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The Minor Apocalypse of Meena Krejci

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by Susan Taylor Chehak




  THE MINOR APOCALYPSE OF MEENA KREJCI

  A Novel

  by

  Susan Taylor Chehak

  Copyright © 2014 by Susan Taylor Chehak.

  All rights reserved.

  FOREVERLAND PRESS

  Silverthorne, Colorado

  http://www.foreverlandpress.com

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Cover Design by http://www.ebooklaunch.com

  And all shall be well and

  All manner of thing shall be well

  When the tongues of flame are in-folded

  Into the crowned knot of fire

  And the fire and the rose are one.

  —T.S. Eliot, "Little Gidding"

  However I choose to understand what brought

  you to the fence, I bring my own hand

  up to the latch. There are no cardinal rules

  in the treatment of one human by another. In the teeming air

  of our narrow escapes, we freely observe our species

  advance, capable and composed, toward

  extinction, increasingly eager

  for what must appear,

  as it approaches, more beautiful

  and superior

  with every step.

  —Jean Monahan, "Letter to Robin Silverman"

  Sweet thought that I may yet live and grow green,

  That leaves may yet spring from the withered root,

  And buds and flowers and berries half unseen;

  Then if you haply muse upon the past,

  Say this: Poor child, she hath her wish at last;

  Barren through life, but in death bearing fruit.

  —Christina Rossetti, "Looking Forward"

  The moon is full here every night,

  And I can bathe here in his light.

  The leaves will bury every year,

  And no one knows I'm gone.

  —Tom Waits, "No One Knows I'm Gone"

  As one rose dies another blooms

  It's always been that way

  I remember the showers

  But no one puts flowers

  On a flower's grave

  —Tom Waits, "Flower's Grave"

  TABLE OF CONTENTS

  It begins

  July 2006

  Someone To Look After You: 1951-1957

  July 2006

  King of the Wood: 1961

  July 2006

  The Pilgrim of Prague: 1962

  July 2006

  The Master of Disaster: 1963

  July 2006

  What Remains: 1964

  July 2006

  Frails: 1968-1969

  July 2006

  Accounting: 1969

  July 2006

  Come With Us: 1969

  July 2006

  Nowhere: 1969

  July 2006

  August 2006

  July 2007

  It ends

  Also by Susan Taylor Chehak

  About the Author

  It begins...

  ...like a storm—with that pensive heavy stillness of dead air pressing in, with a soft rustle of the wind just barely stirring in the trees, a bruising over of the summer sky, a somber gray and yellow horizon glittery with lightning, bloated full of thunder, swept by sheets of rain—it begins when old man Krejci bumps his head.

  And then—like that same storm spent, blown past to leave the ground and the air around feeling new and fresh and washed crisp clean—the next morning when Meena peeks into her father's sun-spilled bedroom to find that he has not moved, but is still lying on the bed with his head flat back on the pillow, in just exactly the same way she left him there eight hours before, everything will be changed...

  July 2006

  It begins on a Friday evening in July, when Josef and Meena Krejci go over to Larks Cafe to eat supper and then off to see a movie at the new theater complex out in the Westside Mall. Just the two of them: Joe an old man in his late nineties and Meena his daughter, in her middle middle-age. Nothing fancy: he in his yellow golf shirt and blue trousers and she in a light green cotton shift that she's tried to dress up a little with a flowered pink and turquoise chiffon scarf. If you were to see them out together like this you might think she's his nurse or his caretaker, a paid companion who's been hired to look after the old man.

  She is solicitous of him, but he is clearly still in charge. He does the driving. She slows her pace to match his and leans forward to listen to him, raises her voice to be sure he can hear whatever she might have to say to him in reply.

  Or if you were to look closer you might think you see a family resemblance and then maybe you would guess that the father is a widower, the mother is dead and Meena is a devoted daughter, maybe never married, maybe divorced, alone and childless, maybe even widowed herself, although this is not in fact the case.

  At Larks they sit at their usual table, in a corner near a window that looks out over the parking lot, newly paved and painted, shimmery with the lingering midsummer heat. Joe's back is to the wall because, he says, he likes to see what's coming, but Meena knows that if there's anything coming it's probably not worth waiting for. The place is almost empty at this early hour, and the Krejcis have the young waitress to themselves. The plastic nametag on her lapel says her name is Prairie, and Joe finds this amusing. His blue eyes twinkle as he flirts with her—"What kind of name is that?" he wants to know. The girl shrugs. "My parents were hippies," she answers, matter-of-factly. This must be something that she's been asked to explain many times. "Would you care for any water, sir?" Her face is blank; she's just doing her job. Maybe she knows already, just by looking at him, that this guy is not going to leave her much of a tip. The old ones never do.

  But Prairie's chilly demeanor annoys Meena—Why can't she at least smile? How hard is it to be pleasant to a harmless old man who doesn't get out much anymore and is only doing his best to be friendly? Joe Krejci could teach this girl a thing or two about customer relations. With an attitude like that, she wouldn't have lasted ten minutes working for him.

  Used to be you had to stand in line to get a table in this place, but not anymore, and no wonder. When Meena was little, coming here for dinner with her father was a special treat, reserved for special occasions, but lately it's become a weekly event. Back then the waitresses bent over backwards to be nice—they had seemed like motherly old ladies to her at the time, but in fact they were probably younger than she is now.

  Joe would tell you he loves Larks because the food's pretty good and for only $6.95 you can get all you can eat at the early-bird buffet, seconds and thirds and even fourths if that's what it takes to fill you up, plus unlimited helpings of pie. He's always had a healthy appetite; even now, even at this advanced age, when other men are withering down to skin and bone, Joe Krejci is still plump. He still has a pinkish glow of health in his cheeks. His laugh is still hearty. He looks years younger than he is and always has: that's what everybody says.

  He catches Meena watching him and frowns, "What is it?"

  She shakes her head. "Nothing."

  Meena has the meat loaf and mashed potatoes, with a little green and pink Jell-O salad and a slice of sponge cake for dessert, and Josef has the fried fish and coleslaw with boiled spinach and stewed tomatoes and a scoop of macaroni and cheese on the side. Plus the pie—one piece of Boston cream, one of rhubarb, and a slice of pecan, which he tries to get Meena to finish for him but she doesn't want it.

  It's the yellowy color of t
he mayonnaise that will lead them both to wonder later whether maybe the tartar sauce was bad, was that it? Was that why he was in the bathroom being sick after they got home, and not because of how he'd bumped his head, not just once but twice that night? At his age he was lucky not to have broken any bones, and they will both of them be thankful for that.

  They leave Larks to drive through downtown and across Bohemie Bridge, on over to the new developments on the far west side of Linwood, all the way along to where Hill Parkway widens into four lanes near the Interstate, with Joe at the wheel because even if he is an old man and maybe age has slowed his reaction time some, still after last year's cataract surgeries his eyes are pretty good and he is competent enough to pass a driving test on his birthday every year. Besides, he's Meena's father and he's not anywhere near ready to turn over his independence to her, not now and as far as he's concerned, not ever.

  The handicapped parking spaces are all taken, so he has to squeeze into a regular spot on the end instead, a little ways away, and this angers him. Then, when he's climbing out of the car, Joe loses his footing and careens backward, thrashing for balance and chocking his head against the cinder block wall behind him.

  Angered further, he kicks at the bumper of the car. He buffs at the knot on the back of his head with his knuckles, rubbing his fist hard across the shiny mottled surface of his scalp. He shrugs Meena off when she comes around and tries to help him. He lurches away from her, staggers and stumbles forward bear-like, into the pool of light that falls across the asphalt from the street lamp overhead.

  "I'm all right," he growls when Meena tries to draw his fist away and get a look at the goose egg that's started to swell there on the back of his head. He's angrier than he should be, snapping at her even though she knows he doesn't really mean it.

  "Dammit, I said I was all right."

  And after all the years that she's been living with him, she surely should know better than to argue with her father. He has never in her lifetime had much of a mind for anything that she might have to tell him, and she learned long ago how to give up and let go of what she can. Joe Krejci is, by his own description, a stubborn old bohunk, and he's just as likely to do a thing twice knowing how it maybe bothers somebody else when he does. Better all around if only you can find a way instead to bite your tongue and bide your time, wait awhile until his anger has cooled off and blown on by and been forgotten.

  She tries to take his arm, but he brushes her off and continues on. There is a Boy Scout standing under the theater marquee, holding a flat box of yellow ribbons. On the sandwich board beside him is a blurred blow-up of a man's face.

  "Would you like a ribbon, sir?" The Scout thrusts the box of ribbons toward Joe.

  But the old man just growls and keeps on walking, while Meena has slowed for a closer look at the sandwich board. The caption reads: "$25,000 Reward For Any Information That Directly Leads To The Return Of RALPH WENDELL. 54 yrs of age, white male, 5'10", 180 lbs, blue eyes, gray/brown hair.

  "Ma'am?"

  The Scout is offering the ribbons to her. She takes one and starts to pin it to her dress.

  "It costs a dollar."

  Meena apologizes and puts it back, then joins her father in the ticket line, behind two teenage girls, scantily clad in the usual mallrat slut-wear. He is working to get his wallet out of his back pocket. The girls turn to him, then look at each other and giggle.

  "Go fuck yourself," Joe barks.

  "Dad!" Meena apologizes to the girls, but they aren't having it.

  They edge away from him. "Asshole."

  He wobbles and she puts a hand on his arm to steady him. Another early warning sign of Alzheimer's: inappropriate anger. "Are you okay?"

  "Stop asking me that, will ya"? Joe has his wallet out and is opening it. His hands are shaking. Before he can stop her, Meena has fished out her five-dollar bill, and she's gone back to the Scout.

  He grins. "Change your mind?"

  "I'll take two." She hands him the money and helps herself to the ribbons. He starts to give her change, but she stops him. "No, it's okay," she says. "You keep it. It's for a good cause." She puts the ribbons in her purse and goes back to the line.

  She tries again to see the bump on her father's head, but again he pushes her away.

  "I'm telling you, Meena. Leave it."

  So is there anyone who will say it was all her fault? Didn't she try to help him? Didn't she do just as much as she could do? And didn't he push her away and tell her to leave him alone? But Meena will blame herself, anyway. She won't be able to help it.

  Because what happens next is that one minute the two of them are standing together, shoulder to shoulder, waiting to buy their movie tickets outside the theater, and then the next minute Joe is going down. She hears his squeak, so shrill and so unlike him that right away Meena knows there must be something wrong, and she turns to look, to see why in the world he might have made such an improbable sound. And what she sees is her father collapsing away from her, like a crumpled paper bag. The two girls are standing right there in front of them in the ticket line, and they sense the awkward movement of the old man's body as his legs give out and he starts toppling over toward them, so they turn around just in time to see him coming. But instead of doing the decent thing by reaching out to try and catch him, these girls jump back. His shoulder hits the ground first, and he turns his head. The girls screech at the hollow hard thunking sound that his face makes when it smacks against the pavement at their feet, bounces, smacks the pavement again.

  A shock wave moves through the line and Meena is on her knees. The cement of the sidewalk is snagging holes in her pantyhose, but she doesn't mind that, not a bit. She's bending her own body over her father's, as if she thinks she can shield him from something, maybe just the eager view of all these Friday night movie-goers who are standing around in a tight circle already, drawn to the real-life drama of Joe Krejci's real-life fall. She can feel the warmth of their bodies in the air and she can sense their restless, craning movements as they begin to press in closer to see better whatever there is for them to see. She can hear, too, the rough shuffle of their shoes against the sidewalk and the coarse incomprehensible rumble of their voices murmuring in the air over her head, and it scares her. She sees her own hands as if maybe they belong to someone else; she watches as they flutter uselessly above her father's body, hovering around his hips and then his head, lighting in his hair, landing on his arm, brushing up against his neck, his shoulder blades, his back.

  One of his arms has been pinned beneath him; the other is outstretched above his head, turned at the wrist so his hand is twisted, its empty palm held up and out as if in some kind of supplication. Meena is shocked by how unlikely this seems, how wrong it is, how indecent really, for her father, of all people, to be lying here like this, in public, unconscious and exposed. She cups both hands around the curve of his far shoulder and, sobbing with the effort of it, she pulls against his dead weight. He is still a large man. She has rolled him over onto his back.

  The front of his yellow shirt is spattered with a fine lacy pattern of sprayed blood, and one whole side of his face—from the flat edge of his temple, across the swell of his cheekbone, down to the rise of his jaw and over onto the point of his chin—has been scraped raw.

  Meena isn't sure what she's supposed to do next. She sits back on her haunches, with her hands folded helplessly in her lap, and she can only stare at Joe as if he might be a stranger that she's never laid eyes on before in her life.

  Later Meena will think it was because she was weak that she got up and turned away. But she just couldn't bear to look. He was Josef Krejci, he was her father, and she had given most of her life to his, so it was just too much for her to have to see him lying there that way, defenseless and brought down. She didn't mean to turn her back on him, and she wasn't intending to go off and leave him there alone either, but just then someone else stepped aside and a space opened up for her. Meena simply stepped into it, and th
en it seemed as if the circle around him sucked itself shut again behind her, so that for a moment she lost sight of Joe. At that moment, Meena might have been anybody, just another onlooker, but then there he was again, he had come to and he was lurching up to his feet. He charged toward her, lumbering heavily, with one hand splayed across his injured face, shouldering everybody else out of his way.

  He was bellowing her name: "Meena!"

  She was embarrassed and she didn't want to have anything to do with him.

  A woman had stepped forward and was speaking to him, offering help most likely, but Joe wouldn't have it. He swiped out with a backward swing of his opened hand, just missing her, and the woman reared back.

  He had seen Meena and he barreled toward her. He grabbed hold of her arm, curling his thick fingers around it, getting some blood on the sleeve of her green dress—ruining it—and then half pulling on her and half leaning on her for support, he led the way over to the end of the parking lot, where they'd left the car.

  Meena untied the scarf from around her neck and gave it to her father. He wadded it in his fist and pressed the soft porous fabric to the raw side of his face. She wanted him to stop and hold still for long enough at least so she could take a look at him to see just how badly he was hurt.

  "Maybe we ought to call an ambulance. Maybe you should sit down here on the bumper for a minute to collect yourself. Take a second and wait."

  But Joe had opened the car door, and he was standing there with one hand enmeshed in the floral pattern of Meena's scarf and the other hand on the handle of the door, holding it open for her.

  "Get in," he said, and obediently she did, smoothing the skirt of her dress with one hand and fingering the holes that had been torn in the knees of her stockings with the other. She perched there on the wide front seat clutching her purse in her lap beneath her folded hands, looking through the grimy windshield into the pitch black of an empty field on the far side of the lot, waiting for Joe to let her know what he wanted her to do next.

 

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