I almost forgot I didn’t have a car here, but I didn’t mention it. I wasn’t going to start our new life by becoming helpless. I’d just call Portia and have her pick me up at the parking lot. She was probably still at Dairy Queen with the rest of the cast and crew.
“You go on. I need to do something first.” I grabbed my purse.
“What about this?” He picked up the locker key that must have fallen on the floor at some point.
“Keep it. I told you I was giving you your money back tonight.”
“And you’re just a model of truth and honesty.” He walked over to me and wrapped his arms around my waist, grinning.
“Just like you. We make a great couple.”
He gave me one last kiss to tide us both over until we could meet again and then he left. I started to reach for my phone, but became overwhelmed by euphoria. Everything flashed through my head, each moment and decision over the past year that had led me to this point in my life. I spun around a few more times, hugging myself, and then dug the camcorder out of my purse, eager to recount every last second of the miracle that just happened.
DEL / Saturday, May 10, 2008
WINIFRED BLEW up the barn on the morning of the fishing opener. Usually Bud and I spent this day motoring the patrol boat around Lake Crosby, catching a mess of crappies too little to do anything with besides throw back. We went to Lake Michigan later in July, between planting and harvest, when Bud could afford a week away and after I’d dried out the Fourth of July idiots. That was our serious fishing trip. The opener was just so we could feel the line casting out over the water.
The boys pulled practically all the lake patrol during the season. They confiscated alcohol and handed out tickets for not wearing life vests, but mostly worked on their tans. Everyone loved the lake shifts and I let the crew have them, except for the opener. That day had always been mine and Bud’s.
We hadn’t talked since I’d arrested Lund and Bud knocked me down. I wanted to call but didn’t know what to say, and the days kept filling up with county business. Tommy’d become erratic and was pulled over for drunk driving. His parents talked the judge into giving him leniency on account of his loss. The station had a tractor turn over on the highway, a complaint of livestock theft, and a ninety-year-old who knocked over a light pole because his car was in the wrong gear. I filled out the paperwork and set up the detours, feeling all the while like I should apologize to Bud and not knowing what for. I passed him in town once or twice and we both lifted a hand from our steering wheels and kept driving in different directions. Finally, after the arraignment, I signed Winifred’s permit and called him. I told him I’d be on the lake during the blast for security.
“I’m going with you,” Bud said, and hung up.
On the morning of the blast, we dropped the boat in and parked the cruiser in front of the entrance to the lot at 5:00 a.m., well before dawn. I posted the Lake Closed sign next to the newspaper notice on the gate.
“Warm already,” I commented as we pulled away from the dock.
Bud sat in the passenger seat, looking ahead at the black water. His face was unreadable as he nodded. “It’s gonna be a scorcher this year.”
Neither one of us spoke after that. The demo wasn’t scheduled for another hour, so I killed the motor and drifted into one of the better inlets, handing the bait to Bud. We cast out the lines in silence and waited. Every once in a while I turned to check the crew’s progress. They milled around the barn, a bunch of dark figures against the faint orange lightening up the horizon. A few days ago they’d strung up a net to catch the bits that were going to blast into the water, making it look like the barn was caught on a giant flyswatter.
Bud didn’t turn around. When he got a bite, he didn’t even pull the fish out. Pull it up, I wanted to say, but the words wouldn’t come. We both watched the line tug this way and that until the fish thrashed free of the hook and swam away.
After a while the sun showed its face, throwing the cattails and weeds into that hollow first morning light. I reeled in my line.
“It’s time.”
Bud followed suit and set his pole aside without comment.
“Better do one last sweep of the perimeter and then we can set up in the middle of the water. We’ll be well clear of the blast radius.”
He nodded.
I slowed down when we got to the launch, making sure nobody was trying to slip by the cruiser and set in anyway. There were plenty of cars lined up on the road, but folks were lounging on their hoods with binoculars—they’d come for the show. There’d been a lot of grumbling on the timing of the thing, and now no serious fishermen were bothering with the lake at all today.
I motored over toward the east side by the barn, giving the demo crew a quick nod to let them know we were clear.
“Fifteen minutes,” the foreman shouted from the bank. I waved and headed back to the middle of the lake.
Bud’s stare seemed to harden when we pulled up near the barn, but he still didn’t have a word to say. Even though we’d shared plenty of quiet moments over the years, most of that had come from my side. Bud had always been the one who reached out, ready with a joke or a story about the kids. I’d lived with my silence until it was like a wife to me and I didn’t think twice about it. Bud’s silence was unnatural. I didn’t know how to break through it. There was a barrier between us now, a hard place that used to be easy.
I positioned the boat and killed the motor. There wasn’t any breeze today, which was good. As the seconds ticked by, I couldn’t help tensing up, feeling that old nausea.