Read The Long Wait for Tomorrow Online
Authors: Joaquin Dorfman
he three of them closed the restaurant.
Their bill came out to a number reserved for class-action settlements.
Kelly slapped down his credit card without a peep.
Signed with a flourish, adding a tip that would most likely clear the waiter of all student loans.
Patrick hadn’t gone beyond his first glass of champagne, and he drove them all back to Kelly’s, whereupon the liquor cabinet was raided, stereo plugged in, and night sky filled with the drunken laughter of two wasted teenagers.
Or to believe Kelly, one wasted teenage girl, and one wasted middle-aged man in a teenager’s body.
Patrick sat at the same table as his friends, drinking lemonade and watching Kelly light up another cigarette. Jenna was pouring two shots of Chivas Regal, giggling uncontrollably. A good portion of Scotch fell onto the table, through the cracks, and onto the deck. The whole table was a mess of such mishaps. A sticky battlefield, covered with all the bottles they could get their hands on, determined to sample each and every one before even considering the evening over.
Patrick had given up hope on serious discussion of Kelly’s delusion for a while now.
Jenna had gotten tipsy halfway through the bottle of champagne and simply granted the premise. After that, the subject had been all but forgotten, until the big hand had snuck its way past midnight.
“OK, future boy!” Jenna snorted, sliding a glass over to Kelly. Both her straps had slid from her shoulders, breasts in serious danger of announcing their presence. “Here’s what I want to know…. In the future, what happens to me? Who do I become?”
Kelly blew a plume of smoke into the air, grinning with drunk abandon. “No idea, baby.”
“Liar!” Jenna raised her glass. “You’re just trying to protect the future from us changing it! Otherwise, if we know too much, we’ll destroy our own destiny, right? Like in the movies.”
“Except … !” Kelly reached for his glass. “This isn’t really the past…. Patrick?”
Patrick picked up on his cue without much enthusiasm. “This isn’t the past. Kelly’s in the future, dreaming about the past.” He caught Jenna doing her best to focus, swaying slightly with drink in hand. “What he’s saying, Jenna, is that this isn’t really happening. You and I aren’t really here. We’re all in the future, running around in Kelly’s happy little dream.”
Jenna turned to face Kelly, drink sloshing around. “I am your dream woman, is that it?”
“Have to drink to that.”
Kelly and Jenna hadn’t actually toasted in over an hour, and they downed their drinks.
“So, OK, future boy …” Jenna puckered her face, shook her
head with a horselike flap of her lips. “You don’t have any excuses, then. What am I in the future?”
“I told you, I don’t know.”
“So you’re from the future….” Patrick shifted in his seat, stretching. “And you can’t tell us anything about it?”
“I just can’t tell you
everything …
,” Kelly countered. “To be fair, most things. One of those things happens to be what happens to Jenna, what happens to you, Patrick….”
“That’s mighty convenient there, Kelly.”
“What do you want from me!” Kelly stood, reached over the table, searching for a bottle to sample. “Guys, I can’t remember anything.”
“Well, that’s normal,” Jenna assured him, mocking the comforting tone of a guidance counselor. “It’s been twenty years, Kelly.”
“No, I’ll be honest about this,” Kelly conceded, picking up a bottle of Beefeater. “I don’t even remember most of
my
life. I don’t remember what I’ve done, where I’ve been. I can’t even remember what I’m doing in that goddamn nuthouse. I mean, maybe it’s the drugs they’ve shot me up with, but all I’ve got left are moments, anecdotes, things I know I’ve grown to like—”
“Like six-hundred-dollar dinners!” Jenna testified, waving her arms in the air.
“Hey, I
wish
there had been more of those.” Kelly poured them each a hefty amount of gin. “But what can I say, all I know is that I’m giving us the royal treatment. Once I fall asleep tonight, I’m just going to wake up back in that goddamn room, which, honestly, I can’t even remember what it looks like.”
“Even though that’s where you are right now,” Patrick said with a withering look. “Dreaming all this, twenty years from now.”
“Doesn’t the memory prove it? You’ve all had dreams. You wake up on an island. You find yourself running up a set of crumbling steps, some awful creature ripping at your heels. You’re in bed, going at it with a girl you once knew, only she’s still the same age as she was fifteen years ago, and what information do you have? Are there ever any hints, or answers to your questions? What am I doing here, where did I come from? If we could remember them, we’d wake up from our dreams the moment they started, because we’d be
too certain they were dreams.”
The CD had run through its tracks, came to a stop with a depressed whirl.
Kelly took advantage of the gaping silence to make his way over to the stereo. He bent down, pressed Play. From out in the darkness, a dog barked. Kelly waved in that direction as though letting it know that, yes, he was getting to that. He skipped ahead a few tracks, settled on the one he wanted.
With this fresh injection of music, Kelly closed his eyes, listening to the gravelly voice of Tom Waits. Droplets of piano coupling with lush violins. He followed along without mouthing the words, holding his finger up when it was time for them to listen.
“ ‘If I exorcise my devils, well my angels may leave too,’ ” he sang along, off-key and uncaring. “ ‘When they leave they’re so hard to find.’”
“Are you really going to go?” Jenna asked. Suddenly somber, though far from sober. Her eyes were sad, taking Kelly
in for all he was worth. “When you fall asleep, that’s it? Goodbye, Kelly?”
“Let me tell you guys something….” Kelly remained standing, glass of gin at the ready. “I don’t remember much about Kelly McDermott, but my impression is that he was a loser. Maybe not in any way that people think about losers. He was apparently worshipped, feared, successful, but … What can I say, a loser can be all those things and more if they got no heart…. And if any of this were real, if I were really here, I’d tell you to kick Kelly to the curb….”
Kelly sauntered over to his chair and plopped himself down.
“Fuck Kelly McDermott,” he concluded, looking into his glass. “I’m going to miss you guys come tomorrow.”
Jenna set her glass down and wrapped her arms around Kelly.
“Miss you, too,” she mumbled, rubbing her face against his neck.
Patrick didn’t avert his eyes in time, and their lips joined together in a wet exchange. He watched them tumble into each other, mouths searching, eyes closed. The music played on, the night quietly accepting their union. Patrick’s stomach turned a few times, deciding between pain and guilty wishes for his tongue in place of Kelly’s.
Not that it mattered.
Jenna straddled Kelly’s lap, and the pair continued to kiss.
Maybe Kelly’s right
, Patrick’s angels said, did what they could to pat him on the back.
Least as far as they’re concerned, you don’t even exist right now.
Patrick ordered his legs to lift him from the chair.
He turned and walked toward the door, secretly hoping one of them would notice.
Ask him to stay awhile.
It wasn’t until he was halfway through the kitchen that he realized it wasn’t going to happen.
Patrick counted the steps leading up to the hallway, into the guest room.
Didn’t bother to brush his teeth. He didn’t wash his face, take off his clothes. Just spread himself over the bed, shoes hanging over the edge. He reached under the pillow and pulled out the envelope. Turned it over in his hands, eyelids drooping.
Fell asleep with the Ohio State coat of arms nestled in the corner of his mouth.
Woke up in the same position. So flawless, it felt as though time had failed to pass. All at once, it was light outside. The cheap plastic clock on the night table read seven-thirty. Patrick rolled his eyes around, unsure if he should bother getting up.
He did, of course, peeling the envelope from his face. He sat up and stared at it, as he had several times since fishing it from the mailbox in late January.
January, February, March, April, May.
Patrick’s angels rattled off the months.
Just how long do you plan to keep this nonsense up?
He didn’t answer, just went through the same tired routine: opened the flap, pulled out the letter, and unfolded it. His eyes scanned the words
Dear Patrick Saint
, tracing each letter, holding off the moment when he would need to look at the following words …
Congratulations on your acceptance …
With quick motions, Patrick refolded the letter, slipping it back into the envelope and under the pillow in one smooth motion. He stood up, cleared his throat, and glanced around to make sure no one had seen.
Nobody had, and then he remembered Kelly McDermott.
Patrick took a few tentative steps toward the bathroom.
Once again, he decided to poke his head into Kelly’s room.
The place was an absolute mess; empty liquor bottles, desk dragged halfway along the wall, several feet from where it should have been. Clothes scattered every which way.
Jenna lay sleeping in Kelly’s bed. The comforter wrapped itself around her naked body like candy-cane stripes, snug between her legs.
Patrick traced the contours from her toes up past her calf, thigh … lowered his eyes before he could get any farther. He stood at the threshold, listening to her snore. Imagining how comfortable her body must feel.
He turned and made his way down the steps.
Counted each one, shuffling his way into the kitchen.
Patrick looked around. Kelly’s pants lay abandoned in the middle of the floor. To the left, he caught sight of the disaster area that was once a collection of priceless crystal. He sighed, cold light of day coming in through the windows. Reached up and picked at the corner of his eye, trying to remove the crusty evidence that he had, in fact, managed to sleep.
Paused in the middle of it, frowning.
He opened the back door and stepped outside.
Kelly was seated at the table, facing the forest.
Perfectly still, modest enough to remember his boxer shorts this time.
Patrick surveyed the damage, marveling at the vast army of bottles. Half of them turned over due to reasons Patrick preferred not to think of. The morning had an actual chill to it, for once. Gray clouds filled the skies. Crickets replaced with the fresh chatter of birds.
Patrick circled around, Kelly’s face slowly coming into view.
His eyes open, glassy.
Dead
, Patrick’s angels warned, just seconds before Kelly’s eyes shifted.
Looked up at Patrick with a pleading exhaustion.
“Hey,” Patrick managed.
“Patrick …,” Kelly croaked, reaching for a lit cigarette and taking a drag.
He’s still smoking!
Patrick’s angels screamed.
Still smoking.
“Sleep well?” Patrick asked, batting away the real questions.
“Patrick …” Kelly’s eyes begged for a way out of what he was about to say.
Patrick frantically tried to meet his wish halfway, but there was no stopping it.
“It’s still today,” Kelly told him. He looked down at his hands, then back up. “Patrick, I’m still here. And it’s still today.”
Friday. May sixteenth, two thousand and eight
, Patrick’s angels clarified.
Makes sense to us, Patrick.
What’s your excuse?