Benediction (18 page)

Read Benediction Online

Authors: Kent Haruf

Tags: #Fiction, #Family Life, #Literary, #Religious

Franklin, Dad said. Is that what he’s calling himself?

I don’t know, she said. Do you want some cream?

He didn’t bring us any.

I know. She got up and looked at the tables, then leaned over the counter and found
a little metal pitcher.

This looks fresh, she said.

She sat down again. Dad poured cream into his coffee and looked in his cup and sipped
at it.

Is it all right?

He nodded.

Then Frank came out through the kitchen door. He saw them and came over and stood
beside their table. He was tall and very thin, his hair grown out long. There was
a bruise on his cheek.

Well, you made it, he said. You’re too early for supper though.

That waiter let us know, Dad said. He called you Franklin.

That’s what I call myself now.

Why would you do that?

Because. I’m making changes. That’s part of it.

Changing your name.

That’s right.

It isn’t what you were born with.

I know. That’s the point, Dad.

Dad looked out across the street at the used-car lot.

How long will you be here? Frank said.

We have to go back tonight, Dad said. He turned back.

Lorraine’s at home on Christmas break, Mary said. We don’t want to be away while she’s
there.

We don’t close till eight and I have to help clean up. So it’ll be late.

We can wait for you, Mary said. She looked at Dad. Can’t we.

They won’t let you off any earlier? he said.

They might but I don’t want to lose this job. I’ve just had it a month. Do you want
anything to eat?

I guess we can get some hamburgers, Dad said.

You want some chips too?

You don’t have any fries?

Not yet.

Frank left and went back to the kitchen.

He looks too thin, Mary said.

He always was thin. He’s probably always going to be thin.

You saw that bruise on his cheek?

He must of got hit, Dad said. In a fight or something.

Why would someone want to hit Frank?

I advise you not to ask him.

I know. I don’t intend to.

Maybe it wasn’t too bad, Dad said. Maybe he didn’t get the worst of it.

Frank came back carrying two thick crockery plates with the hamburgers and chips,
lettuce and tomato and onion on the side. He stood for a while next to the table,
talking. Then a boy about his age came out from the kitchen and stood beside him.

This is Harlan, Frank said. He wanted to meet you.

How do you do, Mary said.

The boy reached and shook her hand. His hair was long too.

This is my dad, Frank said.

He shook Dad’s hand. You’re from here in Denver? Dad said.

Yes, sir. I was working here before Franklin ever started.

Then you’ve been here a while, Mary said.

Too long. He looked at them. Well, it’s good to meet you. I’ve got to get back to
the kitchen. He popped Frank on the back of the head and Frank turned and said, You
better be careful, you might get in trouble, boy. The boy laughed and went back through
the door. Frank watched him until he was gone and then looked at his parents. They
were looking at each other. Then two women and a man entered the café and Frank went
to meet them. They watched him
and it was clear that he was good at meeting people, and soon the café got busy. Outside
the light began to weaken along the street and Dad and Mary ate their food and when
Frank came back they ordered pie and presently he brought the pie and set it down.

I asked Howard. He said I could get off at seven thirty if we aren’t too busy.

A half hour earlier than usual, Dad said.

Yes, plus missing out on cleanup. What do you want to do?

We’ll meet you out front, Dad said.

When they finished eating they left money on the table and went out to the car and
drove to Civic Center. Colored lights were shining up from big lamps, flooded onto
the fronts of the government buildings. Dad parked and they walked along the sidewalk
in front of the buildings with other people, the families and their kids in heavy
coats and caps. The buildings were all lit up for the holiday and the trees had colored
lights strung in the bare branches. They walked by the museum and the public library
and back to the car. They were sitting on the side street near the café for an hour
before Frank came out. They waited and looked at the car lot and watched the diners
through the big windows and saw Frank working at the tables. Everybody was eating
and talking and they could see Frank talking. They all looked festive and happy.

It’s after seven thirty, Dad said.

He’s still busy, Mary said.

Then Frank finally came out. He was only wearing a thin jacket with a long dirty scarf
wrapped around his neck, he got in the backseat and they drove over to his apartment.

The street was dark with old tall wooden houses. One of the street lamps was broken
out at the corner. They got out and Frank used his key and they climbed the stairs
to the third floor, where there was a wide bare hallway with a single shared bathroom.
Frank’s apartment was just one room looking out onto the dark street, with a narrow
bed and a chest of drawers and a curtain hung across the corner for a closet, with
an electric hot plate on a stand and a half-size refrigerator, a bare table and two
chairs. A poster of the night lights of New York was taped on the wall. Opposite was
a poster showing an Indian girl above a caption that said Better Red Than Dead.

Sit down, Frank said. I can make you tea or coffee.

Tea would be good, his mother said.

They sat at the table and Frank put a pan of water on the electric burner and got
out tea and sugar, then stood and waited for it to boil. Dad was looking at the poster
across the room. You believe that? he said.

What?

What that poster says.

I don’t want to kill anybody, Frank said.

That’s not what I’m talking about.

Don’t worry, Dad. My lottery number’s a low one. They’re not going to call me.

When did you hear that? Mary said.

A couple months ago.

You didn’t tell us. We’ve been worried.

I got lucky.

The water boiled and Frank poured out three cups and they made their tea. He took
his across the room and sat on the bed.

It was warm in the room. They looked around at the spare furnishings.

Have you seen your sister lately? Mary said.

She came down and stayed a weekend with me. And I went up to Fort Collins.

She seems to be doing all right. Don’t you think?

Yeah. She’s good.

Have you decided if you’re coming home for Christmas at all? We’d like to see you.

I have to work, Mom.

You can’t get off for even one day?

Maybe. I’ll have to see what he tells me. We’ll see.

That means you won’t, Dad said.

It means I don’t know, Frank said.

He got up and carried his cup back across the room.

Are you done?

He took their cups and stacked them in the little sink in the corner.

I’ve got you something for Christmas, Mary said. I didn’t know what you needed. She
opened her purse and took out an envelope, she’d written his name on it in red ink
and handed it to him and he opened it, a Christmas card with a fifty-dollar bill inside.

Thank you, Mom. He bent and kissed her. You too, Dad.

You’re welcome.

I’m sorry I didn’t get you anything.

It doesn’t matter, honey.

I think I’ll go down and get the car warmed up, Dad said.

Do we have to go so soon?

It’s late. We still have two and a half hours of driving ahead of us.

Dad looked at Frank. I’ll see you, he said, take care of yourself, and he went out
the door and they heard him going down the wood stairs.

After a while Mary stood up and buttoned her coat and hugged Frank.

You know that money was your dad’s idea. It was from him even more than me. I want
you to know that.

I appreciate it, Mom. I know that.

Can I tell him?

Whatever you want.

But are you all right here, honey? I need to know. I never hear anything from you.

Yes, I’m all right.

You’re telling me the truth.

Of course.

You know that every time I call you, Dad wants to know what you said. He wants to
know how you are too.

I’m doing the best I can, Mom. That’s all I can say. I’m getting along the best I
can. You can tell Dad that much too.

She went out to the hallway and down the stairs. Frank followed her and she hugged
him again on the sidewalk, holding him tight, and went on to the car at the curb.
She got in and looked at him standing there without a coat. She rolled the window
down.

Go back in, honey, she told him. It’s cold out here.

They drove out of Denver and out onto the plains going east toward Holt County.

I wish I was a drinker, she said. She was peering out the side window at the country
going by, at the dark clear sky.

What?

I wish I drank. I wish I was a drinker. I never cared for it though.

Are you sick? You want me to stop?

This would be a good time for it.

To start drinking.

Yes.

What’s wrong? I don’t understand what you’re talking about.

What did you think would happen today? she said.

I didn’t think much of anything would happen today.

You were right about that. It didn’t.

You sound upset.

I am upset. I’m disappointed that we don’t have anything to do with him. Anything
more than this. Than what happened back there. You give me money to give him and I
put it in an envelope for Christmas and he hasn’t even thought to have anything to
give us in return. We see him working at the café and we follow him up to his dirty
little apartment room in a dirty old house and we drink tea and we talk for five minutes,
then you go outside to warm up the car and that’s it.

What did you expect?

I wanted it to be nice. I told you that. Something present there between us and our
son. We’re going to lose him, she said. Don’t you know that?

We lost him a long time ago.

You lost him. I didn’t.

Dad pulled out on the highway to pass the truck ahead of them and they went around
its long high length in the night and sped on faster. He looked at her. You wish I
was a drinker too?

No, I wouldn’t wish that on us, she said. We have enough already.

She dozed the rest of the way, until Dad pulled up in front of the house and stopped
the car. The house was all dark, Lorraine was not home yet. She was still out somewhere
in town with her friends. It was almost midnight, the latest they’d been awake for
a long time. They sat for a while looking at the unlighted house and then Dad shut
the engine off and they went inside and fell to sleep beside each other in their familiar
downstairs bedroom at the back of the house.

27

T
HE HOSPICE NURSE
had come and gone. The same small quick efficient woman with the beautiful smile.
It was late morning now on a hot July day toward the end of the month. She had arrived
just after nine o’clock and Dad was back in bed when she came. He had gotten up for
breakfast, had drunk his morning coffee and eaten a little piece of buttered toast,
dunking it in the coffee, and afterward he had sat for an hour at the window in the
living room looking out at the green lawn and the shade tree, then he had gone back
to lie down in bed in the back room. The nurse had attended him there.

She checked his blood pressure and pulse and temperature and asked how he was and
he said he was a little worse maybe, he couldn’t tell but felt he might be slipping
faster now, and she asked about his pain, and if he was taking the medication regularly,
and he said it was all right, he could live with it, and again she told him he didn’t
have to just live with it but could have relief, and he looked away and said he knew
that, he understood that, then she checked his pills, to see if he had enough, and
asked was there anything else, and he said he couldn’t think of anything, but he wanted
to thank her for coming and looked at Mary and Lorraine who were standing at the foot
of the bed watching and listening to it all, and then the nurse leaned forward and
took his hand and pressed it warmly and said she’d be back, to call her if he needed
anything, anytime day or night, and then she packed up and left.

Mary and Lorraine walked her outside and stood in the shade of the silver poplar trees.
How long do you think now? Lorraine asked her.

Two weeks maybe. Sometimes they surprise us. Maybe ten days.

Is there anything more we should be doing?

No, I don’t think so. He’s lucky to have such good care. A lot of people don’t. But
you need to be sure to take care of yourselves too. You must know that.

We can rest later, Mary said.

Yes, the nurse said.

She got in the car and drove off up the street. The street looked hot and dry. A dust
rose up behind her.

When they went back into the house Dad was asleep again. Later in the morning they
woke him when Rudy and Bob came to show him the store accounts, knowing he’d be disappointed
if they didn’t.

The window was open in the bedroom and there was a warm breeze blowing in but even
so Dad lay in the bed with the blanket pulled up over him. Now he propped himself
on the pillows and Rudy and Bob carried two chairs into the bedroom and Lorraine followed
them and sat in the big chair that was always in the corner. Dad looked at the two
men.

Lorraine’s going to join us here, he said. I mentioned that the last time.

We know, Dad, said Rudy.

Okay. I didn’t know if you remembered.

Yeah. We remembered.

Well. How you doing? How’s it going these days?

We’re doing good. And you, Dad, that’s what we want to know.

I’m going down, I guess, he said. I can feel it.

Are you hurting?

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