--JUST HOLD ON
LOOSELY, AND DON’T LET GO
…In a few
minutes I’m headed to Milwaukee to spend the weekend with three of my favorite
people on the planet. It’s certain to be
epic. One of them I haven’t seen in
nearly a year. It’s terrible when the
people you love most live far away.
On Saturday we’re
doing a reading with some other writers.
I’m not a fan of reading in front of an audience, but I’m going to give
it my best.
I tried to find
a happy story to read, which isn’t an easy task for me, as you know.
This is what I
decided to read (it’s about as close to a happy ending as I get):
Brothers
At
night in bed my wife tells me she’s worried.
She always says this.
“This
time I really mean it.”
“Patrick? He’s fine, just nuts is all.”
“It’s
only a matter of time before he does something dangerous.”
“Patrick
wouldn’t hurt a fly. Don’t you see the
way he is with Joni Mitchell?” (Joni Mitchell
is our calico, given to us as a wedding present last year.)
“He
recites The Gettysburg Address to Joni Mitchell, over and over and over.”
“Yeah,
isn’t that something? I can never
remember past the first sentence. Four
score and seven years ago, our fathers--”
“Len! Len, stop it!
There are places equipped to handle people like him.”
“Yeah,
expensive places.”
“I
married you, not your brother.”
“What
are you saying?”
“I’m
saying he’s a burden I didn’t sign up for.”
“Is
that an ultimatum?”
“I
guess it is.”
True
to her word, my wife moves out two days later.
The divorce papers come a month after that. Then it’s just Patrick and I.
When
we were kids Patrick taught me how to ride a bike, how to ice skate and roller skate,
how to fish, how to throw a perfect spiral.
When I read him poems I wrote (poems I have since re-read and now
realize are absolute shit) he listened intently, never laughing, always finding
something in them to praise.
Our
dad died when we were toddlers. It
wasn’t until seventh grade that we learned Pops hadn’t had a heart attack after
all, as Mom had told us, but that he’d hung himself in the garage.
The
doctors I’d spoken to said this discovery had nothing to do with Patrick’s
mental illness, but he started to spiral downward about then, streaking through
downtown wearing only a cowboy hat, boots and underwear. Another time he tried juggling watermelons in
the produce section at Safeway and made quite a mess. Another time he reached into the glass box of
puppies at PetCo and let them loose inside the store. Another time he…
One
day I’m at work when Mrs. Hitchens, my neighbor, calls and says I should get
home as soon as possible.
My
boss is a dick, but I need the job in order to take care of Patrick and pay
alimony, so I feign sickness and speed home where I spot Patrick on top of the
roof in my wife’s old baby blue bathrobe and fuzzy slippers. Not only that, but he’s got a fishing pole
with him. When I get out of the car, he
grins and gives me a parade float wave.
I
start to think maybe my wife was right, that perhaps Patrick is getting more
dangerous. Still he’s my brother. We’ve lived our whole lives together and when
Mom died I became Patrick’s guardian.
I
go into the house, change out of my work clothes, find a ladder in the garage
(how did Patrick get up there without a ladder?) and carefully climb the
slanted roof where my brother sits on the center beam.
He
doesn’t seem surprised to see me, nor does he mention the fact that I’ve change
into a robe and slippers and have my own fishing pole.
“Getting
any bites?” I ask.
“Just
clouds so far.”
“Maybe
you should change your bait,” I say.
“You
think?”
“Can’t
hurt.”
We
cast every three minutes, our lines looping over the gutters below. Eventually Patrick snags one of my ex-wife’s
azaleas from the tiny garden by the porch and reels it up. He whoops and whoops, the happiest I’ve seen
him in a long time. I laugh, too. I tell him, “Let’s go fry that thing up and
have us some dinner,” and he flashes me that grin again, saying, “Yeah, and we’ll
split it.”
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