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car, for this morning’s were last night’s and would have been put in the dirty laundry bag he threw into the car trunk. He knows he kissed her goodnight several times last night, never just one kiss for his kids unless he’s sick with a possible contagious illness, so she must have kissed him, for they both always do except when they’re angry at him or they’ve suddenly fallen asleep when he’s talking or reading to them, let’s say, and neither of those happened last night. He pictures it: she’s holding out her arms from bed, is on her back, room’s dark, he leans over her and she says, this is almost exactly what she said, “Me want hug, no go sleep without hug, won’t stop baby talk which you hate without hug,” and he let her hug him and he put his cheek against hers, she said “You scratch,” and he said “I only shave in the morning,” and she said “How does it work then? — the shave-hairs only grow at night like people?” and he said “Too complicated a subject to go into now, I’ll tell you at breakfast, now go to sleep,” and he probably kissed the air beside her ear or even her ear, forgets. Then she released him and grabbed his wrists and said, and this is almost exactly what she said, he just knows it, “Now you’re handcuffed and can’t get out unless I let you.” He has to remember this. It was the last night; has to, and he’ll write it down at the sink if he didn’t leave his pen in the car and if the policeman asks what he’s writing, he’ll show him. He said okay and sat on her bed. Margo was saying “Now me, my turn for goodnight,” and he said “I’m coming, sweetie,” and Julie said “He can’t go because I have him in handcuffs and he can’t get out of them for all of tonight,” and he said “You mean I have to sleep here?” and stayed there another minute, maybe he was finding it relaxing, resting in the dark with his eyes closed and her hands around his wrists, and she said, maybe she was tired now and wanted to get it over with so she could go to sleep, “I bet you can’t get out if you really tried,” and he said “Bet I can,” and pretended to wrench free. She was laughing, he liked it that she was enjoying him but he also had Margo to say goodnight to now and she’d probably want equal time, so he pretended to wrench some more, gritting his teeth and making straining noises and arching back as if he were trying to pull free and then pushed her hands till they couldn’t go any farther over his fists and her grip snapped. “Goodnight, darling, no more noise,” and quickly kissed her forehead. “More, more,” reaching for his wrists but staying flat in bed and he said no and sat on Margo’s bed and let her hug him, kissed the air or her ear, she grabbed his wrists and said “You’re locked forever,” Julie said “Copycat,” and Margo said “No way, J. I did the lock-forever trick, but around Daddy’s neck mostly, long before you were even born,” and he said “It’s sort of true, Julie, though maybe not that long before and maybe even a bit after, though nobody can pattern it,” and she said “What’s pattern?” and he broke Margo’s grip the same way and said “No definitions, no more delays, goodnight, all,” and left the room. “Don’t forget to keep the light on in the bathroom outside” were Julie’s last words. What were her last words today? Can’t think of them. This is important. Tries harder to, eyes squeezed tight, nothing comes. But did she kiss him, can he picture her kissing him last night? Must have, on the lips and cheek, one after the other which is how she usually did it, cheek first, then the lips, sometimes both cheeks, oh so French without knowing it — no, he’s told her: “Whoo-whoo, so Frenchie,” and then having to explain it — Margo just a lip peck. But the door handle going out, he thinks at the sink. Lots of people don’t wash after they shit and pee. Policeman’s right beside him, looking at himself in the mirror but probably at him. Half, he bets, and what did he once say he discovered about toilet seats in public restrooms and even in his home with guests — say to whom? to his wife — maybe ninety percent of them by men are left up. Which might mean ninety-five percent by men who just pee standing up, since he has to account for those who sit down to shit and pee. And first time washing his hands anywhere since, but he thought that. Then turning cold water on, any water on, splashing some on his face, taking his glasses off first to wash them and splash his face. Is it the first time he’s taken his glasses off since? No, lots. Also, pulling a paper towel out of the dispenser, drying the glasses and then another towel out for his face, but not the first time looking at himself in a mirror, though certainly this mirror or a bathroom mirror. Did that, just the mirror, when he was looking in the rearview at them on the highway when she was alive. Thinks he saw her, maybe he didn’t. Right after he told them to duck. No, they were down then, so last time he saw her alive was in a mirror sometime before when it was all innocent, driving on a road, no worries about maniacs in nearby cars, and they were playing, he thinks: cards, smaller magnetic board versions of checkers and Clue, or a mind one with their own rules, or just into their books. Books are now in back of the car, probably a fucking red, unless the police took them away to inspect them. Some outdoor clothes, dolls and their clothes for the outdoors, car and bed, stuffed animals for tonight, those little things Julie always brings with her for the car trip, tiny dinosaurs, miniature rabbits and cats, markers and a memo pad to draw and write on and small balls from the Giant store vending machine for a dime each and her lucky polished stone and magic necklace, also a red mess on the seat and floor unless the police took most of these too. Pieces of her flesh, did he think of that? embedded in the car seat perhaps or just lying around or stuck to the car’s walls. Oh dear, oh God, oh my darling, why you? why you? it’s not so, it can’t be true. If he found a piece would he cut it out of the seat with part of the cloth it’s in or on, somehow get some substance to preserve it and seal it to the cloth, stain it with colorless shellac perhaps and put it in a plastic box and set it on his night table or desk? Doesn’t think so. For some reason her blood on a cut-out piece of his sleeve doesn’t seem so bad, but the other would be gruesome and too sad. And her little shoulder bag, he forgot, that holds all those little things she brings for the trip and which she empties out almost first thing on the seat between Margo and her. But all those firsts, each breath another first added to the next, every goddamn step, new rooms, familiar corridors and stalls, first piss after the last one and so on, first fart, belch, what’ll be his first cup of coffee sometime when and no doubt pretty soon, first shot of scotch, beer, slice of toast, he’s got to eat and drink, doesn’t he? and certainly get drunk and sick and drunk until he stops, first glass of water and hangover, old and new people he’ll see, friends, family, first piece of meat, first celery, carrot, aspirin, aspirins after that aspirin, will he still take his daily brewer’s yeast tablets and vitamin C? first tranquilizer he’s ever taken, also first sleeping pill and doctor’s exam, first tooth worked on or just a simple cleaning and checkup, will he do it when the reminder card comes he addressed at the dentist’s months ago? will he also do the funeral which’ll be the first sharing of grief like that for his wife and him? first mail, first time he opens something from their mail, first time he listens to music again or will that be at the funeral if he has nothing to do with it or if he just mechanically turns on the car radio? first time again behind a wheel, seated at a typewriter, shopping in a supermarket, looking for a coffin and choosing a funeral home if there’s to be one, there has to be to retrieve her from wherever she goes after here, first coffin he chose was for his father, first walk out of his house if there’s to be one, no he means first walk out after he first comes back, first time he’ll speak to his wife since, first time he’ll see her since, first time both of them break down or crack up together like they’re sure, at least the first one, to do, first time sleeping with her and so forth, no more good sleeps, no more sex, pleasure, amusement of any kind and so on, first time he sweeps the kitchen floor, does the family wash, on his knees cleaning the toilet pedestal, first time he squashes an ant with his thumb, gets enraged at seeing another one on the kitchen counter and smashes it with the side of his fist. Margo’s birthday and their anniversary and so on. Days Julie’s come up. Shouldn’t they get away, maybe leave the country, take Margo with them but go if only for those times, but where can they? In a hole, on a transoceanic ship, but he’d probably feel like jumping off. First time he sharpens a pencil or fills a pen. And what if he comes across the safe scissors she told him yesterday she lost at home and needs tomorrow for school? School, what does he do, simply call or drop in and say she’s not coming in anymore, she’s dead? Same with her after-school ceramics class and what if the teacher wants to give him the things Julie made that were baked in a kiln last week and were supposed to be distributed this? But when will he stop thinking about it and let the subject rest? First things first but he thinks never. He’ll look at Margo; they looked something alike. He’ll look at his wife; Julie resembled her much more than she did him. Photos of his wife and her at four and five and six and you can’t tell one from the other except for the setting and certain clothes. He’ll look in the mirror and perhaps see the little there was of her in him, the narrow eyes, big lobes, somewhat pointed chin. First little girl tossing up a ball the way Julie did or learning to rollerskate, which he’d been helping her do with Margo. Piano. She just started to learn, so first kid’s lesson-playing he’ll hear out of someone’s window or if he goes to a friend’s house where there’s a girl or even a boy around that age who plays that way or just uses the same series of lesson books. First time he sees their piano, even. First time after that time and every time after that and so on. Will he move the piano out? Then every time he sees a piano or space where the piano was in their house or hears one played even by a pro and even on radio, record or tape. It’s possible. It could happen. Fathers who cross the street holding their kids’ hands, every single one. Any kid, any age, either sex, mothers and nannies too. It’s what he always liked but she didn’t always like to do. “You’re too young to cross the street by yourself,” and what would she say? He forgets. “I know what to do. I’ve watched how. I’m old enough. I’m five. I’m six.” “Okay, now that you’re almost seven, and maybe I have been too protective, look both ways, then look again, then make sure nobody’s in the parked cars and just about to pull out, and even if you hear a car coming but don’t see it”—this just last week—“don’t go, wait till it passes or till you don’t hear it, even if that takes a few minutes, then look both ways again and at the parked cars, and only the not-too-traveled street in front of our house and when Mommy or I am looking, or the one by the school with the crossing guard.” Home, her room, all the rooms, bathroom where she washed up and brushed her teeth before going to sleep. He was thinking about firsts before but now he’s talking about everything. His clothes which she’s seen, every plate and cup and such in the house, all the furniture, carpeted floors, woodpile on the porch, streets she’s been on with him and so forth. Jungle Jim he erected and put in with hundreds of pounds of cement, how’s he going to take that out? Neighborhood trees they’ve passed and huge one in the backyard she’s run around. Sky where he’s often pointed out to her a cloud. What’s he talking about? Wash your face, put soap in your mouth. Bang your head against the mirror till it breaks or you’re knocked out. “By the way — excuse me, sir, Mr. Frey,” the policeman says. “But by the way, I never said it so far but I couldn’t be sorrier over what happened to you and your family and I know I’m talking for every law officer in the county and state.” “Yeah, yeah,” looking in the sink. Somebody else’s black hair there, he hates it, why didn’t the guy pick it up and get rid of it or wash it away before he left? “If there was anything we could do, but what possibly could we? But we’d do it in a flash, without question, but even apprehending the rotten fuckers and executing them by injection, what’s it in the end mean as help? Damn, it’s the pits. There’s no comeback from it. I put myself in your position each time.” “You mean,” not looking at him; turning the cold water on and with his finger pressed to the spout spraying the hair to the drain and then down it. “You’re saying, killing a kid like this, it’s happened with others and maybe in the same way?” Turns off the water, looks down the drain, doesn’t see the hair but lets the water run some more to get it all the way to the sewer, or to the river and then the ocean or wherever it winds up but away from here. “Jesus,” to the man’s reflection in the mirror, “just saying it I feel like I’m being killed myself right here. But I suppose I shouldn’t think we’re the first. She is. I am. We all are. Ah, I don’t know what the hell I’m talking about.” There are other hairs in the sink; just noticed them. How corne he didn’t before and how’d they escape the spray? Gray, that’s why, two of them, and one white, so they blended in, plus five or six little black nappy ones which probably have a way of sticking to the porcelain more than what might be the lighter straight ones, but he’s not going to do anything about them. To get all the hairs in all the sinks he sees into the ocean or wherever they go from here, something he never thought of before, and all the sinks he sees into the seas he could see, the shining sinks and shrinking stinks and seas he could mean, though he doesn’t know how, well — well what? He’s lost his train. He’s lost it all. Oh, don’t get so self-pitying, please. And why not get that? And the objective, not the correlative — for he doesn’t know what’s a correlative, it’s just a word he’s heard in attachment to that — would be absurd, wouldn’t it? sinking all the hairs in all the sinks, sort of like going around flushing all the toilets in the world that need to be flushed. Slobs don’t. Absolute slobs. Who let their shit and stuff stay there to swim and stink so the next stiff can see it and wonder about seas and shifting sinks, though they don’t do it for that reason he doesn’t think. They do it because they’re egotists. “I’ve actually seen only one child killed,” the policeman says, who’s actually been talking about that or its correlative for a minute perhaps but he hasn’t heard him till now or not words or not exact. “Oh yeah?” still to the mirror but the policeman to him. I want to get out of here, he thinks. I want to get home with my kids. That’s absolutely what I want, out of this pool of siss, no small thing. “By a bullet, crossfire, druggies shooting up each other over some territory dispute from across a street.” “Druggies, that’s what they were or could have been. Of course,” slapping his head. “What are you saying, something essential you only now remembered about them?” taking out a pen and pad. “No, I don’t know. But who else could kill kids like that but them? They’re out of it. Mind a freaking forest. They’ve lost consciousness or conscience or both or something like that. They’re egotists, aren’t they? — people who kill people like that. And kids, imagine. Even if you’re aiming at me, to know kids are behind. Their lives over them. Meaning, that they think they can, it might even be their right, that someone else’s life is so much shit to them and that they can go on, laughing, even joking about it. ‘Hey,’” nudging the policeman’s arm with his elbow and looking directly at him, “‘we just blew those two halfpints away, what a gas.’ ‘Halfpints.’ That’s from Wilder, once the older girl’s favorite, never hers