Read What You Have Left: The Turner Trilogy Online
Authors: James Sallis
Lonnie showed up not long after, then Don Lee with Doc Oldham in tow. At one point Lonnie threatened to slap cuffs on me and haul my ass back to town if he had to. He didn’t carry through on it, though. Most of us don’t carry through; that’s one of the things you can usually count on.
Eldon was the last to turn up, after the rest had gone, even Nathan—though for all I knew, Nathan was still out there skulking. Eldon sat on the edge of the porch.
“I’m sorry, man,” he said.
“We all are.”
“You have no idea.”
I didn’t have much of anything.
“Rain heading this way.”
“Good.”
After a moment he said, “I loved her, John.”
After a moment I said, “I know you did.”
“What the hell are we gonna do now, man?”
“You’re going to go on, to Texas and all those places you two had talked about, and you’re going to play and sing the songs you and Val always did together.”
I went in and got the banjo.
“She told me you were learning to play.”
“I don’t think you can call what the banjo and I do together
play
. It’s more of an adversary relationship.”
When I handed it to him, he said, “I can’t take this.”
“Sure you can. It needs to be played, it needs to be allowed to do what it was made for.”
We argued about it some more, and finally he agreed. “Okay, I’ll take it, I’ll even learn to play the thing. But it’s not mine.”
“That’s what Val always said: that instruments don’t belong to people, we just borrow them for a while.”
“What about you? What are you going to do?”
I’m going to sit here on this porch, I told him. And once he was gone that’s what I did, sat there on the porch looking out into the trees and back at the label on the wine bottle and thinking about the ragged edges of my life. About daybreak I saw Miss Emily walking at wood’s edge with young ones in a line behind her. “Val,” I said aloud, and as her name came back to me in echo from the trees it sounded very much like a prayer.
Somewhere deep inside myself I’m still sitting there, waiting.
SALT RIVER
To Odie Piker
and Ant Bee—
for putting on The Dog
Contents
SOMETIMES YOU JUST HAVE
to see how much music you can make with what you have left. Val told me that, seconds before I heard the crash of her wineglass against the porch floor, looked up, and only then became aware of the shot that preceded it, two years ago now.
The town doesn’t have much left. I’ve watched it wither away until some days you’d think the first strong wind could take it. I’m not sure how much I have left either. With the town, it’s all economics. As for me, I think maybe I’ve seen a few too many people die, witnessed too much unbearable sadness that still had somehow to be borne. I remember Tracy Caulding up in Memphis telling me about a science fiction story where these immortals would every century or so swim across a pool that relieved them of their memories, then they could go on. I wanted a swim in that pool.
Doc Oldham and I were sitting on the bench outside Manny’s Dollar $tore. Doc had stopped by to show off his new dance step and, worn out from the thirty-second performance, had staggered outside to rest up a spell, so I was resting up with him.
“Used to be Democrats in these parts,” Doc said. “Strange creatures, but they bred well. ’Bout any direction you looked, that’s all you’d see.”
Doc had retired, and his place had been taken by a new doctor, Bill Wilford, who looked all of nineteen years old. Doc now spent most of his time sitting outside. He spent a lot of it, too, saying things like that.
“Where’d they all get to, Turner?” He looked at me, pulling his head back, turtlelike, to focus. I had to wonder what portion of the world outside actually made it through those cataracts, how much of it got caught up in there forever. “Town’s dried up, same as a riverbed. What the hell you stayin’ here for?”
He grabbed at a knee to stop the twitching from the exercise minutes ago. His hands looked like faded pink rubber gloves. All the pigment got burned out a long time back, he said, when he was a chemist, before medical school.
“Yeah, I know,” he went on, “what the hell are any of us staying here for? Granted, the town wasn’t much to start with. Never was meant to be. Just grew up here, like a weed. Farms all about, back then. People start thinking about going to town of a weekend, pick up flour and the like, there has to
be
a town. So they made one. Drew straws, for all I know. See who had to move into the damn thing.”
A thumb-size grasshopper came kiting across the street and landed on Doc’s sleeve. The two of them regarded one another.
“Youngsters used to be all around, too, like them Democrats. Nowadays the ones that don’t just get born old and stay that way, they up and leave soon’s they can.” Looking down, he told the grasshopper: “You should, too.”
Doc liked people but was never much for social amenities, one of those who came and went as he pleased and said pretty much what he thought. Now that he didn’t have anything to do, sometimes you got the feeling that the second cup of coffee you’d offered might stretch to meet your newborn’s graduation. He knew it, too, duly noting and relishing every sign of unease, every darting eye, every shuffled foot. “Wonder is, I’m here at all,” he’d tell you. “My own goddamn miracle of medical science. Got more wrong with me than a hospital full of leftovers. Asthma, diabetes, heart trouble. Enough metal in me to sink a good-size fishing boat.”
“What you are,” I’d tell him, “is a miracle of stubbornness.”
“Just hugging the good earth, Turner. Just hugging the good earth.”
The grasshopper stepped down to his knee, sat there a moment, then took off, with a thrill of wings, back out over the street.
“Least
somebody
listens,” Doc said. “Back when I was an intern . . .”
Apparently a page had been turned in the chronicle playing inside his head. I waited for his coughing fit to subside.
“Back when I was an intern—it was like high school machine shop, those days. Learn to use the hacksaw, pliers, clamps, the whatsits. More like
Jeopardy
now—how much obscure stuff can you remember? Anyway, I was working with all these kids, all in a ward together. A lot of cystic fibrosis—not that we knew what it was. Kids who’d got the butt end of everything.
“There was this one, ugliest little thing you ever saw, body all used up, with this barrel chest, skin like leather, fingers like baseball bats. But she had this pretty name, Leilani. Made you think of flowers and perfume and music. An attending told us one day that the truth was, Leilani didn’t exist anymore, hadn’t really been alive for years, it was just the infection, the pseudomonas in her, that went on living—moving her body around, breathing, responding.”
He looked off in the direction the grasshopper had taken.
“That’s how I feel some days.”
“Doc, I just want you to know, any time you feel like dropping by to cheer me up, don’t hesitate.”
“Never have. Spread it around.”
“You do that, all right.”
He waited a moment before asking, “And how are you doing?”
“I’m here.”
“That’s what it comes down to, Turner. That’s what it comes down to.”
“One might hope for more.”
“One does. Always. So one gets off one’s beloved butt and goes looking. Then, next thing you know, the sticks you used to knock fruit out of a tree have got sharpened up to spears and the spears have turned to guns, and there you are: countries, politicians, TV, designer clothes. Descartes said all our ills come from a man being unable to sit alone, quietly, in a room.”
“I did that a lot.”
“Ain’t sure a prison cell counts.”
“Before. And after. The ills found me anyway.”
“Yeah. They’ll do that, won’t they? Like a dog that gets the taste for blood. Can’t break him of it.”
Odie Piker drove by in his truck, cylinders banging. Thing had started out life as a Dodge. Over the years so many parts had been replaced—galvanized steel welded on as fenders, rust spots filled and painted over in whatever color came to hand, four or five rebuilt clutches and a motor or two dropped in—that there was probably nothing left of the original. Nor, I think, had it at any time in all those years ever been washed or cleaned out. Dust from the fallout of bombs tested in the fifties lurked in its seams, and back under the seat you’d find wrappers for food products long since extinct.
Doors eased shut on pneumatics as Donna and Sally Ann left City Hall for lunch at Jay’s Diner. Minutes later, Mayor Sims stepped out the side door and stood brushing at his sport coat. When he saw us, his hand shifted into a sketchy wave.
“Frangible,” Doc proclaimed, his mind on yet another track.
“Okay.”
“Frangible. What we all are—what life is. Fragile. Easily broken. Mean the same. But neither gets it near the way
frangible
does.”
He looked off at the mayor, who had gotten in his car and was just sitting there.
“Two schools of thought. One has it we’re best off using simple words, plain words. That fancier ones only serve to obscure meaning—wrap it in swaddling clothes. Other side says that takes everything down to the lowest common denominator, that thought is complex and if you want to get close to what’s really meant you have to choose words carefully, words that catch up gradations, nuances . . . You know this shit, Turner.”
“A version of it.”
“Versions are what we have. Of truth, our histories, ourselves. Hell, you know that, too.”
I smiled.
“Frangible Henry over there’s trying to talk himself out of going to see his lady friend up by Elaine.” He gave the town’s name a hard accent. Elaine. “But it’s Thursday. And whichever side of the argument you pick to look at it from, he’ll lose.”
“You never cease to amaze me, Doc.”
“I’m common as horseflies, Turner. We all are, however much we go on making out that it’s otherwise . . . Guess we should both be about our work. If we had some, that is. Anything you need to be doing?”
“Always paperwork.”
“Accounts for eighty percent of the workforce, people just moving papers from one place to another. Though nowadays I guess there ain’t much actual paper involved. Half the
rest
of the workforce spends its time trying to find papers that got put in the wrong place. Well,” he said, “there goes Henry off to Elaine.”
We sat watching as the mayor’s butt-sprung old Buick waddled down the street. A huge crow paced it, sweeping figure eights above, then darted away. Thought it was some lumbering beast about to drop in its tracks, maybe.
Doc pushed to his feet and stood rocking. “They say when you stare into the abyss, the abyss stares back. I think they’re wrong, Turner. I think it only winks.”
With that sage remark Doc left, to be about his business and leave me to mine, as he put it, and once he was gone I sat there alone still resting up, wondering what my business might be.
Alone
was exactly what I’d thought my business was when I came here. Now I found myself at the center of this tired old town, part of a community, even of a family of sorts. Never had considered myself much of a talker either. But with Val conversation had just gone on and on, past weary late afternoons into bleary early mornings, and I was forever remembering things she’d said to me.
Sometimes you just have to see how much music you can make with what you have left.
Or the time we were talking about my prison years and the years after, as a therapist, and she told me: “You’re a matchbook, Turner. You keep on setting fire to yourself. But somehow at the same time you always manage to kindle fires in others.”