Page 54 of Picture Perfect


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He stepped out of the lake, stalking toward me with his fingers outstretched, but ducked to my side at the last minute to disappear into the woods at the edge of the shore. When he returned he was holding a long, thin branch and a sharp fillet knife. He crouched and laid the branch over one knee, whittling one end to a point. Then he waded back into the water.

Alex stood perfectly still, his shadow rippling on the surface, his arm poised with his makeshift spear. In the time it took for me to draw a breath, he plunged the branch through the water, lifting it to reveal a skewered fish still thrashing on the end. Triumphant, Alex turned to me. “When in Tanzania,” he said, “do as the Tanzanians do.”

I was amazed. “How—how did you know how to do that?”

Alex shrugged. “It’s all patience and reflexes,” he said. “I’m used to doing it without a stick.” He walked away from me so that I could not see his face, and tossed the fish into a canvas bag. “You could say my papa taught me.”

We ate several pan-fried fish for dinner and later made love and wrapped up in the blanket, my back pressed to Alex’s chest. When he fell asleep I turned toward him, studying his face in the shadow of a silver moon.

A piercing cry made Alex bolt upright, throwing me back onto the ground. He shook himself free of sleep and reached for me, making sure I was all right. “It’s far away,” I told him. “It just sounds like it’s next door.”

Alex lay down again, but his heart was pounding against my shoulder like a jackhammer. “Don’t even think about it,” I soothed, remembering the first times I’d slept outside in the African night. “Listen to the wind. Count the stars.”

“Do you know,” Alex said quietly, “how much I hate camping?”

I sat up and blinked at him. “Then why are we here?”

Alex reached up his hands and pillowed his head upon them. “I thought you’d like it,” he said. “I wanted to do it for you.”

I rolled my eyes. “I spend enough time in makeshift huts to appreciate clean sheets and a sturdy bed,” I said. “You should have told me.”

When I looked down at Alex, his face was turned up to the sky, but his eyes were staring past the moon. I wondered what I had said to upset him. I touched my hand to the smooth white inside of his upper arm. “For someone who hates camping, you’re quite a pro,” I said softly.

Alex snorted. “I had a lot of unwanted practice,” he said. “You ever been to Louisiana in the summertime?” I shook my head. “Well, it’s hell on earth,” he said. “It’s so hot the air sweats all over you, and the atmosphere is so heavy you can’t breathe right. There are mosquitoes the size of quarters. And it looks like I figure hell looks, too—least down by the bayou. All swamps, dark and muddy, overgrown with cypress and willow, Spanish moss and vines hanging like curtains over the branches. When I was a kid, I’d climb the cottonwoods on the water’s edge and listen to the bullfrogs, thinking it was the devil belching up whiskey.”

Alex smiled, although in the limited light it could have been a grimace. “My papa used to take me out in his pirogue most nights, so it wasn’t like I didn’t know anything about the bayou. He’d haul up the crawfish traps and take them down to Deveraux’s, this restaurant that sits half over the swamp on these huge old cypress stumps. He’d give the catch over to Beau, who owns the place—there isn’t anyone who can make crawfish like Beau—and then he’d go in for an hour and drink off his pay.”

“What did you do?”

Alex shrugged. “I sat outside, mostly, and watched the older kids pulling catfish. You’ve never seen anything like it—no poles, no lines—they just reach down into the mud and wait and then they haul these twenty-pounders out against their chests.” He sighed and rubbed his hand down his face. “Anyway, one night instead of stopping off at Beau’s, my papa took the boat further up, telling me it was time we did some camping. I was maybe nine or ten, and I asked him why we’d be camping out in the swamp, instead of one of those fancy campgrounds set up for tourists on Lake Pontchartrain. He told me they were for queers, and then he steered over to the shore. He tossed a tent I hadn’t noticed out of the bottom of the boat, and then handed me up too. ‘I’ll be right back,’ he told me. ‘You get us some dinner, and I’ll take care of the firewood.’ ”

Alex hugged his knees to his chest as the night became several shades cooler. “Well, needless to say, he didn’t come back. Left me with the sun going down to figure out how I was going to eat and where I could pitch a tent without worrying about sleeping with a water moccasin. I got into such a state of panic I was sure my heart would just freeze over, and wouldn’t that serve me right after being told it was finally healthy.

“That whole night I waited, too scared to move in case my father came back and I was gone. I watched that mist and thought every goddamn shadow was him, every stir of Spanish moss was his boat come back. About ten o’clock I was starving, so I took off my sneakers and waded into the swamp and thought about what I’d seen those kids doing all those nights outside of Beau’s. I reached down, feeling through the mud. It took me two hours but I got the hang of it, and when the water moved around me and the cold brushed against my leg, I grabbed with all my strength and pulled up a catfish. Smallest thing I ever caught, and the best one I ever tasted.”

I thought of Alex, nine years old, standing in the dark, shaping the shadows with his fear. I thought of him standing with a spear in the middle of an African lake. I remembered the way he’d startled earlier when that animal screamed in the night. “When did he come back?” I asked.

“The next morning. Found me with the fish skeleton and the ashes of a fire and told me I’d made him proud. I started to cry.”

My eyes widened. “What did he do?”

Alex smiled. “Took me to Beau’s at seven a.m. and bought me my first whiskey,” he said. “And he kept leaving me off in the bayou, about once every other month, until I could look him in the eye the next morning and act like I’d loved every minute.” He took a deep breath, but in the quiet I could hear the rattle at the back of his throat. “So that,” he said, “is why I don’t like camping.”

“And why,” I added softly, “you became the consummate actor.” I took his hands and kissed the tips of his fingers. His eyes were nearly black with pain, and I could see him trembling just the slightest bit, the one thing he could not control.

My cheek was pressed against his damp chest. I understood what he needed. I had been there, after all. I wanted to speak but I was careful not to show pity, so I chose the words that could either close the subject or offer Alex a lifeline. “I don’t know how you did it,” I whispered.

Alex kissed the top of my head, gentle, tender.He doesn’t want to talkabout it anymore, I realized, and as if the unspoken sentence had decreed it, the tension drained out of Alex’s shoulders. I wondered whether he would bring up a different topic of conversation, like maybe the wedding, or simply pull me close for comfort and try to sleep. Alex’s voice cut through my thoughts. “How I did it was easy,” he said softly. His hands ran over my shoulders to my collarbones, the touch of a lover, as if he had no idea that his words and his actions stood at odds. “I used to stay up all night thinking of my goddamn father,” Alex said. “Of my hands around his throat, squeezing out the life.”

FOR THE SECOND TIME THAT NIGHT, ALEX HAD FALLEN INTO A DEEP sleep, but this time he was having nightmares. He lashed out, striking me across the stomach and waking me. He was speaking in French, but so lightly that even if I had understood the language I wouldn’t have known what he was saying. I sat up and brushed his hair back from his temples, feeling the fever that flooded his skin.

“Alex,” I whispered, thinking it was best to shake him into consciousness. “Alex.”

He sat up and rolled over, pinning me to the ground with his body before I could take a breath. He was staring through me, his eyes pale and shining. One arm was braced across my shoulders, keeping me still, and the other pressed my neck down to the ground, fingers gripping at my jaw.

I tried to speak but Alex’s palm pressed against my windpipe. Panicking, I thrashed and kicked my feet.He doesn’t know what he’s doing. He doesn’t know who I am.

His fingers tightened and my eyes teared. Flailing with my legs, I managed to bring my knee up to his groin. Alex howled in pain and rolled away from me, leaving me flat on my back to let the world swim dizzily into place, to suck bright white air into my lungs.