3
The Lord hath chastened me
sore: but he hath not given me over unto
death.
death.
PSALM 118:19
THE APARTMENT BUILDING KANE LIVED IN WAS ONE OF many thrown up quickly during the pipeline boom of the 1970s, then left to age ungracefully. It was three floors of plywood and two-by-fours, painted a nondescript gray on the outside and baby-shit brown on the inside. A large Yupik family with an ever-shifting cast of characters lived on one side of Kane; a good-looking young couple who had vigorous, noisy sex at every opportunity on the other. The people above him seemed to have a home business training elephants. Kane’s ears told him what his neighbors argued about and what they watched on television; his nose informed him of what they ate and what they smoked.
Not all that much different from prison, privacy
wise, he thought as he checked his mailbox and found, as usual,
nothing but junk sent to “current occupant.” He threw it away,
climbed the stairs to the second floor, and let himself into his
apartment. He locked the door behind him and felt the tension leave
his shoulders and neck for the first time that day.
Kane had been out of prison for a little more
than two months. The proportions of the outside world were still
all wrong. Everything was too big and too open, too bright and too
loud, and there were too many people wandering around loose,
driving, talking, laughing, looking him right in the eye in a way
that, inside, would have brought on at least an exchange of
threats. The world simply contained too much for someone accustomed
to a small cell, cramped vistas, and the constant vigilance that
kept him out of trouble.
Even his apartment, small by most standards,
seemed too big to Kane. It really wasn’t much: living room with
kitchen attached, bedroom in the back with a bathroom off that. It
had come furnished, and none of the pieces—the moldy couch, the
rickety table with mismatched chairs, the double bed without
headboard or foot board, the paper-thin wooden chest of drawers—was
without its scratches, mars, or sags.
But every surface was spotless: the hairy brown
carpets freshly shampooed and vacuumed, the kitchen linoleum swept
and mopped, the bed made with a tautness that would have made even
Kane’s old drill instructor smile. The Wal-Mart dishes were clean
and stowed away, the pot and pan shined. The little TV-VCR combo
that sat on a metal stand gleamed. The apartment was as neat and
barren as a monk’s cell.
One exception, propped up on top of the chest of
drawers, was a framed photo of Kane, Laurie, and the kids in camp
during a raft trip on the Talchulitna River years before. He
remembered everything about that picture: the sun on his back as he
positioned the camera and set the timer, the fresh salmon they’d
eaten for dinner after it was taken, how he and Laurie had made
love so quietly in their tent that night, arriving together at the
place very good sex takes you if you are lucky.
Another was an old picture his mother had given
him that hung above the bed, a garish, bloody rendering of the
Sacred Heart of Jesus that had scared the hell out of him as a
kid.
How could anybody live with their heart outside
them like that? he’d asked.
It’s a miracle, his mother had said. Don’t
question God’s miracles.
If you’d asked Kane why he’d hung that picture,
he couldn’t have answered. Even though his relationship with God,
if there was a God, was much more complicated than his mother’s,
the picture looked like it belonged there.
Kane pulled off his outdoor gear and stowed it in
the closet by the door, walked to the bedroom, navigated around the
books piled there, and dressed for the gym. He put a change of
clothes into his gym bag, put on a coat, and left the apartment,
his nose noting that the Yupik family, the Sundowns, would be
having fish for dinner. He started his pickup, got out to scrape
the ice off its windows, disconnected the head-bolt heater from an
electrical plug mounted on a short four-by-four cemented into the
ground, got back in, and drove to the gym. As usual, the pickup’s
cab was just starting to warm up when he got to where he was
going.
He pumped some iron, did an hour on the
treadmill, then had a steam and a shower. After he toweled off,
Kane looked at himself in a full-length mirror. A shade over six
feet, 190, the same weight he’d played football at in high school.
At the time of the shooting, he’d weighed thirty pounds more, but
worry and exercise had pared that away. Self-discipline and prison
cooking had kept it off.
Kane leaned closer to the mirror to examine his
face. Except for the scar, unremarkable, he thought: black hair
flecked with gray, still cut close, prison-style; brown eyes; an
ordinary nose, ridged in a couple of places it had been broken,
over somewhat thin lips; a jaw that was neither square nor pointed.
The beginnings of jowls hung from the sides of that jaw, and when
he bared his teeth the thin ropes of muscle in his neck jumped
out.
Not getting any younger, he thought.
Back in the apartment, Kane stood in the kitchen
assembling the ingredients for veal scaloppine. He’d never been a
cook. Laurie had done all of that during their more than twenty
years of marriage. Before that, institutions and restaurants had.
Before that, his mother. But as he’d told the Rejoice Council of
Elders, he’d had plenty of time to read in prison, and one of the
things he’d found himself reading was cookbooks. He had one open
now, an old copy of The Joy of Cooking he’d
bought at a secondhand bookstore. Like most of the recipes, this
one served three or four, and he was still trying to figure out how
to cut them down to serve one.
As he sliced mushrooms and diced tomatoes,
browned and baked, he thought about Jeffords’s question. Was he a
religious man? It was the same question the elder, Pinchon, had
asked. Kane couldn’t remember the last time anyone had asked him
such a question, let alone two people on the same day. The cons and
guards didn’t discuss theology much, and neither had the cops he’d
worked with.
Was he a religious man? He didn’t think of
himself as one. He had read the Bible in prison, true, but he’d
read anything he could get his hands on to keep himself from
thinking about where he was, how he’d gotten there, and how much
longer he had. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d been to
Mass. The Catholic Church seemed like a big bureaucracy to him, the
Army with bishops instead of colonels. And all that stuff about
God, the devil, and evil? He’d seen enough in his time to believe
in evil, but it seemed to him that everyone created his or her own.
Jesus, the things people did to each other.
Kane put the scaloppine and steamed vegetables on
separate plates; there was still far too much meat for one person.
As he sat down, he heard the bed in the apartment next door begin
its rhythmic squeaking. Here we go, he thought. He sat eating and
reading other veal recipes as the pace of the squeaking increased,
followed by the woman moaning, then the man joining in, the
headboard banging against the wall, the noise level increasing
until it sounded like the couple was going to come right through
the wall, bed and all. Then, suddenly, silence.
That must be one stout bed, Kane thought, turning
the page.
After he’d put the extra scaloppine in the
refrigerator and cleaned up the dinner dishes, Kane took a cell
phone from his pocket and punched in a number. When a man answered,
he ran his finger down his scar and said, “I’d like to speak with
Laurie, please. This is Nik Kane.”
The man’s hemming and hawing was quickly replaced
by her voice.
“What do you want, Nik?” she asked in the tone of
a mother dealing with a misbehaving child.
“I need to pick up a few things at the house,” he
said.
“Does it have to be tonight?” she said.
“It does,” he said. “I’m heading out in the
morning.”
“Why did you leave this until now?” she
demanded.
“I didn’t leave it until anytime,” he said. “I
didn’t think that coming by the house I still own to pick up some
of my possessions would be a problem.”
“Well, it is,” she said.
“Well, I don’t care,” he said. “I’m coming over
anyway. If that means you and your boyfriend have to put your
clothes back on, tough.”
“Oh, fuck you, Nik,” she said, and slammed the
receiver down.
That went well, he thought, stowing his cell
phone away.
He put on a coat, went out, got into his pickup,
and drove to his soon-to-be ex-house.
Kane told himself he’d have understood if Laurie
had given up on him while he was in prison. But she hadn’t. She
wrote to him regularly and visited him once a week, tracking him as
trouble drove him from one prison to another. The drive to where
he’d ended up, at the prison in Kenai, was more than three hundred
miles round trip, but she made it anyway, week in and week out, and
never a word of complaint. He watched her hair grow longer and her
body thinner, listened to her talk about the kids and her return to
nursing, and wondered if he could make it without her. The cons’
conventional wisdom was that having ties to the outside made you
weak, but Kane figured that was just their way of making it okay
not to have anyone outside. He had been—still was—immensely
grateful to Laurie, and as he pulled into the driveway he was
stricken with remorse for fighting with her.
Laurie was waiting for him, alone, her arms
folded across her chest.
“We’ve got to talk,” she said.
He followed her into their kitchen—her kitchen
now—and sat at the table. Kane folded his hands in front of him and
waited.
“Nik,” she said, “we’re getting divorced. I told
you that before. You have to accept it. We can be friends or we can
be enemies, depending on how we handle this. But we’re not going to
be husband and wife anymore. I’ve seen a lawyer. You’ll be getting
the papers soon.”
Kane looked down at his hands. The knuckles were
white. He forced himself to relax his grip, took a deep breath, and
said, “I want to start by apologizing for how I just treated you. I
had no right to do that. But I just can’t get used to this. I
thought about you for seven years, about coming back and being a
couple again, and now that’s all over? Why?”
Laurie sat up a little straighter, as if she were
trying to put more space, even just a couple of inches more,
between them.
“We talked about that, Nik,” she said. “You’re
not the same man you were before you went in. I’m not the same
woman. We don’t have the kids to raise anymore. We’ve just grown
apart. People do, even under normal circumstances.”
Kane felt like he’d been punched in the stomach.
He was having trouble breathing. He sat up straighter, took a
couple of deep breaths, and said, “That’s it? We’ve grown apart, so
that’s the end of more than twenty years of marriage? Couldn’t we
give it some time, maybe grow back together again?”
Laurie shook her head.
“That’s not the way it feels to me,” she said.
“It feels like this is over. Putting in more time would just make
breaking up horrible and bitter.”
Kane thought about that. Hiding somewhere in her
explanation was something else, a real reason or reasons. He’d had
this feeling before, questioning suspects, and he’d always been
right. Was it that she felt like she didn’t have that much more
time, more time to find somebody else? Laurie was forty-three, and
while she was still a good-looking woman, she had some gray hair
and lines around her eyes and mouth. For a moment, Kane could see
her as he first saw her at nineteen, a twinkle in her eye, her body
turning her candy striper outfit into an incitement to riot. Laurie
was right, the woman she was now was different. But did that have
to mean the end of everything?
“Are you sure that’s all there is to it?” he
asked. He couldn’t quite keep a tone of accusation out of his voice
and he saw her stiffen.
“Another man, you mean,” she said, her voice
harsh. Laurie got to her feet and walked over to lean against the
kitchen counter. “I told you before, there is no other man. I
waited for you. I’m not saying I was a nun for seven years, but I
passed up plenty of chances to hook up, as the kids say. I
practically moved right out of my parents’ house to yours. Why
would I want to get involved again right away? I needed the time to
figure out who I am.”
Kane didn’t understand that at all. Who I am? Who ever knows who they are? There’s the
person you want to be, the person other people want you to be, the
person you have to be, and probably a lot of others. You do the
best you can with all those people every day, and that’s who you
are.
“A man answered the phone,” he reminded
her.
“Antonio is just a friend,” she said,
exasperation in her voice. “I mean, he might be something more, but
he hasn’t been. He’s just been there for me during a lot of hard
times while you were away, and he’s here for me now. But we’re not
sleeping together.”
She blew air out of her mouth and paced, her
movements jerky with anger.
“Listen to me,” she said, “explaining myself to
you. I don’t owe you any explanations. You’re the one who fucked up
and brought us here.”
“I know,” Kane said. “I want to make it up to
you.”
“Make it up to me?” Laurie said, stopping in her
tracks. She sounded really angry now. “How are you going to make it
up to me? You going to give me the seven years back? You going to
be here to help me finish raising the kids and see them off? You
going to fix it so I don’t spend the past seven years on my feet
for ten hours a day, working my butt off, then coming home and
working here, having to be cheerful every minute?” Kane watched as
she regained control, saw the soft smile and the shake of her head.
“You can’t make it up, Nik. What’s done is done. It’s time to move
on.”
That’s what Jeffords said, too, Kane thought.
Time to move on. That’s fine for people who have a place to move on
to. But where am I going? I have a hard time just leaving my
apartment.
“I wish there was something I could say that
would change your mind,” he said, a plea in his voice. He took a
deep breath, then said more firmly, “Can you at least tell me what
it is that convinced you we aren’t right for each other
anymore?”
He really was baffled about that. After seven
years away, they’d spent three weeks together and she’d sent him
away. He’d thought things were going okay, considering. He had been
getting a slow start back into the world, it was true, and she’d
seemed a little tense around him, prickly really. And there was the
sex, which she didn’t seem to really be participating in the way
she once had. He was probably hard to get along with as well. You
don’t go from years of having walls and bars everywhere you looked
to living in twenty-first-century America without needing some time
to adjust. But he loved her, and he thought she loved him, and that
would be enough to carry them over this rough spot.
“What good would it do you to know?” she
asked.
“I don’t know,” he said. “It’s just that you
stuck with me for all that time and then, all of a sudden, it’s
over. I’m confused, I guess.”
Laurie walked over and sat at the table again.
She reached out and put a hand over Kane’s folded ones.
“It wasn’t anything big,” she said. “It was a lot
of little things. But the thing that did it was the way you
dress.”
“The way I dress?” Kane said.
“You wear the same clothes all the time,” she
said. “Blue shirt and jeans. You even had me buy another blue
shirt, so you’d have one to wear while the other was being washed.
Look at you. That’s what you’re wearing now. It’s like you’re still
in prison and this is your uniform.” She took her hand off his and
laid it on the side of his face. He could feel its warmth, and
calluses, too. “You’re not the man I married, Nik, or the one I
expected to get back from prison. Since you left, my world has
gotten bigger, but yours has gotten so much smaller. You’ve got a
lot of issues, Nik, a lot of things to resolve. And I just can’t
wait around until you work it all out, if you ever do.”
Kane opened his mouth and closed it again. There
wasn’t anything to say to that. He’d been proud of the way he’d
gotten through his sentence. Not proud of some of the things he’d
done inside, but proud of not being broken by the experience. He’d
thought it hadn’t even marked him much, but Laurie saw it
differently. He didn’t understand the decision it had led to, but
he had to accept it, like so many things that had come his way
since that night.
I guess I’ll have to do better living in the
world, he thought, and for the first time he felt committed to
going to Rejoice and finding the girl. At least it would force him
to get out of the apartment.
He looked at Laurie’s face. This is probably as
close to her as I’ll ever be again, he thought.
“Okay,” he said, “if that’s what you want. I’m
not happy about it, I may never be, but you’ve got a right to your
life.”
He reached up and gently took her hand and laid
it on the table. Then he got to his feet.
“I really do need to pick up a few things,” he
said. “I’m going out of town for a while. It’s work. I’ll get the
rest of my stuff later, if that’s all right. I’ll be sure to call
ahead. And I’ll sign the papers when I get back. Any way you want
to settle things is fine.”
He went into the garage and got a sleeping bag
and some camping gear and his big thermos. He loaded all that into
the pickup. He stood looking at his locked gun case for a long time
but made no move to open it. A judge had said he was no longer a
felon, so he could use firearms, but he didn’t know if he’d ever
handle one again.
He was taking out the last load, tire chains and
his tool box, when he heard Laurie call, “Nikky.”
He went back into the house. She was standing at
the top of the stairs. God, she’s beautiful, he thought.
“What is it?” he asked.
“Nothing,” she said. “I guess I just wanted to
see you one more time.”
They stood looking at each other for several
moments.
“Good-bye,” Kane said. He wouldn’t see her again
if it could be avoided. He needed a clean break. He turned and
walked away without another word.
Back at his apartment, he packed some clothes and
shaving gear in a duffel bag and got ready for bed. He found he
couldn’t sleep. Somewhere somebody was watching a reality show on
television, and it sounded like a domestic dispute was heating up
down the hall. He lay in his bed thinking about Laurie and his life
with her, saddened and amazed that it was over. Thinking about it
made him want to take a drink. More than one. Instead, he turned on
his bedside lamp and picked up Donald Frame’s translation of
Montaigne’s essays.
“Those who make a practice of comparing human
actions are never so perplexed as when they try to see them as a
whole and in the same light,” he read, “for they commonly
contradict each other so strangely that it seems impossible that
they have come from the same shop.”