Read The Mercy Journals Online
Authors: Claudia Casper
Leo yawned, I wanted to find out what was happening in the world. It’s been a while.
You truly live like a bum then?
Bum is a bit insensitive. There are places. Dormitories.
He gave me back my mobile. I checked the history and asked, what’s Occupy Now Gold Chat?
Some buddies from the old days. Haven’t seen them in years. I was mildly curious what they were up to. He got the milk out of the coolbox.
What happened with the leg? He nodded toward my prosthesis.
Garbage truck ran over it after Jennifer and I split. I don’t remember much. I was passed out beside a dumpster.
Mom and Dad would be so proud.
Yeah. We’re starting to make quite a pair.
We began laughing, and every time we looked at each other, laughed harder. Leo carried a kitchen chair and placed it beside the easy chair and brought in two cups of tea.
So, seriously, Leo.
Are
you looking to get yourself killed?
He looked away.
You know mobs have killed people for less?
He shrugged. I’m not sure more life is what the doctor’s ordering right now. He smiled thinly. I am bored. So bored I can barely be bothered to feed myself. Fatally bored. You know me, I don’t like having to cooperate and play nicely with the other assholes in the sandbox. I want to grab everything for myself and then not even play with it. Just savour knowing other people want it. It’s the way I am.
He was getting back in his armour. His eyes weren’t settling on anything.
Hence my mobile, I observed.
He glanced at me, then raised one hand as though he were a king graciously bestowing a gift.
One of the last pleasures of a dying man.
Those could add up, I had a feeling.
We finished our tea in silence.
I replayed Ruby’s presence in the room. It was radioactive. I crossed my legs to hide an erection.
I told Leo that the government had announced another amnesty period. All he had to do was turn himself in and he’d get set up with a housing unit, a job, a Callebaut, and a mobile. I offered to take him by the office the next morning. He said sure, sure, and asked if I had a woman.
Something about his asking put me on edge. I didn’t feel like sharing my sandbox toys.
Why, did someone come by?
He smiled.
Did she leave a message?
Not really. We had a good conversation though. Interesting woman.
Leo, I am going to help you out of your misery right now and permanently, if you don’t tell me word for word what she said.
A tactical error, I knew immediately, but there was no right move. I remembered the ease with which Ruby had taken her clothes off. I replayed the way Leo was sprawled in my armchair when I got home. His talk about boredom, the last pleasures of a dying man. Still, I doubted he would have laughed the way we did at the thought of our parents seeing us if he’d just poached my woman. Then I didn’t doubt it.
I leaned forward in my chair, hunting thoughts in his eyes. He looked back at me with a defiant glitter, then he crumpled. I will always be the one who had what he wanted and now can never have. And I have never really wanted anything he had. I realize now, writing this, that that picture of himself in the sandbox, just having all the toys and not even playing with them, is how he saw me in our family.
She was looking for you, obviously. I offered her tea but she didn’t want anything. When I told her I was your brother, she asked me some questions about what kind of kid you were, where we grew up. That kind of thing.
I didn’t want Leo to know I had no way to reach her. I didn’t want Leo to know anything about her. I wanted to make sure he never set eyes on her again. And I was thrilled she had come looking for me.
Where’d you meet a woman like that? he asked.
I don’t want to talk about it.
It’s not hard to see why you’d want to keep her all to yourself.
I remained silent.
Allen, give me some money for booze. Don’t worry, I’ll fuck off soon, but I have to have a drink tonight.
I bought him a half-litre of rye on the way to the dining hall. During dinner we asked about each other’s families to fill in the time. Leo said he used to walk by his old house and listen for their voices, but when the garden had been silent for a while, he stopped going by. He hadn’t had the courage to look inside.
It dawned on me to feel guilty that I never tried to contact my nieces. Luke and Sam used to bug me to visit their cousins, then they stopped. Leo and I forked our lasagne in. It had been a kind of madness not to think about my nieces during such dangerous times. I saw those two little girls with their pink
ATVS
and their big-screen
TVS
, their pom-poms and purses.
I got unnerved amid the clatter and talk in the cafeteria. Leo asked about Sam and Luke. He latched onto them as a subject. And I thought, why is he worrying about my sons instead of his daughters?
Allen, did you ever think they might have gone to the cabin? Did they ever talk to you about it?
Like I said, I was planning on taking the family there when things got really bad. The boys were young then, but they probably knew.
Allen. Let’s go. Let’s go up there. Let’s see if they’re there.
What about your daughters?
They might be there too.
I looked down at his empty plate and spoke slowly.
If the boys survived, they’re probably fine. If I start worrying about my sons, I will not be able to stay sane. My world is not big enough for that. They don’t need my shame. And I don’t need their forgiveness.
Leo was scanning the cafeteria.
Next morning, he was gone when I woke up.
I checked if Leo had taken anything, then fed my fish as my tea was brewing and my porridge was setting. I watched them eat while I ate and drank. The males have longer, lighter-coloured feathery fins, while the females are rounder, bigger, and more efficient. Three of the fish darted with golden brilliance after the desiccated flakes drifting down past the plastic plants to the treasure chest with skull and crossbones that Luke gave me, but the fourth fish, a male, remained hovering near the bottom. I tapped the glass beside the fourth fish with my spoon. It spurted forward a bit, keeled over, then righted itself. They never get better. I tapped again and the sick fish shimmied slowly up to take a few unconvincing bites of a flake on the surface. One of the other fish swam over and jerked the flake away.
The sick fish sank back to the bottom. I finished my porridge. The sick fish depressed me. I washed my spoon and bowl and went to take another sip of tea when, out of the corner of my eye, I saw the sick goldfish give a sudden jerk. Two of the others had muscled into its corner behind the plastic plants and—I saw it—one of them swam up to the sick one and took a bite out of its fin. The sick fish jerked again and moved a couple of centimetres forward.
I sprang into action. I got more food and tried to fob the sons of bitches off with extra flakes. The new food distracted them for a minute or two, but then they closed in again. The sick one flapped its tail and moved a few centimetres as they approached.
My father used to say that only man is truly cruel because he has free will and is conscious of what he does. He said only man kills for fun. I wish he could see this. Try to imagine, I’d like to say to him, two men, stuffed to the gills, so to speak, so definitely
not
hungry, taking nibbles off a dying man—biting off an occasional toe or ear lobe, unaffected by his cries of pain. They wouldn’t be
abnormal
men, I’d explain to my father in a deadpan tone, just regular, everyday guys.
I filled a glass bowl with water, matching the temperature as best I could to the tank’s water, and got out my green fish net. I should’ve just flushed the sick one down the toilet. Without a miracle from the fish god—who never seems to dish out miracles—it was going to die. But because this tiny brainless flash of orange was my pet, I felt responsible for it.
I lowered the net into the tank. The sick fish scurried through the plants to the opposite side. The healthy ones also fled. Piscatory helter-skelter. After a couple of passes and a flick of my wrist, I caught the sick one and transferred it to the bowl. I picked out a sprig of fake greenery so the invalid would feel at home and sprinkled in a few flakes, in case it wanted to eat before going belly up.
Experience has taught me that there is no green net in life. I have only seen the opposite. When the other fish in your tank attack, you need your own army to survive, no matter how many representatives you have at the
UN
or OneWorld’s Regional Council.
I scrubbed the green net gently using dish detergent and a nail brush, rinsed it thoroughly with water from my rainwater bucket, dried it first with a towel, then by waving it in the air, and returned it to its place in the utensil drawer. By the time I pushed the drawer shut, the tremors had come on and I had to get to work.
I was tired that day. Leo’s visit had drained me, but when I handed my scanner back to Velma and hung up my uniform jacket, I got a surge. Ruby! I checked the time on my mobile, thought it must be about the same as the last two times I’d met her. I lounged against the stone wall like a man with nothing to do but wait for a woman. I picked out the sound of her heels from a distance and waited with a silly grin. I invited her for dinner.
I live in an old office building near the original railway yard. It was converted to apartments at the turn of the century. Its front entrance has been boarded shut and a small door fitted inside the old one to minimize heat loss. I unlocked the door and held it open for her. We still had just enough daylight to make our way up the three flights of stairs with me touching the wall and leading the way. I got my key out of my pocket and lifted it to the keyhole. The air in the hallway seemed suddenly sucked away and a shyness came over me, which I tried to hide. I unlocked the door to my apartment, switched on the light, and held the door open.
What a pauper’s gesture! Come in to my garden of earthly delight, my nest, lovingly built to attract a mate. I had never really seen my apartment until this moment. Other than the one coat hook, I had taken no steps to make it home. There were no curtains, no pictures, no vases or trinkets or photographs. The place was the civilian version of a barracks. I also smelled it for the first time, the heretofore invisible scent of self, like the smell of clothes brought
out of storage—the musty skin oils that laundering never quite removes. The overall ambience would not be helped by the goldfish, now floating belly-up in the glass bowl beside the kitchen sink, luckily mostly hidden by a tall jar of oats.
Ruby ducked under my arm. Of course she’d already seen my apartment, but not formally, not by invitation, not with my conscious awareness. I followed her in, went directly to the living room window, and opened it. I invited her to sit in the stuffed chair, grabbed Leo’s bedding from the corner, took it into the bedroom, and shoved it in the closet. I had the thought of changing the locks; he was the kind of guy who would get a key copied. Then I picked up the glass bowl, holding it in front of me so my body blocked her sightline, and rushed it to the bathroom. I poured the contents into the toilet, briefly admired the beauty of my fish, and flushed, but the water pressure was too low to push even a raisin down the pipe.
I went back to the kitchen for a soup ladle. Ruby was crouching in front of the shelf under the windows, looking through my micro library. Her jacket had fallen open. She wore a slip of sky blue silk—an arresting garment in these times. Its shimmer reminded me of the fish’s scales.
Just be a minute, I said, and disappeared back into the bathroom where I spooned the fish out of the toilet bowl back into the glass bowl and, for lack of any better place, hid it under my bed. I came back out and put the kettle on, closed the window, put the soup ladle in a pot to sanitize later, plugged the heater into my battery, set it in front of her, and asked if she was hungry. Before she answered I
went to the coolbox, opened the door and announced, egg, sausage, and toast on the menu tonight.
She was back in the armchair, feet up on the ottoman, immersed in a book she’d chosen from the shelf. That blue silk clung to her. Starved, she said. Are you a decent cook? You don’t mind if I read while you work?
I can find my way around a frying pan. Read. More peace for the chef.
I was glad of the chance to get used to her presence without having to talk. I lay the sausages in the frying pan with a sizzle and stared out the window while they cooked, then broke the eggs into the pan and watched the tide of white move from the edges to the vortex.
She had ravaged me the last time and there was a predatory aspect to her now, like our family cat who used to pretend to sleep in the backyard while birds hopped closer.
I forked the sausages onto two plates, and the egg and toast, and called madam to dinner. I had one hand on the back of a kitchen chair while the other hung by my side, fluttering, as though I were playing alternating notes on a piano with my thumb and baby finger. She looked at that hand and lay the book down.
We sat at the table watching the goldfish while we ate. I berated myself for offering her dinner. It was much more awkward than just having sex. At least she was hungry. She ate voraciously.
Do you come from a large family? I inquired.
No. She took another bite and asked with her mouth full, Why?
Usually people who eat that fast had to compete for seconds.
No, I was an only child. I guess I just like to get to my pleasures fast.
I choked and laughed at the same time.
It was then I asked about her, where she grew up, that kind of thing. She gave me the thin version. A résumé.
I’m from Bellingham, former Washington State. Only child, older parents, both dead. Before the die-off I was a custom’s officer at the Peace Arch/Blaine border crossing. I did that for seven years. It got tough when people started trying to move north and the Canadians made us turn everyone back. The job got a lot better after annexation and all we had to do was direct people to the nearest resources. When OneWorld came into play I could’ve switched to doing city borders, but a lot of folks wanted that gig and I was done. I travelled for a couple of years, then I started performing. I sing and dance now to cover my rations and such. Though I could use a larger food ration.