In Springdale Town (2 page)

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Authors: Robert Freeman Wexler

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #fantasy, #Contemporary, #Mythology & Folk Tales, #Fairy Tales, #Paranormal & Urban

BOOK: In Springdale Town
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3

Although Shelling awakened with a headache and tingly fingers, the sensations faded, and he didn’t expect the day, a Friday, to differ from the routine he had established since moving to Springdale several months ago. He spent the morning pulling weeds from his vegetable garden and sitting in the shade of his back patio, where he dictated his journal into a digital recorder, as he did every morning. It wasn’t until afternoon, when he went into town for his yoga class, that he noticed the emptiness.

At the yoga center, though the door hung open and the lights were on, he found no students or teacher. He sat on the couch outside the practice space and removed his shoes and socks, then entered the practice area, a rectangular room with a golden oak floor and a wall of windows–a calming zone in which he always found freedom from the grasping tentacles of chaos that followed after everyone.

He unrolled a mat and waited, sitting cross-legged facing the windows. Cloudless and blue, the kind of day that promised much–perhaps this time, after class, he would suggest lunch to some of the others. Usually, on finishing the hour and a half sessions, he felt so exquisitely drained and limp that conversation proved difficult, and the opportunity for companionship slipped past him.

This empty room was odd though–someone, at least the teacher, should have arrived by now. He rose and walked into the closet-like office, then to the couch, where he sat reading a brochure for a weekend seminar with a visiting yogi. A few minutes later, he slipped his socks and shoes on and left. Across the parking lot, in the food co-op, he bought an avocado, some lemons, and a bag of organic potato chips. Aside from the young woman at the cash register and a man putting out produce, the store was empty.

He deposited the groceries in the trunk of his car and walked toward Main Street; while crossing the street in front of The Cook’s House (a store selling upscale kitchen items), he decided to go to the Springdale Library.

The library occupied an attractive 1920s-era brick building with wood floors and high ceilings. Several afternoons a week, Shelling would come here to sit in the magazine section and look through various newspapers. On this visit, he paused in the foyer to look at a poster advertising the performance of three short Samuel Beckett plays at the college. He had never read or performed any Beckett. Off to his left stood a table of new books; straight through led to the fiction, he knew that...but where was the drama section? He thought to ask if the library had the featured Beckett plays.

Besides programs at the college, there were a few theater groups in town. Funny, his discontent with television had colored his entire view of drama. But why not enter the theatrical life here? Though he was hesitant to reveal his past, or rely on his background to secure parts in local productions, it was ridiculous to turn away from acting altogether. Perhaps instead of acting, here in Springdale he would direct plays, explore a more artistic vision, divorced from the business that had involved him for so long.

Finding no one at the front desk, he rummaged through the new books, picking up one with a painting of a sailing ship on its cover. He flipped through the pages, then stopped. The text was not English. It so closely resembled English that at first he thought his eyes had blurred, mixing the words into random configurations. He picked up another book, and it was the same, words in a sort of near-English gibberish: “
Leth free, tor mousled, ol shan vetchy
,” read the line at the top of one page, opposite a strange drawing of young women and people-sized cats wearing clothes.

Shelling looked around for another library patron or employee, but found no one. At the circulation desk, he called out: “Is anyone here?” The ceiling, distant and white, mocked him. He found he couldn’t breathe, could not force air in through the knotted thing his windpipe had become. A sudden wave of heat engulfed him, a magnified exhalation, as though he had entered the exhaust vent of an immense furnace.

4

I had just entered my room with the daisy-print wallpaper and started travel ritual number one
{note 5}
when someone banged on my door. Not wanting to talk to anyone, I ignored the knock. If the hotel needed me, they could shove a note under the door. The knocking changed to pounding, a rhythmic thud, like some overworked drum circle reject. My irritation magnified with each drum beat. “Okay, I’m coming,” I said. I turned the knob, preparing an irate statement, but smiled when I saw Michael.

“Took you long enough,” he said, pushing past me, followed by two men and a woman, all of whom I thought I recognized from around town. “Train ride okay? Should’ve let me know what time so I could meet you.”

“I figured you would be pretty busy with the wedding.”

“Well, we’re out to have some fun. Not exactly a bachelor party. Drinks with some guys. And not even all guys.” He pointed to the woman.

“I’m Sherrie–you handled my divorce,” she said.

I nodded, although I didn’t remember her. “I have to phone my office,” I said, lying. “Then go over some notes on a case. I’ll meet you later.”

“Too much work,” Michael said. “That’s not the Patrick Travis I remember.” They left. I waited half an hour, then went out to eat mall food, one of those stupid chain restaurants that make you feel as if you haven’t traveled. Springdale has excellent dining, but that was enough reunions for the day. I drifted around the shopping mall till closing. The anonymity of the place comforted me.

5

Swells of oceanographic angst buffeted Shelling. A profusion of discolored velvety fur–pelts of beaver or raccoon–lined the street, softened his fall. Shelling had a beaver dam on his property, and he liked to sit near it, under the trees, losing himself in the sounds of his land. He planned to move a picnic table out there, though he worried it might disturb the animals. But why was he lying in the grass outside the library? Shelling jumped to his feet, and hurried down Main Street.

Half a block from the library, he stopped, unable to recall the source of his agitation. That’s what happens when you miss your yoga class, he thought. He would have appreciated an explanation for the cancellation. With his unstructured life, disruptions like this left him dangling. If not for the discipline of yoga, his transition to life in this small town would have been difficult; the practice relaxed and invigorated him, opened him to new experiences. Living in the Los Angeles area for so long, he had grown contemptuous of other places in the country, of small towns, of any place lacking big-city sophistication.

As he walked, he glanced into the windows of several stores, seeing a clerk behind the counter in some, and in others, no one. Not just the yoga center then; the town appeared to be shorn of people, residents and visitors alike.

He entered Frisell’s Coffee Roasters, pausing in the doorway, as had become his habit, to allow the fertile aroma of the roast to permeate his lungs. Two young women sat on stools behind the counter. They were laughing; as he drew near, he heard the one at the cash register mention elephants, or maybe cellophane. The other laughed harder, gasping, sucking air through the laughs. She hunched forward, cupping her reddening face with both hands. Silver rings decorated most of her fingers. Shelling recognized one with a raised zigzag design on a dark background, from the jewelry store across the street. He had spent parts of two afternoons there, trying on rings, assisted once by a bland-faced woman and the other time by a well-manicured bald man, neither of whom gave any indication of interest in talking to Shelling beyond the requirements of their job.

“What’s so funny?” he asked. Neither woman responded. The young woman at the cash register asked the other to start a pot of decaf. Shelling ordered a cappuccino and waited while the ring woman prepared it. The cash register woman held out a hand for money. A tattoo of a dark bird, wings outstretched, decorated the underside of her wrist. Shelling wanted to join their discussion, but saw no way to breach the wall. He opened his mouth, preparing to tell the young woman that he admired her tattoo; instead, he carried his mug to a table and looked out the window at the empty sidewalk. The two women continued their conversation as though Shelling didn’t exist.

“There’s an archival method, Albania or someplace,” one of them said. “They use numbered index cards to keep track of the tides.”

“Are they suspended by fishing line, like in Greece?”

~

This emptiness, it haunted him: empty cafes, empty theaters, stores. No cars passed through. Shelling drove around town, searching, up Main Street and into the neighborhoods, but saw no one other than the waiters, waitresses, ticket sellers, fishmongers, and shopkeepers at their respective stations.

He pulled his car into the parking lot of The Crow Bar, a brew-pub occupying an old mill on the north edge of town that could easily absorb the ski season crowds and the summertime hikers. This evening, neither were in evidence, though he did find the bartender and two others, a man and woman.

Shelling felt a smile growing but shut it down. It would not do to appear too eager. He would order a drink, wait for conversation to happen. The dark ale reminded him of winters spent in the mountains, in lodges surrounded by friends and strangers, all laughing and talking. Where were these people now?

The man at the bar spoke to the woman. Shelling couldn’t place the extended syllables of his accent. “A man dressed all in black enters a white room. The only sound is the air conditioner, blowing through a vent in the ceiling.” The man stopped and drank the last third of his pint. He motioned to the bartender for another. His hands were wide, with sausage-like fingers.

“How large is the vent?” The woman’s voice sounded husky, as though from smoking, but Shelling saw no ashtrays near the couple. Her accent didn’t match the man’s.

“Doesn’t matter. Just a vent blowing air.” The bartender set a full glass down on a coaster; the man wrapped his thick fingers around it and lifted it to his lips to drink before continuing his story: “So, here’s this man, dressed all in black in a white room. The room is rectangular, maybe four times deeper than it is wide. It’s cold. The blowing air pushes against his hair. He takes out a black knit cap, the kind that covers his whole head except for the eyes and mouth. But he doesn’t put it on. He’s waiting for something, or someone.”

The man tipped his glass and drank, finishing the beer in one deep swallow. He nodded to the woman, who picked up her purse and stood.

“What’s he waiting for?” Shelling asked, but they left without answering.

Shelling sat for a while, drinking his beer in small, brief sips and idly taking pretzel sticks from a bowl. The bartender moved off to shelve a rack of clean glasses.

When he first stopped here, on his cross-country drive, the streets had been crowded with cars, pedestrians. Or had they? It was as though he carried competing memories–a town alive with human contact, and this, the emptiness.

6

In the morning I dressed and drove to town for the wedding. Michael and Dee had decided to hold it in a mansion owned by one of her relatives. The place was a wreck–hadn’t been lived in for years–wallpaper peeling, dank corridors leading off into uninhabitable wings, but it had this amazing ballroom, gilt molding, parquet floor, and a ceiling painted all in cherubs and naked nymphs. I stood in the back, apart from everyone. What a fucking waste, all this. Within a couple of years, either Michael or Dee–didn’t matter which–would do something stupid, some fling with a co-worker or whatever, and that would be the end. People are predictable. Everybody starts out with the same well-meaning platitudes.

The woman who had stopped by my room last night with Michael and the others sat beside me. “Sorry you didn’t make it out to the bar,” she said. “It was a good time. Some of Michael’s former students–I think they had all just turned twenty-one recently and were feeling way proud of it–showed up, and we had them going with stories about Michael’s wild days in the merchant marines.” She waved to some people standing near the door. They came over and sat in the remaining three seats of the row. The woman introduced them to me, but then the music started, freeing me from conversational obligations.

Dee and Michael appeared from opposite ends of the room, all smiley, and their smiles shamed me. I tried to feel better, or at least to hide my cynicism with an outward shine. Hard enough for them without all my negativity coming at them. And they looked great. Dee had bought some vintage wedding dress and shortened it to just below the knees. Michael was wearing a pink ruffled shirt and dark pants.

After the wedding, a civil ceremony with cosmic overtones, we relocated outside for the reception. The garden was mostly overgrown brambly things, but they had cleared enough space for tables and chairs. I went through the hand-shaking line, then sat alone beside a ragged shrub with purple flowers. Late May here was always perfect. I had forgotten. Michael owned a canoe, and after his classes were over, we would take it out on the river. I had always assumed that after putting away enough money from my law practice I would buy a canoe and a riverfront house. Okay, I could still do it, just not here, not in the way I had pictured things back then.

At least Caroline wasn’t at the wedding. Turned out she and Dr. Wonderful had gone to Spain for a month. From my spot by the shrub, I saw a familiar-looking woman talking to Caroline’s best friend, that romance writer Skippy Brisbane. I definitely wanted to avoid Brisbane. That other woman smiled a lot when she talked, which looked odd next to Brisbane’s sour face. Smiley woman was wearing a flowered tank dress that showed a lot of leg. Maybe I had met her once. Maybe she hadn’t been wearing glasses then, or her hair had been long.

Several guys I used to play softball with came over, blocking my view of smiley woman. We exchanged small talk; I told them about lawyering and stuff in the city.

Then this man showed up, waving his hands in the air and screaming something about broken hearts. He said if the wedding wasn’t stopped, he would “do something.” He never said what he would do, just kept repeating the line. A woman standing near him said the wedding had already happened, and he grabbed her shoulders and shook her. That’s when that fat cop I had nicknamed Scooter intervened. He pulled the man away and escorted him from the party.

Now I was feeling guilty for all that negativity I had radiated earlier, thinking I had somehow caused this. One of the softball guys said the screaming man had been Dee’s boyfriend before she met Michael. Someone else said they had been engaged. I had wanted to hide, alone, by my flowering shrub, but for some reason more people joined the group around me. When I saw Brisbane and smiley woman moving my way, I slipped out.

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