The Little Sleep (24 page)

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Authors: Paul Tremblay

BOOK: The Little Sleep
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I’m putting along Route 3 in the right lane, going fifty while everyone else passes me. The flat two lanes of highway stretch out into
darkness, and the red taillights of the passing cars fade out of sight. I think about staying on the highway, taking it slow, pulling over when I get real tired and getting to Southie quicker, but I can’t chance it. I crash here, I’m a dead man, and I’ll probably take someone with me.

I’m already yawning by the time the first Plymouth exit shows up on my radar screen. Maybe I’ll show my movie on Plymouth Rock. I take the exit and pull over in a gully soon after the off-ramp. Need to reset my bearings, take a breather. My hands and fingers are sore from vise-gripping the wheel.

I light a cigarette and turn on my cell phone. It rings and vibrates as soon as it powers up. It’s Ellen. I let it ring out, then I call her back. My timing is good. She’s still leaving a message for me so my call is directly shuffled off to her voice mail.

Talk after the beep. “I’m okay, Ellen. No worries. Just so you know, the DA is crooked, can’t be trusted. You stay put and call the police if you see a couple of mountain-sized goons on your doorstep, or if any red cars pull into the driveway. Or if that doesn’t make you feel safe, go to a motel. I’m being serious. I’d offer to treat but I’m just about out of cash. I’ve almost solved my case. I’ll call you back later, when it’s over.”

It is possible the goons are in the house, have Ellen tied to a chair, gun to her head, the whole mustache-twisting bit, and are making her call me under the threat of pain. Possible but not likely. Sure, it’s getting late and the DA and his squad are desperate to get the film, but they also have to be careful about how many people know what they’re doing. They start harassing too many folks, the cleanup gets too big and messy. Then again, maybe I shouldn’t underestimate their desperation.

I can’t turn back now. If the goons want me, they can call from their own phone.

The cell rings. It’s Ellen and I don’t answer it. She must’ve heard my message. I’ll make it up to her later, if there is a later. I turn on the car, and it’s back on the road again for me.

Plymouth is its own state. The biggest city in Massachusetts by square mileage, and I’m feeling it. Drive, drive, drive. Lefts and rights. Quiet back roads that range from the heart of suburbia to the heart of darkness, country roads with no streetlamps and houses that don’t have any neighbors.

It’s a weeknight and it’s cold, so no one is out walking or riding their bikes. Mostly, it’s just me and the road. When another car approaches in the opposite lane, I tense up, a microwave panic; it’s instant and the same feeling I had on the highway. I think about what would happen if I suddenly veered into that lane, into those headlights, and I’m the Tin Man with no heart and everything starts to rust. Then the car passes me and I relax a little, but the whole process is draining.

I pull over and eat a few donuts. I pull over and take a leak, stretch my legs. I pull over and light another fire in my mouth. I pull over and try to take a quick nap, but as soon as I park the car, shut everything off, I’m awake again. The almost-asleep feeling is gone. I close my eyes, it’s lost, and for once I can’t find it.

Drive, drive, drive. The GPS says I’m in Kingston, but I don’t remember leaving Plymouth. That’s not good. My stomach fills with acid, but that’s what I get for medicating with black coffee and powdered donuts.

I think about calling someone, just to shoot the shit. Talking can help keep me awake, but there’s no one to call. I try to focus on the GPS, its voice, maps, and beeps. I learn the digital pattern, how soon before a turn she’ll tell me to turn. This isn’t good either. The whole trip is becoming a routine. I’ve been in the car long enough that driving is once again automatic behavior.

I sing. I play with the touch screen, changing the background colors. Kingston becomes Pembroke. Pembroke becomes Hanover.

More than ninety minutes have passed since the start. I’d be in Southie by now if I could’ve driven on the highway. That kind thinking isn’t helping. Stay on the sunny side of the street, Genevich.

The road. The road is in Hanover, for now. I flick the projector’s latches up and down. The projector doesn’t complain. The road. How many roads are there in Massachusetts? Truth is, you can get they-uh from hee-uh. You can even find roads to the past. Everything and everyone is connected. It’s more than a little depressing. I flick the latches harder; apparently I’m sadistic when it comes to inanimate objects. The road. Flick. Then everything is noise. The engine revs and the space car fills a ditch. My teeth knock and jam into each other with the jolt. The car careens left into bushes and woods. Budding branches scratch the windshield and side panels. I cut the wheel hard right and stomp on the brake pedal. The car slows some, but the back end skids out, and it wants to roll. I know the feeling. The car goes up and I’m pitched toward the passenger seat and the projector. The space car is going to go over and just ahead is the trunk of a huge tree.

Then the car stops. Everything is quiet. The GPS beeps, tells me to turn right.

I climb out. The car is beached on a swale, a foot away from the big tree. It’s pitch dark and I can’t see all that much, but the driver’s-side door feels dented and scratched. I crossed over the right lane and into some woods. There’s a house maybe two hundred yards ahead. I walk around to the passenger side and check the projector, and it seems to be in one piece.

“Now that we’ve got that out of the way.”

I climb back in the car and roll off the hill; the frame and wheel wells groan but I make it back to the road and go a half mile before I pull over again. The space car’s wounds seem superficial. Tires still inflated. No cracked glass, and I have no cracked bones.

The GPS and distracting dashboard aren’t enough to keep me conscious. I need another stay-awake strategy. I dig a notepad and pencil out of my coat and put it in the passenger seat. It’s worth a shot.

Hanover becomes Norwell. I’m keeping a running tally of yellow street signs. Whenever I pass one, I make a slash on the notepad, a little task to keep me focused and awake. Norwell becomes Hingham. I’m driving with more confidence. I know it’s a false confidence, the belief that the disaster has already happened, lightning struck once, and it won’t happen again. I know that isn’t true but after a night spent in a car, by myself, it’s easy to cling to my own lies.

I keep up with the tally marks. I play with the dashboard some more. I still get sleepy. I push on. Hingham becomes Weymouth. I pull over twice and try to sleep. Again, no dice. I walk around, take deep breaths, alternating filling up my lungs with hot smoke and with the cold March air. I pee on someone’s rosebushes.

It’s almost midnight, but as I creep closer to the city there are more lights, a neon and halogen path. Things are getting brighter. Weymouth becomes Quincy. Despite the late hour, there are more cars around. I let them box me in and go where the currents take me. Quincy becomes the outskirts of Dorchester. I pass the JFK library and UMass Boston and BC High School. Dorchester becomes Southie.

I’ve made it. Bumped and bruised, scratched, damaged, more than a little weary, but I’m here.

T
HIRTY-FOUR
 

 

I drive by my building three times, approaching it from different angles and streets. I’m circling, only I’m not the buzzard. I watch the local traffic and eyeball the parked cars. No sign of the goon car. My office and apartment windows are darkened. No one left the light on for me.

Time to end the magical mystery tour. I park on West Broadway, a block away from my building, across from an empty bank parking lot. I wait and watch the corner, my corner. There’s nothing happening around my apartment. Cabs trolling the streets, homeless sinking inside their upturned collars and sitting on benches, and pub crawlers are the only ones out.

I take out my cell and flip it around in my hands, giving the fingers something to hold besides the steering wheel. I’m not going to call Jennifer right now. Maybe later. Maybe after I watch the film. Maybe not at all. I don’t care all that much about what happens after the film. I just need to see it before everything falls apart and on top of me.

Phone goes back inside the jacket and the manila envelope comes out. I check that the photos are still inside, that they haven’t run and hid anywhere. The photos are still there, so are the young woman and those three letters. LIT, Tim’s signature. I tuck the envelope under the driver’s seat, a pirate hiding his booty. I don’t know if I’ll be able to reclaim the pictures later, but I want to keep the film and the photos separate, just in case.

I get out of the car and remove a small branch that was pinned under a wiper blade. That’s better. Here, under the streetlights, the damage to the space car looks severe and permanent, more a bite from a pit bull than a bee sting. Bumpers wouldn’t have helped, either.

I unload the screen and projector, the precious cargo. My muscles are stiff and the joints ache from the drive. They don’t want to move and they liked it in the car. Sorry, fellas. There’s work to do.

Screen lying across my shoulders and the projector dangling from my left hand, I hike up the street. I’m some limping and bent documentary director about to see my life’s work for the first time. I have no idea what kind of story, what kind of truth I’ve discovered, documented, even created. I’m afraid of that truth and wish I could hide from it, but I can’t. Won’t. Yeah, I’m a kind of hero, but the
worst kind; the one acting heroic only by accident and because of circumstance.

There’s a cold breeze coming off the bay. It’s insistent and gets trapped and passed between the rows of buildings, bouncing around like a ricocheting bullet, hitting me with multiple shots. No tumble-weeds, but wisps of paper wrappers and crushed cans roll on the sidewalks. West Broadway isn’t deserted, but it might as well be. There’s a distinct last-person-on-earth vibe going on. I’m alone and have been for a long time.

I make it to my front door and put my burdens down on the welcome mat. The door is locked, both knob and dead bolt. I feel so protected. My keys fit into their assigned slots and Open Sesame. I should have a flashlight. I should have a lot of things. I lump the equipment inside and I turn on the hall and office lights for a quick peek.

The office and hallway have been cleared and cleaned out, the carcass picked over and stripped. Only the file cabinet and the desk remain in the office. The desk is missing a leg and leans crookedly toward a corner of the room. It’s almost like I was never there. I’m a ghost in a ghost office. I don’t bother to check if any of my files survived the purge. I don’t want to advertise my triumphant return, the not-so-prodigal son, so I shut the lights off. The darkness comes back, slides right in, settles over everything, a favorite blanket.

The ascent up the stairs to the second-floor landing isn’t quite blind, since leftover streetlight spills through the landing window. I huff and puff up the stairs, then put down the equipment next to my door. It’s shut. Ellen’s peeps have already fixed it. I take out my lighter and the half-inch flame is enough to guide my entry into the
apartment. Unlike the office, my apartment has yet to be cleaned or even touched. The shambles and wreckage of my personal life are right where I left them, which is nice. Seems an appropriate scene as any for this little movie.

I scavenge some scraps of paper, find an ashtray, and light a small fire. The fire burns long enough for me to find two small candles in the kitchen. I light those. Don’t know if their orange glow can be seen from the street, so I get a couple of wool blankets out of my bedroom and hang them over the windows, tucking and tying their corners into the curtain framing. A makeshift darkroom.

I set the screen up in front of my bedroom door, which is opposite the blanket-covered windows. Next up, quietly as I can, because anyone could be listening, I clear out some space and bring in the kitchen table. Two legs are broken. I experiment with varied hunks of the living room flotsam and jetsam and manage to jury-rig a flat stable surface for the projector. It’ll hold the weight even if I can’t.

I take the projector out of its case, careful, reverential, a jeweler plucking a diamond from the setting of an antique ring. The projector goes on the table. Its dual arms are stubby and upright. I plug it in, turn it on. Out spits a ray of blinding light, a spotlight that enlarges to a rectangle that’s half on and half off the screen. I shut off the projection bulb and small pilot lights glow around the feeds. I read the manual. It has directions in English and French. It seems like straightforward stuff, but then I think I should try the other film I nabbed from Ellen’s store first, just a little film-threading practice. Never mind. I don’t have the time. I make adjustments to the height of the projector. I place the film on the front reel and thread it through the sound head like Ellen showed me. It’s working.

I fear I might do something to tear or snap the tape, this collection of lost memories is so fragile its impossible thinness passes between my fingers, but the film feeds smooth and the take-up reel gathers frames. A quick adjustment to the lens and everything is in focus. I stand next to the projector and the table with its two legs. The projector is doing its projecting. I’m standing and watching. The film is playing.

T
HIRTY-FIVE
 

 

White empty frames are accompanied by a loud hiss, a loud nothingness. Then the white explodes into sound and color. The projector’s speaker crackles with off-camera laughter, laughter that momentarily precedes any clear images. It’s the laughter of boys, full of bravado and mischief and oh-shit-what-have-we-got-ourselves-into? The bedroom is drab with its green bedspread and off-white paint-chipped walls; nightstand and bookcase are splintering and warped. A neglected, dying bedroom in a Southie project. The scene is fixed; the camera is on a tripod.

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