Read Pike's Folly Online

Authors: Mike Heppner

Tags: #Fiction

Pike's Folly (8 page)

Allison was less impressed. “But why a parking lot?”

Pike answered with relish. “The fact that it's a parking lot means nothing. A parking lot
defies
meaning. That's the beauty of it.”

“Sounds pretty stupid to me.” With a huff, she stood to help clear the dishes, while her father kept asking more questions. She could tell that Pike was reeling him in, and it disgusted her. “Are you finished?” she asked Heath.

“Oh, thanks,” he said, glancing away from Stuart just long enough to pass her his plate. He'd hardly touched his food and had spent most of the dinner talking with Stuart, who'd also managed only a half-slice of ham.

“What about you, Stuart?” she asked.

Stuart handed her his plate but held on to his wineglass. The seating arrangements hadn't worked in his favor, with Heath on one side and Gregg on the other. Both expected more out of him—
the published author
—than he felt able to provide. Heath's questions hadn't let up since they'd sat down: about writing, getting an agent and editor, etc. These questions had continued even after dinner, until Stuart finally rose from the table and asked, “Hey, Nate, do you mind if I borrow the SUV? I want to pick up some wool socks. It's gonna be cold later on.” The excuse sounded forced, but he didn't care.

“The Bean outlet's open all night,” Heath said. “I'll come along.”

With a paternal sigh, Pike reached into his pocket, brought out his car keys and said, “Don't get pulled over.”

Stuart did what was expected and laughed. He'd driven the SUV before, usually bringing Pike to and from the airport. Every time, he'd heard the same lecture.

“If you get arrested, remember”—Pike winked, sliding the keys across the table—“I'm your one phone call.”

Keys in hand, they stepped outside and headed off, Stuart ejecting the James Brown CD from the sound system and tuning the radio to a light classical station. As he drove, he wondered if he ought to call Marlene. She'd be drunk by now—she always drank too much whenever he wasn't home. Her neediness, her reluctance to assert herself except in the most futile ways, struck him as not endearing but pathetic. Her estimation of him was far too great, and her approval so easily won that it had almost no value. Stuart was tired of being the only bright spot in her life. Rather than put himself through this misery, he wondered, why hadn't he poured his energy into writing a new novel? That was his job, after all. He'd already written one book, and there was a realistic expectation he would write another. What the hell was he doing here in New Hampshire? He belonged back home, sitting at his desk. He never should've married Marlene to begin with. He should've
invented
her instead, plugged her into a story line and turned her loose.

“So what's it like to write a book?” Heath asked as they pulled into North Conway. The snow was falling harder now that they'd come out of the mountains. Stuart felt enthroned behind the wheel of the SUV, high above the ground, with an elevated view of the outlets and ski shops that were spread along the main drag.

He'd already answered the question once tonight but gave it another shot. The truth was, he didn't think much about his book anymore. All he remembered was that the actual writing entailed a lot of hard work, over the course of many years, and by the end of it, his experience of writing it was so diffuse that he felt unable to take credit for it. This was an honest answer.

My Private Apocalypse
was, as they say, a flop. The premise of the book was too cerebral, the ending too abstruse. If he were to write another, he'd make it more genre-oriented than the first, maybe a spy novel, something that required less emotional investment on his part. Being emotionally invested hadn't paid off—not that he hadn't been compensated, because he had. No, what his emotions had failed to produce was a honest book. To write a piece of pulp would've been more truthful, in fact. Stuart's life had all the tawdry, dropped-in-the-bathtub flimsiness of a crappy paperback, clichés on every page.

“I found a typo,” Heath said. “You probably know about it already.”

“There's a lot of typos,” Stuart admitted. The typos were all that still mattered to him. Unlike nearly everything else, he could relate to them objectively. “The hardest part about writing a book is proofreading it. The typos are all my fault. I just wanted to move on to something else by that point.”

“Another novel?”

“I thought so. I wanted to be one of those book-a-year guys, like John Updike. But I got . . . sidetracked, I guess.” He could tell that Heath wasn't particularly interested, so he said, “Thanks for reading it, though. You didn't have to do that.”

He wheeled the SUV into the parking lot at L. L. Bean, which was three-quarters full even at this hour. When they got out, he sighed and said, “All right, so tell me about your screenplay.”

Heath was shorter than Stuart, and he had to hurry to keep up. “Well, it's really an homage to—and I know this sounds pretentious, but—”

“Hold on.” Just ahead, under a green awning, dozens of shoppers were streaming in and out of the store. Stuart ran the last few steps and held the door open for a woman who was staggering with her massive bags of purchases.

Heath continued, “It's sort of an homage to sixties counterculture exploitation films like
The Libertine
and, um,
Venus in
Furs
—”

“Dig it.”


The Wild Angels,
that sort of thing.”

“Dig it, dig it.” Stuart stopped to get his bearings inside the store. Nearby, a man's orange flannel shirt hung on a skeletal rack, along with a dozen more just like it; the same style of shirt also came in red, blue and green, with each color displayed on its own separate carousel. “I tried writing screenplays for a while,” he said, and they both nodded at having something in common. “I was never any good at it. Most of my ideas were pretty lame.” The thought streamed away. Even as a rotten screenwriter, Stuart had liked himself better at age twenty-one, ten years ago, than he did now. “Let's check out the socks,” he said.

Heath followed him into the men's department and tried not to watch as Stuart picked out some socks. This was intimate information—another man's socks—and it made him uncomfortable. The implications were erotic, homosexual. Head down, he said, “I don't know what you're working on right now, but if you ever want to get back into screenwriting—”

“I don't.”

The answer startled Heath. He couldn't imagine why someone who'd been given a gift—and not just a gift but the opportunity to use it—would be so reluctant to talk about his art. Heath's single desire was to make a film of such loving, emotional intensity that it would give people the same sense of spiritual well-being that Brian Wilson—whose autobiography he'd been reading sporadically on the toilet since September— talked about when describing some of his more advanced productions from the sixties. Heath's artistic analogues were all musical; he wanted to make a film that felt to his audience like “Good Vibrations,” “Cabin-Essence,” “Heroes and Villains,” songs that functioned as near-static soundscapes to which one could return, as though to a physical, existing space: a room. He wanted to accomplish this in film.

The films that Heath most admired all contained an element of danger, not just in the subject matter but in the filmmaking process itself. The first
Ilsa
movie, for example, was secretly shot on the set of
Hogan's Heroes
—a TV show as wholesome as
Ilsa
was repellent. Sleaze-meister Jess Franco—director of, among hundreds of others,
Erotic Rites of Frankenstein
and
Bloodsucking
Nazi Zombies—covertly filmed his female cast members in the nude, then spliced the footage into the finished edit without their approval. The whole genre was tawdry and repulsive. But under the threat of danger, Heath felt, something worthwhile happened. These films were artifacts of a genuine experience rather than a simulated one. The tension resulted not from a script or a storyboard but from real off-screen menace.

“It's a genre of film that virtually doesn't exist anymore,” he explained. “Some of it's proto-porn, but what I'm mainly interested in—and I know this sounds pretentious—is the social subtext. In Italy, for example, dozens of adult films were shot over a two-year period, from 1975 to 1976—some of the most grisly films ever made. Women being beaten, raped and experimented on by Nazi scientists. Graphic violence, genital mutilation, real sexual torture on camera. And these were mainstream movies, marketed as
erotic
cinema.”

“They still make S&M movies.”

“Yeah, but not with that kind of a budget. And
never
so overtly political. People used to eat this shit up in the seventies.”

“Tastes change, I guess.” Stuart started toward the checkout counter. “I know what you're talking about, though. I've definitely seen my share of it—
Salon Kitty, The Night Porter
and all that.”

And more,
he thought, remembering the hundreds of X-rated videos he'd watched as a younger man. In those pre-Marlene days, the amount of money he wasted on pornography was appalling. He preferred masturbation videos to sex videos because there wasn't as much interference between him and the performers; watching the women masturbate, he could interface with them directly, then dispose of them at will. The mail-order company he regularly patronized offered five new videos every month, each spotlighting a different model. The catalogue descriptions were often better than the videos themselves, 90 percent of which, when they arrived in a red, white and blue FedEx box, were disappointing. Working on his book, Stuart wished that he could write something as bluntly persuasive as “Samantha, 19, 37DD, this stunning brunette strips from heels and garters to COMPLETELY NUDE in her own backyard and brings herself to a HIP-THRUSTING, SCREAMING ORGASM!!!” Whereas the jacket description of
My Private
Apocalypse
read: “A debut novel that shows, in finely crafted phrases both poetic and uncommonly expressive, the vanishing boundary between dreams and disillusionment, the teeming (and often confounded) hopes of a generation and the fundamental power of language itself . . .”

They went over to a counter, where three cashiers were waiting to ring up the next purchase. Stuart handed his socks to one of the cashiers, who scanned each pair with an infrared sensor.

“Anyway,” Heath said, “that's what I'm interested in. I want to re-create, with as much accuracy and sincerity as possible, the look and feel of an actual, late-sixties, early-seventies exploitation film.”

“It sounds like a great idea.” Stuart put a twenty-dollar bill on the counter. “Just don't expect to make a lot of money at it.”

The cashier handed Stuart his change and the bag of socks. Walking ahead of Heath, he pushed the front door open with his shoulder, then caught the cold metal handle and held it open. “So what's this crap about turning my book into a movie?” he asked.

Heath was embarrassed. “Oh, Allison's just talking. She can be a little bossy at times.”

“I hadn't noticed,” Stuart remarked. Across the lot, Nathaniel's SUV looked enormous and out of place—taller and wider and more obnoxious than all the other cars parked around it. The breeze was bitter, and Stuart said, “Come on, let's get moving.”

Back at the lodge, Heath found Allison packing her things in their cabin.

She was furious. “I don't know why I even bothered to come,” she said. “Pike's obviously a scam artist. He scammed my mother, and now he's trying to scam my dad.”

“What do you mean?” Heath asked.

“Don't you get it? He's fucking with us! He wants to turn my father into another rich asshole, just like him. That's why people don't like us, Heath. They see guys like Nathaniel Pike, and they think, ‘See? All rich people are like that.' But we're not! At least
I'm
not.” From the desk by the bed, she swiped up a twist-tie baggy of pot and stuffed it into her backpack. “I'm leaving.”

Heath followed her out of the cabin. “It's too late to drive back to Rhode Island,” he warned.

“I'm going to Concord. It's only an hour. I'll get a room.”

“What's in Concord?”

“A whole bunch of Reese supporters. There's going to be a rally in front of the capitol building on Christmas Eve. Celia Shriver told me about it. I want to help out.”

“I don't think that Mr. Reese is going to like that.” Gently, he took her sleeve and pulled her toward him.

She jerked her arm away. “Too bad. I have to do
something.
Everyone back home is gonna flip out when they hear about this stupid parking lot.” As a peace offering, she said, “You should come too. Take your camera and make a documentary.”

“With Mr. Pike's camera,” he pointed out.

“It's your camera. He gave it to you. Or
I'll
buy you one.”

He looked toward the lodge, where Allison's car was parked. “I don't want to hurt your dad's feelings,” he said.

She stared at him, incredulous. “What's with you guys? You're just like Daddy. He never wants to hurt anyone's feelings either. He didn't want to hurt my mom's feelings when they were married, which was why he ran around like a closet case for eighteen years without telling anyone about it.”

Heath didn't argue with her. He had no business saying anything bad about Mr. Reese.

They walked to her car, where she gave his hand a squeeze. “I'll call you in the morning,” she said and threw her bag into the backseat. “Hey, don't look so upset. You don't need me here anyway.”

He felt like there was something more that he ought to say but didn't know what. Allison's moods were sometimes hard to predict. He almost didn't mind seeing her go.

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