"Oh sure, that's going to make a dandy little scene. Todd Pickett and Brad Pitt: 'Tell me, Brad, when your dog died did you wail like a girl for two days?'"
Now it was Marco who laughed. "Wail like a girl?"
"That's how I feel. I feel like I'm in the middle of some stupid weepie."
"Maybe you should call Wilhemina over and fuck her."
"Wilhemina doesn't do fucks. She does lovemaking with candles and a lot of wash-clothes. I swear she thinks I'm going to give her something."
"Fleas?"
"Yeah. Fleas. You know, as a last act of rebellion on behalf of Dempsey and myself I'd like to give fleas to Wilhemina, Maxine and -- "
"Gary Eppstadt."
Both men were laughing now, curing the hurt the only way it could be cured, by being included in the nature of things.
Speaking of inclusion, he got a call from his mother, about six o'clock. She was at home in Cambridge Massachusetts, but sounded ready to jump the first plane and come visit. She was in one of her 'I've a funny feeling' moods.'
"What's going on?"
"Nothing."
"Yes there is."
She was inevitably right; she could predict with startling accuracy the times she needed to call her famous son and the times when she should keep her distance. Sometimes he could lie to her, and get away with it. But today wasn't one of those days. What was the point?
"Dempsey's dead."
"That old mutt of yours."
"He was not an old mutt and if you talk about him like that then this conversation ends right here."
"How old was he?" Patricia asked.
"Eleven, going on twelve."
"That's a decent age."
"Not for a dog like him."
"What kind of dog would that be?"
"You know -- "
"A mutt. Mutt's always live longer than thoroughbreds. That's a fact of life."
"Well, mine didn't."
"Too much rich food. You used to spoil that dog -- "
"Is there anything else you want besides lecturing me about how I killed my dog with kindness?"
"No. I was just wanting to chat, but obviously you're in no mood to chat."
"I loved Dempsey, Mom. You understand what I'm saying?"
"If you don't mind me observing something -- "
"Could I stop you?"
" -- it's sad that the only serious relationship you've had is with a dog. It's time you grew up, Todd. You're not getting any younger, you know. You think about the way your father aged."
"I don't want to talk about this right now, okay."
"Listen to me."
"Mom. I don't -- "
"You've got his genes, so listen for once will you? He was a good-looking man your father, till he was about thirty-four, thirty-five. Now granted he didn't take care of himself and you do -- I mean he smoked and he drank a lot more than was good for him. But his looks went practically overnight."
"Overnight? That's is ridiculous. Nobody's looks go -- "
"All right, it wasn't overnight. But I was there. I saw. Believe me, it was quick. Five, six months and all his looks had gone."
Even though this was an absurd exaggeration, there was an element of truth in what Patricia Pickett was saying. Todd's father had indeed lost his looks with remarkable speed. It would not have been the kind of thing a son would have noticed, necessarily, but Todd had a second point-of-view on his father's sudden deterioration: his best friend Danny had been raised by a single mother who'd several times made her feelings for Merrick Pickett known to her son. The rumors had reached Todd, of course. Indeed they'd become practically weekly reports, as Danny's mother's plans to seduce the unwitting subject of her desires were laid (and failed) and re-laid.
All this came back to Todd as his mother went on chatting. Eventually, he said, "Mom, I've got to go. I've got to make some decisions about the cremation."
"Oh, Lord, I hope you're keeping this quiet. The media would have a party with this: you and your dog."
"Well all the more reason for you to clam up about it," he warned. "If anybody calls, saying they want a quote."
"I know nothing."
"You know nothing."
"I know the routine by now, honey. Don't worry, your secret's safe with me."
"Don't even tell the neighbours."
"Fine! I won't."
"Bye, Mom."
"I'm sorry about Brewster."
"Dempsey."
"Whatever."
It was true; when Todd gave the subject some serious thought: Merrick Pickett had indeed lost his looks with startling speed. One day he'd been the best looking insurance agent in the city of Cincinnati, the next (it seemed) Danny's mother wouldn't look twice at him. Suppose this was hereditary? Suppose fifty percent of it was hereditary?
He called Eppstadt's office. It took the sonofabitch forty-eight minutes to return the call and when he did his manner was brusque.
"I hope this isn't about Warrior?"
"It isn't."
"We're not going to do it, Todd."
"I get it, Gary. Is your assistant listening in on this conversation?"
"No. What do you want?"
"When we had lunch you recommended a guy who'd done some work for a few famous names."
"Bruce Burrows?"
"How do I get hold of him? He's not in the book."
"Don't worry. I'll hook you up."
"Thanks."
"You're making a good call, Todd. I hope we can get back in business as soon as you're healed."
Once he had the number, Todd didn't leave himself further room for hesitation. He called Burrows, booked the consultation, and tentatively chatted over some dates for the operation.
There was one of piece outstanding business before he could move on: the disposal of Dempsey's ashes. Despite the reassurances of Robert Louis Stevenson, Todd did not have any clear idea as to the permanence of any soul, whether animal or human. He only knew that he wanted Dempsey's mortal remains to be placed where the dog had been most happy. There was no doubt about where that was: the backyard of the Bel Air house, which had been, since his puppyhood, Dempsey's unchallenged territory: his stalking ground, his schoolyard when it came to learning new tricks. And it was there, the evening before Todd put himself into the hands of Bruce Burrows, that he took the bronzed plastic urn provided by the Cremation Company out into the yard. The urn contained a plastic bag, which in turn contained Dempsey's ashes. There were a lot of them; but then he'd been a big dog.
Todd sat down in the middle of the yard, where he and Dempsey had so often sat and watched the sky together, and poured some of the ashes into the palm of his hand. What part of this grey sand was his tail, he wondered, and which his snout? Which part the place behind his ear he'd love you forever if you rubbed? Or didn't it matter? Was that the point about scattering ashes: that in the end they looked the same? Not just the snout and the tail, but a dog's ashes and a man's ashes. All reducible, with the addition of a little flame, to this mottled dust? He put his lips to it, once, to kiss him goodbye. In his head he could hear his mother telling him that it was a gross, unhealthy thing to do, so he kissed them again, just to spite her. Then he stood up and cast Dempsey's ashes around, like a farmer sewing seeds. There was no wind. The ash fell where he threw it, evenly distributed over the mutt's dominion.
"See you, dog," he said, and went back into the house to get himself a large bourbon.
PART THREE. A DARKER TIME
ONE
For four months, in the summer of his seventeenth year, Todd had worked at the Sunset Home for the Elderly on the outskirts of Orlando, where he'd got a job through his Uncle Frank, who worked as an accountant for Sunset Homes Incorporated. The place was little more than a repository for the nearly-dead; working there had been the most depressing experience of his young life. Most of his duties did not involve the patients -- he had no training as a nurse, nor intended to get any. But the care of one of the older occupants, a man by the name of Duncan McFarlane, was given over to him because McFarlane was prone to unruliness when he was being bathed by the female nurses. McFarlane was no great trouble to Todd. He was just a sour sonofabitch who wasn't going to make anybody's life one jot easier if he could possibly avoid it. The ritual of giving a bed-bath to his patient was Todd's particular horror; the sight of his own body awoke a profound self-disgust in the old man. Asking around, Todd had discovered that McFarlane had been an athlete in his prime. But now -- at the age of eighty-three -- there was no trace of the strength or the beauty his body had once possessed. He was a pallid sack of shit and resentment, revolted by the sight of himself.