Death Chronicles

The Death Chronicles

Diane’s sister, Patti, was diagnosed with breast cancer at 42 and died at 50. Her illness nearly destroyed Diane, and it carved up our marriage. We worked in tandem to do our part to care for Patti, from her first treatment through her remission and on until she died, a shriveled version of the former long-tressed and sometimes topless bareback rider. Patti’s misery and anger at her illness were understandable, but less so her need to wrap those feelings around those closest to her. 

Patti’s stomach defined her illness. She vomited food, pills – everything – including her anti-nausea medicine. Rare was the visit when we didn’t watch her wretch. A year before she died, we celebrated Thanksgiving, not in our dining room with linen table cloths, flowery centerpieces, and the chatter of multiple conversations, but at their neighbor’s in NH, serving turkey and gravy and bottles of scotch.

I remember our last Thanksgiving together as Patti sat motionless with that vacant stare of someone with a forever more nightmare. I sat with her that night, and she told me she’d been haunted by a dream during her last hospitalization. Patti said she shivered on a cold steel table in an airport hangar, with people passing by, ignoring her. A nurse approached and told her she had no blood and then turned off her I.V. Patti couldn’t escape the dream; she couldn’t shake the loneliness, which felt to her like death. Too sick to last the evening, we drove Patti back home to her own bed and left her … alone? 

Patti’s vacant look informed her sister Diane’s every subsequent decision about her treatment – terrified she would die the same empty death as her sister.

With Matt, our son, and Diane’s mother, Florence, in the backseat, Diane, haunted by Patti’s stare, cries all the way home. We drop Matt off with his grandmother, and as soon as we pull into our driveway, Diane steps out of the car and howls. I can bear her tears but not the sounds of a dying animal caught in a leg trap. I gaze at the stars, the high, thin clouds scudding past the moon, and feel trapped in my nightmare as Diane’s wails echo. She flees outside for refuge in the downstairs bathroom but cries for hours lying on the hard linoleum floor. I can do nothing to console her. It was the worst day of her life, yet she had another year of Patti’s misery to face. She knew it, and I knew it.

When Patti’s cancer returned, sometime before that Thanksgiving, we called her husband, Peter, and told him we’d help tell his girls, Kate, sixteen, and Emma, thirteen, that their mother’s disease would now end her life. We sat down at their dining room table, Peter and the girls on one side and Diane and I on the other, gingerly explained the unexplainable. “Your mother’s cancer is back, and she probably won’t get better.” Kate sobbed, and Emma looked at her sister and cried too.

During Patti’s last months, we visited her weekly at home or in the hospital. When we weren’t caring for Patti, I’d drive to Indiana to help my dying mother contend with my crazy, angry father and my soon-to-be crazy, angry siblings. Months passed, and as Patti withered, so did my mother. I was convinced they would die the same day, but Patti died in November ’05, and my mother did not until July.

I became Diane’s only target during much of Patti’s last year. She felt I didn’t support her when she disciplined our son, that I belittled her, that I scorned her. “You disdain me,” she said. Her words felt so foreign that I couldn’t help but laugh, which increased her rage.

My head was full of her yelling at me as we drove home after dinner with friends. I didn’t pay her enough attention; she’d say I was dismissive or mean in some way. That couldn’t be where her fury came from, but instead, alcohol and her grief about her sister. Minor transgressions, surely, don’t merit this. Diane’s gone, and I now see how right she was; I just couldn’t see over the walls I’d built and face my failings. I was passive-aggressive and, therefore, just as mean as she. We had a lifetime together: I’ll take half the blame.

Everyone, including her older sister, Susan, knew Diane drank too much – all they had to do was hear her slurred speech. I couldn’t stop her and was embarrassed to sit next to her as she spoke. It always happened: dinners here with Matt’s friends, dinners alone, meals out. One night, she fell down the basement steps and nearly broke her nose – her forehead bloody and her cheeks black and blue. I gave her no comfort; I was too angry. She stopped drinking for a short time.

September 03, 2005, a month before Patti died, Diane’s older sister, Susan, called me at 7:30 in the morning and said, “Michael, Jimmy died.” She explains that her husband woke up in the middle of the night after a full day of house-related projects, feeling not in pain but odd. Alarmed, Susan calls 911, and Jim dies while she is yelling, “I love you, please don’t die on me.” I refuse to wake Diane to tell her and instead wait until she comes down for breakfast two hours later. Diane stares at me in disbelief.

A month later, on November 08, Peter calls me as I’m rebuilding a porch, and hems and haws before he says, “Patti died. Can you tell Diane and Susan?” I say, of course, and I drive to Mclean to comfort Diane, who cries but is also relieved that Patti, after so many years, is finally free from pain. We go to New Hampshire with Matthew to see Patti one last time, and I reminisce about the thin, auburn-haired fifteen-year-old, her first marriage and photos I snapped in front of the screaming yellow forsythia, her second marriage to Peter, the birth of her two girls, but mostly about her last year, her final days. 

A month before the end, Sally, Patti’s lifelong friend, leaves her job and family to move into Patti’s house, where she sleeps on a mattress in the living room and helps Peter with round-the-clock care. The last week of Patti’s life is behind a drawn curtain. I watch Sally beg Patti to pee in bed. “Baby, just go in the bed. Fuck it, baby. Please, pee in the bed. Fuck it. Just fuck it.” Patti’s dignity prevents her, and I help Sally move that frail, pain-wracked body from bed to commode. I fully understand the pathos around me and feel my tenuous connection to reality. So much of what I see feels like the worst chapter from the worst book. Three months later, I’ll be helping my mother from her bed to her toilet.

The service for Patti was well attended by friends of Kate and Emma, Peter’s work friends, and many family members. Susan, too bereft by the loss of her husband a month before, can’t manage to travel east. I print photos of Patti: On her horse, at her wedding, of her with her children, bumming around California, under the quilt donated by her library friends as she lay dying, and glue them all to poster board. The funeral director walks me to the corner of the room, and I set up my gallery. After the service, we drive back to Peter’s house to share drinks and stories. Peter can’t force himself to bury his wife’s remains, though Patti had picked a spot in the yard under the shade of a growing tree. What’s left of her rests on a shelf in the closet with beer and winter jackets. 

In late June ’06, I returned to Indiana to look into hospice options for my mother. My younger brother, Peter, is exhausted from his round-the-clock care, and my father finally admits that he’s unable to manage his wife – he can’t possibly handle the toilet transfers from bed to commode. Peter finds a hospice center nearby, and I walk with my father, praying he simply gives up control and agrees to allow his wife to die there. My younger brother is obsessed with his mom dying the death he wants, in his control, and will resent this move.

The building is bordered by busy streets and single-family homes. The rooms are airy and have beds near sliders that face the outside courtyard, fountains, flowers, and birds flapping in bird baths. This is a place I know my mother will love and which looks ideal to me. My father reluctantly, at first, agrees, but when he learns that insurance will cover the costs he smiles broadly. A wealthy enough man but forever the child of the depression.

My mother moved to the Hospice where she’s loved by staff, serenaded by friends with cello and flute, given massages, and visited endlessly. We’re all happier except my younger brother, who feels alienated from the process (“Hospice was meant to be a respite only, not the place where she’d die!), and then my sister, Joan, arrives. I’ve urged her to come to see her mother before she dies, as Joan’s absence the last year has been troubling. I’d ask my mother, “Where’s Joan?” and she’d turn her palms up. However, Joan wars with my brother, Peter, over appropriate nursing care, and with my brother Brian and me over the money, we agreed to pay Peter for his time. It’s vicious and public and unwarranted, and as my mother dies, so does Joan’s relationship with her brothers, whom she will later accuse of killing her father and trying to steal his assets.

The last year of Helen’s life was a gift to us all. She rarely complained; she exercised by walking around her block and did so even as her last aided walks were better measured on the face of a sundial. Friends who stop in to make her feel better leave feeling better themselves. As Caroline, one of her caregivers, said, “Your mother wakes up in the morning with vomit on her shirt and all she wants to talk about it what she learned from last night’s This Old House. Today it was how to make mortise and tenon joints. It’s as if her life is a juicy peach and she’s determined to suck every last drop from it.” 

Two weeks before she dies, Helen slips into what looks like a coma, but most probably was too much morphine. I assume this is the end of her, but when a friend visits and plays his flute, she opens her eyes. That afternoon, Helen gathers her husband, two sons, and Diane at her bedside, asking for reassurance that we’d all be okay if she left. She’s worried about her cat and her husband, and then she turns to me and says, “I worry the most about you.”  

I need to get back to work, so I fly home to Acton, and I’m on the job when my cell phone rings. I put down my saw, looked at the caller ID, and knew my mother’s gone. Our family friend, Bambi, is gracious and sad, and I thank her for what was a difficult phone call. I sit down, stand up, sit down again, then decide to continue working. When I arrive home hours later, I talk to Diane about her work and Matthew’s school, and then she says.” Have you heard anything about your mother?” I say, “She died.” Diane says, “What, you weren’t going to tell me?”

I bought more poster board, printed more photographs, drove to Indiana, found a caterer, and arranged a memorial service for my mother in a nearby community center. At the end of the evening, which included countless tributes, I drive to the house of longtime family friends three blocks from my father’s house. The weather in southern Indiana in mid-July can wring the life out of you, but this night is only hot, and I’m carried on the currents of the love shown to my mother. As I’m standing alone under the tall oaks, my ninety-two-year-old father shuffles past and asks if I’d like to join him on his walk.

I assume we’ll review the night’s events, but my father never mentions his wife or the service. Instead, he asks me to help him regain control of his life. He wants me to consolidate his bank accounts and probate my mother’s will, and he muses about how long it will be before my sister and her husband leave his home. We walk together past the park with the swing sets and his favorite library made of stone, over to the store-lined street with smelly buses, and then back towards his house. We hurry past the last traffic light, and then he slows, bends over, and grips his dangling left arm. He looks stricken, frightened, and hurt, and he kneads his arm as if to rub the pain away. Vomit drips from his mouth, beads of sweat forming on his brow, and I look at him and say, “My father is dying in front of me, three days after my mother.”  

I think back to sitting on the rocks at Halibut Point thirty-eight years ago after I’d pulled myself from the waves, unable to rescue my brother, Peter, who’d been washed off the rocks by stormy February seas. ?I’m watching my brother drown.? Will the waves of pain recede and let my father live another day as the waves mercifully brought Peter back to shore? I walk away and phone for an ambulance, but by the time the flashing lights appear, my father recovers and stares at me in disbelief and then in anger. He rejects all medical help, and we walk to his house in the dark.

Seven months later, my father underwent, at ninety-two, open heart surgery. I arrived soon after his operation, and he greeted me warmly. It was the first I’d seen in years. He knew I’d come to see him just as I had so many times to care for my mother. I knew he thought he would get better, but I knew he wasn’t, that he was doomed the minute he decided to have his surgery. Maybe he was doomed anyway – his angina was so severe he couldn’t walk that block without chest pain.

His kidneys fail, and he acquires the sometimes fatal bacterial infection C-Diff. The recovery course from that disease is arduous, so besides the maze of tubes, machines, and wires keeping him alive, he also requires a catheter in his anus to evacuate his fecal matter. He in bed is a ghastly sight for me. A man of strong will and determination suddenly reduced to the now-small dying man he is. He’s unable to speak, and he can move only his arms. He flexes his long fingers and massages his spindly and bruised forearms because he wants to live, and his hands are all he can move. He never leaves his hospital bed. 

For days, I sit in his ICU room and read the paper. I look at him, but I can barely say a thing. I’m angry at him, my brother, for letting this happen and the doctors for cracking open his frail chest. I’m angry that the last fifteen years have been a waste because my father withdrew from me after my son’s birth. He’d become a diminished version of himself, reclusive and full of rage. As his bones shrunk, so did his world, and he turned more verbally abusive to my mother.

My mother’s skin turned yellow and papery as she lost weight, just like Patti, and she suffered in that last year. I’d visit, and she’d ask me to turn her heating pad on to warm her cold feet, and my father would turn the heat off. She’d ask for vegetables, and he’d mix in potatoes, which made her sick. She wanted fresh air and outside sounds, and he’d lock the windows. I’d drive those eleven hundred miles, and he’d smile only the night before I left. His refrigerator was full of moldy food he’d boil and eat. At the same time, he’s berating his wife and calling her foul names; he’s mowing his neighbor’s lawn and cleaning out their gutters. He’s as hard on his family as he is gracious to friends.  

I left my father’s bedside, and he died ten days later, still unable to talk, but not before my sister visited and told him that he was dying because of what his sons did to him. 

My father died other than he lived. His fierce independence manifested by his ability to simultaneously put three kids in college and build the transformer that ran our train set, paint our house, and pour his own concrete driveway. He trusted a few people, and none of them were doctors. I don’t know why he let some people in; I know how he excluded them: by his perception of incompetence and their intent. He’d kvetched about his own death and limited lifespan since he was seventy-two, the same year his grandson was born. As his wife lay dying, he talked about “predeceasing her.” After she died, he brightened as if he could finally see a future. In his exuberance, he let his guard down, he opened himself to others, and his trust was betrayed. As he would have known. 

Seven months later, my mother died; I bought more poster boards, printed more photos, and set up my father’s memorial service, providing food and time for testimonials. Most of the same people attend. 

My mother’s ashes were scattered, but what do I do with my father? I drove him to Kansas with no family in Indiana and buried him. I found the old family plot, arranged to have the hole dug, rented a van long enough to hold his coffin, and enlisted my brother, Peter, and my wife, Diane, in this journey back in time. We drive west for eleven hours, and I’m haunted by my father’s dead in his coffin in the rental van, but I’m convinced what I’ve undertaken is right and good. We drive into the cemetery with the iron gate and the huge maple tree that hangs like a weeping willow and pull up to the freshly dug grave. 

We meet Keith, who’s trucked in the concrete vault and will lower my father into the ground, and he looks at us, puzzled. Where’s the minister, the men from the funeral home, the hearse, and all of this man’s friends and family? I say it’s just us. Keith says the grave is too small, and the vault won’t fit. I could jump in and help dig it out, but Keith calls the gravedigger, and an hour later, it’s ready. I help set up the lowering device, after which we lug the coffin from the van to the vault and ease my father into his grave. Keith closes the vault lid, and I stare at the ground, at the rolling prairie, keeping my back to his hometown that is now a sepia photograph of despair. I’m back on the cusp of reality and ask myself, “Will this ever end?” On our drive back to Indiana, back pain causes Diane to fidget in her seat.

I thought, Diane thought, that after my father died, we’d have time to heal our relationship. Jimmy gone, Patti gone, Helen gone, Mack gone, now it’s just us with Matt away at Temple. Maybe it was false hope, but we’ve no time because Diane’s back pain is caused by breast cancer, which has spread to her bones. At our first oncology visit, her doctor points to her cancer sites. She says here, and here and here, and in my head, I’m screaming – stop. Then she says, and here and here, and here and here, I can no longer breathe. Then her blond physician, with blue eyes and what we later learn is a heart of compassion, says there are tumors in Diane’s liver. Diane is dead; she knows it, I know it. 

The oncologist leaves us alone, and I put my head in Diane’s lap and tell her we’re in this together. Hollow words because she’s dying, I’m not. On the way home, Diane says she’s glad it’s her cancer. She says she’s lived a good life, and she’drather not be me. We both dread what we must tell our son, and at home, we pull him away from his friends, into her room, and close the door.

We make frequent trips to our beloved ocean. We find motels with windows that face the sea, we leave our footprints in the sand, and we reminisce about the past: Our motorbike rides in Bermuda where the tops of her hands were burnt by the sun, and her whoops of delight, as we sped along the winding roads, joined mine. We remember the thief in Jamaica, our campsites on the verdant bluffs in Nova Scotia, and the turtle skull in Belize. Private memories mean little to others but the world to us.

At home, we’re careful about what we tell Matthew. We talk about her cancer, her health, her treatment. Diane takes her medicine religiously and exercises in whatever water is nearby – all as if there is a future – and we remain in full survival mode until she’s no more. We don’t forgive each other or make up for past grudges, but she knows I love her, and she is gentle with me. I nurture her daily as she fully and consciously manages her treatment.

Diane dies remorseful that her mother’s care was left to me, that she had to lie about her illness, and that Flo would die alone, but not before another daughter. Diane slips away in our bed Friday night during Matthew’s birthday party, but her heart beats until Sunday morning at about 5 AM. I awake then and know she’s dead beside me because I can feel the stillness. I can’t bear to touch her to confirm what I know. I close my eyes and beg for more sleep. That morning, my friend Jennifer brought Starbucks, as she had every morning that week. She drinks Chai, I drink decaf, and she asks:

“Sit inside or out,”

“On the deck,” I answer.

“Don’t forget the baby monitor.”

“We don’t need it anymore.”

Jennifer helps me phone people who come to see Diane before the men dressed in black take her away. Karen O’Neil arrives, and she sits with Matthew on his bed. She tells him his mother is no longer there. Various close and not-so-close friends come to say goodbye, and the hearse enters the driveway. Two men walk up the stairs to our bedroom, wrap Diane in the blue satin sheets Karen bought for us and two of our pillows, and zip her into a body bag. They ask about her wedding ring, and I say leave it on. I drift back to three years ago when the same men came for Patti after Kate steeled herself for one last kiss on her mom’s forehead after I and others saw her for the final time. I remember her stoic husband, Peter, who gave so much; I remember how, as Patti’s hearse pulled away, he walked into the dark and wailed.

I’ve lived with this different, this dead Diane for hours, and I can barely look at her. She reminds me of her sister, who is less gaunt but just as dead. Still, before they take her away, I ask for one last look. The funeral home guy unzips the body bag, and I kiss Diane on the forehead. I say goodbye.

Our memorial service for Diane is held at a Unitarian church in Lexington. Diane’s poster board and photographs are provided by friends, and it is attended by scores of people. When we finish, we drive to the cemetery where Diane, in her casket crafted by dear friends Adam, Mark, Dan, Tricia, and Amy, is borne by six women and then lowered into the ground. Five women her age – her peers, her dear friends – and one girl Matthew’s age. I shovel earth on her coffin and reflect on our trip to Kansas with my father a year and a half ago. How could I be burying my wife so soon after my father? How can I be burying her without her help?

I did everything I could. I juggled work when needed, and I stopped working. I cooked, cleaned, provided, nourished, and nursed Diane and watched over Matthew. I owed it to Diane because she would have done the same for me. I loved her, and she loved me. Everyone knew that. 

Less than five months later, Diane’s mother dies in bed in her nursing home. One of Diane’s many worries was that her mother would die alone, so I sat with Florence all day on Friday and watched her breathless periods grow. Matt had said goodbye the night before, and Ginger had sat with me for part of the day. I left for dinner, and when I returned at 7 PM, Flo was warm but dead. I walked down the corridor to summon a nurse, and Liz greeted me with, “The choral group just sang to Flo, and they said they’ll come back to sing again tomorrow. I said, “There’s no need.”

To add or not:

Craig Anderson, Diane’s high school boyfriend and close friend, dies of stomach cancer a year before she does.

Roland, an oddly close relationship for me, died in May before my mother in July.

Bill Perkins dies December 08

Roland’s son Chris hangs himself

Polly’s dying and death on November 09

Susan’s estrangement, and Peter and Joan’s.

Flo’s broken hips and continuous care. Diane’s sadness that she will die before Flo. Diane’s burden.

I Meant To

Matt, I’ve got something to show you. This is a warning from Costco. Let me read it. Fresh Food Concepts is recalling Roja’s Layer Dip because the guacamole might have Listeria Monocytogenes. Listeria is the leading cause of death from food-related bacteria. How stupid is it to send a letter? By the time you read this, you’re dead.
I know. I didn’t eat the dip.
I ate the stuff, and I finished it. Wait, you knew what?
I got the phone call.
Phone call?
I didn’t tell you?
Tell me what?
That they called. I meant to. I told Sarah.

Our House

To anyone who has ever asked me if they kept me up, to all of Matt and Hilary and Hannah’s friends, pretty much to anyone under the age of twenty-seven.

Many of you knew Matt’s mom, my wife, Diane, and some did not. Diane and I grew up together. I consider my life before Diane to be playful years. We gave each other crisis comfort in addition to play, and we figured out together how to cope with the hard-edged stuff outside of us that we called the real world. I met Diane on the last leg of my 14,000-mile hitch-hiking journey (see what I mean about play) after I arrived on my brother’s doorstep in Cambridge. I thought I was passing through town on my way back to Indiana.

When I knocked on my brother’s door at some wee-ass hour, having mooched my last ride at a rest stop on the Mass Pike, Brian didn’t answer. His Native American worshipping, left-leaning (both politically and physically), ganja-smoking, self-centered mountain man of a roommate did.

Brian dodged the draft by joining Vista, as John had done. They met in Oregon. They both turned their backs on Vista and drove east together. I don’t remember why they chose this fair state, a girlfriend perhaps, or a dart thrown at a map? Our lives, back then, were chaotic compared to many of yours, with careers yet unknown, and the future (beyond the war) rarely considered.

Diane graduated from Wellesley College and moved to Somerville. She shared her first apartment with her college roommate, Ginger Candee, and Shirley, a friend from back home. However, that union was short-lived. Ginger was already sharing Brian’s bed when I came to town in September. Good for me because I needed a place to sleep, and I moved into Ginger’s empty room. I think I thought I was always going home, which is why I kept it so empty. A friend referred to the style as “Early Nothingness.” Much like my bedroom today. A thin wall separated me from Diane and Rich, her love and a graduate of Fordham. He was destined to be a government lawyer and an ex-boyfriend. Who would have guessed that this classical music-loving, rule-following valedictorian would choose me, a long-haired, bell-bottomed, rootless hippie? Like my bedroom, I haven’t changed much.

Diane explained her attraction to me, “You’re not boring.” Rich was the lamppost outside, and I was the unassembled parts for who-knows-what.

Shirley moved within that first year, and that left Diane and me sharing our space with a succession of roommates … nine, I think, only two of whom were men. Yeah, even then. When we moved to Littleton in 1978, we shared that apartment with three different roommates, all guys this time. We lived a communitarian life with people constantly drifting in and out. We grew our first garden and enjoyed watching the antics of the drunken college-age kids next door. We bought our house in Acton four years later with our friend Dan. He moved out and sold his share to another friend, John, who left when he married Ruth. Finally, we had enough money to own the house without roommates.

I trust these details aren’t too boring. I think they’re important to our story. How does one house on Central Street become a place of refuge, love, joy, and shared sorrow? Most so-called hippies boomeranged back to their roots and became knockoffs of their parents. Diane and I did not. We both continued to value friends and family over our occupations and shiny objects. We all know that Diane would approve of her house transformed. Though she loathed rugs, we know she would have loved to see the floors carpeted by your bodies.

I’m a guy from the fifties. My role models were my father, who wore his belt not just to hold up his pants, and Charles Bronson, who never met an emotion he couldn’t suppress unless it was murderous rage. My parents were liberal and accepting (for example – I slept with my college girlfriend at home way back then). Neither parent seemed at ease with the word love. Diane taught me how to love. She showed me I didn’t need to keep my father’s distance from Matt’s friends. I watched Diane with so many of you: she played, she listened, she advised, and she accepted you as you are.

Now, our house is mostly just Matt and me. I do love that, but, you know, I did love having you all share it as if it were your own home with fewer rules. Though you don’t share my last name, I feel you should. I’m writing this after listening to Thanksgiving night’s sounds of laughter and conversation, minus the breaking of dishes and the booming baritones on the back deck. I know you’ll be back, and there will be other times when I wake up to bodies strewn about in outrageous positions. I also know an era has passed. I am sad but happy. Happy for the growth I see in you all.

Back to Pahrump?

Ken Langer teaches music theory, lives in Maynard with his wife and daughter, and has written eighteen books on paganism. I met him at Sweet Bites, our local coffee shop. Ken usually stops between dropping his daughter off at daycare and driving to work. He typically sits alone with his laptop and his latest inspiration. Our group, not so productively inclined, shares stories and laughter. Ken, not quite as focused as I thought, joined the verbal fun from afar, and after a while, he permanently moved to our table and stopped writing.

Last June, Peter Langer, Ken’s eighty-year-old but very active father disappeared. Peter still regularly collected fossils, carved wood, traded stocks, and ran his apartments. Peter lived a solo life, so days went by before anyone noticed his absence. It seems he just got up from fixing his clock at his kitchen table and vanished. No trail. He left no credit card expenses, bank withdrawals, or sightings of his bobbing head above the sagebrush. 

If you enter his home now, you will walk past a row of scruffy boots, all the same style, all near their discard date and all loosely laced, just as he wore them. Always up before dawn, he’d step into his shoes and out into the desert, sometimes stopping to feed the neighborhood hounds or bark back at them. Two hours later, he’d return and greet his neighbor, Sam, who loved to tinker in his garage, crafting custom motorcycles from parts he found at the junkyard.

I know what I know about Peter from Ken, from Peter’s neighbor, Sam, from Peter’s apartment manager, Mike, and the detective assigned to the case, another Mike. I flew out to Pahrump, Nevada, in late October because I knew in my heart that I could find Peter. Oh, just as I knew I could save Diane’s life by putting my hand on her forehead. I failed both times, but I don’t feel a need to pat myself on the head because I know I’m delusional. 

Ken, not so woven into the fabric of his fantasies, will someday fly to his father’s town, walk the desert cairn trail Sam and I found (the perimeter of Peter’s property is peppered with cairns), and then say his goodbyes. I want one last stab at finding Peter, but I can’t fly out there again. That town taps into my run-from-at-all-costs dark side. However, I can send my friend, Chris Grosjean (Goose). He will be in Tahoe in January, and it’s only a short flight to Pahrump. To better understand the man he is tracking, Goose will sleep in Peter’s house, talk to Sam and Mike, and then walk far past the end of the cairn trail to the caves I did not have the time to explore. 
I figure it’ll cost about $800.00 to send Goose and maybe a friend if he can find another curious soul. I can’t afford all the expenses; I spent enough last October, so I’m asking you all for small donations. People raise funds to walk across Antarctica. This trip has real meaning for lots of people. So please make a small donation, whatever you can, to Goose. Thank you on behalf of Ken, his lost dad, Peter, and myself.
Michael

All donations:
¨Chris Grosjean¨
54 Central St.¨Acton, MA 01720

The End?

John didn’t wait for me this morning to ring his door bell. He strode right up to my car.

“Did you hear the helicopter? It flew over these fields this morning for almost two hours. They started at Pete’s house and covered he same territory we did. I thought you had something to do with it.”

“Didn’t hear a thing. I ate breakfast at 6 and went back to bed.”

“We won’t find out till next week why they were here. I don’t know if you know but our paper comes out only twice a week. I saw the pilot and two guys swooping back and forth above the telephone lines, right where we walked. They had to be looking for someone.”

“I wish they’d done that yesterday. I’m still pulling thorns out of my socks and clearing my throat of dust. So now what do we do? I was going to suggest we follow up on yesterday and walk the fields again.”

“If there was someone down there they would have seen him.”

And that’s how, heat and clockwork be damned, we ended up back at the water tower. I called Ken to check again on Pete’s last journal entry and it hadn’t changed. “He wrote he’s gonna test himself by walking to the water tower.” This time I parked not at the tower but below it and spied a distinct cairn trail. We followed the cairns back towards the mountains alternately talking ourselves in and out of believing they were Pete’s.

And, to repeat myself, that’s why this hunt is so aggravating. There are no declarative clues. Not a one. There is no right direction to go. Only theories, only sentences with question marks. Not to be too graphic but four months later we’re limited to nothing but guess work. No black spiral of birds, and nothing to smell. We have sight and that is it. I can’t even, in good faith, raise money to send Goose and his friend, John, down here. What would I tell them? Don’t look where I’ve looked even though he could have been five feet to my left or right. Go to the water tower because of a journal entry but disregard Sam’s advice about the scorching heat that week. Look for cairns in the desert because Pete has them in his yard, but ignore those in the nearby trailer park? Go north to the Test Site because a psychic told me to?

I didn’t expect to find Ken’s father when I decided to come here, but I’m very disappointed. As I said to Sam, “Other than happiness, I’ve never looked so hard for anything.”

Routine

The hunt

James and I walked for five hours yesterday. We prowled the neighborhood’s open fields, following paths Pete would walk, veering from those paths to scour drainage ditches many of which are now full of tumbleweeds. Today, we’ll do more of the same though my legs may protest and drive themselves to the airport.

James, with his wife and three daughters, moved from Germany to Nevada to retire. Married twenty-seven years his wife promptly ran off with another woman. James ended up living out of his car before moving into the house across the street from Pete. James’ father built houses in Germany which is why James acquired a union job excavating. Not limited to heavy machines, James is an all-trades guy who knows when to use who and whom. While building a motorcycle from junk yard parts he whistled Pete over one day and shared his bottled water. Fast but respectfully distant friends.

James is an outside neighbor and he knows Pete’s routine which is, as he says, clock setting. Out of the house every morning at 5 and back by 7:30.

“That field over there. I’d see Pete’s headed bobbing above the sage brush. Over there too, but he’d walk anywhere, always off the road. He’d come back with fossils, scraps of wood, all kinds of things. You saw that big rock in his yard? Has fossils in it. It must weigh eighty pounds, he brought that back from the water tower. Two, three miles away. I said how, he said he stopped often. Sometimes I’d see him walking home, sometimes he’d return through my back yard. And the dogs? He’d bark at some and feed others. The neighbor over there had a pig. Pete fed the pig.”

James knows Pete’s habits and that’s why he always wanted the search concentrated in the fields near his home. The heat and the clockwork.

“That week was hot. 110 degrees. He never would have walked to the tower. Look how far away it is. He always came back before the heat. He tripped and fell or had a heart attack or was bitten by a snake. Something. He’s not far away. Some people said he hitched rides. I never saw it. He turned them down from me. I’d be driving back from Smith’s and I’d offer but he’d say no.”

Our conversation while scuffling through the sage brush was peppered with speculation. Every sentence ended in a question mark. Pete could be anywhere and by the end of the day even James’ optimism was covered in desert dust. The fields which look dense at street level are not so from horseback, and many are scarred by ATV tire tracks.

And, by the end of the day it’s impossible not to think about a foul ending. Both Sam and I began the day knowing Pete fell in a field, but by the end of the day we were far less certain. All born of rumor, newspaper clippings, John’s comments about abusive tenants and our real frustration at the sad futility of it all.

Home

Do you want to walk a step or two in Ken’s shoes? Meet him, read his books,  and then meet Pete’s friend, John. Buy John coffee and chat with him as long as it takes for him to smile. Listen to his stories about living in Las Vegas before the corporations moved in, his part in the movie “Casino,” his classmate Danny Liston, his love for his dogs and his love for his missing friend. “They’re two guys in town who look like Pete. Same desert colored clothing. I swear I catch a glimpse and I think it’s Pete.” Listen to him talk about waiting four hours for the police to come to Pete’s house after his plaintive call. “He could have been hurt and alive in there. They didn’t know.”   Walk in the desert where Pete walked and then have Mike usher you into Pete’s home.  You’ll walk past a row of dusty boots waiting on the tiled floor near the front door, all unlaced, just as Pete wore them. Slip in, slip out.

Many people live as though their homes are always ready to sell. Their personality is displayed by the color of the walls, the style of the couch, the size of the TV. But their hobbies, work, daily hum drums, are all pristine and put away. You enter their house and the emotional toggle of work shoes worn thin, mantels cluttered with carvings and fossils, desktops caressed by maps and reference books, a kitchen counter holding Saran Wrap and motor oil, is absent.

Not Pete’s house. His table tops aren’t Pledged to show off a salt shaker, but are covered with maps, tools, various things he was working on. Don’t misread this. The house is not a mess, the house is a display of Pete’s life in June. His interests his hobbies. Just like my dad’s basement, disorder to some, but completely comprehensible to the only person to whom it mattered. The presence of Pete in that house makes moving past those shoes  stomach tightening. Time has stopped.  The dissembled watch will never again show the correct time, the wood carving of the Grand Canyon will always lack the south rim, the dishes in the sink will be washed and put away but not by Pete.  That home is a still life.

Closer to Home

 

I’ve become quite fond of the water tower area. I know the terrain, I know approximately where I’ve looked, I know where the cairns are, and I know it’s safe. I could stray for miles but because the land rises the water tower and the town below are always in view.Today, John (above)introduced me to Pete’s neighbor, James, and I’m going to follow James’ advice and look closer to home. He watched Pete walk through surrounding vacant lots every morning carrying a cane to ward off the aggressive dogs and treats for those behind fences.  These  fields are denser than what’s above the water tower, and though the area is not as vast, it’s just as daunting. Maybe more so because the sight lines are so limited. Tomorrow morning I’ll meet James and he and I will walk together. Company’s good. The man’s got stories and he likes to tell them.

 

Click

Connect the Dots

What we think we know.

Peter wasn’t feeling well and his journal entry indicated a hope to walk to the water tower.

John, who managed Pete’s rental properties,  saw him shortly before his last walk and said he looked fine. Pete was his boss but also his friend, not his best friend, that’d be Smoky his dog.  John lives nearby and describes their neighborhood as dangerous – lots of crime fueled by heroin and meth addictions. Sam,  Pete’s neighbor,  saw my mysterious white rental car  and called Mike  instead of the police. No John to call and the cops would’ve been barking at me to come off Pete’s roof where I’d perched for a view of the ‘hood.

“Come down right now.”

“I’m Ken’s friend.”

“Down now.”

“Okay, you don’t have to yell.”

“Now.”

“Look, as you can see there is no ladder. I cobbled together parts of Pete’s life, an exercise machine, a piece of plywood, a short homemade ladder,  to climb up here. Unless you want me to jump it’ll be a while.”

John’s depressing view of Pahrumpians resonates. I’ll include people passing through.

I eat breakfast with folks who look just like you and me except for their jet black holstered sidearms. I tried to engage a guy, who looked like a mix of Wally Cox and my seventh grade science teacher, in a conversation about guns. “You’re here for firearms training? Tell me about that.” However, my smiley inquisitiveness, which serves me so well at Sweet Bites, put him in the en garde position. “What fascist militia do you represent,” I did not ask. I changed the subject, tried to find a common thread to alter his posture, but it wasn’t to be. I, of all people, nervously left the table. “Time to watch the sunrise,” or some such alibi or is it alilie?. I add this because I find myself curiously derisive  about what people are afraid of so when John called me I was still in my,  “Don’t be silly mood.”  That cheese pizza will kill you before the black, red, yellow, government – you pick ’em – hordes descend upon you.

Every time John tried to tell me how things really were in this city, I’d laugh, forcing him to find more crackheads, more beak ins, a kidnapping even, to get me to pay proper attention. Okay, Toto I’m not in Acton.  I went to sleep last night having lost my usual “mankind is all good” self. I awoke feeling the same until I met Lou, the retired juvenile probation officer from Connecticut, at Anytime Fitness. I walked in the door hunting for an employee while looking away from the sweaty bodies, and heard him say to the built-like-a-linebacker instructor, “The Patriots suck.”

This was my introduction to Lou. When he walked away from the only other guy in the room with bigger muscles, I said, “What do you mean the Patriots suck?” I know, for those of you who heard my Chillicothe “The Steelers suck” story,  you’re thinking I’m dining on my just desserts. But Lou was not malevolent he was just … cheerfully vacant. Good thing, huh? His mood helped momentarily reset my own.

Back to what we know.

I talked to Tom,  the detective assigned to the case, this morning. He started out all official,  but after a while I made him  chuckle. I understood his no nonsense attitude birthed from respect for Pete’s family and the need to appear he’s done absolutely all he could. I also know he’s suspicious of me and my judgments.

“Any air search?” I asked

“No money, no airfield, but we used horses and ATV’s. He may be out in the desert but we’ve not found a trace.”

“No fabric, no hat, no clothes blowing around.”

“No, and In this climate that stuff stays for awhile.”

“Interesting that you say that. I walked for six hours yesterday hoping to see something kept from its travels by prickly sage brush. I found one TV, a broken bottle or two, and mylar party balloons, the ones that say don’t release. There seems to be such respect for the environment. People on ATV’s  don’t toss their garbage.”

“Not there they don’t but go to the south side of town and you’ll see what looks like a homeless encampment. People drive their cars and boats into the desert and then set them afire.”

There is it again. I try to say something nice and I get something bad back. Even from the local cops who’d rather vent than keep up the Chamber of Commerce move-to-my-lovely-town facade. My mood was set early on when I got ripped off by a car-rental-cutie in Las Vegas who showed me her vitamin B-12 drops while she inflated my rental fee. Now the angry faces that won’t return my wave, the emphsyematous store clerks struggling to breathe and smile, the weathered tattoos on sagging bodies, the glaring neon signs for sex and slots,  John’s stories, Tom’s stories, the chain link electrified fences, the cars in front of me without plates, and the omnipresence of one family name pinned on motels, restaurants, and construction equipment, makes this one city I’ll be happy to leave.

Click to enlarge. Red pin is Pete’s house and blue one is the water tower.