This is a mainstream story I wrote while my wife and I were living in
Salt Lake City, Utah. We were only in Salt Lake for a year while Kathy did
her doctoral internship at the University of Utah Counseling Center and
worked on her dissertation. I got a job at the university training people
how to use their telephones and voicemail ("Press pound. That's right,
pound.") At night I tried to get some writing done.
I thought external deadlines would spur me to productivity, so I took
advantage of my staff discount and enrolled in a fiction writing course with
François
Camoin. The first assignment eventually turned into
"Free, and Clear." The second
was this story. (The third and final story was a mess best lost to history
called "Golf Digest Fiction Supplement #8: Love on the Links"—an aburdist
thing about golf-cart-jousting octogenarians who fight and fall in love.)
That year we lived in a dark and dreary basement apartment. The landlord
called it "garden level." I called it "soul-killing." But we were broke and
the price was right. Salt Lake was a great place to live, even if you
weren't Mormon, but in that apartment I felt like we were underground and
under siege. Almost everything else in the story is made up, but my God,
that apartment…
The Sound of Glass Breaking
by Daryl Gregory
T
hree a.m. and footsteps creak overhead:
the cop is home. Gordon comes awake—eyes still closed, body still paralyzed
by sleep—but listening. Marti, a warm mass beside him, sleeps through
everything. Gordon’s never told her how the cop wakes him every night.
There’s nothing for a long time. Finally the cop speaks: his voice is low
and vibrates through the floor, but the words have been absorbed by the wood
and plaster. The woman says nothing that he can hear. The bed squeaks in a
rhythm. The headboard knocks against the wall—steady, steady—and Gordon rubs
a hand past his stomach; he is already hard. Then the woman’s voice, as
clear as if she were next to him:
“Shit.” The word sounds delicate. Marti turns on her side and one arm
falls across his chest. Later Gordon listens to the man clump to the
bathroom and turn on the shower, listens to the water drum against the tub.
“We’re throwing the damn cat out.” Marti holds the ironing cord,
insulation split open, red and yellow and green wires exposed. Some have
been chewed through to the copper. Gordon keeps his head down, flips a page
of the phonebook and runs his finger down the column: Grocers, Grouting
Compounds, Guard Dogs. Guards—Door & Window. “The cat is going to die,” she
says.
He can’t listen to her when she gets like this. He picks up the phone and
dials. Rufus bats at the cord, snags it with one paw, and bites. Marti
screams—really screams, nothing falsely dramatic. Rufus jumps sideways and
explodes down the hallway.
There are tears in her eyes. “I’ll fix the iron,” he says. She shakes her
head, slowly. Gordon realizes that he and the cat are equally in danger. “I
know a guy."
“There isn’t—” she says. “This isn’t because—” Marti turns toward the
window.
Gordon waits. There is nothing safe to say here. A click from the
receiver in his lap and a voice sounds distantly. He doesn’t want to lift
the handset. He doesn’t want to make a sudden move.
They live in a half-basement apartment, where the windows are waist high
from inside, flush with the pavement on the outside. In the summer they keep
the windows open and the blinds closed, and at night the sounds are so close
it’s as if there are no walls at all; a car door, a conversation in the
parking lot, the screeching of cats fighting. The sound of boots on the
ceiling. Anything can wake him. Sometimes his eyes snap open and he thinks,
They’re coming. He doesn’t know who, or why he’s so certain: these are dream
facts. Sometimes he reaches for Marti in the dark and traces the curve from
ribs to stomach. Sometimes he presses his cheek against her belly and
listens. A month ago there was a bundle of cells and nerves about two inches
long in her womb; he had listened like this and not even known it was there.
He watches for them when they leave their apartment: the cop, a little
overweight but looking good in his black and gray uniform; the woman much
younger, fresh-faced but curiously neutral in her expressions. Gordon has
never seen them talk to each other. They do not hold hands. It is difficult
to imagine them as the source of the night sounds; it’s difficult for Gordon
to visualize anyone except himself and Marti making love.
Gordon and Marti come home from shopping and the cat runs past their
legs, into the parking lot. Gordon sets the bags inside the door and turns
to get him.
“Just leave him out,” Marti says.
“He’s an indoor cat. He’s declawed.” They’ve had this conversation
before.
“If he wants out let him out.” Marti moves past. Gordon stands for
awhile, looking into the parking lot.
He props the door open with a five- pound sack of sugar and carries the
groceries into the kitchen. “What if he gets hit by a car?”
“We can only hope,” she says, and loops an arm around his neck. She
kisses his ear and it’s as loud as a champagne cork.
At work post-its are glued to his computer screen, the surface of his
desk, the sides of his coffee mug. There are prioritized lists in his
Franklin planner, Action Plans tacked to his cubicle wall, and a
silver-framed list of Long Range Goals on fake parchment on the top shelf.
The words and paper confuse the issue, blind him; it is impossible to read
one word without reading all of them, and soon everything is confetti,
visibility down to zero. He responds only to the ring of the phone, and each
time he answers it’s with a sense of dread: what have I forgotten now? His
Team Leader drops him an E-Mail to tell him he’s falling behind, that he
should get focused, but the words blur on the screen and Gordon has to shut
his eyes.
Gordon sits upright in bed, heart hammering, and he doesn’t know why. He
looks around the dark room. Marti mumbles from her pillow, “What is it?”
Outside, a car door opens. A man swears and then yells something that is
all consonants: he’s drunk, Gordon realizes.
He slips out of bed and parts the blinds: the windows are cranked open
and there is only the screen between them. Yards away the cop is stepping
out of his car, his civilian car, the bumper folded against an iron support
column of the carport. The left headlight is shattered. The cop looks at the
mess, shakes his head, and turns around. The top buttons of his uniform are
undone. Through the screen Gordon can smell oil and hot metal.
“What is it?” Marti says, and the light comes on in the bedroom.
The cop halts in mid stride, and he and Gordon make eye contact. For a
moment neither man moves, and then Gordon releases the blinds and whips
around: “Jesus, Marti!” It’s half yell, half whisper. Marti flips the light
off, but the cop is already stepping forward, Gordon can hear him.
“Hey!” the man shouts. His voice is too close, just inches beyond the
screen. “Hey!”
Gordon waits for a foot to tear through the thin mesh and blinds. Finally
Marti yells, “We’re calling the police!” Gordon thinks, she doesn’t realize
who it is.
The cop sighs. “Shit.” Gordon waits until the shuffling steps fade, then
cranks the windows dosed. In bed he spoons against Marti, his arm covering
her warm stomach, and listens for the clump of boots on the ceiling.
Rufus knows the sound of his car and as soon as Gordon steps out he hears
the cat complaining from the window. He opens the apartment door and Rufus
jumps forward, but Gordon is ready and scoops him up. “Hey, boy, how’s it
going?”
Rufus bites his hand—not hard— and tries to squirm out of his grasp.
Gordon carries him to the grass at the edge of the parking lot. The cop’s
parking space is empty. The shards of glass have been swept up. He looks
around for other cats or dogs. Rufus can take care of himself. Cats have
natural instincts. He sets him down and the cat sniffs the area, then
investigates the hedges that line the lot, moving in and out of the
undergrowth. Gordon feels a twisting sensation every time Rufus goes out of
sight He feels this way when he watches a friend board a plane. Or the night
of the miscarriage, when he woke to find Marti’s side of the bed empty.
Gordon goes upstairs to the mailboxes and hears a sound, liquid and
human, from the stairs above. A man in a blue bathrobe is sitting on the
steps, the heels of his palms pressed against his eyes, a littering of open
envelopes and papers at his feet. It’s the cop. His shoulders are shaking.
Gordon realizes he’s crying.
The cop starts to move his hands away and Gordon quickly turns to his
mailbox, fumbling with the keys. He opens the lock, takes out a mail order
catalog and three white envelopes. He tries to appear intensely interested
in the cover of the catalog.
“Hey,” the cop says.
Gordon looks up with a smile that says, oh, didn’t see you there. The
cop’s eyes are bright, but his manner is familiar, as if they are longtime
neighbors who meet every day by the fence to compare gardens. “Hello,”
Gordon says.
There is a moment in which Gordon senses that something else could be
said, but the cop looks away and Gordon is afraid he’s going to cry again.
In his bathrobe, out of uniform, the cop appears older, almost frail. Gordon
holds up the catalog in a vaguely explanatory gesture: “Yeah. Well.” He
escapes down the stairs.
“I’m going out to look for him.”
“It’s only been a couple of hours,” Marti says. “He’ll be back. He’s a
cat and it’s nighttime. Cats are supposed to do this.”
Gordon pulls on his running shoes with quick, jerking motions. “He’s got
no protection, Marti. He can’t climb trees. He can’t fight back. All he
knows is carpet and food at nine-thirty.”
Outside the night is cool. He circles the apartment complex inspecting
hedges, cars, the dumpster. He calls the cat’s name, but quietly, feeling a
little foolish.
In the street, he half expects to see Rufus’ corpse beneath each
lamppost. He walks down the sidewalk, calling him with tocking noises. At
the end of the block he turns right. The street is darker here, which
somehow makes finding Rufus more probable. “Ruu-fus” he calls.
“Tock-tock-tock.”
At the next corner a long shape lies in the grass near the sidewalk; a
voice says, “Spare change for a veteran?” Gordon picks up his pace without
answering, unwilling now to call out or make noises. In the silence he feels
blind, and he realizes that the sounds had been a kind of sonar; without
them the streets are darker.
He turns the last corner of the square. Marti waits for him in front of
the complex, her arms wrapped around herself. She walks toward him, shaking
her head.
“You shouldn’t make yourself cold,” he says.
She hugs him. “Aw, hon.” She takes his arm. Her skin is warm. “Come back
in.” He walks with her to the door, hoping that Rufus is watching from the
bushes, ready to pounce and chase them inside.
Years from now, Gordon realizes, he will want to remember events in the
proper order, in their correct proportion. On the night of the miscarriage,
he first heard the sound of his name. He rolled over, discovered she was
gone, and heard his name again. There was an edge in her voice. He came out
of the bed clumsily, eyes trying to find details in the dark. The bathroom
door was ajar and a wedge of light illuminated the hallway. Marti sat on the
toilet, one arm across her stomach. Her left arm. There was a bloody towel
at her feet. She had looked at him, her face white. Lying in bed, Gordon
replays the scene until he memorizes the exact tone of her voice, the
precise hue of the light as it struck the hallway wall.
It’s a Saturday and the office building is empty and strange. Gordon keys
into his room and gets out the manual sweeper, the paper towels, the
industrial cleaner. He gathers up the post-its and stray notes and presses
them into a pile that he zips into the Franklin Planner. He sprays every
flat surface with the cleaner, letting the foam build up, and then wipes it
down. He rolls the little sweeper around, stooping to nab staples and
paperclips worked into the carpet. In an hour he has a new office. He takes
down the framed list of Long Range Goals and tosses it into the garbage can.
His goals have changed. He’s got new responsibilities. He opens the Franklin
Planner to Monday and records everything from the post-its, every task,
promise, and appointment. He can hear himself advising the Team Leader: it’s
important to take care of the small things, Rob. It’s important to not let
things slip through your fingers.
He lies beside her on the bed, holding her hand until her grip goes
slack. He pulls the covers over her shoulders. The breeze from the window
has turned cold and it’s two hours before dawn.
Above, the floor creaks with heavy footsteps. Gordon waits. After a time
the television whispers through the ceiling. Nothing else.
His eyes adjust to the dimness. Each article of furniture has become
strange, like repeating a word fifty times until it loses all sense. He gets
up and moves to the window, pushes aside the blinds, and looks out across
the parking lot into the hedges beyond. “Ruu-fus,” he sings quietly. “Here,
boy.” He can see each car, each bush in painful detail.
