Read After Online

Authors: Francis Chalifour

After (13 page)

“I have exactly what you need.”

He brought me a cup of coffee and sat down on the stool beside me. The old men were wrapped up in stories of bets gone wrong and paid no attention to us.

“What’s wrong with your eyes?”

“Nothing.”

“So, what?”

What’s wrong? Let’s see. Everything. Feeling like a prize dork about Jul. Being scared that my mother would crack apart and vanish like Papa. Worrying about Luc who seemed happier playing catch with Sputnik than being with kids his own age. Having been such a disappointment that my father didn’t think it was worthwhile to stick around while I grew up. I wanted to run, the farther away the better.

“My mother wants to give my father’s clothes to my uncle Ted. What’s he ever done for us? Now he’s going to have Papa’s vest and even his shoes. There’s nothing left for me.”

“I see.”

“And she even wants to clean up the attic.”

“Sometimes it’s good to clean up. We have to brush away the cobwebs.”

“You don’t understand.” Mr. D. waited while I furiously stirred sugar into my cup. “I’m scared of the attic.”

I didn’t know how to say it. I didn’t know how to spit out the words that were choking me.

“It’s where Papa died.”

Mr. D. nodded in silence. I wanted to cry but instead I said, “Have you ever been to Toronto?”

“Sure. We used to sail down the St. Lawrence with all kinds of cargo.” Mr. D. looked at me suspiciously. “Why do you ask?”

“No reason. Have you ever heard of a place called The Sailor?”

He laughed. “Oh, that takes me back.” He shook his head as if to rattle a memory loose. “What are you getting at?”

“Do you know the password?”

“Fellows, it’s time to close up.” Mr. Deli got up and started clearing the old men’s table. I knew he wasn’t going to answer me.

13 | D
ELI
D
ELIGHT

I
was sitting on a stool in the deli’s dingy basement kitchen, peeling potatoes for pancakes and french fries. Upstairs the deli was packed. It was hot, and I was sweating.

“Are you done with the potatoes?” Mr. D. called down the stairs.

“I’ve got six or seven more to do.”

“Leave them for now, and come on up and give me a hand.”

I can’t say I liked working at the deli, but the money wasn’t bad and Mr. D. let me pick the music for the tape recorder that was always on. I brought in Jacques Brel and U2.

“Francis, go serve the man at the table by the window.”

“But I’ve never served anyone!” Talking to strangers was not high on my list of skills. My face burned as a I
flipped open the little order pad and asked the man what he wanted to have.

“A clubhouse sandwich and make the bacon well-done.” He said without looking up from his newspaper.

“I’m sorry, we don’t have any bacon here.”

“Is this a deli or what?”

“Yes, but it’s a kosher deli. Dairy.”

“Shit!”

The man took his newspaper, and left.

“What happened?” Mr. D. asked.

“He wanted a club sandwich.”

Mr. D. just shrugged and said, “Finish the potatoes.”

It was something like thirty degrees outside–freakishly hot for the month of May. I was soaked by the time I rode home up the mountain. Despite the heat, Maman was humming happily at the kitchen table, repotting her herbs into bright red ceramic pots. She had opened all the windows, but the house still smelled of fresh paint. In the last week she had painted the living room, the kitchen, and all the rooms in the house, except mine. I wanted to keep my room the way it was, pure white. There was color everywhere else–yellow in the kitchen, blue in the living room, and green in the bathroom. She had also cleaned up the attic with Aunt Sophie. I couldn’t do it.
Point final.

In old movies, they show you that time has passed by having the pages fly off a calendar. Without my noticing,
the pages that marked the year were disappearing. Maman was happy more often than she was sad. She had left the post office and had gone to work in an architect’s office, cheerfully organizing things to her heart’s content. She was earning more money and sometimes she went out with Aunt Sophie for a drink or to the movies while I baby-sat Luc. My little Luc. I picked him up at day care yesterday and as I was admiring a fingerpainting he’d done he said, out of the blue, “I think that Papa is really dead now.” He hadn’t talked about Papa for ages, so he caught me off guard.

“What makes you say that?”

He’d obviously given this a lot of thought. “Because he didn’t come for your birthday. He’s dead for good. Can we have pancakes for supper?”

The hard days were getting farther apart, so when they came they surprised me. I was hanging around in the boys’ washroom waiting for a break in hall traffic so I could go to see Mr. Bergeron when I was hit by a memory. Papa and I were up on Mont-Royal. He pointed at the tallest oak. “See that tree? It’s dying. Even the tallest trees die some day. They go back in the soil and feed the others.”

I talked about it with Raymond–Mr. Bergeron. “Was that his way of telling me he was going to die too? Was he asking me for help, but I didn’t realize it?”

“Maybe he was just telling you about trees,” said Mr. Bergeron.

“Knock me over with a feather.” That’s what Papa would have said, relishing the news. It seemed that Aunt Sophie had met a man. He was a widower, and he didn’t have children, but he had a fat, bad-tempered dachshund. Aunt Sophie brought the man and Spaetzle, the dog, over for Sunday dinner. This event could have won the Horrible Family Dinners Derby hands down.

The whole time, I was afraid to catch Maman’s eye because I knew that once we started laughing we would never be able to stop. First, there was the fact that Luc had never seen Aunt Sophie with a man before and he gawped unselfconsciously as she fussed away at him like a southern belle. If she’d had a lacy handkerchief, I’m sure she would have fluttered it. Then there was the malodorous dachshund panting under the table, having commandeered all of Sputnik’s toys between his stubby paws. On top of that, there was the man himself. When he took off his green baseball cap, I recognized him as the guy who’d ordered the club sandwich at the deli. I don’t know if he remembered me or not. It was the first time that a man, other than my father, had eaten at our table. The evening was a mess. A few months ago it would have made me angry or sad. Now it made me laugh.

14 | R
EPLACEMENT

I
woke up with a start to the sound of Luc crying. I found him lying on his bedroom floor–he must have fallen out of bed.

“Can I sleep with you? I’m scared.” When I knelt down to rock him, I could feel his fragile body trembling in my arms. Saber-toothed tigers. By the time I had settled him in my bed, he was asleep again.

The next day was Monday Have I mentioned that on my Hit Parade of Hates Monday mornings are right up there? I poured Luc’s cereal into his bowl. Maybe it was the influence of Raymond, but I was on a talking kick.
Talk about things. Don’t hide them.

“What happened last night?” I said.

“A nightmare.” He was pressing down on each Cheerio, one after the other, to try to sink it in his milk.

“Really?”

“Nightmares are not funny, Francis,” he said sternly.

“No. They’re not.” I waited.

“I had a dream,” he said.

“Was it a nice dream?”

“No,” he said in a sharp voice.

I kept excavating for words from him. It was hard work. “What was the dream about?”

“A candy dream.”

“You dreamed of candy, and it was a nightmare? That’s hard to believe!”

“But it’s true! I dreamed I was hungry, and there was nothing I could eat in the house, except for SpaghettiOs. I thought maybe there could be at least some jelly beans in the jar, but there were none.”

“What did you do?”

“I cried.”

“Why didn’t you eat SpaghettiOs?”

“Because I wanted to eat candy. Not SpaghettiOs.” He looked up at me to make sure that I understood.

After school I did a shift at the deli. Mr. D. was in what was, for him, a talkative mood. “I’m happy to see you. There’s a ten pound bag of potatoes with your name on it, my son!”

My son.
The words made me want to cry. I went down the narrow wooden steps to the basement and took up my
post, peeling spuds, glad to be alone. It was safe down there, with no one to tell me to do my math homework or to nag at me to eat or to ask me to go to the convenience store to buy some milk. When I was done peeling the potatoes, I hauled them upstairs and started to fry them. That is hot work, let me tell you. The green-hat man came back, and this time he asked for a bagel with fries. When I served him, he looked at me in a funny way. He left me five bucks for a tip. I couldn’t believe it. Usually, it’s a loony–or a toony when it’s Aunt Sophie, or Maman–that people give me.

Maman had started going to the hairdresser on Saturday mornings, so I was alone with Luc. I planted him in front of the TV while I cleaned up the kitchen. He was sitting cross-legged on the floor with his plate balanced on his lap, making a mountain of buttery toast crumbs as he stared at Bugs Bunny.

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