The Republic of Nothing (47 page)

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Authors: Lesley Choyce

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I watched my mother's body jump a second time. I prayed. I heard a young man say, “We got a pulse.” I watched the young nurse breathe two more times into my mother's mouth.

“Twenty five capsules,” I said now to Dr. Maclsaac, handing him the bottle.

“Why, for God's sake?” he demanded but I could not answer.

“Let's stabilize her, then prepare to have her stomach pumped. We're not out of the woods yet.”

47

It turned out to be a bad year for the Tories all around. Bill Weaver was left to carry the banner for them when election time came around and he was soundly defeated at the polls by Jason Cameron, the Liberal candidate who seemed to have been elected as the only, albeit undesirable, alternative to a party in shambles. John G.D. Maclntyre found himself in Dorchester Penitentiary learning the art of stamping out licence plates. Colin Michael Campbell moved out of the country and took up residence in the Dominican Republic where, he had told the press, he was employed as a consultant to that country's
government. The Dominican Republic, conveniently enough, was a nation without any agreement with Canada to expedite criminals back to their home turf for crimes like government bribery and manipulation of public contracts for personal well-being. It was a high old time for the media in Halifax and across Canada as the stories came out. And slowly my father recovered. Of course, it would be many months before he had the strength back in him to chop wood or set nets or do any of the simple tasks he had performed and thoroughly delighted in as a young man. And he could have been a broken man, his political career cut off by a rival with a gripe and a gun.

But it wasn't anything like that. By late fall, he claimed to be somewhere in the top ten of the happiest men in Canada. “And men hate being happy,” he would tell me. “By their nature, they like to cause trouble or worry a thing until it breaks their back. I'm the exception to the rule. Men are stubborn too, but look at me. Again the exception. I could take a hint when it was time to leave public life. Some poor assholes stick around until its too late. Like that poor old son of a bitch John G.D. I want you to know I don't hold a grudge against him. John took me off this island and he bloody well helped me to come back home.”

My father had one fairly serious setback in his recovery. My mother doesn't like to admit it, but they were making love when it happened. I hadn't heard the bed springs squeak like that in years and, Lord knows, it must have been a bit early in my old man's recovery, what with arteries stitched up and lungs patched up, but they were going at it one Saturday night when something must have gone wrong with the repair work. My mother came into my bedroom and told me we had to drive my father to the hospital again because he was having a hard time breathing.

Poor old Dad was a little embarrassed. “Don't worry, Dorothy,” he said to her on the way there, “I'll get my wind back.” He did get his wind back, and the squeaking of the bed springs
was like music to my ears. But before each session of my parents' lovemaking, my mother asked me to stand by on call just in case there were medical problems. Fortunately I was never again needed to haul my old man to the hospital.

After a while I stopped worrying about my father's health and the dangers of lovemaking on a man who had survived the assassin's bullet. I no longer let myself fret about my mother's mental stability either. Since her own near-death encounter, she had regained a number of contacts in the spirit world. But it was different now for all of us. In her younger days, she had taken to the metaphysical with a serious, sometimes even eerie, tenor. Her guides had been sombre, dark figures, often well-meaning, but not the sort you'd like to have hanging around for a Friday night gathering of friends for beer and chips. Now, my mother's invisible friends seemed to be a friendly, chatty lot who could converse with her about immortality and the ongoing spiritual exchange as readily as they could tell her about a new way to prepare a clam sauce.

My father bought a new boat that spring. We cruised her far out to sea on those warm sunny days, dropped anchor and jigged for squid or simply dropped a hand-line or two for cod and mackerel. And we talked, catching up on years of father and son talk. Casey came along too and got to know her father like she had always wanted to. We had all grown tanned and tempered by that September. Trouble would not return to us until later that fall.

My father was at work writing a book about his philosophy and his days in government and, most of all, about the politics of life and death. “I'm a born again anarchist,” he told me. “It wasn't until I was on the other side, sliding down that long, dark, slanty tunnel that I could begin to see how foolish I had been. I was flat on my back and it felt like I was in a flume of dark warm water. The walls were black, but they had a kind of funny glow to them. When I started, there had been this awful pain in my chest. And I was never as scared as that.
I was out of control. I must have gone miles and miles and I kept thinking… I'm going down. And if I'm going down, I'm gonna end up in hell. But then I try real hard and I discover I can sit upright and the pain is all gone. I feel like a little kid again on some kind of slide. And up ahead I see a little light that just keeps growing brighter and brighter. I think that when I get to that light, I'll just shoot out onto some goddamn playground somewhere, like that one behind your old elementary school in Sheet Harbour.

“But I see it's not a place — that light up there — it's a person. It's your mother, standing there ready to catch me. I'm so happy I figure I'm gonna pee myself only I don't know if I can pee myself, ‘cause I also know that I must be dead. I'm thinking,
so this is dead.
It's funny being dead, a lot funnier than you'd figure. And there's your mom. I think I'm gonna crash right into her, only I don't. I arrive there and the tunnel is gone. I'm standing right up on my feet — no pain, no problems, nothing. And your mother is there. Damn, was I ever happy to see her.

“Then this terrible feeling comes over me. Because
I
was the one who was supposed to be dying. Not her. She holds me in her arms and I want to scream out, ‘What are you doing here? You can't be here with me!' But before I can speak she says, ‘I had to come here to bring you back.'”

“And, oh boy, I wanted to go back just then. I mean, I think I wanted to stay, if your mother was there with me, but she held up one hand in the air and in the palm of her hand I could see Casey and in the palm of the other hand I could see you, Ian. So I put my hands up to each of hers and I started drifting off backwards until I was back in bed there in the hospital. The pain came back all at once and it felt so bloody awful, I thought I'd made a mistake. And I couldn't find your mother anywhere. Man was I scared.”

48

By September the Liberals had been in power for nearly a year. Jason Cameron was an old party chum of Bud Tillish and Bud, his past failures in politics behind him, had been sworn in as minister of Mines and Energy. There was talk of sweeping away all the old Tory misdeeds — the graft, the influence peddling, the patronage and the general squandering of public funds. It was the same self-congratulatory sort of remarks that the public would have heard when Colin came to power and swept away the Liberal's graft, influence peddling, patronage and squandering of public funds. And in that brief hiatus of public cynicism when a people turn the other cheek and are ever hopeful of real improvement from their politicians, a mild euphoria swept through Nova Scotia.

My father sat before the TV and watched Jason Cameron give bold and promising speeches as premier. My father could predict nearly word for word what would issue from the man's mouth. It was an odd form of family entertainment to see my father race ahead with his own version of the speech and then hear the less convincing echo of the man on TV, not nearly as eloquent, forge on with the eminent destiny of this great province.

“I lost one of the best speech writers in Halifax to that bastard,” my father said. “We had already been working on this one. After I got shot, Tyrone Glebe went over to the Grits. I liked the man. He had no party loyalty whatsoever. Just wanted to cover his ass and keep his job. He was very up-front about it. He gave me some grand ideas and I fired his imagination with some doozies as well. I'm really quite happy he could put them to use.”

But from where I sat, so much of it boiled down to talk about the great two-faced demon goddess of “economic development.”

“Ever since I've come back from the hereafter, I'm beginning to think I might have been wrong about this economy
stuff,” my father admitted. “It was such a beguiling idea. But I think I was taken in.” He was still staring at the bland, stone-block face of Jason Cameron. “What we need is spiritual growth. And I don't mean organized religion.”

I was really happy to hear my old man talk like that again. There was something about dying that took the Tory right out of him. If he was still a politician, he had reverted to something less organized, more renegade and more homespun. “Look at that dip weed,” he said, pointing at the TV screen. “Not an ounce of human emotion in his body. You couldn't get an honest human reaction out of Jason Cameron if you put a cherry bomb up his ass and lit it. The sucker wants to run the province like a goddamn business. Nova Scotia is not a corporation. It's a bunch of the most beautiful yahoos with more spunk than people anywhere else on the planet. It's a frigging state of awareness, a realm of possibility, not some goddamn fart factory aiming to provide profit for shareholders.”

My mother switched off the set. “We agree,” she said. “Now let's go catch some crabs.”

Crabbing was my mother's way of bringing the family back together. We would sit on Hants Buckler's dock or hang out down by the bridge and drop lines with hunks of herring into the water, pulling up dozens of rock crabs, blue and orange and black. They would all get tossed into a large bushel basket and we'd take them home where my mother would concoct some exotic new dish of crab meat. My mother said that she had been informed by one of her guides, a young herbalist from the thirteenth century, that crab meat helps to strengthen the heart.

“I'm in favour of anything that strengthens the heart,” I said.

It was on a sluggishly delightful afternoon in late September when the uranium drilling truck returned. We were on the bridge, leisurely pulling up a crab or three when the truck trundled past us, shaking the whole structure. It was the same
truck whose engine I had corroded with the best of acids available on the island. The man driving didn't even look at us.

“This bridge is only rated at two tons. That truck's over the limit,” my father said to us. “He's violating provincial law.” It was a curious response. I wanted to know what he was really thinking.

A minute later, another truck towing a flatbed with a bulldozer approached the bridge. The driver cautiously pulled up onto the wooden structure, then gunned the engine and roared across to follow the first truck.

“Son of a bitch,” my father said. We had all felt the crack. I lay down on the road and looked at the creosote beams that were the primary supports to the span. “Wilful destruction of provincial property,” I said.

A wave of numbness shot through my body. I looked away from my father because I didn't want him to see my face. I looked across towards Burnet Sr.'s dilapidated house where his new brood of dogs, awakened by the trucks, were yelping and tearing themselves against their chains. I could hear Burnet's old man yelling at them from inside the house to “shaddup.” Strange to think that he didn't know his son was less than half a mile away on the island and refusing to go see him. I was suddenly thankful that I had a father I could talk to, a father who had returned from politics and the dead to stand by his family come hell or high water.

“War,” my father said.

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