The Perfect Son (13 page)

Read The Perfect Son Online

Authors: Barbara Claypole White

When the kids abandoned the dining room table to sprawl on the sofa, the floor, and the fireplace hearth, Felix started the cleanup with a black bin liner. Harry fired several blinking glances at him as he dumped all the paper plates and half-munched slices of pizza. Did this generation not finish anything?

Under the table, there was a snowdrift of candy wrappers. Why had he thought the bumper packs of individually wrapped candies were a good idea? He picked up one, two, three cans of soda, but they were all half- drunk. How could he rinse them out and recycle them when he didn’t know whether or not the kids were finished? What a waste if they were; what a waste if they weren’t. He dumped the cans anyway.

Someone cranked up the stereo, and Felix took out the trash. The hired help; he’d become the hired help. Even from outside, the house pulsed with teenage anarchy. And was
every
light on in the entire house? Did youngsters have any idea of the cost of electricity? He went back inside and barricaded himself in his bedroom.

The lunatics had taken over the asylum, and it was only 8:00 p.m. Two hours until he served the cake; three hours until the girls left; four hours until the implementation of the noise curfew. And then he would be alone with six boys. Would he sleep? Would they? Suppose they wandered off somewhere in the middle of the night, decided to go walkabout through Duke Forest at 2:00 a.m.? The evening stretched to infinity. He was not going to make it to noon the next day; he absolutely could not do this.

He called Ella’s mobile, but she didn’t pick up and the phone went to voice mail. Unsure what to say—other than
help
—he hung up. He could watch a movie, but suppose he got distracted and forgot to check on the kids? As the parent in charge of nine teenagers—
nine
—he had huge responsibilities. There would be no shirking of duty. He set the timer on his phone for thirty minutes. He would do a walk-through every half hour until the three girls left. Make sure there was no sex, no drinking, no smoking. Nothing that could be classified as monkey business.

By 9:00 p.m., Felix was contemplating breathing into a brown paper bag. His heart raced in one direction and his mind in another, galloping through a reel of nightmares that looped from one imagined catastrophe to the next: an uncoordinated teen tripping over his own feet and breaking a piece of furniture; a fight erupting, which seemed highly plausible given the boy-girl ratio; one of the kids—Max, no doubt—needing to be rushed to the ER for a stomach pump.

Someone yelled hysterically; feet pounded past his door. Kids were running inside his house. And Harry’s voice drowned out all the others. Why was his son not the quiet wallflower? Why couldn’t Harry blend in and
disappear
? Why couldn’t all the kids disappear?

Wait—earplugs!
Ella often complained that he snored—he didn’t—but she kept earplugs in her bedside table. Earplugs were the solution!

As Felix rummaged around in the drawer, his fingers landed on a small wooden box. Too small to be a jewelry box; too small to be functional. Curious, Felix opened it, and there lay a half-smoked joint and a lighter. So Katherine was still sneaking pot into his house.

Despite the large number of illicit cannabis plants grown in his old dorm room, Felix didn’t know much about dope. But yes, he’d seen
The
Big Lebowski
. He picked up the joint. Right now, his world was too bright, too clear, too damn loud; he just needed to soften the edges. Mute everything to a manageable level.

Sitting on the carpet with his back against the bed and his legs stretched out, Felix stared at the innocent-looking joint. A few puffs wouldn’t be that illegal, and no one would know. He just needed help coming down from the ledge so he could function for another—Felix glanced at his watch—two and a half hours.

In the hall, Harry screamed. There was energy, there was high energy, and then there was Harry. A whole subcategory of energy.

Felix put the joint in his mouth, lit the end, and inhaled. And nearly coughed up a lung.

He repeated. Nearly coughed up the other lung. The third hit wasn’t as bad. And the fourth was nice, quite nice.

Weird—he’d never noticed before how red the bedroom walls were. Of course he knew they were red—he’d painted them! But wow, the color really popped. He made the Winston Churchill V-for-victory sign with his fingers.

Scary teenagers! What scary teenagers?

Felix had dated a pothead briefly in college. The fact that she’d been a pothead was the reason the affair had been brief. Although it hadn’t really been an affair. Just lots of mediocre sex. She’d told him marijuana could make you paranoid, but she must have been lying, because his worries went
pop!
He put the joint on the bedside table, lay down on the carpet, and spread out his arms. A snow angel! The kids’ music wasn’t too bad, either. Humming along, Felix closed his eyes and let it throb through his muscles. He could feel every beat, every note. The music was in his bloodstream, drifting around his body, filling him with endorphins. Was this that Marilyn Manson guy? Not bad for a baby-eating psychopath. Eating! Felix got up. He was starving! Definitely had the munchies. Pizza! He needed a slice of pizza right now. And the strangest thing—he didn’t even care if it was Hawaiian.

He rocked himself up to his feet and paused. Stood absolutely still.
Shhh.

A scrabbling noise came from the bathroom. What was that? More scrabbling. There was a creature in his bathroom! Felix grabbed the doorknob and slammed the door shut. Then he shot back into the corner of his bedroom. Panic zoomed out of nothingness. Down the hall, the kids laughed—at him? Had they discovered he was stoned and were making fun of him? Blood pumped in his brain, in his guts, in his throat. Heart palpitations—he had heart palpitations. His heart was about to burst. He was about to burst. Vomit, pass out, burn up. Die.

Breathe, he must breathe.

Somewhere a bell rang. The doorbell? Was one of the parents early? They hadn’t had cake yet. No one could leave—they hadn’t had cake!

Breathe, Felix, breathe
.

His hair follicles prickled; flashing lights danced before his eyes. Oh God, this was not good, very not good.

Knocking on his door.
Please don’t let it be a parent.

“Dad? Katherine’s here.”

The she-devil.

Another knock. “Felix? Are you decent?”

“Yes,” he said, because he couldn’t think and breathe and talk at the same time.

“Good, because I’m coming in.” Katherine opened the door, then her eyes grew wide and she stepped inside, slamming it behind her. “Felix! Are you stoned?”

“I feel a bit funny.”

She snatched up the joint. “How many hits did you have?”

He cowered in the corner. “Four?”

“Four. This is strong shit, buddy.” She shook her head.

“Please don’t tell Ella.”

“What were you thinking?”

“The party, I was anxious . . .”

“Felix, honey.” Her voice softened. “You shouldn’t smoke when you’re wound up.”

He was a failure, a huge failure. “Please”—he nodded at the joint—“take it away.”

She put it back in the little wooden box he’d dropped on the bed. A familiar routine, no doubt.

“You don’t want a hit?”

“No, Felix.” She frowned. “I never smoke if I’m driving. I’m not as irresponsible as you think I am.”

“But you and Ella, you’re always drinking wine and—”

“I never have more than one glass. I don’t drink and drive, either.”

“Oh.” He couldn’t think of anything else to say.

More banging on the door. “Dad! Katherine! Can we do cake?”

Felix crossed his arms and started rubbing his shoulders. “I can’t go out there. I can’t.”

“Okay. Here’s what we’re going to do.”

Felix nodded again and again.
Yes, tell me what to do.

“I’m going to deal with the cake. Is it in the fridge?”

More nodding. “There are paper plates and cocktail napkins and black plastic forks on the counter next to the kettle. And candles. And matches. And a cake slicer. And here.” He shoved his mobile at her, then huddled back into the corner. “You need to take a picture of Harry blowing out his candles and text it to Ella. I promised.”

“I can do all that, but you need to sit in the chair and focus on calming down. And I’m going to get you a glass of water.”

“No! Don’t go in the bathroom.” He dropped his voice to a whisper. “There’s a monster in there.”

“No, there isn’t.” She went into the bathroom and turned on the tap.

“No monsters?” he called out.

“No monsters.”

“Swear?”

Katherine handed him a red glass from the bathroom. It had taken him six months to find the perfect glasses, ones that matched the soap dish and the tissue holder.

“Pinkie swear,” she said. “No monsters.”

Smoking a joint before interacting with Katherine was definitely the way of the future. She wasn’t half bad when he was stoned. In a the-world’s-gone-pear-shaped way. Except that he never, ever planned to do this again.

Felix sank into the big club chair and tugged Ella’s cashmere throw around his shoulders.
Hmm.
Lavender, the scent of Ella’s clothes. Tomorrow he would buy all-new lavender sachets for her drawers.

“Are you going to tattle about this to Ella?” he said.

“Of course not. She has enough to worry about.”

“Katherine?”

“Yes?”

“Why are you here?”

“Ella asked me to come.”

Finally, something made sense. “She wants a full report on the party. I get it.”

But Katherine didn’t answer. “Drink the water. I’ll deal with the cake, and we’ll talk later.”

“Wait! What are you going to tell Harry?”

“That you have a migraine.”

“You’d lie for me?”

She folded her arms over her breasts. Nice breasts, actually. “Do you have a headache?”

“Bit of one, yes.”

“Then we’re not lying. Ella wants Harry to have good memories of tonight. It’s up to us to make sure he does. Your headache has suddenly become quite debilitating. I predict you won’t be able to poke your head out of the rabbit hole for at least two hours.”

Felix held up his glass and stared through the red prism at the still water. He sloshed it around, trying to create a mini tsunami, but the water moved heavily like viscous blood.

Felix woke up in the chair, cuddling Ella’s cashmere throw like a security blanket. Katherine was perched cross-legged on the end of his bed, watching a barely audible movie on the television. The cable box flashed 11:30 p.m.

“Feeling better?” she said without shifting her eyes from the screen.

“Hmm.” He rubbed his chin. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to fall asleep on you.”

She shrugged. “You’ve been under extraordinary stress, Felix. I think your body is trying to tell you something, but next time you want to get stoned—call me first.”

“There won’t be a next time. The girls?”

“Gone. The boys have retreated into Harry’s room for manly activities.” She covered up a yawn with her hand, and his guilt returned. She had to be as exhausted as he was, but she was still in motion.

“Thank you. You should go home now, Katherine; get some sleep. Will I see you tomorrow, when I pick up Ella from the hospital?”

“No.” Katherine held up the remote to click off the television. “Ella won’t be home tomorrow. That’s what I came to tell you.”

“Why?” He jumped up. “What happened?”

“Blood clot in the stent.” She stood too. “And her ejection fraction dropped.”

Ejection fraction, the percentage of blood pumped out with each cycle of the heart . . . and Ella’s figure was already less than half of a normal person’s. “You mean lower that it was—lower than thirty percent?”

She nodded. “Fifteen.”

“My wife’s heart is now seriously compromised, and you waited to tell me? How long have you known? When did it happen?”

“This afternoon.”

“Dear God. This could put her in class three heart failure. I’ve done my research. I know what it means to have another blockage at the same site. I know how high the mortality rates are. And you’ve been sitting on this information. You hate me that much?” He spun round, hands digging through his pockets. “Have you seen my car keys?”

“I don’t hate you, Felix. Although I’ll admit, I had miscast you as the archvillain when you’re actually more of the antihero. That’s a huge difference.”

“Really? Nothing personal, but I’ve never trusted you. And after tonight, I certainly never will. Now where are my bloody car keys?”

“I’m sorry. Please, can we not do this?”

He glowered at her. “Have you seen my car keys?”

“You can’t go, Felix. Ella insisted you stay here with Harry. She made me promise. Nothing can ruin his birthday party—she was adamant.”

Felix collapsed back into the chair. “Ella’s mother died on her birthday.”

“Exactly. She’s fine, Felix. I wouldn’t have left otherwise. And the nurses have my cell number. You need to stay here and supervise the boys. You need to honor Ella’s wishes and make sure Harry suspects nothing until after the sleepover. I promised, and I don’t break my promises.”

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