Carolina Moon (18 page)

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Authors: Jill McCorkle

BOOK: Carolina Moon
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“I have a load coming the end of this week,” she says. “I like to really feed my plot of earth every fall.”

“Now where are the potatoes?” Robert asks, straining to see into Alicia’s backyard where Taylor has a plastic log cabin. It makes his chest swell and ache to see that little house. There’s something about kids living in a shitty household that tears him up. He imagines Alicia trying; he sees her out there putting that house together, lifting and connecting the pieces while that lousy bastard husband was probably inside jacking off to some magazine or a picture of himself. Robert flushes with his own thoughts; he is ashamed when he uses bad language and yet, so often there’s no other way to do justice to an idea.

“The far end.” She gives the dog a look like “Is he stupid or what?” and then shoos Robert on down the path. “Now walk around the hills, please, there you go.” She waves one hand as if presenting the back of Alicia’s house, the deck, and yes, a window, the shade drawn.

“Oh, well,” she says. “Late one afternoon, dusk really, I was out here working and I saw them having an awful fight. You know dusk is the best time of day to see in.”

“Do you know what it was about?”

“Well, he didn’t want her working, which I can’t blame him seeing as
where
she works.” Myra pats her thigh for Mr. Sharpy to come back to her. “I’ve had several run-ins with that awful Queen Mary Stutts Purdy, myself. She can call herself Pur DAY all she wants, but she is nothing but a Stutts and folks around here know that.”

“And?”

“And what?”

“The argument.”

“Hmmm now, let’s see if I can remember.” She looks at her watch and tells him she’s going to have to think it all through again, that she has got a thousand things to do today and so he best be on his way. “I know. Why don’t you come back tomorrow, and I will have remembered by then.”

“All right.” Robert takes one last look at the back of the house, the rubber ball, the plastic wading pool, Alicia’s bathing suit hanging over the railing of the deck. He would give anything to talk to Alicia right now, just to see her, but she had specifically asked that they not bother her until there is new news.

“I do hope Jones isn’t dead.” Myra hands him a little brown paper bag full of cherry tomatoes and dirty cucumbers that smell of pesticides and hustles him back through her dark house. She stands in the doorway, her television (she flipped it on in passing) now blaring in the background. It’s time for Oprah Winfrey. “You better check the river,” Myra says. “Especially now that you’ve found that old fancy car like what my brother-in-law drove to the Tastee Freez. Check it for prints. Do your duty, young man. Did I even tell you what my brother-in-law did buy?” She calls out to his back, “One of those Gremlins. Can you believe that? A Gremlin.
He’s
a gremlin. When you come back I’ll tell you why.”

Testing . . . yoo-hoo. Day four and I just don’t know how long I’m gonna last here in the twilight zone. I mean, this radio guy I told you about? Not the one staying here who tries to flash his fat ass at you if you’ll let him. HE spent his whole therapy time talking about how he knew he was capable of having some extramarital activity, it was just that he hadn’t found anybody who was worth him risking all that he has. Quee told me later that what he has is a wife who tells him exactly what to do when. Quee says she’s all for a powerful woman all right, but she has no respect for the man who doesn’t give her a good fight. Man oh man, I wish you could see Quee’s face when she gets going on something. It’s like her whole face quivers, like all that loose skin starts trembling with a life of its own. She clenches her teeth and flares her nostrils and, other than that, all of her emotional reaction is there in the skin, especially the skin around her neck. She said the other day that somebody could snip away what was there under her chin and fashion two rather sizeable breasts.

“I’ll take ’em,” Alicia said though as far as I can tell that is the one and only thing that she does have, and Lordy she’s another story, which is exactly what I’m building up to. She is downright pitiful. If
the greased-up addicted radio guy is (to quote Quee, of course, because I have never made a habit of using the “p” word and certainly not the “c” word—only the “f” word) “pussy-whipped,” then it’s for sure that this Alicia is pecker- (a “p” word I do find myself using quite often) whipped. She looks like somebody who ought to be walking around with her mouth hanging open. You might name her Pitiful Pearl or Sorrowful Sue if she was a baby doll. I’m into such names right now because part of my made-up therapy is to have folks look at a baby doll and then name it. It’s kind of a modernized Rorschach. I mean, do they see sadness or joy, loneliness or horniness, as suggested by Mr. Radio Lard-Ass. I try to pick babies whose expressions are not so obvious. Then I pull out the hard part of the test. I hold up a stuffed animal and I say: “What gender is this?” Quee kind of liked this one because she herself is also somebody who has always been able to know the sex of a stuffed animal. It’s just instinct; it’s the same way that I’m very good at knowing someone’s sexual preference, like when I was set up on a blind date with a man I knew would much rather be with the man friend who set us up. My date, of course, didn’t know that yet, and neither did the friend who set us up, but I did. It was like being struck in the head with a car jack; that’s what Quee’s forever saying,
Struck in the head with a car jack
—sometimes she says,
Well, hit me with a concrete slab
, the same way my ex always said,
Wow, I could’ve had a V-8
. He is so original, somebody should give him a prize. That’s what I’d always say to him. I’d say,
Yuk, yuk, that’s about as funny as Elvis singing “What’s eatin you, Babe” on a leprosy ward. That’s so funny, when Columbus told it to the Indians, they shot him
. Well, I knew those two men were in need of two men, and you might as well say four divided by two and just stick those that are left together, which is what I did, and they are living happily ever after to this day, still amazed that I knew they were gay before they did.

I mean, it was like I was saying earlier, you know about how I just have intuition about things, which is why people come from all over for my expert advice. Come out, come out wherever you are. Shit or get off the pot. Don’t put off till tomorrow what you can do today. Life is a terminal thing.

Anyway, you would see Alicia and you would say that she had been beaten to a pulp emotionally. She thinks she’s ugly, and she thinks the world is ugly. The only thing she seems to think is cute is that old handyman Tom, always hanging around here, and who wouldn’t, I ask you. Still I’m trying to talk myself out of thinking so, because for one reason he doesn’t even live in a house! Besides, it seems he’s all moonie over somebody who fell into a coma, a
married
woman who fell into a coma I might add. AND, Quee seems to think that if he ever gets over her that he might come to ask Alicia out. Another married one! Quee said all this about how men find Alicia so much fun to be with. There’s Tom Lowe, who always stops after building a closet or some other big brain-requiring feat to ask how she’s doing and to play with that child of hers who looks too old for diapers if you ask me, and then of course there’s that tall skinny cop who looks like he might be in the poultry family with that Adam’s apple of his and those white, white, almost gooseflesh-looking arms. He’s the kind of man you might see and then say, “Did I see a ghost? Is your name Caspar?” You would NOT want to see this man in swimwear.

I won’t be surprised if I swing around and DO see a ghost one of these days, what with all these awful-looking people that are long dead staring out of their dusty old frames. As far as I can tell right now, the only thing that Alicia and I agree on is that these old photos give us the creeps. Alicia seems to think that some bad karma might get out, but Quee just laughs and says, “Oh, honey, you’d know bad karma if you felt it. But I was in real estate long enough to know that
it doesn’t happen very often.” Now how can you let her tell that little bit and then stop? I mean, there that child of Alicia’s was hanging on to her and smelling like a polecat, and Alicia was wanting to hear a story. So of course I asked if she’d ever encountered “bad” karma (worse than what I’m feeling right now, I wanted to say but of course didn’t). She said that once she was trying to sell a house that’s known as the murder-suicide house, and that yes, when she went in and there was still the smell of death, blood in the shower stall and brains on the light fixture, that there was some bad karma. Alicia was looking like she might vomit with this part of the story and excused herself to go change that old diaper where there’s a diaper pail that keeps the whole back of the house smelling like something died and went to hell. “But a little steam cleaning and Clorox, fresh paint, and all the bad karma disappeared.”

“Or was covered up,” I said and she just smiled, her skin quivering, and
that’s
when she said that about she could take what’s on her neck and make somebody some boobs, that is
if
she believed in boobs. She said that she was starting to think that women should have them removed as soon as their childbirthing days are over; get rid of all those cancer caves, she said. Alicia gasped when she heard this. Some people shy off from that word
cancer
, like the word itself might bite you. I suspect they probably had somebody in their childhood tell them that if they had ever eaten or touched a crab (also known as Cancer in the zodiac) that they would die from that very disease. A boy in third grade told me that but of course I was too smart to believe him; I did however tell him that he had ancestors and that his epidermis was showing and that everybody knew he had slumbered in his sleep, and he cried to the teacher, who spanked my hand with a ruler and never once asked me
why
I felt the need to say all of that to him.

So Quee says, these men just take to Alicia “like a fly to honey.” Now if Alicia has a pea in her head, she knows that Quee is just trying to build up her ego. I mean, her husband is missing. Gone for days. Not a trace, except that car of his that if I was Alicia I’d’ve gone and claimed and be driving. “It’s impounded,” she said to me slowly, like I might not have all of my chromosomes. “They are thinking there might be foul play.” Her husband was probably bored to tears like me and just had no choice but to pack a bag and run like hell. So, anyway, there I was with Mr. Radio in the therapy room, and he’s saying all this about how he might have his fat self an affair if he finds the right person, and there Alicia, who’s sitting there rubbing out his hairy-monkey-looking feet, thinks he’s making a play at her. She said: “Really, Barry,” which was the first time I’d heard him called anything other than the Radio Guy. She said, “Really, Barry, why don’t you just go home and do something nice for Wanda?” Alicia glanced at me as if to say, “Why don’t you shut up with your little dream interpretation and let
me
take care of things.” I waved her on. Fine, fine as wine. I am not going to beat my brains out in this little job. I mean, it is like the handyman said, I
do
have a choice about being here.

“She’s a wonderful person,” Alicia said. I had seen a photo of Wanda when I rooted through Barry’s top drawer in search of guiding info while he was in “the sauna,” which really means he was in “the shower” with the doors closed. Mr. Fix-It had nailed up a big piece of Plexiglas between the doors and ceiling to hold in the steam. A person could probably suffocate in there or drown if it was to suddenly fill up with water like in that
I Love Lucy
episode where Lucy and Ethel get stuck in there and are swimming around. I have always
loved
that episode. It always reminded me of that little pool at church where I got baptized. My ex, brilliant man that he is, said that watching things like the Nickelodean or Ted Turner channels, which is where I find all
the shows that I like best, was an activity that he did not understand. I told him that any activity that involved being with him was an activity that I couldn’t understand. I guess this Tom Lowe guy might not even own a TV, can you imagine that? What would you do all night? Anyway, as I was saying, I went peeking in Barry’s drawer, kind of like the way the wizard goes into Dorothy’s purse, and I found that photo of his wife who looks all right, not wonderful like Alicia said, but all right. Normal-looking.

“Wanda will be so proud of you,” Alicia said. “You know Jones still smokes.”

“Yes.” Barry twisted his foot out of her hand and sat forward, his hairy stomach lapping over his towel. He touched her shoulder, and I was about to say, “Well pardon me for conducting my therapy session”; I opened the bottom drawer and got my hand on the visual aid for impotency, deciding that if they got all mushy-mooshie, I’d just whip out that limp number and see what they thought of that. “You’re right, Alicia,” he said and sighed. “I’m not Jones, and it’s about time I stopped trying to act like I am.”

“That’s good, a positive thing from what I hear,” I said and decided to close the drawer back. It occurred to me that it might be a fascinating study to ask the clients to name
that
, since a lot of couples out there seem to engage in such a thing. My ex was forever trying to get me to call his something, I can’t even remember what by now. What I do remember is that I told him that I felt about his penis the way I did about a person, and when it was unattached to the blood and oxygen supply and living on its own then I’d give it the decency of its own name. Until then it was just a part of his body and deserved no more special treatment than his feet or nose.

They both whirled around and looked at me like I might be a slug instead of the therapist in charge when I mentioned that no-good husband
of hers. All day long, that Alicia talks about how awful he is, but, oh no, don’t let anybody else do it.

“Do you know Jones?” Barry asked me and I said no, but I do know that everybody is always saying how he acts just like Howard Stern, how they call him “the preppy Howard Stern.” I said that I personally listened to
Imus in the Morning
or
did
when I lived in a civilization with good radio.

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