Showing posts with label Home Hotel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home Hotel. Show all posts

West Side Castle, Part VII "All Together Now"

As Cara watches, Persis’s eyes narrow, and her lips pull in and tighten until they nearly disappear. Then, swiftly, this tense look is replaced with an expression of supreme calmness. Persis stares at her husband with wide, blank eyes, and for a moment, Cara has the sensation of seeing Ashley’s grave face superimposed on her mother’s.
      “Those rooms are nice,” Persis says finally. Her voice is quiet and even.
      Leo smiles down at her.
      “We’ll have to go again soon,” Persis says.
      “Yeah, sure, Sweetheart,” says Leo. His gaze moves from Persis to Heather and back, faltering. Persis continues to watch him, and Heather watches Persis. The corners of Leo’s smile drop a bit, and a tiny crease appears between his eyebrows.
      “Leo,” Persis says, and although her expression does not change, Cara can see a tremor passing through her upper body like an electric wave. Persis’s hair is shimmering, still catching the light of the fire, but now it’s crackling with its own heat.
      “Leo,” Persis says again. “You and I have never been to the Home Hotel.”
      “Sure we--” Leo begins, but his involuntary flick of a glance at Heather gives lie to his assertion. “Sweetheart,” he says, and it’s not clear which woman he is addressing.
      “You son of a bitch,” says Persis. “You’ve been fucking her. In the fucking Home Hotel.” Her words crack over the heads of the group. Edward and the guitar player turn, startled, from their contemplation of the fire. Lily is frozen in place with her arms against her chest, hands folded protectively over her bracelets. The chess player’s eyes snap open, but he keeps his head down on the pillow next to the baby.
      Heather lifts her head, but she doesn’t withdraw her arm from the back of the sofa. Her fingernails brush the upholstery lightly just inches from Persis’s shoulder. 
      Persis’s grey eyes are nailheads now, her skin tight across her cheekbones. Lines at the corners of her mouth point down like angry arrows. She jumps to her feet, standing chest-to-chest with Leo. The tallest of us, Cara thinks and is surprised at how removed she feels from the scene being played out before her.
      “In the fucking Home Hotel,” Persis repeats, but her voice breaks, and there’s not enough breath left to finish the last word before her throat closes around a sob. 
      Leo says nothing. He stands still in front of the hearth, the firelight lashing patterns of stripes on the backs of his legs.
      Persis stares at him--everyone stares at him--for one two three four heartbeats. Then Persis turns and scoops up a netsuke figure from a collection of such pieces on a narrow table beside the sofa. Her fingers curl around the ivory carving of an old man playing a flute. She runs her thumb over the smooth roundness of the old man’s head and hunched back. She hefts the small figure like a skipping stone in her palm, then turns, and with elaborate casualness, she flings it at the stained glass pane of lilies nearest the fireplace.
      The netsuke figure hits the pane with a blunt smack! that makes everyone jump. It falls to the floor and rolls under a chair. Persis watches it out of sight, then leans down to pick up the toddler from her pillow near the hearth. As she reaches for the little girl, the chess player flinches his head away from her hands. Ignoring him, Persis shoulders her child and walks quickly across the living room. She mounts the stairs, and when she gets to the top, those below can hear her calling “Bedtime!” to the older children. 
      The group by the fire breaks up somberly, bidding each other goodnight in muted voices. No one looks directly at Leo. Lily and Edward each give Cara a hug and file slowly upstairs to their rooms. Heather replaces her book on the shelf, picks up her flute, and carries it down the hall to her room at the back of the house. The chess player sets the game pieces back in their starting positions, then unfolds a quilt onto the sofa, patting and smoothing it into place. Taking a toothbrush from his hip pocket, he heads for the small bathroom on the far side of the entryway. The guitar player carries the last of the dessert plates into the kitchen. Then he unrolls his futon in a closet-like room built in the space under the stairs. 
      Leo banks the fire, nudging the charred and glowing logs together with an iron poker. Cara watches him draw the steel mesh curtain across the fireplace opening. She pushes herself up from the hearth. “Well, I’m tired. Where did you say I should put my things?” 
      Leo collects Cara’s knapsacks from the entryway and leads her to a room at the end of the hall, next to Heather’s. He brings fresh bedding from a linen closet in the hallway and helps her make up the daybed next to the ponderous oak rolltop desk which dominates the room.
      “I’ll get that moved out tomorrow,” he says, nodding at the desk. He puts a thick hand on Cara’s shoulder. “If there’s anything you need, you let me know.” 
      “Thanks, Leo. I’m okay.” Cara stops. A hard knot rises in the back of her throat. “I hope this isn’t going to be a problem. The doctor said only about six months.”
      “You could never be a problem, Darling. Don’t worry. I’ll take care of you.” 
      “Persis--”
      Leo pulls her against his chest. “Don’t worry,” he says again. His breath is warm against her head. “It’ll all work out okay. We’re all together now.”


[To order a copy of the book, Walking Pocatello, call the Idaho State University Bookstore, (208) 282-3237, or send me an email.]

West Side Castle, Part VI "The Home Hotel"

Persis and Leo sit next to each other on the sofa, facing the fire. Persis curls herself into Leo’s shoulder and puts her head on his chest. Leo strokes her hair, lifting it so that it catches the light from the fire, then slowly letting it fall through his fingers. Heather sits behind them on a low bench placed in back of the sofa. She leans one elbow on the cushion behind Leo’s head. 
      Leo pats the empty seat on the other side of him. “Cara, wouldn’t you be more comfortable over here?”
      Cara shakes her head. “I’m fine. The heat is wonderful. In fact, Lily, don’t you want to sit by me?”
      Lily fans herself with a section of newspaper. “No, I’m fine. I hate to sweat.”
      Cara leans forward, elbows on her thighs. “I like it. Reminds me of Lava Hot Springs. Say, are the pools still open? I’d like to go down there.”
      “They probably are tomorrow,” Persis says. “We could drive down for a soak after dinner.” Everyone murmurs excitedly at the plan.
      “Wonderfully hot!”
      “After dark’s the best time.”
      “Good for sore muscles after skiing.”
      “Steam’s so thick you can’t see three feet in front of you.”
“I haven’t been for years and years,” Cara says. She nods at Leo. “Last time was with you, I think.” 
      “That time the ambulance came.”
      Edward looks up. “Ambulance? What happened?”
      “Well,” Cara explains, “we’d just gotten the room filled up--”
      “Room?” Edward looks a question. 
      “Oh, Cara, you don’t know!” interjects Lily. “They tore down the rooms and built a new pool, out in the open.”
      “You’re kidding.”
      “No. In fact, it couldn’t have been long after you left. Because Leo and I--” Lily pauses for a heartbeat. “I mean, the first couple of times I went there, they still had the rooms, but then one day we went, and they were just gone.”
      “What rooms?” Edward pleads.
      Cara turns to him. “There used to be this row of little rooms. Off the main hallway by the office. You could rent your own private room. Each one had a shower--like in a bath house--and a dressing room just inside the door. Then there was this cement ramp you walked down, and you could turn on the valve, and the lower part of the room filled up with hot mineral water. You could sit in there and.....”  She breaks off, remembering.
      Leo and Lily pick up her sentence. “You could take food--”
      “And a bottle of wine--”
      “Or some pot--”
      “Of course, bathing suits were optional.”
      “I don’t think I ever even took a suit with me,” says Cara. She looks down at her bulk. “Probably wouldn’t want to do that now.”
      Leo jumps to his feet. “Are you kidding?” He raises Cara from the hearth and waltzes her gently in front of the fire. “You’re just as beautiful as ever, Darling.”
      “I never liked those disgusting little rooms,” says Lily. “Who knows what kind of germs you could pick up. Like sitting in old soup.”
      “Sounds wonderful to me,” Persis says. “Wish I could have been there.”
      Cara disengages herself from Leo’s arms and plops back down on the hearth. “Well, it was---” she breathes heavily, “a very sensual experience.”
      “So what about this ambulance?” Edward asks again.
      “Well,” says Cara, “one time we were in there, and we heard a lot of commotion. Out in the hall. At first, we just thought somebody was drunk--”
      “That happened a lot,” says Leo.
      “But when we looked out, there were the paramedics, hauling this man out on a stretcher.”
      “Remember how huge he was?”
      “Oh, god, yes. This giant, naked stomach. Just as round and bright red as a beach ball. Actually that’s about all I do remember about the poor man.”
      “What’d he have? A heart attack?”
      “I guess. Never found out. Wouldn’t be surprised. It was hot enough in there.” She looks at Leo standing in front of the fire. “Those were some good times, though. I’m sorry it’s torn down.”
      “Yeah,” says Leo. “Now, if you want a private room with a tub, you have to settle for the Home Hotel.”
      “The Home Hotel?”
      “Yeah. That old one on Main Street. They put hot tubs in each room. Big enough for two people. Pretty nice.” Leo rocks a little on his heels, his back to the fire.
      No one says anything for a moment or two, and Cara becomes aware of an uneasiness hanging in the warm air. She glances at Leo, but he’s looking at the ceiling. Probably thinking about putting in a skylight or painting something up there, Cara thinks. Lily is rearranging her bracelets, and Edward and the guitarist are staring into the fire. The chess player appears to have fallen asleep with his head on the same pillow as the baby. 
      Only Persis and Heather are alert. Heather’s chin is propped on her long arm, which is stretched along the back of the sofa. Heather’s posture is relaxed, but Cara can see that her eyes are intent on Persis’s profile. Persis is sitting up and looking straight at Leo.