lightbulb. A faulty switch. A problem with the wiring.
I stand in the kitchen, swallowing the last of a Mountain Dew, one shoe on and one shoe off, stepping into the second of the black sneakers, when I see a spasm of light from across the street. On. Off. On. Off. Like an involuntary muscle contraction. A charley horse. A twitch, a tic.
On. Off.
And then itâs done and Iâm not even sure if it happened anymore or if it was just my imagination playing tricks on me.
Pops is on the sofa when I go, his arms and legs spread out in all directions. Thereâs an open bottle of Canadian whiskey on the coffee tableâGibsonâs Finestâthe cap lost somewhere in the cushions of the sofa, or clutched in the palm of a clammy hand probably. Heâs snoring, his chest rattling like an eastern diamondback. His mouth is open, head slung over the arm of the sofa so that when he finally does wake upâhungover, no doubtâheâs sure to have a kink in his neck. The stench of morning breath fills the room, exuding like car exhaust from the open mouthânitrogen, carbon monoxide and sulfur oxides flowing into the air, making it black. Not really, but thatâs the way I picture it, anywayâblackâas I hold a hand to my nose so I donât have to smell it.
Pops wears his shoes still, a pair of dark brown leather boots, the left one untied, frayed laces trailing down the side of the sofa. He wears his coat, a zippered nylon thing the color of spruce trees. The stench of old-school cologne imparts to me the details of his night, another pathetic night that would have gone scores better had he thought to remove his ring. The man has more hair than a man his age should have, cut short, and yet bushy on the tops and sides, a russet color to tag along with the ruddy skin. Other men his age are going bald, thinning hair or no hair at all. Theyâre getting fat, too. But not Pops. Heâs a good-looking guy.
But still, even in sleep, I see defeat. Heâs a defeatist, a calamity much worse for forty-five-year-old men than love handles and receding hairlines.
Heâs also a drunk.
The TV is on from last night, now playing early-morning cartoons. I flip it off and head out the door, staring at the dumped home across the street where I saw the light coming just a few minutes ago. On, off. Itâs a minimal traditional home, school-bus yellow, a concrete slab in place of a porch, aluminum siding, a busted roof.
No one lives in that house. No one wants to live there any more than they want to have a root canal or an appendectomy. Many winters ago, a water pipe froze and burstâor so we heardâfilling the inside with water. Some of the windows are boarded up with plywood, which some of the wannabe gangs defaced. Weeds choke the yard, asphyxiating the lawn. A rain gutter hangs loosely from the fascia, its downspout now lying defunct on the lawn. Soon it will be covered with snow.
It isnât the only house on the street thatâs been abandoned, but it is the one everyone always talks about. The economy and the housing market are to blame for the other rotten, forsaken homes, the blight that abraded the rest of our homesâ value and made a once idyllic nabe now ugly.
But not this one. This one has its own story to tell.
I ram my hands into the pockets of a gray jacket and press on.
The lake this morning is angry. Waves pound the shores of the beach, sloshing water across the sand. Cold water. It canât be more than thirty-five degrees. Warm enough that it hasnât thought to freeze, not yet, anywayânot like last winter when the lighthouse was plastered with ice, Lake Michiganâs swell frozen midair, clinging to the edges of the wooden pier. But that was last winter. Now itâs fall. Thereâs still plenty of time for the lake to freeze.
I walk a body length or two away from the lake so my shoes donât get wet. But still, they get wet. The water