|
PART ONE
Atherton
Not slowly wrought, nor treasured
for their form
In heaven, but by the blind self of the storm
Spun off, each driven individual
Perfected in the moment of its fall.
-- Howard Nemerov,
"Snowflakes"
One
I
The neon yellow sign atop the Yankee
Savings & Trust Building flickered to life at just past
three in the afternoon, its light-sensitive timer tripped by
the advancing tide of gray clouds that rolled in off the
Atlantic, casting downtown into a gloomy winter shade. Since
the building's completion in 1984, the old joke for the
"townies" who lived at the base of the hill was that the
tallest and newest building in Atherton's meager skyline
liked to send everyone home early during winter by
announcing nightfall several hours prematurely. By five
thirty, the last of the insurance adjusters and bank tellers
made the short walk to the train station where they would
board commuter rails that would carry them as far as Boston
and Connecticut, leaving behind a downtown that would become
an empty stage set of art deco entrances and sidewalks blown
clean of litter by increasingly ferocious winds off the
bay.
As the city below drained of life, the crown of Atherton
Hill glowed with a corona of light. A verdant green swell in
summer months, winter stripped the hill to a scabbard of
skeletal branches spider-webbing between Gothic spires and
Victorian rooftops. Streets snaked up the hillside toward
the university campus, begging for a blanket of white they
might not be granted. The waters of the bay usually warmed
potential flakes into dreary sheets of rain.
By seven o'clock, on the evening of November fourteenth,
fat flakes filled the halos of the streetlamps lining the
paved banks of the Atherton River, a black vein curving its
way around downtown. The snow fell with rare and determined
force, clinging to the pavement with a refusal to melt.
Shouts erupted across the crown of the hill. Dorm room
windows were raised, and students burst from the library
headed for the nearest cafeteria and its piles of trays that
could be used as sleds. Almost an hour later, the Hill had
quieted, the continuing snow blanketing the campus with an
eerie hush. At the base of the hill, squealing brakes and an
abrupt shatter of glass broke the silence.
II
"Phil?"
Headlights danced across his three rearview mirrors in
succession. The brake pedal groaned and stuttered under his
foot and the Tercel almost went into a skid. He threw out
his arm, hooking one of his wife's shoulders and driving her
back against the passenger seat. There was an abrupt silence
and he felt as if the world had suddenly been put on
pause.
Then he saw it: the Volvo that had come out of nowhere,
arcing silently through the air fifteen feet from the angled
nose of their car, a torn section of guardrail hooked to one
of the Volvo's shattered headlights. It vanished as quickly
as it had appeared.
"Oh, shit . . . Phil! Shit!"
Silence again except for their own gasping breath.
Where the hell did it go? he thought. It just
disappeared.
But he knew better.
When he kicked open the passenger door, his wife bucked
against her seat belt, one arm reaching for his. But he
slammed the driver's side door shut behind him,
extinguishing the dome light. His wife became a dark shadow
behind the windshield, still pulling frantically at her seat
belt. He jogged breathlessly to the torn opening in the
guardrail, went to brace himself against it and then
withdrew his hands suddenly like a man about to get his
fingerprints on a murder weapon.
Black water embraced the Volvo's upended taillights.
Escaping air out the shattered rear window bobbed a flotilla
of rent mental and ice. And after the shrill shriek of the
brakes and the shattering glass, now the only sound was the
disgusting, rhythmic thump of the air pushing itself out of
the Volvo and to the river's surface in cartoonishly large
eruptions. Without thinking, he turned.
Colonial Avenue was a dark swath cutting down the hill to
where his Tercel sat angled in the intersection. To his
right, downtown was a warren of shadows. No headlights in
either direction. He was startled by the sound of the door
alarm and turned to see his wife running toward him across
the thirty-foot-long bridge, one arm raised over her bent
head, trying to shield herself from the driving snow.
He met her halfway, grabbing both of her shoulders,
practically lifting her off her feet for an instant as her
shocked eyes met his.
"Get in the car!"
Could she smell it? He certainly could. And Jesus Christ,
hadn't she been the one who made the crack at dinner?
One more glass and we'll be toasted.
"We have to call someone!"
"Just get in the car --"
"Phil, this is insane!"
But he had already taken hold of her shoulders, was
driving her back toward the Tercel. She tried one last time,
whipping her body around against his bracing arm, grabbing
at his forearm with both hands, as if trying to get a peek
over his shoulder at the Volvo which was now. . . . He
didn't dare turn around.
He threw her against the door and her chest hit the roof
of the car with a sickly thud, her breath coming out of her
with a groan. And this time when she turned, her eyes landed
on him, not what might be going on beyond the rail, and he
saw equal parts disgust and fear. Was he really going to
make them do this?
"We'll pull over. We'll use a pay phone."
The apology in his voice sounded pathetic and he pondered
exhaling right into her face so she could smell the one and
a half bottles of Cabernet Sauvignon. But she was already
climbing back into the car, and by the time he joined her,
she had rolled her head to one side, gazing out the
passenger window and the hole punched through the guardrail,
crying silently.
"I'll pull over."
He turned the key in the ignition and the entire car
screamed before he realized he hadn't bothered to kill the
engine.
III
Kathryn Parker couldn't move her feet. She looked down
and saw they were wedged under the wooden crossbar of the
railroad tracks. She heard the low, mournful moan of a
locomotive's horn somewhere in the distance, and then the
tracks stretching out on either side of her erupted in a
concert of metal against wood. She was blinded by the
headlight of an approaching train, roaring toward her out of
darkness that had been immaterial only seconds before. Her
arms went up to stop the inevitable.
She awoke to the theme from Shaft.
Strange shapes drifted across the far wall of her dorm
room and she sat up, groping for the knob on the halogen
lamp next to her bed. The torch sent a halo of light across
the ceiling, its panels still scarred by the design of beer
bottle caps that had been embedded in them on the day she
moved in. Flakes fell past the window, casting their shadows
on the cinderblock wall on April's side of the room. Now
that the roar of her nightmare had retreated, she could make
out the persistent and grating music of Stockton Hall, a
pulsing four-story beehive of disconnected adolescents
announcing their new identities with stereos turned too
loud, shouted punch lines followed by forced laughter. Next
door, the sounds of Shaft gave way to televised
conversation and she remembered that the engineering freaks
were holding their weekly Babylon 5 party. April
had been the first one to point out that white Jewish boys
from outer Boston seemed to have a propensity for all things
Superfly. She didn't know how she could sleep through it
all.
It was Randall's story that had caused her nightmare, and
she reached for it where it lay on her desk.
The town of Drywater, Texas exists because a woman
named Elena Sanchez was killed by a train.
Randall Stone was her best friend at Atherton -- maybe
her only friend -- and now he had managed to infiltrate her
dreams thanks to a short story she could only describe as
bizarre.
Elena's only son Ricky didn't find this out until he
was thirteen.
She dropped the story to her desk and swung her legs to
the floor, padding barefoot across the threadbare rug April
had bought only a week earlier, and across the chilly
linoleum to the poor excuse for a vanity set into the wall
between the room's two closets.
Since arriving at Atherton University, her dreams had
become increasingly bizarre and she had developed the odd
habit of checking herself in the mirror after every one to
see if nightmares left any visible traces on her face. She
raked one hand back through her sandy blonde hair, revealing
her wide eyes, still brown and no, not that
bloodshot. Her fingers instinctively traced a path down to
where her hair hit just above her shoulder, searching for
split ends. She caught herself, forcing her hand down to her
side, staring dead on at a pretty enough girl who had
stopped being called mousy once she entered high school,
whose breasts had exploded at fifteen before refusing to
expand another cup size. After several seconds of the
masochistic exercise, she found herself unable to turn away
from her own image. The hand she had forced down earlier
traveled back to her throat. Even as she told herself to
stop, her fingers were prodding the soft flesh at the top of
her neck, trying to find the lump of her lymph nodes. Bigger
than yesterday? Bigger than the day before that?
She clasped her hands in front of her face, breathing
into them.
Was it the nightmare that had left her this shaken, or
was it the reality that this compulsion had not left her as
quickly as she thought it would? How many more test results
would have to come back before a mild sore throat could be
just that, a fucking sore throat?
The door flew open and she backed away from the vanity as
if she had been caught fondling herself. She expected
Randall -- he had stopped knocking long ago -- but it was
April who shoved her way through the door. She was bundled
in her favorite leather jacket with the faux fur collar,
black braids flecked with white flakes. "It's snowing!"she
announced flatly, before letting her book bag slide off one
shoulder to the floor with a thud.
"How was the meeting?"Kathryn asked, standing awkwardly
as April got down on all fours and dove headfirst into her
closet, two feet deep with a tattered curtain instead of a
door.
"I need a beer."
She tossed a pair of Gucci boots out behind her, which
landed at Kathryn's feet.
"April?"
April rose, shoving the curtain aside on its rod. "Did
you know there was a Black national anthem?"She tore several
hangers from the rack before depositing the pile of shirts
onto her extra-long twin. "No, I didn't,"Kathryn answered,
realizing that April's worst fears about attending a meeting
of the Afro-American Student Alliance had been
confirmed.
"It was like the first day of high school. I walk into
the center and the only person that would even talk to me is
Marcel. And you want to know what he told me after the
meeting? It doesn't matter that his mother's Irish and his
father's black. But with me, see, that's a problem, because
all the women there think I'm going to steal all the good
men. Good black men who really want white women. How's that
for unity?"
April froze, her back to Kathryn. "Did you tell them you
were a dyke?"she asked with as much humor as she could
muster.
April's laugh was strained. But at least she had
responded. It was a reliable joke. In the first week of
living together, Kathryn had gone from calling April a
lipstick lesbian to a Neiman Marcus lesbian. "Screw them,
April. Give the GLA a try. Trust me. I went with Randall
once. They're hurting for patent leather and side-zip
jeans."
"Great,"April responded. "And in a month I'll be out on
the green trying to turn dykes into Girl Scouts. Or Girl
Scouts into dykes. No thanks. Politics isn't my calling
anyway."
April dug into her jacket pocket and removed a crumpled
pink flyer which she handed to Kathryn. Kathryn unfolded it
as she crossed to her side of the room. Andy Warhol's face
stared up at her, superimposed on top of a spiral design
that looked like it had been designed by a third-grader.
"Burton House?"Kathryn asked incredulously. "The literary
frat?"
"They don't card. And we're going. So get dressed."
"These are the losers that march a pledge naked on the
green and make him do tequila shots while they dance around
in llama costumes, right?"
"Kathryn, who are you to talk? You've been napping since
we got here."
Kathryn tossed the flyer aside and fell back onto her
mattress with a groan. "I've got work."
"Waiting for Randall is not work!"April shot back.
"Besides, I think he's going."
"No, he isn't,"Kathryn responded, sitting up
suddenly.
April shot her a look. "Why? Because he didn't clear it
with you first?"
Kathryn rolled her eyes. April's suspicions of Kathryn's
deep affection for Randall had become old hat. But truth be
told, Kathryn didn't know where Randall was going that
evening. She had dropped by his room earlier, daring to
knock even though it might result in a face-to-face with
Randall's roommate, Jesse, and maybe whatever completely
naive freshman he was bagging that evening. But both Randall
and his walking penis of a roommate had been out and she was
greeted only by the site of those inane construction paper
signs announcing the room's occupants in bright letters cut
of neon colored construction paper. The RA had taped them to
the doors of every room on the first day of orientation, but
most students had removed or disfigured theirs. Randall's
and Jesse's signs remained intact, as if highlighting the
odd pairing that lived together on the other side of the
door.
With a jolt she realized April had been talking to her
for the last minute.
". . . guy looked like Paul Bunyan on crack but we both
took a flyer and Randall said he might be going." April
turned suddenly. Kathryn hoped she didn't look caught, but
April saw something in her eyes because she crossed to
Kathryn's bed and sank down on it. "If you don't snap out of
this I'm going to buy those special light bulbs I read
about. The ones that simulate sunlight for little West Coast
girls like you who turn suicidal during winter."
"I'm from San Francisco. But nice try."
April smiled, pleased that Kathryn was sparring with her
again. "April, don't you remember my rule about frat
parties?"
"Oh please. It's a literary frat, Kathryn!"
April rose, shaking her head before her gaze landed on
Kathryn's desk. She rose and crossed to it, picking up
Randall's story. "What's this?"she asked. Feeling a strange
stab of panic, Kathryn rose from the bed, too. "I didn't
know Randall wrote stories,"April said distantly. No sooner
had she flipped the first page than Kathryn had tugged the
story out of her hands gently. April looked to her with a
surprised, slightly offended smirk.
"Sorry. I just don't know how many people he wants
reading it."
"Can you tell me what it's about?"April sounded slightly
offended, and when Kathryn looked up from the story on her
lap, she realized that despite her wisecracks that implied
Kathryn felt something deeper than friendship for her best
friend, April was also intimidated by the strength of their
bond.
Kathryn managed a slight laugh. The story was so bizarre
it defied instant description. "It's about this kid who
grows up in this small town in Texas --"
"Randall's from New York."
"That's why it's a story. Do you want to know what it's
about or not?"
April rolled her eyes and returned to her bed.
"When he's a little kid, his mom gets killed in this car
accident. Her car stalls out at this railroad crossing and
she gets hit and like dies instantly. Then the county
finally decides that it should put up gates and warning
lights because she's like the ninth person to get killed in
that spot. So then . . ." April was holding up a collared
shit that looked like it was made out of aluminum to her
chest and examining herself in the full-length mirror.
"April, are you listening?"
"Uh-huh."
Kathryn knew she was pre-med and had little patience for
fiction beyond Michael Crichton.
"All right, so when the boy turns fifteen he finds out
that this entire town he grew up in only exists because the
county put up the gates and people finally thought it was
safe to live near the tracks. Basically, his mother had to
get killed before anyone would build his hometown. So the
kid just . . . snaps. And one night, he derails the
train."
Startled, April turned.
"How?"she asked, her sense of logic obviously
offended.
"He saws through some of the crossbars."
April's eyebrows arched.
"I don't think he really means to do it. I think you're
supposed to believe it's an accident."
But even she wasn't sure. The descriptions of propane
tanks lying in the smoldering cavities of Airstream trailers
had been too emphatic, demonstrating a love of fire even as
it consumed humans, and more than that, a kind of rage she
had never seen Randall Stone exhibit in day-to-day life.
Now, the five page story had a dizzying effect and she slid
open her desk drawer and deposited it inside. When she
turned, April was studying her, seeming to have sensed the
strange spell the story had cast on her.
"What's a Warhol party, anyway?"
"I don't know." April brightened at Kathryn's first sign
of surrender. "Drugs?"
"One condition."
"Here we go!"
"If Jesse Lowry shows up, then I'm out of there."
April lifted both hands in a gesture of defeat.
"Fine."
IV
Eric Eberman wasn't sure what had awakened him: the
mournful wail of the siren carried by the wind that was
buffeting the walls of the house, or the feel of the boy's
finger tracing a slow path down the center of his chest
before circling one nipple. The bedroom window was rattling
in its frame and outside tree branches jerked in the wan
halo of light from the street, their shadows dancing over
Randall's face, hiding and then revealing his pale blue eyes
and his slight smile.
"I have to go,"Randall whispered.
He bent down as if to give Eric a formal kiss on the
cheek, and in response Eric curved an arm around his
shoulders and brought the young man's body on top of his.
Randall let out a gentle, almost placatory laugh before his
head came to rest on Eric's chest. Most of the sounds that
came out of Randall Stone seemed strangely adult given his
soft, boyish features: full lips and baby fat padded cheeks
that could transform from a pout to a smile in a second, a
jawline that added years to his face when tensed in
anger.
Eric allowed his hands to wander down Randall's naked
back. Wondering how long he could let his fingers traverse
the smooth flesh before the first stab of guilt would come,
that sudden weight that yanked him down from the delirious
high that came from freely touching what had previously been
taboo.
Randall let out a labored breath and brought one fist to
rest against his head as if he were about to return to
sleep. But when Eric's fingers touched the first scabbed
scar on the back of his thigh, Eric could feel the young man
tense a bit, and then think twice, before forcing himself to
go lax.
"Do they hurt?"
"Never,"Randall answered.
"I'm sure they did at the time."
Randall grunted slightly as if to say he couldn't
remember.
"How did you . . ."
"My mom was preparing for this big dinner party. I was
three and she put me up on the counter so I could watch. I
barely remember . . ."Randall paused as if trying to summon
the recollection. "I just remember this entire pan going up
in flames. It was like this big curtain of fire."
The first time Eric had asked about the burns covering
Randall's legs his description had been more vivid. The pan
had tipped. His mother had screamed when she knocked it
over. Three-year-old Randall had blacked out the moment he
saw his legs burning.
"I thought you blacked out."
Randall lifted himself off Eric's chest.
"I must have." He kissed Eric's forehead gently. "Because
I don't remember any pain."
Outside, the first siren was joined by a second in
discordant chorus.
Randall slid out from Eric's arms and swung his legs to
the floor. He reached for his pack of Dunhill Lights on the
nightstand and extended one to Eric. Eric didn't need to
shake his head "no." Randall knew he wouldn't smoke. But of
course, their silent and shared joke was that the man who
had just cheated on his wife with one of his male students
wouldn't be caught dead with a cigarette in his mouth.
Randall lit it and crossed to the bedroom window. Eric saw
the snow for the first time, framing Randall as he stood
naked in front of the glass, one arm braced against the
panes over his head where a slow curl of smoke crept from
his fingers through the street light's frail glow.
"Where are you going?" Eric asked.
"A party."
"So I was just a pit stop."
Surprised, and no doubt amused, Randall turned from the
window.
"Are you asking me to stay?"
"She's not coming back."
"I know." Randall returned his attention to the fat
flakes falling with determined force past the window.
"Sometimes I think she might stay,"Eric added, unnerved
by Randall's silence.
"That would be easy, wouldn't it?"
"What do you mean?"
"I mean it would be easier than leaving her."
Silence fell as Eric realized they had wandered
dangerously close to forbidden territory, and he felt the
urge to appropriate one of the few sayings of his generation
Randall frequently used: Don't go there.
"You made the rule yourself, Eric. Can't spend the night,
remember?"
"We have rules?"
Randall's only response was an amused exhalation of
breath that couldn't qualify as a laugh.
"It seems more real with rules. Otherwise all we are is a
bunch of stolen moments lined up in a row. Both of us are
too afraid to actually give this a name, and when it ends,
both of us will spend the rest of our lives trying to figure
out the best ways to call it a mistake. It's not fair to me
when you think about it."
"Why is that?"
"Because I'll live longer than you."
"What makes you think that?"
Randall turned from the window, no longer a softly lit
profile. A dark shadow staring back at him. The sound of
Randall's breathy laughter startled him. Randall's shadow
moved to the chair draped with his clothes. By the time he
heard the tinny rattle of Randall's belt buckle sliding to
his waist, Eric spoke again.
"Randall."
He could see Randall's head turn.
"I'm asking you to stay."
Randall was still for a second before he moved to the
foot of the bed, crawling across it on all fours until his
mouth was inches from Eric. Eric didn't move. Randall was
still shirtless, his jeans unbuttoned. His gelled and spiked
hair was slightly mussed and matted from being twisted
against the pillow. He stared at Eric, eyes bright, teeth
sinking slowly into his lower lip, and Eric felt his stomach
tighten with anticipation. And then Randall slowly shook his
head "no."
"No. I like you better when you don't get everything you
want."
Randall's kiss was brief but firm and Eric fought the
urge to lean in and draw the boy's tongue out of his mouth.
Randall's weight left the mattress and Eric slouched back
into the pillows, rolling over onto one side as Randall left
him alone with the mournful song of several sirens which no
longer seemed to be approaching or departing but had joined
together in a consistent, off-key wail that was impossible
to locate because of the distorting wind.
V
"Want to cut through the Elms?"
"Shut up, April."
"They're a good shortcut if you're not loaded. Or you
don't have an overactive imagination."
The snow was driving and they were forced to walk with
their shoulders hunched. Kathryn could hear sirens coming
from the city below the hill. April had brought her jacket
up over her neck. Kathryn shot a glance at the dark expanse
of suggestive shadows to their left. To bypass it they had
to walk through residential streets.
"I don't get it,"Kathryn said.
"What?"
"How much money did they spend to build the Tech
Center?"
"Loads, probably."
"And they still haven't managed to build on the
Elms?"
The trees were thinning out and up ahead the four houses
fringing Fraternity Green were fishbowls of light. Strobe
lights inside Burton House cut stained glass shapes across
the snow-blanketed lawn. "You think they should put a dorm
there just because it gives you the creeps."
"No, it's just weird that Michael Price can't get his
hands on a piece of prime real estate."
"Please. Be grateful. If someone doesn't stop that jerk,
he's going to coat the entire campus in chrome!"
Michael Price was one of Atherton's most prominent
alumni. The world-renowned architect had made a point of
bringing cold and sterile modern architecture to his alma
mater, which students and faculty alike found glaringly
inappropriate for a predominantly Gothic campus.
"You know the Pamela Milford story, right?"April asked.
Kathryn shook her head "no." They were steps away from
Burton House and the bass pounding of disco was already
audible. "I think it was the '80s. She wandered out of some
party here, drunk off her ass, stumbled into the Elms and
drowned."
"How did she drown?"
"There's some kind of creek, I think."
"All the more reason to raze it."
On the front porch of the house, Kathryn looked back to
the Green.
"He might be inside. Can we just go in?"
April tugged on her shoulder.
Inside, they were swallowed by the shoulder-to-shoulder
throng clogging the front hallway. The living room had been
transformed into a poor man's Studio 54. Every other dancer
wore a neon-colored wig and a Warhol film was being
projected onto the ceiling. A rail-thin boy done up in drag
shoved a tray of Jell-O shots in their face. April took one,
shot it and then handed one to Kathryn.
"I told you they didn't card!"
"What's in this?"Kathryn asked the drag queen.
"X,"he shouted back, before vanishing into the adjacent
dance floor.
April brought one hand to her mouth. "He was probably
kidding,"Kathryn said, as she dropped her shot onto the
stair above her head.
"Whatever. If I'm still awake in four hours, cuddling up
against you in bed and stroking your hair, then these freaks
are going in front of the Disciplinary Council!"
Kathryn hooked her by the shoulder. "Let's find
Randall."
The kitchen was as crowded as the rest of the house, but
Kathryn spotted an open back door. A hand slapped her ass.
When she turned she saw April several steps behind her, and
whirled to face the offender. Tim Mathis grinned back at
her, raising dimples. His cherubic cheeks had the blush of
too many drinks and to an ignorant observer it might have
looked like the short, stocky peroxide blonde with the
bicycle chain around his neck was making an ill-advised
pass. That illusion was broken when Tim threw both arms
skyward with a squeal before enfolding Kathryn in a sloppy
embrace. "It's my favorite couple!"
"Have you seen Randall?" Kathryn asked as she pried
herself free.
"Nope. No sign of the Ice Queen. But his roommate
is certainly here, though!"Tim said, exaggerating the
word roommate with a sexual suggestiveness that turned
Kathryn's stomach. "He's out on the dance floor bumping and
grinding with some twelve-year-old."
"Who?"Kathryn asked, before she could stop herself.
"Someone who doesn't know any better,"April cut in,
grabbing one of Kathryn's shoulders.
"What's the guy's deal anyway? Randall wouldn't give me
any of the dirt. Is he a member of the spur posse or
something?"More drunken guests were shuffling into the
kitchen and Kathryn was being pressed up against Tim's
chest. April's hand didn't leave her shoulder, ready to pull
Kathryn away from a conversation she knew Kathryn didn't
want to have. "I mean, don't get me wrong. Jesse Lowry is a
Bruce Weber photo waiting to be snapped, but forgive
me for thinking that a man who sleeps with that many women
doesn't have something to prove!"
"Have you quit smoking yet?" April asked her.
"No."
"Let's go have one. I can't breathe in here."
"No, I wasn't talking. Really,"Tim cut in. "And aren't
you a med student?"
"Nice try. Biomedical ethics. And aren't you a music
major?"
"No!"
"Then why don't you try talking without singing!"
"You're just pissed because you're a dyke."
"I'm also black. Which fills me with rage. Kathryn,
cigarette!"
"No, no. Not so fast!"Tim grabbed Kathryn's other
shoulder. "Seriously, Kathryn, now I know how you and
Randall are. You two probably did the whole finger-pricking,
sharing blood thing. And I hate to be the first one to tell
you but I think there might be more going down behind that
door when you're on the other side . . ."
"No offense to you or your kind, Tim, but Jesse Lowry is
as heterosexual as they come,"April cut in.
"Bullshit. He's sexual. When are you girls ever going to
learn the difference?"
Kathryn guessed that Tim had had no idea how much his
flip comments had disturbed her, but the hand on her
shoulder had begun to grip and pull. "Maybe you can
interview Jesse for your column, Tim,"she managed.
"Screw that. I'm about to quit. They think if they make
me a news editor then I'll stop trying to rile shit up. I
mean, do you guys even read the Atherton Herald?
It's like three pages long and the major headline is always
something real scintillating like, 'Sophomore Plants
Tree.'"
Kathryn laughed.
"Have I told you I'm claustrophobic?"
"Jesus, April. All right. Tim, if you see Randall tell
him I'm looking for him."
"Yeah, right. Like I ever see Randall anymore,"Tim
managed, raising his plastic cup in a sarcastic toast as
April dragged Kathryn toward the open back door.
On the patio, smokers shivered in huddles. Trash cans
lined the back wall spilling flattened beer cases.
"That was rude,"Kathryn finally said.
"The guy bugs me. He talks about the Herald like
it was the Washington Post and he's just trying to
milk you for info on Randall with all that Jesse bullshit.
He needs to move on."
Kathryn was silent, knowing that April had dragged her
away from Tim solely because he had mentioned Jesse's name.
And it wasn't just because Kathryn happened not to like her
best friend's fanatically arrogant, albeit incredibly
attractive roommate. The one time Kathryn had voiced her
opinions on guys who sleep with a different girl every other
night and refuse to call any of them back, April had accused
Kathryn of being a puritan.
"Are you rolling yet?"Kathryn asked.
"Shit. It's Svet."
"Who?"
"Svetlana."
Kathryn followed April's frightened stare to where one of
April's previous girlfriends of the moment stood smoking
next to a trash can, shooting slant-eyed glances around the
patio as if any number of the other guests might jump up and
try to oppress her.
"Is that Abba?"
"I told you not to call her that. You and Randall need to
start learning people's names. You're sociopaths."
The girl had claimed to be Swedish royalty, so rather
than risk embarrassment in attempting to pronounce her name,
Kathryn and Randall had agreed to nickname her after the
famous Swedish singing group.
"How royal is she?"
"I have to talk to her."
"Why? You dumped her last month."
"That's why I have to talk to her. It's like noblesse
oblige. Wait here."
"For what?"
But April was already crossing the patio. Kathryn turned,
instinctively scanning the other guests to make sure no one
was staring at the girl who had just been left standing
awkwardly by herself.
Where the hell was Randall?
She shoved her way back inside. There was no sign of Tim
in the kitchen, so she moved into the front hallway. She
stopped in the doorway to the living room, scanning the
dance floor and narrowing her eyes against the flashing
strobe lights. There were plenty of blond heads, some with
the same military-short buzz cut that Randall sported. But
none of them belonged to Randall.
When her eyes met Jesse Lowry's, her breath came out in a
startled hiss.
He was halfway across the living room and his dance
partner was a rail-thin brunette who clung to Jesse's broad
frame as if she were in a drunken swoon. They were engaged
in a slow, swaying embrace completely out of synch with the
uptempo disco. Jesse wore his UCLA baseball cap, with the
bill shading his eyes from the flashing strobe lights, but
Kathryn could make out his slight, suggestive smile; a smile
that implied Kathryn had been watching Jesse for hours. The
cap was a permanent fixture and she guessed his hair was
dark under it. He wore a tight, cable-knit sweater which
accented the broad swells of his chest. Most girls went weak
in the knees -- not unlike his current dancing partner, and
chosen one-night stand -- when Jesse bothered to look their
way. Kathryn had trained herself to react with a mixture of
disgust and suspicion.
After several seconds of this icy eye contact, Kathryn
saw that it wasn't alcohol that had turned the girl in
Jesse's embrace into a limp noodle. One of Jesse's hands
disappeared behind the unbuttoned, slightly extended
waistline of the girl's jeans, and she rocked up onto her
toes, trying to bring her mouth to Jesse's before her
intended kiss turned into a defeated gasp against his
cheek.
Jesse withdrew his hand from the girl's pants. Kathryn
left the doorway right before Jesse brought his finger to
his mouth.
VI
When he returned home from the department meeting that
evening, it had still been light out. Eric descended the
stairs to the pitch-dark first floor, where the view out the
living-room windows glowed brighter than anything inside the
house. Parked cars along Victoria Street sat beneath layers
of white and the snowfall had thinned to frail flakes that
danced on their descent; the evening's blow had turned into
a dusting.
He wasn't sure what prevented him from turning on any of
the lights. Randall was long gone and his paranoia was
probably just that. But he crossed to the gas fireplace in
the living room without flicking a switch. With a flick of
the wrist, he turned on the gas and lit it with the
fireplace lighter, the flames catching with a sudden whoosh
as they punched through the plastic, charred coals. The
firelight was too weak to illuminate the framed prints on
the walls and they looked like hanging patches of deeper
black.
Halfway to the kitchen, something hard banged his knee
and he stepped back, realizing he had walked into the liquor
cabinet door, which Lisa had left standing open. Angrily, he
pushed it shut before realizing that he was hardly in any
position to curse his wife's forgetfulness. Never mind that
Lisa had spent the last three years of life fomenting scotch
and Darvon as staples of her diet, he could still taste
Randall in his mouth.
In the kitchen, he flicked on the overhead light,
glancing at the phone. Lisa had left one of her usual notes,
they were also cursory and by now unnecessary.
"Went to Paula's . . . Paula had a bad week. Back Mon.
Prob Late."
He had popped open the fridge when the phone rang,
startling him.
He turned and crossed to the phone. His hand was almost
to the receiver when his eyes landed on the note, written on
the banana-shaped stationary usually reserved for grocery
lists. Instead of picking up the phone, he picked up the
note, raising it closer to his face even though he had no
trouble reading it at all.
I SAW. I KNOW.
His breath didn't catch, it simply stopped. Then a
painful stab in his chest reminded him to breathe, and when
he sucked in his first breath he realized the phone must
have been on its tenth ring.
"Hello?"
"Is this Eric Eberman?"
An unfamiliar female voice, its tone clipped and
professional.
"Sir, is this . . ."
"Yes. Who is this?"
"My name is Martha Kellerman, sir. I'm afraid I have some
bad news."
"Lisa . . . "There was no shock or urgency in his voice.
He had answered on instinct.
"Your wife has been in an accident."
He looked down at the note he held in one hand. The urge
to tear it in two struck him with such sudden force that he
almost dropped the phone. Instead, he opened the nearest
drawer with one hand and slid it inside, shutting it slowly
so as not to be heard on the other end. By the time the
woman was explaining that a patrol car was on its way to
pick him up, Eric remembered the wail of sirens which had
only come to a stop twenty minutes earlier.
VII
Burton House shook with the bass thud of disco. Tim
rested his head in both open palms as Kathryn fished a
cigarette for him out of her jacket pocket. He took it with
a weak smile and popped it into his mouth, before she lit it
for him.
"This kills, you know?"he managed after exhaling his
first drag.
"Shit. Why didn't anyone tell me?"
Silence settled.
"Sorry about earlier,"Tim muttered.
Kathryn feigned ignorance with silence.
"So what's his deal anyway?"
"Jesse?"
"No. Randall."
Kathryn had assumed that Randall's fling with the guy she
had referred to as the "junior reporter guy" was over simply
because the last time Kathryn had asked about it Randall had
commented, "He's too earthy. He makes his own soap."
"He's from New York,"Kathryn responded, unsure of how
much she should be divulging.
"Only child, right?"
"Yeah. I guess that explains a lot."
"The New York thing explains a lot more. "Tim sucked a
drag. "Sorry. I just realized we've been on a few dates and
I barely know a thing about him."
"I didn't think you guys actually went on dates."
Tim smiled wryly. "He tells you everything, doesn't
he?"
"I don't ask for all the details."
Tim's eyes were downcast and Kathryn felt a stab of
sympathy when she realized that Tim was still smarting from
the sting of rejection, albeit a silent one.
The door to the house popped open and April emerged,
tailed by Svetlana and three other lesbians Kathryn didn't
recognize. "We're going to the Hole!"
"Gross. Be sure to shower,"Tim commented.
"You coming?"April asked, eyes on Kathryn as she punched
her fists into her gloves.
"Some of us don't have fake ID's."
"I can get you in,"one of the lesbians offered. Kathryn
attempted a grateful smile and just shook her head "no."
"No sign of the Ice Queen?"April asked.
"Looks like my nickname stuck,"Tim said proudly.
April shot Kathryn one last disapproving look before
turning to her entourage. "Let's head out, girls!"They
shuffled down the steps past Kathryn. "We might meet
you!"Kathryn called after them, and April only responded
with a wave over one shoulder.
Kathryn stared after them before noticing a dark shadow
striding down the path toward Burton House, moving a
determined and familiar gait. On instinct, Kathryn rose and
descended the front steps of the house. Randall's eyes lit
up when he saw her, glancing briefly over to where Tim
remained seated behind her. He hooked an arm around her
waist and kissed her on the cheek. "You were waiting?"he
asked, tone apologetic.
"No. It's cool."
She heard Tim rise to his feet behind her and turned to
see him brushing off the seat of his pants. He gave Randall
an acidic forced smile and Kathryn felt a current of tension
pass between both men before Randall returned the smile with
a stiff and formal one of his own. "Tim,"was the only
greeting he managed.
"Randall," Tim responded mockingly, descending the
steps. "All right, Bopsey Twins. I'll see you guys later."
He passed them and Kathryn heard him add, "Maybe,"under his
breath.
Once he was gone.
"I know. The soap,"Kathryn said.
"What did I miss?"
"Nothing. But you might still be able to see Jesse reel
in tonight's catch."
"I'm sure I'll run into her later."
Randall tugged his silver flask from his inside jacket
pocket, uncapped it and handed it to Kathryn. She took a
slug and winced. "Christ, Randall, can't you add soda or
something?"
"Lightweight. Come on." He took one of her hands and
began leading her off the sidewalk and onto the lawn.
"Mind if I ask where we're going?"
"Madeline's."
Kathryn yanked her hand free. "No, Randall. I hate that
place."
"I'll let you change. They'll only card you if you're
dressed like you are right now."
His playful smile indicated he was only half-serious, but
when she didn't show any of signs of giving in he formed his
mouth into a slight pout and stuck out his lower lip.
"Don't,"Kathryn said. Randall furrowed his brow, jutting his
lip out further. His expression had transformed from
baby-faced pleading into a monkey scowl and by the time he
had raised his hands to push his ears forward and complete
the effect, Kathryn had grabbed one of his wrists.
"Fine!"she barked, to choke off her laughter. "Stupid of me
to think you could hang out with anyone who doesn't wear
Prada."
"This is Gucci,"Randall said in a small voice.
"Don't push it!"Kathryn made a sharp turn, leading them
back toward the sidewalk.
"Where are you going?"She turned and saw Randall gesture
with one arm toward the Elms. "Are you kidding?"
"Come on. I'll protect you." He curved an arm around her
shoulders. Kathryn let out a defeated groan and allowed
herself to be led into the dark woods. To her surprise, they
were easily navigated. There was no underbrush and the only
obstructions were shoulder-height tree branches that were
hard to make out in the darkness. Randall pressed her head
down and pushed branches out of their way with one gloved
hand as they went.
"You don't even want to know what I saw your roommate
doing tonight."
"Now I do."
Randall came to a sudden halt. Kathryn looked down and
saw they were standing at the edge of a five-foot drop down
into a creek swollen with runoff from melting snow. She
looked to Randall, who stared down the drop as if it had
foiled his plans. "I didn't know it was so wide down
here,"he mumbled, eyes scanning the creek bed.
"I thought you knew your way."
"Come on,"Randall said, taking her hand and leading her
up the bank. The trees began to thin out, revealing houses
beyond. "So?"Randall asked.
"He and the girl he was dancing with needed to get a
room,"Kathryn said, instantly regretting that she had
brought it up.
"Is there any reason you can't refer to him by his first
name? He's always My Roommate, or That Asshole."
"He's both,"Kathryn responded. They came to a sidewalk
with a stone banister that crossed over the top of a large
drainage pipe which emitted a crystalline mixture of black
water and miniature ice floes extending from the bottom lip
of the opening like white teeth. Kathryn's breaths were more
steady now that they were on the solid ground of the
sidewalk. The welcoming halos of Brookline Avenue's street
lamps beckoned up ahead.
"I think it's interesting how some people make
concessions for the beautiful, but you hold them to a higher
standard,"Randall said.
"He's not beautiful, Randall. He's hot. There's a big
difference,"Kathryn said, thinking of the magazine ads of
shirtless, buff male models Randall used to bridge the gaps
between posters on the cinderblock wall of his room; models
who bore a striking resemblance to Jesse in their perfectly
proportioned frames and inscrutable, distant facial
expressions which suggested they were permanently aloof as
well as physically indestructible.
"You might want to sleep with him. Just once."
"I'm going to pretend you didn't say that."
"Why? It might take away his mystique."
"He doesn't have any mystique."
"That must be why we're talking about him, then."
They had arrived at the stop light across the street from
Madeline's. Brookline Avenue's only hip restaurant had made
its ten o'clock transformation into a nightclub. Its front
door emitted a long and impatient line of the university's
best dressed, shivering in the cold as they waited to
pretend they were in Manhattan for the rest of the
night.
Randall had turned to face her, still holding one of her
hands in his.
"What's next?"he asked gently. "Campus-wide outreaches
for one-night stands gone wrong?"
"You've played the messages for me, Randall."
"For fun."
"Every time it's a different girl. It wouldn't bother me
so much if I didn't think those messages were getting him
off as much as the act itself."
"Fine. No more messages,"Randall responded. "I don't
think I should be indulging this fixation on Jesse's sexual
habits."
"You know every time I talk about him, you and April make
me out to be this Puritan."
"You talk about him a lot, Kathryn."
A note of concern had crept into Randall's voice and it
took Kathryn a second to decide whether it might be
condescension. Slightly wounded, and now feeling like a
neurotic, she met Randall's gaze, unable to give voice to
why she kept returning to Jesse as a conversation topic.
Recognition flickered in Randall's eyes and leaned into her,
reaching an arm around her waist and cupping the back of her
neck slightly in one hand.
"Kathryn. I know better. All right?"
She didn't say anything else, she didn't need to. Once
again, Randall had exhibited his knack for cutting straight
to the truth, and doing it gently. Maybe this was one of the
major reasons they had fallen into such a deep and
all-inclusive friendship. Kathryn only had to do half of the
work, because Randall could usually intuit the rest. Did
this make her lazy?
She returned his embrace before giving him a surprise
slap on the ass. He jerked.
They were both startled by a high-pitched whistle.
"Break it up, you two!"
Kathryn steeled herself at the sound of a familiar voice.
Jesse's date clung to his shoulder, and let out a short,
barking laugh as they approached down the sidewalk.
Kathryn's eyes immediately shot to the girl's crotch to see
if her jeans were buttoned.
VIII
Candles on wall sconces lit the interior of Madeline's.
The bar was clogged with Armani- and Gucci-clad students
downing shots between boisterous fits of laughter. Anemic,
black-clad waitresses maneuvered between the cramped tables
carrying trays of drinks on their rail-thin arms. A strange
mix of acid jazz and ambient music pumped from unseen
speakers, a stark contrast to the flickering images of the
local eleven o'clock news Kathryn watched on the television
above the bar.
Kathryn sipped her club soda and shot a glance over one
shoulder. Through the plate-glass windows, cardigan-clad
students made the walk back to their dorm, weighted by
overloaded book bags and shooting withering glances at the
designated hangout for Atherton's Euro Trash and
designer-drug addicts. Kathryn prayed none of them noticed
her.
"Where's Randall?"
Kathryn didn't bother to look at Jesse as he slid onto
the bar stool next to hers.
"Bathroom."
"I thought you two were like attached at the hip."
Kathryn took a sip of her drink. "What's her name?"
"Don't know yet." Jesse sipped his drink and Kathryn
finally made eye contact. He lifted his glass. "7-Up."
Kathryn nodded, as if impressed.
"You?"
"Club soda. I thought you were a Schlitz man, Jesse."
"Not when I have to perform."
Kathryn's smile hurt her cheeks.
She looked toward the bathroom, praying Randall would
emerge. Instead she saw Jesse's brunette, filing out of the
women's room with three other girls. The brunette's eyes
shot in both directions before she clasped her hands as if
in prayer, using both index fingers to wipe at her nostrils.
Kathryn noticed one of the other girls applying a liberal
amount of chapstick. She read the group's behavior in an
instant. They hadn't gone to the bathroom together to put on
make-up.
"Hey?"
Kathryn turned, startled, to see Jesse leaning toward her
with one bent elbow braced on the bar. "Mind if I ask you a
question?"
"Never,"Kathryn answered.
Jesse laughed, eyes not leaving hers. "No, I'd just love
to know what it is I do that pisses you off so much."
"I think it's really important you find one girl who
won't sleep with you."
Jesse leaned back onto his stool and gave her a slight
nod, not in agreement, but as if satisfied to get an
explanation for the constant chill she greeted him with.
"You know, I think it's kind of cool what the two of you
have."
"What do you mean?"
"I just remember the way you guys were during Orientation
Week. Everyone else was hanging out in the lounge making
bullshit conversation, spouting off those statistics about
how ninety percent of married couples meet their other half
in college, or going to those stupid ice cream social
things. Not you and Randall. You were always out in front of
the dorm smoking."
"I don't exactly recall you bonding with our dorm unit,
either."
"I didn't,"Jesse responded, without pause. "That's why I
think it's cool."
Puzzled, she waited for him to continue. "Jesus, it's
like everyone on our floor. They're all rushing to join some
club, or they've got some whacked-out major like April with
a hundred requirements and they've already gone to three
classes by the time I wake up. It's like they're working
their asses off to be anything other than what they
are."
"What are they?"Kathryn asked.
"Kids. Away from home. But if you ask them they'll tell
you they're a major. Not us, though,"Jesse continued. "The
three of us. You, me, Randall. It's like we didn't get taken
up into the fold. Everyone else here, they're like Stepford
Child freaks. It's like they're still high on all that
bullshit they tried to feed us at Orientation."
"April says I use Randall to avoid making new
friends,"Kathryn said carefully, reminding herself who she
was talking to. She left out April's other point, she used
Randall to avoid meeting a boyfriend as well.
"I don't know,"Jesse said nonchalantly. "We've only been
here, what? Two months? It's like the two of you have taken
vows or something."
She was reminded of Tim's comments about finger-pricking
and sharing blood.
"So who's he dating anyway?"Jesse said.
"Randall? No one."
"That's weird. What happened to that reporter guy?"
"That's over,"Kathryn responded.
Jesse's eyes narrowed.
"What?"
"He's just been staying out really late."
"No, he hasn't,"Kathryn said, unable to restrain the hint
of anger in her voice.
"He leaves after you two get back."
The brunette suddenly slid between them, perma-smile
plastered on her face, pupils dilated. Kathryn was
definitely sure the girl was high and she watched as she
leaned in to Jesse and whispered into his ear. She withdrew,
laughing slightly, but Jesse's face had gone blank. Kathryn
was startled to see him cup the girl's chin in one hand and
gently push her face back several inches, surveying her.
"What?"the girl asked.
Jesse reached up and swabbed at the girl's nostrils with
one finger.
"What are you doing?"the girl cried
indignantly.
Jesse turned his attention to his 7-Up as the girl's eyes
moved from him to Kathryn, having watched the entire scene.
"Oh, I get it!"She snorted and turned on one heel.
"Asshole!"she barked over one shoulder before making a
beeline for the front door. Jesse didn't look up from his
glass.
"High as a kite,"Kathryn finally said.
Jesse's eyes shot to hers.
"How could you tell?"
"Experience."
Jesse arched his eyebrows suggestively.
"Not me. I had friends in high school whose entire
weekend was an eight ball."
"But you never touched the stuff?"
"Never,"Kathryn answered, her gaze unwavering.
Randall sidled up to the bar in between them. He shot
Kathryn a curious glance, obviously wondering how long she
and Jesse had been bonding. "Can I get an apple martini?"he
asked the bartender.
"Randall, someday you're going to introduce me to a
homosexual who can drink something that doesn't have a
visible shade in candlelight!"
"Wait!"Jesse piped up. He grabbed one of Randall's
shoulders and turned him, cupping his chin and examining his
eyes.
"Mind if I ask what you're doing?"Randall said.
"He's clean,"Jesse said to Kathryn with an unnerving
grin.
The bartender delivered Randall's drink and he paid in
cash. He turned his back on Jesse and leaned in. "What the
hell was that about?"he asked, voice low.
"Inside joke. You're on the outside. Sorry."
"You two have inside jokes now? I was only in the
bathroom for ten minutes."
"I know and we wanted to know why."
"Are you saying that the two of you actually bonded?"
"Mmmm. No, not really." Kathryn grabbed his chin. "But
let me see something
"
"I don't do drugs."
"Then why do we keep coming here?"
"Damn!"Jesse barked. "Check that out!"
He pointed to the television screen above the bar, where
Kathryn saw the mauled remains of a Volvo station wagon
being hauled from the black water of the Atherton River.
Police lights flared on the bridge overhead.
"Turn it up!"
It took Kathryn a second to realize Randall had shouted
at the bartender, who was occupied on the other side of the
bar.
On television, the news report cut live to a reporter at
the rail of the bridge at the exact moment when Kathryn
thought they were going to be given a glimpse of the person
behind the Volvo's wheel. The volume bar suddenly appeared
on the bottom of the screen. Heads around the bar jerked at
the sound of the reporter's voice, now fighting with the
music. Kathryn turned to see Jesse, bent over the bar,
holding the remote.
". . . trying to chase down the anonymous caller who
placed the 911 call reporting the accident, but so far they
are short on leads. And also, no comment on whether or not
that caller might have been involved in tonight's fatal
accident which claimed the life of forty-one-year-old Lisa
Eberman."
The reporter cut to footage of paramedics rolling a
gurney towards the flaring light of an awaiting ambulance,
smeared halos through the driving snow.
"As we told you earlier, Eberman was the wife of noted
Atherton art history professor and published author, Dr.
Eric Eberman."
"Dude!"The bartender snapped, before yanking the remote
out of Jesse's hand. "This isn't a sports bar!"
Kathryn turned to find Randall staring rapt at the
television screen.
"Do you know her?"she asked.
Randall turned, eyes glazed over and distant.
"Her husband. I'm in his course,"he said.
Kathryn nodded as Randall gripped the stem of his glass
and took a slug.
Jesse rose from his stool. "Looks like I've got work to
do,"he said, gesturing with one arm to the rest of the
bar.
"Good night, Jesse."
Jesse departed into the crowd milling around the
tables.
"You ready?"Randall asked.
She was surprised to see he had downed his entire drink.
| October 2001
Copyright © 2001 Christopher Rice
Christopher
Rice was born in Berkeley, California in 1978 to the
bestselling novelist Anne Rice and the poet and painter Stan
Rice. His first novel, A Density of Souls, was a
literary and critical success. The Snow Garden is his
second book.
|