by Rob Kaufman
Table of Contents
Copyright
ONE LAST LIE
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
One Last Lie
By Rob Kaufman
Copyright 2013 by Rob Kaufman
Cover Copyright 2013 by Rob Kaufman
Previously published in print, May 2012
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the publisher or author, except in the case of a reviewer, who may quote brief passages embodied in critical articles or in a review. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction. The characters, dialogue and events in this book are wholly fictional, and any resemblance to companies and actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
ONE LAST LIE
A Novel
Rob Kaufman
1
The old man was dying, and the worst part was, he knew it.
He could feel it in his brittle bones, popping and cracking with every move. He tasted it in his mouth — the bitter phlegm sitting on his tongue. He could even see it through the viscous film caught between his quivering eyelids.
But the telltale sign of approaching death was the feeling of surrender that had crept into his aching body — complete resignation to his current existence and to the life he’d led. The fight was just about gone.
He pursed his lips, pushing back against the spoon Katy pressed to his mouth. He couldn’t take his eyes off the thick braid of auburn hair hanging over her shoulder, moving like a pendulum, each swing bringing the broom of split ends closer to the bowl from which she scooped his oatmeal.
He refused to eat, trying to prove there was at least one thing over which he had control. Nothing tasted right anyway. Over the past thirty years food had lost its flavor, and his passion for the fine wines and nouveau cuisine he once sought was gone. He was now eating to live and wondered if it was worth the effort. As he approached his last days on earth, living had become secondary to discovering where his life had gone wrong and if, in fact, that day thirty years ago was the day he truly died.
“Jonathan!” Katy pulled the spoon from his mouth and tapped the uneaten oatmeal back into the yellow plastic bowl. “You can’t go on like this. I don’t want to have to threaten you with the feeding tube again.”
Gently, she pushed the few wisps of white hair off his damp forehead, patting the mist of sweat with her apron. “I can see you smiling inside, Jonathan, under that sour grimace of yours. You can’t fool me.”
But he was fooling her. He wasn’t smiling: not inside or out. Why would he smile? What inside this so-called “elite” retirement home could make him smile? The stench of urine wafting into his room from the littered hallway? The monotony of cries and moans from other residents, most strangers to him, some even younger than his 75 years, being hushed back into their rooms with gentle whispers? The crumpled white bed sheets, hardened and pilled by bleach and overuse? Were these the things Katy thought he was smiling about? She must be crazier than I am.
He looked at his pale, bony feet hanging off the side of the bed and longed for the security of his Westport, Connecticut home; a cozy, five-bedroom colonial where he’d lived in comfort until they wheeled him out on a stretcher almost five years ago. The sky was pure that day, an ocean of cerulean blue that seemed to go on forever. But mostly he remembered the leaves; the deepest of reds, painted by the heat of the sun and the frosty New England nights; bright yellows, sprayed with crisp and timeless autumn air. Others were almost fire-orange, with narrow veins displayed through their transparent skin, backlit by the intense sun. Bouncing on the stretcher as the paramedics carried him down the front porch steps, he held his chest, feeling the hard thumps of his failing heart and watching the leaves quiver in the frigid breeze. They dangled from the branches above him, holding on for dear life, seemingly aware that one strong wind could easily toss them into obscurity until they withered and died. At that moment he clutched the flannel bathrobe lapel into his fist, realizing he was hanging from the very same branch.
He waited until Katy carried away the oatmeal before he fell backward onto the mattress, his bare Achilles heels banging against the cold, metal bed railing. “I want to go home. I just want to go home. Why can’t I go home? It’s only a few miles from here. We can take a taxi —”
He heard a “tsk tsk” as Katy dried both hands on her apron and walked toward the bed. She sat next to him, her corpulence creating a valley that threatened to suck him in. He tried pulling himself up, but she grabbed his hand.
“Oh, Jonathan.” She placed her other hand on top of the one she’d already swept up. He wondered how she could bare to touch his thin, age-spotted skin. “Oh, Jonathan,” she repeated, her soft voice spilling puddles of sweetness all around him, like his mother, who could so easily lull him to sleep after a day of fighting with the world, a tough battle for an oversensitive ten year old.
“We’ve been through this so many times. Remember? Your home pays for this place — pays for me.” He could barely feel the pad of her thumb wipe the tear from the side of his face. “Your house was sold years ago. This is your home now. It will be so much easier for you when you’re able to accept that.” She placed his hand back on his lap, stood straight up, and spread her arms to her sides, as though washing away the sadness.
“I’m going to do an extra special cleaning of your room today.” She opened the pine closet door and rummaged inside. “And do you know why it’ll be extra special?”
No… he didn’t know, nor did he care. Just because he allowed her to wipe away an infrequent tear didn’t mean she could treat him like a five year old. He lifted himself onto his elbows and sniffed.
“A surprise visitor’s coming tomorrow.”
Jonathan felt his chest tighten; behind his ribs, a hard thump, then another. “I don’t know anyone. No one would visit me.” The air rising from his throat was so arid he almost choked on the words. He squinted his eyes, glaring at her as she held the rag out in front of her and sprayed it with a foul-smelling mist. If that crap is something that attracts dust, he thought, she should use it for the inside of her head.
She jerked her head back as if she’d heard his thought, opening her mouth like a toad trying to catch a fly. Jonathan wasn’t sure if she was laughing or asphyxiating from too much dust spray. She chortled and then pretended to get serious, “Oh, Jonathan Beckett, that’s what you think. I’m sure plenty of people would visit if you weren’t so grumpy.”
He focused on her large bottom and the extra weight jiggling around her white scrub pants. They were tight, showing a lot more than he wanted to see.
“I do not want anyone coming into this room! Unless they’re coming to wheel my dead body down to the morgue, no one comes in here!”
Nothing. Katy wasn’t biting.
“Did you hear me?” Jonathan banged the mattress with the side of his fists.
Couldn’t she understand that everyone he cared
about, anyone he’d ever want to see was already dead or had been taken from him long ago? And with his own impending death so close, all he wanted was privacy — to spend those last precious moments on earth alone, recalling only memories that would make him smile.
Katy wiped a rag along the top of the television, a plume of dust erupting like volcano ash. She let out a cough. “Yes, I hear you.” Another cough. “But this visit will be a happy one for you. I promise.” She wiped her nose with her sleeve, sprayed more mist onto the cloth until it was damp, and stroked it along the top of the chest of drawers.
“Life is to be lived, Jonathan, and sitting in this room like a hermit is not living. You don’t talk to your neighbors, you don’t accept visitors, you barely talk to me.” She waved her arm. “You don’t even have any photographs in here. This is not living, Mr. Beckett. Not living at all.” She unfolded and refolded the cloth, tucking it into the palm of her hand. Slowly turning toward him, she tried to force a smile. From the pained look on her face, Jonathan could sense she was uncertain whether or not to continue the diatribe. Her eyes focused on the wall behind him, avoiding his face. “This isn’t living, Jonathan… it’s dying.”
*
The room was dark except for a few strips of light pushing through the slats of the vertical blinds. Every now and then Jonathan heard footsteps scurry past the closed door: maybe that thick-headed nurse Flo bringing pills to a resident she forgot to medicate; maybe lunatic Frank from the fifth floor sneaking behind the nurses’ station, stealing cotton balls to put inside the imaginary spaceship he’d been building for years.
Or maybe it was all his imagination, just part of the barrage of sounds and visions that showed themselves nightly, invading his loneliness like a blast of arctic air and nearly taking his breath away. But it was always worth it, for when his breath returned, Philip came with it.
Tonight he ignored the chill and kept his eyes on the nearly invisible ceiling, focusing on imagined shapes: swirls and dots and circles floating amidst the darkness, falling then rising, then falling again. As always, Philip appeared through the shadows, his doe-like eyes a darker brown than they’d ever been before. His blonde hair glinted with golden highlights, feathery strands of amber sweeping across his forehead. A hint of stubble covered the lower half of his face, accentuating the glowing, silky skin.
They never spoke during these nightly visits; no need to. They stared at one another until Jonathan felt safe enough to drift off to sleep and dream of the life he’d once lived. But tonight, with eternity at the edge of each breath, Jonathan pushed a whisper from deep within his throat. “I’m coming,” he mouthed, frightened by the meaning of his words, yet at the same time mesmerized by the thought that after so many years, he’d be whole again. “I’m coming.”
He didn’t wipe the tears from his face, nor did he struggle to pull the ends of the quilt out from beneath the mattress. Jonathan let his eyes close, took a deep breath, and replayed the part of his life he could remember — all the while, in the back of his mind, praying he’d be dead before Katy arrived with his surprise visitor.
2
“The girl was a square,” Philip used the blade of his new sushi knife to push diced onions to the far end of the cutting board.
Jonathan leaned against the doorjamb leading into the kitchen, hiding his fists inside the pockets of his jeans. Fragments of onion were already sticking to the inside of the sink and tiny labels from avocado peels clung to terra cotta tile under Philip’s left foot. Jonathan desperately wanted to start picking things up before the disorder got out of hand, but he knew better than to break Philip’s momentum. Cooking was Philip’s way of escaping the monotony of his CPA career — the daily influx of numbers and calculations that poured over him like a hot bowl of alphabet soup. Trying to tidy up while Philip prepared meals would be asking for trouble.
“A square, huh?” Jonathan perched on one of the metal stools in front of the island — the best place to stay out of Philip’s way while keeping watch over the growing mess. “Was she dull? Boring? Did she dress like an old woman?”
Philip turned around to face him and leaned against the counter. He held the knife in the space between them and sketched a square. “No, I mean a square. You know, like a box with four corners. She was maybe five feet tall and about 250 pounds — literally a square.” He turned back to the counter, grabbed an avocado, squeezed it and held it to his nose. Jonathan saw the furrow of Philip’s eyebrows and immediately knew it wasn’t good news. “Too freakin’ ripe. Jesus! As of today, we never buy another avocado from Balducci’s.” He tossed it into the open garbage container, grabbed another, squeezed it and pursed his lips. “I’m glad I bought extra.”
Jonathan tried to keep him focused on the subject at hand — their impending dinner guest: a woman he’d never even heard of, until Philip mentioned a few minutes earlier that she was on her way from New York to eat dinner with them. He glanced at the stove’s digital clock: 6:00. In fifteen minutes, the “square” would be ringing their doorbell.
“Are you kidding me? You hung out with a square all through college? How come I never heard about her?”
Philip sliced through the avocados with ease, his adept hands creating perfect halves to expose the pit. He held the pitted half in one hand and the knife in the other, tapping the pit with the long edge of the knife, wedging it deep enough to twist out the pit. They called this the “pit twist,” but before Philip came along Jonathan didn’t even know avocados had pits. He loved watching the pit twist, right up to the moment when Philip unhitched the pit from the knife by slamming it on the edge of the sink, splattering avocado gunk around the room.
“I actually met her at the Boston Common on the first nice day after the longest winter ever. Exams were driving me nuts and I had to get away from campus for awhile. I spread a blanket and some books out on the grass, took my shirt off, and soaked in the sun.”
The sweet smell of cilantro wafted through the air. Jonathan took a deep breath, and saliva filled his mouth. In a few minutes he’d be testing the guacamole.
“I fell asleep, and when I woke up a giant shadow loomed over me. It was Angela blocking the sun like the sail of a ship. At first I thought it was a dream.”
Half-listening to Philip’s story, Jonathan drummed his fingertips on the black granite. He wanted the kitchen cleaned before Angela arrived, but Philip was taking his time. Not good. He forced himself to take a deep, cleansing breath and marshal his mental forces. A mess in the kitchen did not mean the end of the world. It only meant discomfort: an “irritated state of being” as his therapist, Dr. Crowley called it.
The thought conjured up a mental image of Dr. Crowley, holding his pipe and pontificating at their final session together: “This irritated state of being is the root cause of your troubles, Jonathan.” The doctor spoke with all the compassion of an executioner at the gallows. “And you’ll need to work at keeping it under control for the rest of your life.” Miffed because Jonathan had decided to end the expensive therapy, the doctor’s words were a last-ditch attempt to convince Jonathan he should continue the sessions for the rest of his life. And with each sentence he spoke, Jonathan slumped deeper into the chair. Maybe he’s right… maybe just a few more sessions… maybe…
Jonathan forced his spine straight and sat tall in the chair. He’d almost succumbed to the doctor’s cunning logic, but a surge of strength — the same one that helped him originally decide to end therapy — warned him he must start handling the daily issues of life on his own. He leapt to his feet, slid on his sunglasses, and left the gaping doctor slouched in his vintage leather wingback chair.
Outside the office, Jonathan felt an emerging freedom that escalated with each step he took away from the doctor’s frigid, air-conditioned room into the intense humidity of the mid-July day. The sun clawed through his tee shirt, heating his chest and working through his jeans — a sensation so opposite the arctic environment of Crowley’s building that goose bumps cover
ed his entire body. The warmth and sun enlivened him, exciting an optimism he rarely experienced. This is a good omen. The words rang in his head, sunshine… not rain… a whole new day. He pulled his shoulders back and strutted down Rices Lane, proud and ready for the fight ahead. And he knew it would be a fight — a constant battle against his “irritated state of being” and everything it entailed — such as today’s obsessive thoughts of maintaining a spotless kitchen while Philip expressed himself as a cook.
Jonathan cleared his throat. “Okay, so this square is standing in front of you. Then what?”
Philip tossed the chopped garlic, onions, jalapeno and cilantro into the bowl of mashed avocado. He slid in a pile of diced tomatoes from the cutting board, gave the mixture a few good squeezes of lime juice, and stirred everything together with a whisk. “Well, she told me if I wasn’t careful I’d get sunburned. I asked her jokingly if she was a doctor. She told me she was studying to be a nurse. Then I asked her if she wanted to sit with me. She hesitated at first, I guess because it was hard for her to squat, but somehow she made it down.” He laughed and tossed his head back to push the hair from his eyes. “Anyway, we talked for two more hours. She was also going to BU and actually working at a sperm bank in Boston to help pay for college.”
Jonathan’s stomach tightened: here it was again. “The same sperm bank where you made your donations?”
Philip dropped the whisk, its handle clanking against the metal bowl. Jonathan wiggled on the stool to hide his jittery reaction.
“For the hundredth time Jonny, I only did it twice… just two times. And it was only for extra cash. Doesn’t matter anyway, the sperm was probably dead.” He grabbed the whisk and with deep strokes began remixing the ingredients, this time without speaking.
Philip’s mood change hovered in the air between them; a heavy fog holding fear and death. The mess created by his innuendo was much worse than the mess on the kitchen floor.
“That was before the cancer, Philip. Your sperm wasn’t always dead. The fucking radiation did it.” Jonathan wasn’t sure if these were the words Philip wanted to hear, but they were the only ones that came to mind. What were people supposed to say about cancer? He had no idea.