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DAD GIVES ME
A CALL. HE says, "Listen, I'm going to be in town. Next week. On
Tuesday." He says, "It's the same deal as last year. For that golf
deal." There's an annual old farts tournament. He's come down for the
last four or five years. "We're out at this new club," he tells me.
"Crooked Creek. Know where that is?" I say,
"No." Then I think
again, and I tell him, "Wait. Out east of town, isn't it?" "Is it?
I've got the address written down. Somewhere." Slips of paper are being
shuffled. "Yeah, well...somewhere," he promises me. I'm hoping to
hell he's not the one driving. And as if
he's reading my mind, he says, "I'm riding with Bill Wannamaker. You
remember Bill." Not
particularly. "Anyway,"
he says, "Things start at seven. We'll be done one, one-thirty. They're
feeding us up at the clubhouse. I guess. If you want, come out for a minute
or two. If you're not too busy." How do you
explain busy to a retired man? But I tell him, "Maybe." Then I
amend myself, adding, "Probably. Sure." And that's where we leave
things. I've been
seeing the same woman for five, six months. And we've reached that point
where I'm having trouble seeing the point to things. Where I can pretty well
imagine us parting ways. Not that
there's anything wrong with Colleen. It's just that we have next to nothing
in common. Not age, since she's a good eleven years younger than me. Not
hobbies, except that we both like watching old movies. But even then, someone
usually has to compromise his or her good tastes. Then there's the fact that
Colleen is vegetarian where I'm an omnivore. And worst of all, there's a
question about beliefs. I'm a staunch Rationalist, and Darwin is my patron
saint. Colleen is a born Catholic who long ago discovered a fascination for
the occult. Which isn't that far from being Catholic, if you want the truth. Anyway, that
weekend, hunched over a plate of beans and flee, I mention my father and his
consuming interest in golf. And the tournament. And my intention to drive out
and say, "Hi," to the old bum. "Can I
tag along?" asks Colleen. I don't say
anything. She reads my
aura. My face. Or maybe the silence. Then she shrugs and says, "If you
don't want me to go .... " "It's in
the afternoon. Aren't you workings" Colleen is a
barber. Which is a story onto itself, honestly. She doesn't work Sundays and
Mondays. I assumed that I'd be safe for Tuesday. But she says,
"I can take a long late lunch." "Dad has
this way," I begin. "Nothing ever happens on schedule." She looks
down at her plate, lips pursed. I read the
silence. Or her face. Or her aura, maybe. Then I tell her, "Just so
you're warned. Sure, let's go watch some sweaty old men hitting tiny white
balls." And that's
where we leave things. I don't know
why golf has to make this sudden comeback. It embodies everything that I
truly hate in a quasi-sport. Golf, at its heart, is elitist and proud of it.
The courses themselves are monocultures of hybrid grasses maintained with
industrial doses of fertilizer and herbicides, the grass groomed until it
resembles nothing else found in Nature. And worst of all, I hate the game
because I don't play it anymore and because I despised playing it when I was
a boy. Dad used to haul me over to a little nine hole course near our house.
He gave me next to no instructions, and precious little encouragement. My old
man belongs to that generation that learned by doing, whether it was playing
golf or fighting fascism to the death. And what made my golfing career even
more excruciating: One day, walking into the clubhouse, we happened to bump
into one of Dad's buddies, and his buddy's son. As it happened, I halfway
knew the kid. He went to my school. He was a year behind me, and tubby, and
silly looking with that little sack of clubs hanging on his fat little
shoulder. The men
decided that we'd make a foursome, and I thought: Good. As usual, my
opening shot carved up a piece of the green turf, flinging my ball all of
fifty feet. But my fat friend would make me look good, I kept thinking. Right
up until his swing, which was as smooth and strong as mine felt cranky and
sloppy. And with a determined Whoosh, the driver cut through the air, and the
ball was launched -- a study in efficient ballistics that ended on the green,
maybe twenty feet from the mocking flag. I tell
Colleen that story while I'm driving. And she laughs at my misery. She always
seems to appreciate my humor. Which is a huge point in her favor, I can tell
you. "I never
played golf again," I boast. She laughs
and looks ahead. Colleen has a pretty profile, her face fine and young and
her curly red hair always needing a brush, and I'm wondering for the
umpteenth time if there's something seriously wrong with me. One bad marriage
and a string of broken relationships. Is it me? Am I just asking too much
from the institution of love? "Is that
the place?" she asks. Corn fields
-- another ecological abomination -- give way to a rolling carpet of unbroken
green lawn. Trees are small and scarce. What must be the clubhouse is perched
on the crest of the hill. A bright warm day in May, and the parking lot is
only half-filled. Things aren't as busy as I'd guessed. But then again, the
old farts have probably car-pooled from both ends of the state. The cars are
just what I'd expect. Lincolns and Cadillacs and such. I park
between Cadillacs. There isn't a
breath of wind, which is remarkable. I mention it as we're walking toward the
clubhouse. "Springtime on the plains, and not even a breeze," I
mutter, glancing at my watch. One-thirty-one.
I'm nothing if not punctual. There's
always something intimidating about clubhouses, and particularly this one.
It's a massive long building made from dark wood and imported stone. Entering
through the front door would feel wrong. So I steer us around the side,
climbing onto a raised porch that hugs the building's upper story..And what
worries me right off is that the place feels deserted. Is this the right
course? The right clubhouse? The right day.? Through
tinted windows, I make out an almost empty bar. Somewhere
ahead of us, balls are getting whacked. I walk to the end of the porch,
looking across the driving range. Young men stand in a line, swinging for the
next county. And it occurs to me suddenly that the sound of golf has changed
in thirty years. That hard sharp whap sound is new. Today's drivers are made
from titanium alloys, and the balls have nickel cores. "If we put as
much energy and invention into the space program," I tell Colleen,
"then we'd have cities on the moon by now. If not Mars." "And
golf courses, too," she says. Which makes
me laugh. A team roster
has been posted on one of the tinted windows. I pause, looking for my
father's name. And he appears at the end, on the last team. Which is bad
news, if I was hoping to get out of here soon. "Which one is he?"
Colleen asks. But she's not
looking at the names. She's staring out at the course itself. Between our
hilltop and the wooded stream bed, I can make out maybe a hundred old guys in
hats and colorful clothes. Half of them, easily, could be my father. "I'm
going to ask someone," I tell her. "I'm
going to stand right here," she replies. The bar isn't
quite empty. A pair of golfers are enjoying tall beers, and there's a bright
new television turned to the golfing channel, and there's a youngish man
talking on a cell phone, looking like the prototypical golf pro. I'm thinking
about asking him about the tournament. Then I spot a girl standing behind a
tall counter. A college coed already out for the summer, is my guess. Blonde
and pretty, and I'm wondering when did twenty-year-old girls become so
impossibly pretty. So delicious. I give her a smile, saying, "I'm
looking for my father." I tell her, "He's playing in the old-fart
tournament." She laughs,
sort of. "They're
running late," she admits. "They probably won't be coming in...I
don't know...for another fifty minutes or so..." Why am I not
surprised? I thank her,
and I start to turn away. "Old
farts," says one of the golfers. "What's that mean?" He and his
buddy are sitting at a little round table. They're captains of industry,
probably. But to me they look like puffy-faced men with a history of heart disease.
I say,
"Pardon?" "Careful
what you call people," is the golfer's advice. There's a beery offense
being taken. "Didn't your folks ever teach you that?" What can I
do? I just shrug and march outside again. Distracted, and a little pissed.
I'm thinking about having to wait for another hour. I'm hoping that Colleen
has to get back to work, giving me the perfect excuse to leave. Then I'm
considering the girl at the counter, remembering her face...and Colleen waits
at the porch rail, leaning into it a little bit...and without looking at me,
says, "Kiss?" She might be
talking to the golf course, saying "Now?" I come up
behind her and put a hand against the small of her narrow back, and she tips
her head toward me with her blue eyes closed. Then as soon as I'm done
kissing her, she volunteers, "I don't have an appointment until
four-fifteen." She says,
"As long as you want, I can wait." She's a
funny, funny girl. According to
the way I tell it, I just happened to be shopping for a new barber and Colleen
happens to work in a little shop that's walking distance from my house.
Coincidence is responsible; no cosmic alignments or any other flavor of bull.
She started
me off with a shampoo. Which was fine. But as she worked with my hair,
something about her hands changed. The rhythm of them. Their purpose. We had
slipped into a slow massage, and eventually, with a quiet, serious voice, she
said, "You feel like a vegetarian." "Why?"
I muttered. "It's
your scalp," she said. "It's very healthy, very relaxed." A compliment
is a compliment. I gave a shrug, saying, "Thanks." Then because I
couldn't let her think that I was, I showed her a tooth-rich smile,
confessing, "But I do like my meat. Quite a bit, frankly." "Then I
was wrong," she allowed. She said it instantly.
Not the least bit bothered by her mistake, I noticed. Which surprised me,
considering how some of these people can be. Like with any
new hairdresser or dentist, our conversation resembled every first date of my
life. Where I grew up. Where I went to school. What I do for a living. And
when I mentioned my college, Colleen piped up at once, saying, "Then you
must know the ghost of White Hall." "Old
Miss Markel," I said knowingly. "You've
seen her?" she asked. Sounding, if anything, hopeful. I laughed
politely, and I said, "Never had the pleasure." Colleen took
a long pause. Except to tell me to dip my head forward, please, so that she
could rinse out my hair. Which left me in the perfect pose to consider that
tall music teacher who died in her office some seventy years ago, and
according to legend, still walks the old hallways, pausing from time to time
to stroke a few keys on her favorite Aerosonic. Finally, as a
joke, I asked, "Have you met Miss Markel?" That's when
Colleen said my name for the first time. "Johnny?"
she said. And I lifted my head, seeing her reflection in the mirror in front
of me. Seeing what I can only describe as a strong and even and wise smile.
Colleen has a pretty face and fit young body and bright red hair that on almost
any other woman comes from a bottle. And with a little wink and a
self-deprecating laugh, she asked, "If I told you yes, that I'd seen a
ghost...would you think I was crazy...?" With her,
it's easy to tell the truth. I said,
"Oh, probably. Yeah." "And if
you thought I was crazy," she continued, "then I suppose you
wouldn't say, `Yes.'" "To
what?" I asked. "Would
you like to go out with me some evening?" she asked. And when I didn't
respond in a timely fashion, she added, "You do believe in dates, don't
you?" I forgot all
about ghosts. "Sure, I
do," I said. For no reason
that I can point to, I told her, "Sure. Let's go out." I DON'T SEE
MY FATHER much. My parents split when I was a teenager, and ever since, our
relationship has been spotty -- one of the back-burner issues in my life.
Something to be lived with, like my stiff elbow. I can't say that we have
disagreements when we're together, much less genuine fights. Dad's always
been an agreeable if somewhat odd soul. But between me and my father lies a
distance. With me, it's the emotional garbage of him leaving us. With him, I
don't know what it is. He's always been an aloof creature. With me, and with
everyone. And over the years, it's grown worse. That or maybe I've gotten
better about being offended by his faraway stares and his lingering silences.
Waiting on
the clubhouse porch, I feel a nagging embarrassment. Every time a golf cart
drives up, one or two of the riders looks like my father. The same pale,
sun-drowned flesh. The same ugly-ass hats and the bright shirts and the bulky
shorts. But these are just the first waves of tournament players, I keep
telling myself. Dad's somewhere in the last wave. Coming closer a stroke at a
time. I buy us two
iced teas -- black tea, not the green that Colleen hopes for -- and we claim
an outside table. Still, there
isn't a breath of wind. Flags hang limp on every pole, and the young trees
are as still as photographs. Yet the air is dry and pleasantly cool, and
lovely, and I'm not too awfully bored, even after the first twenty minutes.
Even when we've started our second glasses of tea. Colleen asks
about my father. And my
mother. And in sneaky
ways, she asks about me. Dad is deep
into his seventies. And I warn her the same way that I've warned my other women:
He might seem awfully distracted, but she shouldn't take it personally.
That's just the way he is. Not the way he started out in life. But it's the
way he became. "Why's
that?" she asks. Naturally. "It was
the war," I reply. "Mom knew him before. When they were kids. Dad
was this smiling, happy boy when World War II started, and he came back
changed. Like a lot of them did, of course." "Where
did he fight?" "The
Pacific." "What
did he do?" she inquires. "Rode in
an airplane," I tell her. "Oh,
yeah?" "B-29s,"
I add. "Which were big bombers." She stares at
me. Then with her eyes narrowing, she smirks, reminding me, "I'm not
totally ignorant here. Thank you." "Sorry." She sips her
cold tea, saying nothing else. I look at the
deck beneath our feet. This is a brand new facility, yet the cedar planks are
riddled with holes. Little holes. It takes me a few moments to realize why.
Beefy golfers walking here with their goofy spiked shoes. Glancing down at my
watch, I decide that we've been waiting for more than forty minutes. Then
with a quiet and serious voice, I tell her, "My father's bomber went
down, by the way. It crashed into the ocean." Colleen looks
at me. "I don't
know much more about it," I admit. "It was the biggest rule when I
was growing up. I could never ask Dad about the war. Ever." I'm telling
her this, and I'm serving up a warning, too. "What I
know," I continue, "is that everyone else on that bomber died. And
he survived after floating in the ocean, alone, for something like two days,
and nights .... " She swirls
her ice, asking, "Was it shot down?" "I think
so." "You're
not sure?" I have to
shrug my shoulders, saying, "I haven't heard the whole story. Except for
some old military files, maybe...only my father knows .... " A golfer
strolls past. A big man smelling of cigarettes. Pausing, he asks me, "Is
that where we tee off?" I look up at him. With my eyes,
I tell him to leave us alone. With my voice, I say, "I really don't have
the tiniest clue." Disgruntled,
he continues along the porch, his fancy, silly, and overpriced shoes punching
fresh holes into the cedar. I watch him for a moment, then I watch the latest
crop of young men smashing balls out across the driving range. The world is
at peace today, and they have time as well as money to waste. Then I happen
to glance straight down, looking at a patch of raked gravel where golf carts
are being parked in a neat row. A lone man has left his cart, climbing toward
the clubhouse with his head down. I can't see anything about him but the top
of his floppy lime-green hat and the weak old shoulders and the way that his
legs, despite riding around in a motorized cart, are weary, barely able to
lift the feet that are wearing beat-up old golf shoes that I don't recognize.
I don't know the man or his clothes. He's too small to be my father.
Christmas was the last time I saw him face to face. But that can't be Dad,
I'm thinking. Old is one thing, but this poor fellow, whoever he is, looks pretty
much washed up. I happen to
glance at Colleen. She gives me
a peculiar look. And by lifting her pale blue eyes and one corner of her
mouth, she asks, "Is that him?" How could she
know my father? Before me? But I look
again, and that's when the fossil lifts his head, showing me his face. I'm
looking straight at him, knowing him. And I lean out over the railing now,
showing him my own face. But Dad
doesn't seem to notice me. Looking
straight at me, he stops to breathe a few good breaths. Then down goes his
head, and he continues to plug his way toward the clubhouse, and us. "It's
him," I grumble. Then I look
at Colleen. She gives her
ice and her tea a little swirl, then sets down her glass again. But she
nearly misses our table, leaving the glass teetering over the edge far enough
that gravity and the slick condensation let it tip and fall with a sloppy
crash. And still,
she watches my father. Blue eyes
like saucers. Watching. ON OUR SECOND
or third date, we went to a coffee house in one of the old warehouses next to
downtown, and Colleen motioned and asked if I could see him. "Who?"
I asked, following her gaze. Then I told her, "I don't see anyone,"
because there was nothing to see except an empty table tucked in the back of
the room. Obviously. Then came an
afternoon when we went walking in a wooded park. It was late winter, but not
too cold. And I caught her staring at a big hackberry tree. Watching
something. So I had to ask, "What are you watching?" I asked,
"Is there a coyote? A deer? What?" But she just
shook her head and made a point of smiling at me, saying with a careful
little voice, "It's nothing. Never mind." Sometime
later, I remembered the story. How several years back, a young man dumped by
his girlfriend had gone to that park and thrown an electrical cord over a
branch and hanged himself to death. And Colleen probably knew the story, and
the power of suggestion did the rest. I told myself. Explaining it to my own
self. Then there
was an evening, not long ago, when I finally asked her, "Why did you
leave the Catholic faith? "Not
that you shouldn't have," I added. She sat up in
bed, showing me her pale and narrow back. And throwing a good stare over her
shoulder, she said, "When I was a girl, twelve or so, I realized that
the church didn't really know very much about souls, and death...and just
like that, I realized that I wasn't a believer, and I'd never been one,
either. You know?" Spike-pocked
cedar stairs lead up to the porch. I'm waiting at the top of the stairs,
watching him climb. His head is down. His head lifts up, gauging distances.
Then the old man starts to drop his eyes again --watery and distracted brown
eyes -- before he blinks and looks up at me, and the puffy face goes into a
smile. And he says, "There you are!" and laughs in a big way. I tell him,
"Hi, Dad." Then Colleen
is next to me, grabbing hold of my hand with both of hers. Which is
different. And she sounds remarkably nervous, her voice breaking when she
introduces herself, concluding by saying, "It's really a pleasure to
meet you, Mr. Harris." "On, no!
The pleasure's all mine," my father counters. And he gives a wink,
conquering the last of the stairs with a little burst of speed. I'm nervous
too, I realize. But not my
father. He says, "Yeah, the boys got a late start this morning."
Meaning the old men, of course. He says, "Sorry for the wait," with
the same easy, well-practiced manner that he's used to gloss over everything
for the last forty years. Then he asks, "How's the food in this place? I
haven't eaten a bite since four this morning." "You
must be famished," says Colleen. I can't
decide if Dad heard her. One of his long stares comes over him, and he takes
a big breath. Then his expression changes. "We're supposed to get a
lunch eventually," he says. "But I'll tell you, I'd rather eat
something right now. In the bar, maybe. What do you think? My treat ?" I start to
say, "Okay." But Colleen
interrupts, telling him, "No, it's my treat, Mr. Hams -- " "Harvey,"
he corrects her. "Harvey,"
she repeats. Dad winks
again. Nice and easy. He's always been nothing but pleasant with my new
women. Goodness knows, he's had enough practice. With Colleen
holding the door, we slip inside. It's the
blonde coed who takes our orders. The old farts that I offended have
disappeared. Thankfully. Golf is still playing on the big television. And I'm
trying hard not to stare at the coed, which is why I find myself watching
highlights from last weekend's professional tournament. In a casual
way, I ask, "How did it go today? Your game, I mean." A pause. Then Dad
blinks and looks in my general direction, and he says, "Good. Real good!
Until we got to the back nine." "How's
this new course?" I ask. "Fine,"
he tells me. "Until that back nine." We all have a
little laugh about that. Then Dad
gestures at the television, saying "Let me tell you about that kid. See
him there? Missing that putt?" He shakes his head, saying, "Past
the hype, he's nothing special. Not yet, and probably won't ever be."
Dad pulls his hand across his mouth like he has a million times in my life.
Then he says, "What the best ones do, day in and day out...it takes
something more important than talent, I can tell you." "Like
what?" Colleen prompts. "Arrogance,"
he says. "That's what you need. All those people watching you, and all
that money riding on your next long putt, and if you pay attention to
anything that isn't your ball and the green, and the way the green lays, and
your putter, and your hands, and shoulders, and how your legs are
positioned...well, if there's any world outside your game, then you're not
arrogant enough. There's no damn way that you can sink that putt. Not with
talent, you can't. Luck, maybe. But luck gives you two strokes, or three. At
the most." I've been
here before. I know this speech halfway by heart. But the words
seem to mean everything to Colleen. She leans over the little table, egging
Dad on with her questions. Who are the best players now? And before? When did
he start to play? What's his handicap? Is that the right word? Handicap? Then
she looks around the room, asking what, if he doesn't mind telling, was his
best game ever? I'm listening
to the two of them, and I'm not. If there's
anything more boring than golf, it's talking about golf. That's what
I'm thinking when our lunches come, and that's what I'm still thinking when
we're finished eating. I had a so-so burger. Colleen had a grilled cheese
sandwich. And my starving father ate most of a little salad and drank maybe
half of his iced tea. I'm worried
about the old man. That's what
I'm thinking about, halfway listening while he tells us how most of the
professionals are big smokers. Not on camera, but everywhere else. They use
the nicotine to keep their nerves steady. Which is something that I'd never
heard. And frankly, it's knowledge that leaves me feeling even more superior
than before. On that note,
I stand and announce, "I'11 be right back." Three iced
teas is my limit. The big dining
room at the far end of the clubhouse is filled with old men. A raspy voice is
reading off names. The morning's winners, apparently. I listen for my
father's name, but it isn't mentioned. Too bad. Then I find my way back to
the bar and with a glance, I know that something here has changed. Colleen is
speaking to my father now. And from his
expression, I can tell that Dad's actually listening to her. With huge eyes,
he stares at the area under the television, nodding in a careful way. A funny
half-smile tries to emerge on his face. Then, he glances at my girlfriend.
Then he straightens his back, something about his posture and his attitude
implying some great embarrassment. Or is it relief? Maybe it's both things,
I'm thinking. As I'm walking up on them. Feeling like the intruder here. "The
tall, handsome one," I hear her saying. "Which one is he?" Dad answers
in a mutter, then looks at my direction and shuts his mouth instantly.
Nothing showing now but embarrassment. "He was
our pilot," I heard him say. Confess. Whatever. "That's
what I imagined," Colleen remarks, patting Dad fondly on the knee as she
turns to look at the same empty space. "That's what makes perfect
sense." My father
shuts his eyes and tilts his head -- an ignore-the-world gesture older than
me -- and after a few moments, when his eyes open again, he discovers to his
complete and utter horror that his son now stands in front of him. For a
slippery instant, it looks as if fifty years of determined self-control might
evaporate. Dad takes a
deep wet breath. Then, a second breath. I watch the eyes brighten as the face
tries to smile, and fails. Then his expression tumbles into a look of
profound embarrassment and disgust and worry. I can see my father asking
himself what I heard, if anything. And what I think about it. And he has to
wonder what I'll say next, which makes two of us. I don't know what I'm
thinking, much less how to respond. I'm feeling puzzled. Lost, even. Baffled,
and in strange ways, sad. Then because I can't think of anything better, I
look at Colleen, hoping for a few salient words of advice. Our silence
is shattered by a new voice. "Harvey!
Is this where you're hiding out?" Dad blinks.
Smiles again. And says, "Bill," with the grateful tone of a man who
was praying for any interruption. "You remember my son, Johnny...?"
Bill
Wannamaker is a big ruddy-faced man. I don't remember him. Not even a little
bit. But he says, "Ah, sure," as if we're old buddies, and he gives
me a bone-crushing handshake. Then he turns back to Dad, saying, "Look,
Harv! Look what you won in the drawing!" From one of the pockets of his
ugly-ass golfing trousers, Bill pulls out a long box of new white golf bails.
"Almost makes up for those you lost in that damned creek. Doesn't
it?" Dad's
embarrassment is small and pleasant. Everyone enjoys a good friendly laugh at
his expense. Then Bill
announces, "Our guys are starting to pull out. How about you, Harv? You
about ready here?" There's a brief pause. "We
could drive you home, Harvey," says Colleen, patting my father on the
knee again. "I'll make a quick call and cancel my afternoon
appointments. That'll be okay with them. Is it okay with you, Johnny?" I hear myself
saying, "Sure. Why not?" Bill is staring
hard at Colleen's hand and Dad's lucky knee. Envy makes the ruddy face grow
even redder now. "My
clubs," Dad chirps. "They're out in Bill's trunk." Colleen gives
me a little look. "I'll
get them for you," I promise. Bill leads me
to the parking lot, saying nothing for most of the trip. Then as he opens the
cavernous trunk of his big Lincoln, he has to ask, "Is that redheaded
girl...is she here with you?" "Nope,"
I tell him. "I never
saw her before in my life," I tell him. That stops
our conversation dead. I wrestle
with Dad's old bag and clubs, fitting the worn leather strap over my
shoulder. Then I head for my car, thinking about everything. Feeling certain
about nothing. Pulling up short, I take a deep breath, and I turn and walk
back up to the clubhouse with the bag and clubs growing heavier by the
minute. I find my girl and my father out on the porch. They're talking to
each other. Dad asks something, and Colleen answers him. Then Colleen tells
him something else. Something that needs a quiet voice and a hand touching
him on the shoulder. And the old man nods and wipes at his mouth and looks
down the longgreen hillside, neither of them saying anything now. I set the bag
down with a rattling pop, and to my father, I say, "We've got time. What
if we buy ourselves a bucket of balls?" I DON'T
MENTION GHOSTS. Standing beside Colleen, I watch my father as he concentrates
on the ball and himself. Years of determined practice are visible in the
twist of his hips and the grip of his two hands and the changing angle of the
driver. The sharp solid whap of the ball is impressive in its own right. For
a moment, I lose the ball in the fierce glare of the sun. Then it drops to
the driving range, and bounces, and rolls, and vanishes again. "Very
good!" Colleen declares, giving a little applause. The ball does
seem as if it went a long, long way. And maybe that's why Dad decides to stop
here. He turns and hands me his driver, saying, "You give it a
whack." "I'm not
very good," I warn. "Oh, I
remember," he responds. And I prove
my incompetence with half a dozen graceless hacks. If I picked up the balls
and threw them overhand, I'd do better. My last shot never gets more than a
quarter inch off the ground, and all I can do after that abomination is hand
back the driver, laughing along with the rest of our little threesome. "Now
you," says Dad. Handing it over to Colleen. Her whacks
are crisp but determined, all of her balls traveling farther than mine. Which is
fine, I discover. Is perfect,
even. Dad finishes
the bucket for us. And when Colleen and I are standing behind him, at a
respectful distance, I finally ask, "What do you see right now?" She turns her
head and says, "You." "You
know what I mean." She looks
back at him and says, "Nothing. When he concentrates, like he's doing
right now, the ghosts fade away." "How
many are there," I ask. "Four.
Five. Maybe six." She squints, telling me, "But only three of them
are clear, consistent presences." "I don't
believe in ghosts," I remind her. "Fine."
"But
assuming there's something there, I mean. Why pick on him?" "Your
father has a rare gift, or a curse. Either way, it lets him see the
dead." She shrugs and gives me a patient look. "It started when he
was a boy, I guess. But it was just an occasional talent. Then there was a
fuel leak and his plane caught fire, and he managed to parachute free. Only
him. The rest of his crew died. His best friends in the world, and they died
together, and after all these years, they're still pissed that their lives are
finished, and your father still feels guilty that he's still among the
living." I don't know
what to say. What to
think. "The
pilot?" I mutter. "Is
their ringleader." She points. "A self-possessed little spirit,
frankly." I stare at
the empty air. At nothing. And for lack of better, I ask, "How can
anyone live that way? Followed everywhere by angry ghosts?" "I
don't know how," she admits. Dad sets down the last ball and swings, and
the whap is different. Is loud and crisp, and perfect. The ball flies across
the blue May sky, instantly tiny, and it ends up in the trees all the way
down by Crooked Creek. Colleen and I
clap our hands. Then she
turns to me, and with a voice quiet and firm says, "The thing about
ghosts, Johnny. They're extremely simple. Whatever they are. They come out of
something angry or lost inside a person, and I've always felt sorry for the
poor things." She says,
"I'm just warning you, Johnny." "Why
warn me?" I have to ask. "Because,
darling, if you're not careful," she tells me, "you're going to end
up trapped like them." She points at
the bright empty air. And my father
picks up the empty bucket and his driver, then starts to walk with a tired
steady gait, shoving his way through all those angry ghosts, doing a hero's
walk in order to get to us. |