your sentence.â Hammy comes into the living room and stands before Earl.
âYou could be a little more grateful is all.â
âChrist, Iâm grateful all right. You make me laugh. Lecturing me on being grateful.â
Earl looks past Hammy around the room. The walls are grimy in spots. Workers walk past the unit, shovels on their shoulders, laughing in the sunlight. The fridge door is ajar, the coffee pot empty but the machine still on. âIâm getting some air.â
âThere you go. Run and hide. Nothingâs changed.â
âShut the damn fridge and turn off the coffee machine.â Earl goes outside, punts the plastic pail, and watches it sail across the yard and crash into the fence. He kicks over the toy dump truck. The workers have gone around the corner, but another wave of them sit on the back of a pickup, legs dangling off the tailgate. He reminds himself to bring Arlene flowers when he gets home; it seems like the right thing to do. Heâs not sure if she even likes flowers. He decides heâll bring her chocolate; what woman doesnât like chocolate?
VII
The drone of the TV fills the room as they eat dinner.
âYou still dancing?â Hammy says.
âWhat?â
âDancing. Two-stepping. Are you still dancing?â
âNo.â
âWhy not?â
âWhatâs it matter why? I gave it up.â
âWhy? No more room for all those trophies?â
Earl shakes his head.
âThen why?â
âNothing.â He feels the sting of his admission, another failure at sticking with something, and wishes Hammy would stop.
âDonât make sense to me, Earl. You were real good at it.Made you happy. Or at least it seemed that way.â
âDidnât have time no more. Not like you.â
Hammy pushes his plate aside, leans his forearms on the table and laughs. âLeast Iâm committed. Do my time, donât hurt no one.â
âUntil you get out.â
âThe good Lordâs keeping a watch on me. One day at a time, bro. Iâm doing my best. Thatâs all I can do. You might try it.â
âThe good Lord? Bad as any woman. Makes demands of you. Haunts your every move. Tells you whatâs right and wrong and punishes you for either, and then turns around and does whatever the hell He wants. Will let you down time and again, and if He donât, Heâll expect something in return, something you can never give âcause it ainât ever enough. Praise the Lord! Give thanks on ye, Lord! No way, little man. You hang onto Him, but the fact is, once you step outside of that fence, blinking like some dumbstruck lamb in the sunshine, standing in front of the pearly gates of heaven, youâre gonna fuck it all up. Sure as snow in January. And whereâs He gonna be then?â
Hammy stops smiling. He closes his eyes and tilts his head back, his face colourless and slack, as if his jawbone has been unhinged. Earl fears his brother might start to cry. Hammy opens his eyes and stares at the light bulb on the ceiling he had taken down when they first arrived. He takes a deep breath and tips his head forward to look at Earl. His eyes are damp, but still.
âYou know, Big E, the good thing about getting reacquainted with your own people is that you learn some new things about them, and you get to remember the old things you liked.â
âI was out of line.â
âThereâs nothing I can do about the past. Canât think about it, gotta move on, and live one day at a time.â He leans forward. âI try to look for the good and positive in everyone, including myself. Hell, it ainât easy. You should give it a shot, too.â
âSounds like your social workerâs been doing a tap dance on your head.â
âMaybe. I dunno. Itâs better than the alternative.â
âWhich is?â
âAnger. The bastard child of being all alone.â
VIII
Hammy