Claudia followed him into the kitchen, a room she had never entered: scabby linoleum and ancient appliances, an electric stove that looked grimy and possibly dangerous, its burners wrapped in yellowed tinfoil. Lined up on the counter were cereal boxes, a twenty-pack of Top Ramen, a toolbox, and a sack of rock salt.
They stood shoulder to shoulder, staring into the refrigerator.
“This is bleak,” Timmy said.
“Hang on.” Claudia rummaged through the drawers and came up with a half stick of butter, speckled with toast crumbs, and a few plastic-wrapped slices of American cheese.
She hadn’t made Cheesy Ramen in twenty-five years, but she made it that night for her weed dealer on her first orphan Christmas. They dined side by side in front of the television, the way she’d eaten every meal for the first seventeen years of her life.
“If I’m ever on death row, I want this to be my last meal,” Timmy said with his mouth full. “I want you to come make me these fuckin noodles.”
He said, “This is the most incredible thing I have ever eaten in my life.”
DON’T YOU WANT TO FIND HIM?
SHE TRIED ONE LAST TIME TO SEE HIM—MIDWAY THROUGH HER second trimester, when she was just beginning to show. She was counting on her belly to speak for her, to articulate what couldn’t be said.
Timmy’s apartment was empty. The tapestry had been taken down from the front window, and she could see clearly into the empty living room. His furniture was gone, the capacious couch and magisterial recliner and massive wide-screen TV. Claudia stood on the porch a long time, looking into the apartment, trying to memorize it. She knew that she would never return.
“Can I help you?”
She turned to see a pink-cheeked man in a Bruins jersey, holding a laminated sign. APARTMENT FOR RENT.
“I was just about to hang this.” He was maybe sixty, with longish hair and a gold chain at his throat. “The place is available first of the month. You wanna see it?”
“Yes,” said Claudia, her heart beating loudly. Yes, that is exactly what I want.
She followed him inside.
“I just listed it this morning,” said the landlord. “Already I’m getting calls out the wazoo.”
The apartment was clean and empty, filled with sunlight. Without Timmy’s outsized furniture, his imposing physical presence, the place felt smaller, not larger. It still smelled faintly of weed.
“Sorry about the smell. I’m having the floors redone next week. That should take care of it.”
She followed him into the kitchen. The cruddy linoleum had been replaced with wood-grain laminate, the moribund stove with a ceramic cooktop.
“That’s a brand-new refrigerator,” said the landlord. “Energy Star–rated.”
“Terrific,” Claudia said.
“You know the neighborhood? It’s a great location, walking distance to the Orange Line. At this price, the place will go fast. I’d put in an application today, if you’re interested.” His eyes dipped briefly to her waist, or maybe they didn’t. She was at the stage in her pregnancy when she was prone to imagining such things.
“Any questions for me?” he asked.
Claudia hesitated only a moment.
“The old tenant,” she said. “Where did he go?”
It was a bizarre question, but if the landlord thought so, he gave no sign. He looked a little sleepy, his eyes red-rimmed and bleary. It occurred to her that he was probably high.
“Moved away,” he said. “Out of state, I think.”
“Do you know where?”