“I spent my whole life trying to figure people out, tricking them by appealing to their unconscious, and I never, I never figured out my own fucking self.”
Ted had an instinct to make it all better, to put it in context, to put words on it, to forgive, to help Marty forgive himself, but he remained quiet. Right behind the impulse to smooth things over was the wisdom to let it be and let time, even though they were fast running out of time, work its natural pace of injury and healing. Ted thought, We are all of this earth and subject to time and its laws-physical and psychic-and there are no shortcuts. All time was geologic. A Polaroid that took fifty years to develop in your hand.
Everything had been leading to this moment, everything, why move past it before it took shape, before it was colored in, before it settled? Words would only diminish things, like cages for wild animals.
After minutes of silence, of Ted listening to his father sob in the dark, Marty began to breathe more regularly, to quiet and comfort himself. Ted had been crying too, his cries mingling with his father’s; yet he was crying not for himself, but for his father, and that pure instinctive generosity laced a sweetness beneath the anguish of both men.
Finally, Marty spoke: “That’s why me and Mariana clicked.”
Ted swallowed and took a deep breath. He wanted his voice to sound unstrained by all this big feeling.
“You mean Maria.”
“No, Mariana. She lost a little daughter. To cancer. That’s the tattoo on her ankle. Christina. Her little girl’s name was Christina.”
“Not Christ, Christina.”
“Yeah, Christina. She understood my fear of you ’cause she had seen the darkness of a child’s death too, only she still lived in that darkness, every day she has to walk out of it into the light where the living are and then, every night, she walks back into the darkness where her daughter is. It was her idea for me to write again.”
Ted watched the images of his mind project out onto the blackness. He saw his young father and his infant self; he saw a young and terrified Mariana and a dying girl. He saw the bottomless well, but couldn’t draw near it, couldn’t look down into it; he did not have a child, he couldn’t know. His father spoke and sounded spent:
“Ted, please tell me you don’t hate me.”
“Oh God, no. I don’t hate you, Dad.”
“I’m so tired.”
“Go to sleep.”
“I’m afraid I won’t wake up.”
“You’re not done yet. I’m not afraid.”
Ted got up and went to his father’s bed and got in. He put his arm underneath his dad’s neck and held him, Marty’s head on his chest. Ted kissed the top of Marty’s head. Marty whispered, “You’re my secret weapon.” Ted had vague memories of his boyhood, indistinguishable from wishes, of his father putting him to sleep like this on difficult nights. His head buried in Marty’s chest, Marty stroking his hair. In the pitch dark, his sense of touch was heightened, and he could feel the beat of his own heart moving Marty’s head ever so slightly on his chest, rocking and consoling him. In less than a minute, Ted could tell by Marty’s deep breathing that he was asleep.
Ted waited in the dark like that for an hour, watching the images in his mind, like Plato in his cave. But he couldn’t sleep. He got up, careful not to wake his father, to go out and smoke another joint in the motel parking lot. He swallowed the roach, went to the pay phone out there, and took out Mariana’s card. He dialed the number. He didn’t know what to say, but he wanted to say something. He hoped it would come to him as it rang, but it didn’t, and no one picked up.
He went back inside where his father was sleeping. He walked over to Marty’s bed and kneeled down. He couldn’t make out the old man’s face in the dark, though he was less than an inch away. He whispered in the sleeping man’s ear:
“You tried to kill me a long time ago, but you couldn’t because my father took you out of me and into him. But you’re still a coward. You attacked a child and now you attack an old man. I’m not scared of you anymore. I’m a man. I’m ready to fight.”
He listened to his father’s breathing, for any kind of change. He couldn’t tell.
“My dad called you out of my lungs and into his, but now I want you back. You came for me. It’s me you want. And I want that fight. Come out of him and into me. Come back where you belong…”
Ted inched down even closer so he could feel his father’s breath on his own mouth. He inhaled deeply, and again and again and again, hoping to catch his demon out and defeat it once and for all. The three of them crouched in the darkness-Ted, Marty, and the demon, undecided and malevolent, hovering between them.
72.
Ted parked the Corolla at a nice spot by the Charles River. Sixty-eight degrees and sunny. Panthers or no panthers, there would be no rainout today. Father and son shared a doobie in peace and quiet. They ate some food, watched the rowers on the water. One of those perfect fall days where you just lose track of time. The radio was off to save the enigmatic battery. Ted looked up at the blue and chanted, “‘The mules that angels ride come slowly down the blazing passes, from beyond the sun.’”
“If you say so, Cheech,” said Marty.
“Wally Stevens says so,” Ted footnoted, as he coughed through a deep lungful of cannabis. “Sorry.”
Marty waved it off and smiled as if to say he was no longer bothered by Ted’s cough. He said, “I like watching the rowers from up here, ’cause you know they’re killing themselves, that they’re cramping and their lungs are burning, but from this far away, you can’t hear or see their pain. All I see is this miraculous smooth flight across the surface of the water. From this Olympian remove, all I see is beauty.”
“Sounds like art. Concealing the hard part.”
“No, baby, it’s death. That’s what looking at things from death is like. No sweat, all beauty. I wish I could’ve been dying my whole life.”
Ted looked at the smoking joint in his hand and said, “You’re outheavying me, Dad. Too deep while I’m eating a ‘sub.’ The burning bush. I think I’m gonna quit.”
“Not me,” said Marty. “I’m a pothead.”
“You walked through the gate, huh?”
“Yes, I walked through the gate and forgot to close it.”
“Well, ’cause you’re high. You forgot to close the gate ’cause you’re high.”
“Ah so.”
“You crazy kids with your hash oil and your wacky weed.”
“Hash oil? What is this hash oil of which you speak? Tell me about this hash oil.”
“Slow down there, William Burroughs.”
“Wish we had some Frusen Glädjé.”
“There is no emperor like the motherfucking emperor of ice cream.”
They both looked into their minds to see if they remembered passing a convenience store in the past hour or so that might sell ice cream. Neither could come up with an image, and they both quit looking in mild disappointment. They watched in stoned awe as the rowers cut like knives through sparkling liquid glass.
“Ted?”
“Yeah?”
“What time is it?”
Ted said, “Oh shit,” and jumped at the car radio to turn it on. The game was already well under way.
“Shit! It’s three! Game’s at two thirty!” Ted said. “The game started.”
He threw the car in gear and backed up. The unmistakable, unwelcome sound of metal rim on pavement.
“That’s a flat,” Marty said. “That’s a flat tire.”
“No shit, Sherlock.”
Of course, Ted had no spare and had to go running to flag down a cab, get to an auto parts store, buy a tire, and cab it back. Ted left Marty in the car to listen to the game and enjoy the river. The streets were more or less empty, so he made good time, considering. Most of Boston was either at the game or home watching, all of New England probably. They lost a lot of time, but eventually they were rolling again on four good wheels. Marty was nervous with the game on the radio, listening intently for sounds behind sounds, with the focus of a stalking predator, for telltale signs of the action even before the announcers could relay it, wiping his sweaty palms on his pant legs.