Shadow Traffic (15 page)

Read Shadow Traffic Online

Authors: Richard Burgin

Tags: #Fiction, #Short Stories, #General, #Short Stories (Single Author)

It got darker outside. It was a cold night in early spring and there were lots of clouds out. She could see through the Venetian blinds that were still open until he finally noticed and closed them. What was she thinking by going back to his place in the suburbs? They could have gone to an after-hours bar in University City. She could have stayed in the city with him until she knew him better. Why hadn't she? Her rule of thumb was to go to a man's place only if she was prepared to sleep with him. She didn't think she was thinking that with Phil (although lately she'd been feeling so lonely), so why had she broken her own rule? It was because his behavior was so impeccable on the first two dates—considerate, generous, animated but not aggressive. Also, he seemed to be doing well at his business, which she
couldn't quite remember but had something to do with computers. So there were no warnings, at least none that she caught until they were already at his place.

It had gotten hot in his condominium but she was hesitant to mention it. Maybe she'd just take off the pink cardigan sweater she was wearing—the one she had picked because it looked so good with her black skirt.

“What are you doing?” he said. He was a little further away, but his gun was still pointed at her.

“I'm just feeling a little warm. Is that OK?”

He didn't say anything. She felt it was all right to take it off (she was wearing a white blouse underneath) because so far, thank God, he'd shown no sexual interest in her. Meanwhile, he lit two candles on the glass table in front of them. (It was ironic, she thought, about the candles. On her Match.com profile, which was how they met, she'd listed candlelight as one of her turn-ons.) She placed the sweater carefully beside the gun.

“Hey, what are you doing?” he said again.

“What? I just put my sweater down.”

“I thought you might be reaching for your gun, which is OK, of course, I completely encourage that.”

“I don't believe in guns. I wish you'd throw them away.”

“Why's that?”

“Because they're dangerous—they can kill people and I don't want to be part of that.”

“But you are part of that now, aren't you? From an objective point of view, I'd say you should keep your gun. You can never tell when you might need it, when it might be all you can reach for in this world.”

“What do you want from me? I don't understand,” she said, starting to cry again.

“I'll answer that question when I feel like it, Herr Doktor, or maybe you'll just figure it out in time … speaking of which, time passes slowly in here, doesn't it. It's not at all like a therapist's hour.”

She stopped crying and tried to laugh at his joke.

“It's funny how things happen,” he said, stroking his chin for a moment with his free hand. “For many years I was very unlike other people and then after my ex, I began to do online dating, which is how I met you, and I became more like other people then, but now, I'm not acting like other people at all, am I? I've come back full circle to my original oddness.”

She snuck a look at her watch and was shocked to see it wasn't even 1 a.m. He'd said he was keeping her here all night—did he mean that literally? Although he often spoke in riddles or metaphors, he was also at times literal to a childish degree. In that case, her night might have just begun, and who knew what it would eventually include? So far, he hadn't been violent since he pushed her down on the sofa, but she could still remember the pressure of his hands on her neck. He hadn't made any sexual demands yet either, but who knew when that might happen or what the meaning of his long looks at her was? One time she knew she'd caught him staring at her legs.

It was stupefying, how slowly time passed. Sometimes he talked in manic little fits and starts about his ex, whose name was Melanie, a name he never said again, as if saying her name would make her even more intolerably alive. Other times, there was unadorned silence, which made her listen for the little noises that every home makes, yet his didn't, as if it were as silent as a vault in a museum.

Always she tried to keep eye contact with him and always he kept his gun pointed at her, until she thought she might lose her mind.

Then she needed to urinate but was afraid to ask him—afraid he would go with her to the bathroom and who knew what would happen then? Maybe she should take her gun with her, but that might provoke him somehow. Probably it was better to somehow hold it in and if worse came to worse, do it in her underpants. But what if some of it trickled onto his sofa? Who knew how he'd react to that? In his cosmology his sofa might be sacred and that might be all it would take to make him shoot her.

“You seem restless,” he said, without a trace of irony.

“I'm OK.”

“Are you worrying about what's going to happen to you?”

“Yes … to a degree.”

“Are you afraid I'm going to attack you in some way?”

“No, I don't think you'd do that.”

“How do you know what I'm going to do? Why do you say that?”

“I don't think you really want to hurt me.”

“What am I going to do then? Tell me what I'm going to do.”

“I think you want me to stay so you won't be alone … with your feelings. I think maybe you'd like me to help you. Maybe that's why you answered my ad and wanted to ask me out in the first place?”

“Because you're a therapist?”

She smiled and shrugged.

“What else do I want from you? … assuming that you're right about any of this.”

“Maybe you want to see if you can trust me or any person, after what happened to you.”

“Trust you to do what?”

“Stay here with you tonight. Listen to you, if you feel like talking.”

He turned his face away, staring into space.

“Do you think I should trust you?” he finally said.

“Yes.”

“Because you're a therapist?”

“That's only part of it. I haven't given you any reason not to trust me, have I?”

“Women are trained to lie. To act and flatter and deceive and lie. It's what we call their personality.”

“I don't believe that,” she said, although there was some truth in what he said, she thought. But that was only because women had always been oppressed, didn't he know that? Didn't he understand about social conditioning and sexism?

“You're the exception to the rule, I suppose,” he said.

“I don't believe there is a rule.”

“But as a ‘good' woman, and certainly as a psychotherapist, you would never break a trust, would you? You would always keep your promise and never manipulate me, right?”

“Yes. You can definitely trust me. I'll stay here with you tonight.”

“Along with your gun.”

“I told you I don't want it.”

He smiled and nodded ironically.

“I prayed for something else about you tonight,” he said.

“What was that?”

“I prayed I wouldn't hurt you.”

“That prayer has been answered.”

“You think so?”

“Yes, I do,” she said, trying not to let her voice shake. Have you done it before, she wanted to ask, rape or worse? He'd seemed so affable and solicitous (albeit slightly nervous) on both dates—he hadn't even tried to kiss her good night. But she saw now that he was just waiting for the chance to terrorize her, that that alone made him feel alive.

“A man is always alone,” he said calmly but definitively, as if commenting on the weather. “In the end, he's deserted by everyone, his parents, his women, and of course by God, the original deserter, and he's left only with regret, his infinite regret and his anguish.”

“I haven't left you. I'll listen to anything you want to tell me. Maybe if you tell me the story about your ex you'll feel better.”

“There are no stories—at least that's the way it is for ear people like me. For us, stories go in one ear and out the other. Anyway, I'm going to make a leap of faith and trust you, simply because I have to use the bathroom. But I'm leaving the door open a little so I can hear you very easily and I'll only be fifteen or twenty feet away with my gun in hand and all my ears wide open, and then I'll be back in less than a half minute.”

She nodded to reassure him as she watched him cross the room, go into the bathroom, and close the door but not completely shut it. The moment she heard him urinate she took her shoes off, grabbed her pocketbook and gun and bolted for the door, leaving it open so perhaps he wouldn't hear her from the bathroom. She ran down his steps, worrying that she'd fall, then past two or three houses until she went into a neighbor's backyard. That way if he chased her she could scream and someone might hear her.

It was extremely dark out—a cloudy sky covered a hint of a
moon. She nearly bumped into an enormous tree, then put her hand on the tree trunk to steady herself. She was not one who ran regularly, or even exercised, and was out of breath—panting heavily—which made a strange kind of music in the night as she put her shoes on.

She had a horrible thought then, but it disappeared as soon as she reached in her pocketbook and found her cell phone. Why hadn't she taken her car on this date? Why? Finally she felt herself get her breath back, then realized how cold she was and that she'd left her sweater—her favorite one—back at his place. She opened her phone to get a little light and call 911, when she realized she didn't know what street she was on and wasn't even sure of the town—was it Ballwin, Wildwood? Perhaps at 911 they could tell where she was, she wasn't sure. But what could she tell the police? There'd been no rape—no sex at all—and as far as violence was concerned, just the time he threw her down on the sofa and pressed his hands on her neck. But there'd be no sign of that either. Nor would there be any sign of the threat he constantly posed to her with his gun—which he would have hidden by now or perhaps even had a license for and wouldn't need to hide. She opened her pocketbook and felt the gun he gave her, cold and heavy like a snake. What would she say about it? She didn't know. (She wished she'd taken her sweater instead.) She only knew that she'd throw the gun away as soon as she got home.

He'd been clever, diabolically clever, she saw that now, in his self-restraint—turning her night of torture into a long mock therapy session of a kind, more than anything else.

“Bastard,” she muttered, and started running again to get further away from him. But after a couple of blocks she began thinking differently. He was, after all, ill. She couldn't lose or compromise her humanity because of him. She thought instead
she'd eventually try to show some mercy toward him, only testifying against him if he would be sent to some mental health facility where he could get help, instead of jail. That would be a good thing for her, might even help her self-esteem, since she'd been feeling so blue lately. She would look at him as a person grappling with some of the painful riddles of the world and try to respect that, but meanwhile keep running till she found some light and could read a street address to call a taxi from because every town had a yellow cab, didn't it?

It took fifteen seconds, twenty at most before he realized he was alone. How could he not hear her leave? It must have been the fan that went on when he turned on the light. Then, when he realized what happened he was stunned, as if he'd turned into a giant frozen ear, which gave her five or more seconds to get away before he raced to the door, gun in hand, and looked out but couldn't see her. Then he bowed his head and turned back. Fifteen or twenty seconds—that's all it took to become a ghost, at least in this room, he thought. He stared at the empty sofa, just as he did a month ago when Melanie had been sitting there, and noticed Courtney had taken the gun with her. It was like a little cavity was now on the sofa. He walked to the hall closet, unloaded the blanks from his gun, replaced them with the same bullets he'd put in her gun, turned around and walked back to his original spot. This time he noticed her sweater, even saw that it was pink before he started seeing it as flesh colored and then finally saw Courtney herself in it as if she grew out of the sweater.

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