If one of these men was the older of the two it was the one in the ragged but voluminous coat, from which he extended a hand, like the last days of Pope John Paul, in a gesture of peace. The other took it, and after a pause their conversation resumed about the five-dollar box of Cheerios they’d both seen that morning at IGA. “It was big, I’ll give you that. But still.”
Jocelyn came into the lobby, carrying a battered purse, wearing a baseball cap and gold earrings, jeans and a thin, tailored white blouse that emphasized her pretty figure. She was on a cane and used it with athletic dispatch. “We roll.”
She directed me to the small airfield southwest of town on a road that was almost too much for my Oldsmobile, whose oil pan felt like an extension of my own viscera. Looking around the car, Jocelyn said, “I thought medicine paid better than this.”
“It’s a ride.”
“I guess. Go over that cattle guard and just follow the two-track into the pucker brush and you’ll see it, little flat mesa hangs out over the creek bottom.”
I glanced over and found her eyes, in no hurry to glance away. I reached for her hand, which she put in my lap like something I’d misplaced. “Oh, Doctor.” There were several ways to look at this remark, the first being that I had misjudged the situation. Jocelyn smiled at me, but there was a bit of amusement in it. She raised her cane and gave it a little shake in my direction.
A grass airfield ended at the mesa edge, where a bedraggled windsock hung from an unpainted steel pole. A coyote dug for gophers in the middle of the field and trotted off at our arrival. All that remained was an anonymous rental car glinting in the sun. In other words we had arrived and something would have to change.
Jocelyn asked, “How much time should I allow to get to the Billings airport?”
“Hour and a half, to be safe.” I pulled up next to the sedan.
“Then I’d better keep moving along.”
“Where are you going?”
“Where am I going? I’m going to the Billings airport.”
“I mean where are you flying to?”
“I’m not. I’m picking up my mechanic. He’s going to help me drive to Texas. This is his car.” I had the disquieting sense that she was making this up: she was talking too fast.
“Oh,” I said, as though landing on the heart of the matter. “I thought it was a rental car.”
“No, no, it’s his car. I flew the ag plane up and he was supposed to meet me when I was done. I got done sooner than I thought.”
“I’ll be darned, I thought it was just a rental car.” I couldn’t have been more of a fool. She smiled compassionately at my confusion and slung her pack out of the car. She came around my side and kissed me on the cheek just as I was coming to my senses.
“I’ll call you if my whole life changes,” she said. “Maybe we can have dinner.”
“Please do. I’m crazy about you.” My face was red.
She laughed out loud and got into her car. “Who knows? You in the book?”
“I am.”
I watched her pull away. I offered a wave, but looking at her receding rearview window, I saw no hand raised in my own direction. A sort of twist went through me of something akin to embarrassment, though there was no one there to be embarrassed in front of. I did wonder if several days of unspecified eagerness had contributed to my outbreak of foolhardiness, or if I’d wished for something I really needed. It was no mystery to me, who had seen the various results, some soon after, some decades after, of the unexpected electricity between people. One of my patients was an infantryman who had fought in the Second World War and returned to Seattle to a job cooking in a café. In 1946 the cashier, a young woman from eastern Washington who had come to Seattle during the war, dropped a roll of nickels, which burst on the tile floor. The infantryman and the cashier knelt to gather them up, and fifty years later the old couple were my patients. Surely something of lesser magnitude had happened to me, but there had been some sort of event at the crash site, and I think it was no more than seeing a small curve of forehead between the edge of her helmet and the slight rise of flesh where her ear disappeared inside the gear. In my embarrassment, I tried to come up with something more substantial and barely resurrected the shape of one nostril! I was like a picnic ant on two square inches of anonymous flesh. Fool!
I got called in to stitch up Jasper Carroll, a fireman, for the fourth time in nine years, each due to being stabbed by his wife. I don’t think she intended to kill him and he always offered the same explanation: “We was having a discussion and she come with the blade.” You might say that I had lost all respect for Jasper’s injuries. He always brought his dog, a little Chihuahua named Manolete, for fear his wife would take it out on the dog. He lay on his stomach on the operating table with very little anesthetic, the nice wide but fairly shallow gash extending from just below his left shoulder in a downward angle to his spine. Jasper was an old hippie, and his gray ponytail hung below his black Chevron gimme cap almost far enough to be in the way. I listened to ZZ Top singing “Mexican Blackbird” as I worked and Billy Gibbons’s loping guitar created a nice rhythm for the stitches — poking, yanking, snipping. And Manolete’s occasional howls punctuated the soft-shoe boogie I performed next to the table. Alan Hirsch peeked in to watch me work and said, “Get down with your bad self.” I kept the Chrome, Smoke & BBQ boxed set in the emergency room to lift my spirits when the hours got long. I suppose it hurt my reputation with the rest of the staff. They had had a word with me about what they considered to be an excessively festive atmosphere. I think it just places me on the side of life, where a doctor should be.
The next time Jinx and I had lunch she tried to bring up the subject of my general unseemliness. We had taken pita wraps and beer to the park on an unseasonably warm day. Jinx wore a thick gray-green sweater with a shawl collar and the oddest pillbox hat I’d ever seen. I quite admired her indifference to her appearance and the impatience that caused her to speak through her hand when she was eating. Canada geese were standing at the edge of the park pond, which was so dark and still that their reflections were indistinguishable from themselves, and on a nearby bench an adoring young father rocked and gazed at his baby boy with shining eyes — a kind of Pietà but for the big ears and long black beard. I had spent the morning counseling a meth-head roofer from Walnut Creek, California, who had hit bottom here in town and wanted to talk about it. Surprisingly, he hoped to find a medical approach to maintaining his addiction and seemed strangely unaware that he was on a short straight road to hell. I got him in touch with our addiction counselor from my office phone, and I could tell by the upbeat dialogue he affected that he was not going to do anything for the time being. I told him I could see he wouldn’t even keep his appointment. He was a handsome young fellow of moderate height in jeans, Hush Puppies, and a worn blue suede jacket. He had jet-black hair that stuck out and clear blue eyes. I could see how bright he was, his imperfectly concealed suffering showing just under the surface of his bonhomie.
“No, Doc, honest, I’ll see him today.”
“No, you won’t.”
“You don’t think so?”
“No, but I wish I was wrong. I think you’re young and tough enough to picture that great feeling. I realize it’s like falling in love, but it’s a lie. Wait till you start rotting, it’ll seem like expensive love.” He didn’t like this and his face soured.
“You get this from Nancy Reagan?”
“Uh-huh.”
The young man backed to the door.
He said, “I’m Chad, by the way.”
“See you, Chad.”