Bob didn’t say, And with the hardware store receipts plus date-stamped pictures of us working, we prove renovation, increasing our equity.
He told Parker, “Either you come in or we’re all out.”
Parker clumped up the porch steps as if he were climbing a gallows. Louise handed him coffee from a thermos they’d filled at a Starbucks 110 miles away in Great Falls. The four friends had flown into Great Falls the day before, from Denver. She followed Parker and Bob into the dining room with its legacy of scarred furniture that included a document-covered table.
Steve laughed while Ali strapped a tool belt around his waist.
Louise caught the glow in her husband’s eyes.
Bob gets off on seeing that fire in other men.
Louise shook her head: Why did I just think that?
Montana recognizes legal verification other than notarization. A digital movie camera recorded the four friends processing sales documents with the mansion’s heir. Parker wanted to sign, sign, signand skedaddle, but Bob insisted on explaining each document to forestall future lawyers.
Fifty-four minutes later, Parker yelled, “Done!”
The front door swung open. They all hurried to its gaping view.
Outside snowflakes parachuted down like an invading army.
“But there’s no wind yet,” said Steve. “What opened the door?”
“Old houses,” said Bob. “They’re always settling.”
Parker said, “I’m so outta here!”
Louise grabbed his arm. “You can’t drive in a whiteout!”
Her husband, Steve, pushed the door closed.
Damn my logic,thought Louise. She didn’t know why.
And again the door swung open.
“Whoa,” said Ali. “That’s weird.”
As with a great whoosh, wind rose in the storm.
Bob closed the door. “Parker, if you die out there, the sale gets stalled in your probate. That blizzard will swallow you. What could be worse?”
“I don’t wanna know.” From his shirt pocket Parker fetched a steel lighter and a hand-rolled cigarette. The herbal smoke he exhaled revealed marijuana.
Bob said, “You’re getting stoned? Now? Celebrate at home!”
“Ain’t celebration.” Parker took another hit. “Medication.”
The door rattled.
“Didn’t think the wind was blowing that hard,” said Steve.
“ Not thinking’s the way to be here,” said Parker. “My old man didn’t hole up here because he was a drunk. He drank because he holed up here. Staying outside or being stoned makes it harder for the thinking to get you.”
“Look,” said Bob. “ Thoughts, voices, whatever you hear—”
Ali asked, “Why did you say that?”
“—doesn’t matter,” continued Bob. “We gotta fix this place up fast. Seal ourselves in or this storm will turn us into icicles. The leaky windows in the upstairs bedrooms: no time to replace them, but we can cover them up.”
Louise heard her husband, Steve, say, “Ali and I’ll do it!”
“Good,” said Bob. “Louise, help me Sheetrock that basement insulating wall Parker’s dad didn’t finish.”
Breaking glass!
They ran into the dining room and found the popped-off-the-wall shelf that Ali and Steve had laughingly named “Look-out Ledge” when they stacked it with bottles of red wine, the smoky Scotch Lauren ached to give up for motherhood, and the vodka Bob favored because it never breathed the secret of its sip. Plus Diet Coke and tonic water and two six-packs of beer.
The plastic bottles of Diet Coke and tonic water had survived—one Diet Coke bottle rolled across the floor to greet the five of them running in.
The liquor bottles were a jumble of broken glass cupping tiny pools of red wine.
Parker said, “Looks like you guys just lost your medical protection.”
He stubbed out the joint on the lighter and put them in his shirt pocket.
“Leave this mess,” said Bob. “We gotta work. It’s getting colder.”
Bob led them to the living room and their stack of delivered hardware supplies, their luggage and sack lunches and read-on-the-plane newspapers.
He handed Parker a hammer. “We’re all trapped in a house that needs fixing. Rip out the molding, reframe that window to keep out the cold.”
Parker shrugged: “If you gotta, you gotta.”
Steve grabbed a roll of plastic weathersheeting, duct tape. He would have dashed up the two flights of stairs to the bedroom level except Ali floated up the steps with that long-legged languor Steve didn’t want to miss.
Louise blinked: No, that wall didn’t just pulse.
Bob led her to the basement while their spouses climbed to the third floor with its wide-open stairwell bordered by a railing-protected corridor. Steve looked down the huge open shaft. Felt the vertigo of its inviting depth.
He and Ali worked on the smallest bedroom first.
“Like a cage in here,” said Ali.
Steve spun the rolled weathersheeting so an end flopped down.
Ali lifted a utility knife from the tool belt she’d strapped onto this muscled man who seemed less boring than her husband. She cut a translucent sheet, held it over the only window. Cold air blowing in from outside flapped the plastic and goose-bumped her flesh. She heard Steve ripping free strips of duct tape from where he loomed behind her hips.
Why did I think of it like that?she wondered.
Felt him brush against her as he bent to tape and seal all the edges.
“We’re done here.” Steve stared at her. “This is a kid’s room.”
She felt her goose bumps receding as the now-sealed room warmed, wondered if he noticed her nipples had yet to go down under her sweatshirt. Then she heard herself share a secret out loud: “Kids cut into your chances.”
“And all you can do is screw them up.” Never even told Louise that,thought her husband, Steve, as he led Ali to the second bedroom.
Where, in the dust and cobwebs stirring with the drafts from two windows, the bed was big enough for a surging teenage boy.
Ali said, “Feel the furnace? Like it started blasting more heat.”
Steve swallowed as she slid the zipper on her hooded sweatshirt down, down, spread her arms wide as she took it off.
For no reason she knew, Ali shook her blond hair free from a ponytail so it fell across her blue denim shirt with its pearl-white cowboy snaps.
Steve shook his head. I want “driving down the highway, white hash lines coming at the windshield,” and it’s the going, not the getting anywhere.
White pearl snaps.
They plastic-sealed the two windows against the howling wind.
Work together,Ali thought. It’s harder for the world to win if it’s more than just you.She felt like she was back in the trailer park, a girl hearing Gramma turn up the radio for some “Sealed with a Kiss” song. Ali knew how to do that, had done it and it wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t thatkiss.
Ali said, “We should . . . keep going.”
“Yes,” answered Steve. Yes. White hash lines. White pearl snaps.
They walked the corridor along the third-floor railing. Rising from the living room came the whump-ruhsounds of Parker ripping out molding.
As Ali led Steve into the third, the last, the master bedroom.
Whump-ruh. Whump-ruh.
That bedroom door slammed. Closed. With them inside.
“Old houses—always settling,” repeated Steve.
“Sure,” said Ali. “Sure.”
Covering the first window, Steve held the plastic in place while Ali taped it to the wall.
The heat swelled in that closed room. Steve shed his outer shirt. Its flannel smell sweetened the air for Ali as Steve savored the whiff of coconut shampoo from that morning at the motel when she’d showered naked.
Ali went between Steve and smudged glass to seal the last window.
Feels like I’m stoned,she thought as she finished. Her hips brushed Steve’s loins. She turned. Her breasts brushed his arm. Don’t thinkyes .