3
Jack had the Lincoln Tunnel pretty much to
himself. He passed the stripe which marked the border of New York
and New Jersey, remembering how his brother and sister and he used
to cheer whenever they crossed the line after spending a day in The
City with their parents. It had always been a thrill then to be
back in good ol’ New Jersey. Those days were gone with the two-way
toll collections. Now they charged you a double toll to get to
Manhattan and let you leave for nothing. And he didn’t cheer as he
crossed the line.
He cruised out of the tunnel mouth, squinting
into the sudden glare of the morning sun. The ramp made a nearly
circular turn up to and through Union City, then down to the
meadowlands and the N.J. Turnpike. Jack collected his ticket from
the “Cars Only” machine, set his cruise control for fifty miles per
hour and settled into the right-hand lane for the trip. He was
running a little late, but the last thing he wanted was to be
stopped by a state cop.
The olfactory adventure began as the Turnpike
wound its ways through the swampy lowlands, past the Port of Newark
and all the surrounding refineries and chemical plants. Smoke
poured from stacks and torch-like flames roared from ten-story
discharge towers. The odors he encountered on the strip between
Exits 16 and 12 were varied and uniformly noxious. Even on a Sunday
morning.
But as the road drifted inland, the scenery
gradually turned rural and hilly and sweet-smelling. The farther
south he drove, the farther his thoughts were pulled into the past.
Images streaked by with the mile markers: Mr. Canelli and his lawn…
early fix-it jobs around Burlington County during his late teens,
usually involving vandals, always contracted sub rosa… starting Rutgers but keeping his repairs
business going on the side… the first trips to New York to do
fix-it work for relatives of former customers…
Tension began building in him after he passed
Exit 7. Jack knew the reason: He was approaching the spot where his
mother was killed.
It was also the spot where he had—how had
Kolabati put it?—”drawn the line between yourself and the rest of
the human race.”
It had happened during his third year at
Rutgers. A Sunday night in early January. Jack was on semester
break. He and his parents were driving south on the Turnpike after
visiting his Aunt Doris in Heightstown; Jack was in the back seat,
his parents in the front, his father driving. Jack had offered to
take the wheel but his mother said the way he wove in and out of
all those trucks made her nervous. As he remembered it, he and his
father had been discussing the upcoming Superbowl while his mother
watched the speedometer to make sure it didn’t stray too far over
sixty. The easy, peaceful feeling that comes with a full stomach
after a lazy winter afternoon spent with relatives was shattered as
they cruised under an overpass. With a crash like thunder and an
impact that shook the car, the right half of the windshield
exploded into countless flying, glittering fragments. He heard his
father shout with surprise, his mother scream in pain, felt a blast
of icy air rip through the car. His mother moaned and
vomited.
As his father swerved the car to the side of
the road, Jack jumped into the front seat and realized what had
happened: A cinderblock had crashed through the windshield and
landed against his mother’s lower ribs and upper abdomen. Jack
didn’t know what to do. As he watched helplessly, his mother passed
out and slumped forward. He shouted to get to the nearest hospital.
His father drove like a demon, flooring the pedal, blowing the
horn, and blinking the headlights while Jack pushed his mother’s
limp body back and pulled the cinderblock off her. Then he removed
his coat and wrapped it around her as protection against the cold
gale whistling through the hole in the windshield. His mother
vomited once more—this time it was all blood and it splattered the
dashboard and what was left of the windshield. As he held her, Jack
could feel her growing cold, could almost feel the life slipping
out of her. He knew she was bleeding internally, but there was
nothing he could do about it. He screamed at his father to hurry
but he was already driving as fast as he could without risking loss
of control of the car.
She was in deep shock by the time they got
her to the emergency room. She died in surgery of a lacerated liver
and a ruptured spleen. She had exsanguinated into her abdominal
cavity.
The incalculable grief. The interminable wake
and funeral. And afterwards, questions: Who?
Why? The police didn’t know and doubted very much that they
would ever find out. It was common for kids to go up on the
overpasses at night and drop things through the cyclone fencing
onto the cars streaming by below. By the time an incident was
reported, the culprits were long gone. The State Police response to
any and all appeals from Jack and his father was a helpless
shrug.
His father’s response was withdrawal; the
senselessness of the tragedy had thrown him into a sort of
emotional catatonia in which he appeared to function normally but
felt absolutely nothing. Jack’s response was something else: cold,
nerveless, consuming rage. He was faced with a new kind of fix-it
job. He knew where it had happened. He knew how. All he had to do
was find out who.
He would do nothing else, think of nothing
else, until that job was done.
And eventually it was
done.
It was long over now, a part of the past. Yet
as he approached that overpass he felt his throat constrict. He
could almost see a cinderblock falling… falling toward the
windshield… crashing through in a blizzard of glass fragments…
crushing him. Then he was under and in shadow, and for an instant
it was nighttime and snowing, and hanging off the other side of the
overpass he saw a limp, battered body dangling from a rope tied to
its feet, swinging and spinning crazily. Then it was gone and he
was back in the August sun again.
He shivered. He hated New Jersey.