Authors: Cordelia Strube
âHe's put on weight. I had to find larger pants.'
âThat's because he's a happy person.'
âYou're fat and you're not happy. Have you been sleeping? You've got craters under your eyes.' Milo doesn't bother to respond. âPablo's cute,' Val says. âHe'll look hot on camera.'
âDid you manage to get a shirt on him?'
âT-shirt.'
âReally? Normally he eats naked.'
âInvite me for dinner sometime.'
As she sponges foundation on his face, Milo tries to formulate a plan, adopt a role, find the path of least resistance. âCheese,' he says, smiling at his reflection.
âWhat?'
âDo Poles eat cheese?' he asks, still grinning. âWill there be
cheese
at this banquet?'
âFuck if I know. Count yourself lucky the food is real. Sometimes Dina puts fake stuff out, turkeys and hams to make it look fancy.'
âCouldn't they find any fake pig's knuckles?'
âThey really eat every part of the critter, don't they? We had Poles down the street. They were always eating cow's tongues and sausages stuffed with blood.'
âWhy aren't you smoking?'
âI don't smoke in private homes.'
âDon't hesitate to burn this one down on my account.'
The momentous evening begins with a toast. Gus, rosy-cheeked from vodka, seated at the head of the table as per Sammy's instructions, holds up his glass. â
Na zdrowie
.'
âSay that again, Gussy?'
â
Na zdrowie
.'
Pablo holds up his glass. âNah zdroh-vyeh.'
âNice driveway,' Milo says, also holding up his glass.
â
Qué?
'
âIsn't that what you just said, nice driveway?'
âNah zdroh-vyeh,' Pablo repeats.
âRight. That's what I said, ni-ce dri-ve-way.' Sammy prods him from behind. âIt
is
a fascinating language,' Milo adds. âAnd fascinating food. I sure hope there's blood in those sausages. Do we have any pig's knuckles? Gosh, to think I spent all those years gnawing on Mrs. Cauldershot's Salisbury steaks when I could have been eating cow's tongues.'
âHave some dill pickle soup,' Vera urges.
âDid you say dill pickle soup?' Wallace asks, looking worried in a blazer that fits for once.
âIt will be delicious with a dollop of sour cream.' Vera dollops cream into her dill pickle soup.
â
Zupa ogórkowa
,' Gus says, pointing cheerily at the soup.
âZoo-pah ogoor-koh-vah,' Pablo says.
âIs there an echo in here?' Milo asks.
Pablo points his spoon at him. âYou don't even try to speak Polish, Milo, what kind of son are you?'
âThat's an excellent question. What kind of son am I? Gustaw, what kind of son am I? Our home viewers would like to know.'
âCut,' Birgit says, then stands so close to Milo that he could easily nuzzle her breasts. âWhat do think you're doing?'
âHaving a reunion of a lifetime. Isn't it fabulous?'
âWe never refer to home viewers. Don't be a wiseass.'
âSor-reee.' He looks at Pablo, Vera and Wallace, who all stare back with anxious eyes. Of course they're on edge; this is, after all, their big moment on network television. They only get one shot at dazzling viewers, whereas Milo, a seasoned professional, has dazzled many with his acting skills. To him, being in front of a camera feels quite natural, quite mundane, in fact. He is, after all, the Canadian Tire Man. He drinks more vodka.
âYou've had enough of that.' Birgit snatches the glass from him. âDina? We need water here.'
âI'm not drinking water.'
âOh yes you are, asshole, now eat up and behave.'
âOkay, fine, so what am I supposed to say? He doesn't speak English.'
Birgit snaps her fingers. âSammy?'
Sammy crouches beside Milo's chair and whispers. âRemember your childhood, my friend, those lazy days of summer. Talk about the good times. Baseball, did you ever play baseball with your dad? Catch in the backyard on a summer's evening?' Sammy pats Milo's shoulder and steps back. âLeave him for a moment,' he murmurs to Birgit. âGive him a chance to remember.'
âAre you remembering yet?' Birgit demands. âLet's move on.'
With the cameras rolling, Milo dons his fond-remembrances face. âRememÂber, Dad, when you insisted on coming with me to Dads on the Diamond Day? I said, “Dad, you don't know how to play baseball, you don't need to come.” I think I even said, “
Please
don't come, Dad.” But you were determined, probably because you thought you could network with some potential clients and sell some patios. Anyhoodle, off we went, me in my
Miami Vice
T-shirt and jeans, and you in your stonemason clothes because you didn't dig cowboy shirts and denim in those days. And guess what? Do you remember?' Gus, still permitted vodka, stares hazily at him. âYou threw like a girl,' Milo says. âThe other dads thought you were faking it and figured you were hamming it up because your pitches totally sucked. They were laughing and slapping their thighs, oh, it was hilarious. But you kept throwing girly pitches until, finally, silence fell on the diamond as all the boys and their dads realized that you weren't faking it, that you were, in fact, throwing like a girl. Dean Blinky nudged me and said, “Who the fuck is that?” And you know what I said? I said, “I have no fucking clue.” Then I took off, and when you came home you tore into me. It didn't occur to you that you'd embarrassed me, that I was mortally ashamed of you, because, as usual, you had your head so far up your own asshole you had no idea what I was feeling. In fact, as usual, you didn't want to know what I was feeling. You
sucked
at baseball, old man.'
âI think it's time we tried the pork,' Vera says.
âThat's cot-let s-habo-vyh pah-nyeh-roh-vah-nyh,' Pablo explains.
â
Kotlet schabowy panierowany
,' Gus agrees, looking warily at Milo.
âAnd zhiem-nyah-kamee,' Pablo adds.
â
Ziemnikami
,' Gus says, nodding.
âIt looks delicious,' Vera says.
âCan we stop this?' Milo asks, turning and staring into a camera lens. âCan we cut this bullshit? I mean, seriously, it's not funny anymore.'
âIt never was funny,' Birgit says.
âI can't do this,' Milo insists, âthis ⦠this farce. He was a horrible father and a horrible man. Ask Wallace, he stole his pucks. So what if terrible things happened to him in the war and in camps and God knows where else, that doesn't make him a better person. So what if he watched children burn, and bigger boys shoved things up his ass? I'm sorry he has nightmares and screams in the night but that doesn't make it okay that he was a mean son of a bitch.' He stumbles over some cables to Gus, who jumps out of his chair and backs away from him. âI'm not Mr. Mandela,' Milo says, âor the Colombian hostage, or Sarah Moon Dancer, or Mother-fucking-Teresa, I'm Milo, and you fucked me up and I
don't
forgive you.'
âOnce more with feeling,' Wallace says.
âAnd why don't
you
tell your mother how you really feel? Why did I have to tell her that you haven't fucked a woman in years and work in junk removal? Why do you lie to her all the time? Why can't we be
honest
with each other? Why all this collusion and deceit?' To Milo's horror, he feels himself choking up as his losses mount: Christopher's rejection, Tanis's rejection, Robertson's disinterest now that he has bonded with Gus, Zosia's rejection, the clubbiness of the three musketeers and Gus â good god, even Tawny has taken his side. Everybody likes Gus. Everybody likes Pablo. Why is it that Milo is always on the outside? Not that he wants to be on the inside with the deadbeats but somehow, somehow he wants to belong somewhere; there must be somewhere. He starts to sing plaintively, âSomewhere over the rainbow, bluebirds fly⦠' They all look at him as though he has gone Âcompletely mad and maybe he has. He can't remember the rest of the words to the song so he hums into the satisfying stillness around him, enjoying the slight buzzing in his sinuses caused by the high notes. His singing coach told him he had a range of two octaves. She was ancient with flame-red hair and a bulging diaphragm that she forced him to feel to comprehend its power. He hated touching her, and the songs she made him sing, upbeat show tunes about gals and fellas. â
Smile
when you sing,' she insisted. âShow your teeth.' Sometimes she took her foot off a piano pedal and kicked him to remind him to show his teeth.
Cheese
.
And then it clicks.
None of it matters
, and it doesn't matter that none of it matters. It doesn't matter that Milo doesn't matter. Nothing matters. It's all just an arrangement of atoms that will cease to exist.
Amor fati
. And he approaches his father slowly, carefully, because he is just an old man who has lost his marbles and wants to chow down on pigs' knuckles. Milo puts his arms around him, inhaling the stench of pickled herring on his breath, feeling his fear and frailty and says, âIt doesn't matter.'
ll morning Gus and Robertson work on the patio. Neither of them respond to Milo's âHey, guys.' Even Sal doesn't bother to sniff him. When Milo sets fire to the box of Polaroids, Gus merely glances in his direction, untroubled by memories of burning children. It seems only his tormentors survive in his dreams. Bullies rule even in the subconscious.
Pablo hurtles out the back door. âMilo, you won't believe it ⦠'
âYou're being deported.'
âMaria wants me back.'
âWhy?'
âShe loves me. She told me she can't stop missing me even if I don't believe in God Almighty.'
âGo fig,' Milo says.
âWe're just going to have a simple wedding, like, at city hall, no priest or nothing. She's downloading a licence. What are you burning?'
âGarbage. What about Fennel?'
âOh she's totally busy with Vitorio. Painting will always come first with Fenny.'
âAnd you think you will always come first with Maria?'
âOf course.'
âGood luck with that.'
âOh, this is for you.' He holds out a disk in an envelope.
âWhat is it?'
âZosia left it.'
âZosia was here? Why didn't you tell me?'
âYou weren't here, Milo. It was when we were all getting ready for the show.'
âI was in the basement, you dumbass.'
âBefore that, when you were out.'
âDid she say anything?'
âShe said, “Give this to Milo.” Her number's on it. Listen, are you serious about us having to move out, like, today?'
âDead serious.' He isn't but wants to be obeyed for once.
âIt won't be easy for Vera.'
âVera can stay.' He can't have her passing out in some dank hotel room. âUntil she goes back to England.'
âShe's not going back.'
âSince when?'
âSince her and Wally talked. He's going to find her a place.'
âThey talked?'
Pablo nods. âAnd Tawny don't got nowhere to go. Her alcoholic mama shacked up with her alcoholic uncle and he don't like teenagers.'
âTawny can stay too.'
âWhat about Gussy?'
âIt's his house. I'm leaving anyway.'
âWhere are you going?'
âHaven't decided yet.' He emailed Sammy demanding payment but doesn't expect to hear from the head case. Birgit threatened to sue Milo's ass while the crew decamped and Dina, the wild boar, tore down her ruffled curtains. Only Val seemed sympathetic and insisted that Milo keep the jacket. âYou smoke in that,' she said. âOne of these days you're going to want to look hot.'
âCan I stay till me and Maria get stuff figured out?'
âDid you not say, a mere forty-eight hours ago, that Fennel was all the stars in your firmament?'
âThings change, Milo. Please. Just a few days.'
âWhatevs.'
Flames lick Gus and his widows. The shot of Mrs. Cauldershot's spider veins takes the longest to burn.
âVera?' He can hear her packing. âCan I use the computer for a minute?' He moved it to his mother's dresser when Tawny took over his room.
âOf course. Come in, Milo.'
âYou don't have to leave.'
âWally's going to find me a nice flat with a balcony, he says. I've always fancied a balcony. It'll be splendid with pots of geraniums. I could have my tea on it.'
Milo boots up the computer. âYeah, but he's not going to find the flat right away, is he? Stay till he finds it.'
âAre you sure I won't be any bother?'
âQuite sure.'
âI must admit, the good thing about Wally not being the marrying kind is he's got more time for his mum.'
âThere's an upside to everything.' He inserts the disk and waits for it to load.
âGus and the boy next door are the best of mates, aren't they? Tanis says she's not going to sell just yet.'
âWhen did she say that?'
âThis aft. She said she's never seen the boy so at ease with anyone. She's going to home-school him till things get sorted.' This should mean something to Milo but his feet remain set in concrete. Tanis will avoid him and he will avoid her, and Robertson will build with Gus. It doesn't matter.
âHel-lo,' Vera says, âwhose is that?'
âWhose is what?' On the screen a grainy image reveals a trapped creature.
âThat's a baby in its mum's tummy.'
Milo leans closer to the screen and begins to decipher a head and limbs.
âIt's sucking its thumb,' Vera says. âCheeky little bugger, finding his thumb already.'
A general trembling overtakes Milo. âWhat makes you so sure it's a boy?'
âA girl wouldn't do that,' Vera says. âIt's marvellous what they can see these days. My nieces always get videos and we all wager on the sex. Five quid that's a boy. Who sent it?'
âNobody.' Sweat trickles down his temples. He ejects the disk and staggers downstairs where Pablo is making a protein smoothie. âWhat did Zosia tell you?'
âShe didn't tell me nothing.'
âDo you know what this is?' He wields the disk, convinced they're all in this together. One big fucking joke on Milo.
âI don't know nothing. We was busy getting ready for the show. She didn't want to talk anyway. She looked tired.'
âWas she fat?'
âI don't know, she was wearing a raincoat, Milo. What's the matter with you?'
He walks fast, out of the house and into the ravine in search of muggers or anything that will offer distraction. What was she thinking? She who carries condoms on her person, the pragmatist, the problem solver, the career woman, the smartest person in the room, what was she
thinking
?
He clambers through the woods and undergrowth until he finds the debris shelter he built with Robertson. Though still intact, empty beer bottles and trash are strewn on and around it. Milo crawls into the hut, gagging from the stench of piss. A newspaper swats his head.
âWho are you?' a ragged voice demands.
In the poor light Milo is able to make out a man with matted hair, covered in blankets. âI built this shelter.'
âJust because you built it don't mean you own it,' the man says. âIt's city property. Nobody owns it, just the city. You got no right.'
âI just wanted some peace and quiet. I'll go now.'
âD'you have a smoke?'
âNo.'
âSpare change?'
âNo.'
âGum?'
âNo.'
âCough drops?'
âNo. I have a disk.'
âA disk?'
âYeah.'
âWhat's on it?'
âAn ultrasound of a baby.'
âYours?'
âI have no idea.'
âWhat you carrying it for then?'
âI don't know.'
âAnd I thought
I
was fucked. You can sleep here if you want. Nobody bothers you. And it's pretty dry. Sorry I hit you, but you can't be too careful.'
Bunking with the vagrant will not ease his mind. He crawls out and rushes on through the ravine, heedless of the branches and potholes. All his life he has taken precautions with women, even when they told him it wasn't necessary.
AIDS
was big news during his teens. Emaciated men with scabs on their faces haunted the theatre world. His first summer job was working the box office for a gay theatre company. Pasquale, who ran it, believed that Milo was gay but didn't realize it yet. âAlways wear a rubber, pussycat,' he advised. So this cannot be Milo's baby. This is a scheme. Like Wallace said, she's after his fucking wedding vows, forcing him to fix someone else's mistake. Not this time.
Someone tugs on his arm causing him to spring into Bruce Lee mode. He will not let the fuckers flatten him again.
âWhat are you doing?' Tawny asks.
âWhat are
you
doing?'
âFollowing you.'
âWhy?'
âBecause you're freaked out.'
âWho says I'm freaked out?'
âChill for a second. It's peaceful here in the woods. It reminds me of home. Too much trash though. People shouldn't litter.'
âPeople shouldn't do a lot of things.' He trudges onward with no destiÂnation in mind. The effort required to climb over uneven ground shakes the numbness from his legs. Tawny keeps pace with youthful ease.
âSo I guess you think it's your baby,' she says.
âHow do you know about the baby?'
âVera.'
âWhich means she's told the whole crew. Thank you so very bloody much.'
The wind picks up, bullying branches overhead.
âI'd like to have a baby someday,' Tawny says.
âWhy?'
âTo love. And maybe if I don't screw up too much, it'll love me back.'
âIf you don't screw up too much. Ah, there's the rub.'
âThis whole thing with your dad is a little retarded. I mean, everybody always thinks a miracle might happen and their parents will change into the people they wish they were, or back to the people they used to be. But that's not going to happen. And even though everybody knows it's not going to happen, they still hope it will. It's retarded.'
Milo squats on a fallen trunk. She sits beside him while the city grumbles and belches beyond the trees.
âDid you hear about that guy who killed his father with a crossbow?' she asks.
âWhat guy?'
âA Chinese guy. He hated his father so much he drove all the way from Ottawa to kill him with his crossbow. Shot him in the library, right in front of everybody. That's how much he hated him, he didn't care if he got caught, he just wanted him dead. That would take a lot of energy, hating somebody that much.'
âWhat did his father do to him?'
âThe usual. Physical and psychological abuse. Plus he beat his mother. They moved to Ottawa to get away from him, but I guess that wasn't enough. The son had to come back and kill the guy. He shot him from behind. The father fell forward over a table with the arrow sticking out of his back. Now the son will go to prison for, like, forever.'
Milo imagines Gus flopped over a table with an arrow sticking out of his back. The image does not please him. Maybe he doesn't hate him that much, or anyway, doesn't have the required energy.
âCould you show me the baby?' Tawny asks.
âWhy?'
âI've never seen an ultrasound. On the reservation only high-risk pregnancies get to have ultrasounds, and they have to go to Sudbury for them.'
High-risk?
Is that what this is about? Is the trapped creature fighting for its life? Does Zosia fear she will die from complications in childbirth, leaving no one to care for her bastard? Has she turned to Milo because he is a nice guy, a suck, who will do the right thing? Whatever was propelling him is spent and torpor takes hold. Budging from the log becomes unfathomable.