BOARDED WINDOWS
Boarded
Windows
A NOVEL
Dylan Hicks
COFFEE HOUSE PRESS
MINNEAPOLIS
2012
COPYRIGHT 2012 by Dylan Hicks
COVER AND BOOK DESIGN by Linda Koutsky
COVER PHOTOGRAPH Frank Gaglione, Getty Images
AUTHOR PHOTOGRAPH Sean Smuda
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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CIP INFORMATION
Hicks, Dylan.
Boarded windows / Dylan Hicks.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-56689-297-1 (alk. paper)
ISBN 978-1-56689-308-4 (ebook)
I. Title.
PS3608.I2785B63 2012
813.6DC23
2011029253
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks to Samantha Gillison, Nor Hall, J. C. Hallman, and Brad Zellar for their generous advice and assistance. Thanks to Chris, Anitra, Jessica, Tricia, Linda, Andrea, and all at Coffee House. My parents have always been wonderful and supportive: in alphabetical order, they are Don and Elaine Hicks, Robert and Terry Roos, and Margaret Stewart. Jackson Hickss talent, wit, and kindness is a constant inspiration to me. Above all I want to thank Nina Hale, whos even more impossibly great than John Coltranes solo on our apt wedding song, My One and Only Love.
CREDITS
Let the Wind Carry Me . Words and Music by JONI MITCHELL. Copyright 1972 (Renewed) CRAZY CROW MUSIC. All Rights Administered by SONY/ATV MUSIC PUBLISHING, 8 Music Square West, Nashville, TN 37203. All Rights Reserved. Used by Permission.
For Nina
Blue
T HE LAST TIME I SAW WADE SALEM WAS THE MORNING of December 21, 1991, through the window of a green-and-white taxi. I stood on the sidewalks lumpy mattress of snow and watched him toss a backpack to the other side of the seat, and pull off his pomponed Washington Redskins cap with a nod toward urgency. The taxi was overheated, its safe to imagine. I had recently turned twenty-one. I had even more recently lent Wade the backpack, in the way one lends out a quarter or a piece of gum. In the trunk was my former guitar, a midpriced acoustic on which three or four nights earlier Wade had played Gentle on My Mind and The Poor Orphan Child.
Somethingmy sticky-zippered backpack, or, more likely, the Redskins capmust have slid off the backseats slippery vinyl, because just as the taxi was about to pull out into the lane, its wheels creaking the snow, Wade leaned over (to pick up the cap, Im speculating), erasing himself from the rear passenger-side window, like I and millions of others had slide-erased stale sketches from our magnetic drawing toys, such as the one Wade long ago brought home to me, unwrapped, as an ingratiating gift. His head reemerged as the taxi made its first turn toward the airport. For a moment I lingered on the sidewalk, across the busy westward one-way from a pretentiously named Nixon-era apartment building, its mansard roof covering most of its face like the Fat Albert characters nonpomponed cap. The bare trees and dirty boulevard snow were aptly gloomy, but the sky was blue, seemed too blue for the nostril-stinging cold. I felt tired and brittle, wished my feelings of good riddance werent so mixed with longing.
Man with a Pipe
H E HAD CALLED ME IN EARLY OCTOBER. HE SAID HED heard through one of my erstwhile Enswell playmates that I was living with a woman, an older woman, he added, belaboring the jokey condescension. He asked a few questions about Wanda (only five years older than I). He asked about my mother. He said he was moving to Berlin, after a final tour of the States. He said something about Hank Snow and the incantatory power of American town and city names, and that hed be in Minneapolis soon. It was probably six days later, around midnight, when he called. Wanda was already in bed. Im at a pay phone on Lake Street, he said. Looks like Im sharing the corner with some working girls. At most he was ten minutes away, but an hour passed before he buzzed. He smiled broadly when he saw me coming down the stairs; the immoderate width of his mouth made it hard for him to smile narrowly. We pumped hands in the vestibule, somewhat awkwardly, either for emotional reasons or because, having left my keys upstairs, I at the last second remembered to stop the fast-closing door with my left foot (resting demi-pointe, it might have looked to a fanciful observer), and as a result was slightly off balance. Im still taller, he said. He was holding a yellowed pillowcase, presumably containing clothes and toiletries.
His American hatchback, also yellow and about a decade old, was filled, to an extent that would have frustrated visibility and fuel economy, with about a dozen square cardboard boxes filled with LPs. Loose LPs had been stuffed like Styrofoam sea horses in the cars few unfilled spaces. Quite a few discs had slid out of their jacketsWade always threw away the inner sleeves (the bunchy plastic ones he threw away with particular contempt)and I mentally cringed at how roughly he stacked and fingered the unclothed vinyl, and how some of the discs had picked up flakes of peanut skin and other car-floor garbage. These are just my country records, he said. I sold everything elseeverything, barring the car and the contents of its glove box, and the road atlas and the clothes off my back, as well as the clothes off my feet, legs, groin, and head, and a sleeping bag that I intend to keep rolled up and stashed behind your couch indefinitely. I nodded. And the few items in this pillowcase, he said, swinging the half-empty pillowcase till it wrapped one and a half times around his index finger.
Having forgotten to prop open the door, we had to buzz Wanda several times to let us in. She was a heavy sleeper like me. (These days I have trouble sleeping and suffer from nocturnal polyuria.) I staggered two or three ineffectual buzzes, then Wade stepped in to accelerate things. Shes probably incorporating the sound into her dreams, he said, buzzing with the resoluteness, I thought at the time (now I dislike the analogy), of a lab rat attempting to self-administer a drug, the supply of which has been depleted or removed. Right now shes dreaming of a reversing forklift, he said. I caught a whiff of the sweat-abused sheepskin lining of my calfskin slippers, my mothers last gift to me, it turned out, or last antemortem gift, since I did, only a few months later, begin to inherit some of her things. Wanda finally came down, squinted irritably through a quick introduction, and trudged back up to bed. Shes exactly my height, Wade said, palming the top of his head, extending his arm as if Wanda were still there to vindicate his estimate, then retracting his arm to scratch his head, whose hair, excepting one handsome gray cataract, was still shiny and black, as black as an Ad Reinhardt canvas in an attic at night, as black as the vision of the painted red door, the black of the blackest stereo component, the black that, like the song by Los Bravos, is black, with the same shoulder terminus I remembered, the same way of falling over his cheeks yet leaving most of his forehead rampart exposed, the same slicing part down the middle, like Geronimo, or Neil Young circa After the Gold Rush, James Taylor circa Sweet Baby James and Two-Lane Blacktop. (Although I see now from a photograph that Taylors part was softer than Wades.) Exactly went too far, but later I confirmed that Wandas and Wades drivers licenses each read 6-2. Of course, such numbers are self-reported, and my sense is that DMV agents challenge only the most outlandish misrepresentations.