The Surrendered
Page 44
N I N E T E E N
S H E K E P T T A L K I N G about la chiesa dell'ossario. The Chapel of Bones. She was still flush with the double dose Hector had given her, riding in the splendid chariot. The three-hour drive had taken nearly fi ve because of jammed traffic and then getting lost several times, Hector having to pull over and check the map himself. June was no longer able to help him. There was a question as to what she could even see, her eyes opaque and darkened, the color of muddy coffee. But they were close now, ascending the road to the village on the next hill, and as if she knew they were making the last approach, she was preparing herself, reviewing. She had not been to this place before but she spoke as if she had seen it many times, as might a guide, telling him how the church was consecrated in 1870 as a reliquary of the fallen soldiers of the Battle of Solferino. It was the simplest church, nothing about it ornate, the only spark of color on the cream-and-white facade a mural of Saint Peter in a blue robe, a red shawl about his shoulders, a golden halo encircling his somber head. She said he would know it by this. C H A N G - R A E L E E
But the car had sounded funny in the last half-hour, and now something was clattering in the undercarriage, and as Hector careened ponderously on the steep curves banking up the hill, he wondered if this last effortful stretch would prove its demise. He shifted to a lower gear and lurched the rest of the way, the heaving strain of the motor shaking the tinny sedan, and when he looked in the rearview mirror he saw her slumped against the door, her face pinched up as if she were tasting something bitter. The road widened on a plateau and he stopped across from a small hotel whose patio and cocktail tables were set practically onto the pavement. He was simply going to park, to give the machine a moment's rest, when to his right he saw the church. It shined starkly in the late-afternoon light. It stood atop a brief rise of land opposite the old hotel, a wide gravel walking path lined with cypress trees leading up to its dark wooden doors. Above the doors was the figure of the saint, his colors just as June had described.
"Look," he said to her. "Up there."
But now, in the lee of the drug rush, she was too weak even to turn her head. Her color was ghastly.
"Is your back hurting again?"
"I want to lie down," she said breathily, talking through her teeth.
"I want to lie down right now."
He was going to circle tightly in the wide street and let her off in front of the hotel, but when he tried the ignition it cranked and cranked, and then it simply clicked. Finally it didn't even click anymore and he told her to hold on and he walked across to the hotel and arranged for a room. When he returned she was nearly passed out and he had to catch her head as he opened the rear passenger door so that she wouldn't tumble out. He lifted her and held her as several cars and scooters passed, one of them peppering its horn at them. He bristled until he realized they were probably being taken for newlyweds. The honking startled her and she gazed at him as if waking from a long and restful sleep, craning her neck back before resting her cheek on his shoulder, happy to be once more cradled in his arms. And yet he wasn't completely sure she recognized him. The elevator was out of order and so he carried her up the four flights of stairs to a room in the tower, led by the manager of the hotel, a gaunt-faced young man in a crimson tracksuit. He let them into a large spartan room with two double beds and an armoire with one of its doors detached and leaning up against its front. There were large armchairs in the corners, placed, it seemed, more for the inhabitants' punishment than comfort. But the main feature of the room was its tall, large window, which framed perfectly the church on the hill. The manager pointed it out in Italian and broken English, obviously accustomed to hosting its visitors. Hector laid June on the bed next to the window, but she didn't turn toward it, as if she had no desire to see the church, or had even forgotten why they had come. The young manager considered her gravely, and when Hector extended some lire for a tip he refused it, saying instead that he would fetch their bags. Hector pointed out their car, parked across the way, but couldn't explain that it had just died.
"I wish Nicholas were here," June said, after the manager had come back with their bags and then left once again. She was somewhat revived. She wanted to change her clothes, for some reason, rather than have him bear her immediately to the church on the hill. He didn't say what he was thinking, which was that she might never leave the room, or at least leave it alive. They were finally here after the fi tful sojourns of recent days--and now she would devote precious minutes to this?
But he didn't protest.
She said, "He would have liked this place."
"You think so?"
"He was always an artistic boy. He would have liked the landscape here. The colors and the hills, just like in the art books he used to look at. All the cypress trees."
Hector was surprised, wondering when she might have noticed.
"I don't much like those trees."
"No? Why not?"
"Makes me think of cemeteries."
June nodded, waiting as he unpacked her bag to look for the pieces of clothing she wanted. "Of course you're right," she said, almost able to smile.
"Are these the ones?" he asked her, holding up the things she'd asked for from her bag. An outfit constructed from a stiff, coarse white linen.
"Yes."
He placed them on her bed. June explained to him that the outfi t wasn't a traditional death robe exactly, except for the fact that it was white. The mourners would wear white as well.
"I don't have any clothes like that," he said.
She laughed weakly. "You're not going to mourn me, so what does it matter?"
He didn't answer. Back in the car she had told him what to do with her after she was dead: she should be cremated and then her ashes spread about the grounds of the church, or perhaps even snuck inside, dispersed however and wherever he saw fit. She joked that he might perhaps prefer to do the job himself, though following the old manner, swathing her body in cotton dressings and then building a wooden bier on which to set her aflame.
"Do you think we should have had Nicholas come with us?" she said, now lying on her side, her head propped on two pillows. He peered into her eyes to see what she was thinking or could possibly be hoping for now. But there was only flatness in her gaze, an unfocused stare, as though she were looking upon a shape more looming than defined. What she believed or wanted to believe, he couldn't tell anymore.
He said, "It's better that he stayed back in Siena."
"Yes. You're probably right. What would he do here? Except I was thinking just now that perhaps he might have wanted to spend more time with you."
"I doubt that."
"Why not?"
"I don't think he took to me much."
"How could you tell?"
"It wasn't hard."
"Did you take to him?"
He didn't answer, for although it was obvious how she hoped he would reply, he couldn't bring himself to say anything good about "Nicholas." In fact, this renewed mention of the fellow was making his chest pound, his fists ache. On the road he had scolded himself for not beating him to within an inch of his life. And now he wished that he could have met the other Nicholas, her true son, and his, if even for just a few minutes, not for any longing or want of a bond but simply so he could say something that wouldn't be such a burning, raging utterance. To simply greet the boy. So he pictured the old school photograph of Nicholas, the color washed out, yellowed, his long hair parted in the middle, framing an expression that was more a question than a statement, as though he were waiting for some long-hoped-for instruction.
"Maybe I could have," he said. "But it would have taken a long time."
"Doesn't everything?"
He nodded, startled by this seeming flash of lucidity. He had unpacked the rest of her clothes and put them into the armoire and begun emptying his own small satchel when he saw the book that he'd forced Nick Crump to hand over to him in Siena. He couldn't bear to handle it and had immediately
thrust it beneath his clothes. But earlier, at a rest stop, while she was napping, he couldn't help himself and had peered once more into the book. It was the same, except that the cloth of its cover had been burned away, its pages made brittle by the trauma. He noticed two inscriptions on the title page. The first, to Sylvie, he recognized from all those years before; the second was in a different hand, the ink newer: To Nicholas, my dearest wayfarer. May you fi nd great treasure and riches. He was confused as to how June had come to possess it, whether it had been singed in the terrible fire, and how, if so, it had ever survived. But like a promise of ill reckoning, the scent of smoke that rose up from its binding quickly quashed his questions and he had pushed it back into his bag.
Now he gave the thin volume over to her, the thing literally falling apart in his hands. When June took it he could see her fi ngers straining against it, as if she wanted to press it back to life. She opened the book and turned its first pages to a photograph of the author, a younglooking man with muttonchops and a gold watch chain on his suit vest. Opposite was the title page, twice inscribed, as he'd seen, and June seemed to linger on the handwriting, her expression one of confusion. Finally she caressed the page as if it were the cheek of an infant. With hardly any difficulty she stood up before the large window, her hands braced against the wide marble sill. In the framed vista the church at the top of the hill gleamed in the late-afternoon sun, the rising gravel path darkly ribbed with the long shadows of the cypress trees, and though it must have been the first time she'd seen it her eyes only narrowed coldly while taking its measure, her gaze no pilgrim's.
"I didn't mean for him to be alone in the world," she said. "Not forever, anyway. I thought it would be good for him to get away from me. Not to depend on me. But I haven't asked you. Was he still angry with me? I mean to say, did it seem to you that he had forgiven me?"
"Forgiven you for what?"
"I told you," she said, wrapping the book with her arms. She looked strong all of a sudden, her posture as straight as when she was a child, her chin forward, elevated. That orphan girl, carved from rock. For a long second, when she turned back to look at him, she appeared as if she might not be ill at all.
"Didn't I? When he was injured in England while riding. After the hospital called. I waited until I got a postcard from him. In the end it was okay but I keep asking myself why I didn't try to reach him right away. I wanted to talk to him so much. I wanted to see him. It had been many years. I could have told him I'd fly right over and be with him. But for some reason I just passed the hours. I opened the shop the next day. I went to dinner by myself. For two weeks I didn't sleep. Then his postcard came and after that the nice letters, and it seemed that he cared about me again, but I've been thinking it was only because he was angry for so long that he ended up being kind. Do you think that can happen? Do you think that's what happened to my son?"
She then stepped back from the window and sat down on the bed, her head heavy and bent, all the girding of the prior moment now fl ed from her body. She set the book aside on the bed beside her. He asked her if she wanted to change now into the special clothes.
"I don't know," she said.
"I can leave if you like."
"That's not it."
"You don't want to?"
"I don't know," she said, her voice suddenly sinking. "I don't know."
She began to cry, which took them both by surprise. She was weak enough that it hardly seemed to be crying at all, more as though she was having trouble breathing, her meager tears barely wetting her cheeks. But he had never seen her cry, not at the orphanage, not once since, and the sight broke open a fear in his chest: here, about to perish, was surely the strongest person he had ever known. She wiped her face roughly with her palm. "Give me another shot now, okay? I want a little more time, without it hurting so much."
"I gave you one just two hours ago."
"I'd like another."
He obliged, another heavy dose. Hector drifted into an armchair across the room, trying to avert his gaze. He could have loaded up another half-dozen syringes and instantly extinguished her but he couldn't help but think that she might somehow come back for him if he did, in a malign form, hound him for eternity for cheating her of even a few hours.
"I'm sorry, Hector. But I think now I want to rest."
"Okay. I'll leave you alone."
"But just for a little while. I don't want to fall asleep for too long. I can't let this day pass. I don't know if I'll be able to do anything tomorrow. Where will you be?"
"Downstairs, I guess."
"Would you come for me in an hour? We'll go up to the church then."
"Okay."
"Would you bring me back something?"
"What do you want?"
"Something to eat."
"You're hungry?"
"I don't know if I can really eat anything. But I want to try."
"I can bring something. What do you want?"
"It doesn't matter. I just don't want this to be the last feeling I have."
He went to close the curtains but she told him to leave them drawn open, so the room would stay awash in the light. It was good light, being reflected light, as it was now late in the day, all of it fully drenching the room, the tops of the trees and the terra-cotta roofs and stuccoed buildings illuminated by the strong, low sun, the color of their lower halves in the warm penumbra glowing in a muted scale, the white church atop the rise of land as brilliant as a lodestar. "Just an hour, Hector. Don't let me sleep any longer. You'll remember to come back up?
Won't you?"
"You think I wouldn't?"
"I don't know," she said, the shot having settled deep into her now. From her loosened posture he could see that it had already met and quelled the harshest pain. She was almost herself again.
"I know you must hate me," she said. Her eyes were narrowed.
"You do, don't you? You're the only person in the world who knows anything about me now, and I don't want you to hate me."
"I said in the car I didn't."
"Even after everything I told you?"
"That's right."
"I don't believe you."
"I'm not going to talk about this anymore."
"Please just say it again."
"I already did."
"Please say it, Hector, please!"
"What do you want?" he shouted. "What the fuck do you want from me?"
"I don't want this!" she shouted back, slapping at her own shriveled, wasted thighs. Her face was a cracked, broken mask. "Not this! Maybe you wouldn't care if this were happening to you! Maybe you never cared whether you lived or not. But I do!"
He was about to tell her she would rot in hell when he realized he was arguing with a woman who had in almost every way disappeared. She immediately said she was sorry, trying to follow him to the door in her feeble hobble, and she might have caught him had he not leaned forward in the last quarter of a second, half-bolting onto the landing and down the steep steps of the tower; he was a world-class sprinter, at such distances. As he rounded the corner he caught sight of her ruined silhouette, halted at the end of the landing with her hands outstretched like a flightless bird, her desperate apologies echoing down the stone well of the tower after him, and though he felt ashamed for the velocity of this easy escape he kept going, his rage making him want to punish her.
Downstairs, in the bar that doubled as the hotel lobby, he slumped at a corner table. The young manager came over and asked if he wanted something and Hector didn't answer and the manager suggested a beer. After serving him the bottle, the manager stole glances at him as he stacked cups on the coffee machine, as did an older German-speaking couple sharing a plate of cheese and salami and a carafe of white wine. The couple had been just sitting down when he carried June into the hotel, and the fleshy, ruddy-cheeked woman now regarded Hector with kindly eyes and a sympathetic purse to her mouth that made him helplessly think of Dora. He drank from his beer but after a sip he put it down,
despite the fact that his insides were crying out; for once in his life he didn't want to douse the parchedness, that driest, coldest fl ame. He wanted his own sentence, for all his deeds and non-deeds, for every instance when he had failed. For when had he not? If he were truly eternal, as his father Jackie madly fantasized, the sum of his persistence had so far only added up to failure. Failure grand and total. Ask Dora what she thought. Ask Patricia Cahill. Ask the Chinese boy soldier if Hector had done right by him. Ask Winnie Vogler about the collateral calamity he had wrought. Ask the Reverend Ames Tanner if his end was the one he had envisioned for himself. Ask them all if Hector had been their right attendant fate.
His failing found expression now in even the small measures, too, like the fact that he couldn't quite summon the hatred even June assumed he should have for her. In the car, in her delirium, or perhaps under its cover, she told him what she had done. Yes, she had caused the fatal fire. Yet in his own way he had stoked it, too, with his rank, blinding want, and he had always believed that it should have been he who never emerged.
On that last night, Sylvie had begged him to let her be. Why had he not heeded her? Why hadn't he simply stayed in his room? Once the fire started, surely he would have rushed inside the dormitory fi rst and gotten them all out. He'd been drinking all evening, sitting in his dim room with a bottle of harsh Japanese-brand scotch whiskey, feeding his accelerating thoughts, which alternated between wanting to fl ay Sylvie with harangues, with the lowliest of sentimental entreaties, with self-pitying rants and outright attacks, and trying to figure out how he might lovingly convince her to stay on. To love him back. But he was useless at romance. He had no profound or pretty words. He thought she had made up her mind on the day they had all collected leaves around the orphanage, when she had followed him into the chapel. Afterward they left the chapel and headed in different directions but she met up with him as he had asked, about one hundred meters along the most southerly trail, where there was an obscuring thicket of woods. They didn't make love but had still fallen upon each other in a primed, overdesperate state and in a matter of minutes they had clawed and tasted one another with the privation of ghouls. They had hardly undressed, and yet later, when he was bathing, he could feel the tines of her fi ngernails striping his back, his neck, his thighs. He'd done the same to her but with his mouth, his ravenous teeth, biting her wherever she pointed to herself, as if they were playing some curious grade school game. She had gasped with each snap, tears filling her eyes, then pointed again. It was then that Hector was sure that he had won, mishoping, misreading her erotic fervor for a deeper devotion; for he was too young and ignorant to know that she was not acting or dissembling but rather offering herself to his pure and towering want, surrendering to his great keen need, which to her was as lovely as he. It was already midnight when he finished the bottle and went to her cottage, knowing that the next day Tanner would be back. He and Sylvie had not yet made love while her husband was presently away, his carrying her after she twisted her knee in the soccer game the first time he'd time touched her since the brief, furious moment in the woods. Simply holding her was an alert of his craving but a kind of anchoring, too, how he needed the literal burden of her to offset the hateful, numb condition of his being. His unassailable body. And as he went around to the back of the cottage he realized how vulnerable he felt whenever she was close, as though he were at last mortally subject, as prone as the next. His heart a boy's, brimful and shaking. Yet he knew, too, though he was still resisting it, that it was already finished between them, or that it had never truly begun, and it was this dire feeling that pushed him to try to be with her again. The window shade was down and when he tried the door it was locked and he rapped at it harder and harder until the sound was loud enough to rouse the children across the way. She opened the door and let him in. Her knee was still just as he had wrapped it and she limped away without even looking at him.