Sweet Lamb of Heaven (11 page)

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Authors: Lydia Millet

BOOK: Sweet Lamb of Heaven
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I remembered being in bed with him, in bed where he'd always been so perfect that it disguised his lack of emotion. It didn't occur to me to wonder about what wasn't given.

Ned was still exactly the man he intended to be.

Inevitably I found myself looking into his face. He had a light and pleasant tan that must have looked as out of place in the Alaskan winter as it did in Maine. I tried to calm myself by picturing him in a sunbed at Planet Beach, slathering lotion onto his body, arranging the little goggles onto his face. I remembered how the fatless musculature of his torso was maintained with daily bouts of grunting resistance training. But it was no use, no matter how hard I tried to belittle him I couldn't reduce the feeling of beauty and threat he imparted.

Except for the anxiety of his nearness, though, I found I was less susceptible to his looks than I remembered being. I could see him impersonally by placing the barrier of my dislike between us. As I did this, his looks became less the features of a living person and more a formal structure—less animal than mineral, transmuted into a polymer that encased him in its petrochemical sheen.

Had he already sent his guys to the motel?
Henchmen,
I repeated silently,
henchmen
, a comical word I'd never thought I'd have a use for. Was Lena already with them? Had her babysitters been pushed aside or persuaded?

I felt a twinge of panic. What should I do? What was the right course of action? Call the Lindas? Don? 911? My cell phone was in my bag, on the counter; there were my car keys beside it. I could grab them and run.

I couldn't decide. I was useless. I tried to stall.

“A suit and
tie
? On Saturday?”

He smiled at me indulgently, as though what was coming from my mouth was empty breath. There was no need for him to acknowledge my speech.

“Look, honey, you and me just need a little face time. We need to put our two heads together and be reasonable here, figure out what's best for everyone.”

“I don't know what you mean.”

In fact I did not know what
I
meant: he was terrifying me. I shook my head. I wasn't in charge of myself, just flustered and stuck. It was exactly what I'd been afraid of since the day he started pursuing us. He'd never laid a finger on me in anger, Ned had never been violent physically. He'd only been false and cold.

Despite this nonviolent history he chilled me to the bone.

“I know you want to come home,” he said.

The arrogance of it flummoxed me—as though he was speaking to a third party, a cameraman, maybe, who was watching and evaluating our performances and knew nothing whatsoever about us.

“I don't want to at
all
,” I rushed. “I don't
have
a home with you and I don't
want
a home with you. You know what I want, don't you, Ned? I just want a divorce.”

“Oh now. Listen. You're getting yourself all in a bunch, aren't you? Relax! We'll go down the street and get a bite. John here tells me y'all have a diner in this town that serves Mexican Coke. All the way up here in the pine-tree state. Go figure. You like that Mexican Co-cola, don't you? Cane sugar, not corn syrup? We need to bring that old-style Coke back to the U. S. of A. I'll put a bill in Congress, on down the road when I get there.”

He'd ramped up his Southern accent several notches, the Southern manners of speech he'd partly suppressed in his first flush of adulthood. Maybe he'd raised the good ol' boy quotient for electability—Alaska has a certain kinship with the South, a redneck commonality without the heat or black people. Southern accents may be a bankable asset, I thought. Ned had always considered Alaska a frontier, the main reason he'd asked me to move there in the first place—not that he cared about the wild and scenic aspects, not that he was attracted to the state's unpopulated beauty. It was the mythology of fortune-seeking that he liked, the small but abundant niches in various markets in the state that called to him.

Because while it was true that Alaska had glaciers and polar bears, albeit melting and starving/drowning, it was a frontier in other ways too—a colony still in development, into which, therefore, generous moneys pour from oil companies and Washington. Ned had been right, I guessed, to see his future in a place where men loved both their guns and their government and corporate handouts. He liked the
cojones
of Alaskans, was what he always said, the way they swaggered like lone cowboys and professed to hate all vestiges of government but at the same time clung fiercely to the coattails of that government—both to their own small government and its big, rich uncle in D.C.

Anyway he'd rediscovered his Southernness. And he was on a first-name basis with Beefy John.

“How'd you know I was here?” I asked.

All of it hung at the margins, all was fuzzy irrelevance except for Lena—where was she, who had her right at this moment? I struggled to think of anything else, stalling until I saw clearly what I should do. I expected a decision to come: presently I would render a decision, a decision would descend and land on me.

I waited for it.

“I make friends easy, honey,” Ned said smoothly. “You know me.”

“ 'Fraid I got to close up, folks,” interrupted Beefy John, emerging from the back office, grinning broadly. The pink skin on his nose and cheeks shone under the fluorescents. “Don't keep Saturday hours, normally.”

That was how I came to scrape my keys toward me on the counter and follow Ned out into the parking lot. Trudging through the slush I considered the fact that Beefy John
had
opened the shop on Saturday and then Ned had been there. Conspiracy, I thought, conspiracy, I'd been stalked, I'd been tracked, I hadn't been paranoid at all.

Could Don help me?

I got into my car and of course couldn't stop Ned from following in his own—a rented SUV driven by someone else, some kind of bodyguard or other employee—in a dutiful procession to the diner a block down, a procession that made me feel like a condemned person. The diner served beer and wine, at least . . . and what could Ned do to me there, in broad daylight? I didn't care how early it seemed to be; it was a zero hour for me, the time of reckoning. I had to stay clearheaded for Lena, but also I desperately needed to calm down.

I ordered a beer.

STRANGE THINGS EXIST
, astonishing oddities—transparent butterflies, three-foot-wide parasites that look like orange flowers, babies born pregnant with their own twins. There are fish like sea serpents, fifty-five feet long, lizards whose species are all female; there's the mysterious roar from outer space, the contagiousness of yawns, the origin of continental drift.

What I want to know is whether the unknowns in nature are only unexplained phenomena or whether there are genuine anomalies—whether a true anomaly exists. I doubt that it's possible for an event to occur only once, to one person, and as I look and look for an answer the more it seems to me that what are called anomalies aren't unique but only symptoms of gaps in understanding. Some of them are just exceptions to the systems people have invented, showing the limits and biases of those invented systems. Or, in physics or astronomy, anomalies are names for states or forces that haven't been figured out.

It was always improbable that whatever happened, way back then, happened
only
to Lena and me.

a·nom·a·ly
[uh-
nom
-uh-
lee
] noun, plural
a·nom·a·lies.

1. deviation from the common rule, type, arrangement, or form.
Synonyms
: abnormality, exception, peculiarity.

I CAN'T RECALL
the pattern of our conversation at the diner. Ned, when he wants to, can have a way of saying nothing specific, conveying only a broad intent. And that intent was exactly what I'd been afraid of: he wanted Lena and me back with him, he wanted us to be his TV family.

His position, as far as I could tell—or his pollster's—was that he was much too good-looking to run as a bachelor or divorced man. And the fact that he was married was already public, so now he had to produce the wife.

No emotions were summoned to build a case for this, no passionate declarations or rhetorical flourishes; Ned simply projected his plan. He has the knack of power, I thought as I drank my beer and picked at the corner of a limp grilled-cheese sandwich, intermittently wiping my fingertips on a napkin. It was undeniable. No wonder he's running for state senate. This first race may be small-time but at some point it'll be a governorship or a senate seat, he's in that forum now, and then probably Congress, just as he'd said.

I wondered how I'd ever become connected with such a man, much less married to him—a person who's mechanistic in his view of others, an individual streamlined to exploit them.

We'd met through a woman I'd only half-liked who had a history at prep schools like Choate and a new, expensive silver-blue car, a brand of car I felt should never be owned by an undergraduate. She'd been a student of mine while I was working toward my PhD, a student in a class I taught as part of my grant package.

This woman had thrown a dinner party the summer I finished grad school, while I was still living in Providence and working as a cashier in a gourmet food store, after the assistant teaching gig had ended. (My family money wasn't given to Solly or me to spend as we saw fit; our parents expected us to work like everyone else. Much of the money Ned took came to us at our wedding, by which time my parents were apparently convinced I wouldn't become a wastrel. Now, of course, I wish they'd never handed it over.) I'd gone to the party because I was lonely and needed to feel like a guest for once instead of a cashier, needed to say something to someone else other than
Did you find everything you were looking for today?

Ned was at the party too, Ned the frat-boy Boy Scout, and somehow not a year later I married him. It must have been partly the setting that carried the evening: a rambling green garden with flowers on trellises and weeping willows and ponds arranged around a house with a colonial aspect, columns, wraparound porches, shining wood floors and chandeliers. I'd had no one to talk to there while my hostess was busy; I hovered awkwardly on the porch, looking out at the garden with my wine in hand, till Ned approached.

He'd been washed in those August colors, a borrowed glow that took a long time to fade since, unlike him, I harbored romantic delusions—that pre-nostalgic filmmaking of the self that separates events into vignettes and montages, curates time into a gallery of sepia-toned images. What were the chances of meeting someone like Ned, a man with movie-star charisma at large among the civilians?

Even as inexperienced as I was then, I was foolish to overlook the indicators of his mercenary bent, blind not to notice his edge of narcissism—an edge that was leading. I must have been quite stupid, I reflected, sitting across from him over grilled cheese. The selfish stupidity of youth had been upon me.

For a minute I sat listless, not even attempting to remove myself from his slick enchantment. In one corner of the diner was the man who had to be his driver or bodyguard, with nothing in front of him on his own table but a cell phone and a glass of what looked like iced tea. He wore a wire in one ear like a Secret Service officer.

It was laughable, I thought, to have a man like that working for you when all you were doing was running for a Podunk state senate.

Lena. I knew the Lindas would still be looking after her, as long as they could. For an hour or two they wouldn't even wonder where I was.

“Have you sent someone to find her?” I interrupted Ned after a while.

He was talking about television or radio, a program he'd been on or was going to be on, some anecdote to which I was incapable of listening. I wasn't mentioning the motel, of course, in case he didn't know where she was after all—in case the car-repair place had been his only touchstone.

“Did you send some of your guys over to where we're living? Is that what you did?”

Ned raised one arm for the waitress, who had already fawned over him. She smiled hopefully, her lipstick bright as she rushed over to our booth, and this eager subservience allowed me to see her as he would: a worker bee possessing only the slightest shading of utility.

Still, no being with any utility, however slight, was undeserving of Ned's charm when he was on active duty. He made small talk with the waitress while ignoring my question about our daughter. As he did so I weighed the advantages and disadvantages of running outside and jumping in my car and I decided that, on balance, I had little to lose. I had to get back to Lena anyway, sooner or later I would have to go to her and inevitably, if he hadn't already found out where we were living, lead him there. I was impatient to be with her again, to see her and be near.

And so, abruptly—while Ned was holding the middle-aged waitress in thrall to his shining attention and I was hearing her say she'd been married to three different members of the same MC—I rose and hurried out the door, not looking behind me.

There was no flurry of activity back there, Ned didn't ever tend to exhibit undue haste, but still it hadn't been two minutes before I could see his rented car in my rearview mirror.

I let out a breath I hadn't known I was holding: a childish part of me had hoped to lose him by bolting, though realistically I knew better.

I DROVE TO
the motel with mounting panic, knowing it wasn't the best move. But I had to be with her. I talked to myself as I drove, tapping the steering wheel restlessly at the lone stoplight between the town and the motel.
Of course he can't take her from me, with all his concern about public relations. Calm down. Calm down, calm down, calm down
.

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