How to Build a House

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How to Build a House Page 5

by Dana Reinhardt


  “Hey,” I say.

  “How’s Tennessee?”

  “Hot.”

  “Yeah, I bet. I don’t want to rub it in, but it is gorgeous here. Coley and I are thinking about hitting the beach. He’s got a new boogie board.”

  Cole can barely swim.

  Dad knows I’m a worrier, so he adds, “He likes to lie on it in the sand and have me drag him around.”

  “Sounds like fun.”

  “So, tell me more. What are you up to? Do you have friends? Will you be able to build me some shelves in my office when you get home?”

  I’m alone. Maybe I slept too late. I don’t see anyone hanging around. This is how I wanted it. I was hoping for some privacy. I didn’t want to call home within earshot of anybody else.

  “C’mon, Harper. Tell me something. Anything. Please?”

  I tell him about the tornado. Its crazy path through this quiet countryside. The wrecked homes, and how some families just packed up and left. They gave up. I tell him about the Wrights, Diane and Wesley and the beautiful twins and skinny Teddy.

  I tell him about how they stayed.

  HERE

  On Monday Teddy’s working at the site.

  Homes from the Heart has a policy. If they come to build you a house, and they provide all these materials and all these laborers, even if the laborers are a bunch of teenagers, some of us quite lazy, you still have to help out. Which makes total sense. And since Diane runs the medical clinic and Wesley teaches summer school and the twins are only nine, the Wright family contribution falls to Teddy.

  Teddy is my double-y partner for the week, and I’m missing Captain. I tried arguing with Linus. I told him what I learned in my Eastern philosophy elective last spring: that the yin is the dark, feminine, passive force and the yang is the bright, active, masculine force, and if he really knew anything about yin and yang he would know not only that Captain is the perfect yang to my yin, but also that it takes time for the two sides to figure out their roles, to really know each other’s strengths and weaknesses, and tearing us apart right now is counterproductive.

  Linus was unmoved.

  When Captain and I worked together we talked all day long. He talked to me about Marcy and Frances. I told him about Gabriel, making our relationship sound much more official or simple or real than it ever was, because here in Tennessee, sixteen hundred miles from home, I can make it anything I want it to be.

  He didn’t ask me anything about my family.

  Yin and yang. Perfect.

  For the first hour, Teddy doesn’t say a word, which is just as well, because even though I don’t know him at all, I’m irritated with him for the simple reason that he’s not Captain.

  He listens to an MP3 player that is not an iPod, which I’m pretty sure puts him in violation of a rule. Okay, so maybe it strictly states no iPods at the construction site, but as I mentioned, I’m a stickler. The spirit of the rule is that you aren’t supposed to have any kind of electronic listening device while working.

  Maybe this is for safety purposes. Or to make sure we communicate and get to know each other better. In that case, I think it’s a stupid rule. You can’t force people to talk to each other if they aren’t interested. So, good for Teddy.

  Sometime into the second hour Teddy takes out his earphones and puts his player into the pocket of his baggy shorts and he tilts back his baseball cap and he checks me out.

  “Harper, right?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Sorry for the antisocial behavior. I’m working on this song and the only thing that helps me when I get stuck is listening to other people’s music, which is counterintuitive, I know, but what can I say? The creative process is a mystery.”

  “A song?”

  “Yeah, I write music. It’s sort of my passion.”

  “What kind of music?”

  “Anything. Everything. I love it all. Hip-hop. Bluegrass. Jazz. I even love the whiny chick singers. Well, some of them.”

  “How do you feel about country music?”

  “Love it.”

  “Ugh.”

  “You obviously don’t know good country music.”

  “Oh, I know country music. And it isn’t good. How do you feel about a barbershop quartet?”

  “I don’t know…. We don’t even have a barbershop in this town.” He smiles at me. “So, do you have one?”

  “A barbershop?”

  “No, silly. A passion.”

  Nobody’s ever asked me that. I run through a list of answers in the search for something funny. Casually funny. I want to seem as relaxed and sure of myself as he does.

  Garden gnomes. No, that’s just stupid. Strong coffee. That’s a cliché. Talking-animal movies. I hate talking-animal movies.

  Then it strikes me.

  Of course I have a passion. For as long as I can remember it’s been my passion.

  “The planet.”

  “Care to be more specific?”

  “Sure. The planet and how we’re ruining it and how it may not be livable by the time our children are approaching middle age.”

  “Are you saying you see children in our future?” He smiles at me again.

  “Ha, ha,” I say. “Joking is a luxury of living in a sustainable environment. This won’t seem so funny years from now. Trust me.”

  He leans forward on his shovel and I take a good look at him. His skinny arms and big Adam’s apple. The sweat at his hairline.

  “Yeah.” The light goes out of his eyes.

  It’s one of the hazards of having the planet as my passion. Talking about global warming can be kind of a downer.

  He shakes his head and wipes his brow with a bandana from his pocket. “So, where you from?”

  Here we go.

  “Los Angeles.”

  “Cool.”

  “Compared to here, yes, it is.”

  “Amen.” He goes back to raking. I think I’m in the clear until he asks, “Any brothers or sisters?”

  You’d think I’d have a canned answer. I’ve been dreading this question since I boarded my flight to Memphis, but I never bothered to work out what I’d say when it came up.

  He eyes me.

  “I only ask because I’m living in a tiny trailer with two nine-year-old girls and I’ve taken to wishing I’d been an only child.” He smiles a crooked smile. “But anyway, it’s not such a complicated question.”

  HOME

  On the second Saturday after Dad dropped the bomb, Tess and I went to the same party. We had the same friends. We went to the same parties. That wasn’t going to change.

  But this time we got dressed in our rooms in our separate homes and drove in our separate cars.

  I counted on Tess. I counted on her to tell me what to wear and how to do my hair. She always put on my mascara. I have this weird thing about eyeballs. Even watching somebody else put in contact lenses makes me want to hurl. But Tess had a magical way with the mascara brush. She would talk to me in this gentle voice and tell me something totally stupid and distracting and somehow I’d survive the dangerous proximity of brush to eyeball.

  “Voilà!” she’d say. “You look fantastic.”

  I never saw what the big deal was with mascara. It doesn’t seem to change anything. I haven’t worn any since Tess moved out.

  The night of the party, Gabriel picked me up.

  It had been seven days since Gabriel and I had sex and things had been strange between us all week. It was like reliving the period following the hand-to-breast incident of eighth grade, except this time we didn’t stop talking to each other. This time we talked to each other as if nothing had happened.

  For the last year we’d been fooling around. And that’s all it was. Fooling around. We made out every now and then. So what? Couldn’t friends fool around without it turning into a big deal?

  Tess asked me all the time what was happening with Gabriel.

  “Nothing,” I’d say.

  “I don’t believe you.”

&n
bsp; “It’s casual. Whatever.”

  “Is that all you want from him? Something casual?”

  “I don’t know. We don’t really talk about it.”

  But now we’d had sex. Didn’t that scream It’s time to talk?

  Gabriel rang the doorbell. He never did that. He never asked if he could have something from the fridge or if he could use the phone. He’d kick off his shoes and leave them in the middle of the room and he’d help himself to music from Dad’s vast collection of female soul singers.

  Tonight things were different. Gabriel was ringing the doorbell and I was nervous.

  “Gabriel, my man!” I heard Dad say. Their hands slapped in a high five. Why did Dad insist on turning all supermacho around Gabriel?

  I wondered what would happen if Dad knew. How differently he might greet Gabriel at the door.

  “Arthur,” Gabriel said as I was entering the room. “Might I say, you are looking quite well this evening. Quite well, all things considered.”

  Nobody but Gabriel calls Dad Arthur. To the rest of the world he’s just Art. But early on, Gabriel adopted this phony formality with Dad that stuck.

  “All things considered” was as close as Gabriel was going to get to telling Dad he knew what was happening with Jane and that he was sorry.

  Dad’s macho grin slipped away, and he grabbed Gabriel in a big bear hug. I was fragile those days, to say the least, and the sight of this embrace almost undid me.

  We took my car because Gabriel’s barely holds together with duct tape. He smelled like shaving cream. He’d missed a spot just above his upper lip.

  I thought maybe in the car, in the green glow of the dashboard lights, that he might bring up whatever this was that was happening with us. We might finally talk.

  We talked about Dad and Jane.

  “How’re you holding up?”

  I’m not. I’m falling apart. “Fine.”

  “Really?”

  “What?”

  “You look like a mess.”

  “Thanks. Just what I needed to hear.”

  “You know what I mean. I don’t mean how you look, I guess what I mean is how you seem. You seem like a mess. You look hot. The guys are going to be all over you tonight.” He gave my knee a pat. A friendly pat.

  It deserved a snappy comeback, keep it light, but I was silent.

  Last weekend he’d come over because I’d called him in tears. I didn’t usually lean on Gabriel that way, but I didn’t know who to call. Tess was gone. I never even saw her leaving. Jane packed her things while we were both at school. Dad said they’d be back in a few days to collect the rest.

  “It’s best if everyone just takes a breather,” he’d said.

  Gabriel came right away and found me in my room. Dad let him in and then went out for a drink. He never minded leaving me alone in the house with Gabriel.

  I was lying on my bed, face splotchy, eyes sore. I’d never cried in front of Gabriel.

  He rubbed my back, mumbling something about how life really sucks.

  I lifted up my T-shirt so that he could rub my bare back, so that I could feel his touch.

  It felt really nice.

  Really, really nice.

  I unhooked my bra so that he could rub my back without anything getting in the way. Soon I wasn’t thinking about Dad and Jane and Tess. All I was thinking about was Gabriel’s hands on my skin.

  I turned over.

  Gabriel looked surprised. The lights were on. The lights were never on. I could see his face. I lifted my shirt over my head.

  He continued to touch me.

  I started to unbutton his pants. And then, since everything was different, since everything had changed, I did something I never did with Gabriel. I talked to him, about us, right there in the light.

  “I want to,” I said. “I want to do it tonight.”

  The party was huge. We had to park five blocks away and even from there we could hear voices. I had an impulse to take Gabriel’s hand. He’d rung the doorbell. He’d picked me up to go to a party. This night had all the elements of a date. But I couldn’t do it.

  There was a crowd swarming the front lawn and jamming up the entryway and I could see people through the second-story windows. I went around to the backyard and bumped into Tess.

  All these people. Hundreds of them, and Tess and I find each other right away. Perfect.

  “Hi,” I said.

  “Hey.”

  I was hoping she’d be wearing something new again. That was a good icebreaker. But she was wearing a striped dress she’d had for over a year and old black boots.

  “What’s up?” I asked. What’s up? How lame is that?

  I tried to read her face. It was a closed book.

  “I can’t really handle this tonight. I just want to have a good time. I need to have a good time. You understand.” She aimed for a smile but missed. She walked away.

  I looked around for Gabriel. He had disappeared somewhere into the crowd. Our date had ended. I looked around for anyone. Somebody who knew me.

  I was alone.

  HERE

  On Tuesday morning I take my coffee outside. I’m drinking it out of a travel mug I bought at the convenience store; I can’t bear to use one more foam cup.

  I find Linus sitting cross-legged on the cement by the pool with his eyes closed, his palms raised out and up, much the same way he was on the first day we arrived. I tiptoe over to a lounge chair, ease myself into it and spill hot coffee on my bare legs.

  I shout out something totally foul.

  Linus stands up and hurries over.

  “Everything okay here?”

  “Yeah. Ouch. Sorry. I just spilled my coffee.”

  He grabs a towel and soaks it in the pool, then hands it to me. I put it on my legs. Relief.

  “In my experience,” Linus says, “the coffee here is barely lukewarm.”

  “Today the gods conspired to make it scalding hot.”

  “Let’s take a look.”

  I pull back the towel. I’m pink.

  “I think you’re going to be okay.” Linus smiles and drags a lounge chair next to mine. “So tell me, Harper Evans from Los Angeles, California, how’s everything going for you so far?”

  “Pretty good. I kind of like it here.”

  “Good to know. What do you like about it?”

  I have to think. I don’t really want to say anything about coming to the middle of nowhere where nobody knows me or knows anything about what my life used to be.

  “I like the crickets. Or the cicadas, or whatever they are. I like the sounds all around. The buzzing. It feels like the earth is alive here. It’s kind of easy to forget that in Los Angeles.”

  He smiles, leans back in his chair and closes his eyes to the sun.

  I remember how I felt when I cut the wood. “And I like the worm-drive saw.”

  “There’s a reason they call them power tools.”

  Now I lean back in my chair.

  I sneak a look at him and I notice that he has a tattoo.

  glad

  Large cursive letters on his right arm, just above his farmer’s tan.

  It suits him. He seems happy, or glad, pretty much all the time. Or maybe serene is the better word. Why didn’t he think to tattoo serene on his arm?

  I think about asking him why he chose glad, but I decide against it. Like I said, I can be annoying about language. I ask him instead about this ritual with the closed eyes, folded legs and outstretched arms.

  “Oh, it’s just something I try to do every day. Find a quiet moment and say this thing. It’s sort of like a prayer, I guess. A mantra.”

  “So I interrupted your morning mantra all for a lousy cup of coffee?”

  “A lousy cup of hot coffee. Hey. It’s been my pleasure. Every day is filled with opportunities to take a quiet moment and I’ll just grab another one later.”

  It’s time to go out to the bus.

  As we’re walking away from the pool, me creeping because
my legs still sting, Linus asks, “How’s it going with Teddy? I know you were reluctant to work with him, but I had a feeling you’d do well together.”

  “He’s fine,” I say, and then I feel my cheeks turn pink. They match my legs. My answer is a double entendre.

  To Tess, guys are never “cute” or “hot” or “sexy.” They’re “fine,” as in “Ashton Kutcher may have the IQ of a banana slug, but he’s fine.”

  I smile even though Linus couldn’t know why what I’ve just said is kind of funny. Only Tess would understand.

  I worked with Teddy all day. We sat together during lunch. I forgot my hat, so I walked back to his trailer with him in the afternoon and waited outside while he got me an extra one.

  None of this is lost on Captain.

  At dinner he starts questioning me, and Frances and Marisol join in.

  “We saw you,” says Captain, and he gives me this knowing look.

  “What are you talking about?”

  “We saw you and Teddy picnicking together and then taking off for parts unknown,” says Frances. She’s leaning into Captain and I think about how I haven’t said one word about whatever is going on between the two of them in front of her because I don’t want to embarrass either one of them.

  “Parts unknown? It was his trailer, Frances. I needed a hat. My nose was getting burned. See?” I lean forward, led by my nose.

  “Don’t come knockin’ if this trailer’s a-rockin’,” Captain chants while he shakes our table.

  “Classy, Captain. Really classy.”

  “C’mon, Harper. Spill. What’s up with you and Quiet Tennessee Boy?” Marisol asks.

  “He’s quiet?”

  She shrugs. “He seems pretty quiet to me.”

  “That’s just ’cause you’re a big loudmouth,” says Captain. Marisol bunches up her napkin and throws it at him.

  “He’s not quiet,” I say. “He’s just, I don’t know, thoughtful.”

  Captain bursts out laughing. “And you expect us to believe that you don’t have the hots for him?”

  Okay, so maybe I was looking at Teddy today, at his eyes that are such a light brown they’re almost gold, and maybe I was thinking how much nicer gold eyes are than green-flecked eyes. Maybe I was thinking that he’s not too skinny, that his baggy shorts look cute, that his shoulders are nice and broad. Maybe I was listening to his slow, deep drawl and forgetting what to do with the tool in my hands. Maybe I think Teddy is fine.

 

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