Offering Larry Scotch and Cigars
was probably the most desperate thing I could think of in an attempt to lure
him over here. The smell of whiskey
pollutes my senses when I greet him at the door. I can tell he’s already had too much to
drink. I water down the glass of scotch
in as much ice and water as I can so he doesn’t realize the difference. He’s sitting on the couch, slouched, his face
covered in stubs of hair from lack of shaving.
His divorce has devastated him
and has left him feeling so much grief that he can barely hold it
together. I invited him over for dinner
with my wife and I hoping that his favorite bottle of Scotch and fancy cigars
would pull him out of his state, but he seems more on edge than ever.
I join him on the sofa, doing what
I know best to comfort him. Larry’s my brother and we’ve always been
close. We were born eighteen months
apart from each other, so we were close.
Even though he went off and joined the military and got himself hitched,
while I went on to Architect School and became an architect, we still remained
a tight-knit set of brothers.
"How do you do it?"
He says to me. "How do you keep your marriage together? It's like mine just slipped through my
fingers and I can't put the pieces back together."
"Marriage is rough. It takes a lot of effort and commitment. It's not easy for anyone no matter how much
it looks like a fairy tale to everyone else."
He takes a swig of his Scotch
and puffs on his cigar, leaning back on the sofa, resting his head against the
cushion as he transitions his stare from the floor to the ceiling. Larry looks as though he hasn’t seen a razor
in weeks. His beard has overgrown his
face, his hair looks like a cue-tip and his clothes? Let’s just say if it hadn’t been for his wife
he never would have known how to dress properly. His shirt’s un-tucked and it looks as though
he’s been wearing the same jeans for the past three days. He’s not well.
"She's taking our son, did
you know that?"
I shake my head, devastated
about the news.
"Shit, I'm so
sorry."
"She didn't even ask if I
wanted him, she just assumed she had rights to them."
Amy walks in with a tray of
peanuts and chips and sets it down on the ottoman. Larry sits up at full attention; it’s the
fastest I’ve seen him move since he got here.
“I thought you might like an
appetizer before dinner,” my wife says.
“Thank you,” I say to her.
“You read my mind, Amy,” Larry
declares.
Amy disappears out of the study
and Larry slouches back on the couch, tossing some peanuts into his mouth. He sighs.
“I envy you, Denny,” he says. “You
don’t have an ungrateful, nagging wife who threatens you every time you talk
about going to Vegas every few months.”
A constant nagging in my head
insists on arguing with Larry’s idea of my perfect life. I try to keep myself steady, solid, as I pour
myself a drink.
“Don’t envy me,” I say.
“You have an amazing woman who
loves you and would stick by you no matter what. You don’t have to worry about her taking your
kids away if you got a divorce.”
Larry’s words are plied by
fatigue, scotch and cigars. It’s a painful and unwelcome reminder of the
trouble my wife and I have been going through in an effort to have children. We have been married for almost ten years and
have been trying to have children for five long, grueling and devastating
years. Years that involved fertility
drugs, and a miscarriage that has left us with a painful reality.
Amy has taken it pretty hard; She drowns her sorrows in a bottle of
Jameson, and one time I caught her taking a valium with the whiskey. I
snatch the bottle from her delicate hand.
She screams at me.
“What the fuck do you think
you’re doing?” I say. “Do you know a combination like that can fuck you up?”
“Leave me alone, Denny. This doesn’t concern you!”
“It does. You’re my wife! I have a right to know if you’re poisoning
yourself!”
Amy starts blubbering, her hands
shaky. She leans against the sink,
shivering and sobbing; her mascara runs like paint down her cheeks. The one miscarriage left her feeling pretty
devastated. She was six months pregnant
when it happened. No one suspected that
there was anything wrong; the pregnancy had been coming along so smoothly. The baby was at the right weight and size and
it was kicking up a storm, so we had gotten its room ready. Then one night, Amy woke me up, screaming in
fear. I spring up in my bed and I can
see her in our bathroom, standing there with blood dripping down her legs. Lots of blood.
We get to the hospital where she
had to have an emergency C-section. I
had to stand there and watch as they yanked my fragile son from my wife’s
belly. He wasn’t breathing, he wasn’t
crying, he wasn’t kicking. My son was
dead. I stood there and I watched them
wrap him up in a blanket and set him in the cradle.
“Is he sleeping?” My wife
mutters from behind the sheet the doctors pinned up.
“No, sweetie,” I whimper. “He’s
gone.”
I can see the pain in her eyes
as she turns away from me, her eyes filled with tears. I reach out to comfort her, but she brushes
me away. The horrible incident left her
in a state of severe depression for months.
“I just want the pain to stop,”
she sobs as she reaches for the pills from my hand.
“This isn’t going to help,” I
say.
“What the fuck do you know about
it?” She yells. “Do you know what it’s like to lose a baby that had been
growing inside you?”
“No,” I say. “But I lost him
too. You’re not the only one who lost
him.”
Rage and fury build-up in her
blood-shot red eyes.
“Get the fuck out of my sight!”
She screams.
She shoves me out of the
bathroom and slams the door. That began an
endless streak of sleeping in the study on the fold out couch.
Larry notices the poignant
disposition appearing across my face.
“Shit, man I’m sorry. I didn’t mean anything by that.”
“It’s alright,” I say
solemnly. “I suppose there is that
blessing in disguise, but I wouldn’t jump to the conclusion that my life is
anything to be envious about.”
“You have it all together, man. You have a successful career, a nice home, a
beautiful wife. I’m jealous.”
I kill off the last of my Scotch and set the
glass on the bar.
“What the hell good is a home if
it’s empty?” I say.
Larry sits there in a chilling
silence. I can’t say anymore. I run my hand over my face to hide the tears
that are starting to form and excuse myself from the study.
I go to the kitchen to check on
my wife as she’s cooking dinner. She’s
working on the salad, chopping tomatoes and celery. I offer to help, but she shoos me away.
“Don’t bother yourself with it,”
she snaps.
“I want to be useful somehow,” I
say.
“Keep Larry company.”
“I can’t. I need a break.”
“You can’t even handle your own
brother?”
She smirks.
“I thought you two were close.”
“We are,” I retort. “I just need
a breather.”
“You need a breather,” she says
unimpressed.
She stops her chopping and
glares at me. You could cut the tension
with a knife with that glare.
“Go then. We need coffee. I know you’re going to need it later if you
want to get those designs done for that project in Kirkland. One of us still has to make a living.”
She returns to her chopping and
I just stand there, the rage and frustration building up inside. I exit out the
backdoor without notice.
I hitch up our yellow Lab, Moses, and the two of us walk down to the
store. As oppose to the tension that
lingers in my house, there’s calm on the street. The street lamps are dimly lit as the warm,
spring sun sets over the Olympic mountain range. A combination of yellow, pink and indigo
paint the sky as the day becomes night and the fresh, cool breeze fills my
lungs with an air so heavenly I almost felt I were the walking dead. It’s therapeutic. The spring air makes it easier to clear my
head from the drama that surrounds the demise of my life, my brother’s life. I don’t know how much more of it I can take.
Moses and I arrive at Jake’s
Grocery Mart. His son, Jeffrey is busy
stocking the shelves with canned goods and greets me in his pubescent voice.
“How are you doing today, Mr. Morgan?” He
“Fine, Jeffrey, how are you?”
“I’ll be glad when school is finally over.”
I chuckle.
“Yes, it’s that time of year isn’t it?”
“Denny!” Jake calls from behind the counter. “How the hell are you
doing?”
Jake and I have known one
another ever since my wife and I moved to this neighborhood a few years ago. We
get together for poker games every once in a while, along with a few of my
colleagues. His store is the best place
to go when I need something and he always makes sure he has my favorite coffee
in stock.
Jake is middle aged with balding,
graying hair and smells of Camel’s cigarettes. The first few times I came in
here we talked about nothing but fishing and that became our bonding
point. Eventually he and his wife
invited Amy and I up to Whidbey Island where he took me out on his boat and
went fishing and crabbing. We are like
family now.
“Okay I suppose,” I say.
“How’s that lovely wife of
yours? Feeling any better?”
“It’s still pretty rough,” I
sigh. “She’s on anti-depressants now, but I’m not sure if they’re helping. Work at least keeps her busy, but when she’s
home with me it’s like everything is a constant reminder of our failed attempt
to have children.”
He shakes his head, hands leaned
on the counter.
“I’m truly sorry, Den. I sure wish I had words of wisdom to help you
through this rough time. Perhaps you two
need a vacation, get out of the city for a while. You can use our place up on the island if you
want.”
“I might take you up on that
offer,” I say.
“What can I do for you today,
son?”
“I just came to get some
coffee,” I say.
I spot my favorite brand on the
shelf and grab it. Jake quickly rings it
up, offering Moses a dog treat. I thank
him and Moses and I head back towards the house. I’m suddenly dwelling and stewing in my own
misery. I’m not ready to go back to the
house. Not yet. I’m not sure how much more I can handle Larry
the more he drinks and the way my wife looks at me with that pressing resentment
in her eyes. I know she blames me for everything. Somehow it’s always my fault. I should’ve gotten her to the hospital
sooner, or I should have stopped her from taking Yoga for pregnant women. There are different reasons why it’s been my
fault.
I live in the Beacon Hill
neighborhood and my house is conveniently located near the look-out point where
a lot of people like to take their dogs and take in a great view of the city
from afar. I lead Moses over to the bench to sit for a moment, staring out onto
the city and the rushing traffic that speeds by. The lights of the sky scrapers are a glow
throughout, as the fast lights of the rushing cars roar in and out of the
city. Bright lights from Safeco are
shimmering in the evening sky as the Mariners are probably on another losing
streak. It’s a nice place I go to
whenever I want to be alone. No guilt to
bother me, no remorse for Larry, just Moses, me and the city before me. I think of my childhood and how I came here
when I was a boy to watch them implode the old King Dome in order to build the
Seahawk’s stadium. I remember my dad
bringing my sister and I here on Sundays as we explored different parts of
Seattle. Those were simpler times. Now I’m not sure if there is such a
word. Between Larry’s divorce and the
miscarriage, the word is practically moot.
Moses starts whining and nudges
my hand. That’s usually a sign to head
back home so he can eat. So we do. I cut through the backyard to let Moses off
his leash and into the dog run. When I
turn to head into the house I notice through the kitchen window Larry and my
wife, having some sort of conversation and laughing about it. I watch for a moment. I’ve never seen either of them so damn happy
and engaged. I’m about to head inside
when I notice they’ve suddenly stopped.
They gaze at one another and I can see that spark that naturally settles
between them. It’s the look of longing
and desire and in that moment they lean into one another and exchange a long,
passionate and deep kiss. Now I feel
like the one who is drowning.
I don’t know what else to do at
this point. I just stand there like an
idiot, watching my brother make out
with my wife. Had they planned
this? Is this the first time? My hands start to tremble and I can feel the
blood coursing through my veins in a violent rage, coming to a boil. I
hold tight onto the coffee can.
Their lips part and I begin
pacing around in the yard. Do they not
even see me? Are they too caught up in
the moment of the kiss to even realize they just kissed in front of me? They stand there, gazing into one another’s
eyes, looking so blissfully fucking happy that I want to put a bullet through
my own fucking head. I raise the
canister of coffee to the level of my head and launch it at the kitchen window,
causing a loud bang that startles the two of them out of their state of
bliss. The dog is getting excited and barks. Amy peers out her window and spots me. I can see her lips moving, saying, “Oh my
God” as she stares at me. Larry is at
her side, mouthing the words, “holy shit” as he stares at me.
He comes out to the back
yard. If he comes any closer I will kill
him. I should kill him.
“I don’t know what you saw,”
Larry says in a calm and thoughtful manner.
“Fuck you! You know exactly what I saw,” I say.
“It was just a kiss, she was
upset.”
“Yeah,” I say unconvinced. “She
sure looked upset.”
“Denny, please come in the house.”
My wife follows Larry out into
the yard.
“What?” I snap. “What do you
want me to do?”
“Come inside and let’s just have
dinner.”
“I’m not having dinner with you
guys,” I say.
“Denny, please,” she urges me to
calm down.
“I’m not having dinner with him
and I’m not taking any more shit from you about the fucking miscarriage. It wasn’t my god damn fault! Okay?
I lost him too!”
I can feel the pain in my tears as I fight to hold them back. The pain infused with rage and hatred.
“Shit happens!” I say dismissively.
“How dare you,” she snarls.
“I hope you and Larry are happy
together,” I finally say. “I really do.”
“Come on, man, don’t be like
that.”
Larry reaches a hand out to me,
but I back off and swing my fist at his jaw.
I can feel it crack against my knuckles, pain shoots through my fist and
I shake it out. Tears are streaming down
my wife’s cheeks. I quickly grab the
dog, get in my car and drive off and head towards Jake’s. A few days on Whidbey Island sounds like a
great idea.
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