Jerry’s
Daddy, looking half dead, sat in the kitchen smoking a Camel and sketching
comic faces on a napkin with a stubby pencil. There was quite an odor about
him, mostly of sour, poorly washed clothes. A thin white paste leaked from his
mouth. Jerry sat at the far end of
the dining table. “Where have you
been?”
“All over
the place. Don’t worry about
that.”
“How did
you get into the house?”
“The
basement window. I was careful, I was quiet, I didn’t want to wake you up in
the middle of the night. I scraped myself, but don’t worry, I don’t bleed
anymore.”
“I
assumed you were dead.”
“It’s an
assumption, Jerry. You never knew this, but at times I had to rest. I came here, a familiar place. I stayed
in the basement. I’ve got a little niche back there in the corner.”
“That’s
crazy. What’s that white stuff you’re drooling?”
“I don’t
know. It just started happening a few years ago. I know it smells bad.”
“Why
don’t you bathe? I’ll take you upstairs. You can get into the tub. I’ll give
you some soap.”
“The
least bit of water on my skin burns like acid.”
“Right.
I’m sure it does. Would you like a cup of coffee?”
“I’ll
have a sip or two. If I drink too much I get animated…. What kind of coffee do
people drink these days? Is it still Maxwell House and Folgers?”
“I get
better stuff. It costs twice as much. It’s organic.”
“It’s
what?”
“Organic.”
“What in
the shit does that mean?”
“They
don’t use pesticides on the coffee plants. They don’t treat the beans with
chemicals.”
Jerry’s
Daddy watched him pour three scoops of beans into his Braun grinder and held
his ears when it was turned on. “Jesus Christ, what is that thing? Cyclones in Hell that don’t make that
much noise.”
“It’s an
electric grinder. You buy the whole beans and you grind them yourself. It
tastes fresher.”
“Have we
gone to the moon yet?”
“We have,
yes. In 1969. Where the hell have you been?”
“Fantastic.
I knew they would. How old is Kennedy now? He must be eighty or ninety.”
“He was
assassinated.”
“You’re
kidding.”
“In
Dallas. A little guy with Cuban sympathies shot him dead in his limousine. The
top was down.”
“Somebody
shot Kennedy? Hard to believe.”
“What am
I going to do with you? This is a small place. Just a kitchen, a tiny parlor,
one bedroom and a bath upstairs.”
“I said I
would stay in the basement.”
“The
bathroom is upstairs. You’d be going up and down all night.”
“I don’t need
a bathroom. I’m dried up. Kidneys don’t work.”
“That’s
interesting, Daddy. Here’s your
coffee. I’m taking you somewhere, a facility where you can get some help.”
“I don’t
need help. I’m fine.”
“What
will you eat down there, slugs? Roaches?
I’m taking you somewhere. Let me make a few phone calls.”
Jerry
fished an iPhone from his robe pocket and spoke into its receiver: “Social
Services, Geriatric.” He looked intently at the little screen for an answer.
Daddy
pointed at the iPhone. “What in the hell is that?”
Several
social service geriatric sites had scrolled up and Jerry wasn’t paying
attention. “What is what? I’m busy looking something up.”
“Don’t
tell me they’ve got little bitty televisions now. Why did you talk to it?”
“It’s a
telephone and it’s also a small computer. It gives me information about things
to do with you. Right now it’s telling me to call St. Vincent’s, which it says
has a good reputation.”
“I read
about them in Popular Science, the
little computing machine of the future you could hold in your hand. No wires.
Dick Tracy had a wrist phone. It might have been a radio too. I don’t
remember.”
Jerry
said, “Fifty years, Daddy. You’ve been gone that long.”
“Was I.…?
What about your mother? Whatever became of her?”
“She died
in eighty nine. Cancer of the colon.”
“I bet
she suffered. I’m sorry I couldn’t be with her. I wish I cared more, but I lost
all my feelings when I moved on. Physically, mentally, nothing there.”
Jerry
punched in the number for St. Vincent’s and waited for an answer. “I was with
her,” he said, spite on his fleshy face. “I took care of emptying her colostomy
bag and trying to talk her out of taking an overdose of her pain pills.”
“I’m
guessing it wasn’t fun.”
“It
wasn’t…. Hello? St.Vincent’s? I’m calling about a situation I’m having with my
father. He’s been gone fifty years and now he’s back and he needs care. Are
your services free?”
“I’m not
going there, Jerry. Think of something else.”
Jerry
shushed him with a finger to the lip and listened for awhile with his ear to
the iPhone. “I’ve already thought about this for a long time, in case you came
back. I can’t take care of you. It’s way too late. You’re going to St.
Vincent’s.”
Daddy
took a small sip of coffee. “Did you ever hook up with a woman and get
married?”
Jerry
pressed the End button and slid home the cover of the iPhone. “The damned place
is closed three days a week. They won’t be there till Thursday. I got a
recording.”
“Did
you?”
“Did I
what?”
“Find a
woman and get married.”
“No, I’ve been going it alone. It’s noon
already. We’ve got to make some kind of arrangements.”
“I’m
living the dream. I couldn’t be better. I don’t need any arrangements. I told
you that, didn’t I?”
“I’ll
call them back on Thursday.”
“Son, are
you religious? Do you belong or go to any church? All that Heaven and Hell
shit?”
“No. I
don’t believe any of that.”
“Let me
tell you, I’ve been to Hell.”
“Of
course you have.”
Jerry
began to make a sandwich. He took sliced ham, mayonnaise, yellow mustard and a
leaf of lettuce from the fridge, placed them on the kitchen counter and dropped
two slices of split-top white bread into the toaster. “Go on, Daddy, tell me
all about Hell.”
“The
first morning I woke up there I felt more rested than I had in years. My big
surprise—there wasn’t enough fire to roast a marshmallow. The place that
terrified us had burned out long ago and a cool drizzle had turned everything
into a slimy black tar, still warm enough to burn your feet, but that’s it. I
saw familiar faces right away, friends from home. They were in single file,
pushed along by the Devil’s trustees, on their way to one of several Hell-based
factories for a long, steamy day of work. There were two Hells, one for women
and one for men. A river of boiling plasma separated them.”
“I think
St. Vincent’s is the place for you. Good priests, good nuns. They’ll treat you
well.”
“I’m not
finished with Hell yet, Son.”
“All
right.”
“There
were a few children to be seen, mostly males, idling their way through
eternity, too young to work, too old for Limbo. There were no clouds, tobacco
or animals. And the condemned ate half-cooked flesh soaked in mother’s milk at
every meal. People were trying to distill whiskey down there. They were going
to call it Deep Shaft Bourbon—Bottled in Hell, but you can’t make good whiskey
without corn. And for corn, you need good water. The Styx doesn’t have it. It’s
eighty feet under the ground. It gets every drop of toxic effluent from the
City.”
“Is that
it, your treatise on Hell?”
“It’s my
report. I was there. Look, I’m going down for a nap. I can’t hold my eyes
open.”
Daddy
struggled up from the table without help from Jerry and shuffled to the
basement door. “Good night, Jerry.”
“Daddy,
it isn’t noon yet.”
“Oh,
don’t worry, it’s dark enough in the basement.” He opened the basement door.
“Don’t try to raise me in the morning. I’ll be sleeping in.”
“All
right.”
Daddy stepped onto the
basement stairs and closed the door behind him.
David Ohle lives in Lawrence, Kansas.
I liked it; any follow up?
ReplyDeleteGreat, what a packed piece of writing.
ReplyDelete