“Are you blind, Tommy, right there, in the corner, look there, are your eyes painted on?”
Clay watched them speak, then gave it a circular polish, and now the sleeve was black; the city’s dirty mouth. All three of them were in singlets and old shorts. All three of them tightened their jaws. Henry gave Tommy a wink. “Good work, Clay, time to go, huh? Don’t want to be late for the main event.”
Tommy and the dog followed first, always the same.
Then Clay.
When he joined them, Henry said, “Good cemeteries make good neighbors.” Honestly, his crap was endless.
Tommy said, “I hate coming here, you know that, don’t you?”
And Clay?
Clay—who was the quiet one, or the smiler—only turned, one last time, and stared across the sunlit district of statues, crosses, and gravestones.
They looked like runners-up trophies.
Every last one.
Back at 18 Archer Street, relations were at a stalemate in the kitchen.
The Murderer backed slowly away, into the rest of the house. Its silence was something awesome—an enormous playground for the guilt to wreak havoc, to work him over—but it was also a deception. The fridge hummed, the mule breathed, and there were more animals in there, too. Now that he’d reversed into the hallway, he could sense the movement. Was the Murderer being sniffed out and hunted down?
Not likely.
No, the animals didn’t remotely pose a threat; it was the two eldest of us he feared most.
I was the responsible one:
The long-standing breadwinner.
Rory was the invincible one:
The human ball and chain.
* * *
—
Around six-thirty, Rory was across the street, leaning against a telegraph pole, smiling wry and rueful, smiling just for laughs; the world was filthy, and so was he. After a short search, he pulled a long strand of girls’ hair from his mouth. Whoever she was, she was out there somewhere, she lay open-legged in Rory’s head. A girl we’ll never know, or see.
A moment earlier, he’d run into a girl we did know, a girl named Carey Novac. It was just beyond her driveway.
She smelt like horse, she’d called out hi.
She’d jumped off her old bike.
She had good-green eyes and auburn hair—miles of it down her back—and she gave him a message, for Clay. It had to do with a book; one of three important to everything. “Tell him I’m still loving Buonarroti, okay?”
Rory was taken aback, but didn’t move. Only his mouth. “Borna-who?”
The girl laughed on her way to the garage. “Just tell him, okay?” But then she took pity, she tilted back, all freckly-armed and sure. There was a kind of generosity to her, of heat and sweat and life. “You know,” she said, “Michelangelo?”
“What?” Now he was even more confused. The girl’s mad, he thought. Sweet but totally mad. Who gives a shit about Michelangelo?
But somehow the thought endured.
He found that pole, he leaned a while, then crossed the road for home. Rory was a bit on the hungry side.