I heard my mother answer the phone. I could tell
by the grogginess in her voice it was before her early, which in some cases,
overlapped with my late. I didn’t have to open my eyes to know it was still
dark. I could feel it in the pit of my stomach. I have never been a successful
morning person, to this instant the thought of functioning before eight in the
morning makes me nauseous. Anyone
I have ever been acquainted with has known this to be true. By way of fair
warning or an unpleasant experience, didn’t much matter, it was nearly
folklore.
Something had to be wrong.
My mother yelled up the stairs.
“It’s Lisa.”
Lisa hadn’t spoken to me for nearly a year, until
that morning. A year I would give anything to not have wasted on petty
bullshit. I can’t even recall, with any certainty, what we had fallen out over
but I am confident it wasn’t worthy of silence, especially for such a long
period of time.
“Edward’s
dead.”
She said it just like that. Flat. As if it
wouldn’t kill me.
It couldn’t be true. I had talked to him hours
before. He was packing his stuff. He said he wouldn’t be late. I could barely
fall asleep, too excited to quiet my mind, knowing Wally was struggling
identically in his bed across town. I had missed him terribly. Edward joined
the Navy, regardless of my tantrum. He was no sailor. I was uninterested in his
contention that the uniform was a chick magnet. I had begged him, tears and
all. He went anyway. He loved that uniform and looked handsome, like Gene
Kelly. None of that mattered anymore. All of that was behind us now. He was
coming home.
“Erin?”
I had to be dreaming. I was overcome with a
numbness; a terrible fog that would plague me again and again.
“Did
you hear me?”
“Yes.”
I hung up the phone. I
got back in bed.
“Is everything ok?”
I couldn’t speak.
“Erin?”
“Edward’s dead.”
I remained in bed for hours and stared at the
ceiling. The phone rang incessantly. I heard when Wally called. I could hear my
mother comforting him, distraught, herself. He called repeatedly. I couldn’t
talk to him. I couldn’t hear the reality in his voice. It was unbearable in the
abstract, let alone in actuality.
By noon Wally was at my door. I could hear his
choking sobs as he made his way up the stairs to my room.
“We have to go see his mother. Eddie would want us to.”
“You can do whatever you want.”
“Please.”
His voice cracked.
I got up, brushed my
teeth, and, put on a baseball hat. My mother was standing at the bottom of the
stairs when we came down.
“Erin, do you think you should go over in your pajama’s?”
I shrugged and walked
out the door.
Edward’s house swarmed with people. I felt confused, light-headed, as if I
was visiting an alternative universe. I walked from room to room. I knew there
was noise. I could see the twisted faces of grief in every corner. The kind of
grief that is accompanied by wailing but I couldn’t hear it. His mother clung
to his most recent portrait, one that possessed the same smirk, as all of his portraits
held. He loved having his picture taken. It was remarkable how pleased he always
was with himself.
People spoke to me, hugged me, shook their heads
in disbelief, patted me on the back, I knew they were acts of condolence but I
could only see their lips move. The house felt hot and heavy. I needed to get
out.
I sat on the front porch and stared at the house
across the street. My old house looked back at me. Still, white in color with
dark shutters, innocuous looking to the untrained eye. The site of my earliest
and most vivid recollections, the headquarters for all of our adventures and, the
last place I had ever felt whole, the place I was originally broken. I was
barefoot, wearing sweat pants and a Grateful dead t-shirt, so worn they were
barely worthy of pajama’s. I felt my chest tighten and my stomach turn. I
leaned between the balusters and vomited in the front bushes. People milled
around as if it were a cocktail party. I’m sure they wondered if I had cracked,
literally and figuratively.
“You want to go?”
“Nah, I’m okay.”
“Really?
Cause you just barfed in the pachysandra and look like a homeless hippie. Your
mom dropped off some stuff.” He smiled, sadly. It was the first time I had
actually looked at him all day. He had aged overnight, as I’m sure I had, and
he had a suit on. I burst out laughing.
“You’ve had that suit on
all day? It’s ninety fucking degrees out! I hadn’t noticed how spiffy you were
looking!
“Says the shrub-puking,
bag lady! Fuck you. And a Sox hat? You know he’s a Yankee fan."
“Fuck him.”
“Yeah. Fuck him.”
We almost laughed. What we could muster.
I took the stuff my mother left and went up to
Edward’s bedroom. We joked that it had become a shrine since he had left for
the Navy. He was the youngest and the favorite, in that “absence makes the
heart grow fonder”, kind of way. I looked at all of the things he had
collected over the years. His rainbow suspenders hung from the back of his open
closet door. Boy scout badges, posters, drawings, decorated his walls, rocks,
seashells, a diorama of Rome he had been particularly proud of from 5th
grade, condoms, phone numbers, matchbooks, ashtray, occupied the top of his
dresser. A crucifix resided over
the bed.
Pictures were tucked into the wood frame of his
dresser mirror, various girls, but mostly picture of the three of us. Our high
school portraits, the wallet size, of both Wally and me, the three of us from
Lisa’s graduation party, me and Wally dressed as hobo’s for Halloween when we
were ten. Edward and me at our eighth grade graduation from catholic school, the
three of us, smiling, after making a seeming fortune, before we got in trouble,
for caroling for a fake charity, Edward’s going away party, the three of us in
front of his house, him in uniform, smirking. A Polaroid of Wally and Edward that
I took before they left for Boy Scout sleep away camp. I told them I was taking
it to remember them because I was sure they were to be eaten by cannibals, when
in truth, I just wanted to scare them into staying home, afraid they would have
more fun without me and never come back. I don’t know how he ended up with it.
Stolen is my best guess. He had total access to everything I owned and rifled
through it often.
A framed picture I had made for each of us sat on
his nightstand. Us three. Sharing a hammock and a cigarette the Thanksgiving
prior. The last time we would see him; our very last moment.
I lied on his bed and held his pillow to my face.
I closed my eyes and breathed him in, as much as I could tolerate; a vain
attempt to fill a void that would forever exist, Edward, my first penis, my
first cigarette, my best friend, my first terrible fog.
4 comments:
How you can take a gut-wrenching horrible, terrible, tearful moment and make me giggle, I'll never know. My memories of him were he and Debbie "dirty dancing" at school dances. The movie hadn't even come out and didn't for at least 2 or 3 years. They moved together and it was so rhythmical and beautiful. I never saw him without a smile. Again, my friend, you amaze!
My heart is in my throat.
Sick chick..
Life can be sooooo strange and so tragic, but sometimes so beautifully sweet!!! To anonymous - ain't nothing sick about the story. Sick is something created when people know better!!!!
Love you Red.........Ri
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