Huit

Levesque

            She was everything to him. He took another drink sip of Stoli. He needed to slow down. He was getting a little beyond melancholic. He thought back on the first few years of his relationship with Beth.

 

She’d been a year behind him at the high school. He hadn’t known her until his senior year when they shared a Current Events class. She wasn’t a classic drop-dead gorgeous beauty, whatever that was back then, but she had “it.”

She was a Renaissance woman of a sort. She was a member of the field hockey and tennis teams, the treasurer for her class and a member of the choir. She had also starred in a couple of the drama clubs productions.

She filled a room with sunlight just by walking in. Everyone felt better for being around her. She brought it out in them. She didn’t have the standard high school hang-ups of only running with the “in” crowd. She dazzled all comers with heartfelt “hellos” and inclusive smiles that started in her eyes.

He remembered those smiles, when she turned in her chair look back at him. His face would turn red and his stomach would flip. He hated turning red. It felt amazing.

He took a long drink from the Stoli.

They’d begun dating not too long into the Fall. It didn’t happen in any particular way. There’d been some small talk in class, and then they were out together, traveling all over the state to see acquaintances she had in different places.

It had been a thrill for him. He had lived most of his life in fear of asking his father for anything, let alone asking him to allow him to stay out late, or travel to other parts of the state on his own.

He snuck into the Chanticleer and had his first beer with her amongst the chaos of preppy college students and tattooed locals with her. She convinced him to join her and her friends at the local pool halls.

She made him stretch the limits of what he thought was possible for himself. She forced him to be more than he thought he could be. He was so afraid of losing her; he pushed himself even further to keep her.

He wasn’t blind. He knew guys liked her. He also knew she hungered the attention. The hunger kept him in state for college. His father had the money. Felton was an excellent school. There was nothing to be ashamed of in going there. Sure, it wasn’t Cornell, but it was only a step below.

Beth had loved the idea of his staying home for her. She loved it almost as much as the bracelets and necklaces he gifted her from his father’s shop. His staying home was just the type of move to assuage her ego. She was in love, as long as she was the focal point of the love, and treated like royalty. The jewelry store had made this less of a problem for Levesque.

She had spent most nights in his dorm room, where they had stayed up until all hours. They had talked about the future, the kids they would have and the vacations they would take. They made love. And then one Saturday night towards the end of the Spring Term, they snuck into the Chanti, and after their third pitcher of PBR, he’d asked her to marry him.

He’d expected her to say no, she couldn’t commit. She’d told him countless times how she couldn’t wait to get out of the Falls. She loved her mother’s family, but she wanted to be far away from her alcoholic father. To that end, she had been planning to go to NYU. He hadn’t been able to figure out why she’d changed her mind.

When the word “yes” had reached him through the drunken haze, he was elated. At least that’s what he’d thought the feeling was. Had he known even then?

Ignoring their hangovers the next morning, they had figured it all out. They’d get married that summer. They were going to make a go of it on their own. They’d have an apartment downtown. He would continue on at Felton, while working for his father in his free time.

Beth was going to attend the local Western Maine Community College, while also continuing to work at the local sporting goods store. They’d have an income, and their own place. Things were going to be perfect.

The wedding had been perfect. She’d been 19. He was 20. They were young enough; they hadn’t reached the phase of life where they felt invincible.

 

Now, her 21st birthday, two years into the marriage, almost to the day. He had planned a big night. Now that he was working full-time at his father’s, he was making better money. Still not great. His father demanded a gallon of blood before he’d ever see enough to start living the life Beth wanted. Still, he intended to show her a good time.

They were going to have a fancy dinner at Sedgley Place, then surprise her by meeting a group of her friends at the Chanticleer. He’d thought to celebrate her birthday at the same place they’d been engaged. A place they didn’t get to at all with the busy nature of their current life. Life had felt good.

Something had been wrong from the start. Beth had seemed off from the moment they sat down at dinner. The smile in her eyes was absent. He’d asked if anything was wrong. She’d said no. He’d asked again and again.

She had told him she was pregnant. Emotions slammed through him. Fear, joy, anger, surprise, doubt and elation washed over him before he came to rest on surprised happiness.

She’d told him she was three months along. She’d been afraid to tell him because of how stressed he’d been with his thesis, commencement and his starting full-time working for his father. The baby would be due in December.

He must have said the right thing, because he could see the excitement beginning to take control of her face. Wasn’t it going to be the best Christmas present? She was so excited for this next step for the two of them. And why wasn’t he excited?

In the moment, he’d said it was that she’d caught him by surprise, and it was just a lot to take in. He’d figured it out while she was talking. The smile she’d mistaken for his excitement, had been the wry grin of understanding.

He’d known the child wasn’t his. Somewhere deep in his subconscious, he’d known, and his mind had been spinning through the math as soon as she told him.

They’d slept together from the start of their relationship. As the relationship progressed, their frequency had increased. She’d loved him with a desperate hunger, almost demanding it of him. Until this past spring term.

She’d had a business course requiring a ton of group work. She’d talked about study groups and needing extra help. She’d get home late smelling of beer, and say the group had gone to the O’Shay’s to celebrate the end of some project or other.

The projects had started to be due every week. The “every Thursday” meeting of her group, followed by celebratory drinks was now supplemented by a “kick-off” session on Sundays. She’d leave mid-morning and return at dusk.

None of it had registered because he’d been working more at the store, while also trying to put the finishing touches on the 50 pages that were his thesis. He’d known he was distracted, but he had intended to make it up to her as soon as he graduated, but then he’d started in at the store, and working with his father was next to impossible.

And looking back, he knew he’d failed. He’d stopped paying attention. They hadn’t slept together since the end of February. He only remembered because she’d cried out for “Davis.” He’d thought she was saying his middle name, David.

He had wondered how many Davis’s were in the Central Falls area.

 

He heard a muffled cry from upstairs. He took another drink and stared out into the night.

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Sept

Beth

            She stared at herself in the bathroom mirror. A mess of blonde hair tumbled down over red-rimmed blue eyes. Her cheeks were puffy and tear-stained.

This isn’t real. You’ll wake up tomorrow, and Davis will be here, just like he is every day. He’ll come crawl in to bed and for half an hour, everything will be perfect.

It had been so easy once it started. Davis had been just who she was looking for. A gentleman. A man who doted on her and never had a negative word to say about her. His only care was that she as happy. She had felt safe with him. She had felt secure. He was strong, experienced.

She had loved him. She had loved his experience. She had loved the way he commanded every room he ever walked into. She had loved the steel in his eyes and the silver that was beginning to streak his hair. She had loved the way he smiled when he saw her, the way his mouth would tick up at the right, the easy confidence, bordering on arrogance, it showed. She loved feeling his eyes on her as she moved about a room.

Now he was gone.

She balled up her fists in the arms of her sweater and tugged down the arms. She bent over and dry-heaved into the toilet, every inch of her straining to get rid of this heavy emptiness.

She wanted to scream at the world. At god? At the fates? At whoever was in charge of life’s miseries? She wanted to scream to whomever might be listening about how unfair this was. How she had suffered for so many years, body blow after body blow, and deserved better than this.

How even after she’d found happiness, she delayed it. Delayed it for over a decade. And now, just as she and Davis were making plans to leave, as she was preparing to open wide her arms to complete and total happiness, it was stolen away from her.

He was everything to her.

 

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Six (‘seece’ en français)

Levesque

            As he did each night, Levesque sat at the window with his bottle of Stoli and a heavy shot glass and watched the night descend. Beth had run from the table two hours ago. The bottle, full at the start, was now at the midway point.

As the rain increased its rhythm on the windows, he increased the pace of his race to melancholy.

He hadn’t meant to be cruel. Or at least now he thought he hadn’t meant to be. That was the trouble when he didn’t drink. Things weren’t as clear. He wasn’t as in control. The other piece of him had room to take over.

He’d wanted to see the emotion rise up in her eyes. He’d wanted to see the hurt, the pain, the anguish. She hadn’t acted with any sympathy towards him as he relayed his morning.

He’d seen the concern behind her eyes when she asked after Davis. She knew what time it was. She knew he would have been there with J.D., getting the store ready.

She would have known because Davis would have just left the house. His house. Levesque’s house. Levesque knew he came every day, ten minutes after he left for the store. He knew it was why Davis was late everyday. It was Davis’ own little FU for his not granting Beth the divorce she and Davis were so desperate for.

He couldn’t grant it. That would have been giving in to his father. He burned with rage for that old man. He took a drink.

“Would it have killed him, just once to approve of something I’d done?” he mumbled to himself.

A gust of wind rattled the bay window. He saw his father’s image there, reflected from the photos hanging above the fireplace.

“You were right Dad. You were 100% right. Are you happy? She’s everything you said she was.”

The rain lashed harder against the windows, a bolt of lightning cut the sky. He took a long pull from the bottle and remembered his father’s words when he told him he wasn’t going to Cornell because of Beth:

You idiot. You’re giving up the rest of your life for a cheap fling.”

            “I am not, I love her.”

            “You only think you love her. You think you love her because she’s the first female to smile at you. You think you love her because you’ve been drunk with her a couple of times, and everything seems rosy when you’ve been drinking.”

            “It’s not like that. She cares about me. She –“

            “She cares about what you can provider her. She likes your money. She likes that you come from some. She doesn’t care about you. She just wants the jewels you can put on her fingers, and the comfortable life you can provide. I thought you were smarter than this. If your mother could see you now, God rest her soul.”

            “She does care –“

            “Stop it! I can’t listen to your noise. Do you know where she’s from? Do you know her background?”

            “I know she’s from a shitty part of town –“

            His father’s left hand had reached out and slapped him across the right side of a face, with a quick return to the left.

            “You’ll not ever swear in my presence! Yeah, she lives in a dive downtown. Did you know her father’s a drunk? Never done a day’s honest work in his life. Her mother threw him out ten years ago. After that, he just stumbled into the Chanti night after night, hoping someone would pay his freight. You can’t tie yourself to someone like that. The disease runs in the family. It runs in the blood. She’s going to suck the life out of you.

            “You have to find someone respectable. Someone who’s not going to be seeking out male attention because her father wasn’t a good family man.

Yeah, don’t give me that look. I know the stories about her. How she bats her eyelashes at you and your testosterone charged pals and doors open for her. As soon as you stop with the baubles and trinkets from the store, she’s going to start looking elsewhere.

            “She may claim otherwise, but I know the type. She’s going to get what she wants from you, and move on to the next, you know it, and that’s the only reason your staying. You’re staying because you’re afraid she’ll run off with some other guy if you aren’t around.

“That’s the one thing you’ve got right here. She will. Mark my words.”

 

“God, I hate you,” he said to the rain. He took another long pull from the bottle. His vision blurred as his mind flashed back to the conversation he’d had with his father when he told him he and Beth were getting married:

“You’re a fucking idiot. It’s bad enough you’ve stayed in this piece of shit town for college, but now you’re going to tie yourself down further, with the gold-digger. Son, I can’t condone it.”

            “Why can’t you just admit you were wrong about her?”

            “Because I’m not.”

            “You don’t know anything.”

            “Son, your 20 years old, with a year of college in your home town under your belt. You think you’ve seen the world? You’ve seen nothing of it. You’re a fool if you don’t think I know just how this will end. Your blind to her charms, of which, I grant you there are many, but it doesn’t make you any less of a fool.”

            “Fuck you, Dad.”

            His father rose up from his chair, pushing his shoulders back as he reached his full six feet of height. A vein on the ride side of his forehead began to pulse down to his eyes. The muscles of his chest and arms strained the material of his shirt.

            “If you think for even a minute at 60 I will tolerate that language coming from you, then you also must think I don’t have the ability to throw you across this room. In both instances you would be wrong.”

            He had cowered as his father rose, “I’m sorry.”

            “You’re damn right you’re sorry. You do not have my permission or my approval in this matter. I don’t care how perfect you think she is. You’re going to be hurt by her, and I refuse to say I ever gave you my blessing or anything of the sort in the matter that led to your demise.”

            “You don’t even know her. You refuse to meet her.”

            “I met her once. And I knew her father. That’s all I need to know about her.”

            “Why can’t you have an open mind about anything?”

            “Because I know what’s best for you. I’ve lived a life already. You’ve stayed stuck in the same place. You’ve never been out. I’ve seen some of this world, and it’s a mess. You have to focus on protecting what’s yours. I know it doesn’t feel like it, but I’m trying to protect you right now.”

            “You’re suffocating me. You’ve always suffocated me. Nothing has ever been good enough.”

            “Because you haven’t been good enough. You haven’t pushed yourself, or even attempted to make the most of what you have.”

            “Because I’ve been afraid of you.”

            “And that’s yet another fault of yours, you’re soft. Toughen up. Be a man. This girl is just going to push you around. You need backbone.”

 

“I’m not sorry you’re gone,” he whispered to the window. He emptied the bottle of Stoli. Putting it back on the end table, he knocked over the shot glass. It fell with a thud.

He pushed himself up from the chair. Bracing himself on the window, he stumbled into the kitchen. He went into the refrigerator and found a container of cranberry juice. Unscrewing the top, he took a long drink. He opened the cabinet above the refrigerator and took down a fresh bottle of Stoli. He took another drink from the cranberry juice, wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, replaced the top and put it back in the fridge.

He stumbled back to the recliner. Landing with a thud, he unscrewed the top of the fresh Stoli and took a long swallow. He heard Beth’s feet creak across the floorboards upstairs. He took another swallow and went back to remembering.

 

 

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