Authors: Cordelia Strube
âHow do you feel about dogs?' a tight-lipped queen inquires.
âI love dogs, totally. Canines rule.'
âWe'll be in touch,' the heavy-lidded queen says.
The harried woman removes the Nazi jacket and hustles the headless body out of the room. Stick
that
professionalism up your arse and smoke it.
he lovebirds sprawl, intertwined, on the couch, sharing a container of Häagen-Dazs. Pablo waves his spoon at Milo. âJava Chip, want some?'
âWhere's Wallace?'
âHe had to take Vera to get her hair done.'
âAnd drive her to a bridge party,' Fennel adds.
Milo digs in the fridge for the mayo and opens a can of tuna. âHave you seen Robertson?'
âNo. I went over to find out when Tanis wants me to stain the deck.'
âWas she all right?'
âPretty quiet. I told her about Sarah Moon Dancer's Family Healing Circle.'
âAnd?'
âShe said she'd Google it. She don't realize how hurt she is.'
âWho does?' Fennel says.
âIt's so sad,' Pablo continues, âbecause Sarah empowers families to embrace their gifts and abilities. She believes that every soul and every body bring with them divine wisdom on their Earthwalk. Where's Robertson's dad, Milo?'
âHow should I know?'
âWeren't you friends?'
âFar from it.' Milo mashes mayo into the tuna.
âDoes he know you're in love with Tanis?'
âI am not in love with Tanis.'
âHe stole her panties,' Pablo informs Fennel.
âNo way,' she says. âThat is, like, so totally romantic.' They stop talking and start necking. Milo takes his tuna outside and sits in one of the Muskoka chairs. Sammy didn't give a date. Apparently in the world of
Reality Check
, Sammy and Birgit go where the action is. If something more exciting than
The Reunion of a Lifetime
comes up, Gus will be bumped. They paid Milo only a thousand down.
The silence next door verges on haunting. Usually, on warm nights, Robertson and Sal are out playing fetch. The drawn blinds darken the yard normally illuminated by the light spilling through the sliding doors. Milo knows that no amount of knocking and pleading will cause Tanis to yield. He considers throwing a rock at Robertson's window but fears he might break it. Besides, the noise would frighten the child. No, Milo must watch and listen and try not to think.
âYou fucking Mexican!' Wallace bellows.
âWe can't help our feelings, Wally. You're not the boss of me.'
âYou call me that again and I'll fucking kill you!'
How insane with jealousy will Wallace have to get before he strangles Pablo? Does he have one true feeling for Fennel or is it all a pissing contest? Does Milo have one true feeling for Zosia, or Tanis for that matter? What is a true feeling? Sammy and Birgit advised him to show his true feelings on the show. âDon't hold back when you see your father,' they said, âcry if you want to.' Pablo urged Milo to show his true feelings to Tanis. Sitting very still in the Muskoka chair, Milo tries to feel his true feelings about anything: the newly risen Gus, Zosia, Tanis. Killing a child.
In college, a Buddhist harmonica player told him all that mattered was what he was doing in the moment. âAll the other stuff is meaningless,' he said. âDon't believe your thoughts, your thoughts aren't real. Just because you
think
it, doesn't mean it's real.' So how do you recognize a true feeling if you can't trust your thoughts? Do you trust a hard-on? The hockey player who dated the coltish runner told Milo, âWhen she stops giving me a boner, I'm gone.' A boner is an undeniable feeling, yet men are frequently criticized for thinking with their dicks. Why, when it's a true feeling? More true than Milo's relentless, untrustworthy thoughts chattering, contradicting, accusing. âDon't label yourself,' the Buddhist harmonica player cautioned. âThe more you label yourself, the more you limit yourself.' Milo's only label was president of the Quitters Only Club. The students with more ambitious labels went on to ambitious jobs with labels. They clung to their labels like bits of wreckage in a tumultuous sea. What is Milo supposed to cling to? Pablo says Tanis doesn't realize how hurt she is. How can she realize it if she can't trust her thoughts?
He climbs onto the trampoline and bends his knees, springing upwards, expecting to land on his feet, but the tramp jumps up at him, knocking him on his ass and bouncing him perilously close to the edge. He crawls to the centre of the tramp, stands and bends his knees only slightly to propel himself Âskyward. Again the tramp slams back at him, pitching him onto his belly. It looks so easy when Robertson does it. Several more tries toss Milo to all corners of the trampoline, alerting his cracked rib despite Vera's pills.
âYou have to keep bouncing,' Robertson coaches from his window. âPretend you're on a drum.'
Is the thrill Milo experiences when he sees the boy a true feeling?
âFlap your arms,' Robertson instructs.
Milo flaps his arms. âAsk your mum if you can come out and play,'
The lovebirds, chased out of the house by Wallace, climb onto the tramp.
âWhat are you doing?' Milo demands.
âWe just want to try it,' Pablo says, jumping in time with Milo.
âI won a bronze medal for tramp,' Fennel informs them, also joining the beat. If they break the rhythm, Milo will be jettisoned. âI can do somersaults,' Fennel offers.
âOh, this I gotta see,' Pablo says.
âNo,' Milo protests, feeling as though he is on a runaway train. Fennel spreads her legs and touches her toes in the air, displaying her thong. Next she hugs her knees to her chest mid-jump. Pablo, leaping in sync, applauds. Milo looks up mid-bounce and sees that Robertson is gone from the window. Perfect. He will join them. Tanis won't object to him playing with Pablo, her trusted handyman. The lovebirds bounce holding hands. Milo, for Robertson's sake, keeps jumping, although his legs are starting to burn.
The sliding doors open and the madwoman hobbles out on her crutches. âWhat do you think you're doing? This is private property.'
âWe thought Robertson could join us,' Milo says, spotting the boy behind the doors.
âThis is private property,' she repeats. She has never referred to boundaries before.
âSlow down, guys,' Pablo orders. âWe all have to slow down together or we go flying.'
âGet off the trampoline!' Tanis shouts, waving a crutch. If she had both legs she would be hauling them off it.
âIt's okay, Tanny,' Pablo says. âWe just thought we'd try it.'
âGet off it.'
âI want to play!' the boy screams from behind the door. âWhy can't I play?'
With the bouncing subdued, Milo is able to sit on the tramp. âWe'll keep an eye on him.'
âYou must be joking,' she says. âGet off my property.' The boy howls, banging his head into the doors. âStop that,' she orders. She never speaks to Robertson this way.
âYou can't lock him up,' Milo pleads.
âDon't tell me how to look after my child. Get off my property or I'll call the police.'
âPolice are
fascists
!' the boy shrieks as sobs tear his throat.
Pablo takes Milo's arm and helps him off the tramp. Fennel jumps down in one swift movement. âWe're sorry, Tanis. We had no idea.'
âWell, you do now. Keep out.'
âYou can't do this,' Milo protests. âHe needs to be outside.'
âWhat he needs are people capable of taking responsibility for him.'
âI will do that. You know I will do that.'
âI know you build wigwams, steal hamsters and kill children.' She hobbles through the doors and wedges her body between Robertson's head and the glass. The boy's cries are only slightly muted as she slides the doors closed.
âIt's like she's possessed,' Fennel says, swilling a
G&T
.
âWhat's she mean about you killing children, Milo?'
âI have no idea.'
âShe's totally changed,' Pablo observes. âShe don't even look like Tanis.'
âIt's really sad,' Fennel concludes.
âShe loves him more than breathing,' Milo says. âShe told me that once.' He tried to imagine what loving someone more than breathing would feel like. He wasn't aware that he loved breathing, although he understood that if he stopped he would be dead.
He tried calling Christopher but the hospital switchboard claimed he has no phone.
Pablo massages Fennel's feet. âSarah says special-needs kids carry a powerful medicine with them.'
âTotally,' Fennel agrees.
âShe says you have to honour the dance of the physical, mental, emotional and spiritual aspects of a kid with special needs.'
âThe problem with the politically correct term “special needs,”' Milo says, âis that we don't know what those special needs are.'
âMaybe they should be called unknown-needs kids,' Fennel suggests.
âIf we knew what their special needs were,' Milo continues, âwe wouldn't have to torture them day in and day out. We could set them up with what they specially needed and let them be.'
Stu phones in a panic because the queens want Milo to be Nazi set dressing tomorrow. Milo hadn't realized they'd started shooting. âDo I have any lines?'
âNot at the moment. You're replacing Guard Number Twelve and might get upgraded. Seriously, they liked your energy. Why didn't you tell me you speak German?' Stu hangs up before Milo can ask what happened to Guard Number Twelve.
Pablo rests his head in Fennel's lap. âMaybe we should get Sarah over here. She only charges, like, a hundred an hour or something.'
The door swings open and in stomps the carnivore. âWhat are you lot up to?'
âWho won?' Pablo asks.
âWe did, of course.' She has only been here a week and has already found a bridge partner. Within minutes she's munching crackers and cheese. âWhere's Wally?'
âUpstairs,' Pablo says.
Vera thrusts crackers and cheese at the horizontal Pablo. âYou'll get indigestion eating at that angle.'
Pablo sits up. âVera, Fenny and me have something to tell you.'
âYou're having it off.'
âWe couldn't help it,' Pablo admits. âWe love each other.'
âShe's all the stars in his firmament,' Milo adds.
âI thought as much. What's to be done? Just make sure you don't hurt my Wally.'
âHe's pretty worked up about it,' Fennel says. âThe truth is I never was his girlfriend. Milo hired me to act like his girlfriend so you'd be happy. That he had a girlfriend, I mean.'
âHe's not a pansy, is he?'
âDefinitely not,' Milo hurries to assure her, then wonders if, in fact, Wallace is a repressed pansy, which would explain his overcharged bullish nature.
âI had a cousin went that way and nobody down the pub would talk to him.'
âThere's nothing wrong with homosexuals,' Fennel says.
âDidn't say there was, ducks, just nobody down the pub wants to talk to them.'
Nazi Guard Number One is a marketing consultant.