“Don’t worry, have a good sleep,” said Oliveira. “Shall I turn off the light?”
“No. Leave it on.”
“I don’t mind turning it off. So you can sleep better.”
“It’s fine as it is, Franciscosson. Leave it on.”
Oliveira saw her move one hand over her forehead and chest in a quick blessing degenerated from use, like a businessman’s signature. Agatha, with her eyes already closed, kissed the Christ on her necklace and rolled over.
Now, Oliveira watched her sleep. He did not envy her turbulent sleep; the woman’s body frequently shook as if she were falling through the air in her dreams. Her constant little kicks had uncovered her: her hips had the marks of someone who had lost weight quickly—perhaps after pregnancy, Oliveira already knew that her daughter was dead but didn’t want to know more—and on her thighs the dimpling of cellulite gave her skin the look of fine cork. The hair on her body glistened with the changeable halo of the television like synthetic thread, like the nylon line on a fishing rod. Oliveira went around the other side of the bed, knelt down on the carpet, his gaze at the level of her barely visible vulva. This woman had been beautiful, that was obvious; Oliveira had been aroused by her innocence in bed, her apparent docility, her reluctance when he suggested she turn over.
Then she seemed to sense Oliveira’s gaze.
“What’s up? Do we have to get going?”
He hadn’t thought of that, but he looked at his watch. He still had to take Agatha home and find a rest area, perhaps on the other side of Paris, to get a little sleep before dawn, so he wouldn’t be nodding off on the drive south. Ever since he’d decided to leave he’d found himself in moments like this, when it seemed like his arrival was something illusory, something that would never happen.
“Yes, it’s time,” said Oliveira. “Shall I hand you your clothes?”
The woman sat up in bed. Her breasts dropped slightly, not scrawny but full like bags, like the bag of serum Oliveira had held that afternoon.
“Well, then,” Agatha grumbled like a girl getting up for school. “If we have to go, we have to go. Of course, I haven’t got a vote on this.”
Outside, an icy wind bit their ears and dried their lips. As soon as they stepped into the garage, a motion detector switched on a bright light. Her shadow gathered in on itself, a shapeless, inhuman silhouette.
“So,” said Oliveira. “Tell me how to get to your house.”
“My house,” Agatha repeated in irritation. “You know what? If it were up to me, I’d stay here until morning.”
“Well, stay. What’s the problem?”
“The problem is that France is not covered in railway lines, monsieur. Or perhaps you’ve seen a train going by here? And with the price of a taxi I could pay for five nights in a hotel like this.”
“Exactly,” said Oliveira. “That’s why I’m going to drive you, that’s why I need to know how to get there.”
Agatha didn’t say anything.
“How do you get there?” Oliveira insisted impatiently.
“Yeah, yeah, don’t badger me,” said Agatha. “Just follow the signs for Paris, that’s all. You’ll see L’Isle-Adam soon enough, it’s pretty straightforward.”
This time, however, there was no traffic. Every once in a while, a pair of red lights would whistle past in the left-hand lane and disappear as quickly as they’d appeared; occasionally the van would overtake a transport truck, the bodywork jostling and the steering wheel trembling in Oliveira’s hands as he pulled out of the slipstream. Agatha was silent, as if Oliveira had offended her by saying they had to leave the hotel. To make up for the mistake he couldn’t quite identify, out of cordiality to a woman he’d slept with or simple pity, pity for the sadness Agatha seemed to carry with her like a snail’s shell, Oliveira tried to start up a spontaneous conversation. What would his name be in Iceland? What had she said he’d be called?
“Franciscosson. The son of Francisco. Francisco, your father, the great Portuguese rider of this century.”
“And you?”
“Me what?”
“What would your surname be?”
“Ah.” Agatha straightened up in her seat. “Well, my father’s name was Raymond, so I would be called Raymonddóttir. The daughter of Raymond. But the two letters together, the d of Raymond and the d of dóttir, sound ugly and grating.”
“Yes, a little,” Oliveira admitted.
“It would have to be Raymondóttir, with just one d.”
“Doesn’t sound that great, either.”
“No. Good thing I’m not Icelandic.”
Oliveira smiled. Suddenly seeing her like that, lighthearted and carefree, pleased him as if the well-being of this stranger had begun to matter to him.
“Have you been there?”
“No. But I’d like to, God knows I’d really like to. It must be a lovely country, don’t you think? Do you know how to say ‘I’m lost’ in Icelandic? Ég er týnd.”
“Eg er tynd,” Oliveira tried to repeat.
One of Agatha’s hands moved to her chest; through the material of her blouse her fingers closed over the Christ figure.
“God knows I’d like to live there. Maybe one day I’ll be able to. The night hardly lasts at all, Oliveira. In June, dawn breaks at three in the morning, and night doesn’t fall until twelve. And anyway, the sky never darkens completely, it stays as blue as the sea, it never gets this repugnant black we have here.”
“But that’s in June,” said Oliveira. “In winter it must be worse than here.”
Agatha wasn’t listening. She wasn’t looking at him, wasn’t looking ahead. Her gaze was lost in some distant point, far beyond the window at her side, a point lost among the grain silos, the fields of crops combed by the wind in yellow waves that were the color of fool’s gold against the backdrop of the sky.
“There is an island, in the north of Iceland. It’s called Grímsey. The Arctic Circle goes right across the middle of it, cutting it in two. On Grímsey the sun never sets. It’s light at midnight, it’s light at three in the morning. Can you imagine, Oliveira? A never-ending day, that’s there all the time.”
“Yes, but that’s in the summer. In the winter it must be the opposite, night all the time.”
“Light at midnight,” said Agatha. “Light at three in the morning. So no one is afraid, no one feels the horror of having a fear of the dark.”
The first sign announcing L’Isle-Adam appeared an hour later. Oliveira exited the highway onto one of those minor side roads that always fascinated him because anything could happen along them: a cow, a couple in conversation sitting at the edge of the pavement, and maybe, at the right time of year, a deer leaping across the road.
“Now what do I do?” said Oliveira.
“Straight ahead. I’ll tell you, don’t worry.”
Oliveira looked in the mirror: it had happened. The attack, the urgent need to drop her off and turn back into himself, a man who only counted on himself, a solitary man. And what if she asked him to spend the night with her, to sleep over at her house? He would decline, of course, but how? It was incredible that it still took so much effort to make all the arrangements to conserve his independence, speak those words, make those gestures. It was incredible that life had so insistently proved the futility of any opening up, the greater wisdom of closing in on himself, and he still didn’t know how to apply those lessons. He began to think how he’d say good-bye to her, and the evaluation of various displays of affection, a kiss on the lips, cheek, or forehead, an exchange of phone numbers—but he didn’t yet have a house to call his own, much less a phone number—seemed to him too much like a children’s game. A sign, this time white, announced the entrance to the town on the left, a hundred meters ahead.
“Do I turn here?”
“Yes,” said Agatha.
Oliveira looked
in the rearview mirror, pushed down the indicator. The van was beginning to turn when Agatha said:
“No, sorry. Keep going straight, it’s further on.”
A swerve of the steering wheel straightened out the van.
“You sure?”
“I’m a bit sleepy, or still drunk, I don’t know. It’s straight on, Oliveira.”
He obeyed. Agatha refocused her attention, her eyes wide open, scanning the view. You don’t know where you live, thought Oliveira, you’re lost or don’t want to arrive, and suddenly felt a new link to her: You hate your house, too. He went over in his head the times the odometer had clicked around, one, two, three, four, this was a considerable detour, this woman was considerably lost. They crossed Pontoise along a narrow sleeping street plagued with speed bumps that shook the aluminum instrument case like a maraca. Oliveira expected a comment from Agatha, but, although she didn’t take her eyes off the road, and although her fingers were crickets that leaped as they recognized the way, nothing came out. They had to get close to Meulan before Oliveira started to understand.
“We’re not going to your house, are we?”
Jokingly, she reproached him for being so masculine that he couldn’t tolerate losing total and absolute control of the vehicle.
“Agatha.”
“What?”
“Where are you taking me?”
“Relax. We’re here anyway, we can’t turn back now.”
She pointed to an embankment leading to an oak-lined drive.
“Turn in,” she said.
The gravel shifted under the tires. The house Oliveira arrived at was a façade with no sign of depth, black and flat like a canvas painted to conceal the construction behind it. There were no lights on. From outside, the attic could be seen standing out against the sky.
“Park here,” said Agatha, and her thin fingers moved in the air. “Don’t turn off the engine, so the lights will shine into the room.”
“Aren’t there any lights?” Suddenly Oliveira was furious. “But where the fuck are we?”
“My daughter died here,” said Agatha. “You’ll think I’m crazy, but I wanted you to see the place. I don’t know why you, Oliveira, maybe just because you’re the one who’s with me tonight. Sometimes things are that simple.”
—
TANGLED IN THE BUSHES along the drive were pieces of the police tape they’d used to cordon off the house. Agatha walked ahead and he followed her, breathing the swampy air the autumn rains had produced, the smell of the stagnant water and rotting wood. Oliveira imagined the place next summer, mosquitoes spiraling above the long grass. They walked around the redbrick walls to the glass door into the kitchen. The windows were intact, but the interior was invisible. Agatha turned the knob and the door opened soundlessly. Inside the colors were no different, the world was blue and black.
“They lived here,” said Agatha. “Alma spent her last year here, Oliveira.”
On the large table with a synthetic cover rested three coffee cups, each on top of a different coaster. One of them had the label of a Belgian brand of beer, Judas. The letters of the word were red, but in the darkness, broken only by the van lights shining through the big front window, the red turned purple as if they were at the bottom of the sea or like the lips of someone who’d frozen to death. Oliveira went into the front room looking all around—not a stick of furniture, no rug, just a parquet floor dulled by dust—scrutinizing the bare, white walls, lacking even a nail hole, that basic trace of humanity, evidence that someone had wanted to take possession of a place with the simple gesture of hanging up an image. He wondered in which of the corners of the house Alma had lain down to die, which room and which bed had been chosen by the person who’d injected her with the morphine Agatha was now mentioning, talking about the autopsy, the communiqué the police had sent out to the close family members of the dead people with the description of the bodies neatly organized, laid out methodically with the rigidity of a military barracks, and covered with a freshly washed white sheet, a terrible quotidian detail as if an affectionate grandmother had just embroidered it for that purpose.
“There were twenty-one bodies,” said Agatha. “Most of them were lying on the floor, there, not on the parquet but on mats.”
Oliveira tried to conjure up the image.
“As if they were asleep. Each one on their mat, each mat parallel to the next and all of them equidistant from each other.”
“How old was your daughter?”
“Seventeen, Oliveira. Seventeen fucking years old. People should have to be old enough to buy booze before they’re allowed to join a cult.”
It was too sad an irony to be convincing. Oliveira looked outside, the van’s lights dazzled him and he felt a sharp pain in his retina. The running engine’s murmur reached them, dimmed and distant: the ventilation switched on, the fan belt squealed like an injured animal. Beside the stairs, before going up, Agatha pointed to a niche, the only interruption of the smooth surface of the wall, where the group had kept a nickel silver chalice that was later melted down and a hardcover Bible with rice-paper pages and a velvet bookmark.
“I was able to see it once,” said Agatha. “The Battle of Armageddon had been underlined with a light pencil. ‘And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean.’ That part was underlined, I remember because Alma recited it on a recording she made for me.”
“Light pencil?”
“Yes, you know. Soft lead, or whatever they’re called. The ones architects use.”
Oliveira was struck by the way she was talking about it as if it were a modern relic or a juvenile cult object, Lennon’s glasses or Bogart’s hat. When he wanted to tell her, he felt arrogant. Who was he to describe the shape of her grief? The stairwell smelled of damp and dust, and Oliveira’s nose felt relief when they got to the upper floor, where the air was no less heavy but had a bit more freedom of movement. The light, upstairs, was indirect: again blue, again black.
“Do you want me to go down and move the car? If I back it up a little, maybe we’ll get a bit more light.”
“No, stay here. The tour’s almost finished.”
“You don’t have to be sarcastic, Agatha.”
“Believe me, I do, my dear. It’s absolutely necessary.”
In the first room on the left, the door was half closed. Agatha pushed it as if afraid she might wake someone. On each side of the window was a bunk bed without any ladders.
“They look like the ones in the hotel,” said Oliveira. “Except for the color.”
“Except they’re for sleeping and nothing else,” said Agatha. “Nobody kissed anybody here. They all loved each other but didn’t sleep together. They were committed to God the father, married to their new Church.”
She pointed to the bed on the right.
“Alma slept in that one. The four people in this room were women.”
Agatha brushed off the dust and sat down on the bare mattress. Oliveira asked:
“Did she sleep on the top bunk or the bottom?”
“Top. She was taller than me, since she was twelve or thirteen she was a head taller than me.”
“So why are you sitting down there, then? Come on, I’ll help you up.”
Agatha stepped into Oliveira’s interlaced hands: he lifted her easily, and then steadied her with a hand on her bum. She smiled.
“Cheeky,” she said. “You’re not coming up?”
Oliveira stretched out on the lower bunk.
“I’m fine here, thanks.”
He could feel every knot and every seam of the mattress in his back. He crossed his arms behind his head and closed his eyes. He played at opening them and closing them, acknowledged there wasn’t much difference and, nevertheless, that his eyes were adjusting to the dark, and gradually details of the room were coming into
focus: the geometric designs carved on the white door, the bare wire hanging from the ceiling where once a lightbulb would have hung. Above his body, the bedsprings creaked with Agatha’s every movement. Lying there he realized he couldn’t imagine a day of devotion; everything religious was so abstract to him that it was impossible to relate it to waking up, coffee brewing in the kitchen, or taking turns to use the shower. He’d had faith when he was little, of course, because a child is capable of seeing the fulfillment of a prayer, the answer to a plea in anything. And later, what had happened? He got used to the idea of himself, learned that every man is an island, and then the notion disappeared: the notion of that Christian god he’d been told about, that god Oliveira had never seen or heard.
“Oliveira.”
“What’s up?”
“Nothing. Just wondering if you’d fallen asleep.”
“I’m wide awake,” he said. He heard the sound of friction. He guessed that Agatha was scratching the wall with her fingernail.
“You wouldn’t leave without telling me, would you?” she said.
“I’m quite comfortable here, why would I leave?” said Oliveira. “And you? Do you want to get going?”
There was no answer. Oliveira watched the silvery springs working, the delicate contractions each time the woman above him moved. The nail scraped the wall.
“Sometimes babies suddenly forget to breathe. I don’t know why that happens,” said Agatha.
Lovers on All Saints' Day Page 16