Authors: Cordelia Strube
âA rabbit,' Tawny says, pointing at bushes. âDid you see it?'
âNo.' Another unsinkable memory bobs towards him. He was five and wanted a bunny. Dean Blinky's sister had one. Since the moment he could talk, it seemed to Milo, he'd begged his parents for a pet and been told âmaybe when you're older.' Annie was allergic to cats, scared of dogs and repulsed by rodents, so why not a rabbit? âYour daddy had a bad experience with rabbits.'
âWhat experience?'
âOn his farm.'
âWhat on his farm?'
âRabbits. They ate them.'
This dampened Milo's enthusiasm briefly but he understood that farmers ate some of their animals, which was why he didn't want to be a farmer. âSo?' he said.
She sipped more Bailey's Irish Cream. âHe loved those bunnies, gave them names and talked to them and stroked their ears. Every Friday night he had to pick one and hit it with a stick till it stopped moving. He always cried and sometimes barfed, but no matter what, he had to choose a bunny and hit it with a stick until it was dead so his mother could cook it. Otherwise his father would hit him with a stick. If he didn't eat the bunny, his father would hit
him
with a stick anyway.'
Milo tried to picture his father as a boy, crying and barfing and thwacking a rabbit with a stick. Then being forced to eat the bunny.
âDon't tell your dad I told you,' Annie said. âIt's just that rabbits upset him.'
âHe wouldn't have to kill
my
rabbit,' Milo pointed out.
âSilly boy,' she said, brushing hair out of his eyes. âYou need a haircut, monkey.'
He loved it when she called him monkey, and didn't want to alter her mood by pushing the rabbit issue. He never raised it again.
âWhat are you going to do if it's yours?' Tawny asks.
âIt's not mine.'
âWhy would your girlfriend send it then?'
âShe's not my girlfriend. To force me to marry her, duh.'
âShowing you an ultrasound of your baby isn't forcing you to do anything. It's just letting you know about it, giving you the opportunity to be part of its life. Some men want babies. My cousin and his wife can't have any. They've done all kinds of tests and she takes fertility drugs that make her even fatter. Every time she has her period she cries like her baby died. Your girlfriend's lucky she got pregnant, especially if it's yours.'
âHow is she lucky?'
âBecause you're a decent guy. A little mixed-up maybe, but you'll get over it.'
âWhat?'
âThe father thing. I was pretty mixed-up about my mother hooking up with my dad's brother. I mean, I thought it was just going to be her and me from now on. I mean, she's old. She used to say, “I'm done with men.” Then she goes and shags my uncle. I was pretty upset but I got over it. Maybe being a father would help you get over your father thing.'
Of course they all want to see it and lean over him to peer at the screen.
âTen quid it's a boy,' Vera announces.
âIt's dollars here, Ma.'
âThat's a girl,' Pablo insists. âLook at her little hands and feet.'
âWhy is its head so big?' Milo asks.
âThey always have big heads,' Vera advises. âThink of what has to be packed into that noggin before they pop out.'
âI can't get over her not breathing,' Pablo says. âCan you believe that, Milo? I mean, everybody knows babies don't breathe in the womb but to see her wiggling around like that and know she's not breathing.'
âIt's fucking mind-blowing,' Wallace concedes. He is much more interested in the ultrasound than Milo would have expected. âIt jerked, did you see that? It
jerked
.'
âThose are hiccups,' Vera says. âThey all get them. And the mum can feel them, before she feels the kicks, she feels the hiccups.'
âFucking unreal,' Wallace observes.
âIt's like,' Pablo elaborates, âshe's a fish and then suddenly she's a human.'
âIt looks trapped,' Milo says.
âNo way,' Pablo says, âthat's her world, man, that's her space capsule.'
âThat's why you swaddle them when they come out,' Vera explains. âImagine how strange it must feel to suddenly have your arms and legs all akimbo.'
âAnd breathing,' Pablo emphasizes. âIt must feel totally weird, being underwater then suddenly you have to, like, breathe polluted air. That must be why they cry. The polluted air must burn their little lungs.'
âAnd they must be fucking freezing,' Wallace adds. âI mean, the womb must be warm, right, then all of a sudden they're out where it's cold and bright and they have to breathe and their arms and legs are flopping all over the place.'
âI'm surprised they don't die of shock,' Milo says.
â¢â¢â¢
He attempts to dial the number several times before finally completing the call. Her voice mail sounds officious, which means she must be job hunting again. He doesn't leave a message but tries again several times before muttering, âIt's me, Milo. Call me.'
With the musketeers downstairs he watches the video repeatedly. The raw vulnerability of the creature causes an unexpected heaving and shifting in Milo's intestines. âDon't come out,' he whispers to it. Between hiccups it holds up its hands as if to ask
why
? âToo complicated,' Milo tells it. Its legs look cramped, as though it wants to bust out, and its big head is being forced downward in the tiny space capsule. Maybe it should come out â who wants to hiccup in a cramped swamp? But if it's high-risk, what awaits it on the outside? Incubators, injections, tubes and wires leading in and out of every orifice? The phone rings.
âHello?'
âMilo,' she says. She always begins their phone conversations with âMilo.' The other women in his life immediately held forth about their feelings or worries but Zosia just said, âMilo.'
âI got the disk,' he says.
âGood.'
He can't even hear her breathing. âWhy did you send it?'
âWhy do you think?'
âI think you want me to think it's mine.'
âYou don't think it's yours?'
âHow could it be?'
âI'm seven months' pregnant. Do the math.'
âBut there've been other men.'
âWhat other men?'
âThe bartender at the Copper Pipe, with the moustache.'
She doesn't respond, which is not unusual. Unlike the other women in his life, she is comfortable with silence. The alien creature hiccups and holds up its hands again,
why
?
âHe got shot,' Zosia says.
âWho?'
âThe bartender. He was my friend, not my lover. The fact that you are questioning me tells me I made the wrong decision. I should not have contacted you. I'm sorry. Goodbye.' And she's gone, poof, just like that. He redials immediately but she doesn't answer. What was he thinking? Shot dead? Was she kneeling by the fallen man's side while his brains leaked onto the terracotta tiles?
âMilo?' Vera calls. âCome have a sanny. You haven't eaten a scrap all day.'
The creature holds up its hands again. âI'm sorry,' Milo whispers to it while his guts heave and shift. The creature shrugs as if to say,
it's okay
, and suddenly Milo is awash in an ocean of entitlement. It is
his
baby, is it not? She has no right to prevent him from having
his
baby. It needs his help, his protection in a violent world, and this gushing well of emotion that might be love. Seven months? No wonder the head is so big compared to the rest of it. Those little stick arms and legs will fill out, the tiny shoulders and chest will broaden against the onslaught of human ignorance. And Milo will be waiting for it, ready to do whatever it takes to protect his vital organ outside his body.
He can't sleep, of course, and calls her countless times between bouts of twisting himself into contortions on the couch. He managed to eat a peanut butter sandwich, understanding that Vera's right: faced with new responsibility, he must keep his strength up. He has told the musketeers nothing. They think he hasn't returned Zosia's call, that he is experiencing typical my-Âgirlfriend-got-pregnant angst. Tawny has disappeared again, padding off soundlessly.
The La-Z-Boy creaks. âMilo? Are you still awake?'
He plays possum.
âDo you want to talk about it?'
âDefinitely not.'
âMaria's cousin freaked when he found out his girlfriend was pregnant. She was working in a flower factory so he was scared the baby would be born with flippers from all those pesticides. He told her to abort it, said he'd pay for it, but getting safe abortions in Mexico is hard. Anyway, she didn't want to.'
Milo waits for the blabbermouth to finish the story but no, the muscleÂhead unwraps a stick of gum and chews on it. âWhat happened?' he asks, finally.
âIt was stillborn.'
âOh my god.' The thought of the little trapped creature being born dead causes a crack in Milo's foundation that expands with every breath, widening into a chasm. In seconds, everything he has ever cared about is sucked into cold, dark infinity. Only the little creature remains, teetering at the edge of the precipice, hiccupping and holding up its hands,
why
?
âI think you should call her Valentina,' Pablo says. âThen you can call her Tina or Val. Or Teeny. Teeny's nice for, like, when she's little.'
âShut up,' Milo says.
He sleeps fitfully, dreaming of rabbits spurting blood as Gus thwacks them with a stick. He hears noises in the kitchen and finds Tawny back at the books. âDid you call her?' she asks.
âI pissed her off. Now she won't answer my calls.'
âHow did you piss her off?'
âI questioned its paternity.'
âBad idea.'
âI realize that.'
âYou want me to call her?'
âYou?'
âI could call her from a pay phone. She won't know who it is.'
Is he really so desperate that he will put his life in the hands of a fifteen-year-old? âOkay. When?'
âWhenever you want.'
âNow.'
âYou want me to call her at four in the morning?'
âShe's an early riser.'
As they plod to the pay phone, she asks about Gus, and Milo realizes that the old sadist has not screamed for dope. Is it possible that the patio project has calmed his core as it has Robertson's? Not once in the past twenty-four hours has Milo heard screaming through the wall or head-banging.
âWhat's the number?' Tawny asks. He points to the envelope, sweaty from his grip. She punches the numbers then shoves him out the sliding doors. âDon't listen. I have to tell her honestly that you're not listening. Go over there.' She points to some newspaper boxes.
âThe whole point in you calling her was so
I
could talk to her.'
âI have to talk to her first.' With the receiver pressed against her ear, she shoos him with her free hand. He stands by the newspaper boxes, a man on a deserted island hoping for a passing ship. Tawny turns her back on him as she talks. He can deduce nothing from her body language. This child of alcoholics, possibly suffering from the lasting effects of fetal alcohol syndrome, is toying with his fate. What was he
thinking
? Should he snatch the phone and demand to be heard? It is his right, is it not, as the father of the child?
Father of the child
. The very words cause his ribs to jam. A child who might love him if he doesn't screw up too much. Isn't he screwing up too much already? But who will care for the child if not him? Liquid explodes behind Milo's eyeballs, enabling the confusion inside him to spew out and pool around his feet. Like Christopher he will burn and drip until nothing remains but a puddle.
Did she laugh? What's so funny? Are they
laughing
at him? He takes a step towards the phone booth but shame and fear harness him. More rejection he cannot endure.
She hangs up.
Hangs up?
And steps out of the booth.
âYou were supposed to let me talk to her,' he protests.
âShe doesn't want to talk to you right now. She has to think about it and wants you to stop calling her.'
âBut ⦠but ⦠'
âBut nothing. Quit stalking her. She has to think.'
And that's it. Poker-faced, the fifteen-year-old pads back to base camp.
ablo operates a squeezeball in his right hand to cope with the stress caused by his impending nuptials. His cell died so Maria has been calling him on Milo's phone to make arrangements. Milo rushes to the phone each time it rings hoping, of course, that it is Zosia. But no, it is Maria.
âYou going to have some yah-jetch-nitsah nah botch-kuh with us, Milo?'
â
Jajecznica na boczku
,' Gus clarifies, nodding.
âWhat is it?'
âScrambled eggs with bacon. Gussy makes it better than anybody.'
The bacon does smell good, and Milo can't be alone right now with cold winds howling in and out of him. He quit looking at the video in an attempt to stop forming an attachment to the trapped creature, and has begun conversations in his head re the impracticalities of having a child â financial and psychological â particularly if it's high-risk.
â
MiÅosz
,' Gus says, holding a plate of eggs out to Milo.
â
Coño
,' Pablo says, âdid he just call you Mee-wosh?'
âI have no idea.'
âHey, Gussy, who's that?' Pablo points to Milo.
â
MiÅosz
.' Gus pulls a chair out for Milo and gestures for him to sit.
âThat must be your Polish name, Milo.'
âI don't have a Polish name.'
âThat's so cool. Mee-wosh. I wonder what Pablo is in Polish. Hey, Gussy, what's Pablo in Polski?'
âPablo,' Gus says.
Milo shoves Pablo's naked feet off a chair. âI thought you were supposed to be the martyr. Get off your ass and make us some kah-vah.'
âSee, Mee-wosh, you're learning Polish.'
The phone rings again. Milo runs for it. âIs Pablo there?' Maria asks.
Vera comes downstairs waving a letter. âThe dog ate Ettie's false teeth. Imagine that. She was sleeping over for Freddie's party and she left her teeth by the bed and the dog ate them. Must have thought they were a bone.
Poor Ettie.'
âPoor dog,' Milo says.
âHas anybody seen Wally? He's taking me to look at flats this afternoon. Isn't it grand?'
âVery.' She looks enviably spry.
âHow can I help?' she asks Gus, and the two of them begin a breakfast dance, beating more eggs and buttering more toast. Milo leans back in his chair, tipping the front legs off the floor, a habit that irritated his father, but reborn Gussy doesn't seem to mind. Tawny, newspaper in hand, pulls a chair up beside him. âThat Chinese guy's father had a brain injury. He was hit by a car and part of his brain got damaged. It totally altered his personality. That's why he turned violent.' She points to the headline
Crossbow Victim's Trauma Revealed
.
âSo now the abuser becomes the victim,' Milo says.
âHis lawyer says he had severe cognitive, language and functional Âimpairments.'
âYou can always trust a lawyer.'
âHe says he was destitute and homeless. His clothes were dirty and he smelled terrible. He got on his knees and begged the lawyer to take his case. He said he had been thrown out of his matrimonial home without notice and was living in a shelter.'
âPoor guy, no wonder he had to beat the crap out of his wife and son.'
Vera spreads jam. âThere are two sides to every story, Milo. Did we finish the marmalade?'
But really, it's not so bad sitting here with pig frying and the septuagenarians bustling around him. He could never sit idly like this with the old Gus. The old Gus would assign a task: laundry, floor washing, vacuuming.
You don't have Mrs. Cauldershot to clean up after you anymore
.
What was the story with Gus and the old witch anyway? Did he not realize she was enamoured of him, that she was the woman of his dreams, willing to sacrifice all to serve the great man? On her last day she left Milo a small dish of jelly beans. For nine years she had forbidden him candy in the house. At thirteen, jelly beans held considerably less value than when Milo was five. He sucked on a green one anyway as she traipsed down the walk. When she looked back with a wobbly smile, Gus said, âLook after yourself,' then marched back to the basement. Only Milo stayed to see her off, waving limply. Once her back was turned, he flipped her the finger.
Pablo returns a weakened man. âMaria wants to decorate the wedding chamber at city hall. We only get thirty minutes in there for a hundred bucks and she wants to decorate it.'
Already Milo can smell irreconcilable differences. âThat's more than three bucks per minute,' he warns. âI hope it's an epic wedding chamber.'
âAnd that don't include tax,' Pablo adds.
âWell, a few cheery flowers will do the trick,' Vera says.
âYou don't understand, she wants to, like,
decorate the walls
. How do you put up decorations
and
get married in thirty minutes?'
The phone rings. Milo lunges for it. âHello ⦠?'
âMilo.'
His heart sticks to his jammed ribs.
âMilo?'
âYes.'
âAre you all right?'
âFine. I'm ⦠I'm having bacon and scrambled eggs.'
âGood for you.'
âCan we ⦠? Are you ⦠?'
âYou wanted to talk.'
âYes. I'm really sorry I said what I said.'
âWhat do you want to talk about?'
âWell, I ⦠I was hoping we could meet and, you know, talk in person?'
A
Titanic
of a pause sinks between them.
âWhere would you like to meet?' she asks.
He has already planned to suggest the Magic Bean where they held hands and played footsy while drinking five-dollar coffees. âHow 'bout the Magic Bean?' His voice jumps an octave on
bean
.
âWhatever,' she says. âTwo o'clock?'
âTwo o'clock would be excellent. I'll look forward to it.'
âOkay.' She hangs up. They're all staring at him, except Gussy who is busy scrambling and humming a Polish folk tune.
â¢â¢â¢
Still three hours to go. To stop himself from thinking he resumes scraping the Muskoka chairs while Gussy and the boy lay patio stones. Why does time drag its ass when you want it to move, and travel at the speed of light when you want it to loiter? Gussy interrupts his masonry briefly to inspect Milo's handiwork. The son waits for the father's criticism but all Gussy says is âGoot,' nodding and smiling.
And then Tanis is there hanging laundry and, to Milo's amazement, he has no desire to lick her legs. He watches her as though through a telescope. What an interesting specimen. Her system of holding pegs in her mouth, thereby freeing her hands, and then clasping the edges of two garments with one peg impresses him. Why use two pegs when one will do? How could he have failed to notice this demonstration of human ingenuity before? Does lust blind you? Of course it does.
He can't imagine touching Zosia again, so undeserving is he of her trust. He could tell from the way she said âwhatever' that it is over. She is agreeing to meet with him because she wants to end it. One of her favourite North American phrases is âno loose ends.' When you're seven months' pregnant, single, on a temporary visa, unemployed and your mother is sick in Latvia, can there be looser ends? Could not Milo take her in his arms and offer comfort at least? Maybe he should try this, skip the dialogue and cut to the action.
âAre you ignoring me now?' Tanis asks.
âNot at all.'
âJust preoccupied.'
âA little.'
âChristopher's been calling. We're talking.'
âI'm glad.'
âIt's because of you. Thank you.'
Her sincere gratitude as she stands gripping wet socks punches the breath out of him and once again liquid explodes behind his eyeballs. He keeps his head down and scrapes at chipped paint while what feels like his innards dribbles onto the grass.
â¢â¢â¢
Milo changes tables again, scoring a window seat. This way he'll spot her before she sees him. He has refrained from rehearsing in his mind how he will act, intending to be completely spontaneous. He distracts himself with crossword puzzles and horoscopes, checking the door only about every ten seconds. She has been known to arrive early, although usually exactly on time.
Virgo: Be decisive and dynamic and take full advantage of the new opportunities coming your way. Everything will work out for the best if you believe in yourself and if you believe that the Universe wants you to succeed.
Tanis told him one of Christopher's legs is healing half an inch shorter than the other. They might have to refracture it, the doctor said, or he could try wearing a lift.
âIs he upset?' Milo asked.
âHe's beyond upset. He's in another zone.'
âAre you going to go see him?'
âIt's not like we're getting together again, Milo.'
âI wasn't suggesting you were.'
âYou want that, you want things like they were. You know what my father says?'
Her father is a businessman who uses terms Milo doesn't understand like
securitization, de-leveraging and structured investment vehicles
.
âHe says long-term results are usually determined by short-term decisions.'
âI have no idea what that means,' Milo said and walked away, yes, walked away from Tanis to get on with his life,
his
life.
When he sees Zosia he feels emotions gurgling again and tries to appear preoccupied with the newspaper, although really, to maintain an even keel, he would prefer to lie on the floor.
âWhat can I get you?' he asks, hoping she'll request one of the decadent creamy coffees they used to share.
âA small decaf. Black. Thank you.'
He orders at the bar, assuring himself that all is not lost, even though she looks pale and worn and without hope. He sets the cup before her and tries to smile,
cheese
, but he is so jittery he spills some coffee. âSorry,' he says, grabbing napkins and mopping it up. She says nothing, only sits, waiting patiently while he disposes of the soaked napkins. âIs there enough left?' he asks. âDo you want me to get you another one?'
âThis is fine.'
âOkay, well, just say the word if you want another one.'
âSit down, Milo.'
He does.
Be decisive and dynamic and take full advantage of the new opportunities coming your way
.
She points to the newspaper. âWhat are you reading?'
âOh, nothing, just a bit about another suicide bomber. A woman this time. She only managed to blow up twelve people. Wonder if this means they'll give her a hard time in the afterlife.' Why is he babbling? Zosia's skin seems almost translucent. Is all the blood going to the baby? He read somewhere that the fetus's needs override the mother's, draining the life out of her.