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He
insisted I pick it up that night. I didn’t want
to. I was tired, but he insisted. He said if I rang
his doorbell, then he’d come down and give it to
me. It could have waited. One day, even two days more
wouldn’t have made that much of a difference. But
he insisted. So I said, "I’ll come around
ten. I’ll ring your doorbell and then you’ll
come down and give it to me," I said. "That’s
right," he said. "I’ll come down."
"And you’ll give it to me," I said. "Yes,"
he said. "I’ll have it in my hand. I’ll
give it to you and then." "And then what?"
I suddenly found myself asking. "And then you’ll
have it," he said. "Yes," I said. "After
all, it’s mine. Why shouldn’t I?"
The
thing was I was already quite settled. Mentally, I was
in for the night. It’s something you don’t
decide, but you know from the moment you walk in the
door that you’re home for good, that even before
you hang up your coat, you don’t think twice about
whether or not you’re in for the night. Then, suddenly,
you’re in your underwear. You look over towards
your pants and they seem like they’re in another
country. That’s the way it was when I was growing
up. When my father had his pants off, we all might as
well have had them off because we were all settled in
for the night whether we wanted to be or not. If I tried
to leave, he’d say, "Where ya goin’?
Where do you think you’re goin’ with my pants
off?"
So
that’s the way it was and that’s the way it
was for me all the way until my friend called and said,
"I got it." "Got what?" I asked.
"It," he said. "Come over and I’ll
come down." "Come down?" I asked. "Down,"
he said. "Into the street. And I’ll give it
to you."
"You
could have waited until tomorrow," I told him.
"Why?" he asked. "So tomorrow you could
say, ‘Why don’t we wait another day or two.
I mean, another day or two isn’t going to make
that much of a difference, is it?’ "I mean,"
he said. "Isn’t that what you’d say?
Am I right?"
He
was right. But as I was saying I felt so settled. The
day was behind me already. I had already washed my face.
And then there were the pants. The second my pants are
off a little voice in my head says, "That’s
it. It’s over! You, my friend, are in for the night."
And then this. So I called my friend back and the first
thing he said was, "I knew it was you. I knew you’d
call back." I told him how settled I felt. "You
know how it is." I told him. "You come in,
you wash your face, you hang up your socks, you’re
in for the night. You know how it is." Then there
was a long silence and he said, "Did you take your
pants off? Is that it?" And I said, "Yes,
that’s it," and he said, after another long
pause, "I was afraid of that. So do you want me
to open it? Is that it? Is that what it’s come
down to?"
It
was tempting, but it reminded me of when I was growing
up and a package would come for me. "There’s
a package for you," my mother would say. "A
package?" I’d ask. "For me?" "For
you," she’d say. "For me, really?"
I’d ask. "Yes, for you," she’d say.
"Wow!" I’d say. "Don’t get
so excited," she’d say. "We already opened
it. It was nothing."
So
who wants that? If there was a package for me, shouldn’t
I be the one to open it? Then again, if my friend opened
it, I wouldn’t have to go there, at least not right
away. In fact, it was just when my friend asked me that
I looked over at my socks. They were no longer on my
feet but drying on the radiator. They had been in a
puddle. There was no other pair in the house. They were
all out, lost somewhere or at the laundry or on someone
else’s feet but definitely not here and the thought
of putting wet ones back on was not a pleasant one.
I remembered when I was growing up, my mother would
show me pictures of dying children, dying because they
had worn wet socks. I felt sorry for them. If they had
only known my mother perhaps they would have been alive
today. "If you wet your socks," she’d
say, "don’t bother coming home." But
if I didn’t come home, if I was more than a minute
late from wherever it was I wasn’t supposed to
have gone to in the first place, I would not be allowed
to leave the house at all.
I
was confused. I went to ask my father what I was supposed
to do, but his pants were off already, his socks were
bone dry, and he was watching his favorite Western on
T.V. All I could hear were the sounds of gunshots and
of cattle stampeding. It was Rawhide. My father loved
Rawhide, but more than that he loved the theme song
and more than that he loved the whipping sounds that
occur twice during the song, the only two times I would
see him smile all week. He said he wished he had one
of those whips. "The very least life could have
given me," he once told me, was a goddamn whip."
He mentioned no one in particular except Life. Life
wore for my father a pair of heavy pants, and not once
did it ever take them off.
When
I walked in front of the T.V. set, he said, "You
don’t want to live very long, do you?" My
father would use dialogue from old Westerns to threaten
people, especially his own family. "You don’t
want to live very long" was his favorite, but he
also had, "I’d keep my hands right where they
are if I were you," and "One more step and
I’ll see you at the bottom of Diablo Canyon."
I didn’t quite get that one, but I wouldn’t
question it, just skulk away quietly, shaking my head
up and down as if I had benefited from a piece of fatherly
wisdom. All my father’s wisdom seemed to come out
of his pants, though it was a bitter wisdom, born, perhaps,
in suffering and destined to make us all suffer with
it.
"My
socks are wet!" I suddenly blurted out to my friend.
But all my friend said was, "What did you do, step
in a puddle?" That got me angry like he knew me
too well, so I said, "That’s right. I stepped
in a puddle." "You and your wet socks,"
he said. "Yes," I said. "Me and my wet
socks."
"Well,"
he said. "Do you want me to open it or not?"
"No," I said. Just like that. "No."
As if I had been rehearsing my answer for days. "No,"
I said. "Do not open it."
"Fine," he said. "Then I’ll expect
you . . ." "Expect me to what?" I asked.
"Expect you to come and pick it up," he said.
"And if I did come and pick it up?" I asked,
hoping to throw him off a bit from his relentless logic.
"What then?" "Then you’d open
it," he said.
So
I was back where I started. "You got three seconds
to make up your mind," my friend said after another
long silence. "Three seconds?" I asked. "What
happens after three seconds?" "I hang up,"
he said. Three seconds, I thought to myself. What was
it about three seconds? Then I remembered how when I
was growing up everything was measured in intervals
of three seconds. You have three seconds to get out
of the bathroom, you have three seconds to change your
clothes, to change your mind, your attitude, your girlfriend,
always three seconds.
He
was right. After three seconds, he hung up. I can’t
say I was sorry. The thing was why go anywhere when
you can stay home? For God’s sake there were windows.
When I was growing up we had more windows than we knew
what to do with. On Saturday mornings we’d all
wake up and head for the windows. And from any one of
those windows we could see everything. There were the
usual cars, the usual cement, the usual broken bottles,
one old shoe lying in the middle of the street which
we could never figure out where it came from. Most of
all there was old Mr. Goldblatt waiting for the mail,
always waiting for the mail, his eyes glued to the corner
from whence, like a vision, the mailman would suddenly
appear and though we could not see him ourselves, still
from Mr. Goldblatt’s eyes we could tell he was
coming. "And what’s he got today, Mr. Goldblatt?"
my mother would call down to him. "Packages!"
he’d call back to her. "He’s got millions
of packages!" "Really!" my mother would
scream back. "I hope it’s not a trick. I hope
he’s not trying to trick us again like last time."
That was the time the mailman said there were packages
for all of us, actually started to hand them out when
suddenly he started laughing. I could see his tongue
stained with envelope glue, his eyes like those tiny
slits you stick mail through, laughing and laughing
and then he took them all back, told us he was lying,
that they weren’t for us at all but for some guy
who never opened his door at all, who let them all pile
up outside for us to stare at with terrible envy. "Why?"
I remember asking him. "Why would you do such a
terrible thing to us?" He was bored, he said. He
needed a diversion.
We
were all stunned. But not my father. He never believed
the mailman in the first place, refused to accept even
our own mail, and instead put his hands around the mailman’s
neck and started choking him. "No!" we cried.
"Stop! It’s the mailman! You can’t kill
the mailman!"
I
wondered perhaps if my friend didn’t just want
to get me out of the house, see me unsettled again,
that once being unsettled, then settled, there is nothing
worse than being unsettled again. That’s the way
it was with my socks. With all their use and re-use
they had lost their elasticity, their will to live you
might say. Added to all this speculation, I began to
suspect there wasn’t a package waiting for me at
all. I’d get to my friend’s house and he’d
say, "Package? What package? Oh, that package.
You mean the one with your name and address on it? Well,
it was here, but it’s not anymore, because, well,
to tell you the truth, I dumped it!"
Once
when I was growing up, a package actually did arrive
for us. My mother tried to open it, but my father said,
"I’d keep my hands right where they are if
I were you." My mother ripped it open. There was
a struggle. A black box fell out. Inside the black box
there was another black box and then another one inside
of that one and so on and so forth until they became
so small we could hardly see them. "Is this someone’s
idea of a joke?" My mother asked. My father said
nothing but instead began to smash each box systematically,
until there were none left, and then, and only then,
removed his pants and draped them over his chair.
It
was about 10:05 P.M. when I called my friend to confirm
things for the last time.
"Now let me get this straight," I said to
him.
"OK,"
he said. "Let’s."
"OK,"
I said. "You got a package."
"That’s
right," he said. "A package." I thought
I heard a woman laughing in the background, laughing
every time he answered me.
"And
it has my name on it."
"Yes,"
he said. "You are . . ." And I said, "Yes
I am," and the woman laughed again, and I said,
"There’s a woman laughing," and he said,
"There’s no woman here," and then I heard
her say, "What’s he saying? What’s going
on now? Hang up! Hang up on him!" Then he said,
"Shut up!" Not to me but to her and I said,
"What did you say to me?" and he said, "Not
you," and I said, "So you do have someone
there with you," and he said, "No, there’s
no one else here." "No one there besides you
and someone else, you mean," I said, and he said,
"No, no one at all." "Yes, there’s
a woman there," I said, and he said, "There’s
no woman, you’re hearing things. There’s only
me and your damn package and if you want it you better
come and get it or . . ." "Or what?"
I asked. "Or I’ll dump it!" he said.
I
was so agitated I started to head for my pants. But
then I remembered the words I swore I’d live by
after growing up with my father. Never head for your
pants when you’re agitated. In fact, if anything,
take them off. I remembered too how my father would
never hurt me when his pants were off. At those times
he wasn’t much use at all. You might as well have
draped him over the chair with them, but when he put
them on, he was unpredictable, dangerous even. There
was fire in his eyes. Sometimes he’d move in my
direction and then, suddenly, when he was within arms
length, close enough that if he reached out he could
grab me, he’d stop. Then he’d just stare at
me. I felt that if I moved a single inch, that if I
pivoted my foot no more than an inch, in any direction,
I might trip a wire, set off an explosive I knew only
he could defuse by slowly, carefully removing his pants,
first the left leg, then the right, and only then could
I walk away again.
It
was 10:17, only moments before I cancelled the idea
of heading towards my pants, when the phone rang. I
picked it up. "It’s you, isn’t it?"
I said. "Yes, it’s me," my friend said,
"and I’ve been thinking." This stunned
me. "About what?" I asked calmly. But really
I was shaking, my lip was trembling, the hissing in
the background had been replaced by an urgent clanking
sound as if someone was hammering his way into my apartment.
"About us," he said. "About our relationship."
"What
about it?"
"It’s
in danger."
"Danger?"
"Yes,
danger," he said. "And all because of some
package."
"Yes,"
I agreed. "Some package."
"Yes,
therefore I’m going to bring it over to you myself."
"You
are?"
"Yes."
"But
why?" I asked. "Why would you do that?"
"I’m
bored," he said. "I need a diversion."
I
was stunned. And then I thought who wanted him over
here either? In a way it was like going out except "out"
comes to you. There’s that smell of "outness"
when someone suddenly comes in from the outside. And
after all, he wasn’t just the mailman delivering
a package, was he?" I couldn’t just take the
package and tell him to go. For God’s sake our
friendship was in enough trouble. And what if he never
brings the package at all, says he’s bringing it
but never does? He’s like that. Either way, I’d
have to let him in. Then he’d never go. Then, in
essence, he himself would become the package and once
opened would spill himself all over the house, wetting
my socks, staining my pants, thus rendering himself
non-returnable and un-repackageable forever.
"Tomorrow,"
I said to him. "Come tomorrow."
"Why
tomorrow?" he asked. Unless you . . ."
"Unless
what?" I asked.
"Unless,"
he said. "Unless you . . ."
"Unless
I what?" I asked.
"Never
mind," he said.
"No,"
I said. "You were going to say something,"
I said.
"About
what?" he asked.
"About
something. "You said, ‘unless you . . .’
something."
"Unless
you?" he asked. "Unless you what?"
"Never
mind," I said.
"So
I’ll be right over," he said.
"That’s
right," I said. "You will."
After
this last conversation with my friend, I nearly became
paralyzed. All I could do now was listen. I’d listen
for footsteps in the street, in the hallway, out on
the fire escape. Ten minutes, twenty, thirty, still
no sign of him and then just as I was about to go to
sleep, satisfied I was going to be in for the night,
dreaming of packages tightly wrapped, bounded by masking
tape on all sides, absolutely unopenable by human hands,
the doorbell rang. At first I thought I was dreaming.
I can’t tell you how many times doorbells have
rung in my dreams. But this one kept ringing like someone
wanted to get into my dream or at least get me out of
it, until I had to admit to myself it was no dream at
all but that someone was actually ringing my doorbell
downstairs.
Once
when I was growing up a doorbell rang in the middle
of the night. All of us became paralyzed with fear.
"Who is it?" my mother asked. No one answered,
"It’s him," my father said. "He
must have come." "Who?" we asked him.
"Don’t you know?" my father asked us.
"Him. He’s come for me." We went for
his pants. But it was too late. He had made up his mind.
He pushed us away. We watched helplessly as he put them
on. He looked dangerous. There was fire in his eyes
and mustard stains on his pants. He unlocked the door.
A cold blast of air hit us from the west and he was
gone. "Maybe it was a package," my mother
said. "You know how he feels about packages."
We did know, but we didn’t want to think about
it. We waited all night, then days, then weeks, but
he never came back. Finally, my mother locked the door.
The single lock, then the double lock. After this we
never received another package. Our doorbell never rang
again. Even old Mr. Goldblatt had disappeared from our
street. It had become known as the street of no packages.
And
now, again, after so many years, there was the ringing
in the middle of the night. I moved towards my pants
but just at the point where if I extended my arm full
length I could grab them off the chair, I stopped. I
felt that if I moved another inch either back towards
the door or forward towards the chair, I would trip
some invisible wire and explode. The doorbell rang.
Then it rang again. Twice more. "It’s here,"
I thought to myself. "It’s for me."
Shots
rang out. I ducked but still didn’t move. I heard
the sounds of cattle stampeding, men shouting, whips
lashing, pots and pans crashing. Somewhere in the distance
a T.V. was playing my father’s favorite Western.
"It’s all your fault. You started this!"
a voice said. Then there was the kind of music like
when there’s a struggle, and another voice said,
"You don’t want to live very long, do you?"
The doorbell rang. Another shot rang out. "I’ll
see you at the bottom of Diablo Canyon," a voice
said. It sounded just like my father. I grabbed my pants
but they did not give, as if my father himself were
there pulling them away from me. "You don’t
want to live, do you? You don’t want to live,"
he kept saying that night, pushing us away, putting
on his pants, running out the door. And then I remembered
it was my mother who said, long after my father was
gone, and only then under her breath, "It’s
you. It’s all your fault. You started this."
The
doorbell rang. The pants hadn’t moved, so again
I went for them. "You do want to live! You do want
to live don’t you?" I cried out to them, pulling
and pulling, until finally they were mine.
Putting
them on, I stumbled towards the radiator. The socks
were dry now, dry as a bone and so hot I could hardly
touch them, but despite this I put them on, despite
a small voice in the back of my head that said, "Why
now? There’s always tomorrow, isn’t there?"
Despite all this, I moved towards the door, unlocked
the double lock, the single lock, opened the door; a
cold blast of air hit me from the west. Where I was
going I couldn’t say, but the pants, certain of
their destiny, drove me on, through the hallway, down
the stairs, over the package that nearly blocked my
way through the front door, down the street, straight
ahead, and only once in a while did I crane my neck
to see it, the package, as it began to diminish, and
then, finally, to disappear from my sight.

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