A year or two ago, in the spring, I went up to the headwaters of a mountain creek and brought back a dozen small, gorgeous brook trout, which encrusted with panko lay before us on a platter, surrounded by broad homegrown tomatoes, new potatoes, sliced Spanish onions, and Manchego cheese. I bought the cheese next to the railroad station that morning under the scrutiny of a hulking man with a black moustache, massive under his nose. He stared at me with such intensity that I awaited his coming outburst with grim patience. At last it came. “My God, I love Manchego.” Jinx had taken on the lassitude one associates with old historians or bookshop operators who hate their customers, a possible effect of the cold bottle of Riesling we’d shared. “That was a goodish white, didn’t you think? What else is there to drink with these minnows? I feel drawn toward inebriation.” We had another bottle, some stony-tasting thing, after which Dr. J began eating the little trout with her hands. Watching her languid moves as she ate, I felt my heart race. Then she was merry and laughed to herself. She plucked a brochure for Airstream trailers from her purse, held it in front of me, and said, “This is how Americans must live.” I remembered when, years ago, the Wally Byam Caravan came to our town and filled the IGA parking lot with their silver Airstreams. A group of hippies parked in the midst of them, wrapping their old vans in aluminum foil from the IGA, and smoked marijuana in broad daylight while making sardonic forays into socializing with the Airstream people. Anyway, Jinx bought the Airstream but never took it anywhere. Finally, it became a kind of office, and from it she published papers in pediatrics. When we had finished the brook trout and the rest of the wine, Jinx gave me her lowering, authoritarian look and advised me to take a real inventory of my life. “Any life,” she said, “consists of myriad elements, two-thirds of which are superfluous. The gift of living lies in enlarging the discard pile as we move to our true gestalt.”
“Our who?”
“Purpose.”
“Of course that’s what you said.”
I found myself examining the figures in my napkin, some old linen my mother had prized. Jinx had risen from the table and was standing at a mirror over the sideboard; then she stuck her tongue out at her own image and returned to the table.
She said, “I wish we’d get a phone call.”
“I know what you mean.”
“There are automated messages, weather and so forth.”
“I think we can do better than that, Jinx.”
“There’s always work.”
“There’s always work.”
“And we are useful, which is quite different from indispensable.” Jinx stared into space and said, “A couple of sad caregivers.”
This seemed unimaginably despairing, and I put the sounds of the humpback whale on my modest sound system. This had a terrific effect on us as the room filled with their oceanic howls. We arose and circled the table with an undulant gait, imitating the movement of the great marine mammals. It seemed as we came up for breath, our spirits rose too. When the recording was stopped, she plopped back into her chair. “Nothing like the sea,” she said. I noted in an utterly abstract way the light falling on the side of her face, candlelight.
“More are cured by salt air than all our ministrations combined,” I groggily proposed. “The people who live near the sea have more plausible ideas about mortality than mountain people, who from birth tend to be a bubble and a half off plumb — not to mention the empty schemers of the prairie, who covet everything between themselves and the farthest point they can see. They drive enormous automobiles and race them at the horizon hoping to expand the objects of their greed. As new things rise up toward them they are seized by a sort of mania, and this goes on until they run out of gas.”
“How right you are,” Jinx murmured, face resting on her palm. “I’m a prairie person and it’s so easy for me to see those folks parked at the end of the world. Life was never easy for them, but there comes a day when it’s time to leap into the void, leave that Cadillac behind.”
Another bottle, a lovely Pedro Domecq, seemed quite harmles, and we went at it with respectful restraint, talking about the “busy bees” at the clinic, the “clueless” we billed. “We’re cloaked in ignorance,” said Jinx, “and yet they come to us with open hearts.”
“A good thing too,” I twanged. I tapped the neck of the Domecq with the ball of my forefinger. “This don’t go for the same as soda pop.” I was just trying to be funny — but my ER days had given me, as it had given others, a certain detachment. No good came of lamentation over the mangled we had to put right. They seemed pleased enough, coming and going on gurneys as was their wont.
I had a houseguest named Clancy Boyer, who had been a classmate of mine at medical school before he dropped out and went into commercial real estate, at which he prospered. Clancy still lived in Ohio, but he came out each year to hunt and stayed with me. He was a dark-complected, wonderfully fit, lanky sportsman who hiked alone in the mountains with a lightweight.270 Winchester over his shoulder, an old-fashioned big-game hunter who did it the hard way and lived on wild meat despite the riches of commercial real estate. He packed out quarters of mule deer or elk from the far reaches of the local mountains, sometimes making two or three trips on foot. I thought Clancy would be just perfect for Jinx, and so I fixed them up. I don’t know where they went or what they did, but Clancy didn’t get back to my house until three in the morning.
I blew up.
“Do you have any idea what time it is?” I demanded. Jinx had given me pajamas for Christmas and I had put them on, thinking that coming down the stairs in only my shorts and the heat of indignation wouldn’t do. I failed to notice until it was too late that the pajamas’ depiction of French Pierrot-type clowns throwing colored hoops in the air could have made me look ridiculous at a time when I meant to be taken seriously.
“What business is it of yours?”
“ ‘What business is it of mine’? Is it necessary to point out to you that this is my house?”
Clancy looked at me in astonishment, walked out the door jingling his car keys between thumb and forefinger, and was gone. I have not seen Clancy since. The next day Jinx said that she thought Clancy was a goon. “I know a goon when I see one,” she said, but the whole thing was for my benefit and I saw right through it. We were painfully uncomfortable.
12
NILES THROCKMORTON HAD BEEN CALLING frantically, and I guessed someone had advised him — before advising me! — that I was about to have a problem. Up until then, I’d thought Jinx was off her rocker. I didn’t even try to understand it. I felt that would just be complicity. Nor did I expect to see Officer Seaver again, and I told him so. He smiled in a way that let me understand he saw right through me. Meanwhile, Throckmorton just couldn’t seem to get enough of my problem. The first thing he said to me was, “I called and left a message on your chickenshit answering machine. Turn that thing in to the county museum. Fucking sprocket noise is off the charts.”
In fact, I was disconcerted by his enthusiasm for a couple of reasons: I had known Niles most of my life, and while he certainly respected my modest rise from abject stupidity, I remained a somewhat indelible dunce to everyone who had known me since my boyhood; furthermore, Throckmorton was considered by some to be more or less crazy.