“You told me before that I was your best friend,” he said.
“You are. We don’t have to live together because of that, do we?”
“You don’t even have to speak to me. You can entertain yourself with T.W. and his worms, or you can hold down the fortress while Carl rockets firecrackers at your windows, or you can have a big party and study the Rorschach blots of wine on your rug. You could do most any of those things.”
“I’m sorry I hurt your feelings,” she said.
“I’m your best friend, Francie. Say something kinder to me.”
“I don’t know how to talk,” she said.
“What do you mean?”
“I mean that I’m either alone and it’s silent here all day, or my friends are around, and I don’t really talk to them.”
“You can talk to me.”
“I’ve already hurt your feelings. I don’t want to do anything worse.”
“Well, what are you holding out that might really do me in? How little do you think of me?”
Francie drew up her knees and clasped her hands around them. “I want to be a painter,” she said.
“You are a painter.”
“I want to be an important painter.”
He stared at her, waiting for more.
“I don’t know what I want,” Francie said. “When Anita had her baby I wanted to be a mother. I want to be left alone, but I need to have people around.”
“When I was a kid my parents made me take dancing lessons, and the boys had to go up to the girls and ask them to dance. I asked, and the girl stomped my foot.”
“That didn’t really happen.”
“If I wanted to make you feel sorry for me, I could have thought of something more dramatic.”
“You mean just live with you in the house?” Francie said.
“No,” he said.
Francie heaved out a sigh. “Was that horrible to ask?”
“No. It’s okay that you asked.”
“But I mean — do you understand?” Her voice was softer than the crackling fire.
“No,” he said.
She let her legs hang down and stroked the top of the box with one foot, looking away from him.
“I just don’t think of us that way,” she said.
“Would you think about it for a while?” he said.
Francie got off the sofa and went to sit by him. “Have I not understood all along?” she said.
“I love mattresses thrown in attics, Francie.”
“I’m sorry,” she said.
“I’m sorry I said anything. I can’t keep sitting here being embarrassed.”
Perry got up. He was tired and hungry, and he knew that he had made a mistake. He went into the kitchen and headed for the refrigerator to see if there was a beer. One of her canvases of herself was propped up in the kitchen, and he looked away from it and went back to the living room with nothing to drink.
“Forget I said it,” he said. “Are you willing to forget it?”
She smiled at him. “Sure,” she said.
“It’s none of my business,” he said, “but who do you sleep with?”
“Nobody,” she said.
That came as a harder blow than the little-girl’s shoe on the top of his foot.
“I don’t want to talk about it,” she said. “Don’t embarrass me.”
She looked terrible, as if she was about to cry.
“Get rid of the worms,” he said. “Let’s get rid of the worms.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Yes. Come on. I’m dumping them.”
He took the box and went outside. It was just starting to get dark. The sky was deep-purple at the horizon. He pried open the box while Francie watched. The worms were packed in something that looked like straw, but darker brown. When he lifted that out of the big box, Francie stepped back, wincing. You could see the worms squirming in the packing. He pulled it apart into about five gobs and threw them into the bushes. Then he went inside and ripped up the box and threw it into the fire.
They sat in front of the fire for a long time, neither of them saying anything, until the car came into the drive. They both got up and went to the window and looked out. Delores got out of the car first and came weaving toward the house without waiting for Freed. Perry almost grabbed Francie and stopped her from going to the door.
“How’s my baby?” he heard Delores say. There was something wrong with her voice. He heard Freed’s voice. The three of them came into the living room. Freed shook his head. “I thought you were in Vermont,” he said. He came over to where Perry stood by the window. Freed was sweating.
“What do you think I found?” Delores said. Perry looked at her, forcing a smile. Delores was stoned; her eyes were red, and she wasn’t focusing.
“I found my table,” Delores said. “I thought it was lost, and Freed had it all the time. It was there in his living room.”
“I thought all this time that I’d gotten the table from Anita,” Freed said. Then he looked self-conscious because obviously nobody cared how he got the table.
“Meagan’s sleeping,” Francie said. “She has a cold.”
“Does she have the hiccups again?”
“What?” Francie said. “I said she has a cold.”
“Where’s my poor baby?” Delores said and walked out of the living room toward the bedroom.
“What the hell are you doing?” Perry said to Freed.
“I don’t know,” Freed said and hung his head. “Either I’ve always loved Del or I never have.”
Francie looked disgusted when he said that and walked out of the room to find Delores.
“What’s the matter?” Freed said. “Why does everybody look so funny?”
“Freed, you can’t take them out of here like this. Delores is stoned and probably has no idea of what’s going on.”
“I’m not stoned,” Freed said. “I can’t help it if she got herself smashed.” His clothes smelled of grass, and he kept tugging at his shirt hanging out of his pants but not tucking it in. “Listen,” he said. “This is the end.”
“The end of what?”
“It’s just the end! We’re taking Meagan to her grandparents and we’re going to try to have a life. She knows what she’s doing. Don’t insult me by saying she’s just going with me because she’s not in her right mind.”
“Okay,” Perry said. “You do what you want.”
“Well, I want to be friends,” Freed said, dipping his hand toward Perry’s. “Aren’t you going to be my friend?”
“I didn’t say I wasn’t your friend, Freed. You do what you want.”
“Then shake my hand,” Freed said. “You shake it.”
He shook Freed’s hand firmly.
“Jesus Christ!” Freed said. “What happens when a handshake doesn’t mean anything?”
“I shook your fucking hand, Freed.”
“You like me! Cut it out, Perry. You drove me to fucking Alexandria to get my Pontiac.”
“It’s okay, Freed. Calm down.”
“You don’t think she knows what’s going on, do you?”
“What about Meagan? Are you going to take her when she’s sick?”
“We’ve got my two pillows in the back seat. She can lie back there. What’s wrong with that?”
“Nothing. Nothing’s wrong with it.”
“Then what’s happening?” Freed said. “You’re acting this way and Carl flipped out and tried to bomb my house. Is it because you’re jealous that I’ve got Delores?”
“No,” he said. “I just think you’re both upset and you oughtn’t to do this.”
Delores was standing in the doorway holding Meagan, with Meagan’s head fallen off of her shoulder, and Francie beside her. Freed stood with his back to the fire, tilting the clock on the mantel back and forth absent-mindedly. He tilted it too far and had to turn around and set it back in place.
“We don’t want to have a fight,” Francie said. “Let’s talk about this some other time.”