Pagan Babies - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Pagan Babies Part 3 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
Driving back to Mary Pat and his two little girls, Fran turned on his current favorite daydream: Debbie comes out and he has a furnished apartment waiting for her in Somerset, where she used to live, not four miles from his home in Bloomfield Hills. He helps her get settled, maybe paint a room, rearrange the furniture, get in some groceries, booze. They have a drink, kick back. "Boy, it's good to sit down, huh?" Debbie gets high. Naturally she's a little h.o.r.n.y, not having been with a man in almost three years. She gives him the look . . . one Fran has been waiting for ever since he and Debbie met and she started doing investigations for him: the look that says it would be okay to become intimate, not seriously intimate but for fun. Fall into it and say, after, "Wow, how did that happen?"
He had told Terry one time, years ago, he had never picked up a girl in a bar, even when he was single. Terry said, "You never tried or you never made it?" Fran told him he'd never tried. Why didn't he have the same confidence in a bar he had in a courtroom? Terry said that time, "You're too b.u.t.toned up. Lose some weight and quit getting your hair cut for a while."
Terry's answer to any problem was based on the serenity prayer. If you can handle it, do it. If you can't, f.u.c.k it.
5.
AT NIGHT CHANTELLE KEPT HER pistol close by, a Russian Tokarev semiautomatic she bought in the market with money Terry had given her. There were hand grenades for sale, too, but they frightened her. pistol close by, a Russian Tokarev semiautomatic she bought in the market with money Terry had given her. There were hand grenades for sale, too, but they frightened her.
This evening she brought the pistol outside with her and laid it on the table where he was twisting a joint he called a yobie. She had told him that here marijuana was sometimes called emiyobya bwenje emiyobya bwenje, "the stuff that makes your head hot." From that he had made up the word yobie yobie. They had smoked one before supper- goat stew left over from last night, Terry complaining always about the fine bones-and now they would smoke another one with their brandy and coffee, the mugs, the decanter, and a citronella candle on the table.
Always before when they smoked he would tell her funny things he heard in Confession, or about his brother the lawyer, what he did to get money for people who were injured. Or he'd tell jokes she never understood but would laugh because he always laughed at his jokes. This evening, though, he wasn't saying funny things.
He was serious this evening in a strange way.
He said he had never seen so f.u.c.king many bugs in his life. He used that word when he was drinking too much. The f.u.c.king bugs, the f.u.c.king rain. He said sometimes he would turn on a light in the house and it would look like the f.u.c.king walls were moving, wallpaper changing its pattern. She said, "There is no wallpaper in the house." He said he knew there wasn't any wallpaper, he was talking about the bugs. There were so many they looked like a wallpaper design. Then with the light on they'd start moving.
She was patient with him. This evening there were lulls, Chantelle waiting through minutes of silence.
Now he surprised her, coming out of nowhere with "Some were mutilated before they were killed, weren't they? Purposely mutilated."
Lately he had begun to talk about the genocide again.
She said, "Yes, they would do it on purpose."
He said, "They chopped off the feet at the ankles."
"And took the shoes," Chantelle said, "if the person was wearing shoes." She believed he was talking about the time they came in the church, an experience of the genocide he had not spoken of in a long time.
He said, "I don't recall them hacking the feet off with one whack."
It sounded to her so cold. "Sometime they did."
He said, "This was your observation?"
She didn't like it when he spoke in this formal manner. It didn't sound like him and was another sign, along with that word, he had been drinking too much. She said, "Some they did with one blow. But I think the blades became dull, or were not honed to begin with. The one who injured me-I raised my arm to protect myself as he struck. He then took hold of my hand as I tried to pull away and he struck again, this time severing the arm. I saw him holding it by the hand, looking at it. I remember he seemed surprised. Then his face changed to a look-I want to say horror, or disgust. But was he sickened only by what he saw or what he did to me?"
"What if you run into him again?"
"I hope I never see him."
"You could have him arrested and tried."
"Yes? Would I get my arm back?"
Terry smoked in the light of the candle. After a moment he said, "The ones they murdered in the church stood waiting, crowded together, holding each other. The Hutus would drag them into the aisle and some of them called to me. I never told you that, how they called to me, 'Fatha, please ...' "
She didn't want him to talk about himself, what he was doing or not doing that time. "You know," she said, "all over Rwanda they were cutting off the feet of Tutsis, so they not taller than the Hutu killers anymore."
He brought it back to the church saying, "They stood there and let it happen."
She wished he'd be quiet. "Listen to me. If they had no weapons they knew it was their fate to die. I heard of people in Kigali, they paid the Hutu killers to shoot them rather than be hacked to death with the machetes. You understand? They knew they would be dead."
Her words meant nothing to him. He held the yobie to his mouth but didn't draw on it, saying, "I didn't do anything to help them. Not one f.u.c.king thing. I watched. The whole time they were being killed, that's what I did. I watched."
He said it without feeling and it frightened her.
"But you were offering the Ma.s.s. You told me, you were holding the Host in your hands when they came in. There was nothing you could do. You try to stop them they would have killed you. They don't care you're a priest."
Again he raised the yobie to draw on it and paused.
"Let me ask you something."
He paused again and she said, "Yes, what?"
"You think I do any good here?"
Sounding like he was feeling sorry for himself.
She said, "You want the truth? You don't do as much as you could." She said, "Do more. Talk to people, preach the word of G.o.d. Do what a priest is suppose to do. Say Ma.s.s every Sunday, what people want you to do."
"You really believe," he said, staring at her in the candlelight, "I can take bread and change it into the Body of Christ?"
What was he doing asking her that? She said, "Of course you can. It's what priests do, in the Ma.s.s. You change the bread, and also the wine." What was wrong with him? "I believe that, as all those who come to Ma.s.s believe it."
"Sally, we believe what we want to believe."
Calling her that, Sally, from asali asali, the Swahili word for honey, which he did sometimes.
He said, "You want to know what I believe?"
"Yes, I would like to know."
"I did come here with a few good intentions. One thing in particular I wanted to do was paint Fr. Toreki's house. Every picture I ever saw of it, going back years, the house needed painting. I knew how, I used to help my dad sometimes when he had a big job, the outside of a two-story house."
Why was he telling her this? She believed she was listening to his mind wander from having too much to drink.
"My dad was a housepainter all his life. Forty years at least he stood with a wall in front of his face painting it, smelling it, going to his truck with the ladders on top to smoke a cigarette and drink vodka from the bottle. He said to me-it was when I dropped out of college and was helping him-he said, 'Go back to school and get a good job.' He said, 'You're too smart to spend your life p.i.s.sing in paint cans.' The only time he took off was to go deer hunting in the fall. Never saw a doctor, he was sixty-three years old when he died, my brother Fran said watching the Lions on TV. Not real ones, the Detroit Lions, a professional football team. Fran said in a letter our dad's last conscious experience was seeing the Lions march all the way down the field, fumble on the two-yard line and lose the ball."
She watched his expression looking at her. He seemed to smile. Or she could be wrong.
"You have to know my brother," Terry said. "He wasn't being disrespectful."
Was he speaking to her in that quiet voice or to himself? She watched him draw on the yobie.
It had gone out.
"You should go to bed."
"In a while."
"Well, I'm going." She got up from the table with her Russian pistol and stood looking at him. "Why do you talk like this to me?"
"Like what?"
Walking away she said, "Never mind."
And heard him say, "Why are you mad at me?"
Lying still to listen, she heard him taking a shower and then could hear him brus.h.i.+ng his teeth, in the bath between the two bedrooms. Always he brushed his teeth and smelled of toothpaste when he came to her bed. Once a week he brought two Larium pills, so they wouldn't catch malaria, and a gla.s.s of water they shared. The pills were hallucinogenic and in the morning they would try to describe their dreams.
Tonight he slipped in next to her beneath the netting and remained lying on his back, not moving, leaving to her whatever would come next.
She said, "You tell me you come here to paint a house. That's the reason?"
"It's something I wanted to do."
"Then why don't you paint it?"
He didn't answer, but said after a few moments, "I want to have the bodies buried, the ones lying in the church, the bones."
She said, "Yes?"
But now he was silent.
She said, "Can't you talk to me?"
"I'm trying to."
She said, "Give me a break." One of his expressions she liked.
For several minutes she listened to the sounds in the night, outside, before turning onto her side and was closer to him now, close enough to see his face, close enough to rest the stump of her arm on his chest. Now if he takes it in his hand . . .
He did, he took the hard, scarred end of what remained of her arm and began to caress it lightly with his fingers. She raised her head and he slipped his arm around her.
She said, "I know why you don't talk to me."
She waited and he said, "Why?"
"Because you going to leave and not come back."
This time when she waited and he said nothing she raised her head and put her mouth on his.
She awoke in the morning looking at sunlight through the netting and closed her eyes again to listen for sounds in the house. She knew he was gone but continued to listen. Sometimes he would return to his own bedroom during the night. Sometimes he rose before she did and would put the coffee on the stove to boil. She listened to hear him cough and clear his throat. She believed if she didn't see him for a long time and heard him clear his throat in a crowd of people she would know it was Terry. There were times she believed he loved her: not only when they were in bed and he showed his hunger for her, but other times, seeing the way he looked at her and she would wait for him to say it. When she said it to him she would smile, so the words wouldn't frighten him. After they went to bed the first time he was so quiet she said to him, "Listen, there were always priests who want me, Rwandese priests, French priests, it's nothing new. Do you think people care if we sleep together?"
Opening her eyes she turned her head on the pillow.
He was gone.
Now she turned to her side of the bed to get up, looked at the night table and saw her pistol was also gone.
6.
IT TOOK HIM THREE HOURS to drive the hundred miles from Arisimbi to the Banque Commerciale and the Sabena ticket office in Kigali, and then three hours back, the road through Rwanda like nothing from past experience. to drive the hundred miles from Arisimbi to the Banque Commerciale and the Sabena ticket office in Kigali, and then three hours back, the road through Rwanda like nothing from past experience.
Get to the top of a long grade and look around, all you saw were hills in every direction, misty hills, bright green hills, hills that were terraced and cultivated, crops growing among groves of banana trees, the entire country, Terry believed, one big vegetable garden. The red streaks on distant hills were dirt roads, the squares of red dotting the slopes, houses, compounds, a church. He cruised the two-lane blacktop with all the windows in Toreki's Volvo station wagon cranked open. He drove with a sense of making his move, his life about to turn a corner.
The downside was getting stuck behind trucks on the blind curves and grades, trucks piled high with bananas and bags of charcoal, trucks carrying work crews, a big yellow semi with PRIMUS BEER lettered across the rear end that Terry stared at for miles. The trucks, and the people along the side of the road, people standing in groups like they were waiting for a bus and people going somewhere, women in bright colors carrying plastic buckets on their heads, clay pots as big around as medicine b.a.l.l.s, boys pus.h.i.+ng carts loaded with plastic chairs grooved together, goats grazing close to the road, Ankole cows with their graceful horns and tough meat taking their time to cross. But no dogs. Where were the dogs? A roadside poster warned against AIDS. A sign on a Coca-Cola stand said ICI SALLON DE COIFFURE. People strayed onto the blacktop and he would lean on his horn, something he never did at home.
Finally cresting a grade he descended toward Arisimbi, the village laid out below him left to right, the marketplace of concrete stalls on the offside of the main road, away from the sector office and the squares of red brick among plots of vegetation, the bar, the beer lady's house, the compound where Laurent's squad lived, the well, the charcoal seller's house, the compound where Thomas the corn man lived, all of it a patchwork of red and green leading up to the white church and the rectory in the trees.
Terry parked the Volvo wagon in front of the sector office and went in.
Laurent Kamweya in his starched camies looked up from the only desk in the room and then rose saying, "Fatha, how can I be of service?"
Terry liked Laurent and believed he meant it. "You know where I can find Bernard?"
It seemed to stop him for a moment. Laurent turned enough to indicate the window, the heavy wooden shutters open, the street outside that trailed through the village. "You see the white flower by the door of the beer lady's house," Laurent said. "She has banana beer today, so that's where he is, with his friends. Tell me what you want with him."
"Have a talk," Terry said. "See if I can get him to give himself up."
"Persuade Bernard Nyikizi to confess to murder?"
"To save his immortal soul."
"You serious to do this?"
"I'll give it a try. Are you busy?" Terry said. "There's something else I want to ask you."
Laurent said, "Please," gesturing over his desk, the surface clean except for a clipboard holding a few papers. The brick walls of the office were as clean as the desk. A woven mat covered the floor. The place always looked the same, temporary, never much going on. Laurent was watching now as Terry slipped his hand inside his white ca.s.sock and came out with currency, ten five-thousand-franc notes, the new one ill.u.s.trated with tribal dancers, and laid the money on the clean desk.
"Fifty thousand francs," Terry said. "I'd like you to do me a favor, if you would. Use half of this to pay for graves dug in the churchyard, forty-seven graves."
"You have permission of the bourgmestre? bourgmestre?"