by Rona Jaffe
“Just a photographer’s flashbulb,” Mort said. “Modern living.” He gestured. “You like that? They’ve got television here to record the crash, but no one’s figured out how to keep the building up.”
The roving reporter came by with his microphone and stopped beside them. “Did all of you live in this building?” he asked them in Portuguese.
Mort stood up. “Just me,” he answered.
“American?”
“More or less.”
“What is your name, Senhor?”
“Mort Baker. Do you mind if I ask you some questions?”
“Please, Senhor.”
“Do you know why this apartment is going to fall?”
“It is the foundation,” the reporter said. “The ground is too soft, too wet. You see, the two buildings on either side are standing very well. So the builder thought the ground would hold this building also.” He shrugged. “But for some reason, it did not.”
“You would think they would know,” Mort said.
The reporter opened wide, innocent eyes. “But how can anyone know?” he asked reproachfully. “Those two buildings stand, this one falls. The ground could not hold all three of them.”
“Excuse me, Senhor,” Mort said. “I hope you will not think I am impolite. But do you think that if the builder had used less sand in the concrete this building might not be now going to fall?”
The reporter looked scandalized. “Oh, no,” he said. “The buildings in Rio are very well built! You must use concrete in a tropical country. It is the soft land underneath that makes the buildings fall, not sand in the concrete. You can look at most of the buildings that fall down lately. You will see how well built they are. The buildings always fall down in one piece.”
“That’s well built,” Mort said. “I always feel safer in an apartment house that I know is going to fall down in one piece. Thank you, Senhor.”
“Is nothing. Thank you, Senhor.”
The reporter moved away into the crowd. Neil began to laugh. Mort gestured at the leaning building. “One piece,” he said. “It’s nice to have security, isn’t it?”
“I think we need a drink,” Neil said.
“We can lock all the suitcases in our car,” said Margie. “We can still watch everything from the café on the corner.”
They carried the suitcases and cartons and statues in shifts to Neil’s car, which because of the crowds he had been forced to park two blocks away. By the time they got to the outdoor café all the tables were already taken by the curious, their chairs turned to face the leaning building. The waiters rushed in and out happily, doing a capacity business, offering advice and words of wisdom about other buildings which had fallen during the past year. The most famous fallen building was a new one, which had toppled shortly after it was completed, even before all the new tenants had had time to move in.
One waiter said six buildings had fallen in the past twelve months. Another said twelve buildings had fallen in the past six months. “Have you noticed that expensive new building down the street?” someone asked. “It has a great crack in the front of it already. It will fall by next year.” No one seemed either indignant or surprised that this would happen. They seemed to take the crashing of apartment buildings philosophically, as one accepts the crashing of airplanes, and as much less of a tragedy because you could not get out of a doomed plane in advance, suitcases and all, the way you could from an apartment house.
Neil ordered three glasses of chopp beer. He ruffled Margie’s hair and smiled at her, and she smiled at him. He had taken to being very demonstrative in public since they were no longer sleeping together. At first it had puzzled Margie and filled her with pain and sympathy for him because as soon as they were alone together inside their apartment he left her scrupulously alone, and she thought he might be using these public moments to feel the touch of her he so desperately wanted. But then she realized that Neil was too restrained for that. He was all pride. He could never paw her and brush against her like a high-school boy with a shy date, pretending it was horseplay or an accident. Neil received no more pleasure from these public contacts than she. It was pride that prompted them, a public avowal that he and his wife were just like anybody else.
Mort Baker shook his head. “It’s great to see two people who really have something together,” he said. “Like you two. Some of the married people I know are like two enemies who find themselves sharing a cab. Like one of them is eating garlic and the other one has his feet on the first one’s seat, but they can’t stop the cab and get out because there aren’t any other taxis. I always think you two have one of those crazy, lucky marriages.”
“We do,” Neil said.
Margie smiled weakly. “I guess we can stand each other,” she said, trying to keep it light. “It’s been five years.”
“That long …” Mort said, sounding rather amazed.
“My parents have been married for forty years,” Neil said.
“Oh, I didn’t mean that,” said Mort. “I meant, that long to be happy. I can’t remember being really happy for more than three consecutive days.”
“That’s because you don’t settle down,” Margie said. She wasn’t quite sure whether what she was saying was a pose or whether she really felt so motherly and righteous. “You ought to find a girl you love and get married.”
“Margie’s always trying to marry everyone off,” Neil said fondly. He stroked her forearm where it lay on the table.
“She could marry me off in one minute,” Mort said. “If she were available.”
“You mean me?” Margie said. She laughed. “Thank you. Do you hear that, Neil?”
“He has good taste,” Neil said. “That’s why we’re friends.”
They all drank their beer. There was an air of friendship among them, and Margie felt secure. Once in a while they would glance toward the spotlighted area where Edificio Apollo was about to crash down, and that gave their entire meeting an edge of danger, of excitement. Margie looked at Mort. He was nice, she thought; a really nice person, even though he went off on occasional “honeymoons” with girls. And he was funny. The girls never seemed to mind their honeymoons without marriage, and they always flirted with him afterward on the beach, as if hoping he would take them on another. “Honeymoon” was his own term, and he really made it that way. Neil had told her some of his stories, the ones she was not supposed to let on she knew. He always took the girl away from Rio, because if you lived in Rio all your life it wasn’t that exciting. And he might starve for a week afterward, but every day the hotel room would be filled with flowers. She remembered before Edificio Apollo had been built, when Mort was living in a rooming house of sorts. Even his landlady had liked him. He wasn’t just any lover; he was a real Brazilian-type lover, muito sympatico. “He is not here, the American,” Mort’s landlady would say to callers. “He is in Porto Allegre on his honeymoon.”
Neil gestured at the waiter for more beer. Margie covered her half-empty glass with the palm of her hand and shook her head. She hardly drank anything any more; she hardly needed to. There were so many things to enjoy: the beach, the sun, the ocean, the sounds and sights of people in the street, books, her records, even her long evenings alone with Neil. At first she had felt the old panic when he walked near to her or touched her lightly, but then she realized that when Neil had said, “Never again,” he had meant it. So with the vanishing of fear the need to dull her senses disappeared—for she realized now that alcohol had dulled them, not heightened them as she had pretended to herself. In a way, these summer days were the happiest Margie had known during her entire marriage, and although the thought often occurred to her that her life with Neil was abnormal and even portended disaster, yet she was happy. She loved him more now, when she was no longer afraid of him, than she had ever loved him before. Perhaps her parents had been right, perhaps love grew between married couples and transcended sex, until the couple was as one: blood relatives, identical twins, even Siamese twins, bound by a blood line of wor
dless communication.
She remembered feeling about her parents that they had never slept together as lovers—except for the appearance of herself and her brother Tommy, which at least proved irrefutably that they had twice. She wondered what her mother would think if she ever knew the relationship that existed between Margie and Neil. I can’t give you any grandchildren, Mother, because Neil and I never do that. And her mother would look at the ground, or the wall, terribly embarrassed, terribly hurt, and ask, Are you fighting? Don’t you love each other? Her mother would never think to ask, Are you in trouble? Or is he? Her mother never thought anyone was sick or troubled in the mysterious areas that linked the mind and body inseparably together; even the two young bachelors who shared a small apartment on the same floor as the Hafts, who dressed in trousers so tight they could hardly bend their knees and took turns walking their elaborately coiffeured French poodle. The bachelors would stare straight ahead when Margie and her mother were in the elevator, one pouting, the other with the iciest round blue eyes Margie had ever seen. Those eyes and the look they gave her made her shudder. And her mother would often say wistfully, “I wonder why those two good-looking boys never go out with girls. I guess they can’t find one they think is good enough.”
“What are you dreaming about, Margie?” Neil asked.
“I dreamed I went to a house-falling in my Maidenform bra,” she said lightly. She smiled at him, and at Mort. “You two should be glad there’s a woman here who’s not trying to monopolize the conversation.”
Neil and Mort pushed back their chairs. “Let’s go back and get our ringside seats.”
They walked back to the building and stationed themselves in front, at a safe distance, among the crowd. “Imagine,” Neil said, “how many unhappily married men are going to be left without their garçoniers when this house falls.”
“What’s a garçonier?” Margie asked.
“It means ‘little boy’s apartment,’” Neil said.
“No, really!”
“It’s a small apartment married men rent when they want to be lunch-hour bachelors,” said Mort. “They keep it by the year and they take girls there. To play. Hence, little boy’s apartment.’”
Margie smiled at him. “You sound the faintest bit disapproving. Or am I hearing noises in my head?”
“Hell,” Mort said, “I am disapproving. What the hell do people have to get married for if they want to wreck it? We have to be a little bit better than the savages, not that there’s much difference except the savages have more sense.”
“I learn more about you every month,” Margie said.
“That’s a pretty big-time handicap,” Mort said wryly. “I’m with me every day and I haven’t got the scene figured out yet.”
Neil put his arm about Mort’s shoulders and the other arm around Margie’s waist. “You’ll have a lot of time to get to know each other when Mort is living with us,” he said. He looked at both of them with pride—his friend and his wife. For some reason she could not understand Margie felt resentful. She was not even quite sure whom she felt resentful toward. Neil was being magnanimous, inviting an attractive bachelor with a lover’s reputation to live with him and his wife, absolutely certain that nothing would happen between them. He smiled at Mort like the perfect husband and lover, confident and generous. And why not, Margie thought. He knows his wife doesn’t care for any man. And then she realized why she felt resentful. She felt cheated somehow, short-changed. How much better it would be if Neil felt about her as if she were a real woman, whose fidelity he could feel confident of just because he was her man, not because she was a sexless child or a stick of wood!
She drew away from both of them and stood by herself. “Look,” she said. “I think it’s tilting! Look, look!”
A sigh of pleasure and excitement went up from the crowd. The newsreel cameras from the television station began to whirr. The roving reporter crouched over his hand microphone, holding it up to his mouth with both hands and speaking excitedly into it. A small, fat photographer, dressed in sweat-drenched whites, pivoted about snapping pictures, first of the building, then quickly of the faces of some of the watching mob, then quickly again to the building. He looked like a whirling dervish. A little boy had been eating a Kibon bar and stopped with his mouth wide open in awe, clenching the ice cream in his fist until it melted and ran down over his shoes.
Slowly at first, as it were a movie in slow motion, the building began to lean and to crack from its displaced weight at almost the same time. It seemed about to break in the middle. This is one that won’t fall down in one piece, Margie thought excitedly. There was a rumbling sound, but you could hardly hear it because everyone in that huge crowd was jabbering and squealing and crying out at once, poking each other, pointing, jumping up to see. Two girls were holding each other’s heads, their eyes closed, and screaming as if they actually knew what was going on. There seemed to be two definite groups: the people who had lived in the building and had never seen this phenomenon before, and the people who always came to watch buildings fall down and were enjoying every moment of it. There was even an ancient beggar woman, dressed in what looked like a bundle of dirty laundry, who looked as if the only thing keeping her alive this late in life was this show before her.
Up until the last moment you could see that it was an apartment house. You could see the windows, some with curtains or draperies visible through the glass. The lights had gone out. It was a living building, where people spent their lives, and then it was sick and toppling, and then it fell dead, still at that last second a building, with a thunderous crash and a cloud of dust, and lay flat, enormous, lying across trees and sidewalk alike, the dust still rising about it. A huge section of it, consisting of several stories, lay intact. Your thought was: Why is that building sideways instead of upright? And then you saw the white porcelain toilet lying on the rubble-strewn lawn in the bright grass, like a weird lawn ornament.
“Look, Mamai!” a little girl cried out. “There is my bedroom wallpaper!”
A few policemen, dressed in tan uniforms and helmets, were trying to keep the people from rushing forward to help themselves to articles of furniture which might belong to someone else. No one appeared bad-humored about this. Some were souvenir hunters, but they could come back another night. Without a word Mort darted through the straggling line of police and disappeared among the piles of concrete and wood.
“Oh, my God,” Margie said. “What’s the matter with him?”
She and Neil walked cautiously through the crowd, trying to find where he had gone. Now that the excitement was over the crowd was beginning to disperse. The corner café was again becoming crowded, and the little boy who had spilled his ice cream had begun to cry. Then they saw Mort sprinting over the fallen articles of plumbing, coming toward them, waving and looking very happy.
“Hey!” he cried. “Guess what? I found my statue! It’s okay. Just a few chips I can fix up in the morning. You know, it looks great lying there in all that grass. I may donate it for a park monument after they clear this piece of land.”
“If they know what it is,” Neil said.
“Never mind,” said Mort. “Culture. They’ll learn to love it. Kids can play house on it. Dogs can stay cool lying in the shadow of it. And one thing you can be sure of—no matter how much graft there is, no one can ever steal that statue.”
They all laughed and went off to find the car.
CHAPTER 9
How many amnesia victims start their new lives doing exactly the same thing they were doing before they lost their memory? Do we remain in a pattern of life year after year because of enthusiasm or habit, happiness or convention? The ghosts of the past rise up wherever we turn and pluck at our sleeves, blue-coated street-corner monitors for schoolchildren, holding our grown-up bodies to the white safety line. If we live in the town or city where we grew up, how can we escape passing landmarks of memory every day? The woman shopping for her child’s clothing passes the bus stop wher
e she waited every week for the bus that took her downtown to the dentist to have her braces tightened when she was a child herself. She might smile to herself, thinking that life goes on. Or she might be walking quickly to meet her lover, and she might then stop, looking at the houses that look so much shabbier now, and the bus stop where she dreamed her adolescent dreams, and her step might become reluctant as she realizes how much she has changed. It is one thing to emerge from the apartment of her lover at twilight and hurry to her husband: she has already told herself that her husband is unkind, does not love her, is a beast. Perhaps she is right. But how can she pass all the places of memory and of habit, the little restaurant where she used to go with her husband when they loved each other and were delirious with love, the park where she walked with her father on Sundays when she was a child and he had such hopes for her happiness? They are too much, these memories; they color her life; they spoil everything. Why can’t anyone start out fresh? she thinks in desperation.
But for the uprooted expatriates, the homeless in new homes that they still feel ill at ease in, a twilight street is just a street. A tree with sun in its leaves is only a beautiful tree, more poignant now if looked at after an experience of love. A woman running to her lover thinks only of him. A woman emerging from an apartment that had been darkened against the afternoon sun stands for a moment on the sidewalk blinking, shading her eyes. She sees the street; it is any street, a little noisier, a little brighter perhaps, because she is emerging from a total, intense experience into a fragmented one. She adjusts to the light, to the sounds, and hurries on, looking back just once at the shaded window of her lover. How beautiful this afternoon is! she thinks. I will always remember this day, and this street, and that tree. But all her memories of this day will go forward, not back. It is a great eraser of guilt.
Helen Sinclair thought all this as she sat in the rooftop restaurant of a hotel on Copacabana Beach waiting for Sergio. She had waited for him on the beach that first day, sure he would not come, and he had come, late in the afternoon, with Carlos Monteiro for protective coloration. Carlos Monteiro looked like the perfect businessman; even in bathing shorts he seemed about to give dictation to an imaginary secretary or pick up an invisible telephone receiver to make a deal. The two men walked at the edge of the sea, talking with their heads together, like two partners who had decided to leave the office early because of the heat and continue their discussion on the beach.