"Well, not really." She brushed the soil and stems from her hands and smiled.
A chatterbox, he thought. Goofy like Lou, the ex.
"I understand. Too much pain, right?"
Annie affected to laugh heartily and turned away, blushing, toward the door. Eric followed her inside.
Taylor was sipping apple juice from a fruit jar at the kitchen table.
"This is Taylor, Eric," Annie told him.
"Neat," Eric said, glancing at the fireplace, at Taylor, and at the fifty-year-old furniture that had never made its way back to the mainland.
Annie hastened to display the garden flowers to her husband. "What do you think of these, Taylor? They'll work, don't you think?"
Taylor looked over his uninvited guest and burped rudely. He stared at the backpack Eric was removing.
"Good of you to join us, there, Eric."
Eric laughed as politely as he could.
A garlicky vegetable stew Taylor had made days before was simmering on the stove. "Eric is Lou's ex," said Annie.
"I heard," said Taylor.
Though he had passed forty that very summer, there was a quality about Taylor of late lingering adolescence. He kept staring at Eric's backpack.
Outside the kitchen window that looked on Annie's befogged garden, a male cardinal was fiercely attacking his own reflection in the glass. The cardinal was searching for a mate and was determined to drive off rivals. He had become obsessed by the house's windows; a tireless challenger kept appearing in them, matching him cry for cry, dealing him hurtful thumps. The bird's every sally was checked by this relentless enemy. But the love-driven red bird had heart. For days, from misty dawn until the dissolving of the light it had been fighting itself. Annie and Eric looked toward the window.
"Sad," Annie said.
"That's life, isn't it?" Eric said, turning to Taylor. Taylor looked at him without expression.
"It shouldn't be," Annie said.
Annie and Eric turned back to the window and then took a sneaking look at each other.
"Speaking of how life ought to be," Eric said after a moment, "I have some wine for us."
Annie blushed again.
"We don't…" she began.
"We don't drink it," Taylor said sharply. He stood up as Eric took his two bottles of cabernet out of the bag and put them on the table. Taylor took a pair of metal-rimmed glasses from his blue chambray shirt pocket. Then he picked up one bottle after the other and examined them.
"God damn, man," he said softly. He was looking at the price stickers over the labels.
One thing Annie had learned to live with was Taylor's anger. In her case, that anger threatened only her peace of mind because Taylor never hit her. He had, however, served twenty-three months in an Oregon state prison for an act of violence. During the period when she and Taylor had been eco-activists in the Northwest, he had responded to a taunt from a local logger. The response caused him to become one of the few individuals in that state ever charged, under an old frontier law, with the crime of mayhem, which the movement lawyers were able to plead down from felonious assault. Taylor's removable dental bridge had caused disfiguring damage to the logger's nose. Taylor was passionate, and in certain situations he could lose control. Situations involving alcohol were dangerous for him and for others.
"God damn, man," he said again, and smiled. He had never replaced the bridge.
Taylor stood a couple of inches taller than Eric. Thin and tanned, he managed to look frail in spite of his size. He was long-necked, floating a prominent Adam's apple. His eyes were blue and bright. It was impossible not to notice the humps of muscle on his narrow shoulders and the rippling of sinew down the length of his tanned bony arms. He would never look exactly athletic, but the work he did as a deckhand on the island ferry had made him extremely strong. His hands were scarred and callused, the knuckles battered, split, fractured and healed over. He showed a high forehead, prominent cheekbones and a strong jaw. His fair hair was as soft and fine as a girl's, cut short and lying slack on the top of his skull like a tonsured knight's. Annie's sister, Lou, had described him as an ectomorph, a word previously unknown to Annie. It apparently meant a tall, skinny guy who brooded and couldn't drink. That was Taylor.
"Thanks, Eric," Annie hastened to say. "We don't drink wine."
Taylor thrust one of the bottles under Annie's nose to show her what the wine cost. Like everything else on the island, the wine was grossly overpriced. Taylor laid the bottle lengthwise on the table and rolled it casually toward where Eric was standing. Annie made a move to catch it if it fell.
"Wow!" she said. "Thanks anyway," she told Eric kindly. The prices were a little disgusting given the state of the world, but he had only meant to be polite.
"Waste of money," said Taylor. Annie saw that he might be at the point of tossing them outside, breaking them. But Eric had a corkscrew out. He took one of the bottles straight from Taylor's hand and uncorked it.
"Guess I'll have to drink them both then," said Eric, grinning.
Mainly to distract Taylor, Annie hastened to bring Eric a fruit jar.
"He'll just piss it out," Taylor said. "Won't you, Eric?"
"Ah!" Eric said. "But first the buzz! Right, Annie?" He raised his fruit jar to her.
It made Annie dizzy to watch him drain it. Of course it had been a mistake to let him crash at the house — she had known as much at the time. It had been a bad day for Taylor because there had been special trips for big shots on the ferry. Fog had grounded planes.
"Hey, let's eat!" she said with feigned delight. Taylor belched again, set his juice on the table and shambled to the stove. Annie watched him as though she were forcing him there by her will. "Veggie stew," she declared, "always better the second or third day." She looked at Eric, trying to convey anxiety, a warning, something to make him cool it.
Eric poured himself more wine, drank it and stood up.
"Going out for a smoke," he explained. "Be a second." He took the wine with him.
"What?" Taylor asked loudly.
Outside, the breeze seemed only to turn the enveloping fog on itself. The air was sweet. Eric felt excited but confused. What was with the looks Annie was giving him? Did she have a clue how lovely she looked with her guileless Oregon-blue eyes? She seemed innocent but mysterious. Clearly the husband was a menace. He was in danger.
In recent years Eric had tried to internalize a mechanism that controlled his impulsiveness. But he had gone on drinking and smoking too much dope, traveling too much. Strange thoughts assailed him. In Haiti, it might have been, or Indonesia — somewhere that powerful, perhaps infernal, supernatural beings roamed — he dreamed that an unmanageable spirit had entered into him. Flashbacks? Second adolescence on the way down? One never knew.
He smoked one Marlboro after another. Turning toward the Shumways' door, he thought, Make an entrance! An inappropriate urge, like so many. He opened the door dramatically to face them. Annie looked alarmed. Eric marched to the table and opened the second bottle of wine.
"Hey," he said. "Sorry, bad habit."
"Well," she said, "it reheats."
Taylor served the stew in silence, a somnambulist waiter. Eric noticed that the cardinal's struggles continued into darkness. He thought that unusual.
"Veggies, right?" Eric asked them. "Love 'em! Never eat anything with a face. Seriously," he asked them, "I mean, what is meat? A certain consistency to the teeth. A rub for the gums. Like chomp chomp, right? No more to it. Hey, guys," Eric said, "how about some more plonkorino?" He poured some into his fruit glass. "Overpriced? Yes! And yet? Not so bad."
Taylor had begun to smile unpleasantly. Eric looked at the plate before him. He took a forkful of the vegetable stew and put it in his mouth, as much to silence himself as anything else. He glanced at Annie. She seemed strangely calm.