Chris Offutt - No Heroes - A Memoir of Coming Home

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From the critically acclaimed author of the novel
and memoir
comes the unforgettable memoir
. “If you haven’t read Chris Offutt, you’ve missed an accomplished and compelling writer” (
).
In his fortieth year, Chris Offutt returns to his alma mater, Morehead State University, the only four-year school in the Kentucky hills. He envisions leading the modest life of a teacher and father. Yet present-day reality collides painfully with memory, leaving Offutt in the midst of an adventure he never imagined: the search for a home that no longer exists.
Interwoven with this bittersweet homecoming tale are the wartime stories of Offutt’s parents-in-law, Arthur and Irene. An unlikely friendship develops between the eighty-year-old Polish Jew and the forty-year-old Kentucky hillbilly as Arthur and Offutt share comfort in exile, reliving the past at a distance. With masterful prose, Offutt combines these disparate accounts to create
a profound meditation on family, home, the Holocaust, and history.

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“Please,” I said. “I want you to have it.”

She took the heavy book. Her lips pressed together and her eyes got wet.

“Thank you,” she said. “No one ever did anything like this for me.”

“You deserve it, Sandra.”

She nodded and turned away, then spun back and gave me a quick hug, the dictionary between our bodies. She hurried from the office. I sat for a long time, realizing how ignorant I was of my students’ needs. The first lesson was mine, not theirs.

I gathered my classwork in a daze, and headed for the old Malibu at Mrs. Jayne’s house.

A car stopped in the street beside me. People here don’t use their horns, and think nothing of halting traffic to talk with someone. Harley grinned at me, his scarred face missing a few teeth, his hair already gray as an old fence post. I hadn’t seen him since the first day of school, when he invited me to get high with him in the woods.

Harley sat behind the wheel of a rusty car. He appeared happy and proud, and I opened the door and got in. I couldn’t recall ever seeing Harley in the driver’s seat. It was utterly incongruous, like finding a chain saw in an Easter basket. The car ashtray overflowed with cigarette butts. On the transmission hump was a large table ashtray, also full to overflowing.

“Want a cigarette?” he said.

I told him I quit and asked about the car. He explained that he gave up drinking after twenty years, and the car belonged to his girlfriend. She’s the first girlfriend he’s ever had, a Caudill. This last name was as common in the hills as tree leaves, and Harley took pains to identify her. Such distinctions are crucial in Rowan County, where people will judge you forever by who you dated ten years back. They shoot friends and neighbors over these issues.

“She ain’t one of them hollow Caudills from up sixty,” he said. “And she ain’t out of that black-headed bunch on the creek. She might be kin to that uppity bunch, you know the ones, but she don’t claim it.”

Harley told me her mother’s last name, which I vaguely recognized. Essentially, he was letting me know that his girlfriend was a solid middle-of-the-road Caudill, neither inbred nor rich, either of which is highly suspect. Her only indiscretion was having married a man from Martin County who left her after she bore his triplets, one of whom died shortly after birth. People used her as an example of the sort of cosmic penalty that is inflicted for marrying out of the county. There are no coincidences here. Everything is governed by cause and effect.

Harley was still talking. His girlfriend did everything for him.

“I don’t even have to light a cigarette, Chris. She lights it and puts it in my mouth for me. She’s got something to eat any time of the day or night. She won’t let me take a bath. She just warshes me off cleaner than I’ve ever been. Dries me, too.”

“You look clean,” I said.

“Son, when we’re out she don’t look at nobody else. She clings to me like a monkey. She’s fat and ugly but I don’t care.

Harley had recently moved ten miles away from Haldeman across the county line. It was foreign territory to him, like Montana or New York for me. He felt the same as I did about the changes in the county. Our hometown was nothing but dirt and houses.

“Ain’t it awful how they done Morehead,” he said. “I’d not live here for ten dollars a day. They’ve got Main Street bent like a bobby pin. And son, Haldeman’s gone, just gone. It’s like our backyard got took away.”

Our agreement on loss made perfect sense to Harley. It meant nothing that I had traveled half a million miles to his ten, that we both quit drinking, that we hadn’t seen each other in many years. All that mattered was having grown up together. No one can ever know a Haldeman boy like another Haldeman boy. I admired his car for a while.

“Shoot,” he said, “I just got my license two months ago. Had to borrow a car to take it in, and got it on my first try. First try, son! You got anywhere you need to go? I’ll drive you wherever. It don’t matter how far or how long it takes. I got gas and everything. You just tell me where to point this rig. I’ll take care of the rest.”

I realized that Harley wanted to return years of favors to people who drove him around the county. His glee was palpable. The old Pinto looked like it would barely get out of a driveway, but in eastern Kentucky, a car’s appearance could be extremely deceiving, evidenced by my Malibu. I didn’t have the heart to show my car to him. It would feel too much like bragging, and I wanted Harley to enjoy his own satisfaction.

I declined his offer to go somewhere.

“That’s all right,” Harley said. “We’ll set and smoke. Only I forgot you quit. Well, I’ll smoke double then.”

He lit two cigarettes and smoked them simultaneously while recalling various car wrecks, two of which I was in as a teenager. There was a time when several of us boys got drunk and deliberately wrecked cars for the fun of it. I remembered getting stoned on pot with him shortly before I left Kentucky the first time. Harley was astonished at my decision, and said, “There’s nowhere in the world I’d rather live than Haldeman.”

He told me of driving to visit his brother in Huntington, West Virginia, three hours away. Everyone warned him against such an undertaking — his family, his friends, the various counselors who’d attempted to look after him, even the police. No one believed in Harley. I realized that Sandra had lied in class because no one had taught her to believe in herself. I thought of Eugene’s periodic despair over deserting his county for college. My own efforts at self-belief wavered constantly.

I asked Harley if he’d been scared of the trip to Huntington.

“Shit fire and save matches,” he said. “I’ve got a car and a map and a set of eyeballs. Drove right there. Stopped once for gas. Never made a wrong turn but the one time and I was right by my brother’s house when I done it.”

He finished a cigarette, and contemplated the second one still burning in his other hand.

“You seem like you’re doing good,” I said.

“I’m happy as a whore in a pecker patch.”

He hit me in the arm and laughed. Abruptly he looked down, as if talking to his lap.

“Son, I had no idea what a man could do if he wasn’t in the habit of drinking.”

“What made you quit?” I said.

“Thought I was going to die of it. What happened was I had me a hangover that went for a week. Never got no better. I couldn’t eat or sleep. Every water I took came right back. They was puke bags laying thick around my bed. So I just decided I was done with it. I didn’t want to die. Not before I got my license, anyhow. You sure you don’t want me to drive you somewhere.”

“Okay,” I said, “drive me around the block.”

He very carefully put his foot on the brake, turned the key, and slid the automatic shifter to reverse. He looked both ways twice. He checked his mirrors, placed his right arm on the back of my seat, peered over his shoulder, and eased into the street. A cop drove by, one of the few in town, and Harley waved.

“He don’t know what to think,” Harley said. “I’ve knowed him a long time.”

He executed a perfect reverse turn, shifted gears, and began moving forward at five miles per hour. I was reminded of teaching Rita to drive on these very roads a decade back. She still drove like Harley did now — shoulders high, neck pronged forward, hands tense on the wheel, staring straight ahead. My sons told me that on long trips, they remind her to breathe. I understood why Harley’s girlfriend lit cigarettes for him in the car.

We circled the block at a funereal pace. Harley held the wheel with his hands clenched tight. We saw one car the entire drive and Harley became extremely tense, veins rising like cords on his forearms. He didn’t relax until the car went by in the opposite direction. He triple-checked the mirror to guarantee clearance.

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