All I Love and Know (37 page)

Read All I Love and Know Online

Authors: Judith Frank

Daniel's eyes widened; this part took him entirely by surprise. “What for?”

“Just to get some closure on it. I ended things with him on such a bad note, and that bitterness isn't a healthy thing for me to carry around. It taints Jay's memory.”

Daniel was quiet. He was remembering Matt's stories about Kendrick's self-important bustle around Jay, the way he instructed visitors on how they should behave at Jay's sickbed. Kendrick once gave Matt a list of topics he was not to raise—pets, parties, and the movie
Terms of Endearment
, to name just a few—and Matt had snorted, thinking he was joking, until Kendrick shot him a withering look. After hearing that, Daniel thought that the lengths Matt went to in order to stay close to Jay were nothing short of heroic.

“I know,” Matt said. “Risky, right?”

“I don't know if it's risky,” Daniel said. “It's just that I don't know if Kendrick's the kind of guy you can get closure with. He'll always say just a little something that'll piss you off, put a little bit of poison out there.”

Matt nodded thoughtfully. “Maybe,” he said. “It's just that I don't think Jay would want his partner and his best friend to be estranged.”

“You're a generous soul, sweetie pie. I just hope it doesn't bite you in the ass.”

The next day Matt and Gal went to the craft store, after Matt made her promise that she would not scream at him even if she thought he was doing something wrong; instead, she would explain her objection in a regular tone of voice. They bought gauze, and washable white and black paints for the as-yet-undetermined way they would paint her face. They decided that she would wear white, but not a sheet, white tights and a white T-shirt, and that whiteness and sheerness together would make her seem invisible. They practiced draping after dinner till they had Gal wrapped in a way that she could make the fabric ripple a little, yet still move and not trip. Then Matt said, “Okay, let me paint your face.”

“What are you going to do?” she asked warily.

“Just let me do it.” He raised his eyebrows when she hesitated. “I'm a trained professional. Just let me.”

She came to him and lifted her beautiful face to him, its normal stormy twists smoothing into an obedient expanse of creamy cheek, her mouth closed over the adult front teeth that had recently come in and that her face had yet to grow into, her eyes hooded by her dark lashes. He rubbed a delicate wash of white paint over it, letting some skin show through, used just a touch of black paint to hollow out her eyes. Then he said, “Okay, go,” and pushed her toward the mirror.

She opened her eyes and looked at him. “I scared to look!” she said.

He took her by the shoulders and marched her to the mirror and she opened her eyes and took in a breath. She lifted her gauze-covered arms, turned her whitened face this way and that. Her dark hair fell to her shoulders; she raked her fingers gently through the hair on one side and tucked it behind her ear, the first preening gesture Matt had ever seen her make. She turned and looked at him, nodded approvingly.

“Good, right?” he asked. “You look amazing. So much more sophisticated than your normal sheet-on-the-head ghost. Go show Daniel.”

They could barely stop her relieved chattering to get her to bed; she made use of every adjective she knew in both English and Hebrew in an attempt to describe the effect of the costume. “It's spooky but not
scary
,” she said, and then repeated that, enjoying the fine distinction. “It's sophisticated, don't you think? How do you say
sophisticated
in Hebrew? Where's Dani? How do you say
sophisticated
in Hebrew?”

MATT DECIDED TO DRESS
Noam as Mr. Potato Head. “Did you know,” he'd said to Daniel as he boned up on Mr. Potato Head on the Web, using the laptop they kept in the kitchen, “that on Mr. Potato Head's fortieth birthday, they announced that he would no longer be a ‘couch potato' ”—he made ostentatious air quotes with his fingers—“and he received a special award from the President's Council on Physical Fitness? That's awesome. I wonder if he had to do little pull-ups.”

Matt spent the day on Noam's costume, sewing elastic into an old brown sheet to close at Noam's neck and thighs, gluing paper plates on for ears, and colored felt and cotton for the facial features. He went to three different stores looking for blue socks to put over Noam's sneakers. He bought a kid-sized hard hat and spray-painted it black. He worked in a swirl of quiet satisfaction, diligent problem solving, and blistering self-irony. He was spending the day making a little kid's Halloween costume. He was a stay-at-home mom—in the lingo of the blogs and message boards, a SAHM! It blew his mind that his life had led him to this point. Not that he was the most ambitious guy in the world. What was his ambition? For a while, at the New York firm among the design hotshots, he'd entertained the fantasy of becoming the next Carson or Sagmeister. But over time, working among incredibly single-minded and talented people, he was forced to admit to himself that while he was good,
very
good, he wasn't a design genius, and didn't quite have the drive and focus to convincingly fake it. The realization pained him, but it didn't devastate him. He liked his work, a lot, liked the quiet focus of it, the visual pleasure of something falling into place and the pride of submitting work that was clean and stylish and impeccable.

And let's face it, he thought, moving away from New York to live with Daniel, who had the talent to be a great musician and writer but who viewed ambition as frivolous and crass, pretty much put the nail in that coffin.

Still, what would he tell Kendrick about what he was doing these days? He gingerly peeled back one of the paper-plate ears, testing the dryness of the glue, wondering if he should put in a few staples for good measure. When identifying himself, should he say, “It's Matt,” or “It's Matt Greene”? Should he just catch up with him, or should he actually say that he'd called to bury the hatchet? He reminded himself to stick to “I” statements, as he had been instructed to do in a brief and irritating couples therapy with a short-lived boyfriend. And if Kendrick was an officious fuck, what would he say? His mind ran over various options, honing their wit and cuttingness. Then he grabbed the phone before he could think anymore and dialed.

Kendrick answered on the second ring with a quick and intimate “Hi.”

“Hi,” Matt said uncertainly, thinking that Kendrick couldn't have recognized him from the caller ID, because their phone was listed under Daniel's name. “It's Matt. Greene.”

There was a long pause.

“Jay's friend.”

“I know who you are. I thought you were someone else.” The voice was slightly peevish, slightly congested.

“How's it going?”

“It's going well,” Kendrick said.

“That's great,” Matt said. “I'm glad to hear that.”

Kendrick didn't reciprocate, but then again, Matt remembered, he'd never acquired the skill of saying “And how are
you
?” If you wanted to say anything about yourself, you had to put a stick of dynamite in the conversation and blast right through it.

“Are you waiting for another call?” Matt asked.

“Yeah, I'm fighting with my credit card company about a finance charge,” Kendrick said, “and we got disconnected.”

Matt smiled, remembering how Kendrick made a point of keeping excellent medical and financial records, and making sure he didn't get overcharged or double-charged; he checked his credit rating obsessively for errors, and reported everything. “Because otherwise how will they learn?” Matt and Jay loved to use his mantra in their conversations.

“I wanted to call,” Matt said, picking up a pen and starting to doodle on the little pad of paper sitting on the kitchen table, “because it's Halloween, which always makes me think of Jay.”

“Oh, right,” Kendrick said. “So where are you living again? Elmira?”

Matt smiled at the snobbery of the New Yorker. “Northampton. Massachusetts.”

“Oh yeah, where all the lesbians are,” Kendrick said.

“Right,” Matt said. “I'm basically a lesbian now.”

Kendrick laughed.

“Listen,” Matt said, warmed by that, always a sucker for anybody who laughed at his jokes, “I just wanted to touch base, maybe bury the hatchet. I think Jay would want that.”

Kendrick was quiet for a few moments. “Well, I appreciate that, I do,” he finally said. “He wished we could get along better; it was painful to him that we couldn't.”

“I know,” Matt said, and continued to the line he'd practiced before calling: “It's just that—I think that we both loved him so much, and were in so much pain, that we weren't at our best with each other.”

There was another pause, and then Kendrick said, “True.”

“So I'm sorry for my part,” Matt said, thinking that this was easier than he'd thought it would be.

“Thanks, Matt,” Kendrick said. “Me too. It's just that—I don't know if I should even say this. No, never mind.”

Matt's head rolled back on his neck and he closed his eyes.
Here we go
, he thought.

“It's just that—this may be a fault of mine, but I just can't pretend to be nice to people who hurt the people I love.”

“What are you talking about?” Matt said while Kendrick continued, “And it really bothered me how bitchy you were to him for making money and being successful. It was like the minute he stopped being your sidekick, you couldn't handle it anymore. That really hurt his feelings, Matt.”

“What are you talking about?” Matt repeated.

“Calling him a corporate tool . . .”

Matt cast his mind back, stunned. “That was a joke!” Matt said. “Jay called
himself
a corporate tool!” He worked in the finance department of Goldman Sachs, a job he had landed straight from college and been incredibly successful at.

“He didn't think it was funny.”

“You're so full of shit,” Matt said heatedly, propelled to his feet, pacing. “He never said anything to me about it, and believe me, he was no shrinking violet when it came to telling me my flaws.”

“Forget it. I thought you wanted to have a genuine conversation, but apparently I was wrong.”

“I sincerely wanted to make amends,” Matt said. “I didn't call to get attacked by you. Jay and I handled our relationship just fine.”

“He was
dying
, Matt! He wasn't about to start some huge drama with you.”

Matt's mind was spinning. “Look, I don't have time for this. I'm living with a family that's been devastated by a terrorist attack, raising two orphaned children.” He winced as he uttered the word
orphaned
.

“Whoa,” Kendrick said.

In Kendrick style, as though devoid of the slightest bit of curiosity, he failed to follow up, leaving Matt to wonder if he was undignified enough to throw more unsolicited details out there himself.
You probably read about the Peace Train bombing in Jerusalem earlier this year. It was all over the papers
.

He hung up, sickened. The thought of trick-or-treating had been drained of all its energy and color. Once, he'd loved the huddle of citizens at dusk scurrying from house to house. So what if the occasional house got pelted with eggs, its trees draped with toilet paper? It was a day when Americans answered the door for other American strangers, which seemed marvelous to him. But now: he'd wanted to honor Jay this Halloween, but now he didn't feel like honoring him at all; he was furious at him for hanging on to that hurt and not telling him about it. It was so stupid—it felt petty and vindictive for him to play the game of calling himself a corporate tool and then turn around and complain to Kendrick about it. They'd both seen the absurdity of Jay's huge success at Goldman. Both of them had! This was the guy who had to ask his professors for extensions for almost every paper he wrote, who got behind in his bills, whose house was always a total mess. Then he turned around and got this high-paying job, and lived in the West Village in a building with a doorman, while Matt, in his first design job, lived in a studio sublet all the way over on Ninth Avenue, surrounded by someone else's crappy, tasteless things.

He did have to admit that he'd been jealous; he had never cared about money until he found he wasn't making very much, at least by New York standards. But he felt that he and Jay had managed that well, through the high-level aggressive irony in which they told each other truths they couldn't say more straightforwardly. Apparently he was wrong. And Jay had complained to Kendrick, not him. Of everything, that was the thing that sickened him most. He'd always thought of himself as closer in than Kendrick was, even though Kendrick was Jay's partner. They'd seen lovers come and go, and dished about them all, even to Jay's dying day, when they'd rolled their eyes together over some antic or other of Kendrick's. It was unbearable to think that Jay and Kendrick rolled their eyes about
him
. Unbearable. And he couldn't even conjure Jay to be furious at him, because most of his memories were of Jay after he was already sick, emaciated, with Kaposi's lesions on his neck and face.

THE NEXT MORNING WAS
gray and cold; Matt, wearing only a sweatshirt over his pajamas, shivered as he yelled at Yo-yo to poop, knowing that if someone was yelling at
him
to poop, he'd never give them the satisfaction. Inside there was a squall of panic, yelling, and frenzied phone calls, because it turned out that Gal didn't know if they were supposed to wear their costumes on the bus to school, or bring them and put them on there. “What if I'm the only one on the school bus wearing a costume?” she'd asked, eyes wide in panic.

He hoped it was solved before he went back inside, and it was—at least the kids whose parents they'd reached would be wearing their costumes on the bus. Matt got busy working on her face. He waited with her in front of the house, said “Look, see?” when the bus pulled up, populated by kids in masks, capes, armored suits. “Just be careful not to step on the gauze,” he reminded her for the tenth time. He watched her stomp up the big stairs and felt a pang, knowing he was sending her off to a world with so many land mines, knowing how hard she thought about every step she took, every word she spoke.

Other books

Stork Alert by Delores Fossen
One Last Weekend by Linda Lael Miller
Flights by Jim Shepard
The Bride Wore Denim by Lizbeth Selvig
Light and Wine by Sparrow AuSoleil