Ashland, Kentucky
Terence M. Green

Terence M. Green is a Toronto author whose short stories have appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, The Twilight Zone, Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine, Books in Canada, and Quarry, and in several anthologies, including Doubleday’s Aurora: New Canadian Writing and Tesseracts, edited by Judith Merril. His first novel, Barking Dogs, was published by St. Martin’s Press. A second novel, Children of the Rainbow, was published by McClelland & Stewart in March 1992. He has since written a sequel to Barking Dogs and is contemplating a novel-length work based on the haunting short story that follows.

I

My mother died on March 14, 1984. It had been inevitable, as all such things are inevitable, and although it had not been unexpected, it nevertheless left me in shock. A large chunk of the past was gone. A large chunk of my past. Gone.

She had been hospitalized just before Christmas. Accelerating arteriosclerosis, recurring strokes, and crippling arthritis had rendered her virtually immobile. She was seventy-four.

I am forty. Soon I will be forty-one.

But these are mere numbers. And what numbers measure, especially those linked to Time, I have never understood. And now I understand them less.

II

She died, they say, of heart failure.

When I visited her in January, she was rambling. She upset me so much that I cried. There were three other beds in the hospital room, and now I realize that I can’t recall anything about their occupants. I only recall how, that day, I got up and pulled the sliding curtains around the bed so that we could be alone, so that I could hold her hand.

Her fingers were welded into the timeless claw of the aged, the skin of her hand stretched thinly across bony knuckles. Lesions and brittle remnants of skin cancers dotted her forearm.

But her eyes . . . It was her eyes—glazed, darting, frightened, the blue diluted as with a watery thinner . . .

“Jack was here,” she told me.

I frowned. “Jack?”

“And my father.” She nodded. The eyes darted.

I stared at her. Jack was her brother. She hadn’t seen him for about fifty years. Her father had died thirty years ago.

“Jack was here,” I repeated, finally.

She nodded emphatically. The eyes never ceased their wild circumspection. Her hand gripped mine.

“I told him not to go.”

I nodded, understanding.

“But he went anyway.” Another nod; a pause. “He was always a good boy. We were good children. Never got into any trouble. Always did what we were told.”

I felt the frail bones of her hand, watched the frantic eyes jump about, saw my mother as I had never seen her.

“He’s coming back tomorrow.”

I nodded.

Her eyes darted.

III

I returned the next day. The wildness had passed. In its stead, tubes suspended from a bottle by her bedside snaked into her arm.

“How are you today?” I sat down, took her hand in mine.

“Okay.” The word was soft and dry. Her eyes, I noted, were steadier.

I tried to smile. “What do you think about all this?” I indicated, with an open hand and a postured inspection, our surroundings: the beds with hand cranks, the crisp white sheets, the grey tile floors, the plastic wrist bracelets.

My mother smiled. She was back from wherever she had been yesterday. “I don’t want to die,” she said. “Nobody wants to die. But,” she added, “I don’t want to live like this either.”

I nodded, comforted by the clarity of her answer. She understood what was happening, saw no solution, expressed it simply.

How much more time?

“Who would you like to see? Is there anybody you’d like to see?”

Her eyes focused on me calmly. “Oh, yes.”

“Who?”

“Jack,” she said.

IV

My parents had moved to their new home in North Toronto in 1929. At the time, so I have been told, there were fields all about and a creek within half a block.

The fields are gone; no one is sure today where exactly the creek was. The general consensus is that it’s under the city-run parking lot that serves the subway—which is now the proposed site of the new police station. My father still lives there. Alone.

That afternoon, on my way home from the hospital, I drove to the house where I had grown up—the house I had left twenty years ago. It looked like a house that an old man lived in, alone: peeling paint on the eaves, a pitted and corroded aluminum screen door, snow unshovelled in the driveway.

I knew he was in there. He is always in there.

V

“Tell me about Jack.”

My father lit a cigarette, holding it in his right hand. He jammed his left hand in his belt, as was his habit. He is eighty years old now. I am astonished at his white hair, his groping movements, the thickness of his glasses.

“We don’t know what happened to Jack,” he said.

“I know.”

“He left in the 1930s.”

I nodded. We sat opposite one another at the green Arborite kitchen table. “Why did he leave? What happened?”

He inhaled on the cigarette deeply, then let the smoke expel slowly. “What did your mother say?”

“Nothing much. I asked her who she’d like to see. She said ‘Jack.’ That’s all.”

He nodded. “Things were never settled. That’s why. Things have to be settled, or they never go away.”

I waited. “What happened?” I asked. “Nobody ever told me.”

He paused. “I’m not sure,” he said.

VI

He lit another cigarette. It was time, he knew, for confidences. “There were only the two of them, you know. Just Margaret and Jack. Jack was two years younger—born in 1911. We all lived on Berkeley Street together. That’s how I got to know your mother. We were neighbours.” He smiled, remembering something. “We’ve been married fifty-four years now.”

I smiled. “I know.”

“Their mother died when your mother was just a kid. As a result, your mother ended up playing mother to Jack. Margaret adored her father but the old man, as I understand it, wasn’t much help. He always had a big cigar, always boasted. He didn’t like me much either,” he added. “I remember him saying once, to me—‘You don’t like me, do you?’ I told him that I didn’t.” He paused. “It’s all too bad now. Doesn’t seem to matter much either.” He lifted the cigarette to his lips and gazed off at the wall behind me.

I waited for him to continue. The smoke spiralled patiently toward the ceiling of the kitchen.

“The old man left Jack and Margaret with his various sisters. He was incapable of raising two kids on his own. He was an only son, in the midst of a flock of sisters, and he was spoiled rotten.” My father looked at me. “Always had a big cigar,” he said, “but always lived in rented rooms. Those were different times, the 1920s.” He sighed. “You want a cup of coffee?”

“No, thanks.”

“Me neither. Bad for your heart.”

I smiled, looking at the cigarette.

“The two kids lived with the old man off and on from that point. But half the time he was never home. They raised themselves. And Margaret played mother to Jack. They were very close.” He switched topics suddenly. “Do you remember the old man? Your mother’s father?”

“No. Nothing.”

“He died when you were three. Died of a heart attack on the streetcar on Christmas Day, coming up here to see us. And that was it.”

“That was what?”

“The end of the line for your mother. There was no one else. Her mother and father were dead. Her brother had left and hadn’t been heard of for years.”

“There was you. There was me.”

“Yes. But it wasn’t the same. The past was gone for her. Do you understand? The past was gone. No one wants to give up the past. At least, no one I know.”

The smoke hung in tendrils between us.

VII

His eyes were watery behind the thick lenses. The skin of his forehead was discoloured and flaking. He hadn’t been eating properly. “Jack was jealous of me,” he said.

I listened, without changing expression. I wanted to hear it all. It was time to hear it all. And it was time for him to tell it.

“Your mother married me when she was twenty—when Jack was eighteen. They’d been living alone for a while at that point. The old man had remarried—a girl half his age. The stepmother didn’t want his kids. In fact, I was never sure why she wanted him. So he abandoned them for her. This was the 1920s. Family life was strong then. Nobody did those kinds of things. At least,” he amended, “nobody I knew. So they lived down the street—Berkeley Street—together.”

“Where did my—” I paused over the word “—grandfather live?”

“Out in the west end. Nobody had cars. It was a long way.” He inhaled the smoke. It drifted out as he talked. “I guess she chased him because he talked big and smoked a big cigar.”

“Who?” I wasn’t sure I was following him.

“The girl he married.”

“Oh.”

“She died three years later, giving birth to their second child.”

I was silent.

“It was the 1920s.”

I turned my head to look out the kitchen window—to the parking lot that would become the police station. It was beginning to snow.

“So then he had two more kids, and no mother to look after them, and it was all starting again.” Then he stared at me, hard. “And he was still living in rented rooms.”

VIII

“She wants to see him.”

“Who?” The thin white eyebrows wrinkled.

“Jack.”

He had caught the thread again. “He left in 1932. I think. We never saw him again.”

“Where did he go? Why did he leave?”

“He left because there was nothing here for him. He was a young man, about twenty-one. He had no use for the old man; he could see through him. When Margaret married me he was alone. I think he felt she had abandoned him. It wasn’t fair.” He shrugged. “But then, nothing is fair.” The cigarette was placed between the thin dry lips once more. “Your mother felt bad. Felt guilty, I think.” He looked at me. “Try to see it from Jack’s point of view. His mother dies; his father’s run off and married this young thing; his big sister marries the guy down the street. It’s the Dirty Thirties. Nothing for him here.” I shifted in my chair, crossed my legs.

“He left the country. Left Canada. Went down into the States. Last we heard of him he was in Detroit.”

“Why Detroit?”

“Detroit was turning out cars. There were jobs.”

“Did he write?”

“Once, that I remember.”

“Did anyone try to find him?”

“The Mounties tried to find him.”

I raised my eyebrows.

“RCMP came to the door here in 1939 looking for him. Wanted to know where Jack Radey was. He hadn’t answered his draft notice.”

I waited.

“They never found him either.” He drew deeply on the cigarette. “You sure you don’t want a coffee?”

I got up and put on the kettle.

“Good. I’ve changed my mind too. The hell with my heart.”

I stood, looking out the window at the parking lot. The sky was grey and the snow was still falling. A creek, I thought. Under there. And soon, a police station. Layer upon layer. Impossible to find it.

“When the old man died, they found some correspondence between him and a private investigator he’d hired to find Jack. It was one of the few bright spots your mother could find at the time. The fact that the old man had made some kind of effort to find his own son—that it might have even bothered him—was something he never let any of us know.”

“What did it say?”

“The trail had run dry. That’s what it said. He was gone.”

The kettle began to whistle softly.

IX

When the phone rang that evening, it was my father. “I found something you might be interested in.”

“What is it?”

“The letter from Jack that I remembered. And a card from your mother to him that was returned unclaimed.”

“How old are they?”

“Just a minute.” There was a pause. I could picture him pushing his glasses up onto his forehead and squinting at the paper in his hand. “1934,” he said. “You want ’em?”

The excitement I felt was all out of proportion to the news. There was no reason for it. “Yes,” I whispered.

“I’ll keep ’em for you.”

“I’ll be right over.” I couldn’t wait.

X

The envelopes were yellowed. The one from Jack was postmarked February 22, 1934, Detroit, Michigan. In the upper right hand corner it sported a purple three-cent Washington stamp, and the ironic cancellation imprint: “Notify Your Correspondents of Change of Address.” It was hotel stationery. The upper left read: “Return in five Days to vermont hotel, 138 W. Columbia, Detroit, Michigan.” It had been torn open at the end. It was addressed to my mother, here, at the only address she had ever known after she had married my father.

The other envelope was postmarked Toronto, Ontario, 8:30 p.m., April 29, 1934. It was addressed to Mr. Jack F. Radey, c/o Vermont Hotel, etc., and across the bottom there was a Detroit postmark dated May 3, and a stamped imprint that read: “Return to Writer unclaimed.” Somebody else had scrawled in pen: “Try Washington Hotel.”

“What’s the F. stand for?”

“Francis. Your brother Ron had the same middle name. Your mother’s choice.”

I pulled the letter from Jack to my mother from the torn end of the envelope. It consisted of four faded sheets of Vermont Hotel stationery, complete with stylized letterhead. In the upper left corner it read: “Phone Cherry 4421”; the upper right bore the announcement: “Rates $ 1.00 and up.” The handwriting was quite legible, and in pencil. It was dated February 22/34.

Dear Margaret:

Received your letter ok, and sure was tickled pink to hear from you. I’m sorry to hear Ronnie has been sick and I hope he is real well and yelling his head off when you receive this.

I must be going “Goof” or something. I was starting to think you had deserted me, and here I had sent you the wrong address. It’s funny we didn’t get your other letters or the Valentines. They must have been lost in the mail.

Gee—Margaret I like it real well here. If anything ever happened now that I had to go back I think it would break my heart—no foolin’. I am working in the picture business for the largest and best paying outfit in town, and I like it.

Do you know that coming here has given me an entirely new slant on life. I seem more anxious to be somebody than I ever have in my whole existence. Things seem to be pretty fair here, and you can live cheaper, and make more money than you can in Toronto.

I received a letter from a friend in Toronto today. The one that phoned you. She said you wished I hadn’t come over here with Carmen as he may prove a bad influence. Well forget it—he won’t; and besides I’ve met and mingled with so many fellows who are that way that one more couldn’t make any difference. So stop worrying about me being led astray. So far as drinking is concerned, I haven’t been doing any. I am too busy making money, and trying to get somewhere. The only thing I’m sore about is that I didn’t come here about four years ago. I’d have had a lot more now to be thankful for.

I bought myself a nice new pair of shoes last Saturday and a couple of shirts, etc. and I hope to have a new suit in a week or so. I need one badly.

You know, Marg, the secret of the whole thing is I came over here on my uppers. By the time I had paid Mrs. Scott in Toronto, and a few other little items, I was broke. I was determined to come over here though. The boys l worked with there gave me a rotten deal, and that’s no fairy tale. I borrowed a little money from Carmen, (that’s where he got the idea to come along) and I’ve paid him back every bit of that right now. That isn’t all either—cause I really am going to make something out of myself. I mean it Marg.

This all may seem strange to you—me talking this way, but I have to tell someone how I feel and you are the only person I feel I can tell without being laughed at for dreaming. This is all just between you and me, Marg, I wouldn’t want anyone else to know how I was fixed or what a tough time I had for the first week in Detroit. Everything is going to be ok now though, and pretty soon I will be able to send you and the children and Tommy something from the U.S.A.

I’ve been working around Royal Oak—Gee the “Shrine” is beautiful Marg. I also make it a point to get to mass on Sunday. Write me real soon.

Lots of Love
Jack

I put the letter down and looked across at my father, who had been quietly watching me. “Have you read this?”

“Yes.”

“Where did you find them?”

“In the trunk, at the foot of the bed. At the bottom.”

“What did you make of it?”

He shrugged. “Not much.”

“He said he worked in the picture business? What did he mean?”

“Margaret told me that he was working as a sidewalk photographer down there. She’d heard this from a friend of his here.”

“Sidewalk photographer?” I blinked.

“You knowone of them guys who used to snap your picture, then come up to you and offer to sell you prints when they were developed.”

I continued to look uninformed.

“No,” he sighed. “I guess you don’t know. Polaroids, Instamatics, video replays . . . Of course you don’t know.”

“I think I’ve seen them in the movies. Old movies.” I smiled.

He smiled back. “Yeah, old ones.”

“Doesn’t sound like much of a job.”

“It wasn’t.”

“I thought he went to Detroit to work in the car industry.”

He shrugged. “I don’t know what happened. Sometimes,” he said, “things don’t happen the way you plan.”

XI

I opened the envelope that had been returned unclaimed. Because I had never seen birthday cards from the 1930s, what I found intrigued me. The stationery and greeting card industries, I reflected, had shifted gears significantly over the past fifty years. There were two birthday cards inside—not birthday cards as we know thembut birthday cards of the era: two flat, unfolded cards about four inches square, with elaborate, embossed coloured drawings of a bird in a garden and a galleon on the high seas respectively. The former read: “Birthday Greetings Dear Brother,” the other, “To the Nicest Uncle on his Birthday.” Each sported a genial epigraph, and was signed by my mother, for herself and for the children. On the back of hers was a P.S.—“Why don’t you write?”

Accidentally, I tore the envelope putting them back. It tore easily. “And this was it?” I asked.

My father nodded.

“You never heard from him again?”

He shook his head.

“She’s going to die, you know.”

The eyes behind the thick lenses weakened. “I know.”

“She wants to see him.”

He shrugged, looked away. “He’s gone. He never came back.” Then he looked at me. “What can we do?”

I stood up, walked to the kitchen window, stared out at the snow-covered parking lot. Beyond it, the traffic inched along Eglinton Avenue.

XII

I spent every afternoon for the next week in two places. First I would visit my mother; then I would drive to the main branch of the Toronto Public Library at Bloor and Yonge. There I would pore over an atlas, copying down names of cities, towns, communities in and around the Detroit area and as far south as Toledo. The litany had become familiar: Windsor, Pontiac, Wyandotte, Ypsilanti, Ann Arbor, Flint, Lansing, Grand Rapids—even Saginaw and Bay City—plus numerous others. Having made my daily list, I would then ask the librarian for the white pages of the communities’ phone books, which were all filed on microfiche, and seat myself in front of one of the viewers, scanning them for any mention of the surname “Radey.” It was likely, I realized, that he was dead. But it didn’t seem too unlikely that he may have married, may even have had children. The surname proved remarkably uncommon, which was to my advantage.

My list of names and addresses grew, slowly but steadily.

By the week’s end I had progressed from the Detroit area to major cities in general, including New York, Chicago, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Houston, New Orleans, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego . . . I had also begun to realize the impossibility of my self-appointed task. How, I wondered, could I hope to succeed where the RCMP and private investigators had failed? The answer, I knew, was that I probably would not. What I would need was a lightning bolt of luck, pure and simple. There were too many places I could never cover, too many years that had passed.

Yet I persisted. I wanted to give this to my mother. It was what she wanted. The attempts needed to be made.

My final list consisted of some fifty or so names. A couple were even J. Radeys. One in Kansas City was a John F. Radey.

I wrote my letter.

Dear Sir or Madam:

I am trying to trace a relative—for strictly family reasons—with the surname Radey. I am trying to find Jack (John Francis) Radey, born in Toronto, in 1911. His father was Martin Radey (deceased), born circa 1882 Toronto, and his mother was Margaret Anne Curtis (deceased) born Toronto, 1878. He had one sibling—a sister, Margaret, born Toronto, 1909.

Margaret, Jack’s sister (now Mrs. Thomas Dakin), is my mother.

If Jack is still alive, perhaps this letter can reach him. Perhaps he married and had children, some of whom might read this. Xeroxing and networking of this letter is encouraged. If this letter should reach anyone with any information, please feel free to call me collect, as soon as possible. Any information would be appreciated.

Many thanks.
Sincerely, etc.

I made a hundred copies, mailing as many as I could out into the void.

XIII

It’s not that there were no replies. On the contrary, I received about a dozen cards and letters, most merely assuring me that they could be of no help. A card came from Cleveland from a family that informed me that their name had been legally changed in 1953 from a long Polish name: the closest I seemed to come was a letter from a lady in Minnesota:

My father, Charles, to whom your letter was addressed, died last May, a couple weeks short of his eightieth birthday. I have two brothers—Todd in Tallahassee, Florida, and Paul Michael, of Evansville, Indiana.
        My father was raised in the Kansas area. We know very little about his family. We never knew any of them. As far as I know there were no brothers or sisters. As far as I can determine, he had an unhappy childhood and never seemed to want to talk about it—so, I respected that. I’m sorry that I can’t be of some help to you. Good luck in your search.

I wrote to the two brothers.

No answer.

Another brief note arrived as the weeks passed, from Haddonfield, New Jersey.

Dear Sir:

Your letter about Jack Radey was brought to my attention.

A friend of mine who is interested in genealogy suggested that you advertise in the magazine, Genealogy Helper, which is published by the Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., at 1001 N. Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD.

You may wish to forward a copy of your letter. They might be willing to publish it.

I sent them the letter. They published it.

Nothing happened.

XIV

My mother died. I was unable to bring Jack back for her. I had failed.

Time. It was devouring us all, burying us in stratified layers, impervious to archaeological probes.

XV

The snow melted, leaving puddles of slush that glinted in the sunshine. Then the puddles dried up and flew away with the April breezes.

I stood at my father’s kitchen window gazing out at the bulldozers and crane that were excavating the parking lottransforming it into an enormous maw that would serve to support the new police station. In my hand a mug of instant coffee steamed casually, emitting small rays of warmth.

Behind me, saying nothing, my father smoked a cigarette with his right hand. His left hand was jammed in his belt.

XVI

It was the eighth of May when my father phoned. “I’d like you to come over.”

“Anything wrong?”

“No, nothing wrong.” There was a pause. “At least, I don’t think so.”

“What is it?”

“A letter came today. For Margaret.”

“Who’s it from?”

“I opened it.” He seemed to be apologizing.

I waited.

“It’s from Jack.”

I couldn’t speak.

“I said it’s from Jack.”

“Jack?” My mind was numbed. “He’s alive?”

“I don’t know.”

“You don’t know? What do you mean you don’t know?” The words were tumbling out before I could sift them. “You’re holding his letter, aren’t you?” My voice had become a whisper. It was incredible. Everything seemed incredible.

“Yes, but—”

“But what?”

“Leo . . . Listen to me for a minute.” I could hear his breathing as he waited. A second tripped by. Two. Three. “Will you listen?” He was breathing heavily.

I calmed myself. “Yes.”

“It came in the mail today. Along with all the usual stuff.”

“Where is he?” The question blurted out before I could stifle it.

“It’s postmarked Toledo, Ohio.”

“He’s in Toledo?” It was both exclamation and question.

“I don’t know if he’s there, Leo . . .”

“What is it? What is it?”

“The letter’s fifty years old, Leo. It’s postmarked April 30, 1934. It’s written in pencil, just like the other one. The date on the letter is April 29, 1934. It was written and mailed fifty years ago, Leo, but it came in the mail today. Today!”

I closed my eyes and waited for the explanation to present itself to me. Instead, I saw two birthday cards, one with a bird in a garden, the other with a galleon on the high seas.

XVII

My father was strangely composed when he handed me the letter. I wondered whether it was because he had had time to calm himself, or if it was part of the realm of old age to bear surprises with greater dispassion.

In the upper right-hand corner was the same purple three-cent Washington stamp. The postmark was as he had said.

The letter was two sheets of seven by ten-and-a-half; above the date on the letter was the address 117-17th Street, Toledo.

Dear Margaret:

I certainly owe you an apology, and I suppose I owe all the rest of the family one too. It just seems as though the things I should do, I never get around to, and the ones I shouldn’t are always being done.

I got your letter a couple of weeks ago, and I’ve started to write to you several times. I get about halfway thru and then something happens. How are you all going, and how is Father?

I didn’t have such a good winter, but things are starting to look up now. I lost my car, and just about everything else I had just before Christmas. I had a wreck, and was laid up for a while, but I’m ok now, and thinking about another car. I guess I’ll be smart to stay away from them for a while though.

I was sure glad to hear from you. Don’t think I’m an awful heel for not writing sooner, but just try and realize what a careless brother you have. I would have dropped you a line at Xmas, but I was in pretty bad shape—physically and financially, so I just lay low and hoped everything would be all right.

I’ve been in Toledo now for two weeks. How are the children—Boy I’ll bet they are getting big. I’d love to see them. If you get a chance to come to Detroit some weekend why not bring them along, and let me know beforehand so I’ll meet you there.

I haven’t seen anyone you know for so long that I feel like an orphan. I’m still with Hartican. I was away from him for a while during the winter, but started back again. His picture business is still the biggest. I’m working with a chap named McMaster a real nice fellow. He’s been married about a year and a half, and they were blessed with a bouncing baby boy about three weeks ago. He (Mac I mean) is just ga-ga about the baby. He has me talking like one.

Say—that was a dirty dig about those cards you have for me. You’d think you hadn’t heard from me in over a year. Send me some snapshots of yourself and the kiddies. I’m still carrying the one of you and Loretta in your bathing suits and Ronnie and Anne on the bikes.

Say hello to Father and all the gang for me, and write me sooner than I did you. Try and forgive me for not writing sooner—cause you know how a fellow slips once in a while. I’m glad to hear Tommy is doing well and has a new car, and tell Mrs. Dakin I hope she feels like herself soon.

I’m “gonna” close now and get some sleep. So long and

Lots of Love
Jack

I left the letter on the kitchen table in front of my father and went to the window. In the excavation pit, the foundations had been poured.

XVIII

The next letter arrived on June 23. I hung up the phone after receiving my father’s call and drove to his house in a daze.

This one was postmarked June 18, 1934, from Bucyrus, Ohio. The envelope bore the imprint of some roadside inn or hotel, possibly even a motel.

I wasn’t even certain if such things existed in the 1930s. Perhaps, I thought, it’s merely a rooming house: “the highway,” it read, “On The Nation’s Main Thoroughfare. ‘The Lincoln Highway,’ bucyrus, Ohio.”

The letter consisted of three sheets of six by nine-and-a-half yellowed stationery, with the same letterhead as adorned the envelope. The upper left hand corner boasted “Modern,” the upper right, “Fireproof.” I glanced once more at the envelope. A red two-cent Washington was aligned with a green one-cent counterpart. I read the letter. It was dated, in pencil, June 18/34.

Dear Margaret:

The first thing I want to do is apologize for not writing sooner. You know how I am about letters though.

I’m still with Hartican of Detroit, but its so long since I’ve seen the office that I almost forget what he looks like.

How are all the folks in Toronto? Say “Hello” to all the gang around the house for me.

Have you been bathing this summer? I suppose Ronnie and Anne are both expert swim-champs by now.

There isn’t very much to tell, as I’ve been hitting small towns all along the line. If the next one is as dead as this is I’ll go crazy.

I don’t know where I’m going from here, but we will be leaving in a few days. I’ll let you know my next address in time for you to drop a line. Let me know how Father is getting along. I’ve lost his address.

Things are just about the same with me, I’m not making a fortune but I will one of these days.

I’m “gonna” beat it now and get something to eat.

Lots of Love

Your Brother
Jack

We were quiet for a long time in the kitchen. Finally, I looked at my father.

“Why is this happening?” I asked. I waited for paternal wisdom, for a flippant retort, for exposure of some implausible and outrageous scheme. I watched him frown, and waited.

His eyes were focused on the wall behind me. I glanced sidewise to see what might be there. There was nothing. “Things have to be settled,” he said. “Or they never go away.”

XIX

At home, I dug my road atlas out of a pile of litter in a corner of the basement, and sat down to peruse it.

I found Bucyrus. It was north of Columbus, north of Marion, a tiny speck on Highway 4.

Bucyrus. I let the name roll softly in my brain.

He was headed south. Detroit. Toledo, Bucyrus.

On the Nation’s Main Thoroughfare, The Lincoln Highway.

Was it happening fifty years ago? Or was it happening now?

I knew the answer. It was both.

He was moving, had moved, is moving, deep into the heart of America. It was clear. America: The Melting Pot. Canada: The Event Horizon.

Down The Lincoln Highway. Assimilated. Ingurgitated.

Then and now.

And tomorrow.

XX

The letter that arrived July 5 was the briefestwritten on a torn piece of stationery. It was the last to arrive at my father’s house. It was from Ashland, Kentucky. The hotel this time was called The Scott Hotel, and the letterhead underlined its feature: “Fire ProofModerate PriceTub and Shower Baths.” It had been posted July 1, 1934.

Dear Margaret:

Just a line to ask how you are, and how things are going in Toronto. I am doing pretty well down here. I have my own car now, have had it for a week, a Dodge Roadster. How is Tommy and the kiddies? Say Hello to Father for me.

I’ll be in touch.

Love
Jack

XXI

I usually take my holidays in August. I like the weather, the heat, the end of summer. I usually head north, rent a cottage, do some fishing. The splash of a smallmouth bass taking a surface lure on an August evening can make the hairs on my neck stand up straight.

This year, I headed south.

Detroit, Toledo, Bucyrus, Ashland.

I had to see for myself.

XXII

I told my father. He nodded, sitting in the kitchen.

Outside, the girders rose up out of the pit, giving shape to the police station. The parking lot was gone.

XXIII

There was no Vermont Hotel in Detroit. There were Holiday Inns, Hyatts, Hiltons. An office building stood on the site where 138 W. Columbia would have been.

I drove on.

XXIV

There was no 117-17th Street in Toledo. At least not any longer.

XXV

I took I-75 south from Toledo to Findlay, veered east on 15 to 23, then across 30 to Highway 4.

The Lincoln Highway. Bucyrus.

I tried to imagine it as Jack had seen it, leading into the splendour of America, offering him his fortune. A pleasant little burg. Sherwood Anderson country.

I drove back and forth along the main route twice, tasting, searching, looking for more than just the highway inn. In some way, I was looking for Jack.

He was not here though. J.C. Penney was here. So was First Federal Savings, Rexall Drugs, Halliwell Hardware, Kork ’N’ Kap Drive Thru, Radio Shack, H & R Block, and Holiday Inn. Grey and white Kiwanis garbage bins were strategically located to polish the exterior.

the highway was gone. Amish Cheese was still here.

I had no idea where Jack was.

That night, I stayed at the Holiday Inn.

XXVI

The next day, I got back onto 23 and took it all the way to Ashland, Kentucky. At Portsmouth, I crossed the Ohio River.

It was hot and humid, as only August can be.

I stopped at a Burger King for lunch, scanning the local phone books for a Scott Hotel. There was no listing. Instead of “Fire Proof—Moderate Price—Tub and Shower Baths,” I was regaled with modern attractions: colour TV (24-hour movies); sauna baths; free in-room coffee; king-size waterbeds; luxury rooms . . . People stayed at the Ramada Inn in 1984—not the Scott.

I finished my lunch. I had come all this way to see, to try to understand. Getting into my car, I began to drive, touring the streets casually, my arm resting on the open window ledge.

J.C. Penney was here too. So was Wendy’s, McDonald’s, and Arby’s. Chevron Gas, McCreary Tires, Midas Mufflers. Dairy Cheer—Home of the Smashburger, ABC Drive Thru” Liquors. Sears. The Ashland Oil Company.

I made a left onto one of the short streets that ran north and south joining the main thoroughfares, and I saw it. The Scott Hotel. A creaking rooming house whose very foundation had shifted, giving it a perceptible list, out of plumb with its surroundings.

The sweat ran into my eyes. At least, I think it was the sweat. I may have been crying. I don’t know.

XXVII

Opening my eyes, I blinked several times. It was still there, avatar of a bygone era, unassuming and pale.

The Scott Hotel.

I glanced at my watch. It was 3 p.m. Easing the car to the curb, I parked. It was an accident that I had found it. At least, I thought it was an accident.

I got out, walked up to the dilapidated front porch, studied the moon-shaped wells in the three steps before me, and took them smoothly, arriving at the front door. A giant oval of bevelled glass, frosted at the edges, was implanted in a heavy wooden frame, laden with innumerable coats of paint, the latest of which was a drab olive green. A cast-iron knocker hung to the right of the glass, chest-high. I used it. Then I took a step back, waiting.

When the door was pulled open from within, a small, wiry woman in her fifties stood in the hallway. Her eyes were black and squinting. I was unable to see the end of the hall behind her.

For a moment we merely confronted one another. Then she spoke. “Yes? Can I help you?”

“I’m—” I was at a temporary loss. She smiled, tilting her head to one side.

I didn’t know what I wanted. I didn’t know what to ask. My journey—everything—seemed impossibly foolish.

Yet there were the letters. I had them in the car—in the glove compartment. They were real. They existed.

I tried again. “I’m looking for—Jack Radey.”

She continued smiling. “Oh, yes.” She stepped aside. “He’s in his room. Second on your right, upstairs.”

XXVIII

I knocked. The door opened.

Jack Radey stood before me, a young man in his early twenties. I knew it was him. I could tell by the jaw, the cheekbones, the black hair. He was a Radey—my mother’s brother.

My uncle.

“Yes?”

“Jack? Jack Radey?”

He smiled, puzzled. “Yes.”

“I’m a friend of Margaret’s. A friend of your sister.”

His eyes brightened. “Way down here? You’re kidding!” He moved back, inviting me inside. “C’mon in.”

I went inside.

“Have a seat.” He offered me the chair from the writing desk in the room. “Thanks.” He sat across from me on the bed. His shirt was plain white, open at the neck—the collar from another era; his pants were flannel—too warm for either the time of year or the place—with a double-pleated front.

“Do you live here?” he asked.

“No. I’m on vacation. Margaret knew I might get down here. She gave me your address. Asked me to drop in on you, say hello, make sure everything’s all right.”

He shook his head, smiling. He eyes were bright blue, like my mother’s. “Good old Marg. Always keeping tabs on me. Watchin’ out for little brother.” He was both amused and pleased. Then his eyes met mine again. “I’m sorry—I didn’t catch your name.”

“Leo.” He waited for a last name. When I didn’t offer it, I added, “Just tell her Leo dropped by to see how you were, to see if there was any pressing news, next time you write.”

He accepted that, rose from the bed and walked to the window with his hands in his pockets. “It’s hot here. But I like it. I like the possibilities.” He turned to stare at me, silhouetted in the light from the window, a young man, confronted with his future. “A man can make something of himself down here. Anything can happen.” He moved away from the window so I could see the glow of hope on his face. “Do you know where Ashland is? Do you know where I could go from here?”

I shrugged, not sure what the answer was.

“God . . .” He ran his hand through black curly hair. “Anywhere,” he said. “Anywhere.” Then he turned back to stare out the window. “It’s like the jumping-off point to anywhere.” He paused. “I’m on the edge of the Virginias, the Carolinas. I could go right through to Richmond or Norfolk, or up to Washington, Baltimore, Atlantic City. It’s all ahead of me.” He turned to face me again. “You tell Margaret I’m fine.”

I stood up.

“Tell her everything’s fine. Tell her I miss her.” He offered his hand, I took it. His eyes sparkled.

“Tell Father I’m fine too.”

I nodded. “I will.”

He smiled openly, warmly. “Nice meeting you, Leo.”

I smiled in return. “Margaret wants you to stay in touch.”

“I will.”

He let me out. I went down the stairs and let myself out the front door. When I reached my car, I turned and gazed back at the Scott Hotel.

Upstairs at the window where Jack had stared out, I saw an old man with white hair looking down at me. I got into my car. When I looked again, he was gone.

XXIX

That night, I slept in the Ramada Inn.

XXX

I left Ashland the next morning, crossed the Ohio, went along 52 to 23, and north. I had lunch at the Court Cafe in Bucyrus. Later, because it was hot, and because I was tired, I pulled off Highway 4—The Lincoln Highwayjust south of number 20, had a Pepsi at a gas station, and read a poster for the Seneca Caverns.

No matter what had happened, I was still on my vacation. And I was in no hurry to rush home. Part of me wanted to dawdle, to think, to feelto try to understand.

I got back in the car and followed the signs. Fifteen minutes later I pulled into a modest picnic area, parked, and walked into the rickety gift shop. The sign above the gift shop announced: “Enter the caves in here.” I bought a ticket for the next tour.

I still didn’t know what I was doing.

There were about twenty of us on the tour.

A local high school girl led us down the poured cement stairs. I felt the temperature drop into the fifties, felt the sweat cool on my skin. I left the upper world behind.

The cavern was not a solution cavern. It had been formed by an earthquake, millions of years ago—a giant crack in the earth. The roofs and floors were so juxtaposed that they would fit perfectly into one another.

The high school girl delivered her well-rehearsed speech at each point of interest. When we reached the bottom we were introduced to “Old Mist’ry River,” which, we were told, had defied all attempts to measure its depth or locate its source. The stream’s only inhabitants were amphipods—half-inch-long, shrimp-like creatures.

I asked her if it ever rose higher up into the caverns. “During freshet thaw,” she said. “Ten years ago, it rose right up to within ten feet of the entranceway. But,” she added, “It always recedes again. It always drops back to its proper level.”

I nodded, remembering my mother’s words. “Jack was here. And my father.”

Turning, we retraced our steps, up out of the cavern. I wanted to go home.

XXXI

The letters are no longer in my glove compartment. They have disappeared. I didn’t notice until I was crossing the border from Detroit into Windsor.

I should be upset, but I’m not. I think I figured it out. My father figured it out before I left Toronto. In the kitchen that day, he had simplified it. Things have to be settled, or they never go away.