What We Remember
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Synopsis
When district attorney James McCloud discovers that his missing police officer father has turned up dead, the victim of murder, he returns home where he is reunited with family members and the old tensions that come with them, along with secrets powerful enough to threaten another life and destroy any bonds that remain.
Release date: June 1, 2009
Publisher: Kensington
Print pages: 368
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What We Remember
Michael Thomas Ford
“Ford knows how to weave layers of witticism, cleverness, humor and subtlety into a quilt of sorts—stirring up emotions that keep you oddly secure in knowing you’re not the only one who’s experienced them before.”
—Instinct
CHANGING TIDES
“Ford bridges the gap between gay romance and mainstream fiction in his latest. A deft sense of place and a handle on romance—both Ben and Caddie’s—that’s neither sappy nor shallow will help set this one apart.”
—Publishers Weekly
FULL CIRCLE
“Summer isn’t the same without hitting the beach, getting a sunburn and devouring a deliciously soapy novel. Ford knows how to draw in a reader with sex and sin.”
—Entertainment Weekly
“A must read for every gay man. Older readers will be reminded of where we’ve been and just how far we’ve come. Younger readers will be made more aware of recent gay history. And all will have more respect for what gay men have had to endure and how they’ve managed to overcome it.”
—Envy Man magazine
“An excellent summer read.”
—Dallas Voice
“Ford’s sprawling tale chronicles the highlights of gay history in the latter half of the 20th century.”
—Metrosource
“Full Circle stunningly succeeds as a great novel.”
—We the People
“The characters’ many brushes with homosexual history—Harvey Milk trolling for votes in a gay bar, the unfurling of the first Rainbow flag, the sexual energy of early ACT UP meetings—will resonate with gay readers.”
—Publishers Weekly
LOOKING FOR IT
“An insightful and entertaining read about what we seek, and what answers we find within and without.”
—Booklist
“Ford handles his broad, diverse cast with amazing ease, and demonstrates a natural gift for storytelling.”
—Bay Area Reporter
“Give Michael Thomas Ford credit for giving us a group of identifiable characters who do not live in L.A., NYC, or Miami, but in a small town like those where most readers actually live. It’s also nice to see these characters addressing realistic differences of generation as well as spirituality, in addition to the usual mix of looking for love, dealing with internalized homophobia and creating support systems through friendships and families of choice.”
—Instinct
“Ford handles his broad, diverse cast with aplomb, and his knowing sense of humor and emphasis on the positive make this novel as warm and inviting as a group hug.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Ford has a knack for bringing together characters of all ages who share a common desire of just wanting to be loved and happy. Of all the books I reviewed this past year, this one generated the most response.”
—We the People
“A warm-hearted story about the importance of friendship and the miracle of connection…Ford’s fluid prose and strong storytelling deliver charming credibility.”
—Outlook News
“Few authors have bothered to represent gay life outside of the usual queer meccas, and Ford captures it perfectly…Readers expecting a repeat of Ford’s far sunnier Last Summer will be in for a shock, but Looking for It is a stronger, weightier product that will have readers impatiently turning pages to see how things turn out.”
—Bay Windows (Boston)
LAST SUMMER
“He effectively draws his readers into the wild world of Provincetown…plenty of page-turning drama…a winner.”
—Entertainment Weekly
“Ford expands his repertoire with this brimful first novel about life, love and self-discovery over the course of a steamy Provincetown summer…a satisfying beach book—and a pleasant fiction debut for Ford.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A made-for-the-beach page-turner, complete with characters twining in and out of one another’s arms and destinies that may leave readers wishing for a wintertime sequel.”
—Booklist
1991
“They found him.”
“Found who?” James McCloud mumbled. Jarred awake by the shrill voice of the phone, he had answered it instinctively. The voice on the other end of the line was vaguely familiar, but sleep tempted him back into its arms, and the question of who had awakened him seemed ridiculously unimportant.
“Dad,” the voice answered.
James sat up, suddenly very much alert. “Celeste?” he said.
“They found Dad,” his sister repeated.
“When?” asked James.
“Last night,” Celeste answered. “Nate waited to tell me until they were sure. I just found out a few minutes ago.”
A soft murmur distracted James, and he glanced at the sleeping form next to him. Charly had turned her head and appeared to be looking right at him. Her lips were slightly parted, and one delicate hand lay across her breast. He started to tell her who was on the phone, but a soft snore revealed that she still slept.
After slipping out of bed, James left the bedroom, shutting the door softy behind him, and walked to the kitchen, where he could speak at a normal volume.
“Where did they find him?” he asked Celeste.
“In the woods,” his sister informed him.
James leaned against the counter. Dressed only in boxer shorts, he shivered in the chill of the apartment. The tile floor was cold beneath his bare feet, and he wished he’d grabbed his robe before leaving the bedroom. A glance at the microwave’s clock revealed that it was nearly five. In a few minutes the alarm clock on his bedside table would give its electronic caw and Charly would reach across where he would normally be lying, looking for the snooze button.
“James?” Celeste’s voice brought him back to the moment.
“Seven years,” he said, still not quite believing the news his sister had just delivered. “It’s been seven years, and all of a sudden he turns up?”
“Nicky Turner was digging a foundation for a new cabin,” Celeste explained. “That’s how they found him.”
“Does Mom know?” James asked.
“No,” said Celeste. “I don’t think I can tell her.”
James sighed. “What about Billy?”
Celeste gave a short laugh. “Who knows?” she answered. “Probably drunk somewhere, or high. I haven’t seen him in a couple of days.”
A flash of anger at his younger brother rose up in James’s thoughts, but he blocked it out. Being upset with Billy wouldn’t help. Not now.
“James,” Celeste said. “There’s something else.”
James waited for her to continue. It was a long moment before she did. “He was buried,” she said.
“What do you mean?” James asked. From the bedroom came the harsh beep-beep-beep of the alarm clock. He heard Charly’s muttered curses, followed by a crash as she found the clock and knocked it to the floor. Its voice was choked off.
“I mean someone buried him,” Celeste told her brother.
“That’s impossible,” said James. “He killed—”
“He was in a box,” Celeste interrupted. “Someone buried him in a box.”
James felt his breath leave him, and for a moment he could do nothing but stare at the window above the sink. Raindrops dotted the glass, forming thin trickles that ran down and disappeared over the edge of the sill. He heard the sound of footsteps, and a moment later Charly appeared in the doorway. Her long brown hair fell loosely around her shoulders, and she had put on James’s Yankees sweatshirt. The too-long sleeves covered her hands, which she rubbed against her bare thighs.
“Who are you talking to?” she asked, rubbing an eye and pushing her hair away from her face.
“I’ll come up,” James said to Celeste, holding up a finger to let Charly know he was almost finished. “Don’t say anything to Mom until I get there, okay?”
“Yeah,” Celeste replied. “I guess I can put it off for a few hours. But don’t be too long. This is a small town, remember?”
“How could I forget?” said James. “I’ll be there as soon as I can.”
He hung up and looked at Charly, who was now eyeing him quizzically.
“What’s going on?” she asked.
“I have to go home,” said James.
“Why?”
“Just some family stuff,” James answered.
Charly crossed her arms over her chest and gave him the look he’d come to realize meant that she didn’t believe for one second that he was telling the truth. Although he hated that she could see through him better than anyone he’d ever met, he also found her insightfulness arousing. For a second he thought about taking her back to bed. Then his sister’s words came back to him. Someone buried him.
“Really,” he said. “It’s no big deal. But I have to go up there and deal with my mother. Celeste thinks she may have early Alzheimer’s or something.”
“Your mother?” said Charly. “Early Alzheimer’s? You mean the woman who remembers my birthday even though I’ve never met her? The woman who once recited her grandmother’s recipe for peanut butter fudge to me over the phone from memory after I told her how good it was? That mother?”
James nodded. “I guess she’s been forgetting a lot of things lately. Anyway, Celeste thinks I should come up and talk to her about maybe getting herself checked out. It’s not a big deal.”
Charly continued to stare at him. James met her gaze, smiling and forcing himself not to blink. Finally Charly nodded. “Okay,” she said. “I guess you’ll tell me when you’re ready. Go run off to the hinterlands. I’ll be fine.”
James stepped forward and drew her to him. He slid a hand beneath the sweatshirt, feeling her warm, smooth skin beneath his fingers. Bending down, he kissed her lightly on the mouth.
“It should just take a day or two,” he said. “I’ll be back before you know it.”
He was relieved that she couldn’t see his face as he spoke.
1983
“Hello?”
Ada McCloud’s heart pounded in her chest as she waited for an answer.
“Ada, it’s A.J.”
Ada couldn’t hide the concern in her voice as she asked, “Have you heard from him?”
“No,” A.J. answered. “I was hoping you had.”
“I haven’t,” Ada told him. She hesitated before asking, “Do you think he’s all right?”
“Sure,” A.J. answered, but his answer came too quickly, and his voice had the air of false reassurance.
He’s as worried as I am, Ada thought.
“He’s probably just run off somewhere,” A.J. continued. “He’ll turn up.”
“I’m sure you’re right,” Ada replied.
She was lying as badly as A.J. was, and both of them knew it. Yet neither would admit their falsehoods. A.J. knew as well as Ada did that Dan McCloud wouldn’t just run off anywhere. The two men had been best friends since childhood, so close that Ada often wondered if there were things about her husband that only A.J. Derry would ever know.
“Don’t worry, Ada,” A.J. said. “And call me as soon as you hear from him.”
“Same to you,” said Ada.
She hung up and turned her attention back to the potatoes waiting on the counter. As she ran the peeler over the brown skin and watched it fall in strips into the sink, she tried to focus her thoughts on preparing dinner for her family. The water was on the stove, lightly salted and simmering. She would quarter the potatoes, put them into the pot, and bring the water to a boil. She would cook them until they were fork tender, drain them, and cube them before adding the milk and butter and mashing them, just as her mother had taught her. She would place them in the same bowl her mother had used, the one with the yellow and blue flowers.
She thought about how often this ritual had been repeated, how many times she had cooked dinner for her husband and children. She’d been married for nineteen years, twenty in October. That added up to thousands of meals. Yet as she drew the peeler over the potato in her hand she felt as if she were doing it for the first time. Her fingers trembled. The peeler slipped, and drops of red appeared on the white surface of the potato.
She turned on the water and ran it until it was ice cold before sticking her finger into the stream. It quickly had the desired numbing effect, yet she held her hand steady for a while longer, until she felt nothing.
She turned the water off and patted her hand dry with the dishtowel. She considered finding a bandage, but the cut was a minor one and had already stopped bleeding. Besides, she reminded herself, she had mother’s hands. It was a term coined by her own mother to describe the tolerance to discomfort built up by any woman who spent years cooking for a family. Ada smiled to herself. It was true; it would take much more than a little cut to make her complain. The kids were always remarking on how she could immerse her hands in dishwater so hot it turned her skin the color of a boiled lobster. Even Dan—big, macho Dan—winced when he tried to help her with the after-dinner cleanup.
At the thought of Dan her smile disappeared and she was once more consumed with worry. Her husband had left the house two days earlier, presumably to go to work, but had neither come home nor contacted Ada. It was unlike him. Dan McCloud was a man who liked order. He had a fondness for watches and clocks, was always on time and always making lists of things to be done. He was not someone who just failed to come home.
Ada knew that Dan could take care of himself. He was, after all, the town’s sheriff. In addition to knowing how to use the gun he carried, Dan had a cool head. He would never rush into anything without thinking his way all around it first and figuring out at least three ways to extricate himself should things go badly. His wife had never seen him panic, and despite the dangers that came with his profession she had seldom worried over him.
But somehow this felt different.
The children, she was only somewhat surprised to see, had not really noticed their father’s absence. Now that they were all three teenagers they had their own lives, which intersected with those of their parents only occasionally. Because of Dan’s job they had never been a family that sat down to breakfast and dinner together religiously. The fact that Dan had not made an appearance at the supper table the night before was not unusual, and Ada had answered the questions regarding his whereabouts by explaining that Dan was working.
Another day, however, and she would have to answer them truthfully. What would she say then? How do you tell your children that their father is gone but you don’t know to where? She couldn’t claim he was on a business trip, or taking care of some emergency out of town. They would know she was lying. Which left her with only one option: to tell them the truth. Only she didn’t know what the truth was.
The banging of the kitchen door startled her. She turned to see her youngest son, Billy, entering. Billy had recently turned thirteen, officially making her and Dan the parents of three teenagers. Although she admitted to no favorites among her children, as the baby Billy occupied a place in her heart perhaps a step or two above those of his brother and sister. James, who at sixteen was a younger version of his father, had the McCloud look about him, with dark hair and stormy eyes. Her oldest, Celeste, favored her, being tall and thin, her hair a deep red and her skin the pale, freckled cream that burned easily and never tanned.
But Billy was the perfect mingling of Ada and Dan, proof of their union in physical form. Slighter than his brother, he was graceful without being delicate. His face was less handsome than James’s, but arguably more beautiful. His green eyes sparkled when he laughed, and of all the children he was the one most likely to make Ada smile. Even now, in the midst of worry, his appearance was reassuring. There was, she thought, no question of Dan’s safety when such a child was waiting for him to come home.
“The mail came,” Billy said. He dropped it on the counter and sniffed the air. “Roast beef?” he asked.
Ada nodded. “It’ll be ready in about half an hour,” she told her son. “Go wash up.”
Billy left, and Ada finished peeling the potatoes and cutting them into chunks. Dropping them into the now-steaming water, she turned up the flame beneath the pot. Dinner preparations completed, she picked up the mail. She took it to the table, sat down, and leafed through it. She took time to peruse the circular from Penney’s and to examine the weekly grocery specials, tearing out the 2-for-1 coupon for the brand of peanut butter Dan liked. She discarded several pieces of junk mail from various organizations wanting money, and read with only slight interest a bulletin from the church the family nominally attended but to which they hadn’t actively gone in a long while.
Maybe we’ll go this Sunday, she thought. It might be good for the kids.
The last piece of mail was a plain white envelope. It was addressed to her. Instinctively she looked to the upper left corner for a return address, but found none. The postmark was dated the previous day. Who, she wondered, had sent her a letter? She slid her finger beneath the lip of the envelope and opened it. Removing a single sheet of paper, she began to read.
1991
“Billy, eat your eggs.”
Billy poked at the plate of scrambled eggs, then set the fork down and pushed the plate away from him. He took a spoonful of sugar from the bowl on the table and added it to the coffee in his mug. Stirring it, he tried to pretend he was somewhere else.
“Billy,” his mother said again. “You already put four spoonfuls in that coffee. That’s enough.”
“I’m not a kid, Mom,” he snapped. “For fuck’s sake, I’m twenty-one years old.”
“Don’t swear,” said Ada. “Not in my house.”
“Mom, are you okay?”
Billy looked across the table at his sister. Celeste was sitting beside her husband, Nate. The two of them were ignoring him—had been ignoring him ever since their arrival half an hour ago.
“I’ll make some more eggs,” Ada said, starting to get up.
“Ada,” said Nate. “Sit down. Please.”
Ada paused, then returned to her chair. Of course she listens to Nate, Billy thought. His head hurt. Slipping a hand into his pocket, he sought the little plastic bag he recalled putting there the night before. It wasn’t there. Fuck me, he thought.
“I know this is hard for you to hear.” Nate’s voice droned in Billy’s ears. He closed his eyes, trying to block it out. He wanted to sleep. If he could only sleep, he’d feel better. He hadn’t been to bed in days. How many? He tried to count backward but couldn’t remember if it was Wednesday or only Tuesday. That made a difference.
“You say they found Dan,” he heard his mother say. Her voice was flat, as if she were discussing the laundry or the weather. “I heard you.” She was silent for a minute, then began speaking again. “I knew he was dead,” she said. “We all knew that. This just proves it.”
“It’s not just that, Mom,” Celeste said.
Billy opened his eyes. He seemed to be looking at his sister through a haze. She was blurry, indistinct, a ghost. Her voice was coming from far away. He blinked, and the fog lifted like a curtain going up on a play. Celeste’s face came into focus, and he stared at her mouth.
“What else can there be?” his mother asked. “You’ve already told me he’s dead. Seems to me that’s the end of it.”
Billy saw his sister look at her husband. Nate leaned forward, placing his elbows on the table and folding his hands. “Ada, we didn’t just find Dan in those woods. We found him in a box.”
“A box?” Ada repeated. “What do you mean, a box?”
“Dan was buried inside a trunk,” said Nate.
Billy sat up. “What?” he said.
Nate ignored him, speaking directly to Ada.
“Somebody put Dan into a box—a trunk, actually—and buried him on the land where Nicky Turner is building his cabin,” he said.
“How would he get inside a trunk?” asked Ada. She gave a short laugh, as if she’d just realized that someone had played a joke on her.
“Dad killed himself,” Billy said. “We all know that.”
This time Nate and Celeste did look at him. Celeste in particular looked angry. By speaking about his father’s death he’d broken the agreement that had existed between the members of the family since that day seven years ago. But he didn’t care. Celeste could go fuck herself. Nate too. Especially Nate.
“He killed himself,” Billy repeated. “How the fuck would he get inside a trunk and bury himself in Nicky Turner’s lot?”
“He didn’t kill himself,” said Nate. “Someone else killed him.”
Stunned, Billy looked to his mother. She held her coffee mug in her hands, and she was looking out the window. “That squirrel has been at the suet again,” she said.
“Mom,” said Celeste. “Did you hear what Nate—”
“I heard him,” Ada interrupted. “But he’s wrong. I have the letter.”
“I wish I was wrong, Mom,” said Nate. “But I’m not. Dan didn’t kill himself.”
Ada shook her head. “No one would kill Dan,” she said. “No one could. He would never let them.”
Billy coughed. He felt sick, as if he might throw up the coffee and eggs in his stomach. His chest hurt. He felt another cough coming on and tried to suppress it. But it was too strong for him, and he began hacking. His sister and his brother-in-law shot him annoyed looks but said nothing.
“No,” his mother said decisively. “You’re wrong. That must not be Dan in that…box.” She said the last word softly, letting it die in the still air. “It must be someone else.”
Celeste got up and walked over to Ada. Putting her hand on her mother’s shoulder, she said, “It’s Dad, Mom. He’s wearing his uniform.”
“How do you know what he’s wearing?” Ada snapped.
Celeste looked across the table at Nate. Billy saw Nate nod curtly.
“I’ve seen him,” said Celeste.
“You’ve seen him?” Billy repeated.
Celeste continued speaking to their mother. “I wanted to be sure before we told you. At first I didn’t want to believe Nate, either. But it’s him, Mom. It really is.”
Ada’s face crumpled. She began to cry. That’s the first time I’ve seen her cry since he died, Billy thought. He wished he could go and put his arms around his mother. But Celeste had already claimed her.
“Why did you have to tell me?” Ada said. She looked up. “It was all over,” she said. “I let him go. Now…”
She lowered her eyes once more. Billy saw her shoulders buckle as more tears came. Say something! he telegraphed at Celeste, who remained motionless with her hands on their mother’s shoulders.
“What about the letter?” he said, looking at Nate.
“That’s one of the questions we’re going to have to answer,” Nate answered. “It will all be part of the investigation.”
Ada looked up. Her eyes were wet. “Investigation?” she said weakly.
Nate nodded. “There will have to be an investigation,” he said. “Now that this is a murder case.”
Ada slammed her hand on the table. “No!” she said. She pointed a finger at her son-in-law. “You leave this alone! Do you hear me?”
“Mom—” Celeste began.
“I said no,” Ada interrupted. “There’s no need to bring all of that up again. It won’t change anything.”
“But Mom,” Celeste said, “if Dad was murdered, then Nate has to find out who did it.”
“I don’t care who did it!” Ada cried. She looked at Billy. “I don’t care,” she said, more softly.
It’s all right, Billy thought, giving her what he hoped was a reassuring look. The fog had descended again, and it was difficult to concentrate.
“It’s my job, Mom,” he heard Nate say. “It’s my responsibility to find out what happened to Dan.”
“I know this is hard,” Celeste told her mother. “It’s hard for all of us.”
Celeste looked at Billy. He realized that she wanted him to say something to back her up. But he was so tired. All he wanted to do now was go lie down and sleep. Just for a little while. Until his head cleared.
Shaking her head in obvious irritation, Celeste pulled out the chair between Billy and Ada and sat down. She took one of Ada’s hands in hers and held it, her back to Billy.
“Mom, you have to be prepared for the attention this is going to get. Once people find out that Dad was murdered, it’s going to get crazy.”
“Don’t tell them,” Ada said. “They don’t need to know our business.”
“You know I can’t do that, Ada,” said Nate.
The room fell silent. Billy knew that his mother had accepted the situation, although something still didn’t feel right. He searched his fluttering thoughts, trying to pin one down as if trying to catch a moth in a jar. Something bothered him, but he couldn’t get his mind to stop tumbling headlong through space to figure out what it was.
“James is coming, Mom,” Celeste said, breaking the quiet. “He should be here soon.”
Billy heard himself laugh. James, he thought. Of course James is coming. It’s always James to the rescue. He had the sudden image of his older brother galloping across the prairie on a horse, his white hat shining in the sun. He laughed again.
“What’s wrong with you?” Celeste asked.
Billy looked at her. “Nothing,” he said. “Nothing at all. I’ll be fine. We’ll all be fine. James will be here and everything will be fine.” He emphasized the last word, and saw his sister’s jaw tighten.
“Billy, why don’t you go get some rest,” Nate suggested. “You look beat.”
“Do I?” asked Billy. “Do I look beat, Nate? That’s weird, because like I told my sister, I feel just fine.”
“Billy,” Nate said. His voice was heavy with warning.
“Fuck you,” said Billy. “I’m not married to you. And if anyone doesn’t belong here it’s you. You’re not family.”
“I’m the sheriff,” Nate replied. “And in case you’ve forgotten, your father and my father were best friends.”
Billy nodded. “That’s right, Nate,” he said. “That’s right. Thank you for reminding me about that.” He tapped his temple with his finger. “I forget things sometimes, you know?”
“Stop picking on your brother, Celeste,” said Ada.
“Pick on him?” Celeste objected. “He’s the one who’s—”
“Celeste,” said Nate, stopping her.
“I’m sorry, Mom,” Celeste said. “Maybe you should go lie down.”
“Maybe,” said Ada. “Maybe I will at that.”
She stood up. Celeste steadied her. “Let me help you, Mom,” she said.
“I’m fine, Celeste,” Ada answered. “Just let me be.”
Billy watched as his mother left the kitchen. As soon as she was gone, Celeste turned to him. “You’re high, aren’t you?”
“What difference does it make?” Billy said.
“For one thing, it’s illegal,” Celeste told him.
“Illegal?” said Billy. He laughed. “You’ve been married to that one for too long,” he told his sister, indicating Nate with a wave of his hand. “And it wasn’t all that long ago that neither of you cared about it being illegal yourselves.”
“That was a little pot,” Celeste replied. “What you’re doing is a lot worse.”
“Right,” said Billy, nodding.
“Mom doesn’t need you being fucked up right now, Billy,” Celeste said.
“Maybe not,” Billy agreed. He looked his sister in the eyes. “But maybe it’s what I need.”
Celeste shook her head. “Can’t you arrest him?” she asked her husband.
“Both of you need to pull it together,” said Nate. “This is just going to get worse.”
“Don’t worry,” Billy told him. “Didn’t you hear? James is coming.”
“I’m serious, Billy,” Celeste said. “Once this gets out, everyone’s going to be looking at us. I don’t want them thinking…” She stopped, and turned to look out the window.
“Think what?” Billy asked her. “Think what, Celeste?” he repeated when his sister didn’t reply.
“You know what,” Celeste said quietly. “You know what, Billy.”
Billy stood up. He swayed slightly as his head pounded. “Here’s a news flash for you, big sister. They already think it.”
He made his way out of the kitchen and into the bathroom that was off the hall leading to the living room. After shutting the door behind him, he slumped to the floor and sat there, his back against the side of the tub. The tile in the bathroom was pale pink. It hadn’t changed since he was a kid. Sitting in there with the door closed, it felt like being inside a womb, small and closed in and safe.
He shut his eyes. They’d found his father. His father who had supposedly killed himself seven years ago but who now it seemed had been murdered. It seemed like he should feel something—sadness, anger, rage, anything. Instead, he just felt numb. Not that that was anything new. He had perfected achieving a state of total disinterest in everything.
The throbbing in his head had subsided to a dull pain. Through the door he could hear the voices of Celeste and Nate, faint as the droning of bees. Beside him warm air blew up through the vent in the floor, the breath of the oil furnace hibernating in its basement cave. It felt good to be warm; he was almost always cold. But not here, in the pink bathroom, away from everything.
He curled himself into a ball beside the tub, his head resting on the mat. And for the first time in days, he slept.
1982
It took him a moment to realize that the reason the shoe wouldn’t go on was because he was trying to put it on the wrong foot. Once he figured that out, he easily slipped the red pump over the delicate toes and tucked the heel into the back. He repeated the process on the other foot. The shoes were pretty, much better than the white sandals he’d tried first. Those had not matched the dress at all.
Billy took the Barbie and laid her on the carpet. Turning his attention to Ken, he removed the flower-patterned swimming trunks and replaced them with a pair of tuxedo pants. The garish Hawaiian shirt was abandoned in favor of a shirt and jacket. Black shoes completed the outfit.
With both Barbie and Ken now appropriately dressed for an evening out, he held one in each hand. Turning them to face one another, he took turns providing them with voices.
“Thanks for asking me to dinner,” Barbie said sweetly.
Ken nodded. “Thank you for coming,” he replied, his voice deep and manly. “You look beautiful.”
Barbie turned away, embarrassed. When she looked back at Ken she said, “Aren’t you going to kiss me good night?”
Ken leaned in, his lips touching Barbie’s. Billy watched them, envious.
The door to the room burst open, startling him and causing him to drop the dolls. Behind him, James stood in the doorway, his gaze fixed on the clothes scattered across the floor. Billy began to quickly sweep them into a pile.
“Jesus Christ, Bill,” James said. “What are you doing?”
“Nothing,” said Billy. “Just fooling around.”
“I thought Celeste told you to keep out of her stuff,” James continued.
“She doesn’t even look at these anymore,” said Billy. “She says she’s too old for them.”
“Well, she is,” said James. “And so are you. Also, you’re a boy.”
Billy shrugged as he picked up Ken and Barbie and put them back into the plastic carrying case. “It’s just a game,” he said.
“A girl’s game,” James said. “And you’re almost thirteen, for Christ’s sake.”
“Mom told you not to say Christ like that,” Billy reminded him. “It’s a sin.”
“Whatever,” said James. “Just put that shit away. Dad wants you to come help outside.”
“Help do what?” Billy asked. He slipped the dolls’ carrying case back into Celeste’s closet, then shut the door.
“He’s working on the car,” said James. “He wants you to learn how to change the oil.”
Billy stood up. “Why?” he asked. “Isn’t that why they have garages?”
“Because a guy should know how to change the oil in a car,” said James.
They left Celeste’s room and walked down the hallway toward the living room. As they did, James put his hand on Billy’s shoulder.
“You’ve really got to grow up, Bill,” he said. “You’re not a kid anymore.”
“My name’s Billy,” Billy reminded him
“See,” said James. “That’s what I mean. Billy is a little kid’s name. You should go by Bill.”
“But I like Billy.”
They passed through the kitchen, pushing open the back door and exiting the house. In the driveway their father was standing in front of the family car. The hood was open, held in place by the thin rod that Billy was always afraid would snap in two at any moment, bringing the hood down on his fingers or his head.
“I found him,” James said to their father.
Billy waited for his brother to tell their father where he had found him. But James left it at that. Sometimes he wasn’t a total jerk, Billy thought. But not often.
“Come take a look at this,” their father said, waving both boys over.
Billy followed James to the car. He stood a little bit back, peering down into the tangled knots of unidentifiable metal pieces. He had no idea what any of it was, nor did he care. It was just a car.
“See this?” his father said. He held out a long, thin piece of metal. It was covered in slick black oil. “This is the dipstick. It tells you how much oil is left in the car.”
Billy hadn’t the vaguest notion of why he should care about such a thing, yet he nodded gravely. He watched as his father took a rag and wiped the stick clean. The oil on the rag was a greenish black, ugly, like the insides of a bug.
“You want the dipstick clean when you slide it back inside the engine,” his father continued, demonstrating. “That way you get an accurate reading when you take it out.”
He pulled the dipstick from its sheath and held it out toward Billy. “See those two dots?” he asked. “You want the oil line to be between them. What do you do if it isn’t?”
Billy hesitated. He looked at James, who was biting his lip as if to keep from blurting out the answer. But the question had not been directed at him, and Billy knew his brother would not come to his rescue.
“Um, take it to the garage?” he tried.
His father shook his head. “Maybe if you were your mother, you would,” he said, laughing. “Or your sister. But you, me, or your brother would just add a quart of oil.”
James laughed along with their father, as if the two of them were sharing a joke that Billy didn’t understand. Billy tried to laugh as well, but it sounded too loud to him, and he was embarrassed by his attempt. He saw James glance at him, and he felt his cheeks flush.
“Now you add oil to the engine,” his father continued, seeming not to notice. “Here, you do it.”
He handed Billy a can of oil. It was heavier than Billy expected. Then his father handed him a metal spout with a single sharp metal tooth on one end.
“You snap that onto the can,” his father explained. “Try it. It’s easy.”
Billy pressed the metal tooth against the top of the can. Applying pressure to it, he was surprised when it easily pierced the top and clicked into place.
“Good job,” his father said. “Now just pour it into the hole where the oil goes.”
Billy waited for his father to show him where the hole was. He could see several possibilities. But his father didn’t offer any help, merely saying, “Go on. It’s easy.”
Billy stepped forward. In order to look for the oil hole he had to put his head beneath the raised hood. He looked once more at the flimsy rod holding it open. It was hooked into a hole in the edge of the hood. That could slip out, he thought. He turned his eyes away from it, concentrating on finding the correct hole in which to pour the oil.
He knew that his brother and father were watching him. He knew, too, that James at least expected him to mess up. James was always good at everything, while he, Billy, was always doing things the wrong way. It was as if James had gotten all of the common sense, while Billy had been given all the imagination. James had very little of that. He was practical, where Billy was always dreaming.
“You need to—” he heard James say.
“Let him do it,” their father interrupted. Then he said to Billy, “You can do it, Bill.”
Now he’s calling me Bill too, Billy thought. He wondered when he had stopp. . .
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