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"That's not what I asked you, is it?"
"James Lee Kenrick. What you do for money?"
"I teach at the college, James Lee Kenrick. And besides ... you don't just wander in off the street and start preaching. Whether there's a vacancy or not."
"Sometimes you do. I seen it happen."
But I walk ahead of him, down the hill, beneath cathedral-columned oaks and into the ruin of our neighborhood where two streets cross.
When we reach the edge of the crowd, we stay there, on the margin of a tragedy that's been gathering for days. I think I can guess, but it takes Silvia to confirm it. She is Lonell's mother. More police arrive and then an ambulance, and I'm taken into the swirl of bodies as the crowd gets jostled to one side and then another while yellow crime-scene tape goes up around the tree. Over the ditch. Across the car. Down to the hedge and back over the driveway. Then a black cop and a white cop are working together to push the crowd back. Nightsticks out and up, like this, pus.h.i.+ng the people back into the street. But it's Silvia that I see with electric clarity, not the building chaos around me. Silvia with wild hair and frantic flying hands. Two women who are trying to hold her up, but she keeps throwing herself to the ground, tearing at the gra.s.s, her clothes, and shrieking louder than sirens. Because it's Lonell in the ditch, under the blue blanket; and several men have come out of the crowd to help her. While I'm thinking, G.o.d, what have we done now? But of course I already know.
I can see them behind me and to my right, three teenagers in warm-ups, as dignified as old men. Practicing their nonchalance, but managing nevertheless to lurch like vultures until one of them finally breaks a smile. "They put that mug under a blue blanket, man. Blue!" Like it was the final insult. "Gonna bury that mu'f.u.c.ker in it. Serve him right!" One of them snickering. One of them staring cold hate.
And on the ground beside the tactful blanket is a policeman and another policeman straddling his chest, pumping with desperate jolts that shake his jowls. A pistol in the gra.s.s. Someone's shoe. And more sirens in the distance. More flas.h.i.+ng lights as paramedics arrive for the wounded cop and lift him into the first ambulance without a glance at the crumpled blanket and then try to drive away. Lonell motionless all this time, the fingers of one hand dug into the dirt as if at the moment of death his greatest fear had been falling away from the earth. While some people in the crowd have begun shouting at the outsiders, blocking the path of the ambulance because official Baxter has left behind another black boy, like garbage. Two state patrol cars now, both troopers grim and gray, moving the people out of the street and into adjoining yards. A fat teenage girl shrieking, "I hate white people!"
But of course white people didn't kill Lonell Burns. And when I turn and look for James Lee Kenrick I see that he too is gone, lost somewhere in the crowd.
It's a story that's over before I arrive. A distant horrifying fantasy. Now someone will have to write about it, explain it, translate it. And it's at this moment that I go sick and drop myself onto Baity's white brick wall and pansies, because I know who will take it up and what she will say long before she knows herself. One of those reporters, one of those stick-thin girls graduated from the college, maybe one I've taught myself, as white as desert sand and as breathless and sincere as Jane Austen, and about as prepared for the cough-cough of a Glock 9 mm. Who, sometime this evening, will begin writing about life among the lowly, death in a ditch, for tomorrow's newspaper. Poor Jane, she will be, who will let seep between her words an unconscious amazement that we are human beings. As though we were put on this planet to be discovered. And poor us, who will read and watch the television reports not recognizing anyone, least of all ourselves, as the story trickles out.
So some will rant like the fat girl. And some will scratch our heads. Because the newspaper will say a normally peaceful neighborhood. The tranquility of early evening shattered by gunfire. A troubled teen. The irony that Lonell's own family called the police, trying to prevent bloodshed. That Officer McLane himself would be the first to die.
Then on the day after irony there will appear a second story with numbers, this one written by a feature writer from the city paper twenty-five miles away who will not add an ounce of understanding. It will say three sisters, one cousin, five rooms, and three generations in a modest dwelling on Mott Street. Ten years of schooling, eight suspensions, and several incidents. A total of twelve grams stolen from the dealer earlier in the week, three gold necklaces, and a 9 mm. And taken from Lonell in retaliation: one girlfriend, one child. Then six days between incidents. Three shots fired at Lonell in the drive-by. But no injuries. Seven minutes before Lonell can get his cousin to safety and return home for the gun. Five people who try to restrain him. Two policemen who respond to the call. One can of Mace. One scuffle on the ground. One gathering crowd. One person to reach out of the crowd and pull McLane's arm away. And a horrible, ironic twist to the plot: three shots by Lonell striking McLane in the neck and face. Then two shots by the second cop from point-blank range. For a grand total of ninety-seven.
It's how they see the world.
Then I will pa.s.s the first one on the street, the girl with the sincere pencil, and she will want some words from me, the symbolic spokesman for the tongue-tied cla.s.s. Because she will think I am safe and sadly white. And she will fumble for her notebook as I take down my gla.s.ses, draw out a handkerchief, and squint. Holding the lenses up to the sun like a boy burning ants, thinking furiously. How can I hate this girl who is true to her way of knowing and not hate myself, who could have told a lie nine years ago and prevented myself from observing, "It's a tragedy." As I examine her through the one smudged lens and fit the frames back over deaf ears. And hear myself say, "A painful moment for us all."
Still in the muddle of it, I walk back up the hill thinking of Homer. The Greek poet, yes, in this unlikely place. The Homer who could easily have imagined the grim and gratified young men who provoke death, though they could not have imagined him. I'm trying to remember details, but I suspect Karen has been on the phone already with that circle of women who manage things late at night when the knock comes, the dark man on the front porch with a flashlight. And she'll be quietly waiting for whatever words I can put. She'll ask me what happened, meaning something entirely different from the words. And I will say all those young men, Karen. All those young men, who stab each other at the s.h.i.+ps, will come back tomorrow with different names and precisely the same quarrels-you disrespected me, took my woman, walked upon my turf. You touched my golden chain, struck my child. You prey upon my waking thoughts and steal my sleep. I don't even think they want the monster dead. They want a poet rapping ancient lines, another someone who will translate for them. But right now, as I walk up the long slope, they step out of the early evening fog and into the place where I imagine them, the dark, moist dreamland where they are churning around that s.h.i.+p, Achaeans and Trojans, hacking each other at close range. No more war at a distance, waiting to take the long flights of spears and arrows- they stood there man-to-man and matched their fury, killing each other now with hatchets, battle-axes, big swords, two-edged spears, and many a blade, magnificent, heavy-hilted and thonged in black lay strewn on the ground-some dropped from hands, some fell as the fighters' shoulder straps were cut- and the earth ran black with blood.
Something I could have taught them.
So finally I sag into a kitchen chair, and she reaches out across the table to take my hands in hers before drawing away for coffee. Then slides a steaming cup beneath my face. And I inhale. It's like incense wafting across the face of some hollow idol.
"What happened?" is all she can think to say.
"What happened? They don't even know themselves."
"A drive-by?"
"It doesn't make any difference. Next year it'll be someone else," I tell her. "That baby you held this afternoon will kill somebody trying to become a man. Fast or slow, it doesn't make any difference. In fact I believe my friend Lonell might have come out a winner considering that he never had a chance."
"He had a choice."
"White people have a choice. Lonell had the world he lived in. So why don't you ask me what the rest of them really want to know-where was the boy's father? Where was some thick-muscled man to knock him back from the edge? Where do they all go?"
She looks at me the way she does when we are strangers-it happens from time to time-though in seventeen years we've never fought, not once. Never a hateful word between us. People are amazed. We just draw back. She on her side of the track, me on mine, until one of us figures a way across. It's where we are now. She's sipping her own coffee, stirring with a cinnamon stick and thinking. Combing her hair back with her fingers. Twirling the ring on her finger. Until finally, "I've never seen you this down before. You must have known him, known his family." Her face a perfect oval of concern.
I say to her, "Did you know I grew up in this town? Played in this very house when I was a boy because it belonged to my grandmother Miss Ginny who built it before there was a track. Whose money sent me up north to school and brought me back here to ... whatever it is. It's almost beyond comprehension. Did you know my real name was Quinthony? Not Quentin. But Quinthony. Quinthony Hodges Deagan. It's one of those black names, like Lakeesha or Gonorrhea Jones."
"Stop it."
My face falls down into my hands, and some low moaning sound comes forth. "We need to quit pretending. You and I. We need to quit pretending that we're horrified by these stories. I mean we can at least be honest, right? That's what we have instead of hope."
Then she is there at my shoulders, the hair and the scent of her. Kneading the muscles the way she takes up clay and reaches into the being of it before throwing it on the wheel. "I'll see you in h.e.l.l first," she whispers in my ear. "I'll drag you back a hundred times. You have no idea how far I'll go. Now tell me-what really happened?"
And since there are only two of us in a house fit for a family, and since she is strong, I say, "Let me ask you a question."
Suppose you can't sleep because you have the same dream every night-that it's been raining and that there are puddles and rivulets, diamonds and toys scattered about, and the Angel Malachi waiting for you at the end of a long walk. And that he is tall and patient. Thin as a mantis and hungry for souls. But you don't want to see him. You say to yourself this is a dream, and I am an educated man, and that is just some old fellow who hands out Bibles. One of those homeless who stand outside the gates of the college thrusting little green testaments at anyone who pa.s.ses, while cars go hissing past even though his trench coat, s.h.i.+ny wet and chitinous, stretched tight against his wings, glistens with liquid light. His hands hooked over a Bible and eyes, yes, burning like brimstone.
Until you have to remind yourself that what you're seeing is not real.
But in this particular dream the Angel Malachi will be examining several versions of you because he has eyes like a dragonfly and because one version of you goes blundering through a maze like a blind man. And so he puts himself at a place where your paths converge and says, "This really isn't very complicated."
Though of course you misunderstand. You go as stiff as a corpse and say, "Good G.o.d Almighty! Jesus, mister, you shouldn't come up on a man like that." As the angel closes his eyes. Waits. And you stammer on a step or two hoping to leave him behind by saying, "Look, pal, I don't have anything on me. I left my wallet back at the ... I don't have a nickel."
And the angel says, "It's not that kind of hunger."
Which provokes some cheap fear from you like, "What do you want? Just tell me what you want."
And the Angel Malachi says, "What do we always want?"
So that's what I'm asking you.
If you don't believe in the Walt Disney of it, Karen, then what does he want? If you can't stomach the fried chicken of it, if you can't stand in front of them shouting, "Thank you, Jesus," for crabgra.s.s and aluminum siding, then what the h.e.l.l does he want? Because I can't go back to Bible stories. Not after Lonell and the rest of them.
On the patio she finds me after two days with that hanging question, and I'm feeding the books into the fire because I've finally made the decision they wanted me to make. I'll give them three weeks. And they'll probably take everything that I own. I believe that's the usual deal.
The fireplace huffs and bellows when the wind whirls, drawing the ashes up like dark confetti, the end of a long process of decomposition. And I've noticed this. That first a sheet of paper will crumple in upon itself as if crushed by an invisible hand; and then it will quiver and fall apart, not like rich pine that sizzles in its own juice and then explodes, but like a mummy under eager examination, though of course sometimes it simply smolders, has to be prodded into flames with the poker; and then there is a rush of fire, thick runnels of red and orange that lick halfway up the chimney. Then something like snowflakes, huge three-inch floaters that can be caught in the palm and read. It's unbelievable but true. The words are not gone at all. You can still read them.
So I burn Bradbury first, that old standby. Then Light in August. Then Tolstoy. Then Milton and Melville together, pages curling up like people in pain. It's surprising really, how much heat there is in old books. I have to wait a moment until I can add Huckleberry Finn. Mary Sh.e.l.ley. Leaves going red and blue at the margins, yellow-orange at the center like the flames themselves. Some of the steel print engravings send up a green leafy blaze, from the chemicals I suppose. And pale loose pages fly upward, scattering like quail until they burst into a brilliance I've never seen in the cla.s.sroom, then spiral down on wings of fire. There's no denying it's beautiful. No matter what you feel, there's no denying the beauty of it. I'm seeing what the n.a.z.is saw. And tomorrow I'll feel what I feel. That's tomorrow. But right now ... There's much more heat than we realize. I have to lift my hand momentarily and back away. Then stir the ashes. Then add a thin one, a bright blue one by Anne Frank.
The weight of it is almost too much to bear.
Then I sense her beside me, Karen, looking into my mirrored eyes and crying, "Oh my G.o.d! Oh Jesus no! Quinn, what are you doing?!"
And I have to calm her of course. I say, "Don't worry. It runs in my family. We always destroy the evidence. We've done it for generations. My great-grandfather. My grandmother Miss Ginny. She once burned an entire house and then built a new one, then married a custodian who worked at the college for over ..."
"Quinn, please don't, please."
"It's all right," I say. "It's all right. They can't imagine it, our neighbors. They can't even imagine me. They think we're burning trash."
With her arms around me now. Trying to squeeze the life back into me, work the same silly miracle that they want to work when they lift their sons' shoulders off the sidewalk and feel the warm blood beneath. Birth-fluid seeping into the soil while they become oblivious to every other need of the universe. That kind of woman. Who'll fight right up to the gates of h.e.l.l. Telling me, and the world, with all her strength.
That love is G.o.d.
I don't hate the books. I know them as intimately as I know the angry-frightened woman clutching the shawl, who refuses to be warmed by abstractions. "Listen to me," she is saying. "You're not anything until I love you. I don't understand this, Quinn. You're brilliant. You're successful. You're kind and generous. You and I-right now-are where the world wants to be in fifty years, or a hundred. I'm not going to let that go."
"So why can't I just be content?"
"No. Why can't you realize you're not responsible for every broken child?"
It takes a while, but finally I tell her, shove aside the cardboard box and sit cradling Ralph Ellison in my hands.
"Because I could have saved him. Once upon a time."
"I don't believe that."
"I knew his mother, Silvia, before I knew you. He must have been five or six when I first met her, a bit older when we drifted apart."
"You don't have to do this."
"Anyhow, I remember one night, just after there was you, sitting out on that porch and jamming with some of the folks from down the way. It seemed so natural then, simply spreading out over the porch and busting some old tunes. Beer in a tub of ice, mosquitoes getting blown back by all that sweet sound, just letting the music take us wherever it would. Must have been six or eight of us with old p.a.w.ned-up instruments we'd pulled out of the closet. Maybe one or two fellows with some real talent, but it didn't make any difference. Just some old men with some old songs. James Teague, you know him, sitting on the edge of a rocker blowing trumpet. Some guy named Perry on ba.s.s. Harmonica man on the steps, me with that old Gibson thinking I was B. B. King. They had even rolled the piano over into the doorway, and I was thinking, man, this is the way it ought to be.
"I don't want to make it out to be something wild. It wasn't. There was plenty of quiet talk in between the notes, joking and carrying on. One or two couples standing in the yard. Maybe somebody dancing, but nothing rowdy enough that you'd notice from the street, or even remember. Just folks unwinding from the day, trying to ease on into tomorrow. That's all. But it must have looked like a mob to a nine-year-old.
"When the train rumbled by, we didn't try to compete; we just laid back and let it roll; and I remember letting my eyes drift down the walk to this boy who'd been standing at the outermost edge of the light. Dressed in a white s.h.i.+rt and Sunday pants like somebody'd told him it was a church night. Then walking toward me during the rattle and clang of the train. I knew he was Silvia's boy. And I knew it must have taken everything he had. Waiting for the train to pa.s.s, then whispering into the sudden silence, in that accusatory tone they use when there's still hope, 'Somebody said you was my daddy.'
"'Whoa-ha!' says the ba.s.s man. 'Here it come!'
"But there was nothing else, just some quiet laughter and this boy. And, for a long time, me. The funny thing is that I didn't even have to lie. I just said, 'Son, I'm not your father. Somebody told you wrong.' Which was the thing that subtracted him down to tears."
She waits for me to finish, but there isn't anymore. I love this house. The books. The woman. I'm just trying to make room. That's the only story I have to tell.
When he was little, Lonell played basketball in my driveway, a loose-packed gravel ramp to nowhere that made it a pa.s.s and shoot game. Back then it looked like a sharecropper's field. Your feet went pounding through ruts, crackle and pop, with the ball taking wild crazy bounces that made little white boys want to cry. They all said it, over and over and over. No blood, no foul. You had to b.u.mp and go. You had to turn and shoot into the sun. That's what they learned from the age of nine. You had to earn that smooth level blacktop down at the schoolyard. You had to be recruited to play on the playground. And that's why I remember his face. Pain and joy twisted into one fierce effort that made it obvious where he wanted to go.
Pulp Life.
At the final hearing, the one where the sentence was set, my judge said he wanted to find justice. That is the phrase he used. And, of course, my parents wanted me at home. That is what the parents always want, although I am convinced that they would have said anything to keep me there. They answered eagerly as the distracted judge, looking for misplaced justice, set forth the provisions. But I do not know what Mrs. Anders wanted. Perhaps her son back. She was a dark and quiet woman who had spent the entirety of her life on a farm just outside our town. Her son had been her only accomplishment; and when it came time for her to hand over the photograph, she walked it to the bench as if she were carrying a wounded bird.
Years later, in the front bedroom of what used to be my parents' house, this same judge said to me that there is never justice in cases like mine. That it's never found. The sentence is at best a ragged fiction. "You simply try to ruin as few lives as possible," he mused. But on the day of that final hearing he went searching for justice, shuffling through papers until he seemed to find it in a moment of inspiration. The only other people in the courtroom on that day were the reporter who wrote the story, an a.s.sistant district attorney named Harris, a court recorder, and my own lawyer, who, you might have thought, would have said something. Or maybe she was just thinking what my parents were thinking. That I had just got lucky.
First, however, before my judge went searching among his papers and patting the folds of his robe, he asked me what I remembered. And I said that I did not remember the accident itself because I had been drinking and that I did not remember the hospital because I had been unconscious. Perhaps I did realize at some level that I had been driving and that Jackie and Andrea were both there with me because I could still recall their voices over the deep ba.s.s of the music. That night when time stopped. But I did not remember the road or the lights. It was all just a splash of color and pain.
"At least you're honest," he said. "What about today, Miss Meyer, do you expect you'll remember that?" He called me Miss Meyer, I think, because I was seventeen or maybe because he wanted to make a point, since he called my attorney Ms. McBryde and he called Mrs. Anders Mrs. Anders. Those are the details that I remember now, not the actual sentencing but the very beginning of that afternoon when he said to me, "What about today, Miss Meyer, do you think you'll remember that?" And I did: the numbness in my fingers, the dry, shallow breathing, and the chill along my legs, all as if he had found what he had been looking for on the far planes of an arctic desert.
I cried back to everyone, "I'm so sorry, I don't know what I can do or what I can say," finally breaking down, not realizing that my body could shake that hard. Ms. McBryde holding me up with one arm. And when my father reached for me, the judge told him to sit down. So I don't know how long it was before I could hear again. Sometimes I think it's still going on, that moment, right now. In the future.
"... me ask you about the victim. Do you remember him at all?"
"I didn't see him. I didn't even see his truck," I said. "I didn't realize there was an intersection until my arms broke, that's the other thing I can remember, and I'm so sorry and I just want Mrs. Anders to know that...."
"Address the court, Miss Meyer. Don't speak to anyone else but your attorney."
"I just wanted her to know."
"She already knows, Miss Meyer. It doesn't help."
"I'm so sorry. I just ..."
"Okay, let's wind this up. Ms. McBryde, do you have anything else?"
"No, Your Honor."
"Mr. Harris?"
"No, Your Honor."
"Okay. Okay, that'll do it. Let's get this ... Where's that other form? No, the plea agreement, the one before that other one. It's already gone down? Okay, let me see the one for this one. Okay. Okay, good, that's what I need. Let's get this one in the hopper. Get this one-where's my pen?-in the hopper. All right. Miss Meyer, there are two types of felony DWI in this state, the habitual offender statute and death by motor vehicle while intoxicated. You've been charged and you have pled guilty to violation of the second of these statutes, and the court has heard statements from your attorney, from Mr. Harris, and from the family of the deceased. In considering your sentence the court has taken note that you are a minor child, living at home, with no previous convictions and thus with prospects of a long, useful, and even rewarding life. But the court has also taken note that the victim, Mr. Anders, was planning to be married and did himself look forward to a full and happy life as breadwinner, husband, and father. It is this latter prospect that you have taken away. Your reckless disregard has reached far beyond one life, Miss Meyer, and in dealing with an adult offender I would ordinarily offer a sentence of seven to twenty years confinement. In this case, however, I see nothing but senseless waste and pain a.s.sociated with every aspect. I've taken into consideration your admission of guilt, your obvious remorse, and the very gracious and compa.s.sionate statement by the Anders family. In accord with all those things, I hereby sentence you to fourteen years supervised probation, permanent revocation of your driver's license, partic.i.p.ation in an alcohol treatment program to be approved by your supervisor, and this additional provision-that from this day until the end of your stated probation, with no exception, appeal, or extenuation, you be required to carry upon your person a photograph of the deceased as a perpetual reminder of the consequences of your actions. If at any time, twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, your probation supervisor finds that you are not in physical possession of this photograph, he or she will report so to this court, and an immediate sentence of five to seven years confinement in the state penal system will be ordered. Do you understand the provisions of this sentence?"
"Yes, Your Honor."
"Ms. McBryde, you've covered all this with them?"
"Yes, Your Honor."
"Good. So ordered. Mrs. Anders, have you selected the photograph in accordance with our previous conversation?"
"Yes, Your Honor."
"Would you bring it forward please."
Amazing Stories, November 1939, Volume 13, Number 11. $47. Cover ill.u.s.tration by H. W. McCauley. Lead story "The Four-Sided Triangle" by William F. Temple. Other stories by Ralph Milne Farley, Robert Moore Williams, Frederic Arnold k.u.mmer Jr., and Don Wilc.o.x. Overall G to VG condition. Cover background now fading to violet with magenta undertones-originally a sharp medium blue (see other copies of A.S. from the 1930s). No splits or tears. All pages intact. Minor flaking and chipping where cover overlaps the pages beneath. Cash purchase at Second Foundation.
What drew me to this one was the color work. The individual letters of the words Amazing Stories are bright yellow, rising off the page like an old movie t.i.tle. A thin russet outline gives the lettering dimension but also tricks the eye into seeing molten gold rather than crayon yellow. It is a startling effect to someone who has not been spoiled by Star Wars. McCauley's ill.u.s.tration features a girl in a one-piece bathing suit, unconscious, reclining at about twenty-five degrees on a narrow platform inside a transparent capsule. Next to her is another capsule inside of which is a portion of another girl. The second girl appears to be identical to the first, but only her face and b.r.e.a.s.t.s are complete; the rest of her is skeleton. She is either being duplicated from the first girl or else being deconstructed by a process not made clear in the ill.u.s.tration. At the bottom of the picture is a figure with his back to the viewer, intently studying the encapsulated girls, one hand on the lever of a glowing machine. The light being reflected from every surface in the painting varies from the pure yellow of Amazing Stories to the soft orange of the instrument dials to the lurid lime-gold glow streaming from the lid of each capsule. The shading is not subtle by current standards but is blended with a technical skill I have not seen on any other cover from the 1930s.
The girl in the painting, the complete girl, does not appear to be in pain. Her bathing suit is russet with yellow highlights at her b.r.e.a.s.t.s and pubis. It is of course a reversal of the t.i.tle's color and shading. Her skin is golden white. Her hair is golden red. The whole figure, I think, is a visual pun. Although I could not find the phrase "golden girl" in the dictionary, I believe it is a variant of "golden boy," made familiar in 1937 as the t.i.tle of a Clifford Odets play and then made famous as a 1939 movie starring William Holden and Barbara Stanwyck. Both of the girls on this cover are golden girls, although only one of them has flesh.
There are two machines at the bottom of the page framing the man and making him small. They are primitive and industrial by today's standards but must have looked "scientific" to the artist McCauley. In the far background of the painting are the suggestions of other capsules and other girls, maybe rows of them, filling a huge gothic s.p.a.ce. It is a hypnotic and horrifying moment, and I do not think this golden girl will ever escape alive.
This was my first one. I found it in a science fiction bookshop close to the campus where my parents were taking the tour. I said I would wait for them right here because, secretly, I knew there would be no going away for me. So they took the tour. And I stayed as quiet and alert as a mouse. It is still my favorite one.
My body may have remembered things that my mind could not retrieve. I think it must have remembered the impact, because at certain times during that first year it would jerk itself into rigid imitation of the russet girl with yellow highlights. Even today I can be walking around the corner of a building and be stunned by someone veering close to me. I can feel the force of our collision even though we never touch. My face being pressed against their gla.s.s. My arms, I know, will snap like toothpicks if I raise them. And I gasp, not because I am surprised, but because it is the body's l.u.s.t for air. People will think that I am terrified by small things, but I am not. It's the body trying to protect itself. Back then it was still fighting to stay alive. It absorbed the impact so that my mind could continue on.
During the first year I did not ride in any automobile except my parents'. I did not go to movies. I did not buy new clothes and did not wear those given to me as presents. I did not watch television, cut my hair, or talk on the phone. On weekends I did not come out of my room. And during the week I walked to school, held my eyes like this and my arms like this. Made A's in everything. Lost twenty-two pounds in twenty-two weeks. Lost my house keys, crying with unstoppable joy at the relief of any minor tragedy. I wore dresses and cardigan sweaters in the winter, like a tourist from another country, and fell in love with the sweet oblivion of snow, sinking my hands into the powdered vapor until they burned.
During the second year, I graduated from high school, did not march across the stage, and realized the weight of the anchor holding me fast. I could have gone to any college, legally could have gone to the campus where my parents took the tour; but Gerry kept me home. In the picture he looks like my high school sweetheart, almost handsome, smiling, in the hammock, ankles crossed and hands behind his head in a way that told you he never lounged between trees except in pictures, never wasted a moment by lying still. And I looked so long I could hear him laugh. His fiance moved to Portland with a boy who played the kind of music Gerry loved. She couldn't mourn forever. But Gerry has blue eyes and black hair that you can still see in Edinburgh, my mother said, come down from the hills and the homes where parents look suspiciously on city life. And his own mother's nose and lips. He is wearing a chambray s.h.i.+rt with sleeves three-quarters rolled and jeans as faded as November. It is a picture with no cuts, creases, or folds. No crumbling at the edge or split along the spine. The background is as sharply focused as his face-gra.s.s and twigs and trunk. And the condition is very good to fine. Except for the pit of my stomach where something insistent calls to me, like a baby turned to stone.
In the third year we reconciled. I went to shopping malls, enrolled at the community college. I told myself that any kind of marriage could go sour and that I was getting ahead, making myself into an independent woman, maybe a business executive one day. I took accounting, figured taxes, and filed the forms for our neighbors, who said it to my parents over and over, "I wish we had one like that at home. You're so lucky to have her in your golden years." And then one spring enrolled in a creative writing course, where they gave a solid, unshakeable A for anything. Like when he asked the cla.s.s for a quick list, off the top of our heads, of things that would determine our main character's actions. And I wrote "Ten Reasons She Should Not Open Her Wallet."
1. At some point it will fall open to the unexpected place.
2. Even when she cannot see him, he is there. She is pregnant with his weight, and it is more than one woman can bear.