Chapter Twelve
Chris Navarro’s favorite way to sleep, almost his favorite way to be, was pressed to Swann Portis with nothing between them, arms and legs entwined, chest to chest, stomach to stomach, dick to dick, head in shoulders, breathing in each other. The very first time they’d stayed at the house in South Shore, Chris thought he would be out of ease with all the portraits, with the saints’ faces and candles. Swann explained you never blew out a seven day candle. But Chris felt at home here now. He felt safe like he was in a church in an old movie. They made love easily in that bed and slept without covers, for it was early summer that first time. They didn’t need them.
Early in the morning Chris woke to the door opening, and Uncle Donald walking in blithely and seeing them. The two of them, Chris and Donald looked at each other, and the middle aged man’s face was expressionless.
“I just put coffee on,” he said, “and breakfast will be ready in about ten minutes.”
A cigarette was hanging from Donald’s hand and he turned to go, but as he reached the door he said, “If you put your hand along the inside of the door, where the bolt is, there are two brass buttons. If you press one in, the door locks, and if you push the other one in, the door is…. Unlocked.”
That was all he ever said about the matter, and then he was gone.
That was some four years ago, and this morning they sat at the kitchen table in Donald’s apartment, Donald looking like an old Swann and Doug, cigarette in one hand and coffee in the other, looking like a young Donald while Chris paid more attention to his eggs than usual.
“There’s plenty of em,” Donald said. “They aren’t going anywhere.”
“I just didn’t know I’d be so hungry.”
“It’s this whole not wanting to eat at night thing,” Swann said.
“My doctor said it’s not good for you.’
“You know what is good for you?” Swann said. “White Castles on 95th and Archer followed by Huck Finn’s donuts.”
Donald was, in fact, eating one of three cheeseburgers in cartons, pickles removed, and there was a chocolate donut beside his coffee.
“It’s a bit of a drive, but it’s not not worth it.”
Chris yawned and took a swig of orange juice.
“I was just so tired last night.”
“Well, you were the one doing all the driving,” Swann said.
It had been he and Doug who had taken out the SUV and crossed town.
“I forget how big the southside is,” Swann had muttered from the passenger seat.
They got for themselves what they wanted at the moment, but knew they had to get enough for Pam for Donald and for Chris. When they’d returned an hour later, Swann had climbed onto the bed and waved the burger under Chris’s nose and he had grinned at him and kissed him saying, “Just this once.”
This morning Chris turned from the eggs to a doughnut, and when he’d finished and was licking his fingers, he said, “When do you wanna go to the fish market?”
Doug stubbed out his cigarette.
“Now.”
By eleven thirty they were headed north. They superficially debated which way to travel, but Doug said, “We are two blocks from Lake Shore Drive, and it goes all the way north with no traffic lights and no stopping, so why are we even talking?”
Swann and Douglass had spent their lives traveling from north to south on the El, on Metra, on buses and most awful, in cars stuck in traffic and stopped at traffic lights, a hellish trip in an enormous city. You’d have to be a fool to not touch Lake Shore Drive at least some of the way if you were traveling north south, at least this is what Donald said, and his nephews agreed.
This far south Lake Shore Drive was almost modest. It would be a while before it expanded, before you looked out the window and saw in addition to the magnificent lake, the old faux Roman constructions of the Field Museum, the Museum of Science and Industry and the Shedd Aquarium, before lanes widened and you approached downtown to the left of you and the tall old stately hotels with skyscraper beyond, the tall, straight shouldered gentleman of Chicago and Sears Tower, like a pack of cigarettes someone had pulled out at different heights and painted black. Buckingham Fountain, wide and shooting its great arcs of water. But as they passed it all, seemingly unaffected, Doug Merrin peeled, deveined and dcclawed the meat.
Swann pointed out, “You know what? This process is not nearly as scentless as you promised?”
“It’s not nearly as quick as I hoped, either,” Doug noted. “It would all be done a lot quicker with some assistance.”
Chris, who was driving, looked at Swann and shrugged and Swann let out a deep breath, and unbuckled his seat belt as they approached the junction of the Streeterville where the Chicago River flowed into Lake Michigan and elegant glass buildings rose all around them, tumbling into the back of the vehicle.
Douglass Merrin was nothing if not efficient. He wore an apron and over it plastic, and he sat with a little knife, shelling and deveining. The remains of the sea creatures went into a bucket with one paper bag inside another, and the cleaned creatures went into a large bucket of water which, now and again, Doug elegantly spilled onto Lake Shore Drive heedless of the looks on the faces of his fellow companions on the road. Beside that was an Igloo cooler where all the meat was stored, and now as Swann came to join him, Doug set up a similar station for him so that Swann said, “You knew I’d end up back here with you, didn’t you?
“I’d hoped,” Doug said, sparing him not a glance, and pushed a bag of shrimp his cousin’s way.
But Doug was right. By the time they were passing out of Lincoln Park, Doug was covering the last of the buckets, explaining, “we can spill those out at home,” and he had handed Swann some wet naps a water bottle and a towel.
“Use them in that order, “Doug said. “See, now the smell is gone.”
By the time they reached the end—or rather the beginning—of Lake Shore Drive, and it was turning into Bryn Mawr if they went west, but curling up into Sheridan Road if they continued north, Swann was yawning.
“Don’t you dare,” Chris said. “Don’t you even start.”
“We can hold off,” Swann said.
Sheridan Road was a fast flowing stream of traffic at the bottom of a canyon made of high rises, and it did not relent till they turned left before the tall grey structure of Mundelein College, then came out into the light into the interection where Sheridan merged with Broadway and continued north through Loyola University and then the old apartments bordering Morse and Lunt, and the following streets of Rogers Park till, at last, they arrived on the drive where there was only a pile of rocks to the east separating them from the endless great grey blue water stretching to meet the blue grey sky on one side and on the other side, the ancient mausoleums of the cemetery marking the northern border of Chicago.
“My mother told me Australia was at the bottom ot the world,” Doug said as they drove along the expanse of milky blue water. “And every time we passed this bit, with the rocks falling down to it that seemed so very deep, I thought Australia must be there. I pictured kangaroos, all among the seaweed, jumping up and down on the sand beneath the water.”
Sheridan was at a curve, but it felt straight, so when they passed the little beach and were about to stay on what seemed to be Sheridan, they made a sharp right turn away from the busy but leafy street called South, lined with expensive apartment buildings, and kept on a less busy Sheridan, which was still lined with expensive apartment buildings.
“Whenever I hit South, it feels like I’m going north, and whenever I turn north, it feels like we’re going out east.”
“That’s why you can’t trust your senses,” Doug said prosaicly as they passed old condominiums they were soon to return to and followed the flow of traffic by beach, and then away from water to one large tree veiled house after another large tree veiled home or probable mansion, and now they turned into what Swann called “one of the series of streets after Chicago Avenue and before the lake where expensive people live.”
As they turned away from Sheridan, Chris said, “I wanted to see what happened if we kept driving.”
“You really wanna keep driving?” said Swann. “Because we’ve been in this car for like, an hour and a half.”
“Wilmette happens if you keep driving,” Doug said.
“What’s in Wilmette?”
“White folks. And a temple with a pointed dome. And yachts.”
“The temple with the pointy dome is making me curious.”
“Okay,” Doug said. “Feel free to see it once we get all this seafood in the freezer.”
But the Merrins were expensive people, sort of. Doug said they were less expensive because they lived closer to Chicago Avenue than to the lake. On Judson Avenue, amidst a series of similar old houses, was a large old white one that must have been a duplex, but would have still made two large homes, and here they parked, and here the Swann fell out with one igloo container while his cousin poured dirty water all over the lawn. A weary, vaguely disappointed black woman came out from the right door on the front porch and cocked her head, looking at them.
“Mother, dearest mother,” Doug said as if he almost meant it, “it’s so good to see you!”