We buried Hank on a beautiful California day, when the sun was shining and the sky was a vast blue expanse, as perfect as the ceiling of a sound stage. The only mourners were Jake, Lynette and myself. We found out that Hank had a son named Phillip, a stockbroker who lived in New York City. He wasn’t interested in coming to the funeral but ended up paying for all the arrangements. Hank had never mentioned he had a son, and I’m sure there was plenty more he never divulged to either me or Jake, but it was still a surprise to hear. Just another sad story to add to an old man’s miserable life.
I told Lynette all about Hank, after he died, well, not quite everything, and when I told her how often I had visited him she beamed proudly.
‘You really are a sweet girl,’ she said, getting teary. ‘And for all this time I thought you were probably on drugs.’
I went to the hospital to visit Benji, not the hospital they took him to the night of the party, but another one, with large bedrooms and beautiful gardens. When the doctors suggested Benji should spend a few weeks under observation, his parents made sure he went to the best facility money could buy. It was more like a resort than a hospital, with nurses who would bring you food whenever you wanted, just like room service.
When I walked into his room he was sitting on the bed, legs crossed and reading a magazine, looking like a young boy. He was wearing a striped red shirt and chinos, and his hair was nicely combed. His sleeves were long, covering the places where he had cut himself.
‘What happened to your hair?’ he asked when he saw me.
I twirled a few brown strands between my fingers. ‘I got sick of the pink. Made me look like a freak.’
‘I kinda liked it,’ he said. ‘It made you stand out, well, more than before. But this is good too. Natural.’
‘Brown is my natural hair colour.’
‘I know. We’ve known each other for a long time, remember?’
‘I guess so.’
Benji sat up and winced, placed one hand on his stomach protectively.
‘How’s it all looking down there?’ I asked.
‘A little tender, I guess. I’ve got so many bandages under here I’m like The Mummy.’
Other than that we didn’t talk about the night at the Chateau. Benji already appeared stronger and healthier despite the injuries. He was also softer, and calmer.
‘What are they feeding you in here?’ I asked.
‘It’s all healthy stuff. Organic. They think diet plays a big part in, you know, making your brain work better. What you feed yourself, you feed your brain, and your brain’s not going to function too well on hot dogs and candy bars.’
‘In that case my brain’s a coffee and Danish. I wonder what that says about me?’
‘It’s really interesting stuff, Hilda. I think you’d actually like it here.’
I flicked through the magazine on Benji’s bed, a fishing magazine.
‘Mom thinks we shouldn’t be friends anymore,’ Benji said, looking down like he was ashamed. ‘She says you’re a bad influence.’
I laughed, and luckily Benji laughed too.
‘They think this death stuff is bad for me, too,’ he said, his smile fading. ‘They went into my bedroom, put all my things into boxes.’
I knew what things he meant. His beloved artefacts. It was so sad to think of them thrown into a box and shoved into a cupboard, away from where they could be appreciated, admired, contemplated. I doubted Mr Connor had taken any care with them. I imagined Benji’s treasured bits of wood and slivers of rock were probably destroyed now.
‘That sucks,’ I said.
‘They’re probably right. Maybe it’s time to get a new hobby.’
‘I can’t really imagine you collecting stamps or building model airplanes.’
‘Me neither.’
I put my hand on his leg, and he flinched, but I didn’t pull away. ‘Don’t worry. I’m sure all your stuff will still be there when you get back. You can pull it out when you’re ready.’
We spent the rest of the day strolling around the grounds, making fun of the other patients and pretending we were in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Benji picked up a rubbish bin from the hallway and ran at the window with it, acting like he was going to bust out, and two burly guards raced over and almost tackled him before he could explain he was only joking around. Needless to say they didn’t think it was very funny, but Benji and I did, and we laughed harder than I had laughed in a long time. When I left Benji that afternoon he had colour in his face, and his eyes looked brighter. I decided that even if it was against Mrs Connor’s wishes I would visit Benji again before the summer was over.
Slowly, Jake and I came back to each other. I let him set the agenda: we went to art galleries, street festivals and rock concerts. We went bowling and to the movies and talked about celebrities who were still alive. Jake abandoned The Life Upstairs and started writing an action film with an environmental message that already had a studio interested. I left school. Lynette was disappointed but, in the tradition of letting me make my own decisions (and mistakes), decided to let me go ahead.
‘Your mother would have let you,’ she said, ‘so I’m kind of between a rock and a hard place.’
‘Don’t worry,’ I assured her. ‘Now that I don’t have pink hair I’m sure there are plenty of establishments that will take me on.’
The only job I could get was at a coffee shop in the Valley. I didn’t mind. The whole scene was pretty laid back, and I could have even kept my pink hair if I wanted to. There was always a cool CD on rotation, and the bright fluorescent lights and cushy sofas hypnotised me into a feeling close to content. Some days Jake would come in and work from the sofa in the corner, and I would sit with him during my lunch break, talk about his script and the characters, offer him ideas of my own. I grew to really love the coffee shop. I was more than happy with where I was, in my green apron and hat, mastering the art of the perfect espresso while Paul McCartney tunes played over and over in the background. It was fine for now. Jake was ambitious enough for both of us, and I was happy to coast along for the moment, just enjoying the experience of being alive, being around people, being free.
The Manson Family parole hearings continued like some grotesque charade. I heard about it from the customers talking over lattes, and snatches of headlines from the newspapers they left lying around. I wasn’t too interested anymore. Everyone knew they would never be let out, hell, I’m sure even they knew. It was just another opportunity to give Charlie and his followers the spotlight, macabre fodder for a slow news day. I thought about the poor family members who had lost their loved ones and had to listen to this crap every time one of the killers came up for parole. I continued making lattes, sprinkling chocolate powder on cappuccinos, as Charlie made his pronouncements about judgment day. To Charlie I was one of the squares who had been blinded by ‘the man’. I didn’t care. It was nice to be like everyone else for a change.
I didn’t tell Jake any of what Hank had confessed to me. In some ways what had happened to Hank was unspeakable. Some days I would play the story over in my head, coming at it from all different angles. Sometimes Hank emerged as the tragic victim of circumstance. On other days, when I was feeling black, he was a murderer. I went around in circles so many times that in the end I had to put it aside and let it be. Sometimes that is all you can do.
One day Jake called and asked if I’d like to go to the department store with him. He had a meeting with a director about his screenplay and wanted to buy a new suit for the occasion.
‘We can do that in the morning,’ I said. ‘But then there is somewhere I want to go. I have something I want to show you.’
‘Let me guess. We’re going to the Hollywood sign to see where that chick jumped off.’
‘No Jake, I’ve already seen that. That’s so old school.’
‘Wait, I know. The restaurant where Robert Blake ate dinner with his wife before shooting her.’
‘Before allegedly shooting her, and no, that’s not it either.’
‘So where are we going?’
‘You’ll just have to wait and see.’
That afternoon after buying shirts at Macy’s we drove to a small cemetery in Topanga Canyon. It was on a clearing beside a thick forest, the grave markings small and discreet, so as to not disrupt the natural landscape. We pulled up and Jake turned off the engine.
‘I knew it,’ he said. ‘More death.’
‘This is different.’ I closed the car door and wandered up the clearing. I hadn’t visited for so long. It was as peaceful and beautiful as I remembered. Tiny yellow flowers had covered most of the ground, some of them creeping over the gravestones, enveloping the grey marble in vibrant colour. I knelt on the ground and cleared the overgrowth away from a stone. I felt Jake behind me, a few feet away, unsure of whether to come closer. I turned around.
‘Come on. Sit down.’
He sat beside me. ‘Is this who I think it is?’
I ran my hand along the stone. ‘Mom and Dad, this is Jake.’
There was no crime scene tape, no tour guide with a megaphone, or high fences keeping out souvenir-seekers. There were only stone markers on the ground, each one indistinguishable from the next. Everything was quiet. I didn’t know if my parents could hear me but it didn’t seem to matter. I lay down on the grass with my hand resting on their marker, and Jake lay beside me, held me, and at that moment we were just people who had lost people, who would one day be lost to others. I pulled the tile from my pocket, pushed it into the quiet earth where it could wait for me. Everything seemed okay.