I don't know what drew me into the attic of the family's old Victorian house in North Main Street in Poplar Bluff, Missouri, on a Saturday morning. I think it was because I thought there were things in the house that were missing since I'd returned from two years at the Lakeland Behavioral Health System residential facility in Springfield. There were still large areas of missing memory in my mind since the auto accident nearly four years previously that I and the doctors were trying to get back. I'd been released, at twenty-two, to come home and enroll in the two-year Three Rivers College, to start getting my life together, with the doctors saying that if anyone was going to help me get those chunks of memory back, it would be my family. But my mother and father didn't seem a bit interested in me getting those memories back. And when I returned home, something seemed out of kilter with the house itself--things being missing or not where they had been during my life before the accident.
I had agreed with the doctors at Lakeland that I should just move on now, with starting a life, working from the main talent I seemed to have--fine arts. But it still bugged the hell out of me that I couldn't remember certain areas, certain vital aspects of me. Like, I could come right out and say it, my sexual preferences. I didn't know which way I wanted to swing. I was twenty-two, for god sake, and though I'd almost blanked out of couple of strategic years of my life, or big aspects of those, it was past time for me to know whether I liked women or men. I could contemplate having sex with women, but often when I did--and I'd had sex with women while in Springfield, more often than not, the images of having sex with men drifted into my consciousness. I hadn't actually had sex with men--or I didn't think I'd had. That last, not being sure I hadn't had, kept rising up and biting me in the butt.
It wasn't just some misplaced "things" that had sent me into the attic. I knew, at the back of my mind, that there had been a box I kept in my bedroom closet that had dirty books and sex magazines in it. Didn't all guys have that? What I needed to know about my preferences, I was sure I could find from what was in that box. But there wasn't any such box in my bedroom closet now--and I hadn't been able to find one in the attic either. So, it was just "things" that were missing. It was clues to what I needed to know.
There were fleeting moments of past, of possibilities. Of being with someone. I could almost conjure him up in my mind and then he'd float away. Sometime between the horrendous automobile accident--or during it. Hell, I couldn't get hold of it.
So, I was here, in the attic, going through boxes, not having been helped a bit by either of my parents and not finding that one box I was looking for. I'd noticed that stuff I remembered being in the living room--framed photos mostly--were missing and I asked about that. My father, Frank, just said, "I haven't noticed. Ask your mother. She's always redecorating." But that wasn't true. I hadn't forgotten everything. It was just the more stressful things I'd forgotten, the doctors thought.
"I just got tired of the clutter," she said. "I boxed them up. They're around somewhere," she said. She didn't say they were in the attic. She seemed determine not to say where the stuff was and she probably didn't notice how important it was to me at the moment. I didn't have the nerve to ask her about the one box from my closet, but now, when I was going through other boxes in the attic, my interest had drifted to other things I found there that once were downstairs. I didn't even know why that was important to me, but it was. There was something about the photographs that had been in the living room that was important to me. I needed to pursue the issue. She said they were boxed up and put away, but she didn't say where. That would only mean some closets in the spare rooms--it was a big house--the basement or the attic.
It was the attic. I found the box, and I found the photos. And just before I found them and pulled them out of the box, a name came into my mind: Travis. Uncle Travis. And also, at the same time, the name became connected with that something, something taboo, in my background that my mind was refusing to acknowledge.
Did I have an uncle named Travis? Did he do something that made me unsure of my sexuality--or that clarified that for me?
* * * *
"Yes, that's Travis. Where did you find those, Marty?"
"In a box in the attic," I answered my father. They weren't in the box I was looking for, but they at least gave me something to pursue to start unraveling all of these questions in my mind about "before the accident."
He'd hardly taken his eyes away from the TV set, where the Los Angeles Rams professional football team, which Frank Blandford had been diehard enough to follow when they abandoned Saint Louis and moved west, were playing. "Those" was referring to the two framed photographs I'd brought down from the attic, two that I had remembered seeing on the piano in the living room for years.
I remembered enough about Uncle Travis to know he wasn't that much older than I was--not more than ten years--but that he was a lot younger than either of my parents. I had no idea how he was an uncle of mine. One of the photos was of him as a boy of about twelve--I don't know how I knew it was him, but I did--standing with my parents and an older man. A toddler was in my mother's arms. I assumed that was me. The other photo was of Travis in his Navy uniform, and again I don't know why I knew it was him, I just did. He was maybe nineteen or twenty and he was one fine-looking dude. The term "sexy" came to my mind unbidden, and, yes, it disturbed me that it had.
Something about Travis. There was something about Travis that no one seemed to want me to recover in my memory. What had Travis done with--or to me? I somehow knew there was something considered unmentionable.
"What's happened to Uncle Travis?" I asked. "Why have his photos been put away?"
"What are you thinking about Travis?" my dad said. His eyes went back to the TV and I could see that he tensed up. "Are you remembering something that had been lost?"
He said that almost in a dreading tone. What was up with that? I wondered. This was why they finished with me at Lakeland. It had been too long working with the doctors there and I'd reached an impasse with my memory. They'd said the best chance of unlocking my mind was to return home--to Polar Bluff--and get back into what was intended to be the progression of my life: going to junior college in art before leaving home and going further afield. My mom had agreed with that. For some reason my dad hadn't. For some reason it was almost like my dad didn't want me to remember. What did he know that he wanted me to forget? Did it have something to do with Uncle Travis?
"I'm not remembering much. But I remembered that his photos had been on the piano in the living room and they're now in the attic. I can almost remember something... something about him."