alternative. I considered calling
Drew, asking him to drop by. But she didn’t know him, and moreover,
if she was resting, she wouldn’t answer the door any more than the
phone.
“I’ll be seeing you.”
Father Fred was in the doorway, one hand up.
As I walked him out, we passed through the living
room—empty now except for my mother, who was stacking paper plates
and stuff ing them into a trash bag. Father Fred kissed her on the
cheek.
“It was a beautiful ceremony,” she said. “Thank
you.”
“Thank you for suggesting it,” he said.
She smiled tremulously. “I never do stop thinking
about him.”
“That’s all right,” Father Fred said. “You think as
much as you want.
The katydids had begun their nightly riot. Father
Fred regretted that a morning meeting kept him from driving me to
the airport. I thanked him and wished him luck.
“I have e-mail now,” he said. “No excuses.”
I watched him peel out, debating whether I ought to
try Alma one last time. It was close to ten P.M., eleven in
Cambridge. I had left my parents’ number with her—all but
irrelevant if anything had gone seriously wrong. I told myself I
was getting lathered up over nothing, and had just begun to believe
it when a crash from inside the house brought me hurrying up the
front walk.
My mother was standing in the center of the living
room. Her face was dry, and the only way to tell she was crying was
by looking at her stomach, which convulsed as she watched my father
try to tip over the china cabinet. He’d had greater success with a
glass end table, which now consisted of a circular faux-brass frame
and a sea of shards. The cabinet didn’t give in quite so easily. A
good eight feet tall and loaded down with plates, it would raise up
a few inches before my father lost his grip and the whole thing
slammed back down, narrowly missing his toes. That this was such a
tiresome and involved process spoke to the passage of time; in his
prime, he would have already dealt with the cabinet and moved on to
something else. Now, though, he was sweating, bent over and putting
his back into it, grunting swinishly.
And laughing. He was laughing like a maniac. That
wicked sense of humor of his was intimately connected to his
physical vitality. Both had attenuated with age, and watching him
heave and oink and giggle, I realized what it was he was trying to
achieve: resurrection through an act of destruction.
“Dad,” I said.
He ignored me. My mother looked at me beseechingly,
though I did not know whether she wanted me to go on or to shut
up.
“Dad. Stop it.”
He grunted, slipped, almost fell, steadied himself,
began again to push.
I took him by the arm; he flung my hand away and
turned on me, smiling cockeyed, stink rising off him in great brown
waves.
“Joey,” my mother said.
“Go to bed,” I said.
“Let’s dance,” my father said.
He pitched forward into my arms. The smell was even
worse from up close.
“Oh, how we danced,” he sang.
I tried to hold him still.
“Dance, you little shitbird.”
“I’m not little,” I said.
“Oh God,” my mother said. Her hands were curled at
her mouth.
“ ‘Let’s twist again. Like we did last
summer.”’
“Come on. Upstairs.”
“Oh my God.”
“‘... like we did last yeeeaaar.”’
“Move it,” I said, wrestling with him.
“I’m not done,” my father said.
“You’re done, all right.”
“Shitbird.”
Though I had been taller than him for years, this
was the first real-world application of our strength differential.
He had no choice but to stumble along with me as I walked him to
the stairs.
“I’m gonna kick your ass,” he said to me.
“All right,” I said.
“Think you can lip off to me.”
I pinned his arms to his sides as we toddled down
the hall.
“Goddammit. Let me go.”
“Almost there.”
“Let me the fuck go.”
We reached the base of the stairs. I released him
and he fell down, moaning and holding his head.
“I can’t carry you up the stairs,” I said.
He stopped moaning, looked at me, grinned. “I
know.”
I didn’t know what he meant by that, but it
unnerved and insulted me, and I felt my neck growing hot. “Do what
you want,” I said. “I don’t care.”
“You look like my father,” he said.
I’d never met my paternal grandfather—never seen
him, not even a picture—so I could not vouch for the truth of this
statement. I braced myself for what came next. A secret of some
sort, a key piece of family history that would, if not justify, at
least explain how it was we had all come to this point.
“He was a piece of shit,” said my father.
I turned my back on him and walked away.
My mother was on her knees in the living room,
picking glass out of the carpet, her hands spotted with blood. I
told her I was leaving.
“Your flight’s not till morning,” she said.
I shrugged.
“You’re going to sleep at the airport?”
“I guess so.”
Silence.
“What about me?” she asked.
I looked at her. “I can’t answer that.”
She made a broken noise, then went back to
work.
I ordered a cab, gathered my things, and left
without saying goodbye.
I BOARDED the first leg of my flight sore from
sleeping in a hard plastic chair. There were no working pay phones
in the terminal, though I did manage to call Alma’s house during my
layover in Cincinnati. No one answered. While dialing Drew’s
number, I heard the boarding announcement for my second flight and
had to hang up.
Normally I would have taken the T, but I felt antsy
enough to spring for a second cab. Down through the Ted Williams,
along Storrow, under the irrelevant graffito bemoaning the Curse.
What would happen to Sox fans now that they had nothing to complain
about, the driver asked.
“They’ll think of somethin to complain about,” he
said. “People always do.”
In no mood to chat, I overtipped him, taking the
front steps in a single bound, calling her name as I entered.
Silence.
Her bedroom door was closed. I resisted the urge to
knock by telling myself that if I needed to see her, it was mainly
for my own gratification. To distract myself I did laundry. On my
way back through the kitchen, I stopped to cut myself a piece of
Sachertorte; finding it close to stale, all the whipped cream gone,
I made a note to go out and get fresh supplies. I rinsed my plate,
dried it. It seemed impossible that only twenty minutes had elapsed
since I’d gotten home. I waited until the wash was done, then
transferred my clothes to the dryer and went out for a walk,
returning ninety minutes later with groceries in hand, utterly
beside myself. I dropped the bags in the entry hall and went
upstairs. I knocked. Silence. I knocked again, turned the handle.
Her room was pitch black and the shades down and the air rank and I
saw her bent shape in the bed, touched by a sliver of hallway
light. She was lying oddly, one arm propped up by the pillow and
jutting like a mast or a branch, her face angled away so that she
showed me the back of her head, strands of white silk limp and dry
and I knew that it was all wrong and I ran in, barking my shin
against the bedframe, an injury I did not notice until later that
night, or I should say rather the next morning, when I would see
that I had gashed the flesh wide open. That was all later. Now I
turned her over. Her nightgown was scaled with dried vomit and her
lips parted as though she was breathing but she was not and I found
her wrist and then said to myself call an ambulance, you are not
equipped to make decisions. I called the ambulance. I sat on the
floor, holding her hand, and though my mind became aware of the
approaching siren and the ringing bell I could not stand or move,
and believe it or not they broke down the front door, two nice
young men in blue uniforms who sent me downstairs while they
confirmed what I already knew to be true.
My dear Joseph,
I apologize for the trouble I will have no doubt
caused you. To spare you any additional burden, I have sent a
letter to my attorney, who shall make all the necessary
arrangements.
For your amusement, herewith a copy of my
thesis. It is of no value whatsoever except perhaps as a jeu
d’esprit. Read it with a kind eye.
Know that what I do, I do freely. You above all
ought to understand.
With everlasting fondness,
Alma