Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock(52)
“I couldn’t sleep. Been watching Bogie all night. I was really worried about you. I thought that—I called your home, but no one answered and—”
We just look at each other for a long time because he doesn’t want to say what he’s thinking and I don’t want to talk about last night.
Finally, he regains his composure, falls back into the safety of our routine, picks up his Bogart hat off the arm of his recliner, pops it onto his head, and pulls his old-time movie-star face.70
“Is something the matter, Mr. Allnut? Tell me,” he says, his jaw barely moving, his voice higher than natural, playing Rose Sayer, Katharine Hepburn’s character in The African Queen.
I adjust my Bogart hat—even though Bogie doesn’t wear this type of hat in this movie—and say, “Nothing. Nothing you’d understand.”
“I simply can’t imagine what could be the matter. It’s been such a pleasant day. What is it?” he says, staying in character.
But suddenly, I don’t really want to trade Bogart movie quotes anymore, so I take off my hat and, using my regular speaking voice, I say, “Yesterday was bad, Walt. Really terrible.”
His eyes open so wide. “What the hell happened to your hair?”
Words escape me—I mean, how would I even begin to explain it all to the old man?
In an effort to avoid eye contact, I stare at the picture of Walt’s dead wife, who hangs eternally young on the wall.
Sea-foam green blouse.
Blond Bogart-era hairstyle.
Mysterious eyes that pop and seem to be watching me.
She doesn’t look much older than eighteen in the photo but she’s dead now. I know Walt misses her terribly because I catch him gazing at the picture with this sad look in his eyes. I wonder what my future wife will look like and if I’ll hang her picture on my wall—maybe in Lighthouse 1.
“And what’s with the goofy medal on your shirt?”
Walt’s staring at my heart now. His eyebrows are zigzags.
I look down and remember Herr Silverman’s creation. I’m not sure I can explain the significance of the medal without getting into all the bullshit I went through last night, so I say, “I know I acted strange yesterday. I’m sorry. And I’ll tell you everything you want to know later, Walt. I swear to god. I’ll answer every question you got. But for now, could we just watch the rest of the movie together wearing our Bogart hats? Can we do that? It would mean a lot to me if you just let me watch the movie with you. I’m really tired. I don’t have much left in the proverbial tank. It was a hell of a night. It really was. I need some Bogart. Bogie medicine. Whadda ya say?”
He looks at me for a second or two—examines my face, trying to figure my angle out—and then says, “Sure. Sure. Bogart. We can do that,” real cautiously, like maybe he thinks I’m trying to trick him, even though I’m being utterly sincere and honest—maybe for the first time in years.
I put my Bogart hat back on and sit down at the end of the couch closest to his recliner.
He hits play on his remote and the picture on the TV comes to life.
It’s the part where their boat gets stuck in mud, and when Bogart tries to free it by getting into the water, he returns covered in leeches. Since they’re stuck in the middle of nowhere, they think they’re going to die. But Rose prays and it starts to rain and the river rises and they’re miraculously saved. A whole bunch of other stuff happens with evil Germans, which I already know. My eyes glaze over and I zone out, mostly thinking about how close I came to killing Asher and myself last night. How it almost seemed like I was watching a movie when I had the gun pointed at my classmate—like it wasn’t even real. How f*cked-up scary that seems now that my head is straight. As I sit here next to Walt, I feel kind of grateful for this moment, as strange as that sounds—like I just narrowly avoided some awful, demented fate.
I feel kind of lucky.
It worries me that I can be so explosive one day—volatile enough to commit a murder-suicide—and then the next day I’m watching Bogart save the day with Walt, like nothing happened at all, and nothing is urgent, and I really don’t have to do anything to set the world right or escape my own mind.
I’d like to feel okay all the time—to have the ability to sit and function without feeling so much pressure, without feeling as though blood is going to spurt from my eyes and fingers and toes if I don’t do something.
When the movie ends, Walt clicks off the TV and says, “You know, I was thinking.”
“And?” I say.
“Why did you give me this hat yesterday? I mean, what was so special about yesterday?”
“It was my birthday. I turned eighteen.”
“Jesus Christ! Why didn’t you tell anybody? I feel like a cheapskate now. I would’ve bought you a present.”
I smile and say, “I bought your hat at the thrift store for four dollars and fifty cents. It’s not really an old movie prop. Bogie never wore it.”
“Yeah, I know, Rockefeller,” he says. “I like it anyway. So what did you do to celebrate your birthday?”
I almost laugh, because Walt asked the question so innocently, like I’m just a regular kid who had a regular birthday.
Walt’s the only person in the world who would think I’m capable of being regular like that, and I kind of love him for it.