black plastic and to drape the plastic with bouquets of flowers and bunches of cut ferns.
In a mood to punish himself, Joey stepped to the yawning hole. He peered over the
curtain to see exactly where his dad would be going.
At the bottom of the grave, only half buried in loose earth, lay a body wrapped in
blood-smeared plastic. A naked woman. Face concealed. Ribbons of wet blond hair.
Joey stepped back, bumping into other mourners.
He was unable to breathe. His lungs seemed to be packed full of dirt from his
father's grave.
As solemn as the sepulchral sky, the pallbearers arrived with the casket and
carefully deposited it onto a motorized sling over the excavation.
Joey wanted to shout at them to move the casket and look, look below, look at the
tarp-wrapped woman, look at the bottom of the pit.
He couldn't speak.
The priest had arrived, his black cassock and white surplice flapping in the wind.
The interment service was about to begin.
When the casket was lowered into that seven-foot-deep abyss, atop the dead woman,
when the grave was filled with earth, no one would ever know that she'd been there. To
those in the world who loved her and sought her with such desperation, she would have
vanished forever.
Again Joey tried to speak, but he was still unable to make a sound. He was shaking
violently.
On one level, he knew that the body at the bottom of the grave was not really there.
A phantom. Hallucination. Delirium tremens. Like the bugs that Ray Milland had seen
crawling out of the walls in Lost Weekend.
Nevertheless, a scream swelled in him. He would have given voice to it if he could
have broken the iron band of silence that tightened around him, would have shouted at
them, would have demanded that they move the casket and look into the hole, even though
he knew that they would find nothing and that everyone would think him deranged.
From the grave or from the mound beside it rose the fecund smell of damp earth and
rotting vegetable matter, which called to mind all the small, teeming creatures that
thrived below the sod-beetles, worms, and quick-moving things for which he had no names.
Joey turned away from the grave, pushed through the hundred or more mourners who had
come from the church to the cemetery, and stumbled down the hill, through the ranks of
tombstones. He took refuge in the rental car.
Suddenly he was able to breathe in great gasps, and he found his voice at last. "Oh,
God, oh, God, oh, God."
He must be losing his mind. Twenty years of all-but-constant inebriation had screwed
up his brain beyond repair. Too many cells of gray matter had died in the long bath of
alcohol.
He was so far gone that only another taste of the same sin would give him surcease.
He took the flask from his coat pocket.
Aware that a month's worth of gossip was in the making, the startled mourners at the
grave site must have followed his stumbling flight with considerable interest. No doubt
many, afraid of missing the next development, were still risking the disapproval of the
priest by glancing downhill toward the rental car.
Joey didn't care what anyone thought. He didn't care about anything any more. Except
whiskey.
But his dad still wasn't buried. He had promised himself that he would remain sober
until the interment was complete. He had broken uncounted promises to himself over the
years, but for reasons that he could not quite define, this one was more important than
any of the others.
He didn't open the flask.
Uphill, under the half-bare limbs of the autumn-stripped trees, beneath a bruised
sky, the casket slowly descended into the uncaring earth.
Soon the mourners began to leave, glancing toward Joey's car with unconcealed
interest.
As the priest departed, several small whirlwinds full of dead leaves spun through the
cemetery, exploding over headstones, as if angry spirits had awakened from an uneasy rest.
Thunder rolled across the heavens. It was the first peal in hours, and the remaining
mourners hurried to their cars.
The undertaker and his assistant removed the motorized casket lift and the black
plastic skirt from around the open grave.
As the storm resumed, a cemetery worker in a yellow rain slicker stripped the tarp
and flowers from the mound of excavated dirt.
Another worker appeared behind the wheel of a compact little earthmoving machine
called a Bobcat. It was painted the same shade of yellow as his raincoat.
Before the open grave could be flooded by the storm, it was filled-and then tamped
down by the tread of the Bobcat.
"Goodbye," Joey said.
He should have had a sense of completion, of having reached the end of an important
phase of his life. But he only felt empty and incomplete. He had not put an end to
anything-if that was what he had been hoping to do.
5
BACK AT HIS FATHER'S HOUSE, HE WENT DOWN THE NARROW STEPS FROM the kitchen to the
basement. Past the furnace. Past the small water heater.
The door to P.J.'s old room was warped by humidity and age. It squealed against the
jamb and scraped across the sill as Joey forced it open.
Rain beat on the two narrow, horizontal casement windows that were set high in one
basement wall, and the deep shadows were not dispersed by the meager storm light. He
flicked the switch by the door, and a bare overhead bulb came on.
The small room was empty. Many years ago, the single bed and the other furniture must
have been sold to raise a few dollars. For the past two decades, when P.J. came home, he
had slept in Joey's room on the second floor, because there had been no chance that Joey
would pay a visit and need it himself.
Dust. Cobwebs. Low on the .walls: a few dark patches of mildew like Rorschach blots.
The only items of proof that remained of P.J.'s long-ago residence were a couple of
movie posters for flicks so trashy that the advertising art had an unintentionally campy
quality. They were thumbtacked to the walls, pus yellow with age, cracked, curling at the
corners.
In high school, P.J.'s dream was to get out of Asherville, out of poverty, and become
a filmmaker. "But I need these," he had once said to Joey, indicating the posters, "to
remind me that success at any price isn't worth it. In Hollywood you can become rich and
famous and celebrated even for making stupid, dehumanizing crap. If I can't make it by
doing worthwhile work, I hope I've got the courage to give up the dream altogether
instead of selling out."
Either fate had never given P.J. his shot at Hollywood or he had lost interest in
filmmaking somewhere along the way. Ironically, he had achieved fame as a novelist,
=6= |