Close to Spider Man (4 page)

Read Close to Spider Man Online

Authors: Ivan E. Coyote

Tags: #FIC029000, FIC018000

BOOK: Close to Spider Man
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But the weird part was, Sylvia's dad had shown up at the hospital, snatched both of his daughters from the emergency ward waiting room, and disappeared with them.

Police were looking for them for questioning. They hadn't received medical attention, or trauma counselling. No one was answering their phone. Joanne and I speculated at length over the drama of it all, and my mom filled in the technical details: they were driving Mr Bryant's van. Mr Bryant worked with my mom. Helped her to fire Mr Wadsworth, in fact. Mr Bryant's daughter, the gymnastics prodigy, was in the van, and was still in hospital with a leg that might not ever work right again.

And Sylvia's sister, the virgin / almost doctor, had just gotten her learner's license not days before she rolled the van.
She was relatively unhurt, but just sat at the edge of the highway afterwards, eyes staring straight ahead. She was unable to move, unable to help any of the other injured passengers.

My mom related these tragic circumstances with small-town fervor, and attention to nuance.

“This whole thing is a mess. That Jack Wadsworth better get it together and get those poor girls into hospital or they'll never recover.” She tapped her temple twice with one fore-finger dramatically. “Emotionally, I mean. He is deeply dis' turbed. It's tragic, really.”

I wrote Sylvia a get well card and went by her apartment. No one answered the buzzer, so I tucked the little yellow envelope into the locked metal grate on their mailbox, and left.

When she didn't show up at work the next day, my other boss came up to me.

“So where's your little friend? She pulled a no-show on me this morning.”

I hastily explained the tragic circumstances to him.

“What, she can't make a phone call? You tell her, she does it tomorrow, she's outta here.”

“But her father is a lunatic,” I explained patiently, because he didn't know the nuances.

“My father is a lunatic too,” he returned without sympathy. “I can pick up a phone and call in.”

As circumstance would have it, I mowed the lawn at the graveyard right across from her apartment building that day, and with each dusty pass on my tractor I surveyed the building for any sign of the goings-on within. Nothing all day. My little yellow get well card was still hanging forlornly out of the mailbox. As I was driving away at the end of the day my eyes shot up to the curtains: all closed. Hold on; they were all open this morning, I was sure of it, she was up there, I could feel it.

Murder-suicide? I imagined her lunatic father pacing in front of the couch, her sister sadly dead, a virgin-almost-doctor on the floor next to the china cabinet, and Sylvia, duct-taped to a chair, unable to call out the window to me as I mowed the lawn and did her share of the weed whipping.

Because people who can't waitress very well don't screw up a summer job with the city unless they're dead, or duct-taped to a chair. This was my logic.

I explained the whole fiasco to my dad that night, over a scotch. He was unenthusiastic, but unknowingly the catalyst for what was about to occur.

“If you're so fucking worried about her, quit sitting here complaining to me about it.” He swirled ice cubes in his glass with a lazy turn of his wrist. “Get up off your ass, and go down there and pound on her door until someone lets you in.”

He's absolutely right, I thought as I putted downtown in my Volkswagen. Do something about it.

So I snuck in through the door behind another tenant and ran up the stairs to her apartment. I could hear subdued voices behind the door, so I knocked hopefully.

The voices stopped immediately. Silence, then the sound of shuffling. But no answer.

I pounded on the door for about ten minutes, explaining that no one wanted to press charges or anything, that no one blamed Claudia; the police just wanted to talk to them, and Sylvia, you should at least call in sick or you're gonna get fired. Please open the door.

And then I heard footsteps behind the door. Finally, Jack, you've come to your senses.

But then there was a noise, just behind the door. But it wasn't a door opening kind of noise at all, it was a small, barely audible, well-oiled click of … well, it sounded like

The fucker's got a gun! He's behind the door, and Jesus, that sounded just like a gun!

There are times when, faced with what seems to be a life-threatening situation, that an up-until-then-ordinary person performs a feat of extraordinary bravery and / or strength, and remarkably saves the day. They later tell the reporter that they just did what anyone would have done under the circunistances, and that they really aren't a hero.

But this wasn't one of those times.

I turned and ran out the fire escape and onto the roof. But there was only another well-oiled click, and the door shut
behind me, leaving me locked out, three stories up.

Needless to say, Jack didn't open this door either when I pounded, so … things were not really looking so good for the hero. Just me, the locked fire escape door, and an old ladder.

Of course I promptly propped the ladder up onto the roof above the locked fire escape door and climbed up. I mean, truly, what other options did I have?

I ran across the roof and dropped onto the balcony where I had almost accidentally touched her hand while sunbathing just days before; I ran without thinking, without one thought, it's true. I don't think I had one single plan in my mind at the time, but I felt so close to Spiderman that I ran right through the balcony door into the apartment of a lunatic who I thought had a gun.

I saw Sylvia, and her sister, too, still alive, for one split second before their mother pushed them both into a bedroom, and Sylvia's tear-rimmed eyes caught mine for one more second, and then she looked down, just before the door slammed shut.

Just then Jack clumsily broadsided me and I ended up on the floor, the Spiderman knocked right out of me. Then the door clicked, and I found myself alone out on the balcony again, three stories up, but with no ladder this time. I could hear Jack screaming at his wife to call the cops.

Escape would have been a fruitless endeavour, with my Spidey-senses gone, so I just paced the balcony rails, at first
worrying about being gunned down out there, helpless as a hamster. Until I realized that he probably wouldn't shoot me, with the police already on their way.

This was followed by a short period of self-doubt and remorse. There was no one else to blame for my circumstance. I had acted without thought or foresight, driven by adrenaline and misguided loyalty, and here I was, with nothing to show for my valour but a carpet burn on my elbow. Not even a noble injury. I had no rescuees, no reconnaissance. I had no cigarettes.

The police sure took their time; good thing I wasn't a real burglar, and good thing he hadn't shot me, because I wouldn't have had a chance. So instead what I had was a full-on stress-related nicotine fit, and while pacing the porch, I noticed that if I peered over the railing I could see my van parked askew on the street below, my cigarettes taunting me from the dashboard.

Finally the cops arrived, and I was ushered by a freshly shorn rookie officer through the apartment and into the hallway outside their front door. I did not see Sylvia or her sister, and apparently Jack had hidden the gun. I tried to appear humble and law-abiding, because for some reason the cop was treating me like the criminal.

“So, young lady, you want to tell me just what happened here?” He rocked back on his heels, thick cop thumbs in wide cop belt.

“I sure would. This guy is a lunatic, and he's had his whole family locked up here for three days and –”

Jack interrupted me.
“She
is the lunatic, I want her charged with break and enter – she pounded on my door for twenty minutes –”

“It was only ten.”

“– and when I wouldn't let her in she climbed onto the roof and broke in.”

“The door wasn't even locked.”

“She is a delinquent and I want her removed.”

“He is a paranoid and the police are looking for him. He.…”

The cop silenced us both. “Well, if the police are indeed looking for him, then that is police business. We do not need you crawling around on balconies for us, do you understand me? Now I want you to go home. And don't even think about phoning or coming by here for a couple of weeks.”

“A couple of weeks? He'll kill them all! They need trauma counselling, or they'll never be the same – emotionally, I mean.” I tapped my temple for emphasis.

“Who?” asked the cop.

“Sylvia and her sister.” Obviously he had not been briefed by his superiors.

The cop looked at Jack like they were both just humouring me. “Where are your daughters now, Mr … uuhh … Wadsworth?”

“They went to the movies several hours ago with their mother.”

“He's lying!” My voice was gaining in pitch. “They're locked in the bedroom.”

The cop rolled his eyes. “Don't be ridiculous. Your little friends are at the movies with their mother, and it is time for you to go. This is private property.”

Apparently the police and I had different priorities when it came to serving and protecting.

When I got home, my mother was not sympathetic, either.

“You should know better than to listen to your father. What were you thinking? You could have gotten hurt. I told you that man was a lunatic. Jack Wadsworth, I mean. Your father is just obnoxious.”

I never saw Sylvia again after that night. She never called in sick, quit both of her jobs, and went back to Montreal to become a psychologist. Her sister never finished her last year of medical school, and I heard that she married a helicopter logger and moved to Thunder Bay, Ontario.

So here's the epitaph: Sylvia called me once, about five years ago. She was going back up to the Yukon for Christmas, and she wondered if I was, too. She said her mom had said that I should come by for tea one day, when her father was at “work.” Provided, of course, that I came through the front door this time.

We both laughed, but not like we used to. We talked a bit, and finally she asked the question.

“So … I gotta know, I mean, I've been wondering all of these years … why did you do that?”

There are certain things that cannot be explained to peopie who have to ask, and I guess I shouldn't have been too surprised that she didn't understand just what went down that night.

After all, she never was a very good waitress.

EGGCUPS

MY MOTHER TOLD ME ONCE NEVER TO
take your eggs out of the carton and put them in the little plastic racks in the fridge door. No matter how domestic or tidy this action might seem, it is not a good idea.

“The fridge door,” she said, in that knowing voice that women reserve for passing on kitchen wisdom to one another, “is slightly warmer than the rest of the fridge, and the eggs won't stay as cold there, being on the outside, and what with the door opening and closing, you are far more likely to get salmonella. Far more.”

I asked what seemed the obvious thing at the time. “But then why would they keep on making fridges with little plastic egg cups in the doors then?”

My mother frowned over her glasses at me, shaking her head. “It's not a good idea,” she repeated firmly.

I am a disciple, and she a prophet, bringing household revelations to the unenlightened, and this is a commandment:

Thou shalt not use thine egg cups. Not a good idea
.

Of course, some years later, I made myself an egg cup omelette one night after a ten-hour work day, and spent the next three days in my tiny, bachelor's bathroom, repenting.

I used to hate it when my mother was right, but I've matured.

MANIFESTATION

I WAS WORKING IN THE YUKON AT THE
time, dry-air dirt under my nails, long days in the land where the summer sun seldom sleeps. It was six o'clock in the company truck, there was sand in my teeth, and sweat left shiny trails through the dust on my face. We had planted hundreds of trees and watered them that day, and I felt sunburnt.

My work partner Kelly was a sweet-until-you-crossedher straight girl, due in two weeks to marry my old hockey buddy, Barry Fuller, also a landscaper. His parents lived in the industrial area of town, and my uncle used to date his older sister Gale. Such is the small-town life, and its folks.

She was driving, and I turned to say something to her, but she interrupted me: “Oh my God, look at your face,” she said, red-faced, stuck between a laugh and a sort of half-gasp, eyes wide.

I tilted the rear-view mirror toward the offending face and looked at my reflection.

Sweat had run down my forehead and into the lines
around my mouth, and perhaps I had passed a topsoiled hand over my upper lip, or maybe scratched an itchy nose with a dirty thumb, but it was a magic combination, because there it was: a dirt moustache, worn perfectly into my top lip. Sweat lines and sprinkler spray had collected a perfect line of soil there, and I had been transformed.

I looked just like a boy. To me, I looked like my long lost brother would, if I knew him. To my work partner, I looked like trouble.

“Here, here's a napkin, wipe it off, you're creeping me out. You look like my first boyfriend.” She seemed a little nervous now, and would not meet my eyes.

“Is he a fag now, by any chance?” I asked, my smirk pulling up one corner of my 'stache. I winked at her. “I'm gonna leave it, it's kinda sexy, don'tcha think? I bet the girls would love it, if there were any dykes in this godforsaken land.”

She shook her head and shrugged like she always did when I said anything queer, and drove.

I turned up the
AM
radio, and sang along to a country tune about pick-up trucks, and looked in the rear-view mirror. Couldn't help but look in the mirror. My eyes kept returning to my reflection, like a tongue to a loose tooth. Myself in a moustache. Something about it fit. It suited me, I thought.

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