Maybe that is what he was after, my father, when he arranged, ten years ago, to be discovered in a mobile home with a woman named Roxanne, an attractive, recently divorced masseuse. He sat there, he said later, in the middle of a red, imitation-leather sofa, with his shoes off and a whisky in his hand, filling up with a joyful kind of dread-- like a swamp filling up with night, —while my mother hammered on the trailer door with a muddy, pried-up stone, then smashed the headlights of his car, drove home, and locked herself inside. He paid the piper, was how he put it, because he wanted to live, and at the time knew no other way than to behave like some blind and willful beast, —to make a huge mistake, like a big leap into space, as if following a music that required dissonance and a plunge into the dark. that is what he tried to tell me, the afternoon we talked, as he reclined in his black chair, divorced from the people in his story by ten years a heavy cloud of smoke. Trying to explain how a man could come to a place where he has nothing else to gain unless he loses everything. So he louses up his work, his love, his own heart. he hails disaster like a cab. And years later, when the storm has descended and rubbed his face in the mud of himself, he stands again and looks around, strangely thankful just to be alive, oddly jubilant—as if he had been granted the answer to his riddle or as if the question had been taken back. Perhaps a wind is freshening the grass, and he can see now, as for the first time, the softness of the air between the blades. The pleasure built into a single bending leaf. Maybe then he calls it, in a low voice and only to himself, Sweet Ruin. And maybe only because I am his son, I can hear just what he means. How even at this moment, even when the world seems so perfectly arranged, I feel a force prepared to take it back. Like a smudge on the horizon. Like a black spot on the heart. How one day soon, I might take this nervous paradise, bone and muscle of this extraordinary life, and with one deliberate gesture, like a man stepping on a stick, break it into halves. But less gracefully than that. I think there must be something wrong with me, or wrong with strength, that I would break my happiness apart simply for the pleasure of the sound. The sound the pieces make. What is wrong with peace? I couldn't say. But, sweet ruin, I can hear you. There is always the desire. Always the cloud, suddenly present and willing to oblige.