He nodded. “I’ve been a rotten host.”
Len was wearing his kimono, that red one with the lotus-design. He’d lost a lot of weight — you couldn’t mistake it, the kimono hung so loose on him. His hair was coming back in, but it was still thin, downy. He sat down beside me.
“You met Lucille,” he said.
“How did you know?” I asked, but I didn’t need to; as I spoke, I saw Kimi over the breakfast bar in the kitchen, putting glasses into the dishwasher. She’d told him about our conversation in the washroom. He’d put it together.
“Yeah,” said Len, “you were on the beach. Two of you. Had yourself a time, didn’t you Tom?”
“We had ourselves a time.”
Len put a bony hand on my thigh, gave it a squeeze of surprising strength, and nodded.
“Now you’re drunk in my living room, when everybody else has had sense to get out. Too drunk to drive yourself, am I right?”
That was true.
“And you don’t have cab fare, do you?”
I didn’t have cab fare.
“You’re a fucking leech, Tom. You smell like a fucking leech.”
“It’s the ocean,” I said.
Kimi turned her back to us, lowered her head and raised her shoulder blades, like wings, as she ran water in the kitchen sink.
“Yeah, we know that’s not so,” said Len. “You smell of Lucy.” He licked his lips, and not looking up, Kimi called out, “that’s not nice, Len,” and Len chuckled and jacked a thumb in her direction and shrugged.
“Did she leave?” I asked. “Lucy I mean.”
“Miss her too now?” Did I miss her like you, he meant, obviously.
“I just didn’t see her leave.”
“What’d I just say? Everybody else had the sense to get out.”
A plate clattered loudly in the sink. Len shouted at Kimi to be fuckin’ careful with that. Then he coughed and turned an eye to me. His expression changed.
“You saw,” he said quietly. “Didn’t you?”
“I saw.”
He looked like he wanted to say more. But he stopped himself, the way he does: tucking his chin down, pursing his lips… like he’s doing some math, which is maybe close to the mark of what he is doing until he finally speaks.
“Did she tell you how we met?”
“Friend of a friend,” I said, then remembered: “Not just a friend; one of your partners. And then you just kept inviting her out.”
“Always that simple, isn’t it?”
“It’s never that simple,” I said, “you’re going to tell me.”
“It is that simple,” he said. “Lucille Carroll is a high-school friend of Linda James. Linda isn’t a partner now and I won’t likely live to see the day that she is. But she did work for me. With me. And she used to come out sometimes. And she brought Lucille one day. And not long after, Linda stopped coming around. Lucille still shows up.” He sighed. “Simple.”
Kimi flipped a switch under the counter and the dishwasher hummed to life. “I’m turning in,” she announced, and when Len didn’t say anything, she climbed the stairs.
“It’s not that simple,” I said when Kimi was gone. Now, I thought, was the time when Len would spell it out for me: tell me what had happened, really.
“And she doesn’t like to talk about it,” was what he said instead. “It’s private, Tom.”
What came next? Well, I might have handled it better. But you know how I hate it when my friends hide things from me. We both remember the weekend at the lake, with your sister and her boys. Did I ever properly apologize for that? It’s difficult to, when all I’ve spoken is God’s truth.
But I could have handled it better.
“It’s not private,” I said, “it’s the opposite. She’s the least private person I’ve met. The eyes…”
“Her skin condition you mean.”
“You do know about them.” I may have jabbed him in the chest. That may have been unwise. “Maybe you like them? Watching everything you do? Maybe they flatter your vanity…”
Len shook his head. He stopped me.
“You know what, Tom? I’m sick of you. I’ve been sick of you for a long time. But I’m also sick, and I’ll tell you — that clarifies things for a man. So here’s what I see:
“You come here to my house — you moon around like some fucking puppy dog — you drink my wine… the friends of mine you don’t fuck, you bother with your repetitive, self-involved shit. Jesus, Tom. You’re a leech.”
“I’m sorry,” I said, because really — what else do you say to something like that? To someone like Len, for Christ’s sake?
“Yeah,” he said. “Heard that one before. Lucy’s a special girl, Tom. She’s helping me in ways you couldn’t imagine. And it has nothing to do with my fucking vanity. Not a fucking thing. Lucy’s my… assurance. And she’s always welcome here.”
“I’m sorry.”
“I got that. Now are you okay to drive yet, Tom?”
I wasn’t. But I said sure.
“Then you get out of my house. Get back to your place. Stay there. I don’t think you should come back here again.”
Yes. That’s why you hadn’t seen me at Len’s after that. He cast me out — into the wilderness — left me to my own devices.
I wasn’t avoiding you.
Far from it.
Lucy wasn’t that hard to find.
She had a Facebook page, and I had enough information to narrow her down from the list of those other Lucy Carrolls who said they were from here. So I sent her a note apologizing for being such an asshole, and she sent me a friend request and I agreed — and she asked me to pick a place, and that’s where we met. It’s the Tokyo Grill in the Pier District. I don’t think we ever went there, you and I. But at 12:15 on a Tuesday in June, it’s very bright.
Lucy wore a rose print dress, not quite as pale as her skin. She had freckles and her hair was more reddish than brunette. Perhaps it was the effect of wearing a dress and not a pair of jeans, but she seemed more svelte on the patio than she did that night on the beach. Her eyes were hazel.
Do you remember how I courted you? Did you ever doubt that I was anything but spontaneous? That when I laughed so hard at that joke of yours, it was because I thought it was the funniest thing I’d ever heard?
You didn’t? You should have. I’m not good at everything in life, oh that I’ll admit. But I am good at this part. I am smooth.
And that’s how I was at the Tokyo Grill that Tuesday.
Lucy wasn’t sure about me and she made that explicit pretty early. I’d seemed nice at first, but running off like that… well, it had been hurtful. It made her feel as though there was something wrong with her, and as she made explicit somewhat later on, there wasn’t anything wrong with her.
“It’s not you — it’s the rest of the world,” I said, and when she took offense, I explained I wasn’t making fun.
“The world’s an evil place. Lots wrong with it. Look at… think about Len, as an example.”
“What do you mean?”
“Well. How he treats people. How he uses them. Like Kimi.”
“He’s an important man,” she said quickly. “I imagine it takes a toll. All those clients he’s got to look after.” She sighed. “Clients can be very demanding.”
“Clients.” I made a little smile. “That’s a good word. Len has clients like other people have friends.”
Yes, I suppose I was being dramatic. But Lucy didn’t think so; she laughed, very hard, and agreed.
“So what about you?” she asked. “Are you client or friend?”
“Something else.”
I explained how Lucy wasn’t the only one I’d offended with my bad behaviour that night — and again, I layered contrition on top of itself, and doing so took another step to winning her over.