Archive-name: Miscell/carpentr.txt Archive-author: Neil Bernstein Archive-title: John the Carpenter's Tale (c) Neil Bernstein 1993 One Sunday, driving Dolores' truck back from a provisioning trip, Pete stopped along the riverbank to watch a crew of panting scullers labor their way against the current. Their slender craft slipped around chunks of floating ice smoothly as a ballbearing sliding down a greased track. Got all the time they need to do that, he thought bitterly. Men who could go home to adoring wives and get up the next morning to go to work. In Lombard's General Store he met old John buying feed for his three geldings. The man's belly nearly split his overalls as he carried the sacks out to his car. Pete hid a chuckle. "You come back for coffee now," John bellowed. Pete could see no reason to refuse him. He followed John's rusty truck up a series of gravel paths, shook hands with his pretty wife. John eased himself into a great armchair. He bade her serve them their coffee and an endless succession of snacks: toast, honey, ham sandwiches, spiced drumsticks, maple candies, pear cobbler... When she was done serving she settled back on a kitchen stool and nursed her baby. Pete watched her play with the suckling, bouncing him gently on her knee. He knew, feeling the certainty only the superstitious know, that it could not be John's child. John had been a carpenter for twenty years. One morning he found the work too exerting and gave it up violently, pitching his toolbox through the window of the house he was building. He tried a variety of jobs after that, settling on delivering the Weekly Argus. He sat long hours alone at the head of his kitchen table, playing solitaire late into the night, gaining ten pounds a year. He always left a half-finished puzzle set up in the living room. Pete remembered the last time he'd been out to John's house. A selectman was giving Grandpa Goosehair some problems, badmouthing him in town meeting. The old man wanted Pete to see if John could dig up any incriminating tax information. John looked over everyone's tax forms, considered it his neighborly duty. He got so he could do the arithmetic so quickly that everyone brought him their crumpled forms: farmers who could only read with a certain pair of spectacles they'd lost years and years ago, folks who could read Latin but couldn't be bothered with figures. Pete'd got himself lost on nameless gravel tracks and had arrived very late. The ex-carpenter's wife had just finished showering and now stood before a full-length mirror. Her hips were swathed in fine linen, her arms left half-bare by a silk-finished nightgown. She braided her hair and rubbed fine powder and oil into her tremulous neck. John knelt on the parlor floor, his massive buttocks arching high, and rustled through a stack of papers. Pete grew distracted. He chose to watch the wife's ministrations instead, noting the care she used to touch the perfume bottles to her temples. During the day she slaughtered pigs, birthed troublesome calves, muddied her legs turning earth with the tiller. Now you'd only know she was a farmer if you looked at her fingers. Maybe she wore gloves to bed. He'd thought John would be paying more attention to his wife's elaborate ritual, but he seemed engrossed in his search. Problem, Pete had thought, if you lived too long together. Forget where you want to be kissed. From behind the wife did not look over twenty-five, though Pete knew she was older than he. Her hair was still dark--Pete could not decide whether it had been tinted--and her back was straight as his rifle-barrel. The ex-carpenter had let out a roof-shaking yawn when Pete finished his business. His wife pecked him delicately on the cheek and disappeared up the stairs. Her bottles rested in a neat row on the shelves. Pete had thought John would pad off after her. Instead he loosened his belt and headed for the couch. "G'night," John had mumbled, fitting a pillow under his great hoary neck. As Pete had entered his car he'd looked up again at the house which John had built at the start of his career. Every house he'd built since, he'd told Pete, didn't measure up, couldn't be more than an imperfect copy. Pete saw a candle burning in the wife's bedroom. It was a warm summer's night. She'd left the window open. A massive maple spread over that face of the house. He remembered clearly that its branches drooped below the eaves. Perhaps there was an extra shadow standing by the bed. He couldn't tell. Now Pete wiped a crumb from his lips and stared out the window. The branches were still there, ready to be climbed. A thick one ran past her windowsill. Easily take a man's weight. Could just swing yourself up to the bedroom, didn't have to be an athlete. John hadn't pruned the maple back, though it obscured the view from his kitchen. "You must be full up," John said, smacking the table with his meaty fist. "I don't see you shoveling it in no more." He belched. "What's new with your brother?" "You'd know as much as I would," Pete said. "Haven't seen him in a while." "Always rushing around." John smiled through a mouthful of crumbs. "Making his money move. Don't he never slow down?" "Never seen him do so," Pete said. "Damn if he ain't the by-God power in this town," John mused. "Damn if his word ain't better than the Good Book. I knew a fellow oncet, when I was living out to New Hampshire, thought he ran the town, but he never did so good a job as your brother--I ever tell you that story?" "No, sir," Pete said. "It goes something like this," John said. "Now you know how quiet these tiny New Hampshire towns are--there ain't no crimes to speak of. But the sheriff still walked up and down Main Street every night to remind folks he ran the place. It was a good deal most of the time. There weren't no bar fights 'cepting the ones the sheriff got his deputies to start. But then again, sometimes he got folks so scared they wouldn't take their cars out for fear he'd bust them for speeding--" John's wife handed him the baby. "Here," she said, "you stop him squalling, if all you've a mind to do is talk all day." The kitchen door clattered behind her. "Let me tell the man this story first," John called after her. "I'll be out directly." Pete saw her hoist up a bag of feed from John's truck and lug it over to the barn. The geldings neighed in the cold stable, their voices carrying through the clear air. "I ain't even gotten started yet," John said. "There was a fellow lived in my town, world-class sprinter. He had a little understanding with the sheriff's wife. Told me he came by her place regular, every week, while her man's out on night duty. "Now the wife'd get all excited waiting for the sprinter fellow, rush around the house getting ready for him. She'd pull down the shades in the living room. Carpenter said he put bolts on them so they'd stay fast. Sometimes she'd set him out a cup of coffee, put in a couple teaspoons of honey. That's the way he liked it, told me it gave him quick energy. That's what you do, he says to me, when you want to win the race: drink your coffee with clover honey. "Well, sometimes he was so flustered he got his trousers all loosened as he tore up the path to the house. Neighbor got shocked one time, saw a little more than she wanted to. Once he got to the door he just took a flying leap and--Pete, you can figure out the rest." "I guess I can," Pete said. "You bet you can," John continued. "Worked fine most times only once he soaked his big toe in the hot tea. It ain't like he ever noticed the pain. "Now the sheriff was an Italian fellow, name of Gianni. Got taken as a POW during the War, shipped up to New Hampshire. Learned pretty good English by the time he got released so he thought he might as well stay. He was a blacksmith by trade, but they already had a couple in town, and the sheriff was just about ready to retire. Had a pot belly--monstrous-sized--reined it in with a leather belt but you could still see it kicking when he walked. He was never gonna catch the sprinter fellow--nearly died of apoplexy every time he ran to answer the door. Minister saw him nearly collapse one time when he was going by the church, but I told him he was just walking away a little briskly on account of he was a Roman Catholic. Must've been his saint's day or what have you." The baby began to squall. John patted it absent-mindedly as he spoke. "Seemed the situation was likely to go on forever, long as the fellow never slowed down. Gianni got to play a few tricks on the fellow every so often, kid him around a little. One time his deputies grabbed him off the street and got him drunk, sat around him in a circle blowing smoke into his face and forcing whiskey down his throat. Curious-like to see what'd happen. Thought steam'd puff out of his ears or something. But he only collapsed--it took nearly two bottles, they told me, nearly two whole bottles, even though he was only a wispy little fellow. Didn't wake up for two days. But once he was back on his feet he swept Gianni's wife into his arms and ran up a woods track clear to Chittenden County with her laughing gales every second and telling him to mind he didn't trip over roots." "Did you say Chittenden County?" Pete asked. "Vermont?" "I did indeed," John said. "The one right here. Old Gianni was so shocked he crunched his cigar in half. Nearly had the pair of them killed when they got back. But later on he learned to take a more philosophical attitude, oncet he figured out there was nothing he could do. His wife helped him out a little--you know how women can take your mind off things. Told him no way she can be happy with a dynamo--just a bang, no build-up, no fuse. "I didn't know what to tell him. I didn't know if this was the kind of problem you could cure with your standard marital aids or something like that. "Oncet I saw Gianni buying the fellow coffee and doughnuts. He was waving this stinky little Italian cigar, telling him there's no difference between them, they're all brothers. Just that the fellow got hisself a higher metabolism. He had a point--the fellow was always drinking like he'd burn up, always kept a canteen in his belt, always dashed behind a tree every couple of minutes. Gotta keep the system lubricated. Motor got too many rpm, can't let it overheat. "You buy that? I'd like to, but I doubt there's a pat answer to everything." "I don't know," Pete said. "Ain't so weird. Fellow in the Guinness book who ate a whole car or something, piece at a time." "Ayuh," John said. "That's so. Well, let's see now~they'd just made peace when Gianni took his girl back to the Old Country. I got postcards from the Fontana di Trevi and Napoli and other places that I'll never hope to see. Fellow kept on running rings around me, asking when they're gonna come back. My little cousin--that's my little cousin Geoffrey, by the way, he'd be right out of high school now if he ever bothered to finish--Geoffrey said he caught the fellow jerking hisself off in the middle of the cemetery. He was cleaning up and coming again until he was sure he couldn't possibly have any left. Yet he must've got a second wind the instant he ran over her threshold--instantly got back in Gianni's bad books. Must've carried her right on up to the attic-- "Now I was walking back from the bus station with old Gianni. He'd stayed for a couple drinks, sent his wife on home before. When he saw the door to his house was open, immediately he starts suspecting something. Don't be crazy, I says, don't be crazy, you just got home. You come with me, Gianni says, I'm gonna get that fella. That's okay, I says, you can tell me all about it later. I went on home--I didn't want no part of it. "I met Gianni next day, this is what he told me. He says he waited till he heard them sighing up in his attic. Then he went upstairs and watched them through the keyhole until they'd wrapped their legs up tight and strung out their arms across the cast-iron bedstead. He reached down slowly to his belt and loosened his two pairs of handcuffs--just so. His wife didn't even look up when Gianni snapped the handcuffs around her wrist. The fellow? Well, Gianni said he knew what was happening, his eyes were always darting around the room, but he never thought to do nothing about it. Gianni took his ankle in his big hands--he was a blacksmith, you know, got calluses all over--and locked it tight to the rail. Sweat dripped down the fellow's leg, made a mess all over the clean bedding. Gianni told me he just held his nose and went out the door. "Before their ribs started poking out of their sides Gianni took half the town, one-time 'r another, to look at them through the keyhole and point and ask questions. Hey, bud, I heard this old sailor guy ask him, ya got a naked woman on display there, all ready for fellers to look at, and... you ain't even chargin'? No, sir, Gianni says to him, never even crossed my mind. Later on he ground their bones up and mixed them up in his oats. Told me it made his horse run a mile-two faster." "Damn," Pete said. "That's some story." He looked up and noticed John's wife leaning against the door, one hand on her hips. The points of her teeth sparkled, catching his eye. "You ought never believe a word he says," she said, shaking her head. Her laugh rolled out deep as a growl. Grinning sheepishly, John leaned forward and slurped up the last of his coffee. Pete got up to say his good-byes. John's wife went hurriedly to embrace Pete, stretching and sporting her lean body before the old ex-carpenter. She smiled, showing all her teeth. Pete nodded quickly, ducking his head before she could kiss him, and hurried out of the house. - Neil Bernstein -- nwbernst@unix.amherst.edu