Good Morning, Killer - April Smith [91]
I laughed. “I think he was in shock. I was supposed to be a teacher.”
“I can see you as a teacher.”
I shook my head. “No patience.”
“Do you like kids?”
“They’re kind of a foreign country. What about you?”
“Had a few close calls.” He smiled remorsefully. “But I’ve avoided giving any child the misfortune of having me as his dad.”
“You are so wrong,” I said with conviction. “You’d make a terrific dad.”
“You’re just saying that because you’re trying to get me into bed.”
“I’ve been trying for the past hundred miles.”
He chuckled. “I like you. You’re funny.”
“That’s good, because you’re funny-looking,” I said, pulling on his ear for no reason. “I don’t know why you don’t think you’d make a good father. I’ve seen you work,” thinking of the bank managers he had comforted so freely. “You’re a natural caregiver.”
He made a face. Didn’t like the word.
“What about your mom and dad?”
“My mom and dad?” he echoed as if he had not considered them in years.
Then he seemed to forget all about it, involved with the road which was straight as a ruler, fussing with the radio, searching for a water bottle rolling on the floor.
That’s when he finally said, “I’m adopted,” and I heard the effort in his voice to keep it light, but there was no mistaking the shakiness beneath. He’d thought about it before he told me and now he wasn’t sure.
“So growing up, we were both alone, in a way.”
“My adoptive parents were very loving,” Andrew said quickly. “The most loving people in the world.”
My fingers tightened on his knee.
“I couldn’t do enough for my dad. Could not do enough,” he added bitterly, and I did not yet know the source, that his dad had been a terminal alcoholic for whom it was not possible to do anything. “You had your mom,” he said so wistfully that it moved me deeply.
“She was … I guess today you’d say depressed, but really she was young and brokenhearted because she couldn’t be with my father.”
“Ah, fuck ’em,” Andrew interrupted suddenly. “They did their best, right?”
We drove in silence.
“I’m okay with it,” I said after a while.
“Your family?”
I nodded, tautness in my throat.
“We think that,” Andrew said, “but there’s an animal level to things that we can never change.”
The sun had fallen to the west, level with the road, so that bright orange rays bored at the sides of our faces and the curve of our eyes. Andrew flipped the visor over to the driver’s side window, but it did nothing to block the insistent ginger light that flooded the inside of the car.
“How do you live with it? The animal level?”
“I’ve had some nightmares,” he answered, “that are pretty interesting,” and beside us, endlessly to our left, the green ocean burrowed, turned, and groaned with its own weight, restlessly settling and unsettling, seeking the stillness it constantly destroyed.
The Sandpiper Inn was a perky little motel on Moonstone Beach, scrupulously clean, window boxes jammed with pansies and geraniums. There was a decent heated pool surrounded by pine trees and set far enough from the road so all you heard was the cawing of crows and the hum of the pumps. A cheerful old salt wearing a chewed-up watch cap signed us in, urging coupons for Hearst Castle and whale watching.
“Good to see you again,” he nodded to Andrew.
We carried our bags into the room and each sat on one of the two queen beds and asked the other what we wanted to do, as it was still the afternoon. I was up for running into the village, getting a nice bottle of white wine and some goat cheese and crackers, coming back here and pulling down the shades and scootching under the covers. His idea was to watch the basketball play-offs on TV.
Alone in this determinedly adorable room, with no distractions, the differences between us seemed unbridgeable: he was too old, too closed off, never went to college, divorced too many times; his loyalty was of a soldier to other soldiers, his self-discipline enormously self-absorbed, I decided, as he lay back with a yawn and clicked on the play-offs, while I sat on the edge of the