Trinity
by
Nowick Gray
Zelda and I were walking down the street, minding our
own business, and we saw this old drunk leaning up against
the wall of Woolworth's; or maybe I should say he spied
us. We were on our way to the Savoy to have a beer. Ten
minutes later, in he walks, sees us right away and comes
over to our table, sits down and orders himself a beer,
just like that.
He's drunk already, but his eyes are kind--more human
than you see in some people you pass on the street, whose
souls are shuttered away from the world. These liquid lights
penetrate to our hearts; it's like double moonlight shining
from a forest pool at midnight.
He tells us we're beautiful; that we look like his kids.
He asks us what we do for a living.
We tell him we're teachers. Then we ask him the same question.
"Oh, I was a construction foreman on the dams--"
"Like the Duncan?"
"Yeah like the Duncan. Worked out there nine years
. . . the last one with Alice. She was just a
child, really. She was infatuated with me, y'know what I
mean? I was working eight hours on, eight off, making a
thousand dollars a month clear; but my family was going
hungry." Gulps half his beer.
"Why was that?"
"Because my wife couldn't drive! She couldn't get
to the grocery store!" says he, leaning towards us,
wrinkling his forehead and rolling his eyes. "And besides
that she's stuck at home with my little twin girls, and
meanwhile back in the bunkhouse Alice says I want you, and
I told her, 'But you can't'but, what can you
do? So one time I came home on a Thursday instead of a Wednesday
and Jacqueline, that's my wife, says what you been doing
out there? I said I can forget it if you can." (His
eyes shine up to say know what I mean?) "Jacqueline
ends up saying okay, show me you care. Take me to town,
and I don't mean goddamn Castlegar.
"So I asked for a leave of absence and they said
no, so I quit. We went to Frisco and Vegas for ten days,
spent a whole lotta money, oh, did we ever. Anyway a year
later I ran into Alice in a welfare line in Creston and
I said to her, 'What do you do with that money the gover'ment
gives you?'--She says 'I buy records.' I told her 'You oughta
go to work right now.'"
At this he throws up his hands, eyes gleaming: "She
doesn't even have a record player!"
I look at Zelda, who's got her eyes on the guy bending
over at the pool table, lining up the old eight-ball. I
think, I've seen this before. So I look back at our inspired,
new-found friend. Somebody has to be polite.
He's leaning over our table, trying to get
back Zelda's wandering attention. But I'm looking him right
in the face now so he notices his beer instead and drains
it.
The barmaid is just then passing by so he nips her sleeve--"Miss,
another, please." Zelda perks up then and orders another
as well. I've hardly touched mine; in those days I could
nurse a draft for an hour.
Anyway, the guy continues, on a new tack: "You know
about the Golden Rule--you treat others the way you'd want
them to treat you, right? Everybody's good inside, eh? Christ,
forgive them--they don't know what they're doin'--when they're
throwin' rocks at this beautiful woman who just made a mistake
gettin' pregnant with some other man."
Zelda's tuned back in now; this religious stuff was right
up her alley. And I'm the one having trouble following the
guy, who rambles on: "Three years of arguments I had
with these Jehovah's Witnesses over blood transfusions:
'partaking of blood' they call it. No--sharing with a brother,
that's all, someone in need--like that hockey accident where
a skate sliced a neck artery and I jumped down and closed
it off and the poor guy gets a transfusion immediately--of
course--no questions asked.
"I asked my grandfather when he was a hundred and
one what should I believe in and he says you have a head
God gave you; you know what's right and wrong--"
Our friend paused to drink the fresh beer, licking the
foam off his lips.
"That's so simple! No more lies, in a chain with
no end--it'll never get ya anywhere. You start one, it leads
to another, and another, and so on. Each one makes it worse,
instead of better, know what I mean? Y'know, there's only
one commandment, just like there's only one God. And that
commandment, do you know what it is?"
I look at Zelda. We don't know.
"Don't lie to yourself. And, whatever you do, do
it right; don't fuck around--" He looks at me.
Then, to Zelda: "Y'know, you're a great lady counselor,
always listenin'. Tell 'em what they wanna hear, pat 'em
on the back, tell 'em what they're doin' is okay. Am I right?"
Zelda doesn't know what to say, I can tell. "Sure,"
I say, speaking for her. Then he says to me, "What
do you think of that story?"
Which one, I wonder. "It's sad," I say.
"That's exactly right." Then, to Zelda: "You're
beautiful. You should create more just like yourself. Not
more assholes like we already have too many of . . ."
Then he changes the topic again, and says to Zelda, "You
don't smoke. Do you smoke grass?"
"A little," says Zelda.
"Well, what else can ya do?" He leans back in
his chair with a drunken smile, pulls out a cigarette. "Now
being drunk, is that wrong?" He looks to me, then Zelda.
"Uh, no . . ." She says what he wants to hear.
"That's right. The first thing is, be humble. You're
lucky. You don't want to start smoking and then never quit,
like me." His hand is shaking.
"Look, I told Jacqueline . . . well anyway. Can you
drive me home?"
"We're walking," I tell him.
"Whatever." He gets up, putting out his cigarette.
"In that case I'll be going." He shakes Zelda's
hand, lingering with it as if it were a floppy dog's paw,
and all the time smiling a sad sweet smile. "Ah,"
he says, "I can feel the good going through there .
. ."
I give him a look. He drops her hand and squeezes mine.
Nothing about the good goin' through me.
Then he withdraws, saying meekly, "Best of luck to
you. Individu'ly, and in what you're doin'." And he
trails off, mumbling, out onto the street.
I look down, and there's blood on my hand.
ii
So what happens is, seven years later I've got this three
year old kid and Zelda's taken off with another guy--some
jerk she worships like a saint. I'm not good enough for
her any more, I guess. But good enough to be left with the
kid.
I don't mind. I've always been good with kids.
We went on this camping trip, a long hike up a steep valley
where there was an environmental festival in a wilderness
park, which I thought would be fun for the kid, since she
likes being around lots of people. She was really good about
the walk. I only had to carry her about a third of the way,
and it's maybe a four-hour hike, all with a backpack on.
She got really excited when we hit the snow. At the top
of the trail we found this big crowd camped all around the
edge of the woods, a stage set up in a meadow, loudspeakers
going on, musicians, speakers . . . the works. Let's set
up the tent, I said to Chrissie.
That night there was a campfire nearby and we sat by it
watching the flames, listening to a few guys play their
guitars. I noticed a slightly familiar face in the ring
of listeners, a tall man stomping in the cold, rambling
on to somebody next to him, his raw face illumined by the
fire.
The next morning was cold when we got up so I carried
Chrissie on my shoulders over to the new campfire, that
the early risers or the night owls had restoked, where folks
were having coffee; and I saw the guy again. In the daylight
I almost recognized him, and the voice confirmed it.
So I went up to him and said, "Hey, I think we met
in the Savoy in Nelson, years ago. Am I right?"
He seemed not to remember me--I thought maybe the kid
threw him off. But he looked like he was thinking hard,
and he finally said, "Maybe so. I been through hard
times, son, hard times. No end of persecution, trials and
tribulations." His voice was hollow, haunted, and I
started to wonder if I really did have the same guy. "When
a woman leaves a man, you look into your soul like there's
no tomorrow, and you see hell." His eyes had been distant
but now they bore right into me. "You know what I mean."
Then he looked up and smiled at Chrissie. "Looks
just like her mother," he said.
He offered me a cup of coffee with a shot from his flask,
and then got sidetracked into conversation with a fellow
who had his eye on the flask. "I'm hungry," Chrissie
whined, so we went back to the tent for cereal and powdered
milk. After breakfast we heard music from the stage so I
picked up a blanket for us to sit on and we headed toward
the meadow.
"It wasn't as if I never told 'em," he said
to me suddenly, hot breath on the back of my neck. That
voice again.
I turned around, holding my little girl tightly as she
rode on my shoulders. The multitude walked on past.
"Yeah," he continued, his eyes twinkling, craggy
jowls working: "You can't say they weren't warned.
Why, I've been tellin' 'em for a coupla thousand years,
and the bozos haven't pricked up their ears yet. What's
it gonna take, anyway--for the whole thing to explode in
their laps, or what? I mean, they've just got no sense,
if you ask me, and I know you didn't, so there you go."
An infectious smile. He took out tobacco and papers to
roll a smoke. "I see you roll your own now," I
said. It seemed like we were in for a session, so I sat
down right there in front of him and perched the kid on
my lap. He sat down in front of us. We three were like rocks
in the stream. He went on talking:
"Yeah, you know, it's not only the appearance that
keeps 'em off my trail--after all, who'd ever suspect an
old reprobate like me! But, here I am, just like I've been
tellin' 'em. Are you listening?, I say. Oh, you're drunk,
they tell me. Oh, you smell bad. Oh, you only worked four
hours yesterday, like some o' these cockamamie politicians
tryin' to argue their cases on my behalf. Which half?, is
what I wanna know. Not this one, not this; not right or
left. No, you tell me, do you see a split personality? Come
off it. Okay, maybe I was a different man once. But when
that old black locomotive comes through, bringin' in the
troops, which side of the train are they gonna jump off?--heh,
heh.
"So . . ." He paused to gaze around us at the
moving crowd, the fluffy clouds in the faraway blue sky,
as smoke curled out of his mouth. Then he turned his attention
to me: "You haven't said much--I'm open to another
point of view, y'know; I'm all ears." And he turned
his head to pull on a rabbity ear, winging it back and forth
in his hand. The warts stood out on his bulbous nose. He
was smiling again.
I didn't know what to think of him, what to believe, what
to say. Was he after something? What?--money, sympathy,
a following? Maybe simple friendship. I couldn't tell. But
he saved me from my indecision:
"That's okay. It's your prerogative. It is a free
country, ain't it?" And he pantomimed fear, shrinking
down in his collar, looking around him surreptitiously.
"You never know. Who knows why I've been thrown in
the tank so many times. Do you? No, course not. I don't
mean it the wrong way. But they're not gonna tell you. Charges?
Why, the words they put down on that paper before they wipe
their asses with it don't mean . . . caca. And then there's
this controversy over ethics in public office. Ethics--now
who's kiddin' whom?" He emphasized the m; his voice
had taken off on a musical ride, heavily laden with sarcasm.
"I didn't elect the bastards; they never came to me.
So I don't even expect them to operate in my interest. All
they're concerned with is lookin' for the other guy's shit.
'Scuse my language, little girl." He smiled sweetly
at her, chucked her chin. She giggled and tucked it shyly
back closer to her chest.
"Christ, you can even take this here en-vi-ron-mental
festival, for that matter. These organizers, what do they
have in mind, at twenty bucks per? Well, I can count already
a few thou. But not in my pocket." He rose up on slow
thighs to his knees and pulled one pocket inside out, empty.
Then sank back down to sit erect, leaning forward for emphasis,
words pouring out in the dust.
"The schemes, the scams they'll think of. They'll
rob milk from every babe for the fight against abortion.
They'll raise the tax to pay the tax-collectors. They'll
kill to keep the peace. They'll shut you up to guarantee
somebody else's right to free speech; burn down the forest
to save the trees. Yes, it's a mighty wonderful system we've
got here, ain't it?"
He sucked the last of his butt and crushed it out on the
beaten earth. Yet when he turned that bloodshot face back
up he was still smiling.
"You know what it's gonna take, don't you? Course
ya do. Everybody knows. It's just that we're too stubborn
to think of anything else than to go along with the shuffling
herd. Anybody got any bright ideas? Lock 'em up.
"Ah, what do I care? I've seen it all before. It'll
be a show, I tell ya. And the preachers say read your book.
Hell, the book'll say look around you, look at me! But no
one will read it, anyway--I mean really read it, y'know
what I mean--so what's the dif?
"You don't smoke, do ya?"--he offered his pouch.
"Okay, I'll have another. This isn't what's gonna do
me in, I'll tell ya. Least not for another coupla centuries."
His voice broke into a hacking cough. My daughter flinched.
His ruddy face had darkened; the smile was gone.
He silently rolled another cigarette, then paused with
the wooden match. It burst into flame. His thumbnail was
so quick I hadn't seen it scratch the matchtip. He took
a deep drag and blew out a long, white cloud of smoke.
He looked at me directly, his round eyes clear and shining.
Across our silence flickered a gleam of understanding; yet
in his look I saw also an appeal for confirmation. Of what,
I still wasn't sure. But I sensed that whatever it was he
wanted, I couldn't give it.
I was still speechless. The strains of amplified music
wafted over our heads. I rose to my feet and took Chrissie's
hand.
"Well," I finally managed, "it was nice
talkin' to ya."
I didn't see the guy again until the next day, when the
festival was over. A long ragged line of people wound its
way down through the trees, back on the trail to the parking
lot. I started out at a brisk pace with Chrissie on my shoulders.
In no time the guy turned up behind us, saying, "What's
yer hurry, friend?"
"Oh--" I wheeled around--"hello again."
"Back in the herd now, are we?"
"Looks like it, yeah."
"I know a shorter way."
"Oh? You been here before?"
"Hell, yes. Alice and I used to come here. Nothin'
to do but drink and f--" he glanced up at Chrissie
and smiled. "Anyhow, there's a fork a little ways down.
Avoids the crowds."
I wasn't sure whether to trust him; but I figured he wouldn't
have suggested the route if he didn't know it. And it was
downhill, anyway. . . .
When we came to the fork the main trail was marked with
a row of blazed trees. The trail to the left looked little
used, no bigger than a deer track. Our friend forged past
us and headed down. The main line of people continued on
the blazed route. Several people gave us strange looks as
they saw what we were about to do. When I still hesitated
he glanced over his shoulder and waved his arm forward:
"Come on, I know this country like the back of my hand."
So I plunged forward, following his long strides down
the mountainside. Somewhere behind us the sun was coming
up brighter, but down where we were going, in the dense
big trees in the draw, the light only dimmed.
We followed the trail without talking for over an hour.
It became harder and harder to tell there was a trail at
all, but for following the shadowy figure gliding down ahead
of us through the trees. I really started to have my doubts.
Chrissie had started out humming and cooing, the way they
do, but now she was dead quiet. The old-growth forest we
found ourselves in was filled with a deep, dark gloom.
Our guide suddenly stopped, looked around at the ground
and the trees and up at the distant sky, threw up his hands
and said, "It's no use. I've done it now. We're lost."
He sat down on a mossy log and reached his arms out. "Here,
I'll take your little girl a moment. Come sit on my lap."
Chrissie, you see, had begun to cry a little. She knew
what was what. But she reached to him, so I leaned down
and let her off, and she walked over to sit on his lap,
where she sat studying his hands. I was glad to be relieved
of one burden and took off the backpack as well. I set it
down next to a tree and leaned against it. My mind was in
a turmoil; but the thick moss under me was soft as a feather
bed, so I stretched out and closed my eyes and felt as if
I could lie there forever, and never wake up. . . . I took
a few deep breaths. But I couldn't just forget that we were
in a jam.
I sat up again, so abruptly that I strained a muscle in
my side. "What are we gonna do?" I demanded. I
was angry now and the new pain made it worse.
"Yeah, good question. You got any water?" I
only realized then that the guy wasn't even carrying a pack.
No blanket, nothing. I got out the plastic water bottle
from my pack and handed it to him. I wondered where he'd
slept up there in the cold, but it was not the time for
curiosity. I just wanted a way out right now for me and
my daughter--this crazy fellow be damned.
He took a slug of water and immediately spat it out. "Yagh,
tastes like vinegar."
"Yeah, it's an old vinegar bottle," I said with
some perverse pleasure of revenge.
I was exhausted, and the older man looked beat, too. I
looked back up the hill. I couldn't see the trail. How long
had we been guessing, following mouse-trails for all I knew?
If we could find the trail again, the thing was to follow
it back and get onto the main trail again. If we made good
time we'd have enough daylight to reach the parking lot
by dark. I turned back to suggest this obvious strategy
to our friend. His head was tilted back as he sucked from
his pocket flask. Chrissie was reaching for it and asking
for some.
I lunged at him, swiping at the flask to knock it away.
With a half-opened eye he saw me coming and deftly moved
the flask out of my reach. "Not for you dearie,"
he said to Chrissie. Then to me: "Care for a swig?"
"No!" I shouted. "Now let's find that so-called
trail we were on and get back up to the blazed trail. I
don't want to rot out here in the bush even if you do."
He capped the flask and tucked it away inside his tattered
suitcoat. "Tsk, tsk. It's not all that bad. So we're
lost, temporarily. Ever try forty days of it?"
At that he took out his paraphernalia and started to roll
a smoke.
"Look," I said. I was ready to explode at him
again, to yank the girl out of his hands and storm up the
hill without him. But he looked at me . . . the most gentle,
innocent expression. It completely disarmed me. I realized
that I was as much to blame as he was. Or maybe there was
no blame to lay: we'd simply gone another way, and were
taking a rest-break. It wasn't over yet, and it could turn
out to have been quite an enchanting little stroll through
nature's house. That's what his eyes told me, what the lush
moss told me, what the air breathed and the shaggy trees
whispered.
But my little mind cried out: You've gotta get us back
home! Back up the trail! Forget this lunchbucket you had
the bad sense to hook up with. . . .
"I've got an idea," he said then with a calm,
even voice. "We're both tired. The best thing would
be to conserve our energy, not wander all over the place
until we're both too exhausted to walk back, once we find
the trail. Now, I know I can use more of a rest. If you're
eager to get going, go ahead and see if you can get us pointed
in the right direction. You can keep your backpack and the
little girl here with me until you find a good trail; then
come back for us, marking your way as you go."
My poor mind whirled. Did his plan make any sense? It
had some merits, and some drawbacks--like leaving Chrissie
behind. What if I went and got myself lost, separated from
them? But he was right about all three of us wandering around
aimlessly through the bush.
I looked to Chrissie for help. Kids know. They have a
feeling for things. If she was the least bit uncomfortable
with the idea of staying with this character, there was
no way I'd go for it. But she sat there peacefully pulling
at the moss, and sweetly said to me, "It's be okay,
Daddy. Big Chrissie wait here."
I still wasn't sure. But they looked so calm and peaceful
there together (and my pack on the ground so heavy) that
I took off on an impulse up the hill, confident I'd find
the trail quickly and be back for them.
iii
So I'm sittin' in the Savoy one day tellin' this tale
to a mr. nice guy and his wife. She's got this really beautiful
way of resting her chin on her hands while she's listening,
y'know, blow yer socks off. I figure I've got a good thing
going but talkin' so long gives me a powerful thirst, know
what I mean?
Anyway he's the one buyin'.
I sit there and lick the last drops out of my glass and
then rub the old tongue around in the mouth, catching my
breath . . .
And "Yeah?" he says with his big deer's-eyes.
"So what happens next?"
I tell him, all cool, like--"Ah, you want to hear
more, how about another drink?"
"Go to hell," sezee. Just like that.
"Okay fine," I say, and I'm walking.
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