by Mike Lee
cool beer
Thomas
stared at the laptop screen as the news appeared on his Facebook page that
Maurice had passed away. He let the news sink in, and became unresponsive,
though not from surprise. Thomas knew Maurice was fading and was not expected to
make it through the weekend. He scrolled the comments of mourning, and attendant
accolades on the page, until he clicked away, and shut down. After closing his
MacBook, he rose to go into the kitchen and make a fresh pot of coffee. After
pouring a cup, he sat on the couch and contemplated his past with
Maurice.
Thomas
remembered when they worked together at the café, the one a block from Union
Square that had closed nearly a decade ago. Shortly after he moved to the city
Thomas got the job as a waiter.
Thomas
arrived in Brooklyn with resumes and a charcoal gray suit purchased at Goodwill,
with an obsessive-compulsive girlfriend and what turned out to be a delusional
belief of a career in editorial during an economic
recession.
Maurice
trained him as a waiter. He was in a similar situation; he came to the city to
be an actor. He was inspired to go into theater by his mother, who worked the
stage when she was young, mostly dinner theater in the west in the late 1950s
and early 60s. Maurice had laminated a newspaper clipping of her last theater
notice, which he used it as a bookmark to honor her and inspire his own
endeavors in the field. Thomas watched him stare occasionally at the bookmark;
pulling it from whatever book he was reading. Thomas assumed this was a ritual—a
good luck talisman.
The
play reviewed was a production of Ibsen’s A Doll’s House in Cheyenne, Wyoming,
and the visiting professional actor was Keenan Wynn. When he was a child,
Maurice told Thomas that he used to spend the evening watching television with
his mother. One night, during an episode of The Odd Couple, his mother gasped,
pointing at the screen.
“There
he is!” She shouted. “I worked with him before you were born!”
Spotting Keenan
Wynn was a personal connection to the entertainment industry, to dramatic
theater, in the years before her son’s existence, a life raising him while
working as a medical assistant and transcriptionist, the latter position she
held until she had a stroke.
While
cleaning up the house after his mother died, Maurice found her theater notice
performing Ibsen with Keenan Wynn in the Catholic Bible she kept on her
nightstand. The following year, Maurice moved to New York to pursue his dreams
of acting.
He
sometimes wondered if they had dated. Mom did date a lot, supposedly, before she
met his father several years later, in Las Vegas. The
father wasn’t Keenan Wynn. Maurice didn’t know much about him other than he was
an asshole and a criminal, and his father only saw him once when Maurice was a
baby.
He
held him briefly before handing him back to Mom and left shortly thereafter. His
mother told him that she put Maurice in his crib, gathered all the photographs
of his father and burned them with the fall leaves in the backyard of the house
they shared with Maurice’s grandparents.
Maurice
resembled his mother, so other than a vague description that he had sandy hair;
he knew nothing of his father’s appearance. Maurice did admit he shared his
rage, but his dreams of fame coincided with Mom’s. Therefore, he was an
actor.
These
stories he told Thomas after the lunch rush, while sitting in a booth, both
counting up their checks before clocking out and leaving the
restaurant.
Like
his mother, Maurice did a little dinner theater, performing in productions in
Westchester County and Long Island, returning to work at the restaurant after
the season ended.
*
* *
Thomas
got a full-time editorial job and quit the restaurant. Several months later he
broke up with his girlfriend and found a sublet in the Lower East Side. Maurice
helped Thomas move. It was a hot June afternoon, hauling boxes of books and
record albums up the flight of stairs to a shotgun apartment in an old tenement
building on Ludlow Street. Thomas paid him a hundred for his help, which helped
cover some debts Maurice had. He seemed to owe someone something. Usually it was
not a lot, but enough of a burden for him to notice by how desperate Maurice
overworked when carrying the boxes up the marble stairs into his new apartment,
and the gratitude he showed when Thomas handed him the
cash.
In
September of that year, Maurice stopped by the apartment and absent-mindedly
left the book he had been reading behind. Thomas meant to return it, but Maurice
missed the get-together, and at the following meet, Thomas forgot to bring the
book. Later, Maurice was offered another part in a community production of a Tom
Stoppard play in Poughkeepsie, and for reasons unknown did not return to New
York. He drifted off without leaving a forwarding address. It wasn’t until
months afterward that Thomas found out from a mutual friend that he called from
a hospital in Cleveland. This was the last he heard about him for
years.
In
the meantime, life moved on for both, a Palo dug between them, uncrossed. Thomas
found another girlfriend. Got married and had a child. Moved up the employment
ladder, eventually became a senior editor at a men’s magazine. He continued to
write, publishing a few short stories and for two years had an agent and a novel
making the rounds of publishers. There was promise to be had, though
opportunities turned out to be badly aimed arrows.
Eventually
the couple divorced. Thomas moved to Brooklyn, with weekend visits, support
payments by check on the fifteenth. Kid grew up, went to college. The ex-wife
moved to California. They no longer spoke; there was no longer anything to talk
about.
When
he and Maurice reconnected online, Thomas offered to mail it to him. Maurice
politely responded no. Life had changed, he said, but Maurice noted the
thoughtfulness in Thomas holding on to it. Later, Maurice revealed the extent of
his illness, wishing Thomas well.
Thomas
went to the bookshelf and retrieved the bookmark, placed in a trade paperback of
Hermann Hesse’s Beneath the Wheel. This wasn’t the book Maurice had brought with
him, and Thomas no longer remembered what it was.
Thomas
stared at the notice he held, contemplating how significant this old theater
notice was for Maurice, and earlier for his mother. For Thomas, the bookmark was
a reminder of why he came to New York, where his own aspirations were eventually
sidetracked. Despite some occasional successes, they were not the ones he
initially wanted. He dwelt on the notion of a mother and son eventually crushed
by the demands of the life they were handed by fate and decision to have him
instead of the one they wanted.
He
placed the bookmark down beside the computer at his desk and went back to work
writing another story. He paused to glance at the bookmark: I think Cheyenne,
Wyoming. Ibsen, A Doll’s House, starring Keenan Wynn. The reviewer noted
Catherine Lyvere’s role as Nora. At that, Thomas returned to
work.
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