Read Shamus In The Green Room Online
Authors: Susan Kandel
No, even at his advanced age, Buster wasn’t going to fall for
that one. Fresh air. That was what we needed. We’d been
cooped up for too long. I took Alexander by the hand and led
him out the back door, down the brick steps, and into the
backyard.
“Look at the pretty butterfly!” I pointed out a large black
specimen with tiny white polka dots.
“Birdie!” Alexander said, reaching out his arms.
Close enough. “What do you say I put you to work?”
He nodded shyly.
I turned on the hose, sending the usual tremors through
the plumbing system of my 1932 Spanish-style house, which
was hanging on by a thread. That was part of its charm. Would
the toilet flush? Would the doorbell chime? Would the wrought-
iron sconces send crackling volts of electricity through my
veins when I changed the bulbs? It was all so exciting and un-
predictable.
“Come over here and hold the watering can under the wa-
ter,” I said to Alexander.
“Water! I can swim! I grow tall!”
“So tall,” I said, kissing the top of his head. “And you are
going to help the garden grow, too. The plants are thirsty.
Don’t they look sad?”
Buster’s overactive bladder had pretty much destroyed the
grass. I’d tried to train him to use the dog run, but he’d con-
sidered that an infringement upon his rights as the man of the
house.
“Now take your little can over to the cilantro,” I said, pointing
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to a sorry clump of feathery leaves that had all but dried to a
crisp.
“Dead,” Alexander intoned mournfully. He was right. Year
after year I was defeated by cilantro.
“Not too much water now,” I cautioned. “Too much isn’t
good either.”
“I don’t want water. I don’t wanna work. I want juice. I’m
thirsty. I’m hungry, too.” Alexander dropped the watering can
and started to cry.
“There, there, sweetheart,” I said, picking him up. “Don’t
cry.” He cried harder. “Cece’s going to make you a beautiful
lunch right this very minute.” He was wailing inconsolably
now. Poor kid had been through so much lately. I had no idea
how Annie and Vincent were going to explain the fact that his
mother was gone for good. Maybe she’d come back. She hadn’t
absolutely closed the door on that possibility. Still, I wondered
if at this point that would be a good or a bad thing.
As soon as we set foot on the service porch, Mimi the cat
appeared.
“Shall we feed the pussycat first?” I asked.
Alexander wiped his eyes. “How ’bout a peanut butter
samwich? We could share.”
“Good idea. We’ll just give her some turkey and giblets as
an appetizer.” I cracked open a can of Fancy Feast and dumped
it into her ceramic dish. Nothing but the best for Mimi.
We walked into the kitchen and assembled the items we
needed, sidestepping the destruction wrought by last night’s
eggplant parmigiana, which was delicious, by the way. While
the bread was toasting, I went into Annie’s old room, which I
now used as a guest room, though I rarely had guests. Why
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subject innocent people to a toilet that might not flush? I
opened the closet door and flipped the light switch. What a
mess. Even after she and Vincent had bought their house in
Topanga Canyon, which had maybe quadruple the amount
of storage space I have, Annie still hadn’t cleared out all her old
stuff. The girl was a packrat. One good thing was, there were
sure to be some books or toys in one of the boxes. Maybe some-
thing Alexander would like.
“Pop, pop, pop,” Alexander sang out. “Toast time!”
“No! Don’t touch anything!” All I needed was for him to
get electrocuted. That’d be the last time they let me baby-sit.
Jammed into the corner of the closet was a picture book
and a forlorn Barbie with no hair. I snatched up both and ran
back into the kitchen. Alexander was sitting on the floor with
the jar of peanut butter in his lap.
“Good boy,” I said, trading bald Barbie for the peanut but-
ter. “Did anybody tell you never, ever, to put a knife in the
toaster? You can get a bad shock. It can make your hair go
crazy.”
“Like your hair,” he said, pointing.
“Why don’t you sit right here at the kitchen table,” I said,
“and look at this nice book while I finish the sandwich.”
“My mommy puts bananas in,” he said in a small voice,
“because bananas are fruit.”
Oh, god. “That’s a wonderful idea. I’m going to put ba-
nanas in, too.” I had one black banana sitting on the counter.
Maybe he wouldn’t notice if I sliced it really thin.
“Okay!” I said brightly. “All ready. How about some chips?”
Kids love chips. Everybody loves chips. Instant party.
“No chips.”
“Cece will eat the chips. And Mimi. Mimi loves chips.”
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I sat down next to him and picked up the book.
“Clifford the Big Red Dog,” I read. Why was he so big and
red? His mother and father and brothers and sisters were all
normal. They never explained that. Maybe it was some kind of
post-Chernobyl thing.
“I think we can do better than this,” I said. “I’ll be right
back.”
“Barbie wants a samwich, too.”
“Okay.” I sliced off a tiny corner of Alexander’s sandwich
and arranged it on a saucer, though everyone knows Barbie
doesn’t touch carbs. I shoved some chips in my mouth. At least
I had hair.
I went back into Annie’s closet and waded through the de-
bris. A purple thermos fell on my head. I shoved a Care Bears
helmet and assorted knee and elbow pads out of my way. Then
I saw an old trunk I remembered helping Annie pack full of
papers and books. I dragged it into the middle of the floor and
opened it.
Curious George Goes to the Hospital. A classic, if depressing.
Bread and Jam for Frances. Always made me hungry. Yearbooks.
Autograph books. And here—oh, too funny—was Annie’s
onetime prized possession: her Rafe Simic scrapbook. I’d al-
most forgotten the thing existed. The cover alone was black-
mail material. “R AFE + ANNIE.” She’d cut the letters out of
old magazines and collaged them onto the baby-blue padded
surface. It was still in good shape. Only the “R,” surrounded
by cupids and red hearts, was peeling.
I flipped to the first page. Rafe with shoulder-length hair in
his first big film, Dead Ahead. He played a follower of the
Grateful Dead who inadvertently witnesses a gangland-style
execution. Rafe in wraparound shades and heavy gold jewelry,
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Hollywood’s vision of a sadistic drug lord. Rafe in costume as
a samurai warrior, wielding a sword. A young Rafe with a gold
crown on his head. This wasn’t from any movie I remembered.
Aha. This was real life. I looked down at the caption: “Rafe
Simic, Prom King, and”—Jesus—“Maren Levander, Prom
Queen.” Morbid to a fault, I wondered what Maren had
looked like when she was young and not dead. I peered closely
and had to laugh.
Apparently, it ran in the family.
Annie had decapitated Palos Verdes High’s prom queen
of 1979, and collaged her own face where Maren’s should
have been.
“All done,” Alexander called out.
“Coming,” I answered, grabbing the scrapbook and Frances
and heading into the kitchen.
Just then the key turned in the lock of the front door.
“Annie!” screamed Alexander, careening into her out-
stretched arms.
“Hi, there,” she said. “How’s my sweetheart?”
“I have something to show you,” I said in a singsong voice.
“Mom, what’s that on your jeans?”
I looked down. “I don’t see anything. Have a look at this.”
I handed her the scrapbook.
“No, on the back. Gross.”
I twisted around to see. It was something mushy and black-
ish. I looked at Alexander.
“Icky banana. Mommy never uses icky bananas.”
“I can’t believe you found this thing. Look at how cheesy it
is. Say sorry, Alexander,” Annie instructed.
“Sorry, ’Xander.”
“Not to worry, baby,” I said. “Use a napkin next time.”
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“Okay, Grandma.”
Annie looked at me and I looked at Annie.
“What?” asked Alexander.
He was so serious, just like his father. I bent down to stroke
his hair. It was as soft and slippery as silk.
“Turns out Grandma likes Mondays,” I said, “that’s what.”
Tuesday morning and Rafe and I were back at it again, but
I’d put my foot down when, by way of greeting, he pulled
the mini-microphone out of the pocket of his baggy cargo
shorts.
“To be perfectly honest,” I said as we sped off in his freshly
washed car, “I feel uncomfortable with that thing hanging
around my neck.”
“Not to be rude,” he started—“and by the way, which way
are we headed?” He took a bite of out an Egg McMuffin. “You
want a bite? I don’t usually eat this shit, but whatever.”
“No, thank you.” I’d had my own nourishing breakfast of
stale graham crackers and coffee. My half-and-half had gone
sour, so I’d created a mixture of whipping cream and nonfat
milk, which should have amounted to the same thing but
didn’t. “We’re heading east.”
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He took a left on Melrose, then stuffed the rest of his
breakfast back into the cheery McDonald’s bag and shoved it
onto the backseat. “Like I was saying, I don’t want to be rude,
but this is a job and the mike is one of the job requirements.”
“C’mon, Rafe. You know perfectly well you’re never going
to listen to these tapes.”
“Oh, yes, I am. We have a whole closet devoted to audiovi-
sual equipment. In Will’s office.”
“You think you’re going to listen to them, I believe you.
That way you can tune me out when you feel like it.”
“Whoa. I didn’t know this was about you.”
“It isn’t,” I said, reddening.
“And for the record,” he said, just missing the green light at
Fairfax, “I’m listening to every word you’re saying. I’m listen-
ing to the words in between the words. I’m listening to you
breathing.”
“That isn’t necessary.”
The light changed and he shifted back into gear. “It’s not
like I can help it. How far are we going?”
“Down to Paramount Studios.”
“Cool. Look, Cece,” he said, fiddling with the stereo, “I’m
an actor. We take cues. To take a cue you’ve got to be listening
and you’ve got to be watching. You’ve got to feel the other per-
son’s rhythms. It isn’t personal, really. So just do your job,
okay?” He settled on a rap station and cranked the volume so
high the car started to shake.
I have always been a bad employee. I believe in punctuality
and hard work, but deferring to one’s superior, well, that part
has always stuck in my craw. Which is why writing has been
my salvation. Just me and my Bondi-blue iMac in my con-
verted garage office with the Lucite desk and apple-green walls
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and floors. I should never have accepted this gig. But I did ac-
cept it, and now I had to suck it up.
“I’ve reconsidered. I would be delighted to wear the mike.”
I had to shout over the music. “If you would be so kind as to
hand it over.”
“Cool.” He tried not to look too satisfied, but he could’ve
tried harder.
Traffic was slow between Fairfax and La Brea. This was
prime shopping turf for suburban Goths and punks who
wouldn’t dream of parking their cars far from the stud, spike,
and shroud shops. After three, when school let out, it was even
worse.
We stopped to let a kid wearing enormous black shorts
with silver chains hanging down to his ankles cross the street.
His clothes were no big deal. The impressive part was his
head, which was shaved except for two clumps he’d dyed red
and sculpted into devil’s horns. Rafe took one look at him and
said, “Cool”—again—which was really starting to irk me.
Why did he keep saying that? The way I saw it, things were
the opposite of cool. Why were we chatting about nothing?
Why had he not said a word about our visit to the coroner’s? It
was strange. Not a single word about his dead former girl-
friend. Of course, it wasn’t my place to bring her up. If he
wanted to forget about her, that was fine with me.
“You haven’t said a word about Maren.” It slipped out.
Rafe turned off the music. “Oh. I’m glad you brought that
up. I’m going to need to take tomorrow off, too. Maren’s body
was released to Will this morning, and her ashes are going to
be scattered off the cliffs in Palos Verdes at around eleven. Will
said that’s what she would’ve wanted. They ruled her death a
suicide, by the way.”
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“I’m sorry,” I said, chastened.
He reached over to turn on my mike. “Paramount Studios,
Cece.”
We parked the car at a meter opposite the ornate, historic
archway at the north end of Bronson Avenue. According to Hol-
lywood lore, the wrought-iron filigree at the top was added af-
ter crazed female fans of Rudolph Valentino overwhelmed