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I felt my heart fill up with love for her.

Yes, even this. I can even live with this.

That’s what I thought.

But then I stepped in it.

Her vomit.

Just in front of the nightstand.

There was a lot of it, a heap of undigested meat.

So much her human stomach couldn’t hold it.

It stank.

There were objects in the mess, too.

A button. Hair. A piece of cloth.

And something else.

I reached down for it.

Chewed up and bloody.

It used to be white.

It took a moment for me to realize it was a baby shoe.

It was heavy.

I put it on the nightstand.

She kept sleeping.

She had crawled into some coal miner’s house and yanked an infant out of its crib in the night, like some fairy-tale horror. Like the angel of Passover. Some faceless child I didn’t care about. My beloved Dora. She knew what she was.

And she came to be with her own.

Frankie, if I get out you have to shoot me.

So I shot her.

At least that’s what I meant to do.

I crawled on top of her and straddled her chest, wrapped the blanket around the end of my gun and pointed it at her head.

Her gorgeous eyes opened and met mine, without emotion.

She knew what was in the blanket, and it seemed she neither wanted me to do it nor minded if I did.

I pulled the trigger.

The report was very loud in that small room.

The end of the blanket caught fire a little, then went out.

But here’s the thing.

I missed.

As God is my witness, I meant to blow her brain out the back of her lovely head and then go find a river to pitch myself into. I didn’t miss on purpose. Not in my mind. It’s possible that the blanket and my exhaustion somehow caused me to angle the gun wrong, but I don’t think so. It really wasn’t such a complicated thing to try to do.

I believe now that my wrist jerked.

Something in me refused the command.

A small mutiny.

I don’t know what else to believe.

The end result was that the gun went off, she flinched and yelped and I blew a big hole in the pillow next to her head. A few goose feathers blew out and settled slowly, ridiculously, to the floor.

I got off of her and stood by the bed.

I popped the slide release and closed the gun.

I put it on the nightstand, but then remembered I might like to shoot myself later, so I put it in my pants.

She lay there shaking, but kept her eyes on me.

The jazz song came to an end and the announcer wished his listeners a happy Armistice Day.

I backed out of the room, taking the keys.

I walked to the car, breathing hard, my breath like locomotive steam in the cold.

The man in cabin five peeked white-faced out of his window, white as a fish-belly, then shut his curtain when he saw me look at him.

I started the car and left.

The clerk tried to wave me down, saying, “Mr. Taylor, Mr. Taylor!” but I kept going.

I expected Clint Murray, the optometrist’s son, to pull me over and take me to jail for destruction of property and attempted murder.

But it never happened.

I kept going all the way to Chicago.

But not for good.

I did go back to Georgia.

Just one more time.

And not alone.

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

DECEMBER.

I was standing in John “Granny” Giangrande’s apartment with my shirt off, facing his pretty window that gave on Lake Michigan. He was behind me, inspecting my back over his tiny glasses. He whistled.

“Goddamn, Nichols. I thought your back was fouled up before.”

“Yeah.”

“Do you plan to tell me how you got these?”

“Later.”

“And where’s Dora?”

“Later. Let’s drink.”

LATER, WHEN MY shirt was on and the night was black and bitter cold outside, and a little snow had started sticking on the window, we sat on his couch and drank his good wine. It was the kind of wine a guy who works on State Street and has no kids drinks.

About midnight, our dead friend Dan Metzger came up, like he always did when we were alone and had a bottle, which was part of the reason we rarely saw each other alone with a bottle. Funny thing was that I’m the one who saw it, but Giangrande’s the one who always cried first. It’s important to understand that about Granny to know why he did what I asked. It also makes more sense when you know how badly he was picked on at St. Ignatius and how many fat lips and busted heads I got standing up for him. It makes more sense yet when you remember that he sat stateside with a research job while Dan and I waded in the mud and got whizbangs and 75s chucked at us. That wasn’t his doing, of course, and it’s nothing I would Lord over him, but I knew it worked at him and I was quietly glad for anything that might sway him.

Men who want revenge have no dignity.

They have already died and sold everything.

I told Granny what happened only after I had sat with him long enough for him to remember how much he loved me and to hear that I wasn’t nuts. I’m not saying I was sane. But I was demonstrably not nuts. So I told him what happened. But there was still the matter of what I wanted. I only told him what that was when we were both good and pie-eyed, and when, if not belief, something other than disbelief sat on his face.

“I don’t need to tell you how dangerous that stuff is, do I?”

“No.”

“Or how much time I’d do for making it?”

“No.”

He was swaying on the couch.

“I will say yes, but provisionally. I reserve the right to say no tomorrow.”

“Agreed.”

“And I will say yes not because I believe you, but because you believe yourself. Which is good enough for me.”

“Thanks, Granny. Thanks so much.”

“And because you’ve never asked me for anything.”

“This is big.”

“Yeah. But maybe lots of little things every time I needed them sat in the bank and gained interest.”

“You’re talking like my father.”

“I know. And the fact that you and I are becoming old men and still know how each other’s father talked, that’s a reason. I’ll do it, Frankie. If this is some big joke you’re pulling, then I’ll be your patsy. And if you’re dragging me to hell, like Father Patterson always said, then fuck the Jesuits.”

I hugged him to me.

“Have you told your brother any of this stuff?”

“Not much.”

“I wouldn’t.”

“I won’t.”

“You know who else?” he said, struggling to light a cigarette.

“What?”

He swayed and closed his eyes.

“Might go. Eicher.”

KARL EICHER WAS another vet.

He was also our friend from high school years, but not grade school. During grade school he had run with the neighborhood kids who bullied us for being Catholics. His parents were harsh Lutherans and he hated them and hated how poor his father was and always had something to prove, but he was a guy who always needed to be part of the dominant tribe. His allegiances against the neighborhood Catholics began to shift as more Poles, Italians and Slovenians moved in, and shifted completely by the time the war broke out in 1914 and everything German was suspect. Karl Eicher became an unfortunate name to have. Now he was a minority. Now he needed the three awkward guys with glasses who went to the hoity-toity Catholic school.