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Authors: Bruce Wagner

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BOOK: I’m Losing You
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The phone rang. Serena wanted him to come to the house again. He reflexively began the sixty-five-dollars-just-to-say-hello spiel but
stopped himself. She had pots of money; that made it easier. She was lonely, that's all. He'd make a token inspection, then sit awhile, like a volunteer at a hospice.

When he got there, it was late afternoon. Simon hung back in the entryway. The regressed old woman sat on the living room couch while a doctor gathered up his medical bag. “If the spasms return, I want you to call.” Serena nodded meekly. The nurse stood by the piano watching, vaguely aroused, vaguely punitive. “You'll promise to call then, Serena?”

She bowed her head contritely. “Thank you, Dr. Stanken.”

“You know, this business of being brave is for the birds. And I know Donny has encouraged you to use the phone. Serena?” He squatted before her, staring into her drifting, blepharotic eyes. “You need never suffer from pain again—not so long as I am here to help. Do you understand?”

“Thank you,” she mumbled, mouth pursing involuntarily in the wake of the gentle scolding. Stuart Stanken took his bag and said goodbye. They were suddenly face to face in the front hall.

“I—I'm the Dead Animal Guy,” he whispered. Nothing else came to mind.

“I'm the pain guy. Nice to meet you.” The doctor smiled, sailing out.

The nurse swooped on Simon officiously. “You'll have to go—Mrs. Ribkin isn't feeling well.”

“Sorry to hear it.”

“I don't think she really needed you.”

“I'll just take a quick look under the house and be on my way.”

“This
nonsense
—if I had known she called—”

“Juana? Is that the young man?” Simon muttered “Baby Jane” under his breath as the nurse turned back to the living room, steeling herself. He followed her in. “Why didn't you tell me he was here?”

“You should be going to bed now. You'll be passing out from what Doctor gave you.”

“I want to sit on the terrace.”

“You should be lying down.”

“I want to sit on the terrace, goddammit!”

Outside, they propped her on a chaise, and Simon tucked a Ralph Lauren throw around. His knees acted as a hedge to keep her from falling.

“Can you smell it?”

“I smell skunk, but it's far away.”

“Poor raccoons—it's their mama, I
know
it. How awful!”

“How long have you been sick?”

“Awhile. But I'm just about done.”

Something stirred on the hill.

“I could take another look. I mean, under the house.”

Serena coughed, and he asked if she needed water. She waved him away. “I heard a marvelous joke. Farfina told me, she's the night nurse. Stupendous gal.” She pointed toward the house with a hitch-hiker's thumb and coughed some more. “
This
one—Juana—is a Nazi.”

“I'm not excessively fond of the ladies in white myself. They're all Nurse Ratcheds.”

The old woman was fading. He morfed her face into younger versions of itself, to pass the time. Serena coughed, bad one this time, eyes opening wide in an alarm of pain. She fidgeted and the blanket fell. Simon helped her cover up.

“There's a man, he's dying. His wife and him don't get along too well, physically—haven't done anything for years. He knows he's not going to make it through the night. He tells her that, and asks for sex. She turns him down. He says, ‘How can you do this to me?' The wife says, ‘I'm tired, I'm exhausted, I worked all day.' He's shocked, of course—like they all are. And he says, ‘But I'm dying! How could you be so tired that you couldn't give me sex on my last night on earth?' She looks at him and says, ‘That's easy for you to say. You don't have to get up in the morning'!”

She laughed and coughed and Juana gathered her away.

He was in his office at ICM, thinking about Katherine and her lover. Phylliss Wolfe had told him about as much as he could stomach. Well, his ex could have done far worse than Stocker Vidra, tribadic film critic, book editor and part-time novella-ist: Katherine might just as easily have wound up in the arms of some agent-turned-successful-producer. This way, there was less exposure. Less embarrassment for him. Better a récherchée
clitterateur
than some art-house director in the thralldom of a freak crossover hit. Better some dyke of
Academe than a lawyer-turned-screenwriter. Lawyers-turned-writers were the worst.

He sat there, Dirk Bikkembergs pants at mid-thigh, hand around dick, wondering what they were up to. Probably in Joshua Tree, fisting each other between hits of ecstasy, laughing over his stubby, herpes-ridden shlong.

Taj let him know Phylliss Wolfe was on the phone.

“Hi, Donny. It's Eric.”

“Hi, Eric.”

“I met you at Sweets. I brought Phylliss the script.”

“I know that, Eric. You're very memorable.”

“She's just getting off this other call. I thought I had her but—”

“Old gal's slippery.”

“Would you like me to call you back? Or would you mind holding a second longer?”

“I don't mind holding.” Donny looked down at his lap. “Do you?”

“Do I—?”

“Do you
mind
.”

“Holding?”

He was actually flirting with Phylliss's assistant. She jumped on, interrupting the volley.

“Donny
dearest
, is that you?”

“Yes, Mother.”

“I want to thank you again for the lunch. I thought it went
very
well.”

“It was a stone groove, Mother.”

“Have you heard from her?”

“Don't be desperate, Phyll.”

“Does she hate me?”

“She thinks you're the best.”

“Well, I think she's
wonderful
. So we'll see. And if she doesn't do it, she doesn't do it. Fuck her and fuck you.”

“That's my girl.” A message flashed on the Amtel:
YOUR FATHER ON 4
. Donny hiked up his trousers. “Phyll, I gotta jump.”

Twenty-five years ago, Bernie Ribkin produced a string of low-budget horror films that made a fortune. An over-tan Mike Todd wannabe, he disappeared in the mid-seventies, after the divorce. The
story was he'd been living in Europe, producing films, but Donny didn't buy it. He resurfaced a few years ago and was living in a stuccoplex on Burton Way. On occasion, the agent ran into associates after Bernie introduced himself at Eclipse or Drai's the night before (“I didn't know you had a father!”). The Veepee always cringed. He called him “my crazy stepdad.”

They exchanged guarded hellos. Donny promised himself he wouldn't blow up. That would be his meditation exercise.

“How's your mother?”

“Why don't you ask her?”

“I'd like to be able to. I put
several
calls in but she won't answer.”

“Serena's not doing too well.”

“Somehow I don't think she's too eager to see me.”

“Guess you'll never know.”

“She wasn't all that eager to see me when she was tip-top!”

The agent could smell the cigar and the lox, eggs and onions. “Listen—Dad.” He hated himself for calling him that. Mistake, mistake. “I got five people waiting for me on a conference.”

“I'll let you go. Do you think we could have lunch?”

“Talk to Taj.”

“What's his last name, Mahal?” laughed the old man. “Looks like I've finally got my fucking sequel in place.”

“Great.”

“Can you believe it took me thirty years?”

“That's Hollywood. Gotta jump.”

“I could use some of your casting ideas.”

“Talk to Taj and he'll make a time.”

He found himself on the freeway, heading downtown. He got off on San Pedro and there was a woman with a sign:
GOd BLeSS
. She had a little girl with her. Donny pulled over and gave her a twenty. The woman was pretty and had all her teeth. He asked what had happened and she said she was working for an insurance company. Her employers were hit hard by the quake and had to let her go; people were still dining out on the fucking earthquake. Donny wondered what the real story was, as if a simpler truth lay hidden behind the insipid lie—as if being jobless and alone with a kid wasn't enough to make you destitute.

Her name was Ursula, and Tiffany was her daughter. He asked if they wanted to get something to eat. She thanked him but declined. He could probably get her to say yes, but what was the get-off? What would he do with them? They probably had the virus—she'd cozily left that one off the verbal résumé. So big deal. Donny figured he wouldn't have to touch her. For thirty dollars cash money she'd suck him off with the kid watching, gratis. Or do the God thing. That could be fun—rent her a place in Toluca Lake right
now
, stock it with cutlery, soaps, mops, candles, all that Smart & Final Iris crap, Trader Joe's cheese, thrift-store bean bags, fifties dinette set, water bed, aquarium for the kid, wardrobe and lingerie, give her the old Bernie-bought Impala, the whole
schmear
. Do the impossible in just a few hours. Ensconce them in a super-clean utility apartment on Barrington somewhere and pay the rent a fucking year in advance. How much for the whole package? Ten grand? Twelve? That was shit. When it's done, lay five K on her and disappear, like some saint. Let six months go by, then drop in to see what's what. What else could he do with her? More immediate. Clean her up. Get her to the doc for a little Private Door dusting, douching and delousing. Have her tested. If she's negative, go the whole Pygmalion hog: Dr. Les's magical mystery collagen tonic, creams and unguents and Retin A, plucking and waxing—shave the pussy and storm the blackheads. Shopping at Trashy Lingerie, gallery-hopping at Bergamot Station, Planet Hollywood with the kid. Get Tiffany into a private school. A fourth grader's tuition at Crossroads was only eleven thou. Be fun having a kid out there in the world, one you never needed to see, who worshiped and was terrified of you, like some miniature Manchurian Candidate.

Donny passed her a business card. He said he could find her work cleaning houses. She plucked a book from her knapsack, a two-thousand-page tome called
The Book of Urantia
. “Urantia means Earth,” she said. “Our planet's only one among many, you know.” Donny said he would hereby call her Ursula Major. She smiled and gave him the book, as a gift. He took it, forcing on her a hundred-dollar bill. The homeless woman got weepy and kissed his cheek. Tonight, they'd stay in a Best Western instead of God knew where.

He read Katherine's draft of
Teorema
in bed then scanned
The Book of Urantia
. He flipped through its elegant, tissue-thin pages until he found a passage to read aloud:

For almost one hundred and fifty million years after the Melchizedek bestowal of Michael, all went well in the universe of Nebadon, when trouble began to brew in system II of constellation 37. This trouble involved a misunderstanding by a Lanonandek Son, a System Sovereign, which had been adjudicated by the Constellation Fathers and approved by the Faithful of Days, the Paradise counselor to that constellation, but the protesting System Sovereign was not fully reconciled to the verdict
….

The agent drifted off, rising like a kite toward interplanetary zones.

BOOK: I’m Losing You
6.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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