They left, I guess, Dad said.
They said they had to go, Frank said. They weren’t so bad. Not like you said. You always made them sound like they were terrible people.
You never met them before now.
No. When would I?
Well, you saw them now.
They weren’t so bad. They didn’t bother me.
It was because he wanted to beat me again, Dad said. I wasn’t going to have it. I was fifteen and I run away. I never went home after that.
History repeats, Frank said.
What?
I’m saying I know that story. A version of it, anyway.
Maybe so, Dad said. He looked at Frank for a while. Goddamn it, I didn’t even know how to cut my meat or eat my potatoes right, I chased my peas around the plate with a knife. I come out of that kind of life, out of their house, knowing nothing but hard work and sweat and paying heed and dodging cow shit and taking orders. I cut my meat about like it was a piece of stove wood.
None of that matters, Frank said.
No. That don’t matter, Dad said. But it matters what it stands for. He talks about luck. Your mom was my luck. I was lucky in your mom.
I know, Dad.
Your mom helped me change.
Well, I don’t like to tell you, but you’re not all that sophisticated yet, Dad. If that’s what you’re talking about.
What?
Never mind. That doesn’t matter either.
Wait now. I know what you’re talking about. I know what you mean. But you don’t know where I come from. I wanted more. I wanted out of that. I wanted to work inside someplace. Talk to people. Live in a town. Make a place for myself on Main Street. Own a store, sell things to people, provide what they needed. I worked hard, like I told him. It wasn’t just luck. Your mom was my luck. I know that but I worked hard too.
Dad, who are you talking to? Don’t you know who you’re talking to? I know all that. I was here, remember?
Dad stared at him. All right. I’ll pipe down. He looked around the shadowy room. You want some coffee? I know you drink coffee.
No. Not now.
Go ahead and smoke if you want. I don’t care. What difference does it make now.
All right. I’ll do that.
Frank took a pack from his shirt pocket and lit a cigarette with a match and blew smoke toward the window. The smoke was sucked out by the night air.
Your mom went to find you in Denver, Dad said.
I know she did.
How do you know?
They told me.
Who?
At the café.
I thought you weren’t there no more.
I’m not. But I drop in.
They didn’t tell your mom.
I drop in once in a while.
What are you doing now?
I’ve been out in California where most of us end up. Where else?
I guess it’s nice and warm all year long out there, Dad said.
It’s warm. Yeah. But we’re out there in numbers. That’s what I’m talking about.
You mean others like you.
Yeah. Other weirdos and cocksuckers.
Don’t talk like that about yourself, Dad said.
It’s the truth, isn’t it. Isn’t that what you think?
I did once.
What do you think now?
Not that.
What then?
I don’t know. I don’t understand it. I’m too ignorant. I don’t know nothing about it. I told you, I come off a farm in Kansas. That’s all I knew where I come from. It took all I had to get this far, a little plains town, with a store on Main Street.
You did all right, Dad. You’ve come a long way.
Not far enough.
No. That’s true. Not yet you haven’t.
Dad looked at him, his eyes watering again.
What’s wrong? Frank said.
Nothing.
I thought you were going to cry.
That’s the first kind thing you’ve said to me in forty years, Dad said. About me doing all right, coming a long way.
Well, I must have forgotten myself. I let my guard down. Don’t count on it happening again.
I know. I learned that much. I’m not ignorant about everything.
He woke once more. Frank had moved his chair to a place closer beside the bed. The other two chairs were gone now. The air was fresh and pleasant coming in the window, the light still shining from the barn outside.