Jake’s Hand
Part 5
Book 2 - The Return – 14 Years Later
It had been a year since I had written the story and sent it to the computer
bulletin board. I had had a severe bout of upload remorse after I pushed
the ENTER key, but there was nothing I could do about it then without calling
more attention to myself. The story, I hoped, was lost in the past.
I was coming home from work. Just as I had balanced all my groceries on my knee
and inserted the keys into the lock of the door of my condominium, the phone
rang. Shit! By the time I had hurriedly opened the door and dumped
half the groceries I was carrying onto and over the kitchen counter, the
answering machine had given its spiel, and I could hear the voice at the other
end starting to speak: “I’ll, er, call back some other time,”
I quickly picked up the phone: “Hello! Hello!”
“Hello, Rob? Rob Ellis?” Though I hadn’t heard the voice in years,
I knew immediately who it was. His rich voice was unmistakable.
“It’s Jake Cantwell.”
I was stunned into silence for a few seconds before I regained my wits.
“Gee, I knew a John Edward Cantwell III years ago, but apparently he had no
friends that he was willing to talk to for, let’s see, 14 years. John
Cantwell, did you say?” I asked in the most officious manner I could
muster. “And you’re selling what tonight?”
“Dammit, Rob! At least I let my friends call me Jake, but, obviously,
you’re not a friend. But you could be.” He remembered our
first exchange.
I paused. The telephone line was silent for a few moments and I
sighed deeply with warm feelings. “How the hell are you?”
“I’m good,” he said without enthusiasm.
Not excellent or great or happy or excited to hear my voice, but only a
restrained good. Good means not good, I thought.
“What are
you up to? What’s going on?”
“I’m going to be in Seattle on a project for a few weeks, so I thought I’d look
you up,” he said.
“That’s great! I’d love to see you. Tell me more,” I
said. “What’s the project? Who are you working for?
What part of the world are you living in these days? How long will you be
in Seattle? Can I pick you up at the airport? Will you have any
free time while you’re here? Etc.? Etc.?”
“Whoa! Can I tell you all about it later? I’ll be flying in from
Boston on Tuesday. If it doesn’t put you out of your way, I accept your
offer to pick me up.”
“It’s no trouble at all. Give me the details of the flight.” I
wrote down what Jake told me. “Do you need a place to stay?”
“No, I’m staying at a hotel called...” and he paused, apparently to look at his
notes, “The Emery.” I recognized the name as a (very) modest priced hotel
on the edge of downtown. As if sensing my editorial view of his hotel
choice, Jake continued: “Our company is on a stringent budget.”
“See you Tuesday,” I said as we hung up. Little did I know that on
Tuesday a set of events would begin that would forever change my life.
* * *
Two years earlier, shortly after the divorce, I had found a two-bedroom
condominium that suited me on the south side of Queen Anne hill. It had a
spectacular view of the bay, the downtown and the mountains beyond. It
was about a mile from our—now Anne’s—house in Seattle. Our kids could
easily walk or bicycle from Anne’s house to my condo and vice versa. That
was important to both of us. We both wanted to be involved with our kids.
My almost-13-year-old son Alec stayed most weekends with me as well as,
increasingly, some school days. The remainder of the time he stayed with
his mother. Celly, as I call Celia my daughter, came over from time to
time for dinner—about once a week—and I would take both of the kids to movies
or to some other entertainment, but for the time being she was happier staying
with her mother. She was going on 10 years old. In the summer, I
would take the kids camping on weekends. And then, we would take a
vacation together once a year. It wasn’t a perfect arrangement, but Anne
and I thought it was the best we could do.
The condominium was comfortable. It had two floors, with the living room
ceiling extending the full two floors. There was a stairway on the left
as you came in the door to the living room, a small balcony/landing at the top
of the stairs and a hallway that led off the balcony to a bathroom and the two
bedrooms—Alec’s on the left and mine, the master bedroom, with its own bath on
the right. The master bathroom was huge, with both a walk-in shower and a
tub. Beyond the living room on the main floor was a dining area under the
staircase and the second-floor bedrooms, with a couch separating the two rooms,
and through a door on the right side of the dining room there was the entry
into the kitchen.
The wall beneath the stair was lined with built-in bookshelves, and I had
placed Everything You Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask on a
shelf where Alec was likely to find it, which he did, because I noticed it was
getting a lot of thumbing. Maybe that’s why he liked to stay with
Dad. I had given him the sexual-plumbing talk some months earlier, but I
couldn’t bring myself to talk to him about advanced sex. Hence, the book
method. I hoped he was getting some information in school as well.
More likely, he probably was learning how to put condoms on bananas.
There were outside balconies off both the kitchen and master bedroom.
Alec said it was unfair that he didn’t have a balcony. Tough shit, I had
said, and he had grinned, resignedly. I wanted an outside balcony to my
bedroom for a special reason: the rain. I liked to listen to the
rain through the window or, during mild weather, through the open sliding door,
as the drops hit the planks on the balcony deck. Ever since I was a kid
growing up near Seattle, I would leave a window open so I could listen to the
rain soothe me as it ticked on the roof and on the leaves of the trees
outside. The sound of the rain was a massage for my soul. It was
music for my psyche, especially as I was unwinding from the divorce.
Besides, if you are going to live in Seattle and be happy, you need to make peace
with the rain. My method was not to shut it out but to let it in. Rain to
me is a refuge—a reason for reading a good book at night or for going to the
ocean when the winter wetness has chased all the tourists from the
beaches. Or, I could listen to the soothing sounds for hours on end as I
read my novels before I went to sleep. Seattle rain is rarely spectacular
or violent, like it is in Indiana where thunderstorms reigned during visits to
my grandparents, or like it was in Mississippi, where violent storms tried to
crash our world. In Seattle, it is quiet and steady, like Seattle itself.
Since the divorce, I particularly felt I needed to go to sleep with the sound
of rain out the window. I needed the refuge.
Jake’s Arrival
The dawn on the morning of Jake’s arrival looked spectacular as I stood in my
boxers on my balcony admiring the view, drinking my first cup of fresh-ground
coffee of the day, feeling the cool sea air against the bare skin of my legs
and chest. In the background was the Cascade Range. The sun was
about to rise through a narrow strip of brilliant purple sky framed on the
bottom side by the mountains with Mount Rainier standing high to the south—on
the right. At the top of the view the sun colored the edge of a bank of
clouds advancing from the West. In the foreground, the city skyscrapers
glittered with the last of the night’s lights. I knew the beauty was going to
be short-lived, because the silver, feathered edge of that cloud front rolling
in portended a gray day. In the winter the front might herald a gray
week—or month. But in the spring, the grayness might last only a day or
two.
I could have stood there longer and watched the clouds erase the rest of
the clear sky, but with a sigh I decided it was time to get dressed for work.
Alec was not up yet. He liked to sleep up to that very last minute that
allowed him to get to school on time, and he somehow always managed to make it
without being tardy. At least the school never complained to me. I
left a note telling him I might not be home for dinner, and I put a $5 bill for
him to buy something. I suspected he would buy pizza instead of something
healthy like tofu or vegetables, but I wasn’t sure any more. Alec
did tend to surprise me as he grew up.
I sat at my desk all day, with my mind half on my work and half on the arrival
of Jake. When it finally became near time to go to the airport to pick
him up, I grabbed my coat and left work a few minutes early—relieved that the
wait was ending. I struggled with the afternoon southbound traffic on
I-5, turned off on the Burien exit and the hill going up to the airport from
the Southcenter Mall, fought the parking battle at the airport garage and won
with a spot only 100 feet from the elevators, crossed the foot bridge into the
main terminal, then took the subway to the satellite terminal. I had left
myself plenty of time for all this, and I even was able to pick up the Times to
read the afternoon version of the Mariners’ sorry game the previous
night.
About 15 minutes later, the plane from Boston approached the ramp, the muffled
whine of the engines muted by the plate glass barrier between the waiting area
and the nose of the plane. The whine ceased, the ramp was rolled up to
the airplane and the doors were opened to the terminal.
I was getting nervous, apprehensive and excited at the same time. I have
waited in airport lounges and bars to meet old college friends that I haven’t
seen in a long while, but my wait has always been colored with some
trepidation. You never know what the old friends have become.
College can be such a world-opening interlude in life. For a short while
a good college can force young people away from the circle of their family and
high-school friends, and it redefines them—for better or for worse—with a new
set of friends.
Some of these college friends are able to grow from the base of their family
values and traditions and to redefine them to fit their own individualized
existence, creating something richer and more nuanced once they leave
school. Other friends seem to retreat into the narrower family sphere,
shucking the changes that college has offered them, letting their lives harden in
old molds. The fork in their life road seems to occur somewhere in the
early to mid 20s. The fire of change lit in college either stays lit or
it dies out. My college classmates either become people I want to know
for life or people I am willing to lose touch with through neglect or by mutual
choice, with only a brief hello as we might meet by happenstance.
So, I didn’t know whether Jake was going to emerge from the plane as the joyous
young man that stepped off the bus in Mississippi or as a reversion to his
stolid suburban Boston environment—where his life would be but a commuter
distance from the stolid conservative life of the downtown finance houses,
where his father worked. Would Jake be a grown-up but settled-down
version of the Jake I had written about in my story, eyes bright with hope and
promise and joy? Or would he be a buttoned-down Boston businessman
concerned with material things? How many of the reasons that took him to
Mississippi would he retain as part of his being? As I waited, I
considered the bookends that I had established.
Of course, he didn’t fit any of these molds. I sensed that both my
bookend pre-conceptions were entirely off base when I spied him coming up the
ramp from the 747, dressed in jeans and a T-shirt. This time it was
different. He hadn’t changed in any of the directions I expected.
For reasons I couldn’t articulate, my immediate impression encountering him
this time was not joy or spontaneity nor was it conservative stodginess.
My impression was of infinite sorrow. I don’t know if it was the quick
haunted downcast look that flashed across his face just before that smile or
the way he carried his body. His smile was sunshine as ever, but it was
like the dawn I had just watched, appearing briefly in the small patch of clear
sky before a cloud bank brought a storm. He wasn’t button-down Boston,
but he wasn’t the self-directed adult at the other end of my bookend. He
seemed a bewildered version of the 19 year old who got off the bus in Mississippi,
almost still a boy.
In actuality, his appearance was still the 19-year old in Mississippi. He
had changed only a little. He was still trim and had kept his striking
looks. His auburn hair still covered his ears in soft curls, but he now
wore a beautiful head band made from what I was later to learn was a dyed cloth
called batik. The crow’s feet around his eyes had etched their way
slightly into his face, alas. His smile still radiated from his mouth as
he spoke to one of the other passengers, but age had brought another line at
its edges.
But his eyes hinted at a sadder story. Between the brief smiles, I could see
uncertainty and reserve where confidence once resided. It was something
that had not been there 14 years earlier. It was something I didn’t
expect to find in that once supremely confident child-man who I remember could
talk virtually anybody into doing anything for him. Maybe it was how Tom
Sawyer would have grown up if Mark Twain had let him grow up. I
rationalized that maybe this was just the result of fatigue from the cross
country trip. I realized I no longer knew anything about him, but I
sensed that something had changed profoundly in him.
Of course, Jake might soon think I was reserved as well, taking it from the
nervousness that I felt about seeing a good friend after 14 years.
I started waving to him. As he spotted me, he broke into a warm smile
that did reach his eyes—and that fetched me into his aura once again like the
flash of light from a lighthouse pushing through darkness or fog. He
threaded through the crowd of passengers and greeters and came up to me.
I reached out with both arms and gave him a hug.
“It’s good to see you again,” he said, pulling back and looking me in the
face. God, he had a great smile. His hazel eyes were just as
beautiful as I remembered.
“Likewise,” I countered.
We looked each other head to toe. “Long time,” I said, then with a
grin. “Your fault.”
Jake’s eyes misted over immediately. Oh, oh! It was not what I
expected. I expected a snappy comeback. I was a bit stunned when it
didn’t happen. He looked down quickly so that I could see only the top of
his head. “I know. I’m sorry.”
He looked up, and I looked at him, and all my memories of our summer in
Mississippi flashed past me—things I hadn’t thought of for nearly a decade and
a half. The self confident young man that I had seen climb on the bus was
now 14 years older, but I saw him both as he was 14 years earlier and as he was
today, my memories colliding with the perception of the person I saw in front
of me. He looked surprisingly the same, but, of course, different.
But something was missing—or changed, or wrong.
We had gazed at each other for what seemed like five minutes but probably
wasn’t more than a few seconds. I finally broke the ice: “I didn’t
really mean to screw up this moment. I’m the one who should be sorry!
I’ll make it up to you. Let’s get you to your hotel, and I’ll buy you a
drink.”
“Great, you’re forgiven,” and he flashed me the contagious smile again that I
remembered. “Well, I’ll let you bribe your way out of it, so you’re not
forgiven until I’ve collected.”
We went to baggage claim and, after a short wait, picked up his bags. He
grabbed the largest one leaving me with a small garment bag. There’s
something seriously wrong with this picture, I said to myself, somewhat
wistfully. Me getting the small bag? But it had been 14 years,
after all. We hopped into my van, dropped down the hill and headed north
on I-5, took the James Street exit and went through downtown to his hotel.
At a stoplight I turned and grinned at him. “For 14 years of silence and
neglect, I demand compensation--at least one point.”
He laughed and marked a point in his air ledger. “God, you remember our
game. And what does that make the score?”
“187 for me now, 185 for you.”
“Well, you even remembered the score right.” So Jake had remembered the
score as well. “So maybe 14 years wasn’t such a long time,” he continued.
“Yes, it was,” I said, before I could stop myself. There was silence for
a minute between us.
Jake reached over and punched me lightly on the arm. “Thanks.”
Getting Reacquainted
I had never been to The Emery, but it turned out to be an old, but clean hotel
with potential for a nice renovation if somebody wanted to turn it into a
luxury boutique hotel. Jake checked in, was given a room on the seventh
floor, and we both loaded his luggage into the antiquated elevator. The
room was small, reminding me somewhat of the elevator, but the walls appeared
solid enough to keep out the noise of the neighboring rooms. The double
bed left only space for a dresser, topped by a television, and an easy chair
whose footrest had to be the bed.
Jake threw his suitcase on the bed, opened it and put his clothes in the
dresser. “Do you mind if I take a quick shower to get the airplane grunge
off?” he asked.
“Not at all. I’ll just sit here, loosen my tie and finish the
paper.”
Jake took a shaving kit from where he had unpacked it on the bed and stepped
into the bathroom and closed the door. I had read the sports page, but I
had to read again yet another dispatch about the continuing Mariner
misery. Maybe if I read about it enough it would go away.
I heard the shower turned on, and after a few minutes heard it go quiet.
In about five minutes, Jake stepped out, clean-shaven, a towel around his
waist. He walked to the dresser where he had put his clothes. God,
he still had a beautiful body. Facing the dresser, he dropped the towel
onto the bed and started to put on his underwear. I looked at the back of
his naked body and could remember him running naked into the water at the
swimming hole in Mississippi. I admired how well built he still was—strong
shoulders, still a narrow waist, nice butt globes and strong legs—a dusting of
golden-red hair showed on his legs and under his arms. I felt an
unexpected stirring in my groin. Jake pulled on his under shorts, turned
around and put on some clean jeans and a burgundy colored long sleeved
shirt. He found a batik headband to match.
“Let’s drink!” he said.
We retrieved my van and took off for a nice quiet restaurant and bar that I
frequented. I liked it because they had a good Northwest wine list and
offered grilled salmon if we got hungry. Hell, when you’re in Seattle,
you’re supposed to eat like the natives.
“Do you want to split a bottle of wine, or do you want something a little
stronger? I’m going to have wine,” I said, after we had found a
seat.
I saw Jake hesitate a bit, then say, “Wine would be fine.” I looked at
him, a question in my eyes. As if to answer the question, he said: “I was
thinking about sticking with water. Over the past 14 years I’ve had a few
too many bouts with the bottle. Sometimes when I’m nervous or down, I
want something harder, and sometimes I think I should just stop entirely.
Tonight, I’m nervous, but good nerves. A couple of glasses of wine would
be just fine.” The waiter came to the table and asked if we wanted menus.
“Just a bottle of chardonnay, please, and two glasses. What do you have?”
I asked.
“I have a nice Tualatin ‘78”
“That would be great,” I said. The waiter moved off to get the bottle of
wine, and Jake and I started a more normal reunion conversation.
“So what have you been up to these, um, 14 years?” Jake asked
conversationally. “I got the note saying that you had gotten married.”
“I’ve been sitting by the mailbox waiting for a reply,” I joked. Jake
smiled politely, then waited me out. Finally, I went on. “I became
a financial adviser, had two of my 2.1 kids, got divorced and have lived the
life of a bachelor for the past two years—a somewhat ineligible bachelor,
alas.”
“Ineligible?”
“Technically, no, put practically yeah. Alec, my son, stays with me most
weekends and now he comes over several days a week as well, severely crimping
my love life. He’s almost 13, and between work and his and Celly’s
activities, I really don’t have a lot of time to be anything but be a
bachelor. Celly—that’s short for Celia, my daughter—stays most of the
time with Anne, my ex, but even Celly will drop over from time to time
unannounced and sleep on the couch. How can you have a love life with a
revolving door on the condo, and two critics checking out who I’m bringing
home?”
The waiter arrived with two menus, our wine and two glasses, pulled the cork
and handed it to me. I checked it out, smelled it, and nodded my head. “I
didn’t know if you wanted menus, but I brought a couple over just in case,” he
said. He poured me a small amount of wine. I tasted it, and nodded my
head in approval.
“Nice,” I said. He filled Jake’s glass, then topped mine off. Jake
took a sip of wine, said “Mmmm” and raised his glass in a toast. The
waiter asked us if we wanted to order anything for dinner. I raised my
eyebrows to Jake, relaying the waiter’s question to him.
“I’d love some salmon,” Jake said, “What do you recommend?”
“I would recommend our alder grilled salmon filet and a Caesar’s salad to
start,” the waiter said.
“Sold,” Jake said. “I’m easy.” He flipped the menu shut.
“Make that two,” I piped in. The waiter wrote our order down, gathered
the menus and left.
“Skol! Or whatever they say in Ballard, it’s really good to see you,” he
said as he clinked my glass with his. He must have been reading some
Seattle history if he knew where the Scandinavian section of Seattle was.
“Likewise.” We remained quiet for a few moments, sipping our
wines. Jake would grow serious and seem to be on the verge of saying
something, but kept getting distracted, whether from the waiter coming by to
check on our table or from someone dropping a tray of dishes back in the
kitchen. Something always seemed to intercede to pull the words back from
his lips. The silence and the interruptions lasted a full five minutes.
It must have been a bad night for broken dinnerware in the restaurant. At this
conversational pace, I was beginning to think our reunion might not end too
soon for me. “Your turn,” I said finally. “Tell me what you’ve been doing
for the past 14 years.”
Jake looked at me, taking the time to choose his words. “I’ve been living
in a holy hell,” he said, dropping his head again. I could see him trying
to keep his emotions under control.
I was taken aback, to say the least. I wasn’t nearly fast enough to
figure out what to say after such a bomb blast. His was not even close to
any answer that I expected. Jake toyed with his wine glass, raised it to
his lips and drank half of it in one gulp. I was now certain that
this was not the same super-confident person I had lived every day with in
Mississippi 14 years ago. This was somebody broken. This was a
beaten man. This was somebody clinging to a raft. I wondered
whether I was supposed to be that raft. I wondered if I wanted to be that
raft. My instincts about the sorrow in his eyes, his uncertainty and
reserve as he got off the plane had been right on. I was at a loss for
words. Confusion must have shown on my face.
As if reading the consternation in my mind, Jake said “excuse me,” stood, and
walked away. I saw him go through the front door of the restaurant and
down the street. He had left his coat on a hook by the table, so I
thought he would likely come back. But I wasn’t sure. I sat and
sipped my wine, checked my watch a couple of times and wondered what to
do. Five minutes later he reentered the restaurant and came back to the
table.
He sat down, raised his face to me and grinned ruefully and said: “At
least you know now why there weren’t any postcards. There’s no post
office in hell.” There was redness at the edge of his eyes. An
uncomfortable silence fell between us again. There was no explanation of
why he had left the restaurant. “This is all too morose, let’s change the
subject,” he said finally. We sat for a few more minutes in silence, Jake
downing another half a glass of wine in one gulp. I had no idea what direction
to take the conversation. I decided on baseball, then the stock market,
but the conversation was stilted. We both twirled our wine glasses.
The dinner was beginning to last too long.
“Anything special you want to do while you’re here?” I asked, trying to change
the mood.
Jakes eyes lit up. “I really want to do some biking. Do you know where I
can rent a bicycle till mine gets here? Bike riding lets me work off all
my frustrations faster than walking,” he gestured toward the door, “and the
hills will be a great challenge.”
A spark of enthusiasm. Hooray. And, happily, I had an answer for
him. “Sure, I know where you can rent bikes,” I said. “From me, for the
price of a beer. You can use one of ours. We have four and rarely,
if ever, use them all at the same time, especially at this time of year.
In fact, Anne doesn’t use hers very much at all, so I’d be happy to ask her if
you can use it.” I was talking as if we were still an intact family, but
it was almost certain I could borrow one from Anne or Celly or even Alec, my
last resort.
“I would appreciate it—along with some recommendations on places to
ride.”
“My recommendation is that you ride with me, and I’ll show you some of
Seattle,” I offered, with genuine relief that there was something we could
enjoy together. Jake seemed pleased with my response. “We can start
tomorrow. How about if I come by the hotel about 5:30 tomorrow evening
with a bike for you—assuming this rain blows through?”
“Great,” Jake said, visibly warming. I felt better, too. Some ice
had been broken.
At that moment, our salads arrived and the conversation lapsed as we dug
in. We talked about inconsequential thing, like the Mariners and the Red
Sox as we were served our salmon. Jake toyed with his food for a while,
as if he wanted to get something off his chest before he ate.
“Eat your salmon before it gets cold,” I said, forcing him back to reality—and
a superbly cooked one at that.
He took several bites. “This is really good,” he said. And he dived
into his food with relish.
Thanks to Sharon for editing!
|