CHAPTER SEVEN
 
Willin’
 
I’d been in school during my junior year for a little more than a month when Chase and Iris showed up unexpectedly at my apartment door. After two years living on campus, I’d moved to a creaky one bedroom about a fifteen minute walk from the school. I’d had a difficult time with my roommate the previous semester and decided I really wanted to live by myself. At the same time, I didn’t want to live alone, so I moved into a building that housed six other people I knew from Emerson. To me it was a nearly perfect arrangement: I got to have things exactly the way I wanted them in my living space while also having people to go to classes with, drink with, and crawl home much too late with.
 
Though one wall of the living room had flaking paint and the refrigerator considered its function to be optional, I loved the place. I bragged about it endlessly during my phone conversations with Chase and, for one of the few times in our lives, he actually seemed jealous. He kept telling me that he was going to come up to visit – something he had only done once the two previous years I was away – and I told him that he was always welcome, never expecting him to take me up on it.
 
I certainly didn’t expect him to arrive at 11:00 on a Thursday night without calling ahead first. He stood in the doorway grinning, as though he had just performed some huge trick. I looked over at Iris and she simply waved.
 
After hugging Chase, I told him that he was lucky I was home, that I might have been out at a party, leaving them sitting outside the door for hours. He reminded me that he knew that I always spent Thursday nights alone studying because only then would I be comfortable playing all weekend. I’d had that studying habit since I was ten. I had, in fact, been reading an essay by Camus when he knocked on the door. I then reminded him that he was supposed to be at school the next day and he told me that it was a half day and that as a senior he was morally obligated to take those off. My parents would of course accept this kind of thing, though I wondered if they knew that Iris was with Chase. I had no idea what Iris had told her parents and thought it wouldn’t be cool to ask.
 
While I had seven more pages of the Camus to read and Chase promised to be quiet, I decided I could finish my work Sunday night. We went to a bar a few blocks from the school and screamed conversation at one another while Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and other Seattle imports played in the foreground. Chase was much more enamored of this angst-riddled music than I was. I simply liked how the songs went from a whimper to a bang without notice and how there was a discernable melody even at the highest decibel levels. After a while, we let the music and the beer take over, assuming that we would have plenty of time to talk the next day when I finished my only Friday class. Chase and Iris held hands and occasionally said something into the other’s ear, but they seemed content simply to live in that moment. This was yet another sign that Chase had found something with Iris. When I’d been with him on dates previously, he’d always been doing something, always keeping the conversation rolling, and always moving the evening along.
 
When we left the bar, Chase announced that he was ravenous for something with local flavor, insisting we find some Boston baked beans. When I told him that I had no idea how to find these other than in a supermarket and that I wasn’t sure that this version of baked beans even came from Boston, he decided instead that he wanted tea. I assumed this was a reference to the Boston Tea Party and didn’t bother to ask for an explanation. I tried to convince him that he might want to try other Boston specialties, suggesting a trip over to Little Italy, but he’d decided that he wouldn’t be able to get to bed that night without some real Boston tea. I took him to the nearest diner.
 
I let Chase and Iris sleep in my bed while I spent the night on the couch. I was nearly asleep when the sounds of their lovemaking came through the door. This was not the first time I had been in the next room while someone else was having sex, but this was markedly different. My roommate the previous year had taken several women back to his room, filling the air with rhythmic pounding and exclamation and the concussion of bodies flipping athletically. But the sounds that Chase and Iris made were more serene and exponentially more erotic. Iris’ subtle hum of satisfaction, the whisper of a hand moving softly underneath the sheets, a warm chuckle, an intake of breath, the quiet reverence in Chase’s voice the few times he spoke. I found it a little disturbing to be listening to my brother this way (and I truly had little choice) but I also found it somewhat satisfying. I was glad that the two of them had this sexual connection together and I appreciated anew the effect that Iris had on Chase. I think they were still making love when I fell asleep.
 
The next morning, Chase walked into the living room in his boxer shorts, waking me up as he continued into the kitchen. He rummaged around for a minute and then came back to tell me that I had nothing to eat for breakfast. He walked back into my bedroom and came out fully dressed, telling me that he was going out to “forage.”
 
As soon as he closed the door to the apartment, I heard the shower go on. A few minutes later, Iris came into the living room with a towel wrapped around her head and wearing the Emerson sweatshirt I’d bought Chase for his last birthday.
 
“It was really nice of you to let us sleep in your bed last night,” she said, sitting down in a chair.
 
“I don’t think the two of you would have been very comfortable on the couch. I guess I never thought much about having guests over.”
 
“Well it was really nice of you anyway.” She smiled and looked around the room.
 
I’d gotten out from under the sheets, had put my pants on, and had been folding a blanket when she walked in. Now I sat back on the couch and watched her glancing around. I couldn’t help but think about the sounds she had made while she was making love to my brother the night before. That soft hum was a slightly lower register than her speaking voice and it spoke of feeling something on a deep level. I’d never heard a woman make that sound before and I wondered if it was something distinctive to Iris or if it was something my brother regularly generated from his partners.
 
Iris’ eyes continued to scan the room and I continued to look at her. I had of course realized that she was beautiful the very first time I saw her (even though at that point I thought she was beautiful and insane), but this was the first time that I realized how sexy she was. Almost certainly, it had much to do with what I had heard the night before, but it also had to do with how she looked just out of a shower. The towel didn’t capture all of the strands of her hair and a few tickled her neck. The sweatshirt was considerably too large for her and led me to think about the lithe body that it covered. I stopped myself from continuing this line of thought. In the past, it had been fine for me to appraise my brother’s girlfriends in this way because I had known they wouldn’t be his girlfriends for very long. But things were different with Iris and I had to consider her in a different way.
 
Iris rose and picked up the book I’d been reading the night before.
 
“I don’t get Camus,” she said.
 
“I didn’t get him in high school, either. I tried reading The Fall in my sophomore year and it gave me a headache.”
 
“Yeah, exactly.”
 
“But my philosophy professor this year has really helped me to connect with him. I’m kinda becoming a closet existentialist.”
 
She smiled. “Your secret’s safe with me. I don’t think I could ever be an existentialist, though. I prefer to have a little more meaning with my world-views.”
 
I promise you that a sentence like that had never come from the mouth of any of my brother’s other girlfriends.
 
“Well the last great philosopher I embraced was Bullwinkle, so I’m likely to move on again.”
 
She laughed and said, “When Chase and I first started dating he tried to convince me that he was a Marxist. I tried to explain to him that he really didn’t sound like a Marxist at all. Then he told me he was talking about Harpo Marx.”
 
“And he is a strict Harpo Marxist.”
 
“Yeah, I guess he is.”
 
A few minutes later, Chase returned with a bag of doughnuts and took over the room again. I left for my class around 10:00, but they stayed until after dinner. We talked about many things, mostly inconsequential. At various times during the day, though, completely unbidden, I would remember hearing them together the night before. And for at least a moment, I would have to look away.
 
008
I went into the store the next day feeling good. Iris had confirmed her interest in my staying in touch before we parted, the Phish double-CD bootleg had propelled my drive home from Lenox, and I even found Tyler’s greeting of “Morning, Captain” when I arrived cheering.
 
The idyll didn’t last very long.
 
Tuesdays in the store were always quiet. Even during the height of the summer and fall, when the inns were full most of the time and it took ten minutes to find a parking space anywhere near Russet Avenue, Tuesdays and Wednesdays remained relatively still. During the first hour I was in the store, as Tyler took notes for his accounting final and Carl put up a new shipment of Father’s Day mugs, it came to mind that I could easily take these two days off for as long as it took to sell the store.
 
It was about this time when Carl came running up from the stockroom.
 
“We have a problem,” he said, looking at Tyler.
 
“What’s wrong?” I asked.
 
“The back room is getting flooded.”
 
The three of us moved quickly to the stockroom, where water was gushing out of a burst pipe at an absurd rate. There was already an inch of water on the floor and the wall that butted up against the back display of the store was getting soaked.
 
“How the hell did this happen?” I said.
 
Carl shook his head. “I’m not sure how it started. I came back here to get a box and there was water all over the place. I tried to close the valve over there with a wrench and the valve broke.”
 
I threw my head back and cursed. The vision of an enormous flood in the back of the store doing untold damage – damage that would take months to repair, thereby extending my stay in Amber – loomed in front of me as the water continued to stream out. My cursing seemed to intimidate Carl, who started muttering apologies. I wasn’t interested in an apology. What I wanted was for the flood never to have happened in the first place.
 
While I was seething, Tyler was actually doing something. He went first to a valve that he thought controlled the water in the store, but nothing happened. As he continued to search, I continued to rant. Several minutes went by while Tyler tried to figure out how to turn off the water. During this time, the flood got worse. Nearly the entire back wall of the store was soaked now.
 
“Of course, it’s outside,” Tyler said and headed out the back door. Shortly thereafter, the water stopped streaming and Tyler returned.
 
“I’ve probably seen that valve five hundred times coming into the store,” he said. “I just never paid any attention to it.”
 
“This is a disaster,” I said, looking around the room. Most of our backup stock had been drenched. Since this was essentially cards and stationery items, that meant that all of it was ruined. I walked out of the stockroom to look at the back of the store. As I suspected, the plasterboard was soaked. What I stupidly hadn’t anticipated was that the carpet was spongy. Rivulets of water formed around my shoes.
 
“Can someone help me up here?” came a voice from the front of the store. I turned to see a man holding a magazine, looking exasperated. I turned my back to him and cursed again.
 
“I’ll get him,” Tyler said, walking to the cash register. I went back to examining the display and Tyler returned after making the transaction.
 
“This whole wall is going to have to be replaced,” I said. “Is this a load-bearing wall? Is the entire back of the store going to collapse?”
 
“What do you want me to do with these boxes,” Carl said from the stockroom. I stood up, opened the back door, and pointed outside.
 
“See that dumpster?” I said. “That’s the only thing you can do with those boxes now.”
 
Tyler put his arm around my shoulder. “You might want to wait until we talk to the insurance company.”
 
“I don’t even know who the insurance company is.”
 
Tyler took a deep breath. I think he was doing it to try to convince me to do the same. I didn’t take his suggestion.
 
“I’ll find out,” he said. He led me toward the door of the stockroom. “Listen, why don’t you take the register for a while? I’ll call the landlord and cordon off the back of the store and then I’ll get the number of the insurance company from the files.”
 
“This is a total disaster,” I said.
 
“It’s actually only a partial disaster. Let me take care of some stuff back here. You handle the front.”
 
While Tyler worked, I stood behind the counter, helping the occasional customer and stealing regular glances toward the back. I knew I’d been overreacting, but this complication was one of the few distressing scenarios I hadn’t considered before. We weren’t likely to find a buyer for the store while it was under repair. I castigated myself for having cavalierly offered to stay until my father sold the store. If I’d thought about it at all ahead of time, I would have put an outside date on my commitment. A date that would be rapidly approaching instead of receding increasingly into the distance.
 
I allowed myself to be furious about this for a while longer. Eventually, the simple act of needing to be pleasant to customers calmed me down. By the time Tyler returned to the front, I’d begun to feel somewhat chastened by the way he had taken charge while I ranted. Certainly if Tyler hadn’t been there, I would have eventually done all of the things that he did instead, but I wouldn’t have done them with his composure.
 
“Thanks,” I said to him when he got behind the counter.
 
“It’s fine. It’s a mess back there, but at least the customers won’t get wet. The landlord’s going to be here in a half hour or so. The insurance agent is Philip Watson. I’ll call him if you want.”
 
“No, I’ll call him.” He handed me a piece of paper that listed the broker’s contact information and the policy number. “You’ve done way more than your share already.”
 
By the time the afternoon came along, the landlord and Watson himself (an old friend of my father’s) had been by to examine the damage and I’d spoken to a contractor about getting to work on the repairs as quickly as possible. The activity made me feel like something was happening, even though it was really only conversation about something happening. Feeling guilty, I even sent Tyler home early once I was sure that things were under control. I kept Carl around, though there was very little for him to do.
 
As I stayed in the store, my sense of frustration returned. I walked to the back to examine everything again. I wondered if I had missed some sign that would have told me that this was coming, and I wondered if I could have done something to prevent it. I wondered what my father would have done differently. And then I wondered what Chase would have done differently. That I knew that both of them would have acted more efficiently and might have even minimized the damage did nothing to salve my mood.
 
009
That weekend, my mother went out of town with her sister for a couple of days. They’d been planning the trip for quite some time, some kind of annual spring retreat, and my mother intended to cancel it to tend to my father until I told her that I would do that job instead. It seemed that she could use the break and, sadly, taking care of my father didn’t require much.
 
On my mother’s recommendation, I hadn’t told him about the water damage in the store because I didn’t want to depress him more than he already was. This had the effect of making the weekend feel even more stilted than it was already going to be. Not only was he largely uncommunicative, but I couldn’t even come up with a conversation starter without thinking about the mess in the store. On Friday night, he sat staring at the television, picking at the roasted chicken I’d brought home, and only talking to me when I asked him a question. Between my stint at the store and the duty I was pulling here, I felt like a full-time babysitter.
 
I knew I couldn’t leave my father alone (a neighbor was staying with him while I was in the store), but I certainly didn’t need to be in the same room with him. Still, for some reason, I felt obligated to sit with him, even though he was at best tangentially aware of my presence. And so I lay on the couch, gazing at the trophies and photographs and shop projects, while he sat in his chair watching a sitcom (two kids frolicking and causing their parents to roll their eyes a lot), a mawkish drama (a dysfunctional family that still manages to love one another), and then a cop show (some kind of mystery emerging from deep in the past). At some point, I fell asleep. The first time in my adult life that I did that in front of a television. When I awoke, it was a little after eleven and Dad was giving the news the same hypnotic attention he’d given the other shows.
 
“Dad, it’s late,” I said. “Let’s go to bed.”
 
“I just want to finish watching this.”
 
“All right, but we’re going to bed after the news is over. I’m getting tired and I want to help you upstairs before I go to sleep.”
 
He didn’t say anything until a segment on a parade in Hartford finished.
 
“I’m not going upstairs tonight. I’ll sleep here.”
 
For the past three nights, he’d slept on the sofa bed in the den, unwilling to climb the steps to his bedroom. The doctors had told us that there was no reason to believe that the stress of going up a flight of stairs would do any damage to his heart, but he didn’t want to hear this. If he was going to sleep downstairs a fourth night in a row, there was a good chance he was simply going to continue to do it. In his mid-fifties, my father was acting like an elderly man.
 
“The bed upstairs is much more comfortable, Dad. We always put the guests we didn’t like very much on the sofa bed.”
 
“This is fine. I’m not up for climbing the stairs. If you could just pull the bed out for me, I’ll be okay.”
 
I wondered what would happen if I refused to pull the bed out for him. Would this force him to come upstairs with me? I guessed that he would probably just sleep in the chair. I set things up and then tried one more time to convince him to go up to his room.
 
“I’m fine here, Hugh. Go to bed if you’re tired.”
 
“Do you want me to help you to the bathroom?”
 
He scowled at me. “I can make it to the bathroom myself,” he said. At least I had some sense of the parameters now.
 
When I came back from the store on Saturday, we repeated the ritual. By 8:45, I was burning up with cabin fever. He was watching a rerun of a Super Bowl game on ESPN Classic. He didn’t even like football. He’d always said that the only games he could watch were the games Chase participated in when he was in middle school. I tried to pass the time reading The Witches of Eastwick, but the play-by-play on the television was too distracting. Finally, I decided to leave the den. I’m not even sure Dad noticed I was gone.
 
As I approached the stairs to my room, I passed the study and noticed the computer’s screen saver, a time-lapse video image of a lily blossoming. My mother was a dedicated e-mail correspondent with dozens of friends and relatives. In fact, this was the primary way I had communicated with her over the past several years.
 
Rather than reading, I decided to spend a little time online. I went to Google and typed “New Mexico.” Of course, there were nearly three million items returned, but I managed to find some truly informative sites on the first several screens. One site even allowed me to match my temperament with my ideal New Mexico location. While I would have expected to be directed to Albuquerque or Santa Fe (admittedly among the only places I knew in New Mexico), the program directed me toward Tucumcari, a tiny frontier town out on the old Route 66. The only previous reference I’d had to Tucumcari was in Lowell George’s song, “Willin’” and George had hardly provided much information. I followed a link to the town’s Chamber of Commerce site and spent a good half hour surfing the place’s history, attractions, and community development plans. I even found a restaurant that I would surely visit once I got out there. Before leaving the site, I requested a booklet about the town and several brochures.
 
When I got off, I felt better than I’d felt in a few days. Spending the time exploring New Mexico reminded me that my stasis in Connecticut was only temporary, that the store would eventually sell, and that I would be free to make my way West. To get my kicks out on Route 66.
 
I picked up my Updike book where I’d left it on the stairs and decided to check in on my father before going to my room. A Denver Broncos drive against the Green Bay Packers had my father’s absolute attention. I wondered if he would notice if I changed the channel.
 
“Dad, do you need anything before I head upstairs?” The sofa bed was already open, since I hadn’t bothered to fold it in in the morning. He didn’t say a word as John Elway completed another pass to Ed McCaffrey. It dawned on me that it was entirely possible that he didn’t know who won this game – if he was even actually paying attention.
 
“You sure you don’t need anything, Dad?”
 
As the Broncos huddled up, he turned to me. “Yeah, a new body,” he said.
 
“I’ll see if I can order you one online in the morning. I’m going to read in my room. If you need me, give me a call.”
 
He turned back toward the game. I watched him for another minute, stupefied at the way he’d decided to kill the clock.
 
On Sunday, the store was busier than I expected it to be and I stayed behind to give the late shift a hand. When I got back to my parents’ house in the late afternoon, my mother had returned from her trip. I hadn’t been expecting her until after dinner, but was relieved to see her there. We talked for a couple of minutes about her weekend and then I told her I was going out again.
 
“You aren’t staying for supper?” she asked.
 
“I’ll get something wherever. I’d kind of like a little free time.”
 
She looked toward the den. “Was this too much for you?” she asked crisply.
 
“Not too much, Mom. But definitely enough.”
 
“I’ll see you later, then.”
 
010
I called Iris the next day and she invited me up for the following Wednesday. As had been the case the first time I drove to see her, I felt a little looser and a little more liberated with every mile that passed. It was as though the enervating frequencies sent out from Amber began to fade as I put more distance between them and myself. Though the trip was nearly two hours long, it energized me.
 
I met Iris at her office a little after seven. As soon as she saw me, she grabbed her sweater, kissed me on the cheek, and we were out the door.
 
“That was surprisingly easy,” I said.
 
“Calm before the storm. Opening night is next Wednesday. By Friday, there will be all kinds of crises – real and imagined. But right now everything is on track and everyone is happy.”
 
“Lucky me.”
 
“Yeah, you wouldn’t want to be here Friday night.”
 
We went to a restaurant in town where Iris was hoping to get us a table on the porch. Unfortunately, every one of them was occupied and we were parked in a cramped spot in the bustling main dining room. We could just barely hear ’60s R&B above the chattering of nearly a hundred patrons and the clattering of dishes being speedily bussed.
 
“Cozy little spot, huh?” she said as we were seated.
 
“Is it always this busy?”
 
“I didn’t think it would be on a Wednesday night, but yeah, it’s really popular. You should see it in the summer. At least if we were outside we’d be able to talk.”
 
A couple got up from the table across from ours and a busboy was there as they took their first step away, throwing plates into a bin.
 
“This is fine,” I said. “They really do like to turn those tables, don’t they?”
 
As if in response, a waiter was at our side, asking if we’d decided what we wanted to order. We hadn’t even looked at the menus and I laughed, though he didn’t seem to think anything he’d said was funny. Feeling pressured, I opened my menu and the waiter said he’d be back in a minute. In most restaurants, this would mean that he would be back sometime in the next hour, but no more than a hundred seconds later, he was standing at our side again.
 
“My heart is pounding,” I said to Iris after the waiter left.
 
“You never let him see you sweat, though.”
 
I caught her up on the water disaster in the store and the glacial pace at which the contractor had begun to deal with the repairs. The person I’d hired had convinced me that he would need to replace the back wall and then informed me that he needed to do this in a very slow, very deliberate fashion. I didn’t know enough to know whether he was playing me or not, but since he was yet another friend of my father’s, I felt that I had to trust him. After he dealt with the wall, he would need to do considerable work to the stockroom and replace a huge piece of the carpeting. The fact that he refused to be governed by a schedule was flat-out depressing.
 
Iris told me about the resolution to the tempest with the set designer – it turned out to be less about his romantic entanglements than it was about an adjustment to his antidepressant – and then about an actor they needed to replace on very short notice because he broke his contract to take a gig out in Utah. She related both of these stories matter-of-factly and I could imagine that she dealt with the actual situations in much the same way. I admired her for this. Either one might have been enough to send me packing.
 
The meal came promptly and I felt a bit compelled to eat it as quickly. As we tended to our food, we did-n’t say much to each other. I could just barely make out the harmonies of “Ain’t Too Proud to Beg” over the din. At another table, a man animatedly explained a painful breakup to a friend.
 
“So what’s happening with your father?” Iris asked as our coffee arrived.
 
“He’s managed to confine his entire existence to the den.”
 
“Well, from what I remember, it’s a nice room.”
 
“I guess I should consider it a good thing that he’s not sitting in the garage.”
 
“Are you worried?”
 
I shook my head. “Worried is the wrong word. Confounded would be a better word. Flummoxed maybe. He’s fifty-five.”
 
“You have a right to be flummoxed, though I don’t think I’ve ever heard someone say that word out loud before. He’s gonna come out of it, though, right? If he’s relatively okay physically, he’d have to, wouldn’t he?”
 
“He should. I’m guessing he will. It’s just so bizarre seeing him this way. I mean, he was never a Type A guy, but at least he was always motivated.”
 
Iris sipped her coffee and seemed a little hesitant before she spoke again.
 
“Was this what he was like after Chase died?”
 
Of course she wouldn’t have known. I recalled my father’s thousand-yard stare out the window and the stoicism that followed until the day I left. “That’s definitely the last time I’ve seen him this resigned. But at least then he had a better reason.”
 
“If it’s any consolation, my mother’s been driving me a little crazy lately, too,” she said.
 
“What’s going on?”
 
“She went out on a date last Friday.”
 
“Wow. First one since your dad?”
 
“First one that ‘counts’ as my mother puts it. About a year ago, some friends invited this widower over to some dinner parties. She assumed they were trying to set her up with him, but she wouldn’t give the guy the time of day. This time it was someone she met at a craft fair. He took her to dinner and it sounds like they had a very good time.”
 
“Great.”
 
“Except that she’s feeling insanely guilty about it. I mean can’t-get-out-of-bed kind of guilt. She thinks it diminishes my father’s memory if she likes another man.”
 
“That’s silly.”
 
“Try finding a half dozen delicate ways to say that and you’ll understand what my phone conversations with her have been like lately.”
 
“So is she going to go out with him again?”
 
“She’s screening her calls. She can’t decide what to do.”
 
I shook my head and just said, “Families.”
 
The check arrived and, seeing that there were others waiting for our table, we dutifully paid it. We’d been in the restaurant less than an hour.
 
“That was kind of brisk, wasn’t it?” Iris said when we got outside.
 
“I’ll never complain about slow service again.” We walked toward the parking lot. I certainly didn’t want to drive back to Amber yet.
 
“It’s kind of early,” Iris said. “Do you want to go to a movie?”
 
It was nice to have her suggest that we extend our time together. We drove to the local theater and bought tickets for the movie with the nearest start time. It didn’t matter that the movie wasn’t particularly interesting and it didn’t matter that we couldn’t talk during the show. It was just good to be in the same place with her and to bump fingers with her on occasion as we reached for the popcorn.
 
On the way back to Connecticut that night, I played some Temptations songs on my iPod as a reminder of the music I could barely hear in the restaurant. I sang high harmonies and pounded out the syncopated rhythms on the steering wheel.
 
Iris and I had set the time machine on “now” tonight.