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The Pacific Northwest
Literary Potpourri
Where Will You Spend
Eternity
by Beverly Carol
Lucey
Chester Dunn woke up at six on a late
January Monday, vaguely conscious of the kerosene smell from the
heater the family was using to save on oil. His tiny room at the top
of the old house had no curtains. Only mottled green shades blocked
the view of the house across the way. Chester kept them down all the
time, now that the neighbors had planted a “Where will YOU spend
eternity” sign in their front yard. The question bothered him.
His days on earth already had been an eternity of
thirty-seven years, a life all spent in the Village of Montague City
in the Town of Montague. The sign just before his house bore this
odd collection of place, this senseless conglomeration of concepts.
He faced it coming home across the bridge every day from the office
job in Greenfield, three miles away. On most weekdays he would
reluctantly cross that bridge. Some days he could get out of going
to work. If he was needed around the house.
Chester forced
himself to sit up in bed and accept another new day. He heaved and
grunted until his two hundred and seventy five pounds resettled in a
doughy mass around his middle. This was his room, the only room in
the house that was not shared. His cell. Not a prison cell,
precisely, but instead perhaps the cell of a novitiate, an acolyte.
He had wanted to be a religious brother, a cloistered one. Often he
would imagine the rolling grounds of a monastery. Quiet chanting
would fill the background, the silent meals and monastic peace of
such a place would calm his soul and stomach. He would let no one
get close to him, this monk. Celibacy would be a virtue, not this
burden. Instead he was trapped in the Brotherhood of The
Dunns.
Plus the church had changed so much since he first
dreamed of wearing a brown robe, and making jam all day. What with
everything that wasn’t a sin anymore, he’d gotten confused and never
sent in an application to join the quiet brothers.
Chester
rubbed his hand over his thin damp hair, poked idly at his navel for
a moment, then lumbered out of bed, hoping for a calm breakfast and
an uneventful day.
He was the oldest of seven. Not counting
his father, only one family member had ever left home for good. That
was Tommy, twenty-four, who saw the Alaska Pipeline as a chance to
be in a perfect land—quiet and cold--containing wild, hearty animals
and women. Tommy traveled a long frozen way from this suffocating,
crowded home.
Juleann, the second of the girls, had left
home, once, for three heavenly nights, and now there was a little
tyke drooling in the back bedroom. “And that’s what you get for
leaving the church, Miss Smarty,” Minnie, their mother, tolled
mournfully at any excuse, apparently sure she could be heard clear
to the back room.
Today she viciously squeezed orange halves
on a fluted glass ball made for such a purpose, as Chester descended
the stairs. He stopped at the bottom, one hand on the newel post,
reluctant to join the rest of the messy family, checking first to
see if the younger kids had already caught the school bus before he
entered the room. So much noise in the morning, if
not.
Chester saw Juleann playing with the baby in that back
room. Good. He hated the mess that babies brought. Pokey, seven, the
last one Minnie bore before her husband got killed, was securely in
his rocker facing the corner wall, his helmet in place, crashing
repeatedly into a carpeted spot Minnie had tacked up
there.
Grampa Amos had bolted himself in the bathroom. He was
eighty-two and wouldn’t ever come out of there until he was sure he
had made Chester late for work. But Chester had learned long ago to
say as he passed by the john door, “Grampa, I have to be at the
office by 8:30. Now, don’t make me late.” Since the office opened at
nine, he was always on time. That is, if he went.
As Chester
paused in the doorway, he watched his mother crack a half-dozen eggs
onto a griddle and pull the muffins from the oven. “Eat, Chester.
You’ll need all your strength. It’s a cold day out there. Them
roads. You watch yourself on them roads. A man could get killed.
Swerve once and that’s it. In more ways than one.” She looked at the
spatula that had yesterday’s egg still on it as if she was thinking
maybe she should clean it, but shrugged the thought off and scooped
the eggs with a short order cook’s efficiency. “Sit.”
Chester immediately sat on the large rock maple chair. A
place mat of The Hairpin Turn on the Mohawk Trail covered a large
chip on the enamel-topped table and suddenly reminded Chester of his
father. His father. Not gone to any Great Reward, surely, just gone.
Dead. Father, the traveler—selling festive goods for the paper
company. The state police had found napkins, paper plates, cups that
held drinks, hot or cold, spilled out along the highway like the
wake of some mobile party. But the woman found with him...who could
figure out that. Her cloth covered overnight case with big blue
flowers on it was found in the trunk, blotted across the middle by a
bumper sticker reading, “The Celtics Do It Again!” Dad was gone and
Chester ascended to the nominal position of head of this family. He
was needed, now and forever.
”You need me, Ma?” Should I go
to work today?” Perhaps he could stay home. One less trip in the ’67
Dodge meant one less chance of dying. He was afraid of his car,
bridges, and the interstate highway—a road he had never taken.
Chester feared meeting new people, dogs that waited in bushes to
lunge at his wheels, food from vending machines, and public rest
rooms.
He was allowed to keep his job as a clerk in an
accounting office only because he had been working at minimum wage
for fifteen years, never complained and did well the rote work the
CPAs hated to be bothered with. They put up with his almost biweekly
absences because he had a single-minded concentration that let him
catch up easily on work missed, and he had no need to socialize or
make distracting conversation with the clientele the way the young
receptionists did.
Minnie just grunted at his question about
going to work. She probably didn’t need him around today. Pokey was
relatively calm, Grampa could walk to the Senior Center and if
Chester were home he wouldn’t let her watch Another World. It was
opposite the Catholic Charity telethon today, which Chester loved.
She had to know if Mac and Rachel got back together and if John
would find out about Olive’s plan. ”Your lunch is in the fridge.
Don’t forget it.” As if he had ever missed a meal. “You go to work
now, Chet. We can get along fine today.”
Chester sighed and
yelled up to the bathroom for Grampa to hurry, knowing he still had
plenty of time.
When Grampa Amos came down smelling wildly of
after-shave and still skating his damp palms dry on the legs of his
trousers, he offered to start up the Dodge for Chester. “Lemme jus’
warm it up for ya, Chet. It’s cold out there. Don’t want to be late,
do yuh?” he cackled at Chester’s broad back as his grandson moved
past him toward the stairs. Grampa loved to play in the car and move
the wheel around, pretending to steer. He had been a gad-about years
ago. He supposed himself to be Grandson Tommy’s idol. He often said
the rest of the family was “fulla poop” the way they stayed home all
the time. “Fulla poop,” he said to Chester’s back as his grandson
trudged upstairs to get ready.
•After a longer while than usual, Chester came down
from the bathroom, looking distressed. He had been suddenly sick up
there, and although the feeling of nausea had passed, he wasn’t sure
he cared to leave the house, but he didn’t know how to introduce the
possibility of staying home for his own sake.
He opened the
refrigerator, reaching for the lunch bag his mother had packed. With
some suspicion toward its contents he nevertheless nestled it into
the left arm cradled against his body, still feeling unsteady. He
pulled his plaid wool jacket off the coat rack, put a wool cap
tenderly on his head and aimed himself out the door.
The
Dodge idled heavily in the driveway. Grampa had wet-toweled the
mucky headlights and kicked the snow clumps from the wheel wells. He
had also moved the front seat up so that he could reach the pedals.
Chester jammed himself into the driver’s seat, the wheel pressing
into the folds of his belly. He searched quickly, fumbling down the
left side between the cushion and car door, for the lever that would
slide the seat back. A tuft of puffy cuticle caught on a bolt,
ripping a bit of flesh. The pressure against his middle made him
feel worse as the fear came back on him. Sweat collected on his
forehead. Slowly he backed out of the driveway, breathing deeply,
looking for manic bus drivers, half-crazed dogs , and misguided
sleds that might barrel toward him. The roads never seemed clear
when he was on his way to work. Overwhelmed by the crowd in his own
home, it was becoming more difficult to drive into a world that
contained so many more people. Unpredictable people.
Arriving at 8:57, Chester paced slowly in the carpeted hall.
He checked the bathroom down the corridor for toilet paper, towels,
and Airwick. He plotted the time it took to get from the office to
the john, just in case it happened again. It looked as though he
could make it. The thought of being embarrassed at work...well, he
just couldn’t begin to think of it.
Galen, Sampler, and Walsh
arrived, the partners in the firm. Russell Crate, the newest
associate, just out of business school, brought up the rear. As he
shut the outer opaque glass door behind him Mr. Galen said, as he
always did, “Monday morning, four to go, so....le-e-e-t’s GO, men!”
Then the inner series of doors slammed shut.
Russell Crate
and Chester were left in the outer office. Each cleared his throat
and got to work, their backs to each other until lunch time. Russell
seemed to think Chester strange and after his first few weeks in the
office had given up all attempts at normal chatter, which gave
Chester a great feeling of relief. Chester was, after all, a little
afraid of Russell, who was young. And married.
Chester would
overhear Russell on the phone planning social engagements for coming
weekends—dinners, movies, even a party, once. It was Russell who had
been on a plane headed to Bermuda for his honeymoon. The daring
combination of air travel and conjugal assignation had upset Chester
for weeks. He had punched himself firmly in the stomach every night
for a month whenever his thoughts turned to the new man’s wedding
trip.
The work morning passed with out real event and the
church clock across the town common now clanged twelve. After the
three senior partners left for the noon hour, Russell rose to go
Strecker’s luncheonette, the local hangout for suited business men.
As he stood at his desk Russell asked, “Eating in, Chester?” knowing
the answer, but apparently needing to break the silence. Chester
surprised him with a new response. “Gee, I don’t know if I can eat
lunch.” He really needed to talk about this morning’s discomfort
with someone.
“Beg pardon?” Russell said.
“I’m a
little nervous about lunch today. I was sick this
morning.”
“What. Do you think you’ve got the flu or
something?”
“No.”
“Well, what do you mean sick,
Chester?”
“I was brushing my teeth and I stuck it too far
back in my throat and I threw up. Do you think I can eat yet? I’m
kinda hungry but I wouldn’t want to...you know...” he drifted off,
aware of not having spoken so much at one time outside his own home.
It was as though a vow of a particular perpetual silence had been
broken.
“Live dangerously, Chester. Eat your lunch,” Russell
said and left quickly. Chester ate slowly, letting the bread almost
dissolve before swallowing, testing his digestion. Everything was
working OK, it seemed.
At one, the bosses and Russell came
back. Mr. Sampler called Chester into his office, an unusual
occurrence, since work was usually left on Chester’s desk when he
came in each morning. Chester valued the routine; this summons was
upsetting. He moved like a slug into the brown-toned office.
Mr. Sampler shot both cuffs out of his sleeves and stacked
papers randomly as he spoke. He avoided Chester’s eyes, staring
mostly at the tomato seed hardening on Chester’s white collar.
“Chester. Got a little errand for you. Need some books from
Bernardston. Kamen brothers. They’ll expect you by quarter to two.
Go down Main Street to the rotary, get on 91 North. Second exit says
Northfield. Take that. It’s just down the ramp. Kamen Brothers. You
got that? Hmmn? ” No response seemed to be coming from the large,
round man. “Good-bye, Chester.” He waved Chester away with two short
motions and bent down to a side drawer, as if he were really
searching for a file.
Chester stood in place for a long
moment, hoping this was a joke. How could he go? Three traffic
lights lurked down that way. Mr. Sampler knew what he was asking,
how impossible this request was. They’d had an understanding from
the start. Why would he ask him to get on the highway, as though
this were a normal errand? Chester would always follow orders,
but...oh... Until now they were always inside orders—to the copier,
to the UPS pick up box, to the storage room.
He walked
stiffly to the coat tree and paused hand in mid-air before lifting
his jacket off the hook. He fished in his coat sleeve, but forgot to
complete the motion, thus leaving the garment hanging off one
shoulder. As he gazed wildly around the office, he felt sick. Just
sick.
Slowly he made his way down the stairs to the small
parking lot in the back of the building. He slumped onto the front
seat, hardly able to lift his legs toward the pedals. A rotary. Cars
oozing in and out from all directions. He hugged the wheel
desperately, half sobbing. Route 91 North. What had he done to
deserve this punishment? He turned the motor on; he needed heat. The
orders, the directions came back on him, “Turn down onto a ramp. Oh.
God. Please. Bless me Father for I have sinned. Forgive me Father, I
know not what I do. It has been two weeks since my last...” he was
mumbling and gibbering in the cold.
He would have to try to
drive in a new direction. He was being tested. That must be it.
Suddenly the thought of losing this job frightened him even more
than picturing himself heading toward the highway. He’d show them.
By golly, he would. Backing carefully out in the now steaming car,
after squealing the fog off the inside windshield with his jacket
sleeve, Chester hesitated in the parking lot driveway for fifteen
minutes, first making sure that no cars were coming in either
direction and then waiting until four green ones passed by, to bring
him luck.
Crossing himself as he passed two Catholic
churches, at great risk, since it meant taking one hand off the
wheel, Chester realized he’d made it through two of the three signal
lights. Due to the road conditions, and time of day, little traffic
from shoppers clogged the streets. Chester worked on calming his
overactive heart. The same heart that was causing his face to boil
and his brow to drip.
He passed the dry cleaners, the Italian
restaurant, Sears, Party-rama, two gas stations, Dunkin Donuts and a
U-Haul Rental place. Suddenly a shadow sped just beyond the field of
vision in his right eye. Perhaps he felt it more than saw it,
whatever it was. A dog? A little child? He squashed the brake pedal,
skidded sideways and wound up in a snowbank.
After a few
minutes of resting his head on the steering wheel, trying not to
lose consciousness, he lifted his eyes and peered around. No one was
on the street. Snow blew more thickly than before. He felt his eye
brow because the world looked red out of his left eye. A large
bleeding bump deposited rusty spots on his hand, then his
handkerchief. But what about the dog, or the lost child?
Chester fidgeted with the door handle, forgetting how it
worked for some long minutes. After he made his clumsy way out, he
looked under the car hoping there would be no more blood on this
day. He gouged his right hand while feeling up under the pipe work,
so, nothing in pain under the chassis except for Chester. There was
nothing else at all. No dog whimpering and threatening to bite off
his numb nose. No little boy looking at a grownup who had betrayed
him, and made him suffer.
Leaning with both hands on the
still warm hood, Chester tried to remain conscious. Most of the
stores had closed early. His rubbers were filled with slush. He
couldn’t go on. But he certainly couldn’t stay there. Remembering a
sack of cat litter in his trunk, one his mother had made him buy to
pour on slick front steps, Chester attempted to open the back lid of
the car. His shaking hands couldn’t fit the key in the slot for the
first ten tries.
Somehow he managed to pour enough Tidy Cat
for traction on the back wheels and, in the still empty street,
broke the law by making a U-Turn in the middle of Federal Avenue.
Yellow blinking lights and a few slow skids brought him back to the
office. Two hours had passed. He had traveled one long mile for his
efforts.
In the back parking lot, Chester idled in the car
until four forty-five. Cold, blue, and broken, he had failed at his
mission. He was a bad, bad employee. They had tested him and he had
failed. What now?
After what seemed like an eternity,
Chester, ever so slowly leaned forward and turned the lone key to
the off position, while staring at the statue of St. Christopher,
who had recently been demoted. The car settled into absolute quiet,
except for a clicking in the engine. This metallic response sounded
like some unseen hand snapping its fingers impatiently.
Chester left the car, his shoulders slumped over, and
plodded to the back door of the building. Then he climbed upstairs,
staying to the center of the worn rubber runners and told his first
lie, his first lie ever. Add this onto breaking a law. Chester felt
like both a felon and a sinner.
The partners were all
standing casually around Russell Crate’s desk when he entered the
office. They acted surprised when he came in, empty handed.
Chester said he couldn’t find the place, knowing all the
while they could have taken long looks from Mr. Sampler’s office or
the reception area. They would have seen his car sitting there
throughout much of the afternoon. In fact, when he had cranked his
thick neck around awkwardly to look up toward his window and desk
before he left the Dodge just now, he saw Russell staring down,
hands casually in the pockets of his pants.
Chester then did
what he was meant to do: resigned. All the partners nodded. Mr.
Sampler pulled his offered hand back as he noted the bloody,
encrusted one that Chester held out.
As he turned, his head
bowed, and left for what now seem the sanctuary of home, Chester
hoped they, at least, would still have him.
###
Beverly Carol Lucey has published short fiction in
Portland Maine Magazine, Flint River Review 1999 (GA), Moxie
Winter edition 2000 (CA) Four stories are anthologized in We
Teach Them All (Stenhouse Press, Maine). Another is in the
Quality Women’s Fiction, 2001 (UK). Four non-fiction pieces will
appear in upcoming editions of the inspirational Chocolate for
Women series.
Extensive presence online include ezines:
Zoetrope All Story Extra, Vestal Review, CollectedStories.com,
and Millennium Shift.
The author, a life long educator,
lives in Georgia, and is a member of the Georgia Writers
Association.
Visit her websites: THE LANGUAGE
WRANGLER on education.
POODLE PRESS -
for animal lovers.
A WOMAN
OF A CERTAIN AGE for humor and fun.
ETHICAL OASIS
for everyday ethics.
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