Well, boo-hoo for me. When all this is over I'll treat myself to a week somewhere warm followed by the psychotherapy all my ex-friends pointedly recommended before writing me off. If that doesn't work I'll attend at the first church or suburban rec room that reports a weeping statue of the Blessed Virgin, light a candle, and leave a large donation. Later I will be reformed. But what I need now is a couple hours of headfuck-free work time. So I take my seat again, rub hands together to bring feeling to the fingertips. Pull my head back to whatever lies at the top of the To Do pile.
Laird Johanssen's file. Didn't I throw it out? I should've. I should now. But instead I pull it open and finger through what's inside. A full-size brown envelope with SOUVENIRS printed over it in marker that bulges sharply in places with whatever is kept within. Turn it over and spill the contents out onto the desk.
The first thing I see is two locks of hair, one dark and one light, each bound together by a small elastic band. The shameless fellow must have begged their stylists for a sample from whatever had been swept into a pile under the salon chair after they'd left. As this image plays itself out I find that I've lifted the hair to my own nose, one lock at a time, breathing in the faint scent of the different conditioners--one lemon, one vanilla--that still cling to the brittle strands.
There's a pellet of yellow chewing gum with a molar print dried into its smoothness like a fossil. A cheap silver-plated bracelet with
There's also a scattering of papers, some clipped together and others on their own, leathery from repeated foldings. The first sheaf neater than the others, a handwritten essay with ''THE REAL TRAGEDY OF ROMEO AND JULIET, By Ashley Flynn'' printed in red pen across the top of the first page. I flip to the end and read the final sentence: ''In many ways Shakespeare's play is tragic because it puts the selfish interests of families in conflict against pure love, so that, in the end, neither are ultimately allowed to triumph.'' Beneath this, Tripp's written comments (''As usual, an excellent appreciation of Shakespeare's moral polarities'') and, in the bottom corner, a boldly encircled A+. Another is a page of newsprint ripped from the school paper, Perspectives. The bottom half taken up with a poem by Krystal McConnell under the headline ''1st Prize Winner: Literature'' and entitled ''What's Inside of Me.'' Again I skip to the last lines:
Two photocopies of the girls' entries in Laird's yearbook from the previous spring. The messages cursory, impersonal, obligatory. The first in Ashley's hand:
The
Krystal even more dismissive, through a devastating, adult politeness:
But Laird didn't care that they wanted nothing to do with him. They didn't need to know him to be worthy subjects for capture, worship, and preservation. If hot girls were more accessible they would be less important to a kid like Laird Johanssen anyway. Maybe what makes the Lairds of this world love beauty from a great distance is the very impossibility of that love ever being returned.
So which was I? The adorer or the adored? The truth is I can't remember. And there's nothing to help me: no yearbooks stuck at the bottom of closets, photo albums, letters and notes collected in a shoe box. Somehow I emerged from youth without any evidence of my having been there. All of it made to disappear, just as Ashley and Krystal were.
Dead or alive something happened to them, and now all that's left is Laird's collected bits and pieces, a wrinkled envelope marked SOUVENIRS. Their handwriting speaks in my ear as I read it. The hair glints as though the dull light of the desk lamp is instead the brilliant luster of an afternoon sun. The bracelet warmed by an imagined wrist, its delicate pulses of blood.
Here and then not here.
Taken from the world but not understandably, without motive or reason or story. To disappear is to be denied an ending to yourself, the one gift that death can give.
That night I turn on the TV and it fizzes and cracks to life. A bad picture tube that flattens heads and loses its vertical hold anytime a voice is raised. I get through a real-life cop show featuring a German shepherd separating a fleeing crack dealer from his left arm, the last half of
I turn it off to waggle a plastic spoon into the thermos, only to have it slip out of my fingers when the phone rings.
''Barth Crane here.''
''Oh, my. You're in! I hate to sound like your mother, but I
''Nothing to report, Graham.''
''Surely there's
''Just been doing some research.'' I turn to the Lady's photo on the wall behind me. ''Pulling things together.''
''Very good. No
''This is my case, Graham. Do I call you up just to be a sarcastic bitch when you're working on a trial?''
''I wasn't talking about the trial, old man.''
What if Graham could see me now? The walls plastered in curling newsprint. Most of Tripp's file still unopened on the desk. A written account of Mrs. Arthurs's story of the Lady glowing out from the laptop's screen.
''Really, Graham. When I called that time I think I was drunk, for Christ's sake. Everything's peachy now, if you'd just stop smothering me.''
I turn on the TV again, mute the volume on the remote. It's the funny-home-video show, a family winning $10,000 for footage of its father being swarmed by bees and falling off a stepladder while trying to screw a basketball net over the garage.
''Smothering? I'm so