by Mark Powell
But Stone only smiled, shook his head, and walked away. Crossed the campus grass and headed around the building toward the quad. No hesitation, no explanation.
Six years.
Six years and just like that John was thrown back into the mistake of that other life. Working for Peter Keyes. Sitting in the control room, staring at the monitor, watching. Ray Bageant in the other room. Jimmy Stone with the camera. One of the Poles really did have a rhinestone sheath for his phone. It had been a running joke, the thing the three of them talked about so that they could avoid the primary fact of their existence. That being the extent to which they’d been wrong.
But Stone was right about Professor Hadawi. John stood outside and watched as Hadawi’s things were loaded in the backs of the two SUVs and disappeared with an efficiency John could only envy.
2.
It was possible to see without seeing.
For instance: her husband and sons were in the kitchen. Her daughter Laurie was just across the pillow beyond her, fingers curled, translucent eyelids veined and drawn. Sun fell across their bodies, separating them into parts, these tines of light, warm and swirling with dust. Tess was in bed with her eyes shut and it wasn’t so much that she knew these things as she saw them. She saw one other thing too: she saw the man in the basement.
Tess would have considered him—she would have considered many things—had she not heard John downstairs, singing. She had absolutely no problem with this. Her only complaint was the noise. She could hear the traffic headed north to Chattanooga or Gatlinburg. Nearer, the mowers running. Without opening her eyes, she saw big pickups pulled flush to the curb, trailers bristling with rakes and clippers. Hispanic boys carrying weed-eaters and drinking water from gallon jugs. And beneath it all, her full-throated husband, singing.
Likely he’d been up for hours. If he was off work today—she couldn’t make sense of his schedule—but should he be off, he would take Daniel and Wally to his parents’ where his mother would have a giant breakfast waiting on them. Biscuits and gravy, eggs, bacon. Y’all boys eat now. Don’t be shy. This was supposed to give Tess the morning to gather herself, but if that was John’s intention wouldn’t he take Laurie too?
Tess came into the kitchen in her housecoat, her daughter in her arms. John was packing his messenger bag. He would leave through the side gate, cross the yard, and go to work as head of the campus counseling center at Garrison College.
“I was hoping you’d get up,” he said, and kissed her cheek, kissed their daughter’s head.
“You’re leaving?”
“It’s after eight. What’s the plan for the day?”
“No plan. Are you coming home for lunch?”
“Maybe. But it’s the first day of classes. Could be crazy.”
“Okay.”
“I’ll call you. Love you.”
Only when the door was shut, only when he was through the side gate and moving out over the yard did she call the boys.
*
Her six-year-old was out in the backyard attempting to echolocate, her three-year-old a half-step behind him. This was the nature of being six, the possibility of it. She had shown Wally several documentaries on the Discovery Channel and then last winter, seven months pregnant with Laurie and barely able to move, she and John had driven the eight hours from north Georgia and taken the boys out on a harbor cruise down in Tampa where they had spotted a pod of migrating sperm whales. It was like a blessing, the sudden spurting eruption, the shape of their giant drowsy heads. People hung off the railings to snap photographs and point.
It hadn’t been until the next day they realized they had witnessed something as rare as it was tragic. The whales were disoriented and lost, wandering inside the vast sameness of the bay, unable to find their way back to open sea. What they were doing in there—what they were doing in this part of the world—no one could say, except that it was bad. The Coast Guard shadowed them. NOAA had a boat in the water. Marine biologists from SeaWorld tried to lure them with a bucket trail of dead squid. They called it a pod in the news, but it seemed more like a family to her: the bull male, the female mother, the calf. Three whales, stateless—could you say such a thing? Or was it simply that they were lost, they were in the wrong place?
She could hear her oldest, clicking.
He popped his tongue against the roof of his mouth, moved over the grass with his eyes shut. Now and then his hands flew up for balance or safety. Was he in his socks? She couldn’t quite see from where she sat in the rocking chair on the screened porch, holding Laurie and her book. If he was in his socks they would be ruined. She thought of calling, but didn’t want to wake the baby. It didn’t matter anyway. One thing she had learned was that once you reached a certain point there was no sense in complaining—complaining was an indulgence, a selfish act.
She watched him out beyond the azaleas, pipe-cleaner arms and giant sunflower head. He was squeezing shut his eyes, not enough to merely close them. Daniel followed him, mimicking every move with the reverence reserved only for older siblings, the kind of veneration she could sense herself already beginning to mourn: it was a love incapable of surviving the glare of childhood. Daniel was three years old and the look in his eyes, the way he studied his brother, the delicacy of his arms swimming up and back—it would be gone in five years’ time. You couldn’t live like that, that was another of her reluctant conclusions. You had to moderate your feelings. It was too easy to scare people.
“Wally,” she whispered, looked at sleeping Laurie, undisturbed. “Wally? Daniel?”
The whales had eventually found their way out, a baffling occurrence. For three days they crossed and recrossed the bay, seemingly panic-stricken, and then one night they disappeared. By that point the plight of the whales was on the front page of the paper, leading the nightly local news, getting picked up by CNN where a professor at the Scripps Institute spoke of creaks and slow clicks and codas. There was a certain amount of guilt involved: they had the largest brain on earth, but had been hunted to near extinction. It was possible they used actual names. The shore was lined with volunteers ready to push them back into the sea should they beach. But for two days—nothing. And then on the third day they were sighted by a passing trawler, forty miles out to sea and headed south. That was what echolocation could do for you. You could see without seeing. You could get out.
Laurie stirred, began to cry. Tess tried to soothe her, but it was too late, and she took advantage of the opportunity to rise briefly out of the chair and look over the azaleas for the boys. She could just see them in the far corner past the swing set.
“Wally? Daniel? Baby, come down where I can see you, okay?”
“What, Mom?”
“Play where I can see you, all right?”
She watched them wander closer, onto the sliding board, attempting to walk up it. They were good boys. They listened. She shifted her hips beneath her and gave Laurie her left breast. The clicking was inaudible.
*
“Are you all right?” It was Tess’s little sister, Liz, calling from Savannah. “Mom called asking.”
“About me?”
“Worried.”
They were still in the yard, the boys on the swing set, Laurie asleep in the Pack ’n Play. Tess was reading Proust on the screened porch, a giant pillow across her lap. It was her summer project but now summer was gone and still she was little more than halfway through the first volume. She felt fat-footed and dumb. She was sweating, eternally nursing, and when not nursing, rocking or cooing or bouncing. Making grilled cheese or playing Legos on the floor. There were blots of sweat all over the pages of her book. Crusted milk in the cups of her unwashed bra. These were her parents’ complaints, she reminded herself. But the word wasn’t complaints because they never actually voiced them, and she couldn’t hate them for thinking them.
“I think she’s planning on sending you money,” her sister said. “She was feeling me out.”
“That’s ridiculous.”
“That
’s what I told her. It was this general sort of exploratory vibe and I was like, Mom, seriously?”
“That’s just ridiculous.”
“That’s what I told her, but, Tess? You are all right, aren’t you?”
“Am I all right?”
“That’s what I’m asking.”
She almost laughed, almost felt it take flight. “I don’t know how to answer that. What sort of question is that?”
“Mom used the word depressed.”
“Depressed? I don’t know what to say to you. I’m fine.”
“I’m not trying to trick you.”
“Completely and totally fine.”
“I’m asking because I love you.”
“I don’t even know what to say.”
“You’ve been like this since summer and that’s totally normal. After Laurie was born—”
“This has nothing to do with Laurie.”
“Then what is it?”
“It isn’t anything.”
“This is what I think.”
“Liz . . .”
“I think you’re home by yourself. I think John isn’t around like he should be.”
“I don’t even . . .”
“It’s normal to feel a little crazy is all I’m saying. You start to feel trapped. Then you look out at the world and what do you see? I know you, Tess. I know how you think. You look out at the world and you see people dying. You fix on all the suffering and then you start to absorb it.”
“That’s . . .”
“I know you, Tess. You absorb it.”
“I don’t even know what to say.”
“You’ve been like this since summer and that’s totally normal. After Laurie was born—”
“This has nothing to do with Laurie.”
“Then what is it?”
“It isn’t anything. I don’t even know what to say.”
She didn’t know what to pray either. But then what was the point in praying? In college, people were always saying how the Lord never gave you more than you could handle, and yes, she felt guilty thinking such, but she had come to the conclusion that that was complete and utter bullshit. The world was made out of what you couldn’t handle. The world was what you couldn’t handle. What you couldn’t handle, she thought, was actually a pretty good working definition of life.
*
She brought the boys in for lunch. PBJs and little corn puffs in the shape of baseball players. A green apple cut into eighths, the core delicately removed because if they saw any brownness, if they saw the scooped bell of the seeds they wouldn’t touch it. Laurie was back asleep in her crib. Wally’s socks were ruined.
While they ate, she took a moment to go to the computer. U.S. and French jets were still bombing targets around Kobane. ISIL—today they were calling them ISIL—was advancing block by block. It had been going on for days now and she had watched, surreptitiously, because she wasn’t yet sure how she felt.
It was when she went back into the kitchen that she saw the man coming up the sidewalk, a dirty man in work boots, some sort of headscarf tied around his neck. An Arab man, a Persian man—how was she supposed to know these things? She didn’t know anything. But she felt the pull of it, the catch like a hangnail run through a sleeve. Some dull pain, as sudden as it was satisfying.
When she realized it was a Hispanic man on one of the yard crews she felt it release. He was pushing a wheelbarrow of mulch she had somehow completely missed, and for a moment she imagined the sweet pine smell—Jesus, Tess—and for a moment more she hated herself.
*
They walked to the campus library, Laurie and Daniel in the double stroller, Wally beside her, holding onto the handlebar and helping her push. He wanted to know things. How old was the road? How did the universe get made? Why did people have to die? She started with the age of the road. It was a complex issue, she explained, because was he referring to how long it had last been since the road was repaved or paved initially or was this a question of how long people had traveled this actual path?
“Just how old is it?”
“Fifty-seven years,” she said.
“You’re sure?”
“Let’s get another book on whales.”
“But, Mom, the road?”
“Fifty-seven years, almost to the day.”
“And you’re positive?”
“Absolutely.”
She wanted him to get another book on whales because she needed to know about these things, the creaks, the slow clicks, the codas. It was possible the click of the bull sperm whale was capable of stunning a squid into a temporary stupor. She’d seen this—embarrassing, but true—on a cartoon. When she tried to confirm it online she encountered sharp divides. Apparently, the notion of the click as a weapon was highly controversial. It might not be real, but you could detect the need of many to cling to it. Many others badly needed for it not to be so. But thank God its ability to echolocate was unquestioned. There were reams of data, YouTube videos, links on the National Geographic page.
She wanted, maybe, something on the Middle East, too. She could read at night between feedings. Sunni versus Shia. The Alawite minority. She didn’t know the geopolitics of the region. She didn’t claim she did. But she wasn’t stupid, either.
*
They looked at their new books while she stood in the kitchen and debated supper, Laurie in her carrier. There were canned vegetables and soups and shrink-wrapped chicken and heads of lettuce and also leftovers she could simply heat up. Since Laurie was born someone was always bringing them a meal, just dropping something by. Had extra and thought I’d just drop this by, know your hands are full.
Her sister was wrong. It wasn’t postpartum, whatever it was she felt. It had nothing to do with Laurie. It was John.
What did he do all day?
She thought of this more than she liked. There were occasional appointments, but she knew his counselors handled most of these. He filed reports with academic affairs, but what beyond this? That was an afternoon of work, she thought. A day at most.
Maybe he prayed. It was possible he was locked in his office, down on his knees in prayer. She’d gotten saved at twelve at a youth rally in Tampa. A mass altar call and she’d gone because all around her everyone was going and then she’d looked up and seen the youth pastor and the way he looked at her, that expectancy, the sense that he was doing everything short of holding his breath. She had gotten up, she had gone. How could she not have? And she loved the Lord, she loved the Gospels. She did. It was only the Crucifixion that bothered her. The Crucifixion was ghastly.
She put them, her hands, into the cabinet.
He was a good man, but what did he do?
*
John called to say he would be late. The Ward girl, did she remember Julie?
Of course she did. Julie with the red hair. Lives in Conrad Hall. She wore the gray boots with the buckles like so.
“Something’s happened to her,” John said. “I’m not sure what, but apparently she’s locked herself in the bathroom and won’t come out. Her RA thinks it’s about a boy.”
“On the first day?”
“Apparently she spent the summer saving up all her drama. It could be a while.”
“When should I look for you?”
“I don’t know,” he said. “It could be late.”
The boys were in bed, Laurie in her crib, and Tess was on the screened porch, the white noise of the baby monitor fizzing by her feet. The single green light like a fallen star. She watched the bats swooping down from the bat houses to feed on mosquitoes. They reminded her of the jets on television, the wobbly dive just before the bombs fell, and this bothered her more than she thought it should. Not their violence, but her insistence on similarity. That everything reminded her of something else, that nothing simply was.
In World Religions, they’d spent a week on Buddhism, a barely glancing pass that had revealed itself in a single line she carried with her still: the bedrock experience of huma
n life is disappointment. What a joke that would have been, how silly and hopeless it would have seemed, had anyone bothered to notice. But there were trips to Busch Gardens and Young Life conventions and some friend’s band was playing praise sound Friday nights at the coffee shop. They flew past the sand mandalas and chanting, past the saffron robes. But sitting in the gathering darkness it seemed less silly, less hopeless, too.
But she wasn’t complaining about that, certainly not. Her only complaint was the noise. How down beneath the hum of the monitor she could hear the park traffic. She could hear horns and voices and the sound of a giant motorhome braking on the asphalt. She wasn’t crazy. She wasn’t depressed. It was just that she could hear too much was maybe the problem, that she could hear everything. Down beneath the hum of the monitor she could even hear the man in the basement.
She could hear him clicking.
3.
Sunday they went to church. The five of them across the pew like one of those stick-figure families on the rear glass of minivans, a little ridiculous but not exactly something to apologize for either. John Maynard by the aisle, the boys between him and Tess. Laurie in Tess’s arms. Wally and Daniel had toys, misshapen monsters that might have been human, or near human. Bulky superheroes carrying two-inch assault rifles. Not the sort of thing encouraged here.
The spire of the church marked the center of campus, and like the rest of Garrison College it was expensive, ambitious, and astoundingly white. The college had been founded in 1867 on the grounds of an old mountain resort of fir and pine and breezy summer days, a mosquito-free idyll for the antebellum rich. During the Civil War it had been a hospital for the Army of Tennessee and after, as if to banish the bone-sawed ghosts, was transformed to a college charged with educating freedmen alongside the children of defeated Confederates—a noble history prominently displayed on every piece of official literature. Progressive. Socially minded they called it when the faculty senate nearly voted to divest from Israel or did vote to support gay marriage or wage equality.
John scanned the faces.
To the extent that the faculty attended church, they attended here, avoiding the Baptist and Pentecostal congregations that began just past the college gates. Those places were for the anthropologists recording traditions in messianic faith, the sociologists studying movements in the rural mountain South. The ones taking careful note of the world John had grown up in. The vinyl tablecloths and pedal pushers the women had lately taken to calling capri pants. The Friday ballgame and Sunday sermon. The do-gooder women with their arthritis and prayers. The stoic men with their cans of Bud. John had gone off to get what they called book-learning. But he hadn’t learned a thing, hadn’t gained a thing, except perhaps a thorough schooling in his own capacity to hate. He regretted it. Not exactly the loss of innocence so much as the casting away of beauty.