“The doctor will be here in a moment, Mr. Cameron.” The nurse pulled the door behind her as she left, and I turned toward Tommy, sitting at the end of the examining table, his white-sheathed arms wrapped around himself in an involuntary embrace.
“What
happened?” I said. My voice echoed in the bare room.
He
looked down at his dangling feet, the only limbs still free. He moved them aimlessly as if he were sitting
on a dock, cooling his toes in the water.
He acted like he belonged here, like it wasn’t all a mistake. But it had to be.
“Tommy,
what happened?” I repeated, with a bit
more force than I’d intended. He didn’t
answer. That used to be his way of
getting at me—acting vacant, giving me a “Duhhh…” when he didn’t feel like
answering. Now, he wasn’t kidding. He was sitting at the edge of that table like
an idiot—so help me, that’s exactly what was going through my mind—my older
brother looking like the village idiot.
I took him by the shoulders of that awful jacket and said, “Tommy, tell
me what is going on!” He looked at me—an
unfocused, distant stare—and then he looked away.
I
felt someone’s hand on my shoulder, and heard a soft voice say, “Mr. Cameron,
why don’t you join me in the next room?”
It
was a thin, severe-looking, middle-aged woman with black hair pulled tightly
back in a barrette. On her coat was
embroidered in cursive writing, “Dr. Landis.”
She was the man in the white coat, I thought. The one who comes to take you away.
We
stood behind a one-way mirror and watched Tommy from the other room. I couldn’t shake the sensation that all this
really wasn’t happening, that sooner or later I’d wake up. I’d call tom and we’d laugh about this
dream. I touched the glass in front of
me. It was solid.
Tommy
went back to watching his feet. The
doctor must have been standing back here before, observing my brother and me
like two bugs in a jar. She had probably
been sizing me up, too, diagnosing me.
“Could
you please take that jacket off him?” I said.
“Yes,
we will,” she said. Her voice was a low
whisper. “He doesn’t seem to be a danger
to himself anymore.” She stood behind
me, the two of us peeping through the glass at Tom. “I was hoping that you might be able to
elicit a reaction,” she said.
I
was going to ask her what happened, but before I could ask, she began to tell
me. Tommy had called the crisis center
shouting, she said, shouting that something was about to happen. When the operator asked what he meant, Tom
said something like, “I just need some talk-back!”
“Talk-back? What is that?” I said.
She
didn’t know. She thought I might
know. She waited, then continued. After he said this, he accused the operator
of not wanting to listen to him, and dropped the receiver, leaving it off the
hook. When the paramedics got to his
building he was on the roof, sitting out on the edge of a cornice, dangling his
feet, just as he sat now on the examining table. According to the rescue team, when they
pulled him back to safety, he flailed and resisted, but he didn’t say a word.
The
doctor stopped talking. I felt like
screaming at Tommy, “Cut it out!” but with that glass between us, my words
would have only bounced back to me, unheard.
The doctor, standing at my shoulder, resumed speaking in her low tone,
telling me that it might have been an isolated incident, but then what about
his unresponsive state? Had he been
acting erratically? Had he been
depressed? No, no, I said. I couldn’t think. The last thing I heard her say was that
they’d keep him there for observation, and then I stopped listening.
Pulling
out of the dark parking lot I passed the “St. Mark’s Hospital” sign, and I
thought of the directions Annie and I gave people who were driving to our house
for the first time. We used this place
as a landmark. “Turn left at the loony
bin,” we always said. Ha ha.
When
I got home, it was almost dawn. The
blinds filtered lines of light over Annie, who was twisted up with the bed
sheets and lying diagonally. I stood at
the doorway of our bedroom and for a moment admired the straight lines falling
into this room I’d designed—its length, width, and height all equal, with my
lovely jumble of a wife in the center, now striped with twilight. I nudged her feet over to her side of the
bed, lay down, and let her have the covers.
“I’m
going home now, Elizabeth ,”
she said, clear as day. Annie talks in
her sleep. She talks a lot in her waking
life, too, though that doesn’t seem quite so odd. I don’t know, though, the sleep-talking
doesn’t really bother me. It’s actually
kind of soothing to hear someone talking at night.
I
thought I’d try to sleep a little before the alarm rang. I was wired, but I still managed to close my
eyes and drift off. As my mind dropped
over the edge, I felt myself physically
falling…and some shred of consciousness told me to wake up. I came back to the darkened bedroom with a
jolt, but it took a moment for my heart to slow. I heard someone speak, but it was only Annie,
babbling on. I lay awake and
listened. Her intermittent conversations
with me and other’s somewhere on the other side of consciousness, were
comforting. Tommy used to talk at
night. Maybe she was talking to him.
I
got up and went to work that day, but I went to St. Mark’s on my lunch
hour. I didn’t see Dr. Landis. Tom was in a semiprivate room, sharing space
with an ancient man in a wheelchair, who was a bout as communicative as my
brother. “Hi,” I said, too loudly, too
cheerfully. The old man looked
scornful. I pulled the curtain.
Tom
stared straight ahead. His face was
sallow, and the blond hairs at his temple were matted. I wasn’t sure what to do. “Annie says to say hi, Tom.” I was speaking as if he were deaf, or senile. He did look older, somehow—not elderly, but
older than thirty-one, surely, the way he stared straight in front of him, his
jaw slack, his skin devoid of color. It
wasn’t a matter of wrinkles—I was a year younger, and I had more worry lines
than he had. “Annie really wanted to
come with me, “ I said, “but she had to give a big test or something.” I paused, leaving a space where he might say
something, anything. “Can you
imagine? Third-graders getting a
midterm? I don’t remember even having
tests when we were that young. Do you?”
I
felt foolish—I didn’t know what to say.
I didn’t even know what was wrong with him, why he was here. They’d taken blood and tested for drugs, but
I could have told them it wasn’t that.
He wouldn’t even take Sominex when I’d suggested it.
“That
stuff is addictive, David,” he’d told me not a week before.
Whatever
the cause, I didn’t like having to keep up this goofy, one-sided conversation
with my brother. I’ve never been the
talker of the family, never had to be. Tommy
was always there, speaking for me, even when I didn’t need him to. When we were little and somebody would ask me
how old I was he’d say, “He’s eight!” Or
they’d ask me what kind of sandwich I wanted and he’d say, “He likes peanut
butter!” Some people said he talked too
much, but I never objected. We were two
peas in a pd, my mother used to say—two halves of a whole. We even looked alike. There’s a picture of us that Annie framed and
put in the guest bedroom—Tommy and me at about six and five, sitting side by
side in a big easy chair, wearing matching white T-shirts. Tommy’s elbow rests casually on my
shoulder. His hand, without purpose,
gently touches the top of my head. I
felt the need now to touch Tom, to reach him, but I was helpless to know how.
The
hook of a crane swung a steel beam past the elevator cage, and as it rose I
thought about my brother, my talkative brother, afraid of heights, quietly
dangling his feet over the side of a fourteen-story building. I wondered if he had even been aware of the
sirens that must have blared just below him.
The
cage stopped and I walked out onto the work site. My tie riffled in the sudden breeze, and my
boots shook the plywood floor. Gardner , the VP I’d been
dealing with all the way through the project, came toward me and said
something, but the sound of a metal drill drowned him out. I unrolled a fresh copy of my black-line
drawings. Gardner was a nice guy, but he was always
asking for things that he should have brought up before we drafted all the
plans. “You’ve got to listen to him—he’s
the customer,” my boss kept reminding me.
Listening to him wasn’t the problem; it was readjusting everything to
accommodate him.
“Look,”
I said, and I pointed to the plans.
“Even if someone is standing right here, right by the door, with this
design he doesn’t have a chance of hearing what’s going on inside. It all has to do with trapping the sound,
leaving a space between the walls where the sound can go, and using the right
materials so that it’s absorbed. If we
create that quiet space between two rooms, then the sound is caught, absorbed,
and only those on the inside can hear.”
He
looked at me blankly, but I guess he was satisfied. I have to admit, I didn’t pay close
attention. I’m usually extremely focused
when I work, but I found my mind wandering.
I was thinking about Tommy. He
and I used to build things in the back yard—elaborate tree forts with ropes and
pulleys and platforms. The platforms
were never too high—Tommy’s caveat—but our constructions were still great feats
of engineering. We had planned to form
our own company: Cameron Brothers,
Architects. We should have done that, I
thought, as if Tommy were there, as if I were telling it to him.
We
didn’t do it, of course. I kept thinking
of it as a real plan, but in junior high, when I started to love math, Tom
found it too easy, too logical. Instead,
he excelled in “written and verbal skills.”
I called him “Mr. Essay Contest” to make him mad.
Once
he was asked to read a prize-winning essay he had written, in front of the
entire school. You’d think that reading
aloud would be easy for a guy who could talk so much, but when his name was
announced there was a long pause, then a murmur, and then all the kids stared
to get unruly. Finally, this nun came to
the microphone looking all flushed and windblown and said, “We are going to
proceed to the final part of the program, the closing prayer. Father?”
Tome
was in the bathroom puking his guts out.
That night as he was lying in the twin bed parallel to mine, just as I
was falling asleep, he said, “You know what the thing about it was, Dave?”
“What,
Tom?”
“The
thing about it was, I wasn’t even very scared right before. It was just when they announced me that I
knew I was gonna puke.”
“Mm-hm,”
I said. I was thinking about my design
for a toothpick tower I was building for the science fair, and I was right on
the edge of sleep.
Tommy
would always do that to me. He’d always
start a conversation right as I was about to drift off. And he’d always ask me a question first—“You
know what the thing about it is, Dave?”—so that I’d have to answer, I’d have to
be awake, I’d have to let him know I was giving him my full attention.
“So
why did you?” I said.
“Puke,
you mean? I don’t know. I mean, all those people were looking at me,
seeing if I was going to say something smart.”
“You
say smart stuff all the time,” I said, my eyes still closed.
“Yeah,
but, it’s different when I say stuff, like to you. Then it just comes out.”
“Well
it just came out in the john, didn’t it?”
I heard him laugh, and laughed myself, then settled back on my pillow
and began again to drift.
Sometimes,
though, when he’d finish on one subject, and I’d be giving in to the darkness
behind my eyelids at last, he’d start on something else. “Because you know the thing about it, Dave?”
And if I didn’t answer, he’d say, “Dave?”
And
I’d say, “What, Tom?” And he’d go off on
another subject: why writing essays
suited his temperament, or why the reckless compliment he’d given to Mary Jo
Caponati that day really didn’t make any difference, or why cross-country was
number one for him, and it wasn’t a feeb sport, no matter what anybody said, or
something else I’d be required to respond to, another “Right, Dave?”
interrupting my latest journey toward sleep.
He wouldn’t dismiss me from these conversations until he heard me
snoring.
Occasionally
it bugged me, but the year he went off to college and left me at home to finish
my senior year, I could never get to sleep.
It was too quiet.
I
visited the hospital again, and I ran into Dr. Landis, who asked me into her
office. She said Tommy’s silence was
surely a symptom of a depression. She
talked to me about depression for at least ten minutes, until I was depressed
myself. “But how are you going to get
him to talk?” I said, finally.
“I
thought you might tell me that,” she said.
I
entered Tom’s room, and, having come to realize it was better to ignore the
roommate, I pulled the curtain and resumed the ridiculous small talk I had
begun the first day. “Hi, guy!” I said,
sounding like a game-show host. I’d
brought lunch for both of us, just in case food might bake an impression. Tom had always loved to eat, and when he was
a runner, never gained any weight.
Lately, though, he’d started to look a big cherubic. I offered him a sandwich, but there was no
response. I ate mine, and tried to keep
up a patter. How did those morning DJs
ever do it—sound friendly and funny, while they talked nonstop into nothing but
air? My own speech was halting and
forced. I finally couldn’t stand it
anymore. I left tom’s sandwich on the
table next to his bed and got out of there.
I
started the ignition, dialed my assistant and told her I’d been detained. Pulling away from the hospital, I turned the
car away from the direction of my office and just kept driving until Tulsa was almost behind
me—until I began to see open space. The
land around Tulsa
is flat, like home. Not quite as green
as Indiana ,
but similar in the way that the sky is big and meets the land someplace beyond
where I could ever travel. Back in high
school, Tom’s cross-country route would take him out into the country. I imagined seeing him out here in this
slightly drier landscape, his skinny high-school self running as if he hoped
the road would never end.
I
always envied him his running, not because I couldn’t run—I was a sprinter—but
because it was an extended period of time when Tom was away from me, and
silent. He loved just to go, for long
stretches. If I needed him, though, like
to talk about something, he’d ditch practice.
He was like that—not just to me, but to everyone. You’d know something was important to him,
but if he saw somebody who needed something, he’d stop what he was doing and
help. It wasn’t uncommon to see him in
the study hall, explaining Shakespeare in some teenager’s vernacular, or in the
neighborhood, telling stories to the younger kids. Sometimes a pack of little kids would even
trail him for part of his afternoon run.
I
imagined him, out in this landscape. But
I couldn’t pull up and ask him to get in, to help me with my problem, as he had
always done in high school, because now he was the problem. Back in the hospital, Tommy was lying there
expecting me to do the talking, and All I could do was fantasize that he’d do something for me, that he’d
start a stream of words flowing, to comfort me with the sound he made.
I
drove until the sky began to go gold, and then I turned the car around and came
back toward town. But I didn’t go toward
either work or home. Instead, I headed
toward Tommy’s apartment building. I
parked in the lot and called Annie. The
machine picked up—her voice.
“Hi,
it’s me,” I said. “go ahead and
eat. I’m at Tom’s apartment. If you need me.”
I
fumbled with the keys Tom had given us in case of emergency and opened the door
to find a scrawny, yellow cat wailing at me.
Tome had never told me he had a cat.
It screamed at me and then ran toward the kitchen, leading me to its
empty dish. There was a bag of dry food
on the counter that had been ripped and gnawed at, and a rough-edged hole at
the bottom must have given up enough squares and stars to keep the thing alive. God knows what the cat had done for water
during the past few days. I opened a can
of food that was keeping cold in the otherwise empty refrigerator. The cat went wild as I filled its bowl with
brown mush that smelled foul, contributing to the other strange smells in the
apartment. I watched the thing bolt down
its food, and then I refilled the bowl.
The
place was a wreck. There were papers
everywhere—strewn across the rug in the living room, stuck to the walls with
little bits of tape, spread across the couch.
As I walked around I saw that in addition to the papers, there were
crusty dishes here and there. No wonder
Tom had never invited us over. Dirty
laundry covered the floor in the bedroom, the bathroom, and the hall. Almost without thinking, I began to pick up
the clothes and throw them into a pile.
As I did, I checked out the wall coverings; post cards of famous works of art, a
typewritten sheet entitled “GOALS,” and a couple of “To Do” lists with only a
few items scratched out.
There
was something I had to do here, and though I didn’t know what it was, I knew
the place was way to messy for me even to think. I’d have to get the apartment in shape before
I could figure anything out. I took off
my tie, rolled up my sleeves, and picked up the pile of laundry I’d
assembled. The laundry room was probably
in the basement—I headed out of the apartment, creating a breeze that lifted a
sheet of paper stuck to the inside of the door.
“PAY RENT!!!” it shouted.
When
I came back up from putting a load in the washer, I thought, This place stinks. But I didn’t have time to get to the deep
cleaning just yet. I opened the windows,
but no air moved the curtains. Noises
bounced off the walls of the next building:
car horns, a baby crying. I
looked around for the phone so I could tell Annie I’d be a while. I saw the empty base unit for a cordless
phone, but God only knew where the phone itself was. I’d have to wait for it to ring before I
could find it.
I
gathered up the papers from the floor and the couch and sat down at the
desk. You couldn’t see the desktop. Even the computer monitor had little notes
attached to it with ragged squares of Scotch tape. I tried to put the paperwork in order, neat
piles at least. I set my watch to beep
when I should go down and put Tommy’s clothes in the dryer, and I sifted
through the piles I had made. Maybe I
should have had qualms about invading my brother’s privacy, but I didn’t. If I had to read his mail to find some sort
of clue about his silence, then so be it.
Something here might get him to talk to me.
The
cat made a figure eight around my ankles.
I reached down and touched it absent-mindedly, but I pulled my hand
away, thinking about fleas and fur and my dark suit. Annie had a cat when we first got
married. She couldn’t understand why I
would never pet it. She would sit,
evenings, and talk and talk to the cat.
I didn’t mind the sound of all the cooing and stroking, though I might
have preferred it for myself. When the
thing ran away, I thought she’d never forgive me. “You were jealous of that cat! Admit it!” she said. I wasn’t jealous. I didn’t tell it to run away.
Tommy’s
yellow cat pushed its head against the heel of my shoe and I was suddenly
profoundly glad that this one had survived the neglect.
None
of the mail was very compelling. Tommy
had won a million dollars, he was an instant member of an auto club, only he
could stop the infringement upon his right to bear arms…There were also a
couple of bills in there, ancient and overdue.
I paid them. At the bottom of the
pile were my brother’s story manuscripts, full of cross-outs and scribblings,
looking as though they hadn’t been touched in a while. He had stopped going to the writing classes
he had come to Tulsa
to take.
He’d
been so excited last summer when he called to tell me he was leaving Bloomington and moving
here to work with this writing teacher.
“Leaving Bloomington ? No shit,” I said. He’d been there since graduation—first
getting a Master’s Degree in Literature, which took a while, and then working
at various jobs. He had worked at a
bookstore, a frame-making place, a small press, and a recording studio for
Books on Tape. The last job was the one
he liked the best. It didn’t pay much,
but he’d call us from work sometimes and play choice lines onto our answering
machine. “Call me Ishmael,” our machine
would request of us in the some broadcaster’s deep baritone, between beeping
reminders of dentist appointments and invitations to dinner. A month or so later, a different voice would
intone, “I lived alone, in the woods, a mile from any neighbor, in a house
which I had built myself, on the shore
of Walden Pond .” Women spoke to us too, British women mostly,
about going to a lighthouse about finding a secret garden. If I didn’t know the quote I’d ask Annie. She always knew.
Through
all his jobs, and even up to time he left Bloomington ,
Tom still hung around with the crowd he’d been in since at least my freshman
year. Rebels without a job, I called
them. In college, they all went to
avant-garde films and smoked Clove cigarettes and stayed up late talking about
literature. I didn’t have anything
against them, really. I just had nothing
in common with them. It was a shock
when, after impatiently waiting out my senior year in high school without Tom,
I got to I.U. and discovered I was not a part of his circle. When I didn’t chime in on their riveting
conversations, the Clove crowd decided I was a wet blanket.
So
joined a frat—guys who drank instead of talking. Tom called them cretins. Accurate, maybe, but they had their good
points. It was at a frat party that I
met Annie. She talked instead of
drinking. She talked with her voice, her
eyes, her hands. She gestured with
abandon, and her speech seemed to extend through her hands, as they waved,
circled, pointed and pantomimed what she was talking about. They swam in the air, reaching out to her
listener, drawing me to her.
Annie’s
presence in my life made me seem less of a lost cause in Tom’s eyes. I still had my friends, and Tom still had his,
but almost every Wednesday night, Tom, Annie and I would go to the B&G
Diner and drink coffee for hours. Annie
and Tom would debate the future of the world.
I’d sit and watch Annie’s long, lean hands move excitedly—I still love
those hands—and I’d listen to tom’s voice go up and down with each point he
made. Occasionally, after making a point
about which political leader was decidedly a dope, or what the citizens of the U.S. didn’t
know about the rest of the world, or what Shakespeare had to say about some
aspect of the human condition, Tom would look at me, as if to gauge my
reaction. Annie would stop then, too,
and look. I’d simply say to Tom, “Go
on…” Annie’d reach a hand out to touch
mine, and then they’d be back in the heat of the issue, and I’d be as content
as I ever remember being. I didn’t
realize it then, but those two defined me.
When things were going right, the sound of their voices was all I
thought I’d ever need.
But
Tom wanted something else from me. What
was it he wanted, for me to speak up?
For me to be like him? Whatever
it was, it was something I wasn’t able to give.
And when he didn’t get it, he’d shut me out.
I
guess I learned early on—from my dad—that people could disappoint you, and so I
tried to stop needing Tom so much. I put
my faith in other things: straight
lines, good grades, getting ahead. I’ve
put my faith in Annie, that’s true, but for the most part she’s been a safe
bet. The bitterest moments in our
marriage have been the rare times when she has, unintentionally, disappointed
me. With Tom, though, since college,
there’s always been a certain potential of that that I couldn’t bear to
chance. I’d need him somehow and he’d be
off with his other friends, or he’d want only to talk about something I just
didn’t get. Maybe that’s why I moved so
far away. I wanted the best for the guy,
but out of self-preservation I had to try not to need anything from him.
After
graduation, when I got this job offer in Tulsa ,
I was read to go. Annie and I planned
our wedding, with tom as best man. “Don’t
move to Tulsa ,” he kept saying. But we did move, and he stayed where he
was. Eight years later, he called to say
he was moving here.
He
stayed with us for a week or so while he looked for a place, and it was
fine. He seemed in a hurry to get
established on his own. His only
requirements for an apartment were that it be on the ground level, because of
his fear of heights, and that it be “someplace quiet.” I guess so he could write his stories. He got an amazingly boring job, copy-editing
the phone numbers in the Tulsa Oil Interests Directory. It was only until he found something better,
he said, and anyway, he hadn’t moved here for a job, but for this writing
guy. Tom said on the phone, “He only
invites writers who he thinks exhibit promise.” I couldn’t help getting caught up in Tommy’s
joy, even though I had no idea what he was talking about.
I
sat now at his desk and looked through the manuscripts of the stories he’d come
here to write. Most of these pages had
little markings, word changes and things, but the front page of one story had a
big circle drawn on it, a big scribbly circle like the kind you make while
talking on the phone. It was the same
story he had given me to read about a month ago. I looked it over again, reading through the
scribbling.
In
it, this father is so wrapped up in the projects he designs for an aerospace
firm that he doesn’t have any time for his family, even when he’s home. His kids are always trying to tell him
things, but he’s either working on something or reading the paper. The children act like they’re puppies jumping
up to be petted or played with. Every
once in a while the father glances up and notices, acknowledges whoever’s trying
to talk to him, and then goes back to what he’s doing. The mother keep s coming in and getting
frustrated because her husband won’t talk.
She keeps saying, “Why do I waste
my breath?” as if the kids have the answer.
Oh, and also, there’s this radio playing all through the story.
It
was basically autobiography, except for the aerospace thing, and the radio
playing. Tom never gave up on my father,
always knew if he bugged him enough he could get him to put down his pencil,
take off his glasses, rub his eyes and say, “What?”
I,
on the other hand, took the tack of acting indifferent, thinking Dad would
eventually notice my cold demeanor and ask me what was up. It never did have much of an impact.
Anyway,
Tommy had given me this story to read, and then asked me out to lunch. He didn’t say a word about it until lunch was
almost over, and we were waiting for the check.
Then, he sat across from me with this expectant look on his face, and he
said, “So? What’d you think?
“About…”
“About
my story.”
“Tom,
I don’t know the first thing about reading stories, you know…
“I know, but just tell me, like, what was your impression, the thing you noticed most.”
“I know, but just tell me, like, what was your impression, the thing you noticed most.”
“Well,
uh…the radio. I guess I was thinking,
you can’t hear yourself think in this story.
The damn radio’s always on.”
“OK,
yeah, did you like that, did you get that part of it?”
“Tom,
I know there’s something you want me to say, and I don’t think I’m saying it.”
“Just,
did you like it?” He seemed annoyed.
“Yeah,
I guess I did, all except for the radio.”
The
check came then, and we both had to get back to work. Tom seemed like he was in a hurry.
My
watch beeped, and I went downstairs to the laundry room and slogged my
brother’s wet clothes into the dryer. He
should have shown the story to Annie, I thought, lifting a heavy lump of wet
towels and placing them in the drum of the dryer. She would have understood it. I could have listened to her talk to him
about it; she would have pointed a finger toward a particularly clever line. She would have said the right things. Maybe I’d have learned something. But he didn’t show it to Annie. There was something he wanted only from me.
When
I came back up I smelled that strange combination of odors again. It was time to get at the grunge. I let out the putrid grey water in the sink
and did the dishes. I’d tried to avoid
dealing with the cat box, but the smell was getting to me. I held my breath and emptied the litter into
a Hefty bag. Then I opened the lid to
the kitchen garbage and an even sharper smell hit me full in the face. Everything that might have once been in the refrigerator
or pantry was now in that trash can:
half-eaten cheeses, wet cereal, rotting fruits with a bite out of each,
ripped packages of cookies, pastries, lunch eat. I combined the two messes and held the bag at
arm’s length as I walked out into the hall, where I thought I had seen a
chute. The door clicked behind me. I had a moment of panic thinking I had left
the keys inside, and then a moment of hope that I had. I felt in my pocket and they were there.
When
I cam back in I washed my hands and hoped that Tom hadn’t also discarded the
coffee, because I was going to be there a while. When I opened the cabinet that held the cups,
I noticed a sheet of paper attached to the inside of the cupboard door. It was a typed letter.
Dear Mr. Brudlaker:
I wish to
inform you that you are a toady. You
superiors think so as well; however, they do not mind having a toady beneath
them so much as I mind having a toady for a boss.
Your
actions within the office have endeared you to no one, motivated as said actions
are for political expediency over genuine efficiency or quality of work. While those under you rot with boredom and
frustration, alternately bemused and distressed at your illogical and
unpredictable decisions, absurdly misdirected goals, and transparently
sycophantic maneuvers, you remain oblivious to your own position as the most
disposable member of this firm.
Please be
hereby informed, therefore, that despite your fascination with your own ability
to posture (unrivaled by an corporate contortionist), you have no hope of
promotion, either now or in the future.
Furthermore, those over whom you now exercise your random tyranny (your
intellectual seniors to a man) shall, before long, out-earn you as much as they
now outclass you. You may do with this
information what you wish; however, I strongly recommend that you seek
employment elsewhere, posthaste.
Yours
very truly,
Thomas
H. Cameron
I
laughed. It occurred to me, as I reached
for a cup, that this letter, signed with a flourish, and positioned where it
was, must have served as Tommy’s own strange little pep talk every day when he
fixed his morning coffee. The letter
answered a question I had never asked of him, but had often wondered: How does someone get out of bed for a job like
that?
I
looked more closely now at Tom’s notes to himself, which were stuck here and
there on the wall, mixed in with the flyers for movies, plays, and
readings. Half-covered by a notice for a
long-past book signing was another letter, this one formally addressed at the
top to one Mary Lester-Mauglon:
Dear Ms. Lester-Mauglon,
Please
accept this missive from the unworthy simpleton in your writing class whose
craft pales in comparison to your own. I
know there is no possibility that you would ever look my way, or bestow upon me
your coveted approval, but tonight during the critique of my story, I seemed to
harvest the quality of attention you have stingily withheld from others. Your insightful comment—How did you put
it? Ah, yes—“Shallow, sexist, not worth
reading,” was spoken with eloquence unrivaled.
As to the sexism in my piece: it
was unintentional. I will review, and
where warranted, mend my ways. Mightn’t
the depth, however, be found in the eye of the beholder? Narcissus, too, saw only what was on the
surface. As for the worthiness of my
writing for thine eyes, only you can judge, oh Solomon, oh high priestess, oh
arbiter of worth. Who could doubt your
word? The scent of bacon-grease and
VO-5, which follows you in waves, O wise one, flavors the air of absolute
unquestionability you so heavily carry.
It
stopped there. The guy could make you
laugh. But even as I chuckled, I
thought, Tommy, you have got to lighten up.
There
was a more serious note by his desk, begun and then apparently abandoned,
though he had still managed to tape it to the wall. “Dear Arthur,” it read,
I’m sorry
to say I’m going to have to withdraw from your class, at least for now. I have too much on my mind, too much to sort
out—There used to be a space where I could have my voice heard, but I feel I’ve
hit some sort of impenetrable wall—
I know you
say to use this kind of thing, channel it creatively, but somehow it’s just
getting in my way, keeping me from putting anything on paper that isn’t nasty
and spiteful and full of
That
was it.
As
I walked downstairs to get Tom’s laundry out of the dryer, I felt an incredible
sense of fatigue. There was a pay phone
in the laundry room, and I fished around in my pockets for some change. I had used the last of my quarters in the
dryer, but I found three dimes. I held
the receiver in the crook of my neck as I folded. A friendly voice said hello.
“Hi,”
I said.
“Are
you still over at Toms?” Annie Said.
“Um-hm.”
I was surprised she hadn’t called me. It
was getting kind of late. “And
how is it?”
“Weird,”
I said. “Tell me about your day.”
She
was used to receiving he kind of answers I was able to give. She knew what I needed.
“Well,
Mrs. Court
came in today, to discuss Amber’s pinching problem…”
Annie
went on—about Mrs. Court ,
and the principal, about grading the tests and about little Peter Popielaski,
the sad-sack child she had taken under her wing. He had finally scored an A. It wasn’t so much that Annie liked the sound
of her own voice—she just knew I liked it.
“So
about Tom,” she said finally. “The
hospital called. He started wandering
the halls tonight,” she said, “as soon as it got dark. He was peeking in and watching other patients
sleep. They’ve restricted him to his
room.”
I
looked at my watch. It was already 10:15 . I tied a pair of sweat socks in a knot.
“Has
he said anything?”
“No,
baby.”
There
was silence on the phone.
“You
coming home soon?” she said.
“I
was thinking maybe I’d spend the night.”
“At
Tommy’s?”
I
hadn’t known I was going to say that before it came out of my mouth. It wasn’t strictly logical, but whatever I
needed to know was going to be at this address, if it was anywhere.
“Okay,
I guess,” she said, and then there was a pause.
“How about if I call you there later?” she said.
“Yeah,
that’d be good,” I said, and we hung up.
I
went back upstairs, not really paying attention, and almost tripped on the
steps. I managed to hang onto the warm,
clean shirts and socks I held. I fished
for the key and opened the door. The place
didn’t smell so bad anymore.
I
stopped doing chores at some point, and began just poking around—looking in
closets, sampling Tom’s dusty bottle of after-shave, reading more of the
tidbits he had left lying or hanging around.
I fingered a piece of paper taped to the lampshade in the bedroom. It looked like a list of names for future
characters: Delbert Harmonger, Leticia
Salamandar, Hoary Frost.
I
was getting hungry, but of course Tommy had recently cleaned out the cupboards,
hadn’t he? I wondered what it was about
that food that had so offended him. I
stared at the empty shelves of his pantry.
Hidden at the back, in a lonely corner, was a plastic jar of peanut
butter. I reached for it and opened
it. The smell instantly brought back the
grade-school lunchroom, brown bags, and notes folded up into little paper
footballs, flying between the fifth-grade table and the fourth, my brother to
me.
I
sat on the couch, and ate spoonfuls of the stuff until I felt vaguely sick to
my stomach. It was getting on toward
bedtime, and my eyes began to droop as I sat there with the open jar of peanut
butter on my lap. I wasn’t sure why I
was there, but the more I tried to concentrate on some rational explanation,
the sleepier I felt.
That’s
one thing I can do, sleep. I know Tommy
was having trouble with that before all this happened. I’d have to remember to tell that to Dr.
Landis. I had just assumed he was
feeling pressured at work. But he
started to call me at the office every day, just to talk. About not being able to sleep, about not
being able to write, about having quit his class.
I
was surprised he’d quit, but I shouldn’t have been. Tom’s always been that way—everything is all
or nothing. So he could be either an
inspired artist, or just a number checker, but not both. Same with exercise. He used to be a total fanatic about
running—even ran a marathon—and when he quit:
couch potato. And now it was
talking. All my life I had joked that
Tommy was the Tower
of Babel , and suddenly he
had become the Sphinx.
But
the sleeplessness, that was different.
Tom had said he couldn’t get to sleep until about half an hour before
his alarm was supposed to ring, and this had been going on for days. He called me late one night at the office
just to tell me this. It was about eleven o’clock and I was working on
some drawings that had to be done by the next morning. I was almost done, I was hungry and I was
tired and I was aching to get home.
“Annie
told me you were at work,” he said.
“Yeah,”
I said. “I’m working against a deadline
here. Tommy, can I call you tomorrow?”
“Wait,
wait, Dave, I just want to tell you something, real quick. You know that book about insomnia you gave
me? I’ve been reading it, trying to make
myself sleepy, but the more I read, the less I can sleep! Isn’t that ironic?”
I
was drawing as I spoke to him. I wasn’t
really concentrating on what he was saying.
“Uh-huh,”
I said.
Then
there was a long pause.
“And
how’s by you?” he said, finally. I
didn’t get it then. I didn’t hear anything
in his voice. He caught me at a bad
moment.
“Huh?”
I said. “Um, listen, Tom, how about
counting sheep or something? Or better
yet, stay up late working on a project, that’s what I do.” I laughed.
I meant it as a joke. It was a
stupid joke.
“Count
sheep,” he said, as if he were mulling over the concept. “Count sheep,” he said again, and I could
hear in his voice that old arch tone that he used to use with his Clove
buddies. “Great suggestion, Dave, I’ll
get right on that,” he said. And that
was the end of our conversation. It was
that night, after getting home and pouring myself into bed—just after I’d
fallen asleep, when I got the call. St.
Mark’s calling. Turn left at the loony bin.
Tom’s
couch was uncomfortable for sleeping. I
stumbled into his bedroom and scrounged in the bureau for something that would
pass for pajamas. My brother’s bed was
soft, and I began to doze off.
In
the grey darkness I heard footsteps and thought, as if I were sleeping in our
old house, Tom’s back. I sat up, alarmed, until I realized the
sounds were resonating through the floor of the apartment above. I lay back down. The pipes groaned as the same neighbors
flushed their toilet. I couldn’t hear ay
voices, but what I could hear were the sounds a building holds in the space
between its inner walls. Poor design, I
thought. As I rested there, I began to
lay out the anatomy of the building. Given
its age, it was probably full of structural flaws. Noisy wood-joist floors, no sound
insulation. I redrew the building in my
mind, correcting mistakes in the original design. Of course, when it was built, there would not
have been any of the same codes I had to design for. My buildings all had to be earthquake- and
tornado-proof, as if at any moment the structure could be barraged from above
or below. On my imaginary black-lines, I
drew in everything Tom’s building would need to guard it from natural
disasters. I made each apartment
soundproof, scribbled in energy-saving sealed windows, and scratched out that
damn cornice that stuck out from the building’s top edge---ridiculous,
unnecessary, gaudy decoration. If hat
cornice hadn’t been there, Tommy wouldn’t have had anything to climb out on,
nothing to dangle his feet from. On
second thought, maybe it was a good thing it was there. I don’t know, though. Something told me that, despite what the
rescue team or the crisis people or the doctor might have thought, Tommy did
not go up on that roof to jump.
There
was a dripping faucet somewhere in the apartment. If I had been at home, I would have gotten up,
gotten my tools, and fixed it, no matter what time it was. But here I let it drip. I just lay there and listened to it until I
noticed that it stopped, and I heard another sound, a strange, organic sound like
someone smacking his lips. I got up
cautiously, and followed the sound toward the bathroom. The door was half-closed, and without opening
it any wider, I peeked in. Perched
precariously on the sink, desperately lapping each drop from the faucet before
it fell, was the cat. And I had wondered
how it had survived.
I
flipped on the bathroom light and pushed the door open, and it banged against
something hard. I looked around the door
and saw the phone lying on he floor, the cordless phone, with its battery light
blinking. It had been here all the
time. Had been here, of course, since
Tommy had used it last. That night when
he hadn’t switched it off, hadn’t hung up, had simply dropped it on the
floor. What did Landis say? He had called the crisis center, screaming “I
need talk-back!” whatever the hell that meant, and then he had dropped the
phone, here. I stepped in, pulled the
door back and shut it behind me. I sat
down on the bathroom floor, and I did what y brother had failed to do. I switched the phone off.
When
Tommy sat here last, what might have been going through his mind? I looked up and saw, in the full-length
mirror on the back of the bathroom door, the reflection of a guy dressed in my
brother’s pajamas, sitting cross-legged on the floor, disheveled and maybe even
confused, though the face was blocked out by a letter-sized note stuck into the
frame of the mirror. This letter, unlike
the others, was full of mistakes, as if it had been hurriedly typed. I read the first line. “Dear dave,” it said.
Dear dave,
I just got off the phone withi you and I just thought that
you should know a few things that I’m thinking because I dont’ think you hear me when I talk, so even if I said
these things to you, they just woulnd’t…I know that you put me on your speaker
phone when I call lately I know you’re a busy person, but dammit, couldn’t you
just hold the phone to your ear? The
yes, tommy, no tommy, mm-hm tommy’s I hear would at least sound a lot more personal. I’m sorry I call you at work, Dave, but see,
you’re the only person who might evern come
Close to understanding me . I have to know that you’re
listening…it’s just that I haven’t, well, not being able to sleep makes it hard
for me to think.
I call you at work because at least while I am talking
With you I can think alittle bit straighter, like when you
and I used to talk and stare at the ceiling, life just seemed to make sense
when we could talk about it then, when all the rest of the house was quiet and
I could hear myself, I could hear you talking.
Did you know you talked in your sleep sometimes? Not very often, but every once in a
while. I never told you
that because I knew that it would make you paranoid, but
those times you talked, if I was awake, I’d listen, I’d
listen to whatever you said, most of it didn’t make sense, but then maybe you
think I don’t make any sense, maybe I’m not making any sense now,
it just seems sometimes like I’m wound up so tight, like
I’ve got to talk to you, to hear you talk back,
or something is going to happen, but you don’t want to hear
that, I can hear you now, “Tommy, don’t be that way, take
it easy, lighten up.’ David, what exactly does
that mean? Do you
know? Or is that just something like
MMm-hmm. Yeah tom. Yeah tom, shut up tom, I hear you I hear you,
but really you do not.
The
cat jumped down from the sink and meowed at me as if it were hungry, but I
didn’t move. It came right up behind me,
pushing its head against my back. I
pushed it way, and it began to wail. I’d
fed it. I’d given it water, though it
seemed to prefer a more difficult way to drink.
I had even cleaned out its reeking cat box. “What do you want?” I said out loud. I got up, trying to escape its insistence,
trying to get some peace, trying to think about things. It followed me around the apartment,
relentlessly pursuing me with its high-pitched cry. “What do you want?” I shouted.
I
picked the thing up and set it outside the apartment door, hoping then I could
tune it out, but is cries became more insistent, more infuriating. I went out into the hall, picked it up
roughly, held it up away from me, and looked it in the face. It started to purr. I stood there for a moment like an idiot, and
then pulled the thing close to my chest and felt the vibration of the sound.
When
I turned to go back in I felt for the keys and realized that this time, I had
none. Shit. It was the middle of the night, I was locked
out of an apartment that was not mine, and I looked like a hobo. I had on Tom’s ugliest pajama bottoms, a
ratty old T-shirt and a pair of slippers Annie and I had given him for
Christmas, which he obviously never wore.
I sat on the floor and leaned up against the locked door. The cat curled up next to me and purred. Dammit, Tom.
Why did you drop that fucking phone? Where did you think you were going?
The
cat looked up at me as if I were its best friend. I scooped it up in one hand. “come on,” I said, “we’re taking a
climb. We’re going to see what was so
damn attractive about the roof.” I went
toward the exit sign and started up the stairs.
At about the third landing I began to feel winded, and at the fourth I
began to sweat. At seven I could smell
my own perspiration. “I’m listening now,
Tommy. I’m listening!” I said, not caring who heard. The cat was hanging on around my neck for
dear life as I went faster up the stairs.
His claws dug into my shoulder, and his fur stuck to the sweat on my
neck.
I
passed fourteen and came out onto the roof.
As the cool air hit me I felt a sudden relief, and I stopped for a
moment. Morning was just barely starting
to lighten one corner of the sky, and a breeze blanketed any sounds that might
have risen from the street. I surveyed
the gray roof, and walked straight ahead, toward that damn useless cornice my
brother had so cleverly found a use for.
Just in front of me, it rose up to meet the edge of the roof. Just here, it was big enough to sit on. I looked down, and for a moment I felt dizzy.
The
cat and I climbed out onto the cornice.
We sat and dangled our feet for a long time, just listening to
nothing. The breeze blew. It was like sitting at the edge of a
canyon. But if I had called out just
then there would have been no echo. My
voice would have been lost in the quiet.
Had Tom called out, hoping to hear and echo? Talk-back,
he said he wanted. Had he been asking me
for something I was unwilling to give?
All these years, I’d been so carefully insulating myself from
disappointment that I’d never considered my own ability to disappoint.
Since
we were kids in matching T-shirts, echoing each other in looks if not in
temperament, I’d heard Tommy’s voice whenever I wanted, and I’d switched him on
and off at will. Now we were suddenly
separated by the absence of his speech, a loss I never knew could be so
great. What had come between us was like
the quiet space between walls—we were on opposite sides of that space,
soundproofed from each other. I wished I
could design a place where there was nothing between us, where Tommy would know
his voice was heard, where I could listen, absorb the sound, and talk
back. A place where he could know he
wasn’t wasting his breath.
I
looked like a bum, and I was cradling a skinny, flea-bitten cat, but I managed
to convince the cabby I was just locked out.
He must have seen worse-looking fares, because he took me. When we reached St. Mark’s I asked the driver
for a pencil and a blank receipt and I wrote him out a grubby I.O.U. with my
name and number. He looked at it, then
looked at me. I’m sure he thought I was
an inmate returning home.
I
hid the cat under my arm as I walked past the desk, and I got to tom’s room
without questioning. I guess they knew
me. Or maybe I really did blend in. Tom was strapped to his bed, and his roommate
had been removed. Annie had told me about
this, but hell, I hadn’t seen him strapped.
I gently shut the door, and set the cat on a vinyl chair, where it
curled up and got comfortable. I
loosened Tom’s restraints. The buckles
clinked as they hit the floor. I stared
at my brother. He looked wan. He wasn’t getting better.
I
lay down on the other bed in the room, and put my filthy, street-sullied
slippers on the new sterile sheets. What
was I doing here? Nothing I could do was
going to make any difference. I lay
there until my breathing slowed, and I began to think more random
thoughts. Maybe I was falling
asleep. They could open the door and
find me here, another loony asleep in bed, ready to be strapped in, ready to
give up. I opened my eyes and stared at
the ceiling.
“You
know what the thing about it was, Dave?
Up there on the roof?”
I
heard his voice, and it was just as though he were continuing a conversation he
had started not a minute before.
“What,
Tom?” I said, automatically. But I
looked over at him, looked away from the ceiling and looked up at my brother,
like I can’t ever remember doing. He
started up.
“The
thing about it was…” He waited so long
that for a moment I feared I might never hear him finish, might never again
hear the sweet sound of my brother’s voice.
“The thing about it was…It was so quiet.” He stopped, and I didn’t answer. He turned his head to look at me, to see if I
was listening.
“I
know,” I said. “I know.”
*****
THE STORY BEHIND THE STORY
“The Conveyance
of Sound” began with a technical challenge and a nodule of anger. I wanted to
write a story around one of the nondominant senses, and I was annoyed at
someone who was holding me at arm’s length. To carry the spirit of that
situation into a work of fiction, I made both characters men (I am not a man),
and focused on listening and images of sound. I was in the MFA program at
American University at the time, and an imaginative and playfully serious
writer came there to give both a reading and a master class. Bernard Cooper (Maps to Anywhere, The Bill From My Father,
My Avant-Garde Education) said to me, “Enough with the sounds!” And he was
right. I had bells ringing, music playing—the story was cacophonous. I quit
hitting the motif so hard, and the story quieted down. I remember working on
that story in my apartment in Glover Park, DC, while I played the songs from
Don Henley’s “End of the Innocence” over and over until I could no longer hear
the words.
*****
ABOUT VIRGINIA HARTMAN
Virginia Hartman’s writing has
appeared in the Alaska Quarterly Review,
Liars League NYC, Potomac Review, Delmarva Review, Washingtonian, and the Hudson Review, among others. Her work
has been anthologized in Gravity Dancers:
Even More Fiction by Washington Area Women (Paycock Press), and she
co-edited a literary anthology called A
More Perfect Union: Poems and Stories about the Modern Wedding (St.
Martin’s Press). Her writing has been supported by the Sewanee Writer’s
Conference and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and her stories have
been shortlisted for the New Letters prize, the Tennessee Williams Festival
Prize, the Dana Awards, and the Washington Writers’ Publishing House Prize. She
teaches fiction writing at the Writer’s Center, Bethesda, and poetry at
Miriam’s Kitchen, DC, and has taught creative writing at American University,
George Washington University, and the Smithsonian. She tweets from @virginiahartmn (no “a” in the “man”) and hangs
around the web at virginiahartman.com.
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