| william
giraldi
The photographs on his lap showed his wife Karen walking into
a motel room with her lover. Ronald Feys looked at them and
felt the grip on his throat. The man who had taken these shots
was a private investigator who wanted to be called Ratt —
with two t’s, he said. Ronald had hired him four weeks
ago, after a shifty cousin had put him in touch. Now the two
men sat in their cars in the supermarket parking lot, talking
to each other through their driver’s side windows. Ratt
had pulled in so close that Ronald could smell his pungent
cigarette-coffee breath. He could not make sense of the weird
blue light of the day.
Ratt said, “You want them taken care of?”
“I don’t,” Ronald told him.
“It can be painless. Or painful, it don’t matter.
It’s up to you.”
“No thank you,” Ronald said.
“Let me know if you change your mind.”
“I won’t change my mind. We have a son.”
“Ask him if he wants her taken care of. You never know.
Sometimes a boy wants his mother gone. It’s natural
for some kids, I think. Someone should have knocked off my
mother when I was growing up, and maybe now I’d be the
CEO of some big company, a nice family, who knows.”
Ronald looked at the last photo and then slipped them all
back into the manila envelope. Ratt had written “Feys
Case” on the envelope with a thick, red magic marker,
and Ronald suddenly wondered how he had become a man with
his own case, a man who had arrived at this particular mess
in his life. Awkward, inexplicable forces or circumstances
had to align for him to be sitting here with these photographs
on his lap.
Ratt said, “Not bad, huh? I should have been a professional
photographer maybe. I got some talent for that, I think.”
Ronald tried to be offended by this man’s sarcasm, but
he didn’t have any room left for that. He asked, “Where
were you when you took these shots?”
“I was in my car, across the parking lot. Telephoto
lens.”
He paused to sip from his paper coffee cup, and Ronald waited
for further explanation, as if this strange man might, by
virtue of some hidden goodness, offer Ronald a digestible
explanation, a way for him to live from this day forward with
the hurtful facts lying on his lap.
“So, what do you want to do now?” Ratt asked,
but Ronald could not answer. Ratt reached into his shirt pocket,
pulled out a cassette tape and handed it over to Ronald. “Here,”
he said.
“What’s this?”
“Audio surveillance. I planted a tape recorder in their
room. You can hear for yourself what talent this woman’s
got.”
“You recorded them?”
“Audio and visual, that’s correct. I serve my
clients right. You can listen to the tape while looking at
the pictures. It’ll be like you were actually there.”
Ronald examined the cassette tape as if he had never seen
one before. On a thin label Ratt had once again written “Feys
Case.” The anxiety loose in his stomach and the fuzziness
floating through his head reminded Ronald of the awful influenza
he had caught two years ago: ten straight days in bed and
a fever so high Karen said that he could melt the ice caps.
He opened the center console, dropped the cassette tape into
it and then slammed it shut.
“Did you get the key I asked for? The key to their room?”
“Yeah, I got it, here. Room 23, on the first level,
around the back. Always the same room, like I told you. Your
wife parks her car next to the dumpster. Usually. You remember
the address?”
“Yes,” Ronald said. “I think I remember.”
“1919 Spring Valley Drive. That’s pretty, ain’t
it? Spring Valley. A nice place for an afternoon of illegal
fucking. And you know they meet Wednesdays and Fridays, from
3:30 to 5:00. Usually no later than five. The motel is called
The Bed, which ain’t exactly ironic, I guess, but it
sure is funny.” He paused to chuckle and then said,
“You don’t wanna write any of this down?”
“I don’t need to.”
“All right, but I’m thorough with my facts, buddy.
Facts are everything. I’m professional. I serve my clients
right. You mind if I ask what you’re gonna do with that
key?”
“What do you think I’ll do with it?”
Ratt said, “I think you’re gonna drop in on them,
pay a little surprise visit. I think you’re going to
see for yourself.”
Ronald looked at the key resting on his moist palm. It was
shiny silver with fifty sharp grooves.
“Just don’t do anything crazy,” Ratt said.
“I’m the crazy one around here. You want craziness,
you call me.”
The first evening they met at the diner, Ratt recited his
credentials. He had been a tunnel rat in Vietnam, one of those
sick son-of-a-bitch soldiers who crept through the ground
with a flashlight between his teeth and a .45 in his grip.
Chosen in part because he was a small man, he said he loved
it, that it was like being buried alive, so silent and away
from the world, inside the gentle, indifferent womb of the
earth. Ronald swallowed hard and felt the claustrophobia overcome
him, and then considered if this was really the man he should
hire to spy on Karen. A man who had obviously killed people
— some for country, some for money, and some, Ronald
feared, for fun.
But it was finished now that he had the photographs in hand.
Ronald Feys was grateful that it was finished.
“How much do I owe you?” he asked.
“Three grand. And I hope you brought small bills. Places
look at me funny when I try to use a hundred. Places look
at me funny anyway. Usually.”
Ronald counted out the money on his dashboard and handed it
over to him. After he made sure it was all there, Ratt passed
a tissue back over to Ronald. He said, “Here, take this,
pal. I can’t stand to see a grown man cry.”
Alone now, Ronald put his window up and slid the tape into
the cassette player. There was crackling and static before
he heard Karen’s voice beckoning God and then instructing
her lover: harder, faster, deeper, rougher; grab my hair,
punish my ass, spit in my mouth. Ronald had heard these words
before, but not from Karen. He had heard them on innumerable
porn videos, each indistinguishable from the one before. Karen
had always been docile and conservative in bed with him: no
foul language, rarely any position except missionary, always
with her eyes squeezed shut, as if she was wishing. This woman
on the cassette tape was playing a role. He knew it. She was
leaving her skin and becoming somebody else. She was a woman
who despised her life with such venom that she would do almost
anything to escape it. Ronald recognized all this with an
ache in his upper chest that nearly suffocated him.
On the way to pick up his son Jacob from school, Ronald Feys
felt the numbness take hold of his body. It began in his head,
slunk down through his torso and limbs, and settled in his
feet. As he shifted gears, his legs were wobbly and weak,
as if his knees might unhinge. He was not in shock, since
he had known for nearly a week, and had suspected for much
longer than that. Seeing the photographs and hearing the tape,
though, made Karen’s betrayal come alive in a way he
hadn’t thought possible. He tried to convince himself
that it was only biology at work, the blind carnal needs of
organisms on this earth. The sacred status of sex was a fabrication,
he knew — emotions imposing themselves onto matter,
mind trying to overcome the stubborn sovereignty of flesh,
the honorable human being seeking to sever all ties to the
ignoble beast he once was, that hairy brute who grunted through
the jungle, splashing his seed into whatever receptacle he
could find.
But Ronald’s dialogue with himself failed, because there
was nothing more palpable, more physical, than the ache in
his breast, the constriction in his throat, the tears on his
cheeks and the wetness under his arms. This is biology too,
he thought, and just as real. This is what happens to an organism
in the throes of deception. Sex and pain were equal in the
release of body fluids. Ronald Feys wondered if, with the
sweat and tears, his blood would spill as well. This situation
now thrust upon him seemed somehow to demand buckets of blood.
Whether his or someone else’s, he wasn’t sure.
He couldn’t recall the last time he had ejaculated.
The exhausting absence of fulfillment inside his and Karen’s
bedroom made him almost impotent.
Jacob was waiting in front of the elementary school wearing
his bookbag and flipping through the pages of a karate magazine.
He had lately acquired a fondness for Bruce Lee movies and
was trying to work up the incentive to join a martial arts
class. Before the boy got in the car, Ronald dried his eyes
on the sleeve of his shirt and then took the deepest breath
he could. At the last instant he saw the envelope of photos
on the passenger seat. He reached over and quickly slid them
under the floor mat.
Jacob said, “You’re late, Dad,” throwing
his bookbag onto the back seat.
“Sorry, Jake. Sorry about that. Were you waiting long?”
“Yes.”
“Oh, sorry.”
“Are you sick?” the boy asked. “You look
sick.”
“Yeah, I think I’m getting a cold or something.
I’m all right, though. How are you doing? Put on your
seatbelt.”
“Good. Pretty good. I’m starving, though. Mom
forgot to pack me two sandwiches again. I like two sandwiches.”
Ronald drummed his index fingers on the steering wheel and
looked over at Jacob with a dazed expression, nodding slowly
as if agreeing with the last sentence the boy had spoken.
The word “Mom” baffled him and, at the same time,
intensified the severity of what was about to happen to them.
It was a much more hurtful word than “wife.” The
information that his son preferred two sandwiches presented
itself to Ronald as an almost philosophical problem.
“Why are we just sitting here, Dad? Let’s go already.”
“Oh, right, sorry. Put your seatbelt on.”
When he pulled out of the school’s parking lot, Ronald
got into the left hand turning lane and switched down the
blinker. Jacob noticed right away and asked where they were
going.
“Well, I need to show you something, Jake. Before we
go home. I need to show you something.”
“What is it?” the boy asked.
“Well, I can’t explain it, really. That’s
why I have to show you. I wish I didn’t, but I don’t
know any other way.” He felt for the key through his
jeans. He tried to picture the look on Karen’s face
as he and Jacob walked into the motel room.
Jacob said, “Any other way for what? What are you talking
about? I’m starving don’t forget. And Enter the
Dragon is on at six.”
“We can stop by Burger King or something if you want.
And we’ll be home in time for the movie.”
“What about dinner? Mom’s not making dinner again?”
“Oh, probably not. But Burger King’s pretty good,
don’t you think? I like it okay.”
The boy nodded and glanced over at Ronald with a puzzled grimace.
Ronald understood that these next few minutes in the car were
going to be mysterious for his son. He tried to stay his quivering
limbs and stifle the dread so Jacob would not be afraid. He
could not know if he was succeeding. Karen’s punishment
had to come, though. Ronald could not relinquish that plan,
the hot impulse that was forcing him to bring Jacob to that
motel room, to show him his mother as she really was.
“You’re driving over the center line, Dad. Do
you want me to drive?”
“Very funny, Jake. Ha ha.”
“Yeah,” the boy said, “ha ha. But I want
to know where we’re going. You’re acting funny.”
“Just answer me something first.”
“Just stop at this red light why don’t you.”
“Oh, right, sorry,” he said and slammed his foot
down hard on the brake. Jacob braced himself with one hand
on the dash. “What do you like about that guy?”
“What guy?” the boy asked.
“Bruce Lee. What do you like about him?”
“He’s cool. He kicks everybody’s ass. He’s
tough.”
“Oh. Well, that makes sense. I guess I knew that, yes.”
They were silent while waiting for the light to change. When
they began moving again, Jacob said, “By the way, I
decided I wanna take karate classes. Is that all right? I
really wanna.”
“Yeah, sure, that’s all right. When? Where?”
The question “How?” almost came out of Ronald’s
mouth, but he was able to stop it.
“I don’t know,” Jacob said. “I wanna
go soon. In town someplace. Isn’t there a place in town?”
“Uhh, yeah, I think so.”
“I saw the sign in town somewhere. The end of Main Street,
I think. And, look, there’s the Burger King sign, as
we drive right past it.”
“Oh, shit,” Ronald said, and swerved at the last
second into the parking lot. Jacob once again braced himself
against the dash, and then rolled his eyes at Ronald.
While his son was inside ordering fries and a milkshake, Ronald
Feys remained in the car, commanding himself to breathe and
wiping his wet palms across his jeans. He tried, once again,
to persuade himself that monogamy is a social construct, that
Americans are especially puritanical. The snakes do it in
the slime, the worms do it in the dirt, all of nature is infused
with the insatiable will to fornicate, to replicate. Karen
has no dominion over her body’s cells or the autonomous
neurons tripping in her brain. The universe has unruly intentions,
chaos both within and without. Let’s leave loyalty behind
and surrender to the mighty pulse that prompts all life forward.
In the next instant Ronald was hammering the steering wheel
with the meaty underpart of his fist, cursing his wife and
wishing there were an eternal hellfire for her to roast in.
Through the Burger King window, he could see his son ordering
at the counter.
When Ronald Feys opened his eyes several minutes later, Ratt
was staring at him from behind his steering wheel. He had
pulled in close again to Ronald’s car. Strings of lettuce
dangled from the corners of his mouth; a dot of ketchup marked
the tip of his nose. For those several minutes Ronald had
been in a place somewhere between consciousness and sleep,
as if only half of him had blacked out. With a start he looked
around for Jacob, but saw through the window that the boy
was still at the counter.
Ratt said, with a mouthful of food, “You taking a nap
or something?”
“What are you doing here?” Ronald asked, straightening
himself in the seat.
“I’m an American,” he said. “It’s
my right to eat at any fast food restaurant in the nation.
What the hell you mean, what are you doing here?”
“I mean, uhh, did you want something?”
“Well yeah, actually. I stopped by for a bite to eat
just now and saw your car sitting here, and I remembered that
I never asked you about the guy.”
“About what guy?”
“The guy who’s penetrating your wife.”
“Oh. What about him?”
“You have any idea who he is? Where they met? How long
they’ve known each other? You recognize his voice on
the tape? Anything like that?”
“How would I know any of that? You’re the private
investigator. What did I hire you for?”
“Hey, I was employed for detection and surveillance
only. Intel takes more time. You never said you needed intel,
only proof. So that’s what I got you. Proof. Audio and
visual.”
Ronald looked away from Ratt and saw Jacob ambling out the
side door with a white paper bag in one hand and a tall milkshake
in the other. For a second, as the boy’s head had emerged
from inside the doorway, Ronald did not recognize him. It
was the way the breeze blew his hair sideways, or his deadly-serious
facial expression, so surprising on a boy his size.
“Listen,” he said, “my son’s coming
back to the car, is there anything else you want?”
Ratt craned his neck to see Jacob. He said, “Is that
the little tike? Looks like a good kid.”
“He is. What else do you want?”
“Well, to tell ya the truth, you didn’t look so
good when I saw you before. I guess I was just worried about
you is all.”
“You were worried about me?”
“Yeah, I guess maybe I was. You didn’t look so
good. What, does that make me a fag or something, because
I was worried about you?”
Jacob hopped into the car and closed the door hard. The scent
of the fast food rushed up Ronald’s nose, and for the
briefest instant he felt hungry.
Ratt said, “Hey there, little man, how you doing?”
Jacob said, “Hey,” and then looked at his father.
His face asked, “Who is this man you’re talking
to?”
“I’m an acquaintance of your father’s. My
enemies call me Ratt.”
“Your enemies?” the boy asked with half a smile.
“Well, what do your friends call you?”
“Friends? I don’t have any friends,” and
he laughed at this.
“Listen,” Ronald said, “we should get going.”
“Hey, what’s the rush? Let the boy eat his food.
Don’t you know that the body can’t digest in motion?”
“Is that true?” Jacob said.
“Absolutely true,” Ratt said. “I know things
about the human body that most doctors can only dream of.
I’m sort of an expert in the human body, actually. Strength,
agility, digestion, all that.” He shoved the last of
the burger into his mouth and then crumpled up the wrapper,
throwing it over his shoulder into the back seat.
“Well, I’m taking karate classes,” the boy
said.
“Is that right?” Ratt said. “Your father
didn’t tell me you were interested in the martial arts.
That’s something. I’m a blackbelt, you know.”
Jacob said, “Are you really? Do you like Bruce Lee?”
“Do I like Bruce Lee? Are you kidding? He’s practically
my hero. One of the most unique human beings who ever lived.
Did you know that he was, pound for pound, the strongest man
in the world?”
“Pound for pound?” the boy asked.
“Yeah, he was just a little shit, like myself. Maybe
only a hundred and thirty pounds, soaking wet. But of all
the men in the world his weight, he was the strongest. That’s
a fact.”
Ronald felt unable to stop this conversation. He sat between
Ratt and his son, and turned his head back and forth each
time one of them spoke. For the second time today, his mind
hovered above his body, peering down while it writhed with
nausea and fatigue. A panic attack was possible; it was inching
nearer every minute.
Ratt asked the boy, “How far along are you with your
karate lessons?”
“Well, I haven’t actually started them yet. I’m
gonna start them this week. Right, Dad?”
Ronald heard himself say, “Yes, that’s right.”
“What about Chuck Norris?” the boy asked. “You
like Chuck Norris too?”
Ratt said, “Ahh, an admirable man, Chuck Norris. A true
champion. The Mohammed Ali of American martial arts. But he
can’t really compare to Bruce Lee, you think?”
“No way,” Jacob said. “He’s a bad
ass all right, but Bruce is definitely the best.”
Ratt slurped the rest of his soda through the straw, rattled
around the ice, and then tossed it over his shoulder. He said,
“Hey, kid, you want me to show you a few karate moves?
So you don’t go to your lesson the first day like a
spring chicken with its head up its butt?”
Ronald was about to say, “No, I don’t think so,”
but Jacob was already getting out of the car, excited and
smiling.
Ratt opened his door, just enough so that it didn’t
hit Ronald’s car. Ronald had an uncertain look on his
face. Ratt said, “Relax, buddy. The kid should have
a few pointers. We’re all friends here.”
Ratt and Jacob met in front of the car; Ronald sat there with
both hands on the wheel, staring at them with both horror
and wonder. The next fifteen minutes transpired in soundless
slow motion. Ratt showed the boy how to stand on guard, his
knees slightly bent, his body limber and at an angle, left
fist raised out in front of him, right fist clenched near
his face. Ronald could see Jacob watching with fascination;
the boy did as Ratt told him. Ratt pretended to throw a punch
and told Jacob how he should duck to the side. He then took
hold of Jacob’s shoulders and twisted them gently, putting
him in the proper stance. He took hold of the boy’s
fists and raised them to where they belonged, in a defensive
position. He demonstrated a standing side-kick, his leg up
at a sharp angel and perfectly straight. And the boy followed
his every move.
Ratt was so careful and delicate that it seemed as if Jacob
could be his son. They carried on like that in slow motion,
and Ronald Feys watched their mock rumble. He watched the
seriousness on Ratt’s face and the surprised delight
on Jacob’s. He’s teaching my son, Ronald thought,
his mind suddenly clearer than it had been all day.
Ronald wanted to just drive home, to forget about bringing
his son to the motel. He knew it had something to do with
the lesson that would be learned, and what Jacob was learning
right now from Ratt. One was endurance, the other annihilation.
The lesson and the punishment would become the same. And yet
he could not change his mind; a force he could not explain
was pulling him there.
After another few minutes Jacob got back in the car, then
Ratt said goodbye and drove off. “Wow, that guy’s
awesome,” Jacob said, pulling the seatbelt over his
bony shoulders. “That was a pretty good present you
got for me, Dad. Thanks a lot. Can we go home and watch Bruce
Lee now?”
Ronald nodded and touched his son’s hair. They should
go home now, yes, and sit on the couch together under the
blanket, and watch Bruce Lee. And in the morning they should
wake early to sign up for karate classes together. They should
learn, together, how to defend themselves against the attacker,
and how to survive when the inevitable fight finally comes.
But instead Ronald turned right out of the parking lot in
the direction of the motel. When the tears began falling from
his nose and chin Jacob asked him what was wrong. Ronald was
thinking of what he’d tell the boy as they stood before
the motel room door, the key in hand. “Take this,”
he’d say. “Go on, son. Take it.”
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