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- One Sunday, driving Dolores' truck back from a provisioning
- trip, Pete stopped along the riverbank to watch a crew of panting
- scullers labor their way against the current. Their slender craft
- slipped around chunks of floating ice smoothly as a ballbearing
- sliding down a greased track. Got all the time they need to do
- that, he thought bitterly. Men who could go home to adoring wives
- and get up the next morning to go to work.
- In Lombard's General Store he met old John buying feed for his
- three geldings. The man's belly nearly split his overalls as he
- carried the sacks out to his car. Pete hid a chuckle.
- "You come back for coffee now," John bellowed.
- Pete could see no reason to refuse him. He followed John's
- rusty truck up a series of gravel paths, shook hands with his
- pretty wife. John eased himself into a great armchair. He bade
- her serve them their coffee and an endless succession of snacks:
- toast, honey, ham sandwiches, spiced drumsticks, maple candies,
- pear cobbler...
- When she was done serving she settled back on a kitchen stool
- and nursed her baby. Pete watched her play with the suckling,
- bouncing him gently on her knee. He knew, feeling the certainty
- only the superstitious know, that it could not be John's child.
- John had been a carpenter for twenty years. One morning he
- found the work too exerting and gave it up violently, pitching his
- toolbox through the window of the house he was building. He tried
- a variety of jobs after that, settling on delivering the Weekly
- Argus. He sat long hours alone at the head of his kitchen table,
- playing solitaire late into the night, gaining ten pounds a year.
- He always left a half-finished puzzle set up in the living room.
- Pete remembered the last time he'd been out to John's house.
- A selectman was giving Grandpa Goosehair some problems, badmouthing
- him in town meeting. The old man wanted Pete to see if John could
- dig up any incriminating tax information. John looked over
- everyone's tax forms, considered it his neighborly duty. He got so
- he could do the arithmetic so quickly that everyone brought him
- their crumpled forms: farmers who could only read with a certain
- pair of spectacles they'd lost years and years ago, folks who could
- read Latin but couldn't be bothered with figures.
- Pete'd got himself lost on nameless gravel tracks and had
- arrived very late. The ex-carpenter's wife had just finished
- showering and now stood before a full-length mirror. Her hips were
- swathed in fine linen, her arms left half-bare by a silk-finished
- nightgown. She braided her hair and rubbed fine powder and oil
- into her tremulous neck. John knelt on the parlor floor, his
- massive buttocks arching high, and rustled through a stack of
- papers.
- Pete grew distracted. He chose to watch the wife's
- ministrations instead, noting the care she used to touch the
- perfume bottles to her temples. During the day she slaughtered
- pigs, birthed troublesome calves, muddied her legs turning earth
- with the tiller. Now you'd only know she was a farmer if you
- looked at her fingers. Maybe she wore gloves to bed. He'd thought
- John would be paying more attention to his wife's elaborate ritual,
- but he seemed engrossed in his search.
- Problem, Pete had thought, if you lived too long together.
- Forget where you want to be kissed. From behind the wife did not
- look over twenty-five, though Pete knew she was older than he. Her
- hair was still dark--Pete could not decide whether it had been
- tinted--and her back was straight as his rifle-barrel.
- The ex-carpenter had let out a roof-shaking yawn when Pete
- finished his business. His wife pecked him delicately on the cheek
- and disappeared up the stairs. Her bottles rested in a neat row on
- the shelves. Pete had thought John would pad off after her.
- Instead he loosened his belt and headed for the couch.
- "G'night," John had mumbled, fitting a pillow under his great
- hoary neck.
- As Pete had entered his car he'd looked up again at the house
- which John had built at the start of his career. Every house he'd
- built since, he'd told Pete, didn't measure up, couldn't be more
- than an imperfect copy. Pete saw a candle burning in the wife's
- bedroom. It was a warm summer's night. She'd left the window
- open. A massive maple spread over that face of the house. He
- remembered clearly that its branches drooped below the eaves.
- Perhaps there was an extra shadow standing by the bed. He couldn't
- tell.
- Now Pete wiped a crumb from his lips and stared out the
- window. The branches were still there, ready to be climbed. A
- thick one ran past her windowsill. Easily take a man's weight.
- Could just swing yourself up to the bedroom, didn't have to be an
- athlete. John hadn't pruned the maple back, though it obscured the
- view from his kitchen.
- "You must be full up," John said, smacking the table with his
- meaty fist. "I don't see you shoveling it in no more." He
- belched. "What's new with your brother?"
- "You'd know as much as I would," Pete said. "Haven't seen him
- in a while."
- "Always rushing around." John smiled through a mouthful of
- crumbs. "Making his money move. Don't he never slow down?"
- "Never seen him do so," Pete said.
- "Damn if he ain't the by-God power in this town," John mused.
- "Damn if his word ain't better than the Good Book. I knew a fellow
- oncet, when I was living out to New Hampshire, thought he ran the
- town, but he never did so good a job as your brother--I ever tell
- you that story?"
- "No, sir," Pete said.
- "It goes something like this," John said. "Now you know how
- quiet these tiny New Hampshire towns are--there ain't no crimes to
- speak of. But the sheriff still walked up and down Main Street
- every night to remind folks he ran the place. It was a good deal
- most of the time. There weren't no bar fights 'cepting the ones
- the sheriff got his deputies to start. But then again, sometimes
- he got folks so scared they wouldn't take their cars out for fear
- he'd bust them for speeding--"
- John's wife handed him the baby. "Here," she said, "you stop
- him squalling, if all you've a mind to do is talk all day."
- The kitchen door clattered behind her.
- "Let me tell the man this story first," John called after her.
- "I'll be out directly."
- Pete saw her hoist up a bag of feed from John's truck and lug
- it over to the barn. The geldings neighed in the cold stable,
- their voices carrying through the clear air.
- "I ain't even gotten started yet," John said. "There was a
- fellow lived in my town, world-class sprinter. He had a little
- understanding with the sheriff's wife. Told me he came by her
- place regular, every week, while her man's out on night duty.
- "Now the wife'd get all excited waiting for the sprinter
- fellow, rush around the house getting ready for him. She'd pull
- down the shades in the living room. Carpenter said he put bolts on
- them so they'd stay fast. Sometimes she'd set him out a cup of
- coffee, put in a couple teaspoons of honey. That's the way he
- liked it, told me it gave him quick energy. That's what you do, he
- says to me, when you want to win the race: drink your coffee with
- clover honey.
- "Well, sometimes he was so flustered he got his trousers all
- loosened as he tore up the path to the house. Neighbor got shocked
- one time, saw a little more than she wanted to. Once he got to
- the door he just took a flying leap and--Pete, you can figure out
- the rest."
- "I guess I can," Pete said.
- "You bet you can," John continued. "Worked fine most times
- only once he soaked his big toe in the hot tea. It ain't like he
- ever noticed the pain.
- "Now the sheriff was an Italian fellow, name of Gianni. Got
- taken as a POW during the War, shipped up to New Hampshire.
- Learned pretty good English by the time he got released so he
- thought he might as well stay. He was a blacksmith by trade, but
- they already had a couple in town, and the sheriff was just about
- ready to retire. Had a pot belly--monstrous-sized--reined it in with
- a leather belt but you could still see it kicking when he walked.
- He was never gonna catch the sprinter fellow--nearly died of
- apoplexy every time he ran to answer the door. Minister saw him
- nearly collapse one time when he was going by the church, but I
- told him he was just walking away a little briskly on account of he
- was a Roman Catholic. Must've been his saint's day or what have
- you."
- The baby began to squall. John patted it absent-mindedly as
- he spoke.
- "Seemed the situation was likely to go on forever, long as the
- fellow never slowed down. Gianni got to play a few tricks on the
- fellow every so often, kid him around a little. One time his
- deputies grabbed him off the street and got him drunk, sat around
- him in a circle blowing smoke into his face and forcing whiskey
- down his throat. Curious-like to see what'd happen. Thought
- steam'd puff out of his ears or something. But he only
- collapsed--it took nearly two bottles, they told me, nearly two
- whole bottles, even though he was only a wispy little fellow.
- Didn't wake up for two days. But once he was back on his feet he
- swept Gianni's wife into his arms and ran up a woods track clear to
- Chittenden County with her laughing gales every second and telling
- him to mind he didn't trip over roots."
- "Did you say Chittenden County?" Pete asked. "Vermont?"
- "I did indeed," John said. "The one right here. Old Gianni
- was so shocked he crunched his cigar in half. Nearly had the pair
- of them killed when they got back. But later on he learned to take
- a more philosophical attitude, oncet he figured out there was
- nothing he could do. His wife helped him out a little--you know how
- women can take your mind off things. Told him no way she can be
- happy with a dynamo--just a bang, no build-up, no fuse.
- "I didn't know what to tell him. I didn't know if this was
- the kind of problem you could cure with your standard marital aids
- or something like that.
- "Oncet I saw Gianni buying the fellow coffee and doughnuts.
- He was waving this stinky little Italian cigar, telling him there's
- no difference between them, they're all brothers. Just that the
- fellow got hisself a higher metabolism. He had a point--the fellow
- was always drinking like he'd burn up, always kept a canteen in his
- belt, always dashed behind a tree every couple of minutes. Gotta
- keep the system lubricated. Motor got too many rpm, can't let it
- overheat.
- "You buy that? I'd like to, but I doubt there's a pat answer
- to everything."
- "I don't know," Pete said. "Ain't so weird. Fellow in the
- Guinness book who ate a whole car or something, piece at a time."
- "Ayuh," John said. "That's so. Well, let's see now~they'd
- just made peace when Gianni took his girl back to the Old Country.
- I got postcards from the Fontana di Trevi and Napoli and other
- places that I'll never hope to see. Fellow kept on running rings
- around me, asking when they're gonna come back. My little
- cousin--that's my little cousin Geoffrey, by the way, he'd be right
- out of high school now if he ever bothered to finish--Geoffrey said
- he caught the fellow jerking hisself off in the middle of the
- cemetery. He was cleaning up and coming again until he was sure he
- couldn't possibly have any left. Yet he must've got a second wind
- the instant he ran over her threshold--instantly got back in
- Gianni's bad books. Must've carried her right on up to the attic--
- "Now I was walking back from the bus station with old Gianni.
- He'd stayed for a couple drinks, sent his wife on home before.
- When he saw the door to his house was open, immediately he starts
- suspecting something. Don't be crazy, I says, don't be crazy, you
- just got home. You come with me, Gianni says, I'm gonna get that
- fella. That's okay, I says, you can tell me all about it later.
- I went on home--I didn't want no part of it.
- "I met Gianni next day, this is what he told me. He says he
- waited till he heard them sighing up in his attic. Then he went
- upstairs and watched them through the keyhole until they'd wrapped
- their legs up tight and strung out their arms across the cast-iron
- bedstead. He reached down slowly to his belt and loosened his two
- pairs of handcuffs--just so. His wife didn't even look up when
- Gianni snapped the handcuffs around her wrist. The fellow? Well,
- Gianni said he knew what was happening, his eyes were always
- darting around the room, but he never thought to do nothing about
- it. Gianni took his ankle in his big hands--he was a blacksmith,
- you know, got calluses all over--and locked it tight to the rail.
- Sweat dripped down the fellow's leg, made a mess all over the clean
- bedding. Gianni told me he just held his nose and went out the
- door.
- "Before their ribs started poking out of their sides Gianni
- took half the town, one-time 'r another, to look at them through
- the keyhole and point and ask questions. Hey, bud, I heard this
- old sailor guy ask him, ya got a naked woman on display there, all
- ready for fellers to look at, and... you ain't even chargin'? No,
- sir, Gianni says to him, never even crossed my mind. Later on he
- ground their bones up and mixed them up in his oats. Told me it
- made his horse run a mile-two faster."
- "Damn," Pete said. "That's some story."
- He looked up and noticed John's wife leaning against the door,
- one hand on her hips. The points of her teeth sparkled, catching
- his eye.
- "You ought never believe a word he says," she said, shaking
- her head. Her laugh rolled out deep as a growl.
- Grinning sheepishly, John leaned forward and slurped up the
- last of his coffee. Pete got up to say his good-byes.
- John's wife went hurriedly to embrace Pete, stretching and
- sporting her lean body before the old ex-carpenter. She smiled,
- showing all her teeth. Pete nodded quickly, ducking his head
- before she could kiss him, and hurried out of the house.
-
- - Neil Bernstein
- --
- nwbernst@unix.amherst.edu
-