Dishonest
The summer nights were ending. They
weren’t yet ending but the fact that they would end clearly suggested they were
ending. The process of ending had begun when the summer had. Nothing of any
consequence had been done with any of the nights, still they didn't want them
to end. What ending meant to both of them was years in the future—into a death
beyond space and into a thought experiment so without merit that the very
thinking of it seemed to race them more speedily towards it. And it was it. And
this mid August, barely mid-August, really early-mid August evening, meant
“summer will end” and “summer will end” meant life will end—though even that
they didn't do much with.
Marjorie said, “I think Mark M is
really dishonest.”
Bill said, “Why do you say ‘Mark M’
when we don't know any other Marks anyway?”
Marjorie said she didn't know and how
him saying that was kind of a dishonest reply in a way. “The dishonesty called
evasion, though the kind of ‘dishonest’ I am thinking about is a lot more
damaging and a lot less obvious.”
Bill said how he thought Marjorie’s
need of honesty or fear of dishonesty was a little childish, like she couldn’t
stand the fact that she couldn't know other people in any real meaningful way
anyway and dishonesty is just a big flag showing as much, a big sign saying SEE
YOU ARE TOTALLY ALONE.
This made Marjorie feel hot and she
got up from the table and went to sit in the half-full kiddie pool. She felt
like Bill went a little too far with that last bit about TOTALLY ALONE and,
well, of course that was the reason why she didn't like dishonesty and, of
course, he knew that and knew she knew and the whole TOTALLY ALONE thing was an
unnecessary rubbing-in-her-face. So for whatever reason Bill was angry and she
was going to have to look for another topic. That’s what a relationship was
sometimes. Finding conversational spots on the other person that didn't
irritate.
“Did you look at the upstairs sink?”
The way Bill glared at Marjorie made
her realize that tack wasn’t going to hold either.
“I have so many questions about plants
sometimes,” she started after a pause so long it felt like the water she was
sitting in had turned into the blood inside her body. The liquids had become
the same temperature and moved with the same speed. She pulled at some clover
growing next to the pool.
“Sometimes I can’t believe the way
plants have evolved alongside animals. How different their whole approach to
life is.”
Bill didn’t snap, he just raised his
eyebrows as if to say “well, that is something that you said.” Not “something”
like “well, that is really something,” but “something” like “some thing.” Like
“you said something,” all flat and evident and Icelandic.
Finally Marjorie said, “Let’s see what
the Hand is doing.”
The Hand was their friend Rich Handie
who lived a few blocks over on Coruth and came by once or twice a week and
drank with Marjorie and Bill, or else they would all go to one of the bars that
was in walking distance of their house. A lot of times it was The Hand and Ky Mike,
but Ky Mike had been dating someone for the last month and was less readily
available these days.
That was the way The Hand put it, he
was less readily available, just like
if there was a spoken equivalent to italics. Everybody knew The Hand was funny.
Bill and Marjorie were funny too, but because they were a couple they needed
someone to be funny around. They had begun to cancel each other out the way
sometimes couple’s humor cancels itself out. They don't sit around in the back
yard cracking each other up anymore but if they get around a friend it becomes
a worthy show.
When The Hand came by Bill was pretty
tight, Marjorie was too, but in a more containable way. Marjorie was still
sitting in the kiddie pool and The Hand walked right into the back yard and
right into the kiddie pool in his pants and button-down shirt. The Hand wore
glasses. Just like everybody in the entire world.
Marjorie said, “The Hand just wet his
nice slacks,” and Bill said, “Yeah, why are you wearing such nice slacks?” The
Hand said he's “been making an effort.”
Bill said, “Marjorie, The Hand has
been making an effort.” They all
laughed and then Marjorie told a story about the time she was on line to see a
movie and the couple behind her were clearly making an effort to impress each other.
“They were talking too loudly and just
being strange and witty with each other and then when it was their turn to buy
tickets they jacked the place with a tiny gun pointed at the teller.”
Marjorie said “jacked the place” like
she said “jacked the place” all the time.
“They got about $780 dollars and never
got caught. I remember thinking ‘this human pairing will not stick’. Like that,
like I was observing an experiment about incompatible molecules.”
“Lie,” said Bill.
“But maybe they weren’t even a couple
at all. Who knows.”
“You lie.”
The Hand said, “Why do think that
story’s a lie? Why make up a boring story?”
“Lie.”
Marjorie said, “You lie.”
Bill said, “I do.”
Marjorie thought about whatever day it
was that she and Bill got married. How that “I do” sounded so different. She
thought that one was also about lying. Bill, though, didn’t really lie—what he
did that was so terrible, it was the opposite of lying. He truthed to a hurtful
degree and even this was somehow dishonest.
“Marjorie thinks Mark M is a liar.”
Bill declared this in a revelatory way after about three minutes of a
comfortable, tight silence each of them had lapsed into.
“No, I don’t. I said I thought he was
dishonest, by which I meant something a lot subtler than you can even comprehend.”
“Well, this is what it is. I'm going
to lay it out for us right here before this evening goes any further. I'm going
to outline this evening’s agenda. Marjorie thinks everyone is dishonest.
The Hand is trying to make an effort ever since Ky Mike started
dating that teenager—”
“She is the same age as Ky Mike,”
Marjorie cut in.
The Hand said, “She’s actually a few
years older than Ky Mike.”
“God, she’s such a drag, I thought she
was a child. This makes it worse. Why is Ky Mike dating a grown woman who acts
like a child? Marjorie don’t you think it is dishonest to be that dumb? Or
dishonest to pass off your blandness as youth when it is really inexcusable
blandness?”
The Hand crawled his hands out of the
kiddie pool and walked them towards the six pack of beers he had brought over.
He kept his feet in the pool and stretched himself out almost onto his stomach,
unwilling to move his feet from their spot in the pool. He managed to bring the
bag of beers into the pool with him and Marjorie, pushing himself back up and
dragging the bag along in a protracted backwards worm. He opened a beer for
himself, aware of the grandeur of the moment and his athletic non-display.
Finally he said, “Mark M is not dishonest enough.”
Bill laughed. “Yeah, you’re right—he’s
not dishonest enough for me either.”
Marjorie said, "Yeah, yeah, I
know where you guys are going, but I mean he is not honest in this core way—he
has no idea who or what he is, or what he’s doing. It’s really scary.”
Bill got up from the picnic table and
went over and drunkenly rubbed Marjorie's head and then sat back down.
"Everything scares you, Margie."
"Not everything. Everyone."
The Hand went on for a while about how
once Mark M was trying to talk to this lady DJ (lady DJ) and kept accidentally spilling beers on her albums—how it
was so tedious that it could have been dishonest somehow. It was the type of
logic you don’t want to pin to a Styrofoam board.
“Really Margie, it’s not funny to be
afraid of everything.”
“Well maybe I'm not trying to be
funny.”
“But why not? What are you going to
be?”
“Bill gets afraid that I’ll become
crazier than him and then he’ll have to take care of himself,” Marjorie said to
the Hand.
“If you stop being funny, I guess
crazy will do.”
“Crazy is a drag, Bill. You don’t want
her to get crazy.”
“Okay, what if she can be a little
crazy, sometimes funny—and fine, okay, a bit boring too?"
“Alright Bill, Let’s say a little
crazy, sometimes funny, a bit boring and also sexually depraved.”
“No. Margie, The Hand wants to throw
in a little sexual depravity. Do you think you should be sitting wet next to
him?”
“No,” Marjorie said, getting out of
the kiddie pool.
Marjorie walked away from the picnic
table and the kiddie pool and the big oak tree that covered, like a laughing
hyena, the whole backyard scene. She went into the kitchen and looked at some
plates on the counter. Each plate was a different pattern and color and shape.
They were stacked up uneasily due to their design discrepancies. Marjorie
wasn’t thinking about the plates or the dishonest or the TOTALLY ALONE.
She was thinking about how her father
had had a habit of repeating the last few words a person had said but intoning
it as a question. A conversational style which is easy to fall for and totally
without value. So if her mother had said to him that they were expected at her
parent’s house, he would say “parent’s house?” or if she told her father that
her home room teacher was a sadist with pants that sat too high on his hips, he
would say “high on the hips?” And then it was “yes Dad, they are up above his
waist.” “Above his waist?” “Yes, Dad, and I am not interested at all in current
events.” “Current events?” and it would go on until whoever was speaking with
him realized they had been duped yet again into believing they were conversing
and gave up. As a kid Marjorie would sometimes count the exchanges one would
engage in with her father before they became confused and gave up. For the most
part he could deflect questions almost as handily with an “I suppose,” spoken
either as a complete phrase or with a slowing down on the final “pose” and
followed by a long pause suggesting that an answer would be forthcoming.
Bill never met her father. He was like
cardboard or a Ford Taurus. Nobody knew what he was. He died when Marjorie was
25, too young to really have gained the compassion one gets from viewing their
parent as simply another person. But maybe that was better. Marjorie was
distinctly depressed by the mature act of viewing her mother as a person.
“Margie, come back out. The Hand has a
kitten.”
Marjorie went outside to see The Hand
holding a small kitten. It had immediately curled itself into the crook of his
arm and fell asleep. Bill and The Hand looked like they were frozen. They were
looking so lovingly at the small kitten.
After a few minutes Bill said, “You
ought to call it Marjorie.”
And The Hand said, “No, I’m gonna call
it Bill.” It was so tiny and it was named Bill.
The Hand said it again, directing this
saying towards Marjorie who was standing between the kitchen door and the
picnic table. “I'm gonna call it Bill.”
Marjorie said, “call it Bill?” and the
falseness of the flat cheap joke made her feel like a cockatoo in a Holocaust
survivor's New York City apartment.
Stephanie Barber is a writer and artist living in Baltimore.
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