'Ben?
Ben's nasty feet. The toes curled up, trying to hide.
'A man—what I suppose could
He took in a breath, and we thought he was readying for more. But he just exhaled it al wordlessly out again.
'That it?'
'Pretty much.'
'Is it or isn't it?'
'None of this matters.'
'Why not?'
'Because if she's stil alive, I'm not sure how much longer she's going to be.'
I came in even closer to him. 'Where is she?'
Ben pointed out the window. Not up into the sky where the snow was iluminated by the orange streetlight but down, at what stood across the street. We knew what was there without looking. We looked anyway.
For a long time, none of us said anything.
Not true. Ben was murmuring something, the same thing, the whole time.
'I don't know ... I don't know ... I don't know ...'
'I don't know,' he said for the last time. 'But I think it was the coach.'
[5]
Randy pushes open the door to Jake's Pool 'n' Sports. Though I've never been in the place before, I immediately know I'm home. My grey overcoat and polished Oxfords might mark me as an outsider among the early-bird clientele, the hockey-jerseyed, puffy-faced men who line the bar, frowning up at the flatscreens showing highlights from last night's game, but that's who I would have been had I stayed. Who I am stil, even after al the time away.
We remain marked, we smal-towners dressed in what, as Randy and I walk into Jake's, feels instantly like borrowed city- slicker duds. Beneath the camouflage, al of us in this room are branded by shared experience and ritual as indelibly as members of a religion who are alone in understanding its rules and expectations. I've noticed over the years how we recognize each other among strangers: something draws me to those who have grown up in a Grimshaw, despite our efforts to hide every embarrassing hickdom, every clue that might give away our corn-fed, tranquilized youths.
Part of what we share is the knowledge that every smal town has a second heart, smaler and darker than the one that pumps the blood of good intentions. We alone know that the picture of home cooking and oak trees and harmlessness is false.
This is the secret that binds us. Along with the friends who share its weight.
We take a table in the corner and order a pitcher from a pretty girl wearing the referee's stripes they make al the servers wear. She reminds me of someone. Or a composite of someones. There is a quality to her movements, the inteligent smile and playfuly serious eyes, that I've seen before.
'She looks like Heather,' Randy says.
'Oh yeah?'
'Not exactly
'Don't see it myself,' I lie.
The truth is, the waitress doesn't look like Heather Langham al that much, though they share some general characteristics— height, age, style of hair. But the girl in the referee outfit who now comes our way with a tray balanced on the flat of her hand has the same rare brand of charm as Heather had. An aura, I suppose. A goodness that doesn't disqualify desire, as goodness alone can often do.
She returns with the frosted mugs, pours draft from the pitcher. It's Randy who chats with her. His goofy, going-nowhere banter that waitresses are happy to play along with. He's firing off queries regarding what's good on the menu ('Al I can say is the kitchen passed inspection last time around,' she says), what she's studying ('I took a year off backpacking in Europe last year, so now I'm chained to this place to save up for tuition') and if she grew up in town ('Grimshaw bored and raised!').
Then Randy notices the ring on her finger. A platinum band with an emerald shard embedded in it.
'Now that's a lovely stone. Matches your eyes,' he says, taking her hand in his to inspect it more closely. 'Don't tel me it's an engagement ring? You'd
'I don't know. Pre-engagement, I guess.'
'No worries, then,' Randy says with a laugh. '
As Randy and she tease, he turns to give me a wink both the waitress and I are meant to see, a shared pleasure in the moment. It's the first bloom of alcohol, the comfort of being with a friend you know wel and who asks nothing of you. As for the waitress, she doesn't seem in any particular rush to leave our side, though she