“We don't have MTV,” he said, scanning the available channels.
Â
“That's âcause we don't have cable yet.
Â
I'll get it hooked up this week, I promise.”
Â
David flicked off the set.
Â
“So do I get to go to the game tomorrow?”
Diane sighed.
Â
“Oh, David, let's see where we're at in the morning.
Â
What time would you have to leave?”
“It's an afternoon game, so I guess by lunchtime.”
“Well, let's do a little bit tonight and get up early and unpack some more.
Â
If we've made a good dent in it by ten o'clock, I'll let you go.”
“Sweet!”
David grabbed a box and ripped the packing tape off, revealing sets of dishes.
Â
“Be careful with those,” Diane said.
Â
She got up, went into the kitchen, opened a cabinet, and made sure the shelf was clean.
Â
“Put them in here, all right?”
As he carried a stack into the kitchen, Diane surveyed the place and had to admit that it was a lovely two-bedroom apartment.
Â
The complex was brand new and smelled like it.
Â
It was nice to move into a sparkling clean home, even though it was drastically smaller than their house.
Â
Besides the two bedrooms, there were two bathrooms, a living room with a fireplace, an eat-in kitchen, and a one-car garage.
Â
There was a deck in the back with a bar-b-q grill, and a nice expanse of yard that they shared with other tenants.
Â
Diane figured that she would save close to a thousand dollars a month in mortgage payments.
Â
She had gotten a very good price.
Â
David carried the dishes from the box to the kitchen and asked, “Mom, what were my grandparents like?”
Diane sat on the floor to open another box.
Â
“David, I've told you all about them.
Â
What do you want to know?”
“I don't know,” he said.
Â
“I just wish I had known them.
Â
Grandpa and grandma Boston are okay, but I just wonder what grandpa and grandma Wilson were like.
Â
Wilson
.
Â
The name sounded so foreign to Diane.
Â
She hadn't used it in such a long time.
Â
“Well, you know your grandfather died young.
Â
I was just a baby, so to tell you the truth, I didn't know him either.
Â
He was thirty-one.”
“He had Marfan syndrome, too?”
“That's what we think.
Â
He had a bad heart.
Â
He was tall and skinny like you, and he had thick glasses.
Â
Back then they didn't really understand the, uhm, condition like they do today.
Â
I imagine he probably exerted himself too much one day and just dropped dead.”
David finished with the dishes.
Â
“Which box should I do now, Mom?”
She looked around and pointed to the one that contained glasses.
Â
“Do that one.
Â
The glasses go in the cabinet next to the dishes.”
As he started to work, he asked, “What about grandma Wilson?”
“Well, she was very strict.
Â
I guess she had a hard time after my father died.
Â
She passed away when I was five.
Â
It wasn't much of a family, David.”
“What did you do when she died?
Â
Where did you go?”
“I lived with an uncle and aunt in Texas until I⦠went to college.”
Â
David noticed that his mother had become distracted again.
Â
She tended to do that whenever she talked about the past.
Â
It was almost as if she couldn't remember certain details.
Â
“Now where was I?” she asked herself, looking at two open boxes.
Â
“I think you were working on the linens,” David answered.
“Right.”
Â
She continued to unload towels and walk them into the hallway where the linen closet was located.
Â
“I thought you went to Harper College before you married Dad,” David said.
“I did,” Diane replied.
Â
“That was later.
Â
I went back and got an education degree and my teacher's certificate.
Â
The first time I went to college was as a history major.”
“Where did you go?”
“What's with all these questions, David?
Â
I'd rather not talk about all this.”
“Sorry.”
Â
They worked in silence a while longer until David sat on the sofa, spent.
Â
“Had enough?” Diane asked.
Â
“I think so,” he said.
Â
“I might take a shower.”
“Sounds like a good idea,” Diane said.
Â
“We can do the rest tomorrow morning, I think.”
After a pause, he asked, “You think you and Dad will ever get back together?”
Diane sat next to him and put her arm around him.
Â
“I don't know, honey.
Â
I really don't think so.”
Â
David nodded resignedly and slipped out from under her arm.
Â
He went to another pile of boxes and asked, “Is my PS2 in one of these?”
“Hmmm, maybe.”
He picked up a box and tore off the tape, revealing a collection of old, faded newspaper clippings.
Â
The one on top was the
Los Angeles Times
and the headline blared, “GANGLAND MURDERS AT PORNO WAREHOUSE.”
Â
He lifted the top clipping and saw another headline, “MISSING ADULT FILM ACTRESSES BELIEVED DEAD.”
“Hey, what are these?” David asked.
Diane wrinkled her brow and stood.
Â
She stepped over to him, looked in the box, and gasped.
Â
Reacting suddenly, she pulled the box away and closed the flaps.
Â
“That's nothing,” she said.
Â
“What do you mean?”
Â
David was no fool.
Â
He could see that his mother had recoiled in horror at his discovery.
Â
“What are they?”
“Just some newspapers I forgot I even had.
Â
They're personal.
Â
In fact I probably should have gotten rid of them a long time ago.
Â
Forget about them, I'm throwing them away.
Â
They're garbage.”
David looked at her curiously.
“Really,” she said, unconvincingly.
Â
He finally shrugged and said, “I'm going to take that shower.”
Â
He walked out of the room and headed toward his bedroom.
Â
Diane looked at her hand and saw that she was shaking.
Â
She really had forgotten that she was in possession of the clippings.
Â
They must have been in the crawl space of the house and had been picked up with some of the other boxes down there.
Â
She went straight to the kitchen and found one of the three bottles of wine she had brought from the old house.
Â
She then rummaged through one of the boxes marked “Kitchen” and eventually found the corkscrew.
Â
After opening the bottle, an inexpensive cabernet, she took one of the wineglasses that David had put away, rinsed it out, and poured a nightcap.
Â
The wine tasted good and would go a long way toward easing her anxiety.
Â
She felt her heart pumping hard and fast, so she moved to the sofa and sat.
Â
She closed her eyes and tried to will away the unpleasant memories that were evoked when David had unearthed the newspapers.
Â
“Sweetie?
Â
What's wrong?
Â
You soundâ”
“Please⦔
“Where are you?”
“â¦warehouse⦔
“My God, what's happened?
Â
Sweetie?”
Diane jumped when the phone rang.
Â
She picked up the receiver and answered.
Â
“Hello?”
“I see your new number works.”
Â
It was Greg.
Â
“Hi.”
“How'd it go today?”
“All right.
Â
We still have a lot to do.”
“Is David there?”
“He's taking a shower and then he's going to bed.
Â
We're both exhausted.”
“I can imagine.”
“Look, if you're calling about the game, I guess he can go.
Â
But really, Greg, you should have known better than to arrange this on a weekend when we're moving.”
“I know, I'm sorry, it just came up.
Â
I had no control over it.”
“Well, just keep it in mind for future reference.”
“Fine.
Â
I was
calling
to see how you were doing, not to get a lecture.”
“I'm really tired, Greg, and I have a headache.
Â
I don't feel much like nursing your ego.”
Â
“Well, fuck you, too, Diane.”
“Hey!”
“No,
hey
, to you,” he said.
Â
She could now hear the alcohol in his voice.
Â
She eyed the wineglass in her hand and figured,
it takes one to know one
.
Â
He tried again.
Â
“Look, I called to see if your number worked and to see how it went.
Â
Why do you have to be such a bitch?”
“I'm not, Greg.
Â
If you had paid a little more attention to David's and my needs, we'd all still be living in the same house.”
“Are we getting into that again, Diane?
Â
Come on, it's been over a year.
Â
Can't we be friends now?”
“Why should we?”
“Well, we have a
son
together, for one thing.”
“I know, and I promise I can be civil when you're around us.
Â
I don't bad-mouth you to him.
Â
You're still his father and I respect that.”
“You sure don't sound like it.”
“Greg, you
left
us!
Â
You had your fucking mid-life crisis and walked out of the house.
Â
You started screwing your secretary and thenâ”
“I did
not
screw my secretary!”
“Well, whoever it was, I know it was
someone
at Boston Ford!”
He was quiet for a moment.
Â
This confirmed her suspicion.
Â
“You know, Diane,” he finally said.
Â
“You're a real piece of work.”
“What's that supposed to mean?”
“You never gave one-hundred per cent to me.”
“Sure I did.”
“No.
Â
You didn't.
Â
You held back.
Â
I was talking to Steve the other day.
Â
You know he and Ann are getting a divorce?”
“I heard that.
Â
I'm sorry.”
Â
He was referring to a couple that they used to hang around with.
Â
Since the divorce, Diane hadn't seen either of them.
Â
Greg had remained friends with Steve.
Â