The Surrendered
Page 39
Just before dawn broke she got out of bed, her mind feeling as honed and ready as a newly forged blade. Though her belly was unfi lled from not having eaten supper or lunch the previous day, the emptiness felt more like purity than privation, what she imagined a pilgrim might feel at the end of an arduous journey, this state of cleanly ecstasy that suddenly became, in the last meters, both its own great fuel and fl ame. She dressed quickly as the others slumbered and went across the yard and knocked on the door of the Tanners' cottage. She knocked again when there was no answer. Finally the door creaked open and Reverend Tanner looked out at her in his plaid pajamas, putting on his spectacles in the blue morning light.
"What's happened? What's the matter?"
"Nothing," she said. "I want to talk with Mrs. Tanner, please."
"Mrs. Tanner is asleep," he said angrily, "and I was as well. What is wrong with you, June? You make everything so difficult!"
"I do not mean to."
"I don't believe you!" he said, barely in control of himself. He stepped outside, closing the door behind him. "Or else I must think you have a wrecking force within you. Mrs. Stolz was terribly, terribly upset. She actually feared she'd done something awful to you."
"She did nothing to me."
"Of course not! But I can't imagine what you said or did to make her think she had. If she weren't such a generous, humane woman, they would have fl ed. Certainly her husband wanted to leave right away. Do you realize that? Do you realize that you near ruined the other children's chances as well? Did you ever for one moment think about them?"
June was silent, though not in acquiescence. Not in remorse. Rather she had receded, deep within the whorl of her thoughts. She was simply waiting for Sylvie now to come out and embrace her just as fully and breathlessly as Mrs. Stolz had, to welcome her inside.
"You have nothing to say, do you?" Tanner said. "Nothing at all?"
He glared at her as the first warm light arose, the cowbell for reveille suddenly clanging from the direction of the kitchen. She had heard it hundreds of times before but today the rounded hollowness of the sound struck her deeply, the echoes mapping her empty reaches. It would be breakfast soon but she did not wish to eat, despite what she would normally know as well as anyone alive to be the welling pangs of hunger. But it was not that now, she was certain, for instead of distress or panic she felt rather the strangest satisfaction, a peerless morning calm. She would remain right here until Sylvie came out, and she didn't move or speak, even as Reverend Tanner ascended the stoop and without turning to look back at her firmly shut the door.
S E V E N T E E N
E V E R Y O N E B E L I E V E D she had been suffering from the fl u. Sylvie tried to believe it herself. It was the same as the other times she cut herself off, no better or worse. In Seattle there would be a period every few seasons when she fell ill and she would have to gather herself into a normal, presentable state of sickness before Ames returned from his work at the synod offices. He was always tender to her, his renewed concern that she was innately sickly lining his forehead as he peered down at her while he took her temperature. She was volunteering then in various organizations run out of the church so it wasn't such a problem to stay home for a few days, but here she had impetuously quit her habit and disrupted everything. She had not been able, for example, to come out and embrace and kiss the children the Stolzes adopted, and by this she felt doubly sickened. The three younger boys, Sang and Jin and Jung, were a boisterous, puckish threesome unrelated by blood but who always roved in a tight pack, playing pranks on their playmates and the girls and sometimes even the older boys, who'd chase them into the hills. Sylvie was the only one who was spared the odd frog in the shoe, a brigade of crickets under the bedcovers; once even Ames had found an oversized bird's nest constructed from twigs on his classroom chair--he was nicknamed "Big Crane" by the children because of his lankiness and skinny legs. The three girls were the Kim sisters, who along with a dozen others regularly knitted with Sylvie, and each had given Ames her unfinished project to leave with Mrs. Tanner, three pairs of woolen mittens and matching caps, graduated in size. They were small enough that she could have finished all of them in the morning and sent them with Ames on his way to Seoul to deliver them before they fl ew out of the country, but her hands were too twitchy and she had to poke at her palms with the knitting needles to try to quell them, as she kept dropping stitches or stretching out the knitting too much. She had felt this before, though this time it wasn't the steady, drenching enervation that laid her low but a pointed, angry sickness, her fl esh and skin feeling as though they wished to pull away from her. Finally she had to give up the knitting, her nose running and her eyes hotly welling up with a relentless, involuntary flow that kept steady even after her frustration waned. Her head was sodden, as with a bad cold, but her limbs felt alternately prickly and numb and just as after the other times when she had suddenly thrown away her kit--this time tossing it, three days ago, in the fire the aunties built to heat the children's bathwater--in a matter of a day harsh flashes of hot and cold swept through her body like vengeful weather.
She was suffering because she had to suffer, because she needed to, every pincer and tremor and hard drum of craving a deserved punishment, yes, but also a reminder that she was still vital, still alive. She had little hope that she could ever bear a child and was not certain she wanted one of her own anymore, but for her husband's sake she would endure. She could keep down only a few saltines and some sips of roasted corn tea. Ames brought these to her, insisting that she allow him to take her to the army hospital in Seoul. But she refused him, afraid the doctors would instantly recognize her ailment. I'll be myself again in a couple of days, she told him, though she was fearful who myself might be this time when the sickness finally lifted; after the previous quitting, it felt as though her soul had been worn down by half, and by now the math was surely pitched against her. She didn't believe he knew. But whether he did or not didn't matter: this was the very last time, she was done with this ugliness, and when they returned to the States she would devote herself as never before to the work of his next ministry, which had been rearranged by Ames to be not in Seattle as planned but in southeastern Washington, outside of Spokane, where both of them knew there would be nothing around them but boundless fields of alfalfa and barley.
She stayed in the cottage, seeing no one but Ames. She didn't have to ask him why June was not appearing for her chores; the other morning the sharp tone of his voice had reached into her wracked sleep, June's soft, flat murmurs echoing there as well, and when she arose she could see in his face that it would only make things impossible if she brought up anything about June. He was furious with the girl. There was not even two weeks remaining in their time here were and though she felt utterly wasted, she would somehow convince Ames that they must take her. But each time she tried to talk about June when he brought her tea or mentholated compresses for her neck, an easy reason to defer presented itself--he'd earnestly ask about where she was in her monthly cycle, or he'd simply tell her, as he did this morning, that he loved her, the locks at his temples appearing grayer than ever, his cheekbones jutting and sharp from his constant traveling, and all she could do was think again of his irreproachable character, how he had never sought anything but good for her and for everyone else, that he was just as fair and constant a man as he'd been every other day of his life.
But look at you, she said to herself now, peering into a hand mirror to check the condition of her neck, which was tormenting her with its itchiness, the skin now scratched raw and almost bleeding. Look at this Sylvie Binet, with two bloodshot horrors for eyes, the fever-matted hair, the ghoulish pallor that would certainly frighten the younger children. But she wondered if she wanted to be cured. Ames once said that although an awful thing happened to her in youth she had pulled herself far past it, but in truth she wondered if she would ever possess the necessary strength. She often felt a great part of her had been fi xed in time, that despite
appearances she had been simply stuck in place, never quite getting anywhere. Maybe that's why the children liked her; it wasn't her bright, golden hair or even her obvious adoration of them but their instinctive sense that she was as vulnerable as they, as desperately keen for a lasting bond. That she had never quite grown up. She remembered her father telling her in Manchuria how this world was littered with those cut off in mid-bloom, all this wasted beauty and grace, and that it was their humble task to gather as many as they could and replant them. It didn't matter that they were stomped and torn. That the soil was rocky and poor. She must be the sun and rain. As long as she kept vigilant, as long as they never gave up, the blooms could thrive again.
She was sure this was true of the children. But what of a person like her? Could one ever reroot her own long-trampled self ? Or would you in perpetuity need someone to pick you up at certain intervals, pluck you from the slow rot of your being? It was a good thing that people buried themselves in mostly shallow graves. If she thought about her adult life, it was an existence of constant exertion and work, but also one marked serially by the compulsion to yield. And however miserable and dissolute she ended up, however wretched in that suspension of utter fall or erasure, there was an undeniable seam of what must be gratitude, too, a kind of relief in finding yet another path to giving herself over.
Hector was still angry with her. By the time Ames announced the news of their departure last week they had already ceased their trysts--during Ames's last absence she had not shown up at Hector's door--and he had stopped speaking to her as well, avoiding her, steering himself away from wherever she was and taking his steel pail full of tools to do some job or task in another part of the compound. After lights-out he had begun to head into Itaewon again, and if it showed in the clouds darkly shading his brow, in his unruly, unshorn hair that made him look even younger than he was, like a gruff teen, there was no change in his habit of working all through the day. He was almost out of work to do. She was not afraid that he would confront Ames, or tell him about them. Hector was the least of talkers. The nights they had spent together they hardly spoke, and at the end of only the second night he had told her, unprompted, that they shouldn't have an affair. She didn't know if that meant she shouldn't come visit again. Yet it had been an affair to her, for it wasn't only the carnality she craved (which was as sharpened, as ardent, as she had ever known), but even more the easeful, inertial pull of the hours together afterward, as if they were floating on some quiet water instead of a bed. He'd drink his liquor and she'd bind her arm or thigh and soon they dissolved into each other in the tight well of his cot until she felt them become the pool itself, shedding all their mortal properties. It was a feeling akin to when she was a child and slept between her parents in a stifl ing hut in West Africa and the heat of their three bodies put her in a near-trance of fever that let her hear their blood coursing together like a wide, whispering river. In her dreams she became that bloody river running out far past the land and into the sea. For what had she witnessed daily from her earliest memory of their missions but the fragility of the body, every needless face of sickness and hunger, of merciless injury and death? Even then she imagined how she could make it so that the people they lived among could change form in waking life as she did in her sleep, somehow live without this living, and it was when she helped relieve Reverend Lum of his terrible pain that she saw a fi rst kind way.
But she was at the end of her own ruinous clemency. She had to release herself. She must cease. When Ames left on his last brief overnight she found herself again at Hector's door after midnight and saw the weak yellow lamplight through the slats and was about to push inside when she saw herself in the clutch of her kit and her hand began to shake, both in anticipation and in dread. The tremors subsided but then a hard knob rose in her chest and she could barely breathe; she had to walk back to her cottage by propping herself against the exterior walls of the dormitory, and once inside she dropped hard on her knees to the floor.
The next day after the midday meal Hector caught up with her in the kitchen and asked where she'd been and although the aunties spoke no English anyone could tell he was confused and hurt. She turned away from him and he trailed her across the yard and in an odd reaction that only drew more unwanted attention she broke and halfran, feeling a tightness in her chest. He followed her to her cottage and without knocking stepped right inside and embraced her. His smell was gamey and sharp. She asked him please to go but he kissed her and she couldn't help but kiss him as well but the door had drifted back open to the sight of some children in the central yard, paused in their games, and she panicked and pushed up hard at him. Her hand glanced him on the cheek, but he shrank from her as if she had smashed his face.
He bolted from the cottage just as the sedan transporting Ames from his overnight drove through the gate. She couldn't tell if Ames had seen him leaving.
It was only several evenings later that Ames asked if there had been something amiss or in need of fixing in the cottage, not mentioning Hector at all, and when she told him there wasn't he nodded and didn't pursue it. Later Ames came into her bed and wanted to make love and she must have surprised him with her intensity for he was as physical with her as he had ever been, so lost in the moment that he was unaware of his hand pressing her throat, nearly to the point of her losing consciousness. Yet she had not resisted him in the slightest. He seemed to know that he could do whatever he wished to her, that she would give herself over to any extent, and in the veil of perfect darkness he was not so much a man as a fury, this starved force that sought out every peccant part of her. He fell asleep half atop her in the single bed and by morning the one side of her was numb. He dressed quickly for the day and kissed her but wouldn't meet her gaze; it was always like this after their lovemaking, from the very beginning, a pale light of shame in his eyes. Perhaps it had nothing to do with her but this time she felt the depth of all her lies. As if he sensed something awry Ames embraced her, and she held on to him. What would she be, without him? That afternoon, while he took the children on a hike, she removed her kit from its hiding place in the trunk beneath her bed and threw it in the fire, aware of the miserable hours ahead of her but knowing that they would be so for the very last time.
Ames now returned from breakfast with a bowl of beef broth for her. It was milky white, made as it was in the Korean style, shinbones completely boiled down. She didn't want it but he asked her to try some and she took a sip and then another, the soup dense and rich and salty. Her stomach felt calm and she sipped some more. But then something seized and turned and spit up in the washbasin next to her bed. Ames braced her as she gagged. She wiped her mouth, her burning eyes.
"I shouldn't go tomorrow," he said. "You're not getting better." He was scheduled to go on his final trip to visit two recently opened orphanages along the eastern coastline. It was a slow journey on the poor roads across the coastal mountain range and down along the peninsula, three full days to go out and return.
"I'll be okay."
"I don't see how," he said. "You look as if you're dying."
"I'm not dying."
He looked down at his hands. "Do you want me to go?"
"Of course not," she said. "We have so little time left. No one wants you to leave. The children as much as I."
"I can have Reverend Kim go in my place."
"Do you truly think he can? Do you think he knows yet how an orphanage ought to be run?"
Ames didn't answer. "Sometimes I wonder if he knows much besides conducting the liturgy. "
"And how to eat," she said.
"He's a champion eater, isn't he!"
They laughed easily, the first time in a long while. Ames said: "He's a good man, though. He's smart, if a bit dreamy. He'll learn."
"I hope so," she said. "But sometimes I worry. He never spends any extra time with the children. He has no natural feeling for how to be with them."
"Perhaps sending him now would do him some good. Force him to connect
."
"That would be fine if we weren't leaving, and you could go visit. But this is your last chance. Why should those children have to lose the benefit of your being there? Just because I'm not feeling well? I don't want you to have to go anywhere, but should you take a chance with their welfare because you're worried about me? I'd only feel worse, knowing they would be shortchanged."
"I wish that you could come with me."
"I will if you want."
"How can you? Look at you. You have no strength. Besides, if you did come we'd be leaving Reverend Kim in charge."
"The aunties and the children can handle him."
"But of course Hector would be here."
She would have wished for Ames not to say his name. But he went on: "You know, I've been thinking it might be best if he could stay around. I mean after we've gone. I know I've told him otherwise. But now I think I was wrong. Hector still doesn't seem to know it, or perhaps he knows and doesn't care, but he's good for the children, in his own way."
She nodded but was silent.
"I was thinking that perhaps it's not so terrible, to have an adult around who's not telling them what to do all day. Who's not a preacher. I think I've been too strident about what I expect of them. Sometimes I think I'm not seeing who they are. They're children, yes. But they're not innocents, and maybe it's not the worst thing to have someone like Hector around, who is obviously not so certain of his future. Who clearly struggles. But he works as hard as anyone I've ever seen and I know the children recognize that, too, and I wonder if that's not better for them than any sermon from me."