âBenji?'
âHe's some kinda asshole. Ain't as smart as he thinks.'
I frowned. âYou said you have something for me?'
Hank's eyes were grey and dull. The skin on his legs was dry and scaly, and had flecked off only to get stuck in the spindly hair that grew there. âWhat are you doing with someone like that?' he asked.
âThere's nothing wrong with Benji.'
âSure there's not. Comes in and tells an old man someone died in his bathroom.'
âLook, I'm really sorry about that,' I said, taking a mouthful of tea and swallowing hard even though it was scalding hot. It would be rude to leave with tea still in my cup, so I decided to drink the whole lot as fast as possible. âWe shouldn't have done it. We were just curious.'
âYeah, well people do things and once it's done you can't take it back. Now here you are. Ain't nothin' but consequences in this life.'
âConsequences huh?' I tried to sound like I didn't care, like what he was saying wasn't creeping under my skin and taking root in my veins. I didn't like the sound of âconsequences', the way his eyes glazed over when he said it, like a murderer reminiscing about his last really satisfying kill. I wondered whether I could smash the tea cup right there on the table if I needed to, pick up a sliver of ceramic and drive it into his throat just as he lunged for me, or whether I should just throw the whole cup at his head, praying to God I hit a temple or some other magic spot that would make him black out. A hundred different scenarios raced through my mind from movies and TV shows: Dan Aykroyd getting a TV smashed over his head in
Grosse Pointe Blank
, the scene from
Single White Female
where a guy gets dispensed of with a high heel to the forehead. I stood.
âI gotta go. My brother's gonna be outside. I told him to pick me up. He'll be looking for me.'
Hank laughed. âYou ain't got no brother pickin' you up. What the hell is wrong with you? You think I'm gonna attack you?'
âI don't know. When you sit there talking like Hannibal Lecter about “consequences” you can really start to freak a girl out.'
âWhat the hell do ya think I'm gonna do? My prick's been useless for years. I'm lucky to get any piss out of it let alone make it stand to attention long enough to get my rocks off. So sit down will ya? You're makin' me nervous. I don't get many people around here you know.'
I stayed standing. âListen, I know we did kind of a shitty thing. It was not a cool thing to do. But if you think you're going to hold me hostage because I feel bad about it, and make me do some kind of forced community service by coming here to visit you to make up for it, you're mistaken.'
âI ain't holdin' no one hostage. You came here of your own volition. And it's because I have somethin' for you. I wasn't lyin' about that. Just wait.'
âYou know what? It's cool. I don't want anything.'
âNo. Wait.'
I watched him slink into the kitchen and take something off the bench. When he came back I saw it was an old brown paper bag, crinkled and stained. He handed it to me.
âWhat's this?' I asked.
âOpen it.'
âIt's not some dude's severed ear is it?'
Hank cocked an eyebrow then scratched his ass. âYou're a weird kid, anyone ever tell you that?'
âOnly every day.'
I opened the bag an inch, went to look inside, then closed it again. I handed it back to Hank.
âYou open it,' I said. âI don't feel like getting my finger ripped off by some bizarre booby trap.'
âOh for Christ's sake,' he said, snatching the bag away. âGive it here.'
He turned the bag upside down and tipped the contents out. In the middle of his liver-spotted hand sat a piece of blue ceramic tile. It was a perfect square, the edges sharp and exact except for one corner that was chipped, the whiteness exposed beneath. I carefully picked it out of his hand.
âWhat is it?' I asked, turning it over in my fingers.
âA pool tile.'
âSo why do I want this?'
âIt's from Jayne Mansfield's swimming pool.'
My heart skipped. I held the tile up to the light.
âAre you serious?' I almost squealed. Hank smiled. It was too good to be true. Jayne Mansfield was a Playboy bunny and actress, a cheaper, gaudier version of Marilyn Monroe. She died when the car she was travelling in hit the back of a truck in poor light, decapitating her and killing the two men beside her while her children sat in the backseat. Her heart-shaped pool was a Hollywood icon, torn down by some unfeeling developer who didn't much care for history. A couple of looters had managed to retrieve a few tiles from the demolition site but mainly they were the stuff of legend. And now I had one, right in my hand, and it was blue and beautiful and filled with mystery. âIs this for me?' I squeaked.
âSure is. You can have it. I ain't got no use for it.'
I turned the tile over. It was so special, unique, perfect. âHow did you get it?'
âI helped build Jayne Mansfield's pool in the fifties. She was a real sweet girl. Terrible what happened to her. When we were done building it she gave each of us a tile from the pool. And that pool, shaped like a loveheart, what a sight. Such a shame.'
âDid you know her dog was decapitated in the car accident too?' I asked. âA little Chihuahua sitting in the front seat on her lap.'
Hank made a face. âChrist girl, how old are you?'
âSeventeen.'
âSeventeen and talkin' like that. What is it with all this death crap? Do your parents know you're into all this shit?'
âSure,' I lied. âThey don't care what I do.'
âWell, I don't see no reason why a young, pretty lass like you gotta be fillin' your head with all this morbid stuff.'
âIt's just a hobby.'
âStrange hobby. Sure ain't stamp collecting.'
âI guess not.'
âAw shit,' he growled, and looked at the floor. âI feel like I got this all ass-backwards. How about we start again? I'm Hank. Hank Anderson.'
âHilda Swann,' I said, and held out my hand to shake his. âYou really don't know how much this means to me.'
There was no way he could know. I had something in common with Jayne Mansfield. To own an item that once belonged to her just brought us closer together, made our fates even more entwined. Hank reached forward and took my fingers, shook my hand with a soft but firm grip, and it was then that I noticed the black smear on his arm that had once been a tattoo. It looked as though it had been scrubbed until it was nothing but an indistinguishable blob on the inside of his wrist.
âYou know what Hilda Swann? You look like a young Louise Brooks. At least you would without that pink shit in your hair.'
âI'll try and take that as a compliment.'
I let go of his hand, acted like I hadn't seen the mark on his arm. I noticed some old VHS tapes with no covers on top of the television set. âYou like movies?' I asked, picking one up.
Hank groaned as he sat down in a worn armchair, splayed his legs and scratched at the rim of his boxers. âSure, I like movies. If they're good.'
I read the tape labels.
Gilda
.
Gone With the Wind
.
Gentlemen
Prefer Blondes
.
âClassics, huh?'
Hank heaved himself up. âThe trouble with Hollywood these days is the women have no grace. No style. All those sluts down on Sunset with their cooches hanging out. Goddamn tramps.'
âWhat about Julia Roberts? Reese Witherspoon?'
âBahâit's not the same. Back in my day, actresses were elegant.
Refined
. They were more than women; they were apparitions on the screen. We feared them, adored them.'
âSo you haven't seen Lindsay Lohan in
Herbie the Love Bug
?'
Hank frowned. âToday, everyone finds it so easy to laugh at things. Everything is a big joke.'
âOh no, Lindsay Lohan is no joke. She's a terrifying reality.'
He tilted his head at me. âThere is something about you that is too familiar. You make jokes, but they don't come from a place of joy. A joke from the heart lights up an entire room. When you joke, there is no light. Your face goes dark.'
I put the tape down on the television set and crossed my arms. âYou wanna talk darkness? How's it feel living in a place where a guy killed himself?'
âI've lived in worse.'
I looked towards the bathroom. The door was open and inside I could see small shafts of light from the tiny window, illuminating the tiles. âSo you're quite happy to brush your teeth at that sink every day?'
âBrush, floss, hell, I'd probably beat off if I still could.'
I looked again at the mark on his arm. âDo you believe in ghosts?'
âSure I do.'
âBut you're not scared to go in there?'
âShit no. If there's a ghost in there, at least I'll have someone to talk to.'
I walked over to the bathroom. There were a couple of dirty towels on the floor, mouldy and smelly. The mirror above the sink was so rusty you could barely see a reflection. I opened the little brown bag, peeked inside to make sure the tile was still there, that I hadn't imagined it.
âWell, I should be going,' I said.
âFine. Go. People always have somewhere else they have to be. Never here. Never now.'
âThanks for the tile.'
âDon't mention it.'
I made my way towards the front door. Hank didn't get up. âYou gonna open this for me?' I asked, and for a minute I got scared, but I needn't have because Hank got to his feet and undid the deadlock, then stood behind the door as I walked outside. I hesitated, seized by a genuine desire to spend more time with this strange old man who had given me such a special gift. Maybe it was because as I took a last look around his apartment, with the grey, matted carpet and brown walls, I was overcome with immense sadness. All I knew was that as I prepared to step off his front doorstep and into the night, I became seized with incredible panic. Everything felt unfinished. More than that: it felt like we'd only just begun.
âWell,' I said, holding up the paper bag with the tile in it. âThanks again for this. You were right. It's pretty amazing.'
âI got no use for it,' Hank scowled, his expression suddenly cold. âIt's just a piece of tile. Silly to think a piece of tile is so special. Ain't nothin' in that bag but dust.'
âWell, I think it's beautiful.'
âThat's good for you,' he said, stepping forward. âNow if you've gotta go, you go.'
And he slammed the door in my face.
Mom and Dad loved movies. My earliest memory was the soothing flicker of a television screen, the interplay of light and dark bathing me in warmth as I lay on the carpet. Over time the shadows took shape. People, streets, a puppy running towards the screen then sprinting off againâall the things I had seen outside now contained in one magical window just for me. Slowly the images joined and became stories: an alien stranded in a giant forest, a talking yellow robot and his little robot friend on wheels, a witch with an apple in her hand. I saw visions I would never see outside, and could never hope to, images so fantastic they transfixed me for hours. And always in the background the comforting sound of my Mom and Dad's voices, the clink of dishes as Mom cleared away the breakfast table, the romantic chattering of Dad's old-fashioned typewriter.
I remembered growing up in Topanga Canyon, a place for âalternative lifestyle' seekers who thought the hippy haven of Laurel Canyon had been destroyed by coke and rich music execs. Mom wore beads and sarongs and dyed her hair with henna. Dad was once a teacher but now worked at a factory, but only to support his âart'. He wrote poems and articles about astrology for magazines. He smoked rolled cigarettes and the house was covered in ash. You couldn't open a book without having tobacco spill out from between the pages. Dad had terrible problems at the factory where he worked. Everyone thought he was crazy because he said the Manson Family had ruined everything for the hippies, even though the murders happened decades ago.
I remembered watching movies together. Every night after Dad had finished an article (or the article had finished him, Mom would joke), we sat down on the couch to watch a VHS tape from our vast collection. Sometimes whole weekends were gobbled up by movie marathons and summer vacations flew by without giving me so much as a tan. Aunt Lynette didn't like it. One day I was sitting on the floor, Dad on the sofa behind me, and I could hear her arguing with my mother.
âAren't you worried she'll be socially inept?' I overheard her say as they drank tea in the kitchen, although she wasn't making much of an effort not to be heard. I was watching
Revenge of the Nerds
for what must have been the tenth time. I didn't fully understand the jokes but I knew that the nerds looked funny and made me laugh. Lynette looked tight and uncomfortable in her office suit and high heels, surrounded by coffee mugs made of clay and glowing incense sticks.
âNonsense,' Mom said. âYou should let children do what interests them. One day she'll be the first great female film director.'
âOr illiterate,' Lynette continued. âMartha, it's not healthy for her to watch so much television. And the stuff you let her watch.'
âLike what?'
Lynette pointed at the TV. âLike that! Have you even seen that movie yourself? It's full of sex. There's drug use in it, and naked women.'
âSo? Hilda can decide what she wants to watch for herself. Sex never hurt anyoneâit's the most natural thing in the world.'
âBut at her age? She's only eight years old!'
âI'd rather have her watching sex than something that was horribly violent. I mean, what's wrong with this country? It's okay to show people getting their limbs blown off, but sex is a problem?'