I stood up, and Vincent’s eyes opened. “I must write to Theo,” I told him. “Will a letter to Cité Pigalle reach him, or do I need the number of his apartment there?”
Vincent shook his head and closed his eyes. It didn’t matter. I would send someone to Paris tomorrow to find him at the gallery. Poor Theo: It would be a terrible shock. In the meantime, I had one more duty to carry out. I summoned Paul from downstairs again, and he helped me change Vincent’s bandage. We got a towel from Ravoux and draped it over Vincent’s side, beneath the quilt. The innkeeper was terribly anxious and eager to do whatever he could to save his guest. I tried to soothe him, but all that I could find to say was that Vincent was resting.
I looked back from the door, on my way out. Vincent lay still. Paul sat gazing at him. He turned and met my gaze. “Is there anything I should do?” he whispered.
I shook my head. “I’m quite sure he will have a quiet night. Tomorrow will be more difficult, so I must go home and sleep. If there should be any change, if Vincent feels pain, if he starts to bleed more, or to cough, get Monsieur Ravoux to sit here and run like the wind to fetch me. You are here because you have the swiftest feet among us—and because you have been a friend to Vincent,” I told Paul. I saw him sit a little bit taller and wished that I could remember, more often, to praise him.
There was none of the customary song in the bar downstairs. Vincent had kept a distance from most of the inhabitants of Auvers, aside from painting a few children and young women. He had probably known none of the men who sat uneasily at the café tables, muttering quietly to each other. But when I stepped into the room to tell Ravoux that I was leaving, everyone fell silent.
“I am going home,” I said, making my voice loud enough to carry across the room. “My son, Paul, is upstairs with Monsieur van Gogh. I think Monsieur van Gogh will be comfortable enough tonight, but in the morning his brother must be sent for.”
Ravoux was wiping down the tin counter, and his arm halted in its sweep. “What a terrible thing, Doctor. He was a quiet man, never difficult. Will he recover?”
“I don’t know,” I admitted. “Dr. Mazery and I will do our best, but he is bleeding terribly.”
“We’ll say a prayer for him,” came a voice from the back of the room, followed by murmurs of agreement.
“Yes, do,” I said. “I’m sure that will help him.”
Ravoux came out from behind the counter and stepped through the door with me into the warm, moonlit night. “But what I want to know, Doctor, is where did he get the gun?”
I tried to look puzzled. “I can’t imagine, Ravoux. He barely knows a soul here, besides you and me. It could not have come from us. Perhaps he brought it with him from the South.”
“I suppose that must be it,” Ravoux said, nodding at my apparent wisdom. “I have heard they’re hot-blooded down there. So you really think he’ll die?”
“I do,” I said, relieved to be honest. “Mazery and I can’t do much to save him. And you know how it is, Ravoux, when a man really wants to die.”
“Of course. We see it all the time in the old ones, don’t we? Just get tired and stop. Not a bad thing, really. But he was so young.”
“Yes,” I agreed. “That’s what makes it hard for the rest of us. I’ll be back early in the morning, unless Paul comes for me in the night.”
I walked away. The moon was full, and it gave off so much light that my shadow glided before me, a sharp outline with a hole of light in one side, where I held my lantern. I lifted my left hand so that the lantern’s light obliterated most of my shadow’s torso. That was where Vincent had shot himself, with the gun I had given him.
I dropped my hand to my side, and my shadow resumed a more manlike form. As I walked beneath trees, the shadow merged with the general blackness, leaving my lantern to shine in a golden circle. I was too old to be spending these midnight hours roaming about, but I had to go find the gun. I was certain I knew where it was.
Until I saw Vincent wounded, I hadn’t considered the harm that a bullet does to a living body. Torn flesh, broken blood vessels, damaged organs, bruising, scorching, pain. Infection. The possibility of failure, of permanent incapacitation had not crossed my mind as I weighed my responsibility to my friend and patient. I could not help wondering, as I walked, what it meant that he had tried to shoot himself in the heart. Had he held the pistol at his temple and shied away from the destruction that would cause? I found myself attempting to replicate his gesture as he pressed the gun to his chest.
Then I wondered about the preceding moments. Did he walk up and down trying to steady his nerve? Had he strode up the hill this morning with the intention of killing himself? Or did he sit there, trying to paint, willing his hands to pick up the brush, to squeeze paint onto the palette? Did he seize the weapon when the tools of his trade failed him? No, it was not the tools that failed. It was something in himself. Yet I did not believe that his gesture had been a kind of punishment. His suicide was a strange form of kindness to himself. It was as if he had relented, in a way, and no longer held himself to an impossible standard. He allowed himself to be human, and mortal.
My errand this evening was to find the gun, for I feared it could be traced to me. I trusted Marguerite’s discretion absolutely, yet I felt this step was urgent. Hence the spectacle of an old man pacing up a hill of wheat in the moonlight. The glossy stalks caught on my clothes as I passed, gleaming silver and black in a braided pattern, dipping and springing back as I passed. I could have been walking chest-high through an ocean.
Sometimes in dreams you cannot do what you know is necessary; your feet will not move, the door will not open. But at other times, everything is easy, and I felt that odd magical power that night. I knew just where to go: I unerringly located Vincent’s camp stool and the paint box next to it. I expected to find the gun lying on the wheat nearby, and there it was. I even picked up Vincent’s easel. I wanted to erase his presence from the field. This had been an unhappy spot for him. Let him be forgotten by it.
I strode down the hill with my clumsy burden, cresting the waves of grain as if under sail. A breeze had picked up, stroking huge, invisible hands across the field and stirring the topmost branches of the trees. I felt weirdly powerful. I deposited Vincent’s painting equipment by the church, where it would be found and brought back to the inn. The gun I intended for the river. I followed the railroad track and threw the gun into the center of a pool where the water was deep and exceedingly murky. It has never come to light.
Nineteen
I WOKE AT DAWN. Without rousing Marguerite or Madame Chevalier, I left my house and returned to the inn, where I found Paul sprawled on the floor next to Vincent’s bed. The room smelled worse than it had the night before, so I woke Paul up and had him open the skylight, then sent him home to bed. Soon Ravoux came up the stairs carrying a bowl of coffee for me, which was very kind. Another Dutch painter was staying at the inn, a man called Anton Hirschig. I entrusted him with the letter to Theo, and he left to catch the first train to Paris. He would be at Boussod and Valadon before ten.
Vincent appeared to sleep through this small commotion. When Dr. Mazery came, we changed his dressing. The wound still looked clean—there was no redness and no swelling. The bleeding continued, but at a slower pace. Mazery had brought some old linens, which we packed around Vincent’s side. I felt for the pulse in one of his wrists, and it was both slow and weak. Vincent’s skin tone was pallid, and the contours of his face were sharper than ever. I calculated how long it might be before Theo could reach us; there was still plenty of time.
I spent the morning at Vincent’s side. When he woke and asked for his pipe, I told him that Theo was coming. I fanned Vincent to keep the flies away, and rested in the chair next to his bed, my mind strangely idle. We heard the village wake and the voices muffled downstairs. Several hours passed. We were sitting this way when Theo arrived.
He had begun his day at the gallery, expecting nothing more taxing than the attempt
to sell some paintings and the daily effort to control his ailing body. Yet here he was, in his brother’s tiny garret room, dressed in his frock coat and black silk cravat, after several hours of the gravest worry. His eyes were wild, and when he saw Vincent lying with a terrible stillness beneath the pile of covers, he burst into tears. I stood up and led him to the chair. He sank instead to his knees, clasping Vincent’s ivory hand to his cheek. I heard Vincent’s voice very quietly say, “I did it for all of us.” Then he broke into Dutch. As I left the room, I heard the two brothers murmuring to each other in the guttural language of their childhood.
The day went on. I telegraphed my concierge in Paris, canceling all of my appointments for the next few days. I went back to the house to shave properly and inform Madame Chevalier and Marguerite what had happened. Marguerite turned very pale. I assured her that Vincent was not suffering, but she ran upstairs to her room. Madame Chevalier and I exchanged glances, and she promised me that she would take care of the girl. Then I went back to the inn.
Theo appeared to nurse mistaken hope. Around the middle of the afternoon, he came downstairs to find me. I had brought a chair from the café into Vincent’s shed and was dozing among the canvases. I stood up, moving the light chair closer to him. He collapsed into it.
“He seems stronger, Doctor, don’t you think?” he asked. “It can’t have been that grave an injury. His heart was not damaged, I believe?”
“His heart was not damaged,” I answered. “But I have seen no sign that he is stronger. Rather the opposite, Monsieur van Gogh. The wound is still bleeding.”
“But you have not seen him in the last hour,” Theo protested. “You should go up and check on him. Mazery is with him now. He sent me down for something to eat, but of course I cannot eat. I must write a letter to Jo. She is staying with my mother in Holland. This will be a terrible blow for both of them.”
“Then let us go into the café,” I said, holding out a hand to help him get up. I turned him away from the shed, away from the corner of the table where I had laid a sketch pad across the frightening words Vincent had painted there.
“Come and let Ravoux give you some soup,” I suggested. “I will bring you some paper, and you can write your letter to Jo. We will send Paul to mail it when you are finished.”
“All right, Doctor,” he conceded. “But do check on Vincent. You’ll see he is rallying. He is stronger than anyone thinks.”
I did check on Vincent, who seemed even more diminished. His skin was now the color of paper, and his form beneath the quilt seemed even flatter, as if his body were simply vanishing. Theo wrote his note with some difficulty, I noticed. His handwriting was inconsistent, letters variable in size and lines climbing up and downhill. I wrote the Dutch address on the outside at his direction, and we did not mention his lack of motor control. Soup had also been a poor idea: it was dribbled around where he had been sitting. I supposed that the nervous strain of Vincent’s injury must have been taxing his strength.
Vincent smoked another pipe. Ravoux and I managed to get Theo to drink some tea, and later eat a bit of chicken. He seemed to accept, as the day went on, that Vincent was dying—his face grew ever more stoical, and he spoke of his brother’s comfort rather than of his recovery. The temperature in the garret was wretched, but Vincent showed no sign of discomfort. We were all in our shirtsleeves, hair sticking to our faces, but he lay like marble. By evening the wound was still clean and cool. The flow of blood was very slow now, little more than a dark, sticky trickle. His heartbeat was weak, and his breaths were shallow. I turned to Theo as I listened with my stethoscope.
“His heart is very slow, I must tell you,” I said. “I am afraid it will not be much longer.”
Theo looked up at me. He had loosened his cravat, and he must have rubbed against Vincent’s bandage, for there were rusty smears of blood on one of his sleeves. “There was really nothing you could have done, Doctor, was there?”
“Nothing,” I said. “No one could have saved him.” Theo kept his gaze on my face, perhaps waiting for more. But I had nothing left to say.
When I arrived at the inn just after seven the next morning, Vincent was gone. Theo lay next to him in the bed, his arms wrapped around his brother’s body, but he was not asleep. When I stepped into the room, Theo said, “It was a good end. He said, ‘I wish I could die like this,’ and then he breathed his last.”
Grief overwhelmed me in a hot wave. My hands came up to my face, and I found myself crouching next to the bed. Tears poured down my cheeks and my chin, and I watched them spatter the dusty floor. I had known Vincent would die. I had been glad for him. But now that he was gone, I wept.
We knew, all of us who had known Vincent were certain, that we would never have another friend like him. Surely Theo spoke truly when he called his brother “impossible.” I had caught glimpses of his stubbornness and unreason. Yet he was generous and brilliant, and he had the rare quality of knowing exactly what he was meant to do in life. His circumstances had not helped him, but he pressed on, following his calling. Perhaps his sense of conviction drew people to him because we all wished for a share of it. Perhaps that made his death that much more of a blow.
As the day unrolled, we were busy. We had to certify the death at the town hall, to notify friends in Paris. Vincent would be buried the next day in the new cemetery up on the hill. I offered to arrange for the grave and to order the coffin, in part to spare Theo the need to leave the inn. The priest refused to loan the church’s hearse to convey Vincent’s body to his resting place, since his death was a suicide. We were all so stunned with sorrow that we barely perceived the insult. Paul and Hirschig were sent to borrow a hearse from the neighboring village of Méry.
Toward evening the carpenter Levert let us know that the coffin was finished. The heat had abated somewhat, and Theo was lying down in Ravoux’s best room. We did not want to transfer Vincent’s body until Theo was awake, and I would not let him be disturbed. I went upstairs, glad of a respite myself, and sat down next to Vincent’s bed.
The body had been washed, the bloodied bedding taken away. They had dressed Vincent in his best clothes, a white shirt and a pair of brown trousers. Someone, perhaps Madame Ravoux, had washed and starched the shirt to a brilliant white. Vincent’s skin looked waxy next to it. His brow was furrowed, even in death. My hand came up to try to smooth the lines from his face, but I stopped myself.
The skylight was open, and the sounds from downstairs drifted to me as they had on that night when I visited Vincent. Ravoux had insisted that Vincent’s body be placed in the café itself, and Paul had the brilliant notion that we hang Vincent’s canvases around the walls. I heard hammering, and furniture being moved. Horses clopped past, and someone emptied a bucket into the street. Vincent’s room was silent.
I noticed that his table had been tidied, with the papers and pens and bits of charcoal and pencils and notebooks all laid out in rows and stacks. I got up to examine this unfamiliar arrangement, created by hands other than Vincent’s. There were several blank sheets of letter paper next to the candlestick, and without thinking I picked them up. I found a cardboard folder to support the paper and examined the charcoal, choosing the largest piece. Then I sat down again, facing the bed, and began to draw Vincent.
I had considered making a sketch of Blanche on her deathbed. I had done so for my young nephew who died in 1873, and his parents were happy to have a last portrayal of him. Blanche, though, was so ravaged by her last days that it would have broken my heart to look at her with that kind of scrutiny. Maybe a deathbed portrait is just an attempt to delay a farewell, to spend a little bit more time with a loved one. Vincent’s face was so well known to me, yet this was my last chance to fix it in my memory.
Vincent lay on his back, in three-quarters profile to me. I made a bold line for the contour of his forehead, and drew in the two shallow curves of his eyebrows. Another firm line formed his nose, and already I could see his face taking shape. It was so strange, t
hough, to try to depict Vincent without color. He had seen the world in terms of the full spectrum. On the other hand, perhaps charcoal and paper were the right materials for this task. The room was becoming gloomy as the light faded outside. The brilliant canvases had already been taken downstairs. Vincent’s skin was pale as ivory in death—color, for the time being, had vanished.
I used a few thick strokes of the charcoal to indicate the hair at his temple and the top of his head, then made two curved marks for the ear—the damaged ear. It did not look anything like an ear. I quickly made a few horizontal lines to show where the pillow was.
A better artist than I would have been able to convey the lights and shadows on Vincent’s face. I used the side of the charcoal to indicate the hollow of his cheek. I rubbed with my thumb, hoping to turn the marks into what was more obviously a shadow.
Vincent had made this all look easy. When he made the etching of me, I remembered his saying that he had already considered my face as a pattern of lights and darks, so that it would be relatively simple to etch onto the plate. And he had done it so simply, so clearly. Now I looked at his closed eyes, and hesitated. I kept telling myself to see simply dark and light, but it was not that simple.
As my charcoal roved over the page, I felt as though I was touching Vincent’s skin. I drew a series of parallel lines to indicate the furrows in his forehead. There is a popular notion that the dead are at rest, yet Vincent did not look tranquil. I could not help reaching over to smooth away those creases, but they remained.
Leaving Van Gogh Page 27