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A
Hole in the Universe
CHAPTER
1
“The way to look at it is, that was somebody else, some eighteen-year-old
kid with the same name. It wasn’t you.” His brother,
Dennis, sat at the foot of the bed, watching him in the mirror.
“Who was it, then?” Gordon Loomis squinted through the
blur of sweat. The jug-eared face was the same, bland, the deep
chin cleft its only discernible feature. He dragged his starched
sleeve across his forehead. He still wasn’t used to the heat
of a proper room. The closeness of his brother’s voice seemed
the only air to breathe.
“You know what I mean!” Dennis said. “And besides,
people forget. I mean, twenty-five years! That’s like what?
A lifetime ago when you think of it. Nobody’s the same person
they were then, just like you’re not.”
“But I am. I’m still the same,” Gordon said. His
thick fingers struggled with the tiny collar button. Three hundred
and fifty pounds, six and a half feet tall. Just as big then—“Loomer,”
because he took up so much space. Because of the way he leaned so
close to hear. Because he never knew quite what to do with himself
or where he belonged.
“No, you’re not! For one thing, you used to be a complete
slob, and now look.” Dennis laughed, pointing at Gordon’s
hairbrush, the comb placed in the exact center row of bristles.
“What do you call this? Obsessive-compulsive? Anal retentive?”
He meant the rows of coins stacked heads up, the sleek black flashlight,
and still in its box the blue tie Dennis had bought for him to wear
today. Gordon had laid it all out last night. Some things he could
control. Most he could not, like this job interview.
He took deep breaths to block out the nasally thrum of Dennis’s
voice. “I don’t get it. Lisa and I had you all set up
in Mom and Dad’s room. So why’d you go and move your
stuff in here? It’s the smallest room in the house.”
“It’s my bedroom,” Gordon grunted, chin raised
and straining, the button almost fastened.
“Was your bedroom. Was—twenty-five years ago. But life
moves on, Gordon! Right? It does, doesn’t it?” His brother’s
pained smile rose like a welt on his lean, boyish face.
Gordon knew better than to answer. His younger brother was as thin-skinned
and mercurial as he was generous. It couldn’t have been easy
all these years with his greatest desire, Gordon’s freedom,
so fraught with expectations of disaster. In the week that Gordon
had been home, Dennis had criticized his every decision. His brother’s
confidence in him was strongest with visitors’ Plexiglas between
them.
“It’s so damn dark back here.” Dennis looked out
the window into the leaf-tented patch of shade, the old tree’s
crown grown bigger than the yard. Now Gordon would hear how he should
have gone to California: he’d have a fresh start there, complete
anonymity.
“Damn!” he muttered, and Dennis started toward him just
as the button went through.
“You’re so nervous!” Dennis handed him the tie.
“It’s just an interview. What’s there to be nervous
about?”
Gordon turned his damp collar over the tie. The interview was too
soon. He wasn’t ready. Freedom was like this new suit Dennis
had bought for him. It might look a perfect fit, but it felt as
if it belonged to someone else. Gordon tried to knot the tie, then
yanked it apart. “I never could do this!” He threw it
down on the bureau.
“C’mon, big guy,” Dennis coaxed, slipping it back
around Gordon’s neck. “Hey! After all you’ve been
through, this’ll be a piece of cake! You’ll do fine!”
Gordon glared until Dennis stepped away. His hands trembled as he
fastened the tie himself.
“Knot’s too big,” Dennis said, shaking his head.
Gordon pulled tighter, his face a mask again, eyes half-lidded to
this speck in the mirror, not a man, but a point in time, that was
all. No more than a moment. A moment. And then it would pass without
pain, without anger or loss.
“Now what’d you do? You got the wrong end too long.”
Dennis chuckled. “Here, let me.”
He
reached out.
Gordon stiffened. “There.” He stuffed the longer narrow
end into his shirtfront. “You can’t even see it.”
“No!” Dennis howled with dismayed laughter.
“That’s the way I always did it,” he said.
“Sure, when you were a kid. C’mere!” Dennis was
undoing the tie. “We don’t have much time left.”
Gordon recoiled from the sour intimacy of his brother’s breath.
According to the corrections manual, each inmate had his own space,
a circumference of twenty-four inviolable inches.
“That guy I told you about, Kinnon, my patient?” Dennis
murmured with the last loop. “I called last night to double-check,
and he said it was all set. He said he’d already laid the
ground work. He’d already explained things.”
“What things?”
“Things. You know what I mean, the details.”
The knot dug into his gullet. Details. The scrapings of flesh—his—gleaned
from under her fingernails. The cuts on his enormous arms measured,
photographed: the quantifiable proof of her grasping, desperate
struggle against the pillow. Details, twenty-five years deep, most
like flotsam released in pieces, surfacing through dreams, or snatches
from a song, certain smells: the damp sweetness of shampooed hair,
or even abrupt silence into which would rise her muffled pleas,
soft moans, the last earthly sounds of Janine Walters and male fetus.
Kevin.
“He said he explained it all, you know, how young you were
and everything,” Dennis said as they got into the car.
Everything. Gordon stared out the window. As if it were one of those
crazy things kids do? A prank? Just break into a house and kill
a sleeping woman. His eyes closed. “I hope you never forget!
I hope every day of your miserable life is a living hell!”
her raw-eyed mother screamed with the verdict. She had wanted him
dead.
“So now you just have to show them what a normal, regular
guy you really are.” Dennis grinned. “Plus, you’ve
got all these letters.” The folder between them was thick
with testaments to his good behavior and trustworthiness from chaplains,
wardens, guards.
"The
best one though’s from Delores.”
“What do you mean, from Delores?”
“Her letter. I told you I was going to ask her.”
“No, you didn’t!”
“Well, I thought I did. I meant to. I must’ve forgot,
that’s all. No big deal.” Dennis backed into the street,
then had to wait while a chunky young woman in a skimpy sundress
carried an infant while maneuvering a sagging stroller across the
street. Roped onto the stroller was a television set.
“And where the hell do you think she got that?” Dennis
sighed and shook his head. “Don’t forget: Keep everything
locked. Mrs. Jukas said you even leave a window open and they’re
in like rats.”
“You shouldn’t have done that. I can’t believe
you asked Delores without asking me first.”
“What? What’re you talking about? It’s just Delores!
What’s the big deal?” Dennis said.
The
minute the woman passed, he hit the gas and raced up the street.
“I don’t want her to write a letter.” He gripped
the door handle. The contents of his stomach rose and fell with
the blur of signs, sunstruck glass, cars passing, the honk of a
horn. On the way home from Fortley, Dennis had to stop on the highway
three times while Gordon dry-heaved alongside the car.
“What’re you talking about?” Dennis shouted. “She
already did! She wrote it! All it says is how she’s known
you all your life, and what a decent person you are. You know, things
like that.”
“No! Take it out!”
“But it’s just a letter. She wanted to!” Dennis
kept looking over, stunned. “It’s not like I put pressure
on her or anything. You know how she feels about you.”
“No. I don’t want it in there.” Gordon reached
for the file, but Dennis clamped his hand over it.
“Will you tell me why the hell not?”
“Because.” He felt breathless, as if he were running
up a steep hill. “Because she shouldn’t have to have
her name mixed up in this.” Because he didn’t want to
owe her any more than he already did for all her letters and visits
through the years. He had nothing to give. He had to be careful,
careful of everything. More so now than ever before.
“Have her name mixed up in what? What do you mean? She’s
your friend, that’s all.”
Gordon groped for the handle to roll down the window, then remembered.
It was a button now. “Can you slow down a little?”
“You want to be late?”
“My stomach, it feels funny.”
“You’re nervous, that’s all.”
“No, it’s riding. The car, I’m still not used
to it. It makes me feel sick.” Eyes closed, he turned his
face to the open window.
“Jesus Christ,” Dennis muttered, slowing down. He said
no more until they pulled into the Corcopax parking lot. “Oh,
and one more thing. The only opening right now’s in Human
Resources.”
“Human Resources? I thought you said laminating. They’re
not going to hire me for a job like that. Why didn’t you tell
me? I don’t want to do this.”
“Look, Gordon, let’s get something straight here. I’m
doing the best I can. I’ve got one hell of a busy life. I’ve
got my practice, my family. I’ve got a million things I could
be doing, but right now this is the most important thing. This!
Being here! Helping my brother get off to a good start, that’s
all!”
“I’m sorry.” He hung his head.
“You want me to butt out, you just say the word.”
“No.”
“Because I got so much shit going on right now, I can’t
begin to tell you,” Dennis said with a disgusted sigh.
“I know. I’m sorry. I’m just nervous, that’s
all. It’s just a lot all at once. I mean . . .” No company
was going to hire him to work with people. Unable to say it, to
give up even that much of himself, he rubbed his face with both
hands. All he wanted was to be left alone. In Fortley he’d
at least had that.
“Aw, c’mon, Gordo! You’re going to do fine!”
Dennis assured him as he got out of the car. He handed him the file.
“I probably shouldn’t get your hopes up, but I think
this is a done deal. At least that’s the way Kinnon made it
sound.” He waved, watching a moment, then pulled up alongside
as Gordon trudged toward the gleaming glass-and-granite building.
“Jesus! You’ve got to look more confident than that!
C’mon, Gordo! Head up! Shoulders back! Go get ’em!”
In the lobby, Gordon slipped Delores’s letter from the file
into his pocket. All along the way, in the elevator to the third
floor, then down the long bright corridor to the personnel office,
he could feel people staring at him. Conscious of the sticky-sounding
tread with every footstep, he walked quickly, met no one’s
gaze. He shouldn’t have let himself be pushed into this. He
wasn’t ready. He woke up every morning disoriented to be home
in his own room, as frightened as he was grateful to be free. He
should have had Dennis come with him. Not into the interview, of
course. Just to be close by. But, no. He couldn’t always be
a burden. As it was, Dennis had canceled three patients to bring
him here. So far, every decision had been made for him: his new
clothes, the house fixed up and ready, cupboards filled, even orange
Popsicles in the freezer because Lisa, Dennis’s wife, remembered
his saying once how much he missed them. Personnel. His hand closed
over the knob.
“Right in there.” The receptionist’s eyes swept
over him. She pointed to the open door.
They’re
waiting,” she said as he hesitated, caught between flight
and paralysis. Her chair squeaked as she turned. Not every day she
got to see a murderer.
“Mr. Loomis.” A delicate woman in a hot-pink suit rose
from her desk. After a lifetime of gray, colors came as a shock.
As did beauty. Softness. His face reddened with the limp graze of
her slender palm. He lowered his eyes to keep from staring at her
face.
She said her name. Jamison. Then something about Brown. Who was
Brown? He tried to follow her rushed explanation, then saw the bullnecked
man in the corner. Mr. Brown would be just sitting in on the interview,
a kind of monitoring process, that was all. She seemed extremely
anxious that he understand this.
Gordon nodded. “I see. Yes, of course.” He wondered
how old she was. Or how young. He had no idea, no frame of reference
for women. He tried to smile at Mr. Brown, whose emotionless stare
never wavered.
“Let’s see now.” She opened a green folder, ran
a glittering pink fingernail down the top sheet. “Your GED.
A BS in business administration from Sussex State College.”
She glanced up. “Did you actually attend the classes?”
“Some.”
“What did they do, bring you? I mean, you couldn’t just
leave the . . . the place, right?”
“The ones I went to, they had them right there. In the beginning.
Those were the first classes. The first year. The courses, I mean.
The ones everyone takes. Introductory, that is.” His tongue
swelled in his dry mouth. He kept swallowing. “Well, not everyone
takes them. I mean, for the, you know, the ones that are . . .”
He rolled his hand to churn up the phrase from the perfectly still,
dead air. “Taking the courses.”
She nodded, took up her pen.
He was making this easy for her. “Not just potentially dangerous,
but inarticulate,” she was probably writing.
“The rest were by mail.”
“You’ve had some counseling experience, Mr. Loomis?”
“Counseling experience,” he repeated to calm himself.
His breathing was the only sound in the room.
“Did you work with any of the other . . .” She paused.
“Men who were there with you?”
“No, ma’am. They had professionals for that kind of
thing.”
“What about peer-group activity? They must have had that kind
of interaction. Most places . . . facilities like that do.”
“They did. But I didn’t. I didn’t do that.”
“Why not?”
“Because.” He squirmed, wringing his hands. Because
he hated talking about himself: the misery of it, the emptiness,
the dead echo behind every word like footsteps through an endless
tunnel. “Mostly I just kept a pretty low profile.”
“For twenty-five years?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“But what did you do? I mean, how’d you keep busy? You
must’ve done some kind of work.” She closed the folder.
“Yes. Of course.” He’d worked everywhere, in the
library, laundry, kitchen, dining room, infirmary. But mostly in
the sign shop. “I was a good worker. I always worked really
hard. I like working. I always did.”
“Hmm.” She looked at her watch. “Well! I guess
that about covers it. Unless there’s something you’d
like to add.”
“Just these, I guess.” He handed her the file. “They’re
letters. They’re all from people I know. Well, people who
know me. And who think I’m a good . . . worker.” He’d
almost said “person.”
She thanked him, put the file into hers. “So what we’ll
do is go over everything and if something comes up, some position
that’s compatible with your particular experience, Mr. Loomis,
then we’ll certainly be in touch,” she recited with
a dismissive smile as she and Mr. Brown got up. Gordon rose in a
panic. He couldn’t very well go back to the car after such
a short interview. The new suit. Dennis’s canceled patients.
“Excuse me! Could I just tell you about the sign shop?”
“The sign shop?” She glanced at Mr. Brown.
The prison shop made street signs for cities and towns all over
the state. He had been in charge of the enameling process, getting
the heat to the right temperature, then baking the signs. Well,
in a manner of speaking, baking them, he added in a thin voice.
“I did it for almost ten years.”
“Really? Well, that’s a long time.” She was at
the door again. “Well, in any event, Mr. Loomis, thank you.
Thank you for coming.”
“But I don’t even want Human Resources!” he blurted
before she could leave. “I’m much better with my hands.
I mean, I’m quite conversant with the . . . the thing you
make, the flashlight.” He had taken it apart and then assembled
it countless times last night. “In fact, I . . . I . . .”
Breathless, he couldn’t think. “I mean, actually making
the flashlight, that’s what I’d rather do. But of course
I’ll do a good job wherever I am. I just need a start. Someone
to take a chance on me.” He felt sick, weak for sounding so
frantic. She stepped back, as if from cornered vermin. “I’m
sorry!” he said quickly. “I’m nervous. I shouldn’t
be here. I’m not ready.”
“You can always come back another time, Mr. Loomis.”
“But that doesn’t mean you’ll hire me though,
does it?” he asked quietly.
“I didn’t say that!” Another step back.
“No, I know! What I meant was, it’s my brother. He thinks
this is all set, so if I say you said I could come back, then that’s
what he’ll ask me. The same thing. But if I tell him, ‘No,
they don’t want me’—that, he’ll understand.”
“It’s not like this is anything personal, Loomis.”
And in Brown’s growl Gordon felt the steel cold at his face,
the warning in the guards’ hard eyes.
“No,” Miss Jamison added. “It’s just a matter
of no positions being available right now.”
“Of course. Yes. I understand,” Gordon said. He stepped
into the hallway, then turned suddenly and stuck out his hand. She
cringed, gasping. They regarded each other with mutual horror. “I
was just going to say thank you. I forgot to say that.” He
felt like the same sideshow freak he’d been at the trial—the
last time he’d had to convince someone he was a normal human
being.All the way back, Dennis tried to contain his anger. He reminded
himself of what Lisa kept saying: that Gordon shouldn’t be
rushed; he would have to be coaxed from his numbness, eased into
everyday life. But she hadn’t known Gordon as a kid. He’d
always been like this: thickly, maddeningly stubborn, to the point
of oafishness, always being picked on, never fighting back or protesting,
never telling anyone or even taking a different route to school
to avoid their taunts, instead just plodding along as if it weren’t
really happening, as if he didn’t care. But from the next
room his younger brother would hear him cry out in the middle of
the night, “Don’t! Please don’t! Please don’t
do that!” Don’t just stand there with your head down,
their mother had told them both. Act like a loser and that’s
how you’ll be treated. Look people right in the eye and tell
them exactly who you are! Who’s that, Ma? Dennis would ask,
not just to get her going, which it always did, but because it had
really meant something. “The last name might be Loomis, but
remember, up here you’re Teresa Pratt’s kid. And up
here’s what counts,” she’d say, tapping her temple.
Of the two brothers, Gordon was most like his father, a shy, dull
man, a cement worker for years until he injured his back pouring
a foundation. When his father went on disability, Teresa’s
uncle, Jimmy Pratt, a records clerk at City Hall, spoke to his buddy
the mayor. One phone call, and the next day perky Teresa was a secretary
at the high school. She couldn’t type, so they put her in
charge of the copy machine, on which she printed out exams and study
guides, reading them for typos and learning as much as she could
about everything, preparing for the day opportunity knocked on her
door.
Education,
she preached constantly—it was the surest road to success.
But if their mother’s determination had fueled one son, it
had had little effect on Gordon, who was just as awkward around
people as their father. Dennis still remembered the time his mother
was too sick to attend his basketball banquet. Without her effervescent
shield, his father and brother never once left their seats at the
farthest table in the corner for fear someone might speak to them.
Dennis clicked on the door locks as he came off the highway. The
minute he turned onto Nash Street, bleakness took hold, the gray
net slipping over his eyes every time he came back. The neighborhood
had never been much, but now it was a slum. Broken windows. Graffiti,
the swaybacked, sinuous lettering, words that made no sense, it
was everywhere. Here, the word cargo sprayed on the front door of
the Langs’ big old Victorian on the corner. Once the nicest
house in the neighborhood, it had been chopped up into tiny apartments.
Ten mailboxes flanked the door, their ragged strips of masking tape
bearing the latest tenants’ names. The house across from the
Langs’ had stood empty for years before it caught fire last
winter. A homeless man had kept himself and his dog warm by burning
papers and wood scraps in a bathtub. Plywood covered the windows,
and with the slightest wind the blue tarpaulin on the roof puffed
up and down over charred rafters. A man wearing a glittering gold
necklace stood on the corner, lighting a cigarette for a skinny
girl with pale, frizzy hair.
“Nice,” Dennis said, watching. She was no more than
thirteen or fourteen.
“Wait!” Gordon called, and Dennis hit the brake.
The man’s hand slid to his pocket. He stared as the silver
BMW slowed. “Go ahead, try it,” Dennis muttered, staring
back.
“What’d that sign say?” Gordon was trying to see
out the rear window.
“What sign?”
“Back there. In the market.”
“But you’ve got tons of food. For at least two weeks,
anyway, Lisa said.” He backed up, stopping in front of the
Nash Street Market. Crooked, curling signs in the dingy windows
advertised the week’s specials. A square of red-lettered cardboard
taped to the front door said help wanted.
“Okay,” Gordon said, turning back.
“No,” Dennis groaned. “Don’t even think
of it. You don’t want to do that. C’mon, Gordon. I mean,
for chrissakes, it was just one interview. So maybe they did have
security sitting in. I mean, what do they know about you? What does
she know? You could be some screwball, some raving maniac, some
kind of—”
“Killer.” Gordon unknotted his tie.
“But she doesn’t know what happened. The details. So
naturally she’s a little tense. But what’re you going
to do? You’re never going to go on another interview? Instead,
you’re going to go what? Take up where you left off twenty-five
years ago? Be a stock boy at the Nash Street again? What’re
you gonna do, wrap chickens? Juggle melons? Stack fucking tampon
boxes?” he shouted, already knowing by the set of his brother’s
thick jaw that that was exactly what he wanted. Safety. A corner,
a hole, some dark, out-of-the-way place to curl up in for the next
twenty-five years. “Like Dad!” he exploded, then caught
himself. “You know what I mean,” he said more softly,
then jabbed his brother’s arm as they neared the little white
house, their childhood home. Dennis’s chest felt tight. Coming
back here was a mistake, but Gordon had insisted. It was all he
had, he said, the one thing he’d looked forward to all these
years.
“C’mon, Gordon, just give it a chance, will you? I know
people. Lisa’s dad—I got all these contacts. I’m
not going to let you down. You know I’m not!” He turned
too fast into the narrow driveway, annoyed yet again with the hard
bounce over the concrete berm, their father’s barrier against
rainwater surging in from the street, even though the driveway was
pitched higher than the road: his life’s energy squandered
on petty projects, meaningless chores like his beloved rosebushes
overrun now with weedy vines.
“I know,” Gordon said before he got out.
A curtain moved in the window of the house next door. Gordon looked
away quickly, but Dennis waved. “Always on duty, the old bitch,”
he said through a smile as Mrs. Jukas peered from the side of the
curtain the way she used to when they were kids.
“She must be lonely without Mr. Jukas. He was a nice man,”
Gordon said.
“Yeah, nice man, always bird-dogging Mom.” He didn’t
tell his brother, but after their mother died Mrs. Jukas had cornered
him at the funeral home to say she hoped he wouldn’t be selling
the house to Puerto Ricans now the way everyone else had done. It
wasn’t his to sell, he’d said, enjoying the sour pucker
of her mouth. His parents had left it to his brother.
Even freshly painted with new blinds and curtains, the wallpaper
borders, and Lisa’s delicate stenciling in the kitchen, it
still looked the same. Tired, cramped, the kind of place you’d
live in only because you had to. When Gordon had seen it last week,
he had been amazed by the changes, the furniture, the big television
on its laminate wooden stand, the cordless phone. Even the metal
storm door, he had said, entering the kitchen, overwhelmed to think
they’d bought all this for him to live here. Dennis had to
explain that things seemed new only because he had never seen them
before. Most of it had been bought by their parents after he went
away. Went away, the euphemism, their code for imprisonment, for
the wrenching turn their lives had taken. Gordon had gone away,
taking along laughter and whatever good times there had been. Now
they were gone and he was back.
Gordon’s big feet thudded up the stairs. He can’t wait
to get out of the suit and tie. What was that all about? Dennis
wondered. Just a favor he had to do for me? Go through the motions,
never being honest so people won’t get mad at him? So they
can’t get too close? Dennis called up to remind him that Lisa
was expecting him for dinner Friday night.
“She wants to know if you’re bringing Delores,”
he added.
“It’ll be just me.”
“But you said you were going to ask her!” When Dennis
had run into Delores the other day, he’d mentioned dinner,
foolishly saying that Gordon would call her.
“I know, but I didn’t.”
“So call her now. She’s dying to see you. She told me.”
Looking down from the top step, Gordon shook his head. “I
don’t want to.”
“Why not?”
“I don’t know. I just don’t feel like it.”
“Jesus, she’s your friend! I mean, she’s been
writing and going up there for how many years now?” Not much
to look at, maybe, but she was exactly what his brother needed right
now, a good woman and a good job. Gordon’s impassive stare
was maddening.
Goddamn
sphinx, he should consider himself lucky Delores even cares. Lucky
she’s so desperate. “You gotta call her, Gordon. It’s
the least you can do.”
“What time should I come?”
“Anytime.” Dennis grinned with the rare concession.
“We’ll probably eat at six-thirty or seven, but you
know Lisa, the earlier the better!”
—Reprinted
from A Hole in the Universe by Mary McGarry Morris by permission
of Viking, a division of Penguin Group (USA). Copyright © 2004
by Mary McGarry Morris. All rights reserved. This excerpt, or any
parts thereof, may not be reproduced without permission.
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