Thomas - Man Gone Down
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- Year:2007
- City:New York;Brooklyn (New York;N.Y.);New York (State);Brooklyn
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MAN GONE DOWN
Michael Thomas
Copyright 2007 by Michael Thomas
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Scanning, uploading, and electronic distribution of this book or the facilitation of such without the permission of the publisher is prohibited. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the authors rights is appreciated. Any member of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or anthology, should send inquiries to Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 841 Broadway, New York, NY 10003 or permissions@groveatlantic.com.
Published simultaneously in Canada
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN: 978-1-5558-4745-6 (e-book)
Black Cat
a paperback original imprint of Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
841 Broadway
New York, NY 10003
Distributed by Publishers Group West
www.groveatlantic.com
For Michaele
My wife, my love, my life: the one. Everything is for you.
We proclaim love our salvation...
Marvin Gaye
The Loser
If you came at night like a broken king.
T. S. Eliot, Little Gidding I
I know Im not doing well. I have an emotional relationship with a fishThomas Strawberry. My oldest son, C, named him, and that name was given weight because a six-year-old voiced it as though hed had an epiphany: He looks like a strawberry. The three adults in the room had nodded in agreement.
I only gave you one, his godfather, Jack, the marine biologist, told him. If you have more than one, they kill each other. Jack laughed. He doesnt have kids. He doesnt know that ones not supposed to speak of death in front of them and cackle. One speaks of death in hushed, sober tonesthe way one speaks of alcoholism, race, or secret bubble gum a younger sibling cant have. Jack figured it out on some level from the way both C and X looked at him blankly and then stared into the small aquarium, perhaps envisioning a battle royal between a bowlful of savage little fish, or the empty space left behind. We left the boys in their bedroom and took the baby with us. They dont live very long, he whispered to us. About six weeks. That was Cs birthday in February. Its August, and hes not dead.
Hes with me on the desk, next to my stack of books and legal pads. I left my laptop at my mother-in-laws for C to use. Shed raised an eyebrow as I started to the door. Allegedly, my magnum opus was on that hard drivethe book that would launch my career and provide me with the financial independence she desired. I write better if the first draft is longhand. She hadnt believed me. It had been a Christmas gift from Claire. I remember opening it and being genuinely surprised. All three children had stopped to see what was in the box.
Merry Christmas, honey, shed cooed in my ear. She then took me by the chin and gently turned my face to meet hers. This is your year. She kissed metoo longand the children, in unison, looked away. The computer was sleek and gray and brimming with the potential to organize my thoughts, my work, my time. It would help extract that last portion of whatever it was that I was working on and buff it with the requisite polish to make it salable. This is our year. Her eyes looked glazed, as though she had been intoxicated by the machines power, the early hour, and the spirit of the season. It had been bought, I was sure, with her mothers money. And I knew Edith had never believed me to have any literary talent, but shed wanted to make her daughter feel supported and lovedalthough she probably had expected it to end like this. C had seemed happy when I left, though, sitting on the floor with his legs stretched under the coffee table, the glow from the screen washing out his copper skin.
Bye, C.
By-ye. Hed made it two syllables. He hadnt looked up.
Marco walks up the stairs and stops outside his kids study, where Im working. He knocks on the door. I dont know whether to be thankful or annoyed, but the doors open and its his house. I try to be as friendly as I can.
Yo!
Yo! Whats up? He walks in. I turn halfway and throw him a wave. He comes to the desk and looks down at the stack of legal pads.
Damn, youre cranking it out, man.
Im writing for my life. He laughs. I dont. I wonder if he notices.
Is it a novel?
I cant explain to him that three pads are one novel and seven are another, but what Im working on is a short story. I cant tell him that each hour I have what I believe to be an epiphany, and I must begin againthinking about my life.
Want to eat something?
No thanks, man, I have to finish this part.
I turn around on the stool. Im being rude. Hes moved back to the doorway, leaning. His ties loose. He holds his leather bag in one hand and a fresh beer in the other. Hes dark haired, olive skinned, and long nosed. Hes five-ten and in weekend racquetball shape. He stands there, framed by a clear, solid maple jamb. Next to him is more mill-worka solid maple bookcase, wonderfully spare, with books and photos and his sons trophies. Theres a picture of his boy with C. They were on the same peewee soccer team. Theyre grinning, holding trophies in front of what I believe to be my leg. Marco clinks his wedding band on the bottle. I stare at him. Ive forgotten what we were talking about. I hope hell pick me up.
Want me to bring you something back?
No, man. Thanks, Im good.
Im broke, but I cant tell him this because while his familys away on Long Island for the summer, Im sleeping in his kids bed and he earns daily what I, at my best, earn in a month, because he has a beautiful home, because in spite of all this, I like him. I believe hes a decent man.
All right, man. He goes to take a sip, then stops. Hes probably learned of my drinking problem through the neighborhood gossip channels, but hes never confirmed any of it with me.
Call me on the cell if you change your mind.
He leaves. In the margins, I tally our monthly costs. We need to make $140,000 a year, Claire told me last week. I compute that Ill have to teach twenty-two freshman comp sections a semester as well as pick up full-time work as a carpenter. Thomas Strawberry swims across his bowl to face me.
I fed you, I say to him as though hes my dog. He floats, puckering his fish lips. Thomas, at one time, had the whole family copying his pucker face, but the boys got tired of it. The little one, my girl, kept doing itthe fish, the only animal shed recognize. What does the cow say? Id ask. What does the cat say? Shed stare at me, blankly, giving me the deadeye that only children can givea glimpse of her indecipherable consciousness. What does the fish say? Shed pucker, the same way as when Id ask her for a kissthe fish face and a forehead to the cheekbone.
I packed my wife and kids into my mother-in-laws enormous Mercedes Benz at 7:45 p.m. on Friday, June 26. It was essential for both Claire and her mother to leave Brooklyn by eight with the kids fed and washed and ready for sleep for the three-and-a-half-hour drive to Massachusetts. Claire, I suppose, had learned the trick of planning long drives around sleeping schedules from her mother. Road trips required careful planning and the exact execution of those plans. Id have to park in the bus stop on Atlantic Avenue in front of our building then run the bags, toys, books, and snacks down the stairs, trying to beat the thieves and meter maids. Then Id signal for Claire to bring the kids down, and wed strap them into their seats, equipping them with juice and crackers and their special toys. Then, in her mind, shed make one last sweep of the house, while Id calculate the cost of purchasing whatever toiletries I knew Id left behind.
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