~This story previously appeared in The Yale Review (2003).
Henry does not want to sink heel nor
toe into it. He unlaces and removes his shoes and then parts the cane and thorn
and rubbish that the land here offers over itself but the laces snag even in
Henry's uplifted hand while the thorns scrape deep into its white side. What I
hear is what you might, words he learned from his mammy or so he says his father
calls her when she curses, words I can hear even over the pump and the child,
even over the gush of one and the howl of the other. As Henry fights his way
through the briars barefoot, curses his way past the Cad and the boat and the
Something Else vehicle you can't see from the street the thorns are so thick,
the rat pink baby limbs get soap-rinsed and so slippery some tight gripping is
involved, then some quick wrapping and baby soothing, some milk up front.
He kisses us both, all lips buss
air, and he pinches my cheek bottom to make the baby suck harder.
He is putting in the horse stove, I
say. Inside.
Henry says he has such a movie he is
going to make, he is almost sure to make. Where is this stove?
Before I can think how he will steer
past the fallen wood and shingles to the stove place, the baby, nakedly
post-pumpbath nursing, pees straight up at me, pees right into my ear as my
head is turned toward Henry who now finds a smile you could shake up and find
frothy.
He spots the stove place through the
uprights, he waves as I work the towel, he heads in.
The horse stove sits upright but is
not yet chimneyed. So covered in soot--secondhand soot because the stove had a
life in another house where its horse-embossed front glowed so orange in its
heating that we made an offer on the spot--the father of the baby throws off a
black cloud when he and Henry tender their handshakes, while the boards he has
taken out or down shift under their effort and some even threaten to fall.
Henry waves at them too, without touching them. They teeter, they fall back the
way they should.
He says he's brought beer and hors
d'oeuvres and
news about his movie and what about dinner?
The father of the baby backpats
Henry out through the doorless kitchen and into the backyard where tree limbs
hang and the thorns all around have been almost all held back with thick silver
tape so you can sit in amongst them. I expect to find another seat soon, he
says as he bends down to adjust three buckets seats all entwined in vine. The
thorns gave up half a gas pump last time we weed-whacked.
Together they dig a pit beside the
three seats and somehow Henry’s pressed-sharp pants don’t get dirty even though
he puts coals down the pit's sides in a basket fashion, layer on layer without
a smear of black while the father of the baby gathers sticks out of the thorns
and then they light it, with the wood of the matches they ruin.
Henry's girl shows, out of the blue.
She's the salt to his pepper, she's trouble and fun, invited of course, but
unexpected. Her taxi comes from the train while I'm wrestling the not quite
sleeping baby into his suitcase. It holds his blankets and diapers and, with it
left open, just barely him. I put it close to the hotdogs, the spare ones for
breakfast, so the dog will watch him. Then I go join Henry's girl where she is
fitting herself into the last seat, I go to squat by the fire and laugh.
The bugs sure like the fire, Henry
says into the dusk that settles in as fast as the smoke. This is what we all
say after the wieners are roasted and the last of the chips--Henry's hors
d'oeuvres--are taken care of by the dog who knows a chip in a bush is better
than spare breakfast dogs beside a baby, this is what we say while we swat and
laugh. Then we bless that fire with beer sprinklings, and surprise, the bugs
change over its steam into stars, snapping other stars at a distance.
Stars of another kind are what the
men talk of, who's got what tune and via what talent or video. Henry's girl and
I ask how much of this talk will have to be talked up to beard the long night.
We have heard about talent before, about their agents and backups and deals and
schedules. I swing the baby, trying to wake, on a branch, I swing him to a
little tune about stars the others barely remember.
You like this place? asks Henry.
We haven't found any bodies yet, the
father of the baby says and chalks one up. Though it does smell a little.
It's sewage, I say like that's a
comfort. At least we have the pump.
I could never buy here, he says, I
can't wear Ferragamos or the cops think they're hot. With Guccis like this they
figure you can pay them off, you've got real money, not credit. He shines his
left shoe with a leaf. It's a beach like the Hamptons or nothing.
What water we have is not so far
away and water--the chugging of a washer, the sink spigot--is all that will
calm the baby who now needs it. Without a washer or a sink, we must walk down
the dark chunked-up asphalt road, between reeds, cattails and the bedsprings
that lie strewn along it, walk to the back porch of a neighbor, or, rather, an
ex-neighbor who lives now in some less sheriff x-ed out place, then walk up to
our knees into the water that drifts over his back porch. The baby's little
legs thrash and then dangle from the railing under which armored crabs swim,
chained one to the other in an ecstasy of summer and crab sex, a five or ten
crab chain that weaves around our ankles under a flashlight Henry holds.
It's perfect, he says. How much for
the location?
We laugh. Stars wouldn't come here, I say. They would
have to be borne here on sedan chairs.
They would have to be born here,
says Henry's girl. But who comes from here who would want to come back?
She only pretends no interest in
stars, she has their numbers. You can almost hear her packaging them, the
ribbons coming together, the six or seven figures. She's Henry's one-way to the
Hamptons.
They wouldn't have to stay the
night, I say. You don't either.
But I've brought the sleeping bags
you suggested, she says. And paper so they could work.
The baby, carried all this way by
his father, signals his opinion of work. The baby really loves the movies, says
his father over his crying, he will keep his eyes open for as long as it takes.
We're in his movie, I say. It's a
classic.
Henry takes the little guy bare
chest to bare chest and offers his heart to him until he's quiet. There's so
much silence we can hear the two pumps, and the crabs underwater, the bugs in
the reeds scraping their bellies, and the tide at the sand.
The moon rises.
Camera, action, says the father's
baby.
****
THE STORY BEHIND THE STORY
Thirty years after the event, I sent
the story to my friend with the loafers and he remembered what brand of hot
dogs he brought. By then he'd produced a whole series of house party movies, as
he was destined to do. Race was just another factor in a kaleidoscope of this
unbelievably bad weekend yet the thorns, the crabby baby, the limited supper
were dismissed on the spot by him and his girlfriend--they thought of it as an
adventure. Key to the mystery of the place were those thorny vines, a thicket
that couldn't be fought through, that hid all the history, past and future:
especially the Cad, the moon, and the ocean coming-to-get-you.
*****
ABOUT TERESE SVOBODA
Terese Svoboda's most recent novel
is Bohemian Girl, named one of Booklist's ten best Westerns for 2012.
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