Girls Fall Down

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Girls Fall Down Page 13

by Maggie Helwig


  ‘It’s okay, it’s good you called,’ said Alex, putting the camera back into his bag. ‘Besides, I bet this is something you don’t even know about.’

  ‘What, raw meat?’ asked Susie, looking towards the butcher’s stand. ‘I know more about raw meat than you do.’

  ‘No, this was just me killing time. We’ll be going north from here.’

  ‘And this doesn’t bother you at all?’ asked Susie, with a gesture towards the heaps of ground pork, the glistening coils of sausage.

  ‘Bodies in space, Suzanne,’ said Alex, standing up. ‘It’s all bodies in space.’

  They walked out of the hall and crossed the street. She was wearing a rather elegant black and white batik dress and a red quilted jacket, not quite warm enough for the weather. ‘I have to go to a party for some American hotshot later,’ she said, shrugging, aware that he’d noticed. ‘House of a major donor to the university, up in Rosedale. Filipina maids handing around wine and smoked salmon. And academic backbiting.’

  ‘The maids hand around the backbiting?’

  ‘They might as well. The upper classes can’t do a thing for themselves.’

  ‘Sounds fantastic. Don’t let me keep you from it.’

  ‘I wish you could. But I have some time before it starts.’

  Outside St. James’ Cathedral, a Mennonite family was handing out pamphlets in the dusk – a man in a broad hat, three small girls in calico dresses and aprons, and a pregnant, tired woman wearing a bonnet. Alex took a pamphlet from one of the girls, and after a short negotiation with the father was permitted to take a picture of them, posed stiffly in a group, their papers clutched to their chests.

  Alex studied the pamphlet as he picked up his camera bag. WHAT WOULD JESUS DO? it read on the front.

  ‘See, this is a question I ask,’ he said. They walked by the cathedral garden, brown now and shrivelled, the dried seedheads covered with the powdery snow that had fallen during the night. ‘What would Jesus do? Would he be a fireman? A circus acrobat? I mean, you hang out in churches, you tell me.’

  ‘Something weird, I think,’ said Susie. ‘This is what I’m starting to pick up, that he was a very odd guy. He’d be sitting on the church steps telling a story about mustard. He was always on about the mustard.’

  ‘You’re making that up.’

  ‘No, really. I definitely have heard about mustard.’

  ‘I’m going to check with Evelyn before I accept that.’

  ‘Feel free.’ Susie looked up and around at the office towers. ‘Damn, we’re in the business district again.’

  ‘We should turn this way,’ said Alex, pointing to a pillared corridor between two glass walls.

  ‘I got a letter from my ex-husband today.’

  ‘Oh?’

  ‘He says I was a bad wife. I mean, I know I was a bad wife, it’s his fault he married me in the first place. I just don’t see the point of bringing it up now.’

  ‘Well. Sorry.’ He had no idea what his response to this was supposed to be. He and Amy exchanged polite and impersonal Christmas cards every year, and he could hardly imagine her mentioning their relationship, much less critiquing it.

  ‘Forget it,’ said Susie. ‘It’s a crappy day all over.’

  They went on through the back streets, under grey walls, and then across Yonge and into a gravelled lot, entering an empty glass walkway and crossing out the other side, onto the little stub of Temperance Street. ‘There,’ said Alex, pointing across the road. ‘That’s the Cloud Gardens.’

  Behind a five-storey building, the cold waves of a waterfall poured down the wall, reflecting coloured lights from a theatre marquee across the street. The brilliant water dove into a stone channel, framed as it fell by stepped and ragged limestone terraces and a network of metal bridges. To the side of the cascading waves, a long red oxide steel grid held squares of etched glass and beaten copper and pale concrete, rippled aluminum, green and gold metals. In the square below, curving stone walkways ran between bare oak and ash, banks of snow-covered shrubs.

  ‘Who even knows this is here?’ said Alex, waving his arm as they walked onto the largest path. ‘No one even knows it’s here at all.’ Though this was clearly not quite true, as the bridges and terraces were dotted with clusters of teenagers, sheltered in pockets of darkness. The sharp smell of pot smoke was drifting down over the water.

  ‘I’m thinking that’s why they call it the Cloud Gardens,’ said Susie, nodding her head towards them.

  ‘Kind of takes you back, doesn’t it?’ said Alex, and then put down his camera bag and began moving through the paths, turning in a circle with his camera and causing some consternation among the pot-smoking teens. He had been taking pictures for a few minutes, and had climbed up onto one of the terraces, focusing down on the lights that flickered on the swift run of the water, when he saw that Susie was sitting on a rock, staring down and picking at her fingernails. ‘Hey,’ he called to her. ‘You could come up here.’ She shrugged and walked slowly towards him.

  ‘There’s something else I wanted to show you,’ he said. He led her up another terrace and over one of the metal bridges to a glass door. ‘It’s closed right now, but look.’

  Inside the glass, barely visible, was a dense foam of broad, deep-green leaves, tree trunks hanging with vines, cut through by more bridges. ‘It’s the top of a rainforest,’ said Alex. ‘They built a rainforest under glass here, over a parking garage. Just because. Just so it would be there. And no one even knows.’ She had folded her arms and pursed her lips. ‘This is a human thing, Susie, and I love it. You can tell me it’s pointless if you want. You can tell me it’s built on exploitation and I partly believe that. But you can’t tell me it isn’t beautiful.’

  ‘Alex,’ said Susie sharply. ‘Would you quit with the lectures already?’

  He stepped away from the glass. ‘Excuse me?’

  ‘I’m sorry, but you don’t know what I’m thinking, do you? You have no idea what I was was going to say about this rainforest. For some reason you’re trying to make it out like I’m all theory and no humanity, but you don’t know who the hell I am. And you’re hardly one to talk about what’s more human.’

  He lowered his camera and stared at her, as she kicked fretfully at the bridge with her leather boots. ‘That’s not fair,’ he said.

  ‘It damn well is,’ said Susie. ‘You’ve always been… you block yourself off. You always did. At least you’re not permanently stoned anymore, but there’s still always something in between you and the world, this weird obsessive project of yours or whatever. And you try to tell me about what’s human? I don’t get you sometimes.’

  ‘This is ridiculous.’ He ran a hand over his hair. ‘I’m as much in the world as anyone. I’ve got a job, I’ve got people I know. Hell, I had a girlfriend until a couple of months ago.’

  ‘Had would be the key word there.’

  ‘Well, so what? It wasn’t working out, I broke it off. It happens.’ He could have said more hurtful things, and he thought of them – you’re going to lecture me about busted relationships? – but he didn’t want this to go so bad, so fast, he didn’t want that.

  ‘Yeah, because why exactly? You needed more time to wander around taking pictures of metal structures?’

  He turned away from her. ‘How about because I may be going blind, Susie? How about because it’s not so easy to say to somebody, by the way, I may be blind soon, is that a problem for you?’

  ‘So you’re going to deal with that by cutting yourself off even more? Alex, you live with a cat.’

  ‘Jesus fucking Christ!’ He slammed his fist on the railing of the fence, hard enough to hurt. ‘You, you of all people are talking to me about being isolated? You never even told me you were back. You never told me for eleven fucking years, so fuck you!’ He ran down one short flight of steps, but then he stopped, breathing hard, unable to sustain anger.

  ‘I’m sorry,’ he said. Distantly, he heard water tossing in the stone channel.
>
  ‘I care about you, Alex,’ said Susie quietly. ‘I really do. But you’re already mixing me up.’

  ‘I need to take these pictures.’ He turned to look at her, standing on the bridge. Her face was half obscured by shadows. ‘I need this. I know I can’t do what I want to. I want to take pictures that will change people’s lives, and I know I won’t be able to, I know I’m not that good. But I can’t help wanting it.’ He walked up the steps towards her. ‘This isn’t about theory. This is about me. This is about me haemorrhaging inside my eyes. This about me losing the one thing I’ve ever had. This is about how I’m supposed to survive.’

  He reached up and put his hand on her arm.

  ‘Susie-Paul,’ he said quietly. ‘You’re angry at me. I’m not even sure why, but I know there are reasons. But just – try to understand this.’

  She looked down and shook her head, and didn’t speak for a while. ‘I guess I should go,’ she said at last. ‘I have to go and eat hors d’oeuvres with the big shots.’

  ‘I’m sorry, Susie. Don’t go yet.’

  She sat down on the step. ‘I think I should.’

  He was leaning on the railing, drained, waiting for her to move. She would walk away this time, he thought, and that would be the end, and he wasn’t even sure how that made him feel. But she was still on the step when he became aware of a noise, and then realized, to his astonishment, that his beeper was sounding.

  ‘Good Lord.’ He reached into his pocket. ‘That’s got to be the first time in two years this thing has gone off.’

  ‘You have a beeper?’

  ‘I do shifts on call sometimes. But it never actually goes off. I mean, how often do they need an emergency photo session?’ He pushed a button on the beeper, turning the noise off, and breathed out heavily. ‘Well, it means they’re expecting criminal charges. It’s got to be. God. I hate forensic.’

  ‘Charges?’

  ‘Maybe it’s a car accident,’ he said, thinking, Assault. Rape. ‘I need to find a pay phone.’

  ‘You can use my cell.’ She reached into her jacket and took out a small phone, and he punched in the hospital number, spoke quickly to the dispatcher at the other end.

  ‘I have to go,’ he said, handing the phone back to her. ‘I’m really sorry. They want me as soon as I can get there.’

  ‘It’s okay. I need to be at this party.’

  ‘We have to talk, Susie.’

  She shook her head, noncommittal. ‘Sometime. Some other time.’

  ‘I mean it.’

  ‘Yeah.’ She stood up and walked down the stairs. ‘Whenever.’

  But they couldn’t say goodbye then, they had to ride the subway north together, awkward, edgy, until she got off at Rosedale, making uncertain promises to call.

  Two people on the train were wearing surgical masks, and someone else had a scarf wrapped over his mouth. Alex stayed on until Davisville, and walked out of the station into a cold night wind. He stopped at a little restaurant, bought a falafel and ate it on the way to the hospital, tahini sauce leaking out over his fingers. Maybe he wouldn’t see her again. He thought that at least, out of all of this, he knew where to find Adrian now, and that was something. It was definitely a good thing. Arriving at the hospital, he washed his hands with antibacterial soap and then called an internal number, was told to pick up his equipment and go to the burn ward.

  It was going to be even worse than he had expected.

  Outside the burn ward he found Janice Carriere, in her green scrubs, mask hanging down over her chest. ‘What am I going to be seeing?’ he asked.

  She sighed. ‘It looks like assault. What we’ve been told, he was beaten up first, then someone took a lighter to his clothes. Maybe they didn’t intend to do this much damage.’

  ‘Oh, shit. Is he… ’

  ‘I think he’ll make it, but it’s not pretty.’

  ‘Is it a gang thing? Do you know?’

  ‘Well, a group thing anyway. Gangs or not – I haven’t got a lot of details. The police are over that way,’ she waved vaguely, ‘I had to send them out of the ward. He can’t talk right now.’

  ‘Is it a good time for me to go in?’

  ‘Good as any. There’s no procedures underway at the moment.’

  He went into the scrub area, put on the gown, the mask, the gloves. You had to be especially careful in the burn ward; these were the most vulnerable of patients, their whole flesh exposed to the infective air. He adjusted his camera lens and took a breath. Bodies in space, he told himself, and entered the room. He smelled meat and scorched hair.

  Fire flays the skin, stripping it back off the muscle in brittle charring. And this was not something he could do quickly, however much he wanted to. He had to move slowly around the bed, the nurse stepping aside for him, making sure that it was all on film, the exact degree of harm. The arms, the legs, the hands, the torso. Black, scorched red, the parched white of dead tissue.

  You could look worse. You could look worse and live, and be basically all right, after a while. You could look much better than this and still die. The man would need intravenous fluids, antibiotics, skin grafts, he would be mapped with scars like a lunar surface, but he might well live.

  There would be pain. It was too soon now, the man was in shock, and drugged unconscious, but he would wake to pain, and the knowledge that his skin had been peeled back by fire.

  Alex left the room, and put his hands over his eyes in the scrub area. The grilled-meat smell clung round him. He took off the sterile gown and went back to the hallway. Janice was talking to a police-woman, down past a line of empty stretchers. He signalled to her that he was finished, and she broke off her conversation and came back towards him.

  ‘The photos can be on the hard drive more or less instantly. You want me to print them out right now?’

  ‘That might be best.’ She shook her head. ‘Poor bugger.’

  ‘You know any more about what happened?’

  ‘You aren’t even going to believe this.’ Janice stretched out her hands and cracked her knuckles. ‘Apparently he was standing by the subway station talking to himself and carrying a sports bag, and a bunch of drunk teenagers decided he was the subway poisoner.’

  ‘Oh God, no.’

  ‘That’s what the police say. One of the kids also said the guy “looked Muslim,” though another one is apparently calling him “the Jewish guy.” So they’re pretty clear that they’re into hate crime, they just can’t decide who it is they hate.’

  ‘But, is he… what was in the bag?’

  ‘Dirty socks. Running shorts. I mean, I think he is a bit peculiar, talking to himself out loud and all, but…’ She rubbed the back of her neck. ‘It wouldn’t have been so bad except that while they were hitting him, they spilled their booze on him. So when the lighter came out it had an accelerant. It’s all just a mess. Anyway, if you can get the photos for the police, that’d be great.’

  He went to his office, and while the photos were printing he put his head down on his folded arms, thinking about the burned man whose name he didn’t know, thinking about Susie on the bridge in the city’s hidden garden.

  He felt nervous on the subway on the way home, anxious, as if someone were about to hit him in the back of the head or push him on the tracks. There was no reason for this, but it didn’t seem familiar any longer, the empty cars estranged from him. The platforms echoing and deserted at College as he left the train and transferred to the streetcar, though it was not yet close to midnight, and the station should have been full of people, coming home from restaurants and meetings and sports events, going out to late-night clubs and parties. A man was standing at the corner of College and Yonge holding what seemed to be some kind of protest sign, a large piece of brown cardboard on which he had scrawled GEORGE BUSH TEXAS NORTH MURDER MORON BASTARD AMPHIBIAN, WE ARE NOT A MORON AT ALL.

  Alex rode the streetcar to Grace, got off and crossed the street, and the man being held hostage came down the street to meet him. �
�Sir, I hate to bother you, sir, you’re always so kind… ’

  ‘Sure. Okay.’ He took a two-dollar coin from his pocket and handed it over.

  ‘Thank you so much, sir. I wouldn’t ask… ’

  ‘Yeah. Whatever.’ He didn’t want to hear any more about this, about terrorists, or people falling from the sky, or blood coming out of the ears.

  ‘Oh, oh, and another thing, sir?’

  ‘Mmm?’ He kept walking towards his doorway.

  ‘The lady’s brother, sir. The man you were trying to find. I made some calls to the important people. I can tell you where he is now, sir.’

  A woman walked down Woodbine Avenue, carrying a slice of pizza in a greasy paper bag, and singing ‘Life During Wartime’ under her breath, a love song about tapped phone lines and vans full of guns. A woman alone at night, hypervigilant, listening for footsteps behind her, she sang to herself about burning her notebooks. Outside a subway station, municipal workers cleaned away scraps of scorched cloth and skin, while the burned man lay in isolation, his heart stuttering and slowing as the nurses ran lines of fluid into his bloodstream, fighting off shock, pulling him upwards as his body plunged down.

  Two slight figures in leather jackets and fingerless gloves stopped in an alleyway near King and Bay. While one of them watched the passing traffic for police cars, the other pulled a can of paint from a scuffed khaki backpack and sprayed FEAR on the wall in black letters. They caught the King streetcar three blocks away, rode it to Spadina, and stopped in front of a blocky old office building, once again spraying FEAR against the bricks.

  Across the city, harmless bacteria passed between individuals, carried by airborne particles or traces of saliva or the touch of a hand, our lives marked always by the proximity of others. And on this night or some night quite close in time, a germ woke up and began to inhabit someone’s blood, in a way that was no longer innocent.

  The girl who fell sat in her room in front of her laptop, frowning over an essay.

  Lord of the Flies

 

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