My Present Age (28 page)

Read My Present Age Online

Authors: Guy Vanderhaeghe

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Literary, #Mystery & Detective

I give it up and turn over on my left side. The heart starts tram-polining on the mattress. Not good. I flop over on my back and wait for another sally from Rubacek. Nothing. He has obviously turned his attention back to his manuscript.

Where was I dreaming of? It must have been an island in the Aegean. A vision constructed from those travel brochures and books Victoria and I pored over in the early seventies, a vision tarred up with choice bits from
The Magus
. Yes, it had to have been Greece.

But why were we climbing in my dream? What were we climbing to? Monks. That was it. We were trying to reach the monastery on the brow of the hill.

In the beginning Victoria and I are standing on the packed sand of the beach. I am loaded with her cameras, and the straps have chafed my shoulders raw. I feel uncomfortable leaning back to look up at the cliff of crumbling grey rock from which snakish shrubs grow sinuously wherever they find a pocket of poor soil in which to anchor roots. The limbs of the bushes strain out of the shadow of the scarp, stretching to catch a bit of sun. The monastery squats at the top of this cliff, its white cupola glistening like a mound of sugar. Behind us the sea slops and creeps, sighing along the sand to wind warmly around our ankles.

We prepare to climb, but not up the rock face. With the capricious logic of dreams, the white dome has shifted to my right and somehow the sea has fallen far, far beneath where I stand with my ankles still wet with foam. Looking back I see waves chopping shoreward. They look like wrinkles in cellophane. I feel peculiar. Distances and perspectives have altered. I turn to comment on this to Victoria and discover she is moving up the slope. She is moving much too easily and nimbly. Ordinarily Victoria is clumsy and cautious. Now her toes jam into the loose soil, a flexible ankle boosts, a knee lifts, a haunch bulges, and she rises, rises.

I scramble after her, trying to pull myself up by clutching at bushes studded with thorns or dressed in sticky leaves that strip off in my hands. Victoria’s camera cases swing back and forth, bunting my hips. The trail begins to twist around large outcroppings of rock which have burst out of the hillside like fractured bone through dirty skin. Victoria disappears again and again
behind these boulders and I must trot to avoid losing sight of her altogether. With panic I realize that each brief moment I lose sight of her she miraculously covers incredible distances, distances beyond human capability. Each time her figure reappears it has dwindled, the intervening space between us produces arresting effects; now she shimmers behind a gauze of heat.

I can’t follow any faster. There is the danger to my heart. My short spurts of running are strictly rationed, no unnecessary galloping.

I hurry around the base of a huge shattered stone, pawing and stumbling to catch a glimpse of a contracting figure that bobs, jerks, is gone. A few sobbing breaths before hustling into a quick march, then I break into a rolling half-run.

I call, “Victoria!” She doesn’t hear, or pretends not to. The hillside has, in any case, grown noisier. Insects zither madly in the patchy grass, gusts of hot wind crackle and rattle in desiccated leaves and branches with a fiery sound, and when I call they snatch her name out of my mouth with a burning hand and cast it like a stone into the sea behind me, leaving my mouth gaping, mute.

After her. Faster. The heart, I remind myself. My back goes rigid in anticipation of the dreadful squeezing that will cause the heart to shed pain the way a sponge sheds water, a gush behind the breastbone.

Rest, I remind myself. But I can barely make her out now, only black stick legs and arms, a dot for a head, twitching up the hillside. Shrinking. She is not that small. This must be a distortion of air or altitude.

The hot air is beaten by bells. I swing around in confusion and stare down on a sea grown enormous. While I climbed, it crept around me; now it laps on three sides. A great briny-green gorget for the throat of the island. The bells cease. I look up. The white dome shimmers; inside, monks with grizzled beards and sweat on their faces stare up the bell tower. They can see stars.

The dot and the stick legs are gone. Victoria is lost. Hurry, I urge myself, beginning to climb. Hurry.
Hurry
.

And then came the voice that woke me. Voices? I sit up in bed and listen. There are two voices now. Rubacek is talking to someone. Someone has come into the apartment.

I ease myself quietly back down on the mattress and lie absolutely still and quiet. I have my suspicions it is old McMurtry out there and I don’t want to draw any of his fire if I can avoid it.

They are keeping their voices low. No matter how hard I try, I can’t make anything out of the subdued murmuring that floats to me from my living room. The conversation is certainly one I’m not meant to hear, maybe a discussion of my mental health. Or maybe they are bandying about figures for war reparations, assessing the damage I did the other night. They can amuse themselves as they wish. I couldn’t care less.

I hear footsteps in the hallway. They’re coming. Shit. I draw an arm over my face, commence to snore sonorously.

There is diffident knocking at the door. They wait for an answer, repeat the knocking. I bray, I flute, I strangle, I gargle for all I’m worth. Peeking under the crook of my arm I see the door inching open; a slab of Stanley’s face is gradually revealed: strands of blond hair, eye, nose, bisected mouth. “Ed!” he stage-whispers.
“Ed!”

I continue to lustily spew a geyser of noise at the ceiling. On a less raucous inhalation I hear Stanley scratching at the door with his fingernails, like a goddamn dog. “Ed!” he sings out. “Rise and shine! Wakey-wakey!”

It is perfectly clear there is no point in shamming anything short of a coma. Rubacek will persist.

“What do you want?” I snap, flinging my forearm off my face.

“You busy, Ed?”

“Jesus.”

“You got a visitor, Ed.”

“Tell him I’m not receiving. Tell him to go away.”

“Ta-ra!” bugles Stanley and throws open my bedroom door with a ceremonial flourish. “Surprise!”

And who stands revealed? Not the hoary-headed and time-twisted old codger I expect, but Marsha, Hideous Marsha, looking like the last Romanov princess in an astrakhan pillbox hat.

“Surprised?” inquires Stanley hopefully.

“I said I don’t want visitors. I don’t feel so hot.”

Hideous gives me the kind of smile that can strip varnish off old furniture and then turns to Rubacek. “Maybe I should speak to him alone, Stan.”

“Try and get him to get up,” pleads Stan. “I told him he’s going to get depressed.” Marsha nods knowingly and, reassured, Rubacek eases out of the room, closes the door softly behind him.

Marsha sits on the edge of my bed, plucks off her hat, and bounces her hair around with the palm of her hand. “An interesting addition to your domestic scene, Ed. I trust your relationship with Conan the Barbarian is platonic?”

“What’s it to you?”

“To me? Nothing. It’s just difficult to keep abreast of developments in your life. You’re so unpredictable.”

“I’m not.”

“I’m not, he says. Well, this is certainly a new one. And he is a lusciously proportioned number. Mr. Beefcake tells me that you’ve come away from your hospital stay with the novel idea you’ve had a coronary, all evidence to the contrary notwithstanding. Is that why you’re still in bed in the middle of the afternoon?”

“It’s none of your business what I’m doing in bed.”

“And the heart attack?”

“I know what I felt. Doctors have been known to be wrong.”

“Could it be,” says Hideous, “that you’re trying to lure Victoria back with this bogus affliction? You wouldn’t be concocting one of your famous guilt numbers would you, Ed?”

“I’m sick.”

“No argument here.” Marsha knowingly taps her forehead with a lurid red fingernail.

An interesting notion, Marsha’s. Would Victoria come back if she knew I was ill? Maybe. My eyes mist at the thought of Victoria back in charge. She’d put me on a program. There’d be a diet and exercise. In months she’d have me better than new, the heart as sound and solid as oak.

Marsha lights a cigarette, then looks around for a place to put the spent match. She finally reaches out and deposits it on the top of the dresser.

“Is that out?”

“You worry too much, Ed,” she says. “And by the way, it’s not necessary to keep the blankets clutched under your chin like that. I’ve been exposed to the sight of a man’s nipples before.”

“The reason I mention the match is I don’t want burn marks on my furniture, thank you very much.”

Marsha looks sceptically at my scarred and battered chest of drawers. Then she glances at the Allied Van Lines cardboard wardrobe. She points to it. “Like that priceless period piece?”

“I would prefer if you didn’t smoke,” I say on the spur of the moment. Just now I’ve decided to renounce cigarettes. They’re bad for the heart.

“Sorry, Ed. I prefer the smell of tobacco smoke to the smell in this room. The air in here is fetid. The place smells of marsh gas.”

“No one invited you to sample the air in this room.”

“God,” says Marsha, casting her eyes about the room, taking in the compost heap of soiled clothes in the corner; the mugs incubating scum in a finger of coffee; the water glasses with a milky rime in their bottom, the precipitate of evaporated Scotch, “when you determine to hit bottom, you
plunge
, don’t you? When do you intend to shovel this place out?”

“Mind your own business.”

“I am, in a way. I’m glad I dropped by,” she sighs; “I didn’t think you could be trusted.”

“Trusted to do what?”

“Ed,” says Marsha, “you’re a pig. Where’s your suit?”

“Trusted to do what?”

She’s on her feet now, rummaging in my closet. “To make yourself presentable at my baby brother’s wedding. That’s what. Have you hung it up? Is it hung up at least?” she asks, zinging hangers along the bar.

“Get out of there. Take your hands off my personal stuff.”

“God, is this it?” she asks, hauling out my ensemble and holding it at arm’s length, a fisherman sizing up the catch.

“Yeah, that’s my suit.”

“When did you buy this” – she hesitates over the word deliberately – “
suit
?”

“1972.”

“Ed, the pants are flared. There are buttons on the side pockets of the jacket. Is this a yoke at the back? More buttons,” she mutters, discovering one on the breast pocket. “There are buttons all over this thing. What is this?”

“It’s my security suit,” I volunteer. “A nice number to wear to the midway. It’s pickpocket-proof.”

“Ed,” says Marsha, “is this a cowboy suit?”

“Western wear.”

“Oh my God,” she says, “you were going to wear a cowboy suit to my brother’s wedding?”

“It’s conservatively styled,” I remark. It is, too. My father bought me these duds when he arranged the job interview for his boy Ed with an old friend at the local
TV
station. The job was reading the farm news. I didn’t get it.

“Look, Ed, Dale Evans might think your suit is a model of restraint – I don’t. You aren’t wearing it.” She throws it across the foot of the bed. “God, I just knew to expect something like this.”

“I’ve been thinking, Marsha, that this isn’t such a hot idea anyway. Maybe we should forget it.”

“My invitation was addressed to Ms. Marsha Sadler and guest. You’re the guest. In a blue suit.”

“Just a minute, Marsha, I—”

“Kramer’s can do a made-to-measure in a week. I’ll phone Irv and let him know you’re coming in. They dress Dad – have for years – he’ll get right on it if I call.
Dark blue
, Ed. Like for a funeral; I don’t want you standing out in a crowd. And tell Irv a fine pinstripe, it’ll make you look thinner.”

“Go to hell. I’m not buying a new suit for the wedding of some brat I never even met.”

“It’s on me,” says Marsha, abstracted. Her mind is already on something else. “I’ll tell them to send me the bill. Don’t worry your pretty little head about it.” She crosses the room and flicks the ash off her cigarette into an empty glass on the windowsill. Suddenly she asks, “Can you dance?”

“What do you mean, can I dance?”

“Dance,” she says tartly, “not boogie,
dance
. Waltz, foxtrot, etc. I’m not spending the evening ‘cutting a rug,’ as they so quaintly put it, with my uncles at this wedding. For this occasion you and I have eyes only for one another. My dance card is full. I’m not going to stand for you sitting on your ass sucking back Chivas Regal while the geriatric cases show me a good time.”

“I can dance.”

“Don’t lie to me. It’s all right if you can’t. I’ll teach you.”

“I can dance.”

“Let’s see.”

“What?”

“Get up. Come on, right now.”

“Not likely.”

“Quit the shrinking-maiden bit. I just want to see if you can dance. Come on, it’ll just take a minute.” Saying this, she reaches down and rips the bedclothes off me like a magician whipping the tablecloth out from under the dishes. I am exposed.

“Jesus, you didn’t even know if I had pyjama bottoms on!”

“Well, now I know. You do. Come on.”

I swing my legs gingerly out of bed, sit up, dangle my feet.

“If you aren’t the craziest bitch—”

Marsha reaches out, grasps my wrist, yanks me upright. “Waltz,” she commands, assuming the position, one hand on my shoulder, right arm extended.

“I need music.”

“Hum something.”

I decide that the sooner I get this over with, the better. I percolate “The Tennessee Waltz” in my nasal passages and begin manoeuvring Marsha in the space between closet and bed. The soles of my feet are moist; they stick to the floor.

“Who’s this Rubacek,” she asks, “and where did you find him?”

Who is Rubacek? It is a slightly more intriguing question than I once would have suspected, particularly when viewed in the feeble, flickering light of last night’s little flare-up. A combustion ignited because he wouldn’t shut up about my heart attack.

“Ed,” he said, “why don’t you believe me? You didn’t have no heart attack. It was what you call spasms.”

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