Chapter 87 Of He
(专辑: This Is My Dinner - 2018)
At Oceana Apartments, a
breeze arises, blowing in from the
Pacific. The
balcony doors are open, and the
salt sweat scent of the
sea is on his skin, and on his lips, and in the
air that he breathes. His senses are more acute since he stopped smoking. Chesterfield, his brand of choice, provided the
finance for The
Stolen Jools, and he and Babe generated some income by advertising Old Gold cigarettes, although he could never smoke Old Gold himself. Either way, the
tobacco companies made their money back from him a
thousand times over, and now his is an old man smelling the
world anew. Lois, his daughter, calls him on the
telephone. He enjoys hearing from her, and loves spending time with his grandchildren. He could, perhaps, have tried fro more children of his own, but he chose not to. His daughter is to be his sole such blessing. Ida says that she always knows when Lois is on the
other end of the
telephone. He does not even have to speak her name. Ida can hear it in his voice, and see it in the
expression on his face. Before I
die, Ida sometimes says, I
wish I
could witness that expression on your face just once when I
call. If your tone is anything to go by, your face won't look like it does when you hear from Lois. He always hushes her. If he is an a
bad mood, he tells her that she sounds like Anita Garvin. Or Vera, although he only thinks this and never utters it aloud. He will die soon. He knows this on some animal level. He does not mind dying. He is not afraid. He will miss his daughter, and he will miss Ida, but he is now discarding days like small bills until all are spent, disposing of the
hours by writing letters and waiting for strangers to call. He is excited by new deliveries of stationary with the
Oceana letterhead. In another life, he might have been content to run a
stationary store, with ascending grades of material from the
cheapest to the
finest, and even the
poorest stored carefully to preserve it from damp stains. He retains a
small stock of expensive cotton paper, which he uses sparingly. He admires the
randomness of the
watermark it bears, so that no two sheets are alike. He has always been ambivalent about unpredictability, about disorder. He tried to impose order upon his life, and failed. He resisted the
imposition of order upon his art, and succeeded. In both spheres of his existence, he ultimately embraced chaos. These are the
subjects about which he thinks, when he is alone at the
Oceana Apartments. He is not sad about the
imminence of mortality. He feels that the
purposeful part of his existence ended many years ago, and the
best part of it concluded with Babe's death. He has never been a
particularly religious man. He and Babe had this in common. Reincarnation appeals to him, but only if he can retain some memory of the
mistakes that he has made in this life and therefore only if he can retain some memory of Babe. He does not trust in reincarnation alone to reunite him with Babe. He does not trust in reincarnation alone to reunite him with Babe. He does not trust in reincarnation alone to reunite him with Babe. He does not trust in reincarnation alone to reunite him with Babe. Fate, perhaps, but not reincarnation, because it was fate that brought them together, these lives entwined like lovers' limbs.