Chapter 13
He drove south towards Rahway and then his brain began to start working again. How the fuck had Warren known to call the hospital? If he knew that Ron was in the hospital, why hadn’t he gone there? He thought about the message again. He could stay there if he needed to. He swung the car into right turn and headed west towards the parkway. No, he didn’t need to. He stopped for some coffee at a diner in Bloomfield and then he went to a bakery and bought some freshly baked goods. If he was going home on the crest of a wipe out, he might as well bring food.
He had a key but he felt funny about using it. It was very early and there was no way that Chipper wasn’t going to start barking. But then he had an idea and put the key gently into the lock and opened the door. Chipper padded out in the hallway and began wagging his tail frantically when he saw Ron. Then he peed on the rug as was his custom. Ron smiled and whispered, “Come here, Chip.” The dog ran to him and Ron carefully backed out of the door and sat with the dog on the porch drinking his container of coffee and looking up and down the quiet street. He looked at the newspaper that had been delivered. It was Saturday morning. That’s right. Last night he had been in the city with Chris. He stroked Chipper’s head and whispered into her ear. “It’s good to see you, Chip. Boy is this news going to go over like the Hindenburg.” Chip perked his ears as if he understood, but continually kept sniffing at Ron’s clothes and licking his face like he was trying to make it better. When Ron heard stirring inside, he picked up the bakery bag and opened the door calling out, “Hello?”
George Bombasco walked quickly to the door, his pants undone in the front. He saw Ron and blinked. “What happened?”
“I had a fire, but I’m OK.”
“What kind of fire?”
“In my apartment. Everything is toast.
“Jesus,” said George shaking his head.
Ron held up the bag of donuts. “At least I brought breakfast,” he said.
“We’d better let your mother sleep until she wakes up. You know how she is.”
“Is it alright if I take a shower? I want to get this smell off of me.”
Then George noticed the hospital band on his wrist. “You were in the hospital?”
“They were just being careful,” said Ron. “I’m fine.”
“Do you need clean clothes?”
“I have some things in the car.”
When Ron got into the bathroom to take a shower the sight of his face startled him. His eyebrows were almost gone and the front of his hair sported frizzled clumps. His face hadn’t felt hot but it sure as hell looked red.
The water sprayed over him like he was a farmer’s crop in need of nourishment. He felt the grime of the fire and his nervousness and the long, long night wash away. This wasn’t that bad. He wanted to live with Zoë anyway and now there was the perfect opportunity. What was damaged could be replaced and it would be new and different and not have an inconvenient history attached to it. The fire had spared Aunt Dottie’s chair, he was going to be ok.
Marjorie Bombasco came out of the closed door of her bedroom slowly. Ron watched her from the kitchen table. He was drinking the coffee that George had had made and munching on a crumb bun. George had happily devoured the apple turnover that Ron always tried to remember to get for him. Marjorie had schooled him repeatedly, “Make sure that you buy an apple turnover for George. He appreciates it.”
Now, she looked at her son with a happily surprised, “Good morning, Ronald. You’re here early.”
Ron said, “I bought you jelly donuts.”
Marjorie smiled and Ron got up and poured her a cup of coffee. The sugar was on the table and he pulled the refrigerator door open and saw the half gallon of milk in the bottles that they rinsed out and returned, right where it was supposed to be. She had just bitten into the sweet fully stuffed jelly donut when Ron said, “I had a fire last night. I got burned out of my apartment. I got taken to the hospital, but I’m fine.”
A large glob of jelly plopped down onto Marjorie’s paper plate as her teeth clenched. “What kind of a thing is that to say to person when they’ve just opened their eyes,” she asked?
“If I didn’t tell you, you’d say that I was keeping things from you.”
“But at least let me open my eyes.”
“Are they open yet?” said Ron.
“Why are you such a bastard?” she said dropping the jelly donut down onto her plate. “You bring this nice surprise and then you ruin it by saying something like that.”
“Mom, I woke up n the middle of the night and there was this wall of fire a few inches from my head. I’ve been up all night. Give me a break, ok?”
She looked at him more closely and saw his hair and his face. “Nunny, I’m sorry.” She reached over and took the sides of his head into his hands. “I love you. I’m sorry.”
Ron hadn’t even flinched when she had called him the baby talk name that was kind of a pig-Latin among his aunt, his mother and him. It felt warm and good, like a crumb bun and hot coffee, sitting with his mom at the breakfast table and able to think about the world from this place of security.
He told her about all of it, except the part about the pot and almost driving to Rahway. He looked around her kitchen. She had all the plants that he’d given her. She had learned to take care of them. Traces of Aunt Dottie were interlaced among her things. “Have you told your father?”
Ron shook his head, “I haven’t told anyone. I just came here.”
“This is always your home, Ronald.”
“I know but you and George have a life and this place is small and perfect the way that you have it set up now. You know I gotta live alone, Mom.”
“I don’t see why you couldn’t stay here until you get on your feet.”
“I don’t know, said Ron. “ I think I’m gonna get an apartment with Zoë.”
“The skinny girl with the glasses who squints all the time?”
Ron laughed and said, “Stop it.” Then he said, “I need to use the phone. I’m gonna drive down there and assess the damage in a while.”
It was almost 10 o’clock now; it was a safe time to be calling Rahway. Ron dialed the number with an automatic sense of familiarity.
“Hello,” whinnied Warren, with a voice that said he was awake and ready for the day.
“I got your message,” said Ron. “Thanks.”
“Are you ok?” asked Warren.
“Are you at home today? I’m gonna take a ride down to Elizabeth in a while and see how bad this is.”
“We’re here.”
“Maybe I’ll see you later. By the way, Warren, how did you know?”
“Robin called Laureen, very early this morning.”
Ron’s heart began beating faster. He repeated, “Robin called?”
“Yes,” drawled Lashly. “We’d like to see you here.”
“Yeah,” said Ron. “I’m sure I’m like a favorite song that you can’t wait to get back on the turntable.”
“I’ll see you when I see you,” said Warren.
Ron managed to leave his mother’s house without saying when he would be back. His mother always understood the need for business and she had plans for her day.
He rang the bell outside of his landlady’s door. He waited for a moment and then pushed the painted gold circular button again. Her face appeared on the other side of a lace curtain with gray white hair and the lines of Ireland in their creases. She pulled her door open and smiled. The fire inspector had listed 23 violations and she was thrilled that finally the owners were going to be forced to put the building into shape. Ron’s fire had been a blessing. No one had been hurt and now everyone was aware. Her son, who was usually good for not much, had even made a useful suggestion and Ron had been taken to the hospital while they had time to make things right.
The owner’s voice sounded nervous on the phone. “Get the people that are needed to complete the work. Don’t go overboard of course, but do what needs to be done. We don’t want any problems with the fire department.”
“What about the tenant?” she’d said.
“Do you think that he’ll sue us?” said the owner accentuating the ‘us’ and making them a team against this possible threat.
“I think he just wants to get what he has left and be moving on.”
“Let’s not do anything to upset him,” said the owner.
Ron said, “Some night, huh?”
“How are you feeling, Mr. Tuck?”
“Lucky,” said Ron. “Nobody was hurt, right?”
“Everyone is fine,” she said reassuringly.
“I think I’d like to come by and get my things before too much longer. There’s going to be the need to fix the place up and…” his voice trailed off. “I don’t think that I can stay there anymore.”
“Take a couple of weeks if you need to,” said the landlady. This was perfect. The apartment building fixed and this pot smoking hobo out of her life.
“I’ll just come in and get things when I need them,” said Ron.
Back in his car, he set sights on Rahway. Driving down the main street that became St. George’s Avenue, he stopped at the congestion that was created by the Linden Pathmark and thought about the years of scammed meals that they had eaten from there. He smiled. He wondered where April was now. It was almost as if she had disappeared from existence, but they weren’t in college anymore and that meant that people began living their own lives in a more separate way, at least it meant that for some of them.
Ron made the left off of St. George’s and rolled into the gravel driveway, under the carport and into one of the slots in the back yard. There was only Warren’s car there. Ron never ceased to wonder how someone who had been in New Jersey for what seemed like ten years could get away with driving on North Carolina plates, but Warren did.
It didn’t surprise Ron that the back door was locked. It had never been locked when he’d lived there; it had never been locked when Chris lived there. It was symbolic of who Warren and Laureen were that it was locked now. He tapped on the glass. There was no response and so he tapped again. He fought an urge to get back into his car and just drive away, but he didn’t. Then he saw Laureen coming down the back steps and opening the door.
“Come in, Ron,” she said with a politeness that measured the distance that had grown between them.
Ron felt strange about being invited into Rahway by Laureen of all people. He had nicknamed her The Snake and had written a song about her. Chris had tried calling her The Deputy but Snake was a better fit. Ron walked passed her and went up into the kitchen. Warren was seated in his chair in front of the window at the table where they had shared so many meals. Ron felt very awkward.
“Well,” said Warren smiling, “how are you?”
“I’m just trying to figure out what to do next,” said Ron standing there.
“And what do you think that you want to do next?” said Warren.
“Well obviously, I’ll need a place to live.”
Laureen who had slid into a chair at the table between them stiffened and Ron saw her glance over at Warren.
“Yes,” said Warren, “you will need that.”
“I’m going to ask Zoe to move in with me.”
Laureen visibly relaxed. “Nothing like setting a fire under you to get your ass to do what it should have done a while ago,” she said.
“I’m not sure how she feels about it.”
“Oh she wants to,” said Laureen. “In spite of anything that her sister or I have said, the girl is quite in love with you, Ron. And you haven’t told her about Robin at all, have you?”
“Robin’s not finished with him yet,” said Warren.
“Oh Warren, just shut up when you don’t know what you’re talking about. Robin is more than finished with him.”
Ron sat there listening to them and then Warren smiled in a slow grinning way. “You are welcome to stay here until you find a place.”
“Zoe knows,” said Ron. “How could she not know? You and her sister showed her every poem that I wrote about Robin.”
Laureen laughed. “And we can all see what a lot of good that did.”
Ron said, “It’s nice to know that I can stay here, Warren. Now if the two of you could just tell me how I explain that to Chris.”
It seemed to Ron that they both winced simultaneously at the mention of Chris’s name. It held a power that neither one was truly able to deal with.”
“I can see it now,” continued Ron. “Hey Chris, how are ya? I had a fire and have no place to live so I’m gonna stay with Warren and Laureen until I get myself re-situated. Yup, he’ll understand that.”
“Chris knows that ultimately what I did saved his career and quite possibly his life,” said Warren.
“Ya think he sees it that way huh, Warren?”
“I’m not ready to have this conversation,” said Laureen. She got up and walked back into her room.
Warren looked Ron straight in the eyes and said, “Do you think that I don’t care for him? Do you think that it was easy doing what I had to do?”
“I think that I need a place to stay and that I’m in a bit of trouble and that it’s a good thing for me that you are willing to help out. I think that it’s gonna tear Chris up and that there is no way that he’s not going to see it as a betrayal. But thank you. It’s a kind offer. Please understand that I have to figure out how I’m going to explain it to my friend that his one time partner and one time lover want me to live in the place that they drove him out of.”
“When did you see him last?”
“Last night,” said Ron. “I saw him last night.” He sat in complete wonderment at how fast things had changed in his life. Then he said, “I’m going to try to get in touch with Zoe.” Ron stopped. “I know that I sound ungrateful and I don’t mean it to come out that way, Warren. Truly, thank you for the offer.”
Warren smiled. “It’s my delight.”