Authors: Cordelia Strube
âOh, I love that. Have him say that. And smoke and whistle.'
How marvellous to stub out a cigarette on a prosthetic cheek â the magic of movies. âBrilliant,' the director said. Guard Number One and Prisoner Number Ten congratulated him â although Number One made it clear that he still has more lines â and invited him to a sports bar.
âThis knob one of my exes picked up,' Number One says, âwe're talking a total loser. He's not even good-looking
and
he's overweight. You know what she says about him?'
âWhat?' the prisoner asks.
âShe says, “Something shines through him.” What a crock.'
âMaybe something does,' Milo says.
âLike what?'
âI know this short, nondescript Cuban. Girls are crazy about him.'
âYeah, well,
he's
got the Latino thing going, this guy is total white bread.'
âWomen never want what they say they want,' the Prisoner advises. â
My
ex always said she wanted a kind and sensitive guy but then she went for the exact opposite.'
âIt was interesting what Guard Number Eight said about our feminine sides,' Milo comments.
âThat fag said something interesting?' Number One says.
âWhat did he say?' the Prisoner asks.
âOh, something about how we're always beating up on our feminine sides. Maybe that's what's wrong with the world. If our feminine sides were allowed to flourish, there would be no wars.'
âI doubt that, buddy boy. Try dating one of my exes.'
When Gus beat up on Annie was he beating up on his feminine side? Kick the shit out of your wife and you'll be a man? He didn't actually kick her â it was all verbal abuse except when he threw food. Once he hit her in the face with a meatball. It was almost funny.
âMy exes,' Number One says, âgiven the opportunity, would cut off my balls and shove them down my throat.'
âI felt that way about
my
ex,' the Prisoner admits, âuntil we met at our high school reunion and she asked me to dance. It was a tender moment. I was her first. She said she'd always cherish that.'
âThen she went off to ball a rock star,' Number One says.
âActually, a forklift driver.'
âCan I get you boys anything else?' a chesty waitress in a tank top asks.
âAnother round,' Number One says.
âDo you think we're scared to tell the truth?' Milo asks.
âWhat truth?' Number One wipes sweat off his forehead.
âDo you think men are more scared to tell the truth than women?'
âTruth is subjective,' the Prisoner points out.
âOkay, so are men more scared to reveal their subjective truths than women?'
The Prisoner munches peanuts and Number One drains his beer.
âI have a friend,' Milo says, âwho doesn't tell his mother stuff because he's afraid she'll get miffed.'
âMakes sense,' Number One concedes.
âBut that means he's lying.'
âSo?'
âLying is wrong.'
âAre you one of those numbnuts who want honest relationships?'
âOf course.'
Number One snorts and the Prisoner snickers.
âI don't want to lie to loved ones,' Milo insists. âThat's insane.'
âAt least that way you don't hurt anybody,' the Prisoner points out.
âI think you're wrong. I think by lying, we hurt our loved ones more.' The beer and the euphoria generated by today's movie magic have led Milo to believe he might be thinking profound thoughts. Can he trust them when his thoughts aren't real?
Number One yawns. âI lie to my mother constantly.'
âMe too,' the Prisoner admits. âKeeps her happy.'
âBut that's outrageous, that's ⦠that's so counterproductive.'
âYou don't lie to your mother?' Number One asks.
âMy mother's dead.'
âOops.'
âI'm so sorry,' the Prisoner says.
âThat's why you're thinking about women all the time,' Number One Âconcludes.
âIs it?'
âNo doubt about it. I knew a guy, his mom died in a car accident when he was ten and he spent the rest of his life sanctifying her, and let me tell you, no woman could live up to her image.'
âI don't think that's the case with me. I mean, my mother was an alcoholic.'
âNo shit? So what kind of chicks do you go for?'
âAll kinds. Whoever'll have me.'
Number One nods sagely. âThat's because you had no mother. Mothers make you feel special.'
âWhich is why you lie to them,' the Prisoner adds.
âYeah, you don't want to disappoint them. What you need is a woman who makes you feel special.'
âSo I can lie to her.'
âExactly.'
â¢â¢â¢
No stench of boiled or burnt animal entrails assaults him, no lusty lovers or closet homosexuals crowd his living room. Only Vera sags on the couch gripping an empty wineglass and a photograph.
âHey, Vera. Where is everybody?'
âWally had to work late at the office and then he had a date. I think it's good he's dating again, don't you?' The alcohol has allowed uncertainty to creep into her usually stalwart expression.
âSure.' More lies.
âHe says he isn't a pansy.'
Milo busies himself making a peanut butter sandwich. âHas there been any action next door?'
âShe took the boy away in a taxi this morning. He says the most terrible things to her. I wouldn't stand for it.'
âDid they come back?'
âI haven't a clue. Pablo was sanding the deck.' She shuffles into the kitchen. âAn Indian gentleman phoned for you. He said it was urgent, said he'd call again.'
âWhen was this?'
âAround tea time.'
If it's Sammy Sanjari, what could possibly be urgent? Has Gus had another stroke? The one three years ago disoriented him for weeks. When Milo tried to help, Gus shouted, âLeave me alone!'
Vera pours herself more sherry. âIt's a busy time of year in accounting, Wally says. That's why he always has to get back to the office.'
Milo feels peanut butter sticking to the roof of his mouth.
âI don't think he likes me very much,' Vera says. âI don't know why. I loved him so much. He was such a bonny big boy. So different from his father.' Unsteady on her feet, she grips the counter. âI tried so hard to do the right thing.'
âI think it's tough for a lot of parents when their kids grow up,' Milo says. Gus repeatedly demanded, âI did all this for
you
?' as though hoping the real Milo would stand up.
âI wanted more kiddies,' Vera says, âbut they made a hash of things when they opened me up. Wally'll be such a marvellous father, don't you think so, Milo?'
âSure.'
âAnd now he has his business sorted, the timing couldn't be better. It's a dependable business, accounting, isn't it?'
âDefinitely.'
âVery respectable. I knew Wally would make something of himself in the end. He's always been good at numbers.' She toddles back to the couch and picks up the photograph. âIsn't he a looker?' It's a school portrait of Wallace looking suspicious. Is this his original face? âI made him wear that shirt,' Vera says. âI said, “Wear something smart, show your respect.” She tucks the photo carefully in her handbag before adjusting a cushion behind her head. âI told him, once he's settled, I'll move back here and look after the kiddies. Nobody can afford good help these days.'
Wouldn't it be better for all concerned if Milo tells her the truth so she can cease to hope and be freed from her fixed ideas about things? It can't go on, this deception. With her delusions shattered she'll be able to live in the moment. âIt's ironic, isn't it,' Milo begins, âthat Vera means truth. Vera?' Her head slumps forward and her glasses slide to the floor. Milo places them on the end table.
Gus bought him a Polaroid camera for his twelfth birthday. The gift astounded Milo not only because of its cost but because it meant Gus was entrusting him with something valuable. A peroxide widow who hoped to snare Gus had insisted they drive to Niagara Falls. Milo, eager to test his camera, expressed enthusiasm. Gus, who preferred to tinker in his basement, agreed on the condition that Milo photograph the sights. Walking down Lundy's Lane, Milo took pictures of cars. Never before had he seen so many sparkling automobiles, many of them sports models. His father and the widow had to wait while he took the shots. She repeatedly put her arm around Gus while he grew impatient with Milo. âWhat are you taking pictures of that for? You're wasting film. Take pictures of the
sights
.' Milo wanted to shout, âWhy give me a camera if you're not going to let me take my own pictures?' but he didn't. He took many shots of the falls, and of his father and the grasping widow. Where are those photos now? The camera disappeared over time. Gus resented the cost of the film and Milo resented not being able to take pictures of cars or bugs or Mrs. Cauldershot's spider veins when she nodded off after lunch.
He picks up on the first ring.
âGood evening, is that Milo?'
âIt is.'
âBootiful, you ready for
The Reunion of a Lifetime
?'
âNot really.' Poor reception makes Milo suspect Sammy's calling from his car.
âNo worries. We'll make it easy for you, treat you like a king. You'll love it. Somebody will pick you up at eight.'
âWhat? Tomorrow?'
âWe've had some difficulties but now we're ready to roll. Are you excited?'
âNot really.'
âNo worries. Everybody's a little shy at first but when those cameras start rolling, it's showtime. You'll love it. Tomorrow, first thing.' Milo listens to the dial tone briefly before trying Tanis's number. Her voice-mail message still includes Christopher.
Kneeling, he knocks twice gently and waits, pressing his ear against the wall. He knocks twice again, listens, then knocks four more times and waits. He knocks until his knuckles throb.
he management of the institution housing Gus has allowed the
Reality Check
crew to occupy several rooms. Sammy and Birgit greet him in the corridor. âWhat did you do to your hair?' Sammy gasps.
âI had it cut for a movie. I'm an actor.'
âAn actor?' Sammy looks at Birgit. âHe's an actor.'
âI heard.'
âHave we seen you in anything?' Sammy asks.
âI did a Canadian Tire ad a while back.'
âBootiful,' Sammy says, although he doesn't look pleased. He and Birgit huddle briefly before turning back to Milo. âWhat about a wig?' Sammy asks.
âA wig? Why?'
âTo make you look handsome. Don't you want to look handsome?'
âNo. I want to see my father.' He's still not sure this is true but tries to appear resolute.
âWhat's the movie?' Birgit demands while checking her cell.
â
Love, the Final Solution
. I'm off today, they're doing interior love scenes.'
âA good part?' Sammy asks.
âI play a Nazi guard.'
The hair-and-makeup/wardrobe woman has been staring at Milo steadily. âWhat about a hat?'
âI don't wear hats.'
âBrad Pitt wears hats,' Sammy says.
âI'm not Brad Pitt.'
âNo duh,' the hair-and-make-up/wardrobe woman says. Her excessive eye makeup makes her resemble a raccoon.
Sammy rubs his hands together. âVal is going to make you look the
best
you can be. Still you, but better.' He winks at Milo and nudges him into a small room with Val. Two inmates with failing hearts and minds attempt to join them. âNice to see you too, Gramps,' Val says, kicking the door closed in their faces. Smoking a cigarette, she thrusts some garments at Milo.
âI don't think you're allowed to smoke in here,' he says. The facility's stench of pureed food, shit, piss and disinfectant is nauseating him.
âTry them on.' She points to a foldout screen. Milo takes the clothes behind it to change.
âYou look like your father,' she says.
âYou've seen my father?'
âI had to fix him up. He looked pretty rough. They don't hose 'em down too regularly in this dive.'
âDid you talk to him?'
âI don't speak Polish.'
âHe speaks English.'
âNot to me he didn't.'
Gus never speaks Polish.
âAnyway,' Val says, âhe's got good bones. You've got his eyes and chin. We're dressing you guys to accentuate the similarities.'
Milo zips up the casual cream trousers. âI never wear light pants, they stain too easily.' He pulls the golf shirt over his head. âI never wear golf shirts.' He steps out from behind the screen.
âWhat's your shoe size?'
âEleven.'
She digs around in a box of shoes and pulls out some loafers. âTry these.'
âI never wear loafers.'
âYou're an actor, you wear anything.'
âI'm not acting now. This is supposed to be me meeting my father for real.'
âNothing's real.' Val pulls a sports jacket from a rack. âLet me guess, you never wear sports jackets.'
âNever.'
She helps him put it on then turns him towards the mirror. âYou look hot.'
He has to admit, out of his crumpled jeans and T-shirt combo, into apparel with shape, he does look hot, or anyway, warm.
âWhat's on your neck?' she asks.
âMy neck?'
âYou've got a rash.'
âReally?' He steps closer to the mirror and sees red blotches on his chest and neck.
âAre you allergic to anything? Synthetic blends?'
âNot that I know of.'
âWhat did you eat for breakfast?'
âWhat I always eat.'
âOkay, so it's nerves. Relax, it's spreading.'
So distracted has Milo been by the activity around him that he hasn't considered what effect the pending meeting might have on his physical and emotional health. Now, with redness consuming his body, he realizes it could kill him.
âSit here,' Val commands. In the mirror he's alarmed by the splotches on his face. âBreathe deeply,' she says. Milo tries but the air stops at his neck.
âI can't breathe,' he wheezes.
âSure you can.' She drapes a scarf around his neck to hide the rash.
âThat makes me look like a pansy,' he says, struggling to remove the scarf, which seems to be strangling him.
Val slaps the back of his head. âGet a grip.'
âI'm not wearing this. Brad Pitt doesn't wear scarves.'
âJohnny Depp does.' She tries again to wind it around him but he pushes her away.
âI'm getting Sammy.' She leaves the door ajar, enabling a codger in a golf hat to wander in. He points at Milo.
âTell my lawyers to sue them,' he commands.
âRight away, sir.' Milo starts removing the clothes.
âKeep your pants on,' the old man orders, grabbing Milo's arm with surprising strength. âWhat do you think you're doing?'
âLeaving.'
âNobody leaves. It's locked up. They catch you, they'll put you in the hole.'
Shaking him off, with only one leg in his jeans, Milo makes a break for the corridor.
âMan overboard!' the codger yells. âMan overboard!'
On hearing Sammy's voice, Milo runs in the opposite direction, stumbling over walkers and wheelchairs. Two Jamaican orderlies block him. âI'm not a patient,' Milo explains, âI'm with the show.' They grab his arms.
âTake it easy, mon,' one of them says. âNo runnin' in here.' His breath smells of Juicy Fruit gum. âWhy don't you put your pants on?'
âSure, yes, of course.' Milo pushes his other leg into his jeans as Sammy and Birgit approach.
âWhat seems to be the problem?' Sammy asks.
âI've changed my mind.'
âYou signed a contract,' Birgit says.
âYou can have your money back. I made a mistake.'
âWe all make mistakes, Milo,' Sammy says, taking his arm from the orderly and digging his fingers into Milo's bicep. âThe important thing is to learn from them. The biggest mistake is to make the same mistake twice. Remember how you made a mistake when you thought your father was dead? All that time he was still alive. You walked away from him when he was
still alive
. Now he is still alive and you are walking away from him again. That would be a big mistake
twice
.'
âI don't owe him anything. He sucked as a father.'
âMy father sucked too,' Sammy says. âHe hit me with sticks when I did badly at lessons. And you know why he did that, Milo?'
Shoeless, Milo slumps against the wall.
âHe hit me when I did badly at lessons because he didn't want me to be like him. He wanted a better life for me.'
âBring on the violins,' Milo mutters.
âHe hit me because he loved me. And here I am today in a new country with a new life. Bootiful.' Sammy starts leading him back to Val's lair. âAll fathers love their sons, my friend. All fathers want a better life for their sons.'
âHe's even redder,' Val observes. âI can't cover that.'
âNo worries,' Sammy says. âHe's going to calm down now.'
Behind the folding screen, before Milo changes into the cream trousers, Birgit hands him an orange pill. âLet it dissolve under your tongue. It'll help you relax and stop the rash.'
âIs it an antihistamine?'
âSame family.' As the pill dissolves under his tongue, she strokes his hair. His mother used to do this. âYou'll be fine,' Birgit says. Nobody has touched him for months. Tanis won't even let him hold her hand. Still stroking, Birgit murmurs in a throaty voice, âYou'll be awesome.' He wants to bury his face in her bosom but she starts talking sharply to a crew member on her walkie-talkie.
Garbed in the sports jacket and slacks, Milo emerges from behind the screen.
âBootiful. Very handsome. Have a seat.' Sammy pats the chair beside him. âYour father loves you, my friend.'
âHe said that?'
âHe didn't have to say it.'
âWhat have you told him?'
âAbout what?'
â
The Reunion of a Lifetime
.'
âNothing. We want it to be a surprise.'
âSo how did you explain putting makeup on him? And changing his clothes?'
âHe didn't ask. He's very quiet.'
Gus isn't very quiet. âHe must have said something.'
âAbout what?'
âAnything.'
âDid he say anything to you, Val?'
âNot in English. He enjoyed the shave.'
âHe's so happy to have visitors,' Sammy says. âThey say he never gets any.'
Birgit, still on the walkie-talkie, looks at her watch then at Milo. âFeeling any better? A little more relaxed?'
âA little.'
âHe's less red,' Val observes and starts sponging foundation onto his face. Due no doubt to the orange pill, a filmy sensation is spreading over Milo, a Teflon feeling.
âMy father,' Sammy says, âwas the only schoolteacher in our village and very strict. He would beat my brother and me more than the other boys. He was a very proud man. After he hit us, my brother and I did much better at our lessons.'
âI know a man who's left his son because he hit him.'
âYou mean the son left the father because he hit him.'
âNo, the father left the son.'
âHow does the son feel about this?'
âTerrible.'
Sammy nods knowingly. âYou see, it is better to hit your son than to desert him.'
âHow hard did your father hit you?'
Sammy lifts the hair at the back of his head, revealing a three-inch scar. âHard.'
Gus only hit Milo hard on the head once, when he took the truck without permission and skidded on black ice into a mailbox. After the hefty blow Gus looked as shocked as Milo felt. âYou could have been killed,' was all he said before descending to the basement.
If hitting equals love and a desire for a better life for your son, maybe it is possible that all that abuse was a manifestation of deep caring. The Polish refugee didn't want his son to be like him, a common labourer at the mercy of fascists and communists and people with more money than brains. The father tried to beat his likeness out of his son. And when he couldn't, he ran away. When Christopher couldn't change Robertson, he ran away. Why do we have to change each other? Why can't we leave each other alone? Milo isn't sure if these thoughts are real.