Hopes for an equal, she thought. Hopes for recognition, for understanding. Hopes for a touch, for a contact, miraculously, across that divide.
What matters, Susan thought, is that he had never really abandoned that hope. Even now, deep in this killing winter. It was alive inside him.
She took a last look at the chessboard, then followed him toward the door.
22
John followed Tony Morriseau out into the cold afternoon.
A bank of snowclouds had rolled in from the west; the sunlight was fading into winter dusk. Strange how vivid all this seemed. It was true, what he had told Susan: since childhood he had lived in a world of Platonic abstraction. Schema and essence, the word behind the shadow. It was Benjamin who had inhabited the universe of surfaces and colors.
But that was changing. He felt it now, and he felt it accelerating. He stepped into the biting winter air in a shower of snow crystals, and he was stunned by the immediacy of it all. Was this how Susan experienced things? All sense and no cogitans—this playground of perception? Made it hard to think.
He was deluged by dusk and snowdunes, by the amber glow of the streetlights so cold and melancholy they seemed to burn into his sight. The knife of the wind. The hiss of his breath.
How meaningful it all seemed: a new and ancient language …
“John?”
Susan’s voice was crystalline and intimate. He turned to look at her. She was beautiful. She was frowning. “Are you all right?”
He shook his head. Maybe he wasn’t. He started to say, “I—” But the word itself hovered in the air, a pure and absurd syllable. It had no antecedent. He was as hollow as the sky.
Please, not now, he thought.
“Just a little dizzy,” he said.
“He turned the comer south of here,” Susan said.
John hurried after the retreating figure of Tony Morriseau, forcing recollection on himself. Tony Morriseau who had sold him the Corvette …
Tony Morriseau the drug dealer, who might know something about Amelie.
Amelie whom he must find, because he had assigned himself this task. For Benjamin, it was the repayment of a debt. For John … say, an experiment with an idea. An idea about lineage. An idea about descent.
Tony was too proud to run and John caught up with him in the blank whiteness of a parking lot, the streetlights splaying out weird shadows all around them. Tony whirled and said, “Fuck off!”
“We need to talk,” John said. He heard Susan behind him now: her cold breath and the squeal of her boob against the snow.
“We don’t have anything to talk about,” Tony said.
“About Roch. About Amelie.”
“I don’t know anything about them.”
But Tony was lying. John heard it in the angle of his words, brittle phonemes like tiny shards of ice. Tony knew Roch and Amelie from their street days: John remembered Amelie talking about it. “Tell the truth,” John said.
“Go fuck yourself,” Tony said.
But John possessed the key to Tony’s soul. Tony was a small, pale, undefended thing under his shell of skin and it was not difficult to trick him out. He had done it before. “You talked to Roch.”
Tony looked suddenly doubtful. “Yes …”
“What did he want?”
But now Tony frowned and canted his head. “Why should I tell you?”
And John was startled.
“Because—” he began.
But the words weren’t there.
They had always been there before.
“Asshole,” Tony said.
Susan stepped forward. She looked small and delicate in the snow. “Please,” she said.
Tony shifted to look at her.
“Amelie’s in trouble,” Susan went on. “If you know Roch, you know the kind of trouble I mean. All we want is to find her.”
“What are you, her social worker?”
“Her friend.”
“I talked to Roch,” Tony said, “but not about Amelie.”
“He bought something from you?”
“Not from me. A guy I know. What he wanted, I don’t have. All right? That’s it, that’s all I have to say.”
John collected himself. “Did he tell you where he was going?”
Tony regarded him with instant contempt; he began to speak, then hesitated. John was connecting, but only sporadically. “No,” Tony said. “Except—he mentioned something about ‘the warehouse.’ He said he was ‘going to sleep in the fucking warehouse tonight.’ That was last week. I don’t know what it means.” Tony frowned massively. “Just get the hell away from me, all right? I would really appreciate that.”
He turned and was gone across the parking lot toward the lights on Yonge Street.
* * *
John was suddenly dizzy. Susan put a steadying arm around him.
“John? Can you make it back to the hotel?”
He felt her warm presence against the cold dark and decided he could.
23
Susan wrapped her arm around John’s waist and helped him through the hotel lobby, ignoring the hostile stare of the desk clerk; maneuvered him up the elevator and through the door of the room. He was cooperative but loose-jointed; his body radiated a feverish heat.
She stretched him out across the bed. “John? Can you hear me?”
He turned his face toward her. His eyes were glazed but attentive. He nodded.
She put her hand across his forehead and drew it quickly back. The fever was intense and Susan felt a surge of panic. She couldn’t deal with this! She wasn’t trained for it! He needed a doctor, a hospital—
He reached up suddenly and took her wrist in a clamping grip.
“I need aspirin,” he said. “Maybe cold compresses. This will pass.”
She nodded until her agreement registered and his hand slipped away.
She undressed him and pulled blankets over him, then hurried down to the hotel’s convenience shop for a bottle of Bayer’s. When she got back, he was shivering and moaning. She fed him three tablets with a glass of tap water and pulled up a chair by the bedside.
* * *
The snow that had been predicted all day had settled in by nine o’clock. Susan watched it through the hotel window. It was a picturesque, gentle, persistent snowfall; the big flakes danced against the window and drifted onto the ledge outside. The snow obscured the city lights and softened the murmur of the traffic.
With the snowfall, John’s fever began to retreat.
Susan pressed a damp washcloth against his forehead. He had been sleeping restlessly for the last two hours; it was only forty-five minutes since the fever had broken and his temperature had dropped back to normal. He needs the rest, Susan thought. But when she took the cloth away, he sat up.
“I did what you told me,” Susan said.
“You did fine.”
“Are you better now?”
“Better than I was a little while ago.”
“Is this it?” Susan asked. “Is this what Dr. Kyriakides said would happen?”
“Let’s not talk about it now.”
* * *
She took a shower. She immersed herself in the hot rush of the water. Washing away the fear, she thought. Washing away today and washing away tomorrow.
She wrapped herself in a towel and entered the darkened bedroom. John was propped up in the bed, a faint silhouette. Susan toweled her shoulders a last time, then climbed in beside him.
The bed was hot and faintly damp. A sickroom bed. She didn’t care. His body was warm, but it was an ordinary warmth now. Because she was afraid, Susan pressed herself against him; he turned to face her.
“This might happen again,” she guessed.
He nodded. She felt the motion against her cheek.
“Might be worse the next time?”
“It might be.”
She absorbed this information.
She said, “Did it mean anything to you, what that man said about ‘the warehouse?’
”
“It’s an empty building down by the lakeshore—Amelie told me about it. He might have taken her there. We’ll go tomorrow and have a look.”
“In the snow?”
“In the snow. I’ll be all right.”
* * *
The snow fell steadily far into the night. Susan heard it tapping against the pane of the window. Begging admittance, she thought. But it can’t come in.
Neither of them slept. The silence was a vast tapestry, stitched with the sound of their voices.
“Why me?” Susan asked. “Why did you choose me?”
To be with him in this bed, she meant. To touch him in the darkness.
He said, “Because we’re alike.”
“Are we?”
“In a way.”
“What way?”
“Because both of us have lost something. A certain kind of connection.”
“I don’t understand.” The wind rattled the window.
“We’re orphans,” he said. “Isn’t that obvious? We’re feral children. We don’t know how to be human.” He touched her cheek. “That’s what we have in common.”
Susan was too sleepy to explore this in all its nuances.
She said, “What we have in common is what we don’t have.”
“Yes.”
“A father.”
“Lineage,” John said. “Ancestry.”
“A father,” Susan confirmed. In the tranquility of the snowbound darkness she was able to admit it. She had been looking for a father ever since her father died; she had found a sort of father—at least temporarily—in Dr. Kyriakides.
She was embarrassed to realize she had said this out loud.
“But you want more than that,” John said. “Something finer and better.”
She nodded.
He said, “You would have slept with him—if he’d asked.”
“Yes. I guess I would have. I almost did. Isn’t that strange? There was one time … he took me to dinner … but he said he’s not interested in women. In men, once, but even that was a long time ago.” She rolled over and felt John’s hand slide up her shoulder. “He’s not a good man, is he? But still … at least he’s been able to help you.”
“No,” John said. “I’m sorry, Susan. No, he hasn’t.”
“Not cure you. But he said he gave you a prescription—”
“He gave me dopamine. It’s what they give Alzheimer’s patients. In my case, it’s not much more than a placebo.” Susan turned to face him. He smiled in the dark. “Max can’t do anything to help me. He never could. That’s not why he came looking for me.”
“Why, then?”
“Guilt,” John said. “Remorse. And to finish the experiment.”
* * *
Later, he said he was thirsty. Susan brought him a glass of water from the bathroom tap. He sipped it in the dark.
She said, “Do you know everything about me?”
“Yes,” he said solemnly. “And you know everything about me.”
* * *
But not really. Not everything.
Curled against him, she whispered: “Will you die?”
She strained to hear his answer against the hissing of the wind.
“I don’t know,” he said finally. “I’ve thought about it. What’s happening to me is very powerful, a powerful process. I feel it. It’s like an engine running inside me. Very strong. It’s not something you can simply resist. You have to bend—this way or that. But that’s the hard part. Even if I can bargain with it, I’m not sure … I don’t know if it’s a deal I want to make.”
He held her against him; but Susan was wordless in the dark, and this time the silence lingered.
24
Amelie knew where her brother had taken her: it was the place they called “the warehouse.”
At least, she and Roch had called it that. It wasn’t really a warehouse. It was a big abandoned building beside the railway tracks, where the CPR line ran along the lakeshore west of the city. Many years ago, Roch once told her, the building had contained a fur-storage business. Now it was a cold, dark warren of cavernous rooms and windowless chambers. And she was confined in it.
She remembered how she had come here—but dimly, dimly.
She had gone into the city to meet her mother, but it turned out that there was no bus from Montreal scheduled at that hour. So she had milled around through the crowded, oppressively hot terminal for almost an hour … and then Roch put his hand on her shoulder, and she knew it was Roch, knew it instinctively and immediately. He took her arm. She wanted to break free but couldn’t. He led her out to his van and then he locked her in the back.
They drove to a vacant lot by the CPR line and Roch parked and climbed in back with her. He had something in his hand: a syringe—
Memory clouded. But she remembered him carrying her through the snow at dusk, his strong arms enfolding her. She had recognized the way to the warehouse, where they used to go when there was nowhere else to sleep. But only in summer. It was winter now, and cold, and the snow was deep and getting deeper. Someone will see us, she thought. The railroad police will see us for sure. But the railroad police, who sometimes parked along these tracks, weren’t here now. The snow was too deep and recent. Everybody had gone home. Everybody had found a warm place to stay.
The warehouse …
The property had been in litigation for years. It was worthless. Someday the building would be torn down. For now, it was abandoned and dangerous. Even when they came here during their time on the street, Amelie would never venture very far inside. There were bats living in the old cold-storage chambers; there were drippy, ancient pipes and wild raccoons and bad smells. Since then, apparently, Roch had explored the building. He had a big Eveready flashlight in one hand, and he pulled Amelie stumbling after him with the other. There were rooms and corridors so deep inside this building that no light penetrated from the outside; cracked linoleum or bare concrete floors drifted with sawdust and animal droppings. Roch put her over his shoulder, took the handle of the flashlight in his teeth, and climbed a narrow wooden ladder to a higher, darker level. In a small room here at the heart of the building, he dumped her against the chipped plaster wall and started a small Sterno fire. The smoke wafted up to the ceiling and dissipated through a hole there, up and up in lazy curls. The room did not warm appreciably.
Amelie was a spectator to all this. She felt abstracted from her body. What had Roch put into her? A drug, she thought. Something lazy, distancing, and slightly nauseating. She lifted her hand and looked at it: it seemed to be floating in midair.
She watched Roch pace the room, checking the entrance and fiddling with the Sterno. There was a question she wanted to ask. It was on the tip of her tongue. She worked hard to recall it.
“Roch … what is it you want? What do you want from me?”
He turned his face toward her, but only briefly. His eyes were blank with indifference. He stood up briskly.
“This isn’t about you,” he said. “You don’t matter anymore.”
* * *
25
The snow had paralyzed the city. Overnight, a winter blizzard had accumulated drifts and depths that the snowplows could not shunt aside, at least not quickly or efficiently. The main arteries were reduced to a single lane; the subways were running but the buses were not. Susan awoke to an absolute silence: the traffic outside the hotel had been utterly stilled.
John was in the bathroom—she could hear the shower running.
She went to the window. Outside, the streets were transformed The city was white, unsullied, and motionless. The snow had stopped falling but the sky was a uniform grey.
Good, she thought. We can’t go anywhere today. It wasn’t a blizzard; it was a reprieve.
She turned when she heard the water stop. John appeared a: the bathroom door in his Levis: skinny, pale, a little shaky…but his eyes were bright and lucid.
“Get dressed,” he said. “We don’t have time to waste.
”
I should have expected this, Susan thought. There was no reprieve. It wasn’t possible.
He couldn’t afford one. He didn’t have the time.
* * *
“It’s an old building down by the lakeshore,” John said over breakfast. “Amelie showed me one time when we were out walking.”
Susan hesitated over her eggs. “Showed you?”
He was momentarily puzzled. “Showed Benjamin, I mean.”
“An abandoned building,” Susan repeated. “You think Amelie’s there—Roch took her there?”
“I’m almost certain of it.”
“Is it safe to go there?”
“No. It’s not safe at all.”
“We could call the police,” Susan said. “We don’t even have to tell them about Roch. Say we spotted some vagrants on the premises.”
John shook his head. “Maybe that would flush him out. But I think, if he were cornered, he might just kill her. It’s pointless, but it’s the kind of gesture Roch might make.”
“How can you know that? You never met him.”
“I met him once,” John corrected her.
“And you know that about him?”
“I know that about him.”
“You’re just going to walk in and take her away from him?”
“If I can.”
“Maybe he wants you to come. Maybe he’s jealous, he’s out there waiting for you … that’s why he told Tony Morriseau where he was going.”
The Divide Page 18