Part 12 (1/2)
BOBBY.
I STAYED STAYED in Ned and Alice's house for almost eight years. The urge to do nothing and not change caught up with me; for eight years I squeezed roses onto birthday cakes and thought of what I'd make for dinner. Each day was an identical package, and the gorgeousness of them was their perfect resemblance, each to the others. Like a drug, repet.i.tion changes the size of things. A day when my cinnamon rolls came out just right and the sky clicked over from rain to snow felt full and complete. I thumped melons at the grocery store, dug walnuts from the bins with my hands. I bought new records. I didn't fall in love. I didn't visit my family's graves, three in a row. I waited for asparagus and tomatoes to show up again, and played Dylan's in Ned and Alice's house for almost eight years. The urge to do nothing and not change caught up with me; for eight years I squeezed roses onto birthday cakes and thought of what I'd make for dinner. Each day was an identical package, and the gorgeousness of them was their perfect resemblance, each to the others. Like a drug, repet.i.tion changes the size of things. A day when my cinnamon rolls came out just right and the sky clicked over from rain to snow felt full and complete. I thumped melons at the grocery store, dug walnuts from the bins with my hands. I bought new records. I didn't fall in love. I didn't visit my family's graves, three in a row. I waited for asparagus and tomatoes to show up again, and played Dylan's Blonde on Blonde Blonde on Blonde alb.u.m until the grooves flattened out. I'd be living like that today if Ned and Alice hadn't moved to Arizona. alb.u.m until the grooves flattened out. I'd be living like that today if Ned and Alice hadn't moved to Arizona.
The doctor announced it: Ohio air was too heavy with spoor and lake water for Ned's tired lungs. It was go to the desert or start planning the funeral. That's what he said.
At first I thought I'd go with them. But Alice sat me down. ”Bobby,” she said, ”honey, it's time for you to get out on your own. What would you do in Arizona?”
I told her I'd get a bakery job. I told her I'd do what I was doing now, but I'd do it there instead.
Her eyes shrank, pulled in their light. The singular crease, one deep vertical line, showed up in her forehead. ”Bobby, you're twenty-five. Don't you want more of a life than this?”
”I don't know,” I told her. ”I mean, this is a life, and I like it pretty well.”
I knew how I sounded-slow and oafish, like the cousin who gets ditched and goes on playing alone, as if he'd planned it that way. I couldn't quite tell her about the daily beauty, how I didn't tire of seeing 6 a.m. light on the telephone wires. When I was younger, I'd expected to grow out of the gap between the self I knew and what I heard myself say. I'd expected to feel more like one single person.
”Dearie, there's more to it than this,” she said. ”Trust me.”
”You don't want me to go to Arizona,” I said in a balky cousin's voice. Still, it was what I had to say.
”No. Frankly, I don't. I'm pus.h.i.+ng you out of the nest, like I probably should have some time ago.”
I nodded. We were in the kitchen, and I could see myself reflected in the window gla.s.s. At that moment I looked gigantic, like a geek from a carnival, with a head the size of a football helmet and arms that hung inches above the floor. It was strange, because I'd always thought of myself as small and boy-like, the next best thing to invisible.
”Do you understand what I'm telling you?” she asked.
”Uh-huh.”
I understood that my life would change with or without my agreement. I understood that my supply of this particular drug-these red-checked dish towels and this crock of wooden spoons-was about to run out.
I decided to go to New York. It was the only other logical place. My Cleveland life depended on Alice and Ned-I needed their house to clean, their dinner to cook. I needed them to protect and care for. Otherwise Cleveland was just a place where things failed to happen. The air reeked of disappointment: river water thick as maple syrup, cinder-block shopping centers with three out of five units dark. Working in a bakery, you get to know the local unhappiness. People stuff whole cakes into their sorrow, brownies and cookies and Bismarcks by the dozen. The regularity of my days with Ned and Alice was like a campfire. I'd loved that part of Cleveland. But, without them, there would only be bus stops, and the wind blowing off Lake Erie. I wasn't ready to be a ghost so soon.
I called Jonathan. I did it with true nervousness-by then we were more like relatives than friends. We bought presents, and smoked joints together before Christmas dinners. That was friendly enough. But months went by between holidays, and he wore clothes I would never have thought of on my own. He talked about theater; I went to the movies with Ned or watched TV with Alice. I lay in my room-formerly his room-for hours, just listening to music. Jonathan was quick and bright, going places, and although I loved him his visits always embarra.s.sed me. In his presence I could feel like that gawky cousin or, worse, like a bachelor uncle; a jovial undemanding type who only knew the outer surface of things. Jonathan put my life in a miniaturizing light, and I couldn't help looking forward to the day he got back on the plane because I knew on that day my life would return to its proper size, and I could walk down the Ohio streets with no washed-up, refugee feeling.
Still, when my Cleveland life ran out on me, I called Jonathan. I didn't want an arbitrary new life in Boston or Los Angeles. I couldn't imagine being so alone. And though I was friendly enough with Rose and Sammi and Paul at the bakery, I didn't have what you could truthfully call friends. You don't necessarily meet a lot of people in this world. Not when you let yourself get distracted by music and the pa.s.sing of hours.
The first few times I called I got Jonathan's answering machine, and couldn't talk to it. Each time the machine answered I hung up with a small criminal pang. Finally, after almost a week of trying, he answered in person.
”h.e.l.lo,” he said.
”Jon? Jonny?”
”Mm-hm.”
”Jon. It's Bobby.”
”Bobby. Hey, this is a surprise. Is everything all right?”
That was where we were together. A phone call from me implied bad news about the family's fortunes.
”Oh yeah,” I said. ”Everything's fine. Fine and perfect, couldn't be better.”
”Good. How are you?”
”I'm good. I'm very, very good. How about you?”
”Oh, all right,” he said. ”You know. Life goes on.”
I sat through my own urge to say, ”Well, that's great, goodbye,” and hang up the phone. A scene from my possible Cleveland future pa.s.sed in front of me. On my next birthday, the bakery would have a party for me. Rose, who'd be seventy by then, would kiss a lipstick mark onto my cheek and call me her best beau. There'd be a cake, free to the customers. We'd cut a big slice for George Dubb, a three-hundred-pound bachelor who bought Napoleons and a dozen Linzer cookies every day.
”Listen,” I said. ”Um. You know how Ned and Alice are going to Arizona?”
”Well, sure. Sure I do. I think it'll be good for them. They've needed a change of scene since about 1953.”
”Yeah. Well, you see, now that they're leaving, I've been thinking, like, what am I hanging around here for? They tore down the Moonlight, did you hear about that?”
”No,” he said. ”G.o.d, I haven't thought about that place in ten years. Have you been going there?”
”Well, no. You and I went once. Remember? On acid.”
”I'll never forget. I spent the whole night getting my skates on and going once around the rink.”
”It's gone now,” I said. ”It's a Midas m.u.f.fler now.”
”Huh.”
”Jon?”
”Yes?”
”Would it be okay with you if I came to New York? I mean, could I stay with you for a little while? Just until I got, like, a job and an apartment?”
There was a pause. I could hear the buzz of the miles, all those voices cutting the air between Jonathan and me. He said, ”Do you really want to come to New York?”
”Yeah. I really do. I think I really do.”
”It's a rough place, Bobby. Last week somebody was murdered a few blocks from where I live. They found the body in four different trash cans.”
”I know it isn't Cleveland,” I said. ”I know that. But, Jonny. I'm, like, up to my elbows in frosting here. I mean, I've made a million cupcakes by now.”
He let another pause slip through the line. Then he said, ”If you honestly think you want to give New York a try, of course you can stay with me. Of course you can. I'll see what I can do to keep you safe here.”
I took the train, because it was cheaper and because I wanted to see exactly how much distance I was covering. I looked out the window the whole time, with my full attention, as if I was reading a book.
Jonathan met me at the station in New York. He wore a black T-s.h.i.+rt, black jeans, heavy black shoes with a dull s.h.i.+ne like licorice. You could count on him to be wearing something you didn't expect.
We hugged in the station, and Jonathan put a precise little kiss on my cheek. He led me out to the sidewalk. Seeing him hail a cab was my first lesson in how different we'd become. He stepped off the crowded curb and shot one hand straight up, with the calm certainty of a general. It was a small enough act, but the sense of his own ent.i.tlement was unmistakable. I myself tended to move like a long apology.
When we were in the back seat of the cab, Jonathan pinched my arm. ”I can't believe you're here,” he said.
”Me neither. That's why I wanted to see Pennsylvania go by, so I'd believe it. I mean, if I just got off a plane, this'd seem like, you know, some kind of hallucination.”