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There we were, taking
the long way home through the park, Toby, my black lab, bounding on ahead,
doing two miles for every one of ours. Lovers we were, holding hands when
we weren't struggling single file over rocks and roots. Lovers, inhaling
the autumn afternoon, conscious only of the tromp and slide and crunch
of our footsteps-and the silence. Lovers. Hardly killers.
The path narrowed
so that one of us would hold the branch for the other, until gradually
the path, once a logging road, now weedy and rocky from disuse, widened
to the width of a car. And there, quietly edging upon our consciousness,
was a car facing us in the turn of the road, with its motor running.
At a moment like
this you become embarrassed, feeling as if you've been discovered at something.
Discovered just being unself-conscious, maybe. You pull yourself out of
your reverie, out of your private joke. You think: Damn people, intruding
upon our afternoon, our privacy. Then you're embarrassed for whomever
you're going to come upon. You think: Lovers maybe, necking, or more.
You think: Oh, someone's just gone to take a leak. You think: Maybe there's
a dead body in the front seat.
You prepare your
face.
Your lover takes
the left side of the car, and you take the right, the branches and tall
weeds forcing you to pass close to the car. It's an old, gray, nondescript
car, four doors, some rust along the fender you can see out of the corner
of your eye. Of course you try not to look, but the car is running, and
you glance in as you brush past sideways.
There's a body, a
guy on the front seat, curled up fetal fashion, asleep. So, he's got a
right. But the car is running. You think: He's gonna suffocate, no windows
open, car running-he'll be dead before he wakes. You look over the roof
of the car at Rob, who hasn't given in to curiosity, who hasn't looked.
And now you're behind
the car, and you glance back and see the hose attached to the tail pipe,
and, by God, just like in some movie, just the way it would be in that
movie we've all seen in our heads, the hose goes around on Rob's side,
and you say, "Rob," who has passed by now, and your heart is pumping with
excitement (this is real life) and fear, and you follow the hose around
to the other side of the car, and sure enough, the hose goes into the
front door, and you realize what's happening, and again, urgently, you
say, "Rob," and finally he turns and sees.
So you realize there's
a guy in there who has hooked up a hose to the tail pipe of his car, and
the hose enters the front door and-he's doing it. He's actually doing
it, just as you imagine when you hear how people kill themselves in their
garages by turning on their cars and waiting. You've pictured yourself
doing it. Well, by God, there's a guy doing it right out here in our park,
broad daylight, well, afternoon, a glorious afternoon, your much-needed
afternoon with Rob, unself-consciously melding with nature, and suddenly
all your nerve endings are standing at attention, and you're sharp and
distinct from the bushes and trees, and you think you should do something.
Deal with this. You want to enter the drama but simultaneously resent
that it has upstaged your own private, low-keyed, small, lover drama.
I have to enter the
drama. I have to open the door. There's a temptation, a pull, a seductiveness
to be in the presence of someone who's actually doing it. I want to see
what it's like, although I'm scared now. Someone who's actually doing
it is scary. Maybe it's done already, but then just seeing death is scary.
My hand is on the
door, and now I've opened the door, stepping back quickly into the bushes.
Fear makes me sound angry.
"Hey, what are you
doing? What's going on here?" I sound like a cop.
Slowly, groggily,
the guy lifts his head. He's alive, although his pale eyes looking up
into my face are clouded, unfocused. He's youngish, probably Irish, with
stringy, reddish-blond hair, a blond mustache. He looks like someone I
would know.
"Leave me alone,"
he mumbles.
"Well, I can't, you
see," I answer nervously, with a little laugh, just as if we're having
this perfectly natural conversation. Toby's worrying a stick to death
over near Rob.
"Go on away. Leave
me alone." He's struggling to prop himself up on the steering wheel. It's
a struggle, not only because he was on his way out, but because his gut
is wedged in by the wheel.
"What are you doing,
buddy?" Now I sound overly jovial. Rob has finally come back, but because
he's still standing a little way off, as if about to run, I feel he must
know something. His glasses are winking in the sun; I cannot see his eyes.
Maybe somehow I've spoiled our afternoon by having to look. Maybe Rob
is angry. Now I'm torn. This guy doesn't want me, and Rob wants to go
home. He keeps shuffling, hands stuffed into the pockets of his jeans,
shoulders hunched. He keeps glancing toward the paved road. It's silent
here in the park except for this shuffling, the thrum of the car motor
and Toby still humbling that stick. There's no one else around, and we
can't see the main road from here. I think maybe I've created this.
"What are you doing?"
I can't seem to think of anything else to say. He's looking straight ahead,
up the path further into the woods, one arm hanging onto the steering
wheel for support, thick, nicotine-yellowed fingers (he's a lefty) tapping
on the dash, no wedding ring. Then I see the case of Budweiser on the
floor in the back, crumpled cigarette packs and some dirty laundry on
the seat.
"Why so much beer?"
There are empties tossed onto the floor in the front, and his cigarette
is still lit in the ash tray. There's something forlorn about that cigarette
burning, waiting to be dragged on, life going on.
"It's for the people
who find me." His words are slurred. "So they can have a real party when
they find me. Now shut the door and leave me alone."
That part about the
people who'll find him drinking his case of beer ticks me off. I shift
my weight and look at Rob.
"Rob, what'll I do?"
"Get his keys."
"Aw, shit, just shut
the fucking door. Get the fuck away from me."
More minutes of silence
while I look back and forth between the guy and Rob. The guy stares out
the front window, fully upright now. Rob is impatient. He shuffles a little
farther from the car, a little closer to the main road. I think, this
guy means business. I picture wailing sirens, cop cars, flashing lights,
the ambulance, all that noise breaking into this guy's final moments.
This thing he's doing is as private as masturbation. This guy is serious,
and I am timid before him. I have never done anything so deadly serious.
Now I am moved. I do not want the cops with their sirens and stretchers
and their loud bullying voices to disrespect this man and rush him unwilling
to a hospital and pump out his stomach, or whatever they do for carbon
monoxide poisoning, and treat him as if he doesn't mean it. I am sobered.
This is no joke. I think he means it.
And I have no words
of hope for him. I have my own problems and my own doubts. What he's doing
makes me want to glance behind me, over my shoulder, as if he knows something
about life I don't. As if he's leaving a bad party and by leaving makes
me see how dreary it really is. What's so great about taking a walk in
the park with your supposed lover? I mean, it doesn't solve anything.
Nothing at all. It's irrelevant, really, when you consider all the times
in life when things go wrong. This party stinks.
If Rob were not here,
I know what I would do. I would gently close the door on the hose, being
careful not to shut off its supply of noxious gas. I would raise my hands,
palms forward, to show I meant no harm, and, crouching, I would back away.
"Keys. Get his keys,"
says Rob, suddenly efficient, crisp, though still standing down the road,
out of the guy's sight.
His words galvanize
me, and now it becomes a game: Will I dare to reach in past the guy (maybe
death will grab me too) and pull his keys out of the ignition? That will
spoil it for him, inconvenience him, when, after all, if he's gone to
this length, he's probably been troubled enough in life.
"We'll put the keys
at the end of the road. That'll give him time to think it over." Rob has
it figured out now.
"But I don't want
to inconvenience him." Rob and I are talking the way you do in front of
a child. We're talking as if he's already dead.
"Tell her to shut
the door, Rob." He's heard me call Rob's name. "What the fuck do you think
you're doing? Both of you, leave me alone." His voice is weary. I understand.
"I'm sorry, but I
have to do this."
"Get the fuck away.
I've got something in the back seat that'll make you get away." He straightens
up, his left hand on the steering wheel, his right arm over the back of
the seat.
Oh, shit, what's
he mean, "something." A gun, under all those clothes? This man, so free
with his own life, would not have the usual compunction.
Quickly, I reach
in and pull the keys out of the ignition, thinking if they stick, he'll
grab my arm and pull me into where he's going. But they don't stick, and
I get them and start backing away, apologizing.
"Aw, shit, what are
you gonna do with my keys?"
High on my courage,
I run to catch up with Rob, whose long legs are carrying him toward the
road at a great rate. He calls back, "We'll leave them at the end of the
road. You'll have to come and get them, see?" And to me he says, "This
will give him time to get some air and think it over."
"How will I find
them?" the guy yells. I turn to Rob, who seems to have done this many
times before, so sensible is his idea, whereas I just wanted us to figure
out a way not to inconvenience the guy, to leave him with his dignity.
"We'll leave them
on," (we're striding away now and calling back, and then Rob sees a beer
can) "on a beer can." (How fitting.)
"What?"
We do it. Set the
empty can on end in the tall weeds and carefully place the keys so he
can see the can and the keys when he gets here.
I shout, wanting
to be helpful, "They're on a beer can."
And then we start
up the main road. Toby abandons his stick when we call. We leash him now
and quicken our steps. After all, anything can happen-he could be hit
by a car-we want him close to us. Death is breathing down our necks.
As we reach the top
of the hill, we hear, "Rob, where're the keys?"
I turn, see him,
and make exaggerated motions toward the can, wanting to be helpful. It's
all I can do now. I want him to know we care. We want him to have a good
experience. At least that's the way it is for me. Rob and I are not talking
now, just high-tailing it home.
We think he finds
the keys. There is silence again; it has closed over behind us.
To Rob I say, breathless,
"I don't want to call the police. I believe a person should be allowed
to make this decision."
I believe in suicide.
I believe in death with dignity, and I believe each person ultimately
knows his own course-at least we must operate on that premise. When I'm
old or sick, I want a pill. And when I die, I'd like my family around
me. I'll take the pill with all of them there, so they can watch, so they
won't be so afraid for themselves. We were at my mother's bedside when
she took her last three breaths. We watched and wept, but it was good
to see. Her dying then became a part of my life, and now I am not so afraid.
Only, I want to say when.
I am exhilarated.
The adrenaline is pumping through my very alive body. We march home quickly
as evening comes on.
"I don't want to
call the cops, Rob."
He does not protest,
and I, proud I have stuck by my principles, which were only words before,
do not open myself to their challenge and possible overthrow.
I am saddened by
what has happened. I did not know I would decide like this. I thought
surely my heart would bleed. The rush I used to get from rescuing people
has diminished over the years, as I begin to save myself.
I am too charged
to eat dinner. We talk about it; we tell my daughter, Amy. Neither Rob
nor Amy says, "Let's call the police." Perhaps I present the story in
such a way that they see it my way. They agree that, by God, he got as
far off the road as he could-he really didn't want us to find him and
stop him. We shouldn't have happened along. "The guy intruded on our afternoon,"
says Rob, almost shouting. I think he's nervous, but I really don't know.
He does not discuss his feelings.
We wonder if we could
be said to be accomplices. We talk in hushed voices without turning on
the light over the dining room table. Maybe, with the breath of fresh
air, he won't do it. After all, who do we know who really means business,
who sticks by what they believe. Life is so lukewarm; you are so little
called upon to put your money where your mouth is. You can get by in a
half-life without ever taking a stand or even being fully awake. You can
hedge and compromise. There's so much wasted time in life, so many unaccounted-for
hours, so much dross. And here's this guy doing it. He has stature, in
my eyes, integrity, calling it quits when it's no good anymore, rather
than selling out, biding his time until death taps him.
I do not ask myself,
is his despair only momentary? Is it merely a transient state that I should
wheedle him out of? Or an inverted act of aggression which I have a responsibility
to stop? I do not ask myself these things, and it is only many years later
that it occurs to me that these beliefs I am so proud of may have blinded
me to the particularities of the man before me. In taking for granted
that this man's action was deliberate and considered, and grew out of
his principles, I was making the solipsistic assumption that he was no
different from me.
I prepare for bed,
a clear purposefulness to my actions. Each motion is precise, distinct
from every other motion. I pay attention to what I'm doing and wonder
if it's worth it. That is, what it is he knows that I only suspect. His
choosing death has brought me closer to the narrow edge of my own life,
and I wonder if he doesn't have a point.
The next morning,
without a word between us, we know we want to go back and see. I'm rooting
for him to have done it, but I don't tell Rob that.
We retrace our path
down the hill by car, and when we reach the dirt road, we see the car.
Holy shit. This has the throb of reality. I'm always wondering when reality
is going to kick in.
There are no sounds
except Nature going on about her mindless business and the crunch of our
footsteps on dry leaves as we creep up to just behind the car. There,
with one quick look, we see him lying fetal fashion on the front seat.
The hose is connected to the tailpipe and leads into the front door. The
engine has run down.
We retreat fast and
drive home. Now, now Rob calls the police.
We make breakfast
and wait. Then we hear sirens in the distance. He can't hear them now.
It is over. I am shivering with exhilaration and awe and horror at myself.
I feel proud of him, although I am aware that others might not applaud
what he has done, what we have not done.
Lovers, we were,
not killers. But not saviors either.

* Lucy Wilson Sherman is studying for her MFA in creative nonfiction at
Goddard College in Vermont. "At a Turn in the Road" is one of a collection
of personal essays (in progress) called "Uncommon Passions, Unnatural
Acts." She lives with her husband on their 71-acre farm in Susquehanna,
Pa.
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