Close to Hugh

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Authors: Marina Endicott

BOOK: Close to Hugh
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Copyright © 2015 Marina Endicott

All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication, reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, or stored in a retrieval system without the prior written consent of the publisher—or in the case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, license from the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency—is an infringement of the copyright law.

Doubleday Canada and colophon are registered trademarks of
Random House of Canada Limited

Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

Endicott, Marina, 1958-, author
   Close to Hugh / Marina Endicott.

ISBN 978-0-385-67860-5 (bound).–ISBN 978-0-385-67862-9
(pbk.).–ISBN 978-0-385-67861-2 (epub)

   I. Title.

PS8559.N475H85 2014  C813′.6  C2013-906368-4

                                                              C2013-906369-2

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Cover images: (ladder)
Aleksangel/Shutterstock.com
;
(leaves)
HelenStock/Shutterstock.com

Published in Canada by Doubleday Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited, a Penguin Random House company

www.penguinrandomhouse.ca

v3.1

for Will and Rachel
everything always is
Deep in fall,
my neighbour—
how does he live, I wonder?
BASHO

Contents

Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication

Monday: Oh, the Hughmanity

1. Hugh Can Take It

2. Falling for Hugh

3. Hugh Belong to Me

4. Hugh will take Care of It

5. If I were Hugh

6. Guess Hugh’s Coming to Dinner

7. I’ve Been Everywhere

8. Hugh Gets Eaten

9. I’ve told Every Little Star

10. I Only have Eyes for Hugh

11. Punch Hugh

12. Hugh be the Judge

Tuesday: Hugh made me love Hugh

1. If It Makes Hugh Happy

2. Hugh Can’t go Home Again

3. Whirling Away from Hugh

4. I Master the Class

5. Call Hugh Later

6. Ask me no Questions, I’ll Tell Hugh no Lies

7. Are Hugh my Mother?

8. Hugh’s Sorry Now

9. I.O.Hugh

10. I Put a Spell on Hugh

11. Hugh Never Can Tell

12. I’ll NEVER WALK ALONE

13. Hugh Make Me Feel Brand New

Wednesday: When Life Gives Hugh Lemons

1. Hugh Can’t

2. Hugh Can’t Do Everything

3. I’ve Got Hugh Under My Skin

4. Hugh Can’t Imagine

5. Hugh Oughta Know By Now

6. Can Hugh Feel It When I Do This?

7. Hugh And I Both Know

8. Hugh Make My Dreams Come True

9. I’ve Grown Accustomed To Her Face

10. Master Class: Desire

11. Hugh And The Night And The Music

12. I Want To Be Loved By Hugh

13. Hugh Got To Hide Your Love Away

14. All I Want Is Hugh

Thursday: With Or Without Hugh

1. Hughreka

2. Every Time I Think Of Hugh I Go Blind

3. Hugh Can Sleep When You’re Dead

4. A Bone To Pick With Hugh

5. I Don’t Want To Lose Hugh Now

6. I Can’t Tell Hugh Why

7. Hugh Can Lead A Horse To Water …

8. A Case Of Hugh

9. Master Class: Awakening

10. I’m So In Love With Hugh

11. Nothing Hugh Can Do

12… . But Hugh Can’t Make Him Drink

13. I’ll See Hugh In My Dreams

Friday: Hughoooooooooo …

1. I Saturated Hugh

2. I Rest My Case

3. Cry And The World Cries With Hugh

4. If I Didn’t Have Hugh

5. I Only Want To Be With Hugh

6. How Is The World Treating Hugh?

7. Master Class: What You Will

8. Can’t Buy Hugh Love

9. Hugh Has Got My Golden Arm

10. I Get A Kick Out Of Hugh

11. Hugh Say Party, I Say Die

12. I Really Mean It

13. If Hugh Can’t Stand The Heat, Get Out Of The Kitchen

14. I Know Hugh Now

15. I Don’t Want To Set The World On Fire

16. Hugh Knew

17. Never Let Hugh Go

Saturday: Hugh Can’T Take It With Hugh

1. She Knows Hugh

2. Whistle While Hugh Works

3. Master Class: Earnest

4. The Very Thought Of Hugh

5. The Importance Of Being Hugh

6. Master Class: Gorgon

7. Fuck Hugh

8. And The Horse Hugh Rode In On

9. I Do It For Hugh

10. All She Needs Is Hugh

11. Hugh Can Have Your Cake And Eat It Too

12. Find My Friends

13. Hugh Will Rescue Me?

Sunday: Hughtopia

1. Hughthanasia

2. Tender Flowers

3. A Hughlogy

4. I Can’t Stand The Rain

5. Hugh Can’t Let Go

6. Mole End

7. Hugh Alone

8. Hugh Can’t Tell

9. I’m Looking Through Hugh

10. Hugh Remind Me Of A Lady

11. If I Ever Lose My Faith In Hugh

12. I Will Follow Hugh Into The Dark

13. Whosetopia?

14. Hugh And I

15. Hughphoria

Acknowledgements

FORMATTING NOTE

This title contains sections of poetry with special formatting. The line of characters below indicates approximately the longest line in these sections:
 

the light in her face under the skin when she talks with Nevaeh, smiling as

 
To most accurately reproduce the layout of the text on the printed page, you may choose to decrease the size of the text on your viewer and/or change the orientation of your screen until the above line of characters fits on a single line. This may not be possible on all e-reading devices. Viewing this title at a higher than optimal text size or on a screen too small to accommodate the longest lines in the text will alter the reading experience and may cause single lines of some poems to display as multiple lines of text. If this occurs, the turn of the line will be marked with a shallow indent.

dukkha,
suffering
,
or better, a basic unsatisfactoriness
that pervades all of life
.
entry on Buddhism
,
WIKIPEDIA

1. HUGH CAN TAKE IT

You can bear pain. Hugh can. But you can’t stand to see it in others. It makes your hands and feet hurt. The grey room is full of grey people in various stages of pain. A little party: grouped by the window, sitting on the bed, ten or twelve of them. A woman kneeling by the nightstand says,
It’s all up to you, up to Hugh
. Her cloudy hair, her dress in tatters. No.

No. It’s a dream.

Eyes open.

Light? No. Three a.m. 3:02.

Okay.

3:07.

Hugh can bear pain. For himself it’s not so bad, sometimes he doesn’t even notice it. Hard when it’s someone you can’t help, though. Your mother. Cloudy hair all wisps and tendrils now. No. Don’t think about Mimi, her hands, the pale phosphorescent skin of her chest, her searching eyes.

If you had a child, could you stand that? There’s a question for you, for Hugh: why didn’t you have a child? Okay, Ann had that abortion in the eighties. But that was somebody else’s baby, Hugh is pretty sure. By then Ann was disconnecting herself from him by connecting with a few other people. You couldn’t blame her, it was the times; women felt they had to be libertines in order to be liberated, and there was a fair amount of cocaine going around. He walked in on Ann once, having sex with some guy on a pile of coats at a party. Humiliating, titillating, to see her riding a set of naked limbs. Lots of reasons for shame. Hugh never even saw who it was—the guy pulled a coat over his face against the sudden light, and Hugh turned and left. That tawdry little pain hits again, a bee-sting of stupidity.

Why remember things at all.

Hugh lies in the dark, listening to the night’s last rain falling straight into the basement of the gallery he lives above. Where valuable things are
stored, furniture and boxes he ought to have moved, other people’s art. He’s tired of rain and basements and responsibility.

Della and Ken for dinner on Saturday, with Ruth—he should ask Newell too, but can’t bear the burden of Burton, Newell’s house guest. Della and Ken: that’s a mess.

Think of something else: what to make for Ruth? Trivial, tepid, time-taking thought, a treat for old Ruth. She likes seafood crêpes. Okay, not rolled, but stacked like layer cake. Frozen crab, not that reeking stuff from the truck they had last time.
Fresh? Liars!
said Ruth.

The first time he was sent to live with her, four years old, confused, he thought they said to call her Aunt Truth. Newell waiting with him, waiting for their mothers to come back: two boys side by side at the long white table, watching Ruth laugh as she stood stirring at the stove, laughing at something Jasper said. Jasper flirting in his peacocky shirt, gesturing with his glass—he didn’t even drink too much, back then. When was that? 1969. Warm and safe in Ruth’s foster-kitchen, those boys, backs against fake ivy-covered bricks on washed-clean vinyl wallpaper. Ivy in pots too, growing, growing, shining green, kind and clean.

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