I ran toward the Explorer, though not as quickly as I could have, remembering the tree my shin had kissed on the way to the house. I was running for two reasons: one, I wanted to follow the van; and two, if the captain turned left out of the driveway, he would pass the Explorer, which might make him suspicious.
And, if he was doing all of the things I thought he was doing, then he had good reason to be suspicious. It took me three minutes to reach the Explorer-far longer than Skipper needed to reach the end of the driveway. I paused at the edge of the woods to see if Skipper was passing by. I saw no sign of him. I heard nothing. I jumped in the Explorer, turned it around and drove back the way he had come.
He was gone.
Chapter 25
Rarely is witnessing an event, even an event that was supposed to be secret, as revelatory as it seems at the time it is witnessed. People who have witnessed plane crashes, automobile accidents, even assassinations, often know little more than those who were not there at all. I had seen Skipper take Thomas to Maddox’s house last night and I had no idea what it meant. I had seen one isolated incident out of context. Of the several things it could mean, I had no way of knowing what it actually meant.
Under the clear blue skies that had appeared again when the sun rose Sunday morning, I was returning Dad’s Explorer. He lived about fifteen minutes from me on a secluded five-acre farm. I tried to enjoy and appreciate the beautiful creations all around me as well as interact with the creator, but I could think of little else besides the events of the preceding night. I thought maybe I should tell Dad what was going on, but then again, I thought I probably should find out what was going on first. It seemed reasonable.
As I rounded the last curve and put my left blinker on, preparing to turn into Dad’s driveway, the phone rang. At first I didn’t know what it was. I thought maybe a bird had somehow gotten in the vehicle, because of the chirping sound. After the third ring, I deduced that it was a car phone-I’m nothing if not quick. I answered it as I came to a stop in front of my Dad’s little red farm house.
“Hello,” I said into the small phone.
“John,” Dad said, “we need to talk. How long will take you to get over here?”
“Not long,” I said.
“Well, that’s too long. Come as quick as you can.”
“Sure, Dad, I’ll be right there,” I said.
I hung up the phone, got out of the car, and walked over and knocked on the front door.
He looked puzzled when he opened the door. He was wearing a red flannel shirt and a pair of blue jeans that were no longer very blue. His white tube socks matched his jeans-his laundry skills had never been his strong suit. His salt-and-pepper hair, which was receding only slightly, looked to have not seen a brush this morning. His brown eyes, which almost always looked sad, looked especially sad today.
“How the hell did you get here so fast?” he asked.
“I was in your driveway when you called. I’m returning your truck. It made the trip to Tallahassee seem like a vacation. Thanks.”
“You’re welcome. Come in. We need to talk,” he said as he turned and walked down the short hallway that led to his den.
His den was actually a great room with very little furniture, the first clue that this was a bachelor’s pad. There was a large stacked-stone fireplace on the back wall, which we faced as we entered the room. It had an unvarnished wood hearth that was filled with pictures and marksman trophies. Above the fireplace on the dark paneling wall, the head of a large elk was mounted. On the other wall to the left, where the TV sat on a built-in shelf, hung other animal heads-deer, bear, boar, and moose. Dad was a real man’s man. I was a real disappointment to him in this regard.
He took a seat in an old gray recliner that was positioned in front of the TV. It creaked when he plopped down in it. The only other place to sit was a dark gray couch in front of the wall opposite the fireplace, but to sit there was to sit behind him, so I stood.
The house smelled as it always smelled-dusty, slightly mildewed, and like a pack of wild dogs lived there. The pack-of-wilddogs smell came from Wallace, an Irish setter who was currently occupying the couch-another reason I stood.
I glanced over my shoulder toward the kitchen, where I could see food on the small yellow table and dishes piled in the sink, a look not unfamiliar to me. I looked back at Dad. He was staring at the TV, which showed two boxers-a white one and a black one. The black one was being cruel and unusually punishing to the white one. Dad leaned forward slightly as if to hear what the announcers were saying, but the sound was muted.
“Dad, you okay?” I asked. He was always quiet, but now he seemed depressed, preoccupied. As always, his expressions and gestures were small and understated. He was the kind of man who would walk not run out of a burning building.
“Yes, I’m fine, but your mother’s not,” he said without his usual disgust when she was the topic of conversation.
They were divorced when I was fourteen, when her drinking had progressed to the point that it was no longer safe to leave my brother and me with her. He divorced her after almost eighteen years and about a million second chances. The patience of Job comes to mind. It was at this time that my sister Nancy divorced herself from our entire family and moved to Chicago. My brother Jake and I lived with Dad until, at seventeen, I started drinking, at which time I lived with Mom for a short time. It was during that time that I discovered that I didn’t like her any better when I was drunk.
“I know that,” I said. “I’ve never seen her when she was fine. Why are you telling me what I know so well?”
“She needs someone, and it needs to be you,” he said, only looking away from the boxing and up at me momentarily.
“Dad, we’ve been over this. I’m a recovering alcoholic. That comes first. I have a difficult enough time staying sober myself. I cannot keep her sober as well. I’m sorry, but I’m not responsible for her sobriety, and I do not hold her responsible for mine.”
“I’m not asking you to keep her sober,” he said, his voice cracking a little. “I’m asking you to comfort her. She’s dying, John.”
“She’s not dying,” I said. “She’s manipulating you, Dad.”
“No,” he said. “It’s not like before. She really is dying. I talked to her doctor. She has cirrhosis of the liver and kidney failure. She won’t last long.”
“What?” I asked in shock, waves of guilt beginning to roll over me.
“She’s dying,” he whispered. “She doesn’t have too much longer, though the doctor doesn’t know for sure how long.”
God forgive me, I’m a heartless son. She was reaching out for me on the phone the other night, and I was so hateful to her.
“Are you sure?” I asked again. “She called me the other night, but she sounded drunk, not sick.”
“It’s her medication. She’s in the hospital. It makes her sound drunk, but she’s really not.”
“I can’t believe it,” I said. “I was so mean to her. She’s dying.”
Suddenly my dad stood up. He was still an imposing man, with a large frame that was agile for his age.
“Listen to me, Son,” he said forcefully. “You are not to feel guilty for the other night. She told me what happened, but I told her that it was her fault. She’s cried wolf too many times for any of us to believe her. Hell, I wouldn’t have believed her if I hadn’t talked to the doctor. It’s not your fault, understand?”
That was a classic Jack Jordan statement. He said I was not to feel guilty, so that was that-I was not to feel guilty, as if I could just turn it off. However, it was classic also because he did his best to make sure that Jake and I were not manipulated by her when we were kids. He said not to feel guilty, and I didn’t, and that’s what bothered me the most. I felt guilty in my head. I knew I had been too harsh on the phone the other night. But in my heart I felt no guilt. I felt nothing.