Underwater ~ Alvin Greenberg

 

I can still see, more sharply focused than it could possibly have been at the time, the image of my four-year-old daughter being tossed into the air above our little boat by a sudden wave and about to drop into the deep, translucent blue waters of the Arabian Sea.  It had been, till then, what people like to call a perfect day at the beach, and the beach was the beautiful, fine black sand that rimmed the bay around the little fishing village of Kovalum, on the southwest coast of India, where I was spending a Fulbright year at the University of Kerala with my young family.  We went there often, by taxi from the nearby city of Trivandrum where we lived, and almost always had the beach to ourselves aside from the fishermen, whose village lay tucked behind the palm trees in a far corner of the bay and whom we often saw spreading their nets from their dugout canoes.  They spoke with us sometimes as they crossed the beach, showing us curiosities like the giant sting ray that had washed up on the sand the night before or selling us, for the equivalent of fifty cents apiece–this was a long, long time ago–the rock lobsters they snagged by accident in their nets and that ended up crawling around our feet on the floor in the back of the taxi on our way home or, yes, offering to take us out in their canoes.  I tell you these details to make it clear how normal it was, at least during our year in India, to spend an afternoon in that idyllic setting.  Until suddenly it wasn’t.

 

We talked of this many years later, my still fairly new wife and my quite adult daughter and I, in a setting safely far from any sea, a pleasant, quiet restaurant in St. Paul, Minnesota, though I’m still so rattled by the subject that I can’t recall the exact place, whether it was lunch or dinner, what we ate and drank, or why we were even there on that occasion.  The subject, however, I still remember all too well.  Something–perhaps a movie we’d seen or something we’d read–triggered a discussion of how we, each of us, would prefer to die.  The youngest spoke first.  I don’t think we ever got around to Janet and I announcing our own choices.

“Drowning” Annie said.  “I’d like to die by drowning.”

 

If you ever think about your own choice, you might want to consider this.  When Annie talks about it, the first word that swims into her mind is “blissful.”  She describes a perfectly clear, blue, sunlit, silent . . . “element,” I think you could call it, though she tends to say “world,” through which she drifts slowly and peacefully, hands outstretched as she reaches for the tropical fish gliding slowly around her, dazzled by their colors, their bright oranges and yellows, blues and blacks and pale greens, happy–you can hear that in her voice as she tells it–unafraid, at one with herself and her world.

 

When I hear her tell about it, however, I am grabbed and pulled down into the oceanic depths of all the anguish she doesn’t feel, my whole body, even now, writing this, in panic mode, my heart accelerating, my eyes filling with tears, my voice . . . choked, as if I’m the one drowning, as if I’m back there again on–and in–the wave-tossed waters of Kovalum bay.  Once again I’m dropping my glasses into the bottom of the canoe (as I must have done; though I can’t honestly remember whether or not I’d worn my glasses on that little excursion, I was so dependent on them that I rarely took them off), and diving over the side, entering the water not many seconds behind her. And there she is, six or eight feet below me, drifting lightly along with the slight current, entirely oblivious of her danger, my terror, of anything but this glorious new world she’s suddenly found herself in.  We are, of course, quickly back to the surface, and I’m handing her over the gunwale to the fisherman who’s brought us out too far, to where the incoming tide is breaking over the reef at the mouth of the bay, roughing up the water and threatening to drown my little girl.

Like Annie–but not–I’ve never been out of that deep water since.

 

Every time Janet mentions this when we’re with a group of friends–I, of course, don’t dare to bring it up because I’d be submerged in my emotions before I got through the first mumbled sentence–I’m tempted to get up and leave the room: not because I’m bothered by her bringing it up (you’d think I would be inured to it by now, but no, not, never) but because I’m all too aware that everyone is suddenly looking at the flood of terror that’s washing over my face, and there’s nothing I can do about it, nowhere I can flee from my feelings.

Worse yet, as if to demonstrate–no, to hammer home–the fact that while Annie is blessed to survive with an enduring vision of a peaceful death and I am given this terror to live with forever, this, this visit with the fishes of Kovalum bay, is neither Annie’s first flirtation with drowning nor will it be her last. Just two years previously, while lounging en famille in the beautiful pool at Spindletop, the decaying–some said “cursed”–horse ranch that the University of Kentucky has inherited and turned into a faculty club just outside Lexington, I turn from the edge of the pool we’re all clinging onto to see that Annie has lost her grip on the gutter and begun to drift down below the water.  This time, it’s easier: just a matter of reaching down to grab her wrist, pull her up, and lift her onto the pool side.  But I should have been forewarned.  I am a father, after all; it is my duty, my life, to pay attention.

 

Because a few years after the Kovalum crisis, we are again on a family trip, this time an extended summer vacation traveling through Mexico: down the west coast, through Mexico City, south to the Yucatan, then back up the east coast, where we finally settle for a few days in Veracruz, and, on a heatstruck August day, go to what is reported to be a “safe’ beach, which is to say that it’s encircled by a chainlink shark fence.  Which, obviously, does not keep the tide out.  The children, of course, all three of them, head right for the water; their mother, equally predictable, strides away along the crowded beach, looking for chairs, dragging me along on her search.  Not for long, though.  Chairs found, she flops into one.  But I can’t.  Standing there, shading my eyes with my hand, I search the beach and the water for the children, but with no luck.  I hurry down to the water’s edge, and there they are, I see, already much further out than they should be and, to my eyes–with my glasses definitely on this time–not, as the poem says, waving but drowning.  They’re good swimmers for their ages, all of them, but no match for the swiftly ebbing tide, and by the time I reach them they’re too exhausted to make any progress back to the beach against it.  The two boys are supporting Annie, one on each side, struggling–but they’re so young! they don’t have the strength–to escort her back to shore, and it’s only when I latch onto them, thankful for my own ebbing years of swim team experience, that we’re able to paddle our way through the current and back to the beach.

Still, I love to live by water, whether it’s at home by the little Boise River or here, where I’m writing this, on the rocky north shore of Lake Superior, into whose icy waters that have claimed so many ships and sailors one rarely dares to dip.  I can’t help thinking, though, that just across the lake, on the Wisconsin side’s shallower, sandy-bottomed shore, some fifty miles away as the seagull flies, where the waters are warmer and quieter and my daughter’s in-laws have a cabin, she and her kids might at this very moment be out on their paddle boards, splashing away, heedless of the depths beneath them, happy, carefree, fearless.  I shiver at the thought.

 

Beverly Burch

Beverly Burch’s second poetry collection, How A Mirage Works, won the Sixteen Rivers Press competition and was a finalist for the Audre Lorde Award. Her first, Sweet to Burn, won the Gival Poetry Prize and a Lambda Literary Award. Her fiction and poetry have appeared in New England Review, North American Review, Antioch Review, Willow Springs, Southern Humanities Review and Poetry Northwest. She is a psychotherapist in Berkeley.

The Plum-Colored Ocean ~ Beverly Burch

 

The twack of a branch breaking, an explosion of red, the impact of hard ground, she remembered only that. She must have lost consciousness, the sun was higher. Or lower. Which? She felt no pain but when she tried to sit up she discovered she couldn’t, except for a little head movement—and there was the pain, a dagger at the base of her skull. A stirring of panic began and she called out.

No answer. The children would still be at school, and Jarrett—where was he?  Away, somewhere. Panic swelled, propelled her voice with a rasp. “Can anyone hear me?” It exhausted her. She closed her eyes, squeezed them to make the pain stop, felt her cheeks burn, her mouth taut. Why couldn’t she get up? A mourning dove called. She opened her eyes again. A pair of squirrels chased through the pines over her head. She couldn’t judge time: time was stalled. She was out of time, drifting. Her body, absolutely weightless, hardly seemed to exist. Except for her head, which she wanted to flee when the pain struck again. Her breath stopped against it.

More time. How much? Maybe she’d passed out again. The sun tilted over a pine tree; still she couldn’t recall which way it had moved. A child yelled, there was the soft whirr of bicycle tires. Paper boy? Kids riding by? She tried to call again, as loud as possible. Help? Can anyone help?The words sounded weak and distant.

Nothing. She was somewhere else, younger, lying on the ground after a fall. Camila peered into her face. Camila said Make a loud noise, no words, just loud. Use your throat. The dove called again, another answered. Roseanne let her voice out and held her throat open as long as possible, a guttural hawking croak.

Clouds floated in circles over her head, trees stirred, bending in a circle. Time.

An audible motor, then it turned off. Camila was there again, holding her hand, speaking, but Roseanne couldn’t hear her. There was a blur of people, she sensed unsteady movement. She was traveling, wheels on road. The woman who peered into her face and held her hand was not Camila. She looked Indian. She wore a blue work shirt with a patch: Allied Services. A laminated photo was clipped to her pocket with her name: Leela Tatapuddy.  I tawt I taw a Tattapuddy.

“You awake?”

Roseanne tried to nod but it hurt too much. She moved her lips, a whisper. “Yes.”

“Do you feel my hand holding yours?”

Roseanne didn’t feel it, she saw it. She closed her eyes, retreated to wherever she was before the woman spoke. She wanted Camila again. So long it was, since she’d seen her. Roseanne floated high and below her was a plum-colored ocean.

The woman spoke again. Roseanne fluttered her eyelids, hoping that was sufficient. Where did Camila go? Suddenly she was in a room of too-bright lights. She remembered this room—she was looking for Camila. A hospital. She needed to find her in here. Camila was in trouble. Fuck the harsh lights. They hurt her eyes though her eyes were closed. Camila was somewhere. Ahh, moving toward her.

A man stood next to her, the lights draining color from his skin. “Vitals?” he asked. He was speaking to someone she couldn’t see. Roseanne tried to turn her head but couldn’t, the dagger still there. She tried to lift her hand but the hand wouldn’t obey. Her body had a mind of its own or no mind at all, just fire running through it, metal things on fire inside her, somewhere she couldn’t locate.

“Unstable. Low BP, tachycardia, possible fractures of C4/C5,” a woman’s voice responded. “Respiration stable. We’re setting up an MP drip and taking her to radiology. She’s grimacing, may be in pain.”

They were talking about her. “Yes,” someone who sounded like herself said, “pain.”

The man leaned over her. “You’ll have relief very soon. It may not be much comfort, but it’s a good sign that you have pain. Tell us where.” He spoke matter-of-factly.

“Hot things in my head. My legs?” Her voice was stronger. “I don’t know. I can’t tell.”

Someone came into the room with an IV pole trailing and hovered over her arm, a woman in nurse scrubs.

“That’s good, in your legs. Can you wiggle your toes?”

Roseanne tried. “Did they wiggle?”

“They kind of twitched,” the man said, smiling at her. Was he lying? The nurse was working on her right arm but she didn’t feel anything.

The first woman spoke again. “I’m Dr. Schwirsky. I’m assessing your injuries. We’ll be making decisions soon.” She wrote something in a chart. “Dr. Gleason’s taking over but I’ll be back.”

“Decisions?” Roseanne repeated, trying to be alert. “What decisions? God, my head hurts.”

The doctor gave her a smile, then she left. The IV pole was attached to her arm now and the nurse left also, brisk, like a TV nurse. A soap opera. She was in a bad episode, starring role. Here was the handsome doctor lifting her eyelids and shining a light into her eyes. He asked her to count backwards from 100. “99, 98, 97, 96, 95. Can I stop?”

“Try it from 50.”

“50, 49, 48. Silly.”

“Yes. I’m going to do more silly things.” He was fooling around at her feet though she couldn’t tell what he was doing. He gently lifted her arm, caught it himself as he let it drop. “Are you hot or cold?”

“I’d say…cold?”

“Good.” Was it her imagination or did he wink at her? He was playing the role too hard. Another brutal wave of pain trounced her. She tried to squirm away but her chin was propped on something, her head held in place like it would topple off. After the rush of pain subsided, she tried to ease the tightness in her jaw with a deeper breath, but she couldn’t. “What’s at my chin?”

“You have a cervical collar.” The nurse was back, leaning over her other arm, seemed to be injecting her with something.

“What’s wrong with my neck?”

“We’ll know more after we X-ray. We’ll also be doing an MRI.”

“MRI?” Camila had had an MRI. “I’d like Camila to be here.”

“We need the phone numbers for your next of kin. You had no ID. We couldn’t find a neighbor at home.”

“What time is it? Is school out?”

“Not yet. It’s close though.” He was waving someone in. “You have children?”

“Yes. Someone has to call Jarrett. And Aunt Larraine.”

“She’ll get your information.” He was inclining his head toward a woman in pastel print scrubs who came in with a clipboard. Everyone else left the room. She asked questions, Roseanne gave answers: a cell number for Jarrett and Aunt Larraine’s home number. Alert now, she instructed the aide to ask Larraine to pick her kids up and keep them until Jarrett came.

She was exhausted. Numbers floated on the ceiling. She closed her eyes, she needed to drift again. She was going back to that ocean.

 

Cold. She took Camila’s hand and it warmed her, like sitting in the sun. They seemed to be floating together, not anchored and not moving. We have to plan. Camila spoke calmly. Roseanne gave a little push on her arm. You always plan. I never plan. Camila wrote a series of phone numbers in a notebook and Roseanne watched, the joy of being with her like some perfect thing happening, familiar and new at the same time.

 

Another man, not the handsome doctor, stood beside her. “Hi, Roseanne. Can you tell me what you feel, and when you feel relief? Keep talking to me, okay? Tell me what happened.”

His voice was warm, more intimate than the others. “I don’t know. I climbed a ladder. To prune the tree? Am I okay?” Her voice sounded so small again.

“We don’t know much yet.” Was he was lying too? Did they all lie?

“Who is we?”

“My name’s Danny Reilly. I’m the nurse anesthetist. You have a neurologist looking after you and the attending physician from the ER. The neurosurgeon’s coming soon. We’re deciding on the surgery. I’ll do the anesthesia.”

“Surgery?” Why hadn’t she felt afraid? What was the matter with her?

“You injured your neck. You have trauma to your head, possibly a bleed. We don’t know when you were injured. I’m hoping you can tell us more.”

The pain had disappeared. She was slipping off something like a raft, into the ocean, through its purple hues. “I was in my backyard.”

“How long did you lay there? Was anyone home?”

“My children are at school,” she said. She felt kind of giddy. “God. If they’d found me…”

“It would have gotten you here sooner.”

 

She and Camila were in a private room, watery itself, a sea chamber, though nothing was wet, only smooth and clear like water, except the surface far above them which was roiled and distorted. It was not easy to breathe. Camila was wearing a white top, a white shawl. Roseanne couldn’t remember where she’d seen those clothes before. Camila passed pink lilies to Roseanne, then red gladioli and closed white rosebuds. Her hair was light and glossy. You hold the flowers. I’m making notes, Camila said. We’re going to change.

Clothes? Roseanne asked.

Sure. Off to the right was a swirl of gulfweed.

Clothes? she asked again. She could see into the dense mass, a dazzle of colors. Camila disappeared abruptly and Roseanne was bereft. Camila? Camila!

 

She opened her eyes. Voices, words drifted in from the hallway …traction…surgery… can’t accomplish…damaged…could prevent…. A debate. Where was Danny Reilly?

“Where’s Jarrett? My husband.”

“I don’t think they’ve reached him. Cell phone seems to be off.” Dr. Gleason again.

“Out of reach. Happens all the time.”

“How’s the pain?”

“No pain. I need to talk to Camila again.”

“Who’s Camila?”

“My sister.”

 

There was a mirrored surface. She could see herself in it, her gardening pants, her grubby loafers. She shook off the heavy gloves, wiped her cheek, which was smudged with brown. I do need something nicer to wear. She walked into the floating mass of color.

First we should play Scrabble, Camila said. Now she wore something blue and shiny, metallic, fluid. Camila always loved games. Here are your letters. She gave her a Q, a Z, a T, an S, a G and a W. The she handed her two more letters. But just use these.

Roseanne put the two letters on the board, an N and an O.

Camila offered to get clothes for Roseanne. After all, you can’t walk. Roseanne waited a long time but Camila didn’t return. The chamber had become the horizon again. There was the sound of the mourning dove. Camila. Roseanne called. I’m looking for you. I can’t see you now.

 

“I don’t want surgery.”

“The neurosurgeon’s very good. He won’t operate if it’s too risky.”

“No surgery. No to surgery. I can’t walk. Tell me the truth”

“The X-rays show some fractures in the neck vertebrae. Nothing conclusive. With surgery we may be able to fuse them.”

“I’m paralyzed.”

“We don’t know.”

“You know. I say no surgery.”

“You might not have a choice.”

“I have a choice. Uh-uh. I don’t consent.”

The doctor threw his hands up. “You really don’t have a choice.”

“I have a choice.”

“Look, I don’t know how else to say this. Your life is in danger.”

I am in danger. I want to talk to Danny Reilly.”

The doctor left and she waited, a long time it seemed. No more Camila. When Danny came in, she looked at him, pleaded with her eyes.

“Camila gave me the N and the O.”

“Camila.” Danny cleared his throat. “Roseanne, we asked the social worker to locate your sister. Your aunt said the only sister died years ago.”

“Yes. We are twins. But we don’t look alike. She was here.”

“It’s easy to get things confused after an injury like this.”

“She was here. I touched her, I put my hands on her arm, she was warm. We talked, like we always did.” Tears dropped from the corners of her eyes down toward her ears. Danny wiped them with his hand. “I’ve missed her. You can’t imagine.”

“Roseanne, you  need to stay awake, if you can. We’re getting information as fast as possible. Let’s see if we can get Jarrett here.”

Roseanne wasn’t listening. She was concentrating on something. She was still weeping and she didn’t see Camila. “I don’t know what to do,” she said. “Tell me what to do.”

“You need the surgery.”

“You say. Talk to me. I had a friend in grammar school named Danny. Camila and I played board games with him.”

“I had a friend in grammar school named Roseanne.”

“Old friends. You tell me. Am I paralyzed?”

 

Stay with me, Roseanne. It’s better here. Camila spoke in the most beguiling way. She could charm the feathers off a bird. I’ve missed you so much. Remember, you wanted to, before. It would be easy now. Remember. You wanted to. Camila turned her face away. We can’t forget each other again.

Roseanne was shocked. I never forgot you. Did you forget me? You did, didn’t you? You were the one who left.

Camila wouldn’t answer. She had a cryptic expression on her face. Mystery woman. La Belle Dame. Roseanne wouldn’t let her go this time, no matter how elusive she tried to be. But Camila was fading anyway. She was speaking through a void.

 

She opened her eyes. There was Danny. She tried to bring his mind in more clearly. She and Camila used to do that with each other, wordlessly, since they were little. She recognized the sensation with an involuntary twitch, almost a shudder.

“Do you have a sister?”

“I did. Mine died too. Years ago also.”

“Were you there?”

“Huh?” He looked startled. “Yeah.”

He thought she wasn’t lucid, but she was. She was lucid all right. “I knew it. Tell me what happened.”

He was resisting. She pressed him as hard as she could, with only her mind working.

“You’re afraid you’re dying, Roseanne, but I think we’ll save you.”

“I’m not afraid. You must not save me.” He looked distressed. She could feel the void left by Camila but also the space Danny occupied. “Did your sister talk to you when she was dying? Did she tell you what was happening? You were there.”

Danny looked exasperated. Or more like desperate. Medical people, they shut out these spaces.

“We used to hear each other think. No one believed us, of course.”

Danny was silent.

“Tell me. Tell me about your sister.”

“She was beaten up by someone, a boyfriend we think. She was kind of a wild teenager.”

“Did she want to die?”

“Maybe.”

“Didn’t you let her?”

He looked really disturbed now. Maybe he was angry with her.

“I’m a goner. I know it. You know it. Now help me.”

He leaned toward her and she looked in his eyes. She was so clear about this. Wasn’t she speaking to him with ordinary words? He could understand the whole of what she meant, she knew he could. He just didn’t want to. “What happened to you when your sister died?”

“I felt very close to her.”

He was remembering.

“I held her hand so long I had to lift her fingers off. I felt her release.”

“Yes. What else?”

He was silent a few minutes.

“I felt like I went part way over with her,” he sort of laughed. “I wasn’t altogether in this world.” He broke away from her gaze, leaned back.

“Danny. Don’t look away.” He felt her now, she was sure. He was an ally, even if he didn’t want to be. He’d spent time with dying people, unconscious people. He’d been in sight of that boundary. “A person’s mind keeps something apart from the medicine, doesn’t it? It moves, out and back, doesn’t it?”

She felt him wanting to leave the room and she let him go. He was at the door when a woman bumped into him. “What about the husband?” he demanded.

“I was just coming to say. I finally reached him. He’s up near Canton. It’ll be a little while before he gets here. I talked to the aunt again. She’s got the children.”

Roseanne groaned. Camryn. Brian. Willie off at college. The water around her heaved, eddied. She could easily drown. Not the same as dying. Think of her children and everything perished. She heard Danny in the hallway, talking to someone.

“She’s refusing surgery. I think she’s hallucinating. Not someone able to make a decision.” He hesitated. “She knows she could die. She’s wanting to. You don’t see that when someone’s got kids.”

He came back into the room and she beckoned to him but he didn’t seem to hear her any more. Then the attendant came to take her for the MRI.

 

Danny was there when she opened her eyes, briefly, and shut them again. With effort she held them open. Her bed had been slightly cranked up and she could see him clearly. “Time to decide,” she said.

“Yes. Got to make that decision.”

“No, no,” she said. “What we’ll wear. We’re deciding if we should wear the same dress.”

“Roseanne, stay awake.”

“I’m so awake. The sun on the water’s amazing.”

“Keep your eyes open.”

She looked at him. “Okay.”

“We need to do surgery. We may be able to repair some vertebral damage.”

“May?”

“No guarantees. Jarrett will be here soon.”

“Don’t let Jarrett in here. Send him home. He has to be with the kids. I don’t want him here.” She was panicked again. Jarrett. A sucking pull from the water, a great whirlpool of misery. She couldn’t feel him and stay afloat. He would drag her out and she’d be a limp fish, flopping on sand the rest of her life. All of them tending her. No life for herself or them.

“You need to consent. Just verbally agree.”

“No. I won’t do it, not to my family.” She closed her eyes. “It won’t be good.” She was pleading with him. It was hard to reach him again. The urge to disappear was so strong.

“Roseanne, think. Your family needs you. The surgery may save your life.”

“I can’t move. Don’t lie to me. I don’t want them taking care of me forever. You understand what I’m saying. Please.” It was so hard to keep looking at him, to penetrate his resistance. It took a great effort, everything available, but he was unsettled again, she could feel it. “Okay?” she asked.  She was losing control over her eyes, they kept going dark, seemed to close down, and tears leaked out that she couldn’t stop. “Speak to me. I’m losing ground. My children will be okay. Camila said. Jarrett will be okay.” The words came out with a gasp. A shudder passed across her face. She could feel her mouth twitch. “I don’t know how to leave them.”

Someone entered, said they needed to get her to the OR, the brain stem was at risk. Danny reported that her blood pressure was dropping, respiration was poor, pulse racing. She was having trouble breathing. Roseanne listened. At least her ears were working.

“But she’s still refusing surgery.”

“We have to take her anyway.”

Her eyelids flickered. He was sweating, she could almost hear him thinking. “She refused.”

The surgeon snapped. “You said she was hallucinating. Get her ready.”

People were whisking around the bed, someone was pulling her hair to the side, putting something cold and moist on her scalp. She heard Danny snap at him, tell him to leave the room. I’m doing what I can, but we don’t have long. She fluttered her eyes again. She didn’t need long. There was a knock. When had the door been closed? Danny walked to the door. A flurry of sounds, activity in the hall. Danny was speaking to someone.

“She won’t survive the anesthesia.”

Roseanne drifted off. She’d won something.

She was brought back to the room by a woman’s voice. The monitors in her room began beeping and someone was running. There was such a flash of lights and popping noises, it was like a party, champagne corks and distant fireworks, muffled the way those little Chinese poppers sounded when they tossed them on the street the year she and Camila went to the coast with their parents for New Year’s.

 

Again she didn’t know if time had passed, slowly or quickly. Jarrett’s voice came calling down the hall, demanding where she was. She was already safe now. A doctor spoke. “I’m so sorry. She died before we could get her to surgery. I’m afraid she broke her neck in the fall, what we call a complete cord injury. It left her paralyzed.”

His footsteps came like thunder into the room. An enormous wave rushed toward her. She felt him at her side, bewildered. “Roseanne,” he whispered. He sounded so weak. He put his hands on her shoulders, his forehead against hers. “You can’t go. You can’t go.” He lay his cheek on her breast, murmuring her name. When he lifted his head he spoke. “She’s warm.”

“Yes, she’s warm.” It was Danny’s voice. He was working, removing the IV line.

Jarrett was agitated. She tried to touch him but she couldn’t. She’d thought she might be able to move again once she stopped breathing, but no, she was still paralyzed. She grazed him with love, the kind they felt only during their deepest sexual intimacy. He had to feel that.

“I’ll leave you a while,” Danny said.

Jarrett was sitting on the bed, kissing her face and hands. “Roseanne. Roseanne. I love you so much.”

She could feel his shock. She kept trying to soothe him, to hold him with her mind. He wanted to pull her into his arms but the neck brace interfered. Take it off.

Danny fumbled with the closure at the back of the brace and removed it. Jarrett lifted her and held her against him. “Stay with me. Stay with me.” He held her like that and the flood of his tears spilled into the sea around her.

Jarrett. It’s okay. I’m okay now. I’m right here. I am. You know me, Jarrett. I know it confuses you. But it’s me. I love you.

That was all she could do, just that. She’d said goodbye and she would have to go. But it wasn’t as easy as she thought. She tried to pull away, go where she belonged now, wherever it was. She felt like one of those balloons in old British movies, metallic war balloons, giant inflated silver things tethered with heavy ropes so they couldn’t float away, anchored to a building, or however they did it. She couldn’t release herself and drift off. Jarrett held her. It would wrench her too much. Her mind—though this wasn’t consciousness, but whatever it was now, bigger—would be twisted, fractured. She had to wait for him to let her go.

Or was it herself holding on? To leave was impossible. Jarrett. Her children. Another thought like that and she could never let go. Where would she be then? Jarrett, the children, they were off in their own safety, and maybe she’d be able to watch them once she was gone, maybe that was allowed. Like a movie angel watching loved ones. Being dead was so new—what was possible? Was she only half-dead, neither alive nor dead, not able to return, not able to leave?

Danny came back. He stood by the bed with Jarrett in silence until Jarrett spoke.

“She’s gone. I felt it when she left. She wasn’t dead when I got here, not at first. Nevermind what the machines. She was here. Her body gave a little shudder when I touched her.”

Danny nodded. “That happens sometimes after death.”

“That’s not what I mean. She was here and then she wasn’t and I couldn’t get her back. She could hear me, then she couldn’t. You understand?” He sat with his head in this hands. “How do you know someone dies the minute the heart stops? How do you know that? You don’t know that.” His voice pinned Danny like a wrestler.

Roseanne wanted to shake him. I’m still not gone yet. You don’t understand either. I’ve just lost transmission. Incommunicado. Surely this wasn’t what being dead was.

Danny shook his head. “You’re right. I don’t know. We only know what happens to the body. The rest, we don’t know about that.”

He dimmed the lights, the air in the room as violet as twilight, then he pulled a chair over for himself and sat with Jarrett, his arm around him.

She felt terrible anguish, the feeling that had been waiting to swamp her all this time. When she was giddy, when she was disturbingly calm, even when she was panicked, all of that was a screen against this letting go that would knock the final life out of her. After that, maybe peace, maybe ever-presence, maybe even Camila. And Uncle Charlie and the others who’d died. Maybe nothing. Whatever death was. But this anguish was bearing down on her like a tsunami, the pressure in the air changing as it got closer. It would hit her in a moment. Then she’d be gone.

 

 

David Ebenbach

David Ebenbach is the author of two collections of short fiction—Between Camelots (winner of the Drue Heinz Literature Prize, University of Pittsburgh Press) and Into the Wilderness (Winner of the Washington Writers Publishing House Fiction Prize, WWPH)—as well as a chapbook of poetry entitled Autogeography (Finishing Line Press), and a guide to the creative process called The Artist’s Torah (Cascade Books). His first full-length collection of poetry, We Were the People Who Moved, won the Patricia Bibby Award and will be published by Tebot Bach this summer. He teaches creative writing at Georgetown University.

The Match ~ David Ebenbach

 

Miri sat for a while with the phone in her hand before she called Richard. She sat in the living room armchair and chewed her bottom lip and tried to think if there was anyone else, even though she’d already been through that; he was, inescapably, the right one. She knew it.

“Miri?” he said, when she finally made the call. “Wow. This is a surprise.”

“You have caller ID, don’t you?” she said. Immediately she regretted her tone; that was the very sound of the brusque dynamic of their marriage in the bad years, a blunt bantering that too easily turned combative, and that had helped them reach the end of their marriage five years earlier. It had been probably eighteen months since they last talked—now that the kids were grown there wasn’t much need—and within five seconds the tone had come back to her. “Just kidding,” she said.

“How have you been?” Richard asked, a little stiffly now.

“Good,” she said. It was more like a blurt. “I’ve been good. I’m good.” And then, after a pause, “How about you?”

“Solid,” he said.

“It’s terrible about Ben, isn’t it?” she said. After ten years of marriage to a lovely woman named Ellen, their son was in the midst of a divorce himself—an ugly one. Which was why Miri was calling her own ex-husband.

“It’s a shame,” Richard said. “That’s for sure. I wouldn’t have guessed it. I thought they were a great match.”

Miri suspected that he meant that as an oblique compliment to Miri for her role in getting the two together. “Listen,” she said. “I’ve been thinking. That whole thing is so bad, so angry. It’s terrible when it goes that way.”

“It sure is,” Richard says, his voice soft.

Miri felt the pressure of tears at her eyes, but she calmed herself. She said, “I was thinking. It’s been too long. Since you and I have seen each other. I’m having a dinner party in two weeks and I’d love for you to come.”

“Miri—” he started.

“Don’t worry,” she said with a little private laugh. “I’m not hitting on you. I just—I just think we could be friends. A lot of time has passed. I was thinking we could be friends.”

“Friends,” he said.

“There’ll be a lot of people here,” she said. “It’ll be an easy, casual thing. You know, folding chairs and plastic plates on laps. An early dinner. An afternoon dinner, really. You could bring a plus-one, if you want,” she added, with a question in her voice.

“Well, thank you, Miri. I don’t have a plus-one,” he said, confirming what she’d suspected, “but that’s very thoughtful.”

“So—can I count you in?”

There was silence for a moment. Then Richard said, “What’s the date, exactly?”

After Miri hung up, she had a pang of guilt for not being entirely honest with Richard. It would be nice to be friends, of course, but that wasn’t why she’d invited him. She invited him because she was taking Ben and Ellen’s breakup so hard. She couldn’t stop thinking about it.

She got up and went to the kitchen to wash some dishes. There was only a plate, a fork, and a glass. She washed them slowly, looked out the little window at the yard.

Miri had been the one to introduce her son to Ellen, who was the daughter of a friend. She’d just had a sense about the two of them. The way they listened, the even pace at which they talked. Something about their eyes, very clear in both cases. She was known for having that sense for matches; she had also made the introduction that led to her sister’s marriage of going on forty years, and had set up two friends in college who were still together very happily. The Ben and Ellen match was her third. The family had joked about that; Jewish folklore had it that three matches got you into heaven automatically, no matter what else you did.

And now the divorce—she was handling that very poorly. She could barely stand to talk to Ben about it at all. His suffering was palpable, for one thing; she could hear him pacing while he ranted on the phone, hear the sharp and splintery exasperation in his voice, ready to break into something more wounded. Worse still was her awareness that he didn’t want to be burdening her with this, given everything else that was going on, but that he needed her too much to stop calling. There in his voice was the mixture of desperation and guilt. She understood that mix. She was feeling it herself. When she lay awake at night, her body in pain even with the painkillers, she thought about her son’s feelings, certainly. But she also thought—obsessively, troublingly, bafflingly—about what this all meant.

Miri stood leaning on her wet hands on the edge of the sink, the dishes dripping in the rack.

What the divorce meant was that there were loose pieces in the world, that things were unmatched and disconnected. It meant that her most recent match, her third match, was dissolved. And though she knew it was ridiculous, lately she kept thinking about that old promise of heaven, and its disappearance with this divorce, and, lying awake, she found herself unaccountably scared.

 

Miri invited a number of people to the party: the neighbors on both sides, one set of whom had been there long enough to know Richard; some old couple-friends who hadn’t seen Richard in a long time—had perhaps chosen her over her ex—but who clearly had fond memories of him; a handful of customers, in married pairs, who had become friends and who didn’t know Richard; and her catering partner, Anne, who also didn’t know him, and who had no husband or boyfriend to bring. The stated occasion was the cherry blossoms; it was the season. She had a cherry tree in the backyard, and that’s where the party was going to be—a little cool for it, maybe, but she had a small, portable fire pit and she’d warned everyone to dress for outdoors in any case.

That afternoon Miri set everything up, aiming for a sweet spot between throwing it together haphazardly like an amateur and letting her caterer’s instincts blow the event out of proportion. Still, setting up the tables and chairs and getting all the food ready—a simple enough Japanese theme for the cherry blossoms, with sushi, tempura, dumplings, and even warm sake—all of that left her exhausted and, with an hour to go before the party, Miri found herself shipwrecked on one of the chairs, actually panting a little. That unaccountable fear gripped her tentatively, threateningly; any time she was short on energy the feeling returned. What if she couldn’t manage the party at all?

The phone rang a few times before Miri got herself up to get it. The caller ID told her it was Ben.

“Hey, sweetie,” she said, her heart going quickly for various reasons. She took the phone outside and sat down in the chair, looked at the bright cherry tree in the back of the yard.

“Are you okay?” he asked. He could hear it in her voice. And, lovely boy, even in the midst of his own problems he did still worry about her.

“I’m fine,” she said.

“Really?” he said.

“Just tired.”

“What have you been up to?”

“Oh, just getting ready,” she said. “I’m having a little party. You know, for old folks.”

“That sounds nice,” he said, a little distracted.

“What are you doing?” she asked. She had her hand at her throat, feeling her too-wild pulse.

“Nothing,” he said. “I got some more papers from Ellen’s lawyer today. I guess I’m going to sit down and read those.”

“You don’t have the kids this weekend?”

“No,” he said. “And we still haven’t settled visitation.” She could hear him clenching his jaw. What a thing it was, knowing someone well enough that you could so easily recognize all the gradations of their unhappiness.

“I’m sorry,” she said. She felt afraid. “I’m so sorry.”

“I know,” he said.

There was a pause. Finally, he added, “I should probably let you go.”

“I guess I should finish up. I love you, kiddo. I love you a lot. You’ll get through this.”

“Okay,” he said.

After they hung up, she sat still with the phone in her hand, looking at the cherry tree. It was like a blinding cloud, a snowbank in dazzling sun. It made all the other trees disappear. Miri dug inside for energy.

 

Richard was not the first guest to show up, which didn’t surprise her. He had always been fairly punctual, but this was probably not a completely easy event for him to contemplate. First came the Browns from next door, and then Anne, and then some of the customer-friends, and some older friends. Many of the guests commented on the cherry tree; it really was at peak. Anne admired Miri’s work.

“I like the Japanese theme,” she said. “It’s clever but it’s not too loud.”

Anne didn’t know what Miri was up to that night, and so she had come dressed not to meet someone but to be comfortable—white Capri pants and a black sleeveless t-shirt that showed off her red hair but didn’t have much shape to it. Then again, Miri thought, at their age sometimes it was the body, not the shirt, that didn’t have much shape to it.

“I love your earrings,” she said to Anne. They were turquoise.

Anne smiled. “Do you? I just got them.”

“I do love them,” Miri said, reaching out to touch one. Anne’s face was bright and open, uncomplicatedly glad that something small she’d done had turned out well. Richard was sometimes that way.

Her ex-husband showed up as they were about halfway through the appetizers. The backyard was clattering with voices and laughter, enough to repeatedly startle Miri a little. He came to the gate and hesitated there for a moment; Miri realized he was unsure whether or not he could just stride into the yard the way he had countless times when he lived here, or even the way he would if he was a guest who’d never been here before. Miri waved him in and walked over to greet him.

“Hi, Richard,” she said, giving him a clumsy hug. “I’m glad you came.”

He smiled. He had a beard now, almost entirely gray, the hair on his head still salt-and-pepper. “Thanks for inviting me,” he said. He handed her a bottle of pinot grigio, chilled. “I’m not sure this will go with the theme,” he said, looking around. “I just didn’t want to come empty-handed.”

“Grigio goes wonderfully with sushi,” Miri said. “Thank you. Hey—let me introduce you to someone.” Miri winced a little—she was being too eager.

But just then the Silbers, old friends, came over. Jack, the husband, said, “Richie! You old so-and-so—how are you?” The men shook hands vigorously.

“I’ll open this,” Miri said, slipping away with the bottle of wine. Richard did know a number of people here, people who’d want to say hi first. She could make the introduction later.

 

There were reasons that the third match had to be Richard. First of all, he really was a very lovely man—attentive, gracious, sincere. And she knew more about him than she did about any other man. She knew, for one thing, that she had a match for him. And then, too, there was the feeling that Miri had, ever since the divorce, that their split had left something broken in the world. Neither of them had remarried, and it seemed to her that the two of them were like loose pieces, rattling around in the box. It wasn’t right, the two of them alone. And if it were, perhaps, a little too late for her, it wasn’t for him. Along with the terror, Miri’s medical situation had brought her a desire for wholeness that, if it couldn’t be hers, she found she now wanted other good people to have.

 

Anne was mostly talking to the old customers Miri had invited—easy conversations. Miri, still quite tired, sat down with them and listened more than she chatted. They talked about plans for the summer. For the catering business, it was a busy season, but for the old customers it was a time for vacations, and they talked about islands.

During a pause, Anne turned to Miri and frowned a little. “Are you okay?” she said. She didn’t know Miri was sick—Miri hadn’t told anyone, though her kids clearly suspected something—so Miri must have looked as tired as she felt in that moment.

“Oh,” Miri said. “I’m fine. Just a little post-hostess letdown, I guess.”

“I’m sure,” Anne said. She turned to the others there. “Don’t be fooled. This looks like simple food, but it takes a lot to throw a party like this.”

“I believe it,” Eric Foster said.

“Those are hand-filled gyoza, for example.”

“Oh, you,” Miri said, flapping her hand. “I wanted to make hiyayakka, too, but it seemed too complicated to eat outdoors.”

Anne smiled. “Well, you should take it easy now. This party is running itself.”

Miri looked around at the yard. Everyone had arrived by then and people had their plates and their drinks. They were sitting in comfortable bunches, talking, saying funny things, all very easy and glad. Miri was aware that most people had at least a little social anxiety, a little awkwardness around gatherings and groups, but it had long been her experience—though it somewhat surprised and delighted her each time—that all you had to do was create the right conditions and people would soon forget their nerves and carry on together beautifully. There was a tipping point at parties, and this one had passed it successfully.

“I’d like to introduce you to someone tonight,” Miri said. The old customer-friends were talking amongst themselves.

Anne cocked her head to the side. “What are you up to?”

Miri shrugged a little tease of a shrug.

She didn’t rush it, however; Richard was still catching up with people. After a while, she laid the sushi out on the picnic table where the appetizers had been, and people, offering up their good-natured faux-remonstrations about the abundance of the meal, started to stand up, stretch, and gather around the table. It was then that Anne and Richard were in reasonable enough distance of one another for the introduction to be made.

“Richard,” she said, pulling him aside. “I wanted you to meet Anne. She’s my catering partner, since last year.”

Anne stuck out her hand. She was clearly aware now of what Miri was trying to do. “Nice to meet you,” she said. With her other hand she brushed her hair back over her ear. The turquoise earring hung bright there.

“And this is Richard,” Miri said. “You know about Richard.”

The understanding did register on Anne’s face—a little ripple of surprise that it was Miri’s ex-husband that she was meeting.

Richard shook her hand. “Very nice to meet you.” On his face, a little puzzlement: why the special introduction?

“I just wanted you two to meet,” Miri said. “You have a lot in common.”

One of Richard’s eyebrows went up. Miri continued, “Anne used to be in law, too.”

“Really?” Richard said.

“Before the catering,” Anne said.

“And,” Miri said, “you’re both theater buffs. Richard’s even done a little playwriting himself.”

“Well,” Richard began, protesting.

Miri couldn’t talk about the other similarities, the ones that had really struck her: that simple, open happiness they shared; their closeness in height to one another; the slow way they walked; their tendency to make the same observations repeatedly without knowing they were doing it. She couldn’t get into any of that. But law and theater was a good start.

“I’d better see how we’re doing for wasabi,” Miri said, slipping away again. There was plenty on the table, but she went up into the house anyway, watched the yard from the kitchen window, leaning on the sink. Her arms trembled a little. Anne and Richard were talking, standing fairly close; that was another thing they both did habitually. Seeing it from here, Miri did feel a little envy, and not just of Anne, who was there with her ex-husband, but envy of both of them, standing near to one another, perhaps starting something.

 

Miri came back outside and assembled her own plate of food, and when she was done she noticed that Richard and Anne had gone back to their original chairs again.

She sat down with Anne and the old customers, leaned over to her ear. “How did that go?”

“He seems very nice,” Anne said. “It’s a little strange, being introduced to your ex-husband like that.”

“I know. I just think you’d be good together. He’s really a very nice guy.” It had been enough years that Miri knew that her marital frustrations with him were particular to their peculiar dynamic; they didn’t disqualify him from relationships in general.

“It seems like it,” Anne said.

“So…?”

Anne shrugged. “Well, once I got over the strangeness, I sent some signals. I think it’s in his hands now.”

Miri looked across the yard at Richard, who was talking to the neighbors, two of whom he’d just met for the first time. He saw her looking and he raised an eyebrow at her again before she turned back to her food.

“The California rolls are just right,” Anne said. “And the tuna—you sure know your tuna.”

Miri ate one of the tuna rolls. It really was good.

 

After a while of nothing happening, Miri circulated a little and then sat herself down with Richard.

“So,” she said.

“Great party,” he said. “Thanks for inviting me. I’m sorry we haven’t gotten much chance to talk yet.”

For a minute Miri thought he meant him and Anne, but of course he meant him and her, Miri. She waved the comment off. “There’ll be time for that. Maybe you could stay a little bit after.”

Richard looked at his watch. Miri smiled inwardly; for some reason that move always used to infuriate her. At that moment, though, those fights seemed like a long time ago. He said, “That might work.”

“Are you enjoying catching up with folks?”

He nodded. “It’s really something. I haven’t talked to these people in years. Jack and Renee seem to be doing well.”

They were just a short distance away, leaning into one another as they laughed at one of Melanie Garrison’s jokes. “Yes. I think so. You seem good, too.” He did look healthy.

“I’m solid,” he said. “You’ve lost weight.” It was maybe a compliment, maybe an observation with a question. Either way it made her heart pick up speed.

She nodded. “Just a little.”

“Well, you seem good,” he said.

They lapsed into their own silence, which after a few moments perhaps became a companionable silence. Then Richard said, “So, what was that about, before? With…what’s her name, Anne?”

“That’s right,” Miri said. “Nothing. I just thought you two would have a lot to talk about.” She wasn’t going to be as explicit with him; Richard had never liked to feel manipulated, a recurring complaint late in their marriage. Even now he was eyeing her a little suspiciously. “I’m surprised you didn’t talk longer,” Miri said.

Richard looked off across the yard at Anne. It was starting to get dark out. He turned his eyes back to Miri. “What are you up to, exactly?”

Miri shook her head. “Nothing. I just wanted you to meet everybody. She’s my catering partner. That’s all.”

“Okay,” he said, his face hard to read.

“She’s quite lovely, in fact.” Miri stood up. “Well, I think I should see how everyone’s doing with drinks. Why don’t you circulate a little?”

Miri felt him watching her as she walked off.

 

The party wound on, at some point moving into evening, and it became a little cooler outside. People continued to talk and laugh and eat—she’d made some green tea ice cream—and here and there people began to stand up to go. Miri saw Richard and Anne talk a couple more times, as movements around food and the like brought them near one another. Nothing lengthy, though.

When it was clear that the dinner was starting to really break up, Miri said to Anne, “Hey—I hate to impose, but would you be willing to stick around a little, help me clean up?”

“Oh, sure,” Anne said.

“I know it’s bad form, inviting you to a party and then asking you to clean up.”

“No, sure—this is a lot for you to take care of by yourself.”

Miri said, “And I’ll see if I can recruit another pair of hands, too.”

Anne said, “Now, wait a minute—” but Miri was already crossing the yard.

“Richard,” she said when she’d reached him, settling down into a free chair. “So, do you think you’ll be able to stay a little?”

He checked his watch again. “Sure,” he said.

“I may put you to work,” she said.

He smiled. “Clean-up duty?”

“I know it’s poor form,” she said. “Especially given everything. But it’ll be a chance to catch up. Plus, you know where everything goes.”

“That’s true,” he said.

Actually, it wasn’t true; she’d rearranged just about everything after he moved out, as a way of reclaiming the kitchen. But it was all for the good. “Great,” she said, clapping her hands on her thighs and standing up. “And I’ll see if I can find us another pair of hands.”

Richard touched her arm. “Miri,” he said.

She stopped mid-turn. “What is it?”

“Could you sit down?” he said.

She did, feeling some dread in her throat, a quiet relative of that terror that held her at night.

“You’re trying to set me up with Anne,” he said.

She sighed, and then nodded. “She’s absolutely lovely.”

Richard leaned forward. There weren’t many people in the yard by then, and it was full dark, just the back porch light and the fire pit to see by. “I’m not comfortable with this,” he said.

Just then, the Silbers and the Garrisons came over to say their goodbyes, to offer their hearty happiness about the party and getting to see Richard again. Everybody stood, hugging and shaking hands. And Miri looked over at Anne, who was starting to gather up plates.

After the Silbers and the Garrisons left, Richard said, “How did this idea get into your head?”

“I just thought you two would be a good match,” Miri said, staring at her hands, pressed together between her thighs. They would have been shaking if she hadn’t pressed them there. It had been a long and very tiring day. “I think, if you gave her a chance—”

“Listen, Miri,” he said. “Even if it wasn’t strange, being set up by your ex-wife, I just, I’m just not looking for anyone right now.”

“Why not?” she said, a little desperate.

He looked off toward the back of the yard. “Honestly, since the divorce—I’ve dated a little, but it’s not really where my head’s at.”

“Even after all this time?”

“It’s not a matter of recovering from us,” he said, glancing at her and smiling. “I’m just fine on my own.”

She said, “I don’t like thinking of you alone.”

“You don’t have to worry about me,” he said.

Miri felt a tear get past her defenses. There was enough light, she knew, for Richard to see it.

“Miri,” he said. “Are you okay?”

She sighed raggedly. “Ben and Ellen,” she said. “Ben and Ellen were my match,” she said.

Richard breathed in and out. He nodded.

“I’m taking it pretty hard.”

“It’s a hard thing to take,” he said, a hand on her knee.

There was a sound of running water; Anne was inside the house, washing the plastic dishes.

Miri said, “And I just don’t like thinking of you alone.” She was picturing it, him alone, from above. Like she was hovering over the yard. Hovering and then rising. The cherry tree like a low cloud. And him alone in his lawn chair, his hand on nobody’s knee. “I don’t like thinking of that.”

Richard hesitated a moment, and then he said, “Listen. I don’t know whether this is what you’ll want to hear or not, but the truth is that I like being alone. I do well alone. I have a very full life just the way it is.” He turned to her. “I’m glad we had our time together. And I think—I think that time was enough for me.”

She shook her head. She couldn’t speak or she’d really lose it. Richard reached over from his lawn chair. He put his arms around her. He held her, and she did start crying harder, and he ran his hand down her back, just like he used to do. Miri suddenly sat up straight, looking for Anne. It was her back he was supposed to be touching, not Miri’s; not any of her own traitorous body. But Anne was still inside, or gone. The only people in the yard were her and Richard. She settled back into her own chair, crying quietly. Richard continued to sit forward in his, all readiness. There were times when she had hated his stupid earnestness.

And then he said, “You know, that three matches thing is just a story.”

She felt his hand on her knee, but only very distantly. She wasn’t in the yard. She wasn’t hovering up over the cherry tree. She wasn’t anywhere.

“I know,” she said. “But you have to have something.”

Robin Chapman

Robin Chapman invites you to a reading from her recent portfolio of poems, Dappled Things, accompanying a show of Peter Miller’s photogravures, at the Tenri Cultural Institute in New York City, Wed. June 10, 7 p.m.  Her work has appeared recently in Terrain, Diode, The Common, and Cape Cod Poetry.

Champagne du Belair, Sept. 10 ~ Robin Chapman

 

Dear Ones—here we are, South of France,
tucked into an old walnut mill retrofitted
for Eurotourists looking for gastronomic
thrills—duck breast steamed in hay, a wine
cellared for thirty years, chocolate darker
than our winter months, our thoughts
turning like the waterwheel to our friends
who brought us here two years ago for a lunch
of Michelin buy diazepam uk online stars—closed, as it happened,
but we are back, and our friend back, too,
from spring infusions of chemo, digging out
of snow drifts for another hospital run,
come back to health and hope for another
thirty years—we lift our glasses. We drink
to life, the cheeses aging in the cellar,
the turning of the waterwheel.

 

Leslee Becker

Leslee Becker is the author of The Sincere Café.  Her stories have appeared in The Atlantic, Ploughshares, Boston Review, Epoch, The Kenyon Review, and elsewhere.  She lives in Fort Collins, Colorado, and teaches at Colorado State University.

The Continental ~ Leslee Becker

 

Ellen was surprised by the rain in the Costa del Sol and the timid look of the Hotel Continental.  She arrived in Mojacar and the hotel at dusk, hours later than planned.  No one was at the registration desk, and no guests were in sight, yet she felt conspicuous ringing the bell.  The sense of being exposed had been with her the entire trip, and she wondered if people could tell she’d been masquerading as a seasoned traveler.  She rang the bell again, and an elderly man appeared, his blue suit silvered with age. He treated her curtly, as if the sight of a lone middle-aged woman, surely one without much money, was as disappointing as the uncharacteristic weather.

She was sixty.  She’d taught fifth grade in Vermont for thirty years, and often talked about her fear of retiring.  When she announced her retirement and trip to Spain, colleagues congratulated her, as if she’d overcome a vice, but she’d traveled to spite her unreliable lover, Kay.

She studied the Mojacar guidebook in her room, the pictures showing a faultless sky and a quaint village perched on a hill overlooking the Mediterranean.  From her balcony window, she saw drenched palm trees, lurching boats, and a purple sunset being drawn, like a scarf, through a ring of clouds.       

She was the only patron in the small dining room. The waiter looked at his watch, as she struggled to explain what she wanted.  She heard grumbling in the kitchen, and knew she’d been guilty of some misunderstanding.  Had she been too early?  Too late?

Despite the fog the next morning, she decided to explore the village at the top of the hill, but she couldn’t see the village, or even a few feet ahead.  The sound of bells, bleats, and hooves clacking on rocks startled her, and then through the mist, goats emerged, and an old woman, dressed in black, followed, the fog closing behind her.

Ellen returned to her room, wondering how people would react to her decision to return to Vermont so soon.  “An emergency,” she’d say.  “A dear friend’s illness.”  A voluptuous sensation thrilled through her, and then dread.  Kay had backed out of the trip, and seemed determined to end everything.  Ellen didn’t tell anyone about it, but went over the events, the same way she did for her students in history lessons, always stressing that the real story lay behind the scenes, in the complicated motives and actions of people who had much to gain and lose.

Kay had had an awakening.  It was one of the first things she told Ellen four years ago at a restaurant after a women’s book club meeting—that higher powers were urging her to change her life.  Kay had looked radiant as she described her former life.  She’d experimented with drugs, had many affairs, and a disastrous marriage.  Ellen expected Kay to describe a childhood trauma, but Kay surprised her by saying, “I figured out that the scariest thing imaginable is what we do to ourselves and each other.   My ex would be shocked to know that I’m grateful to him for helping me see the light.  He was so much like me, it scared the hell out of me.”

Ellen confessed what she’d done after a breakup six years ago, sneaking into her lover’s backyard, unleashing the dog, and watching the dog take off.   “I hoped Frances would call.  I even saw myself coming to the rescue, but Frances never called.”

She’d told the story to colleagues, and kept the lover’s gender vague, knowing they’d assume Frances was a man, but she told Kay the truth.

Kay shrugged.  “I knew it was a woman. And you know what?  My old self would’ve poisoned that dog.  That’s the kind of person I was.”

“That’s the kind of person I am,” Ellen said, smiling, but Kay gave her a serious look, and urged her to go easy on herself, insisting that guilt was a harmful indulgence.

At first, Ellen accounted her attraction toward Kay to their closeness in age, but beyond this, was the conviction that being with Kay allowed her to shed her fear about being unremarkable, a person who’d become a predictable fixture at work.  With Kay, she had a heightened, cinematic sense of someone caring about her, watching her actions, even knowing her thoughts.  She believed she’d found her match.

Kay was wealthy, and lived in an elegant house near the river, and Ellen stayed there on weekends and school breaks.  When Kay mentioned the trip to Spain and living together, Ellen saw it as a chance to become a different person.  Later, when she told Kay that she’d announced her retirement at school, she felt like a child who’d performed a feat for a parent’s praise.

“It’s all coming together,” Kay remarked, but one week before the trip, she said she was backing out.

Ellen was relieved.  She’d had misgivings, but described how she’d looked forward to seeing the places Kay wanted to revisit.  Kay had gone to Mojacar on her honeymoon.

“I’ve got a bad feeling about it, and need to trust my instincts,” Kay had said.

“What are you really afraid of?” Ellen asked, prepared to hear Kay say, “You.”

“Disappearing,” Kay said.

It was troubling and exhilarating to see that roles had been reversed.  “You’re backing out of everything, aren’t you?  Not just the trip?”

Kay nodded, her head rasping against Ellen’s breast, and then Kay left the bedroom.  Ellen sat up, stunned, then peeked at Kay’s journal on the nightstand, seeing an account of a recent dream Kay had about the sensation of falling, but waking up before she hit the ground, a predictable, commonplace dream.

Ellen was furious later, waiting for Kay to call, as the trip approached.  It was late-May and stormy, and she pictured the river flooding over, ruining Kay’s house.  In another scenario, she imagined Kay becoming ill, pleading for help. The day before the trip, she saw Kay’s address and “Suspicious Circumstances,” in the newspaper.

“Items were stolen from the victim’s residence,” said a detective, “but there are peculiarities about the perpetrator’s actions that indicate a personal aspect to this crime.”

Someone had been staking out Kay’s house, and Ellen had the unsettling feeling of being the person who spied on Kay and the person being spied upon.  She wondered if the culprit could’ve been a former lover of Kay’s, or a current rival.

“What is it that you want now?” Kay had asked on the phone.

“To help you out.  I saw the crime report in the paper.”

“It wasn’t enough to steal from me, but to violate my personal space?”

“What happened?  What are you saying?”

“It’s so dirty, what happened to me and my house,” Kay had said.

 

“I feel like a different person here,” Ellen wrote on the Mojacar postcard to Kay, praising the food, the hotel, and the views.  “I hope that you’re well, and the worst is behind you. I think of you constantly.”

She wondered if Kay would be envious that she was staying at the hotel Kay had chosen, but knew it’d take at least a week for the card to reach Vermont, and Kay had likely moved on, relegating the love affair to a mistake in a past life.

An older, pudgy man in a green sports coat and a silky yellow shirt was in the dining room. His hair looked lacquered, and his complexion was odd, a mottled beige, like old soap.  Ellen chose a table at the other end of the room.

“This place will be bustling soon,” he said. “We’re lucky to enjoy it now.”

“I imagine that everything around here picks up when the weather improves.”

“Very hot, though.  It gets very hot.  Muy caliente.  And mosquitoes.  Snakes, too. They come out.  Is this your first time here?”

She nodded.

“You picked the right hotel.  The last of its kind.  Name’s Cooke, with an e.  Dan Cooke.”

Ellen introduced herself, and nodded when he asked if she was alone.

“Sola,” he said sadly, and quickly moved to her table.

The waiter took their orders, and gestured toward the wet casement window.  “Si, Señora Peterson, mañana, sol.”

“First time I came to Spain, it was with Liz.  Married nineteen years,” Dan said.    “What a time we had.   She’s gone now.”

Ellen shook her head.  “I’m sorry.”

“She took up with another fellow,” he said.  “What about Mister Peterson?”

“Also out of the picture.   Must be hard for you, coming back here.”

“No, this trip has been better than I expected, but something happened to me in Madrid,” he said, and leaned toward her. “I was robbed!”

“One of my biggest fears.  Did they take your passport?”

“No, but they swiped my wallet.  I lost a sizable sum of money.”

Silly man. You should’ve had traveler’s checks.  “How terrible for you.”

“A catastrophe.  There’s no other word for it.  A catastrophe.   I was getting on the subway in Madrid.  I dropped a package, and felt a tap on my shoulder and hands all over me.  I thought people were trying to help, until I realized I was being robbed.  Those guys were out of there pronto with my pesetas.”

“They must’ve been looking for an opportunity.”

“Yes, exactly.  They seized on an opportunity.  It happened in a blink of an eye.”

She was relieved when the waiter brought their dinners.   Dan Cooke ate quickly.  “Off your feed, Ellen?” he asked, looking at her plate

“I’ve had an unsettled stomach since I’ve been here.”

“Me, I’ve got an international stomach, but to be on the safe side, I always travel with certain medications.  I’d be glad to give you a remedy.”

“No, but thank you.”

“Liz, bless her heart, had gastrointestinal problems, the result of years of pent-up rage.”  He paused. “Sorry.  I’ve been alone for days. Haven’t talked to a soul.”

“You’re the first person I’ve talked with, too.”

“Any kids?”

She shook her head.

“We have that in common.  Well, I should turn in.  They eat so late here, I get mixed up about time.  In the summer, it stays light until ten.  I was here the last time in the summer.  Sorry, I’m getting carried away again.”

“You’re thinking about Liz?”

“No.  Damndest thing.  I was actually grateful when I felt those hands on me in the subway.  I mistook thievery for kindness.  I even said, ‘Gracias.’  Such is my nature.”

She nodded, feeling an agreeable shift toward him, the way stones come to rest in a different place after a hard rain. “Maybe I will try that stomach remedy.”

His room had the same furnishings and lemon-colored walls as her room.  A letter was on the bureau.  He offered her an ordinary Tums. “I travel widely in my profession, and need to be in tip-top shape.”  He handed her a business card that showed two little boys in cowboy outfits.  “Looking for an old pal?” it said.  “Wild horses couldn’t tear you apart, but time has.”

“A finder.  How exciting,” she said, though the card seemed preposterous.

“I was in the insurance business before. When my wife took off, I tracked her down in Kansas, shacking up with a shoe salesman.  She never knew I was around, so there were no scenes.  I felt sorry for the sap she was with.  Liz was always hard to please, so I left Kansas, feeling fine.”

Ellen thought of the scenarios she imagined in Vermont, knowing the worst one would be Kay taking up with someone else, and telling the other woman about Ellen’s many faults. “I never really trusted her,” Kay would say.  “She envied my house and my lifestyle.  She even started to dress like me.  I could tell you things about her that’d scare the hell out of you, but she’s a thing of the past now.”

“It’s adios for me the day after tomorrow,” Dan said.   “What about you?”

“Four more days.  I was supposed to come here with a friend, but—”

“A catastrophe?”

She nodded.

“We find ourselves in the same boat.”

He left abruptly, and entered the bathroom.  She got up to leave, and glanced at the letter on the bureau. “Dear Liz, It has come to my attention,” was all it said.

He came up behind her, reeking of cologne, and pressing a metal object into her hand.  A brassy trinket of a stick-figure man, his extended arms holding a rainbow, the sort of souvenir Kay had in abundance.

“An Indalo.  It’ll protect you from malevolents,” Dan said.  “It’s of no use to me anymore. The worst has already happened.”  He paused.   “I have a rental car.  Care to join me on a little expedition tomorrow?”

“I haven’t seen much. But—”

He thanked her and quickly walked her to the door.

She wished Kay could see her now, making the most of things.  A small step, really, but she hadn’t scurried home in a panic.  She would join Dan Cooke tomorrow.  The sun might come out, and she’d have a chance to see important historical sites.

The sky looked threatening the following morning, and her disappointment that Dan wasn’t in the dining room seemed familiar, as if her reaction to another’s absence was the one true and compelling fact of her life.  When she asked the waiter about him, the waiter grinned.  “Cookay,” he said.  “Ah, señor Cookay.”  He pointed to the doorway, where Dan stood, clutching a greasy paper bag, and wearing the same outfit as last night.  His sandals creaked as he walked to her table.  “I see you’ve got your appetite back.  Good, because I plan to run you ragged.”

The car was tiny and egg-shaped, its sloping front and back end covered with black rubber.  When he opened the door for her, she felt she was in a bumper car at an amusement park.  She watched him writing in a notebook.

“I like to keep records. You wouldn’t believe the price of gas here.”  He quickly pulled onto the road.  “Hasta la vista, baby.  Did you see that Arnold Schwarzenegger movie?  That’s what he said.”

She shook her head.  She was with a buffoon in a clown car, spiraling down a steep hill.  “I imagined all sorts of things happening here, but so far everything’s been a complete surprise.”

“Good thing we can’t see too far ahead, huh?  I don’t like to look under the hood, if you get my drift.  Psychiatrists would go broke if everyone was like me.”

“You’ve been pretty open with me.”

“I have nothing to lose,” he muttered.

She felt absurdly hurt.  She closed her eyes, and pictured going to Kay’s house for the first time, and the luxurious sensation that everything—the river, the polished look of the stars and moon—had collaborated to bring her to this moment.

“We’re in the land of the Moors, the Conquistadors, and all the people who came later,” she told Dan.

“Yes, major battles were fought here,” he replied.

She wondered if Kay and her husband had maybe been on this road decades ago on their honeymoon.

“Got to make a little trip to the boys’ room.”  He pulled off the road, and shambled into the bushes.

She glanced around, then opened the notebook he’d left on the dashboard—a notation about today’s weather, the odometer reading, and cost of last night’s meal.

“Ellen Peterson.  Middle-aged.  Occupation unknown.  Divorced.  A misfortunate soul.”

She shuddered, as if reading an accident report, and she wanted to make corrections, but it would return her to an old role. “Just let it go,” Kay had always urged.    Ellen guessed that the letter she saw in Dan’s room was intended for his ex-wife.  He was writing to her to get something off his chest.

No other cars passed, and she wondered what was keeping him.  Maybe he sprained his ankle, or got lost.  That would be unfortunate, and she could later tell the story of the mishap, and make being stranded in a clown car amusing.

The silly car must’ve prompted it.  A recollection of going to the fair with her lover, Frances.  Frances had run into a former girlfriend, both of them acting flirtatious. Ellen began to walk away, testing Frances.  Such a childish thing she’d done, lingering in a quilt exhibit, hearing women describe the meaning of the intricate designs, the stories behind each quilt.

“I couldn’t find you,” Frances had said in the parking lot. “You had me scared.  Are you happy now?”

“I learned something unexpected,” Ellen answered.

“About me?  About yourself?”

“About myself,” Ellen said.

Frances had driven her home, but stayed in the car, like a parent dropping off a little kid at a house she was afraid to enter.

Dan emerged from the hillside.  “I’ll have to cut our trip short, but I’m going to show you an unforgettable place.”  His hands shook as he opened the paper bag, and began eating a pastry.  “Here it comes,” he said, pointing to a valley.  “Hard to see in this weather, but there are caves down there, formerly occupied by ancient people, and now by vagrants.  Last time I came here, I saw a refrigerator in the middle of the desert, and this is exactly where Liz and I had a spat.”

“About what?”

He shrugged. “There, I did it.  Closure for me, so now a surprise for you.”

Mini Hollywood, it was called, and she tried to mimic his enthusiasm for this unlikely place—a Western movie set, with a saloon, jail, and tiny church.

“The Desierto de Tabernas.  Spaghetti Westerns.  When you see one of those Clint Eastwood movies, it’ll take on something extra because you’ve been there.”

“I will.  I’ll never forget it,” she said, like an earnest girl on a date.

“It’s back to our hotel.  I wonder if other guests have arrived.”

She felt a plummeting sensation.  The distraction of today’s trip would soon end, and then what?   “The hotel surprised me.  I expected a ritzier place.”

“Lucky for us it hasn’t gone modernistic, like the other places on the coast.”

“A friend recommended it,” she said, recalling every step that had set things in motion, starting with Kay rapturously describing the Costa del Sol, like an enticing invitation to renounce one vestige of her past life, replacing it with another.  “We’ll do it with style,” Kay had said.   “I’ll pay for everything.”

And then a sight Ellen had seen countless times—Kay undressing for bed, and slathering herself with cold crème—filled her with pity and shame, as if she were an onlooker, caught in the act of watching an aging woman doing a hopeless thing.

“I love you dearly, and it scares me to know that if I lost you, there’d be an awful hole in my life,” Kay had told her.

Ellen knew she’d never forget how afraid and embarrassed she’d felt for Kay, and that she’d been honest by saying, “I’ll never leave you.  Trust me.”

The next day she announced her retirement to the principal, expecting him and her colleagues to try to talk her out of it.

“I just retired from teaching,” she told Dan.

“Good for you!  And here you are in Spain, braving it alone on the heels of a catastrophe.”

“No, that happened to my traveling companion.  A sudden breakup of a relationship.  I begged her to go ahead with the trip, but she backed out.  I should’ve stayed in Vermont with her.”

“I could help you out.”

“Help me out?”

“With your present situation.  I’ll keep everything strictly confidential.  Mr. Peterson.  Where’s he at now?”

She hesitated a moment. She would become a proven liar, a spectacle, by telling him that she was a lesbian. “Probably having the time of his life.”

“I could find him.  I’ve been known to track down dead-beat husbands.”   He stopped the car, and took the notebook from the dashboard.

“He’s past history,” she said.

“Ooh,” he said, rolling his eyes.  “Something just happened.  I feel awful.  You’ll have to man the helm, dear.”

His complexion was yellow, his forehead sheened with sweat.   She had to help him out of the car, and position him in the passenger seat.  When she got behind the wheel, he slumped over.  She thought of everything he told her today and last night, stunned to realize that he might be gravely ill, and had come to Spain as his swan song.  Hadn’t he given her that religious trinket, insisting that the worst had already happened?

“Dan?” she whispered, and patted his arm. “Dan?”

He startled her by sitting up and eyeing her suspiciously as he checked his pockets.   “Whew.  I had a little spell.  Did I tell you I was robbed?  Thieves made off with my fanny pack, and my necessary medications.  I’m experiencing withdrawal!” he announced proudly, is if it were something to aspire to.

She nodded, and wondered if he had heart trouble or diabetes.

“Siesta’s over.  I’m back in business.” He got out of the car, politely ushered her out of the driving seat, and then got behind the wheel.

“Are you sure you’re all right?”

He patted her leg.  “Not to worry.  It passed.”

Withdrawal seemed to agree with him.  He drove along, as if nothing had happened.   “Why did you come back to Spain?” she asked him.

“I’m not on a case, if that’s what you’re thinking.  I wanted to close the books on unfinished business, and I got something extra now.”

“Good for you,” she said, convinced that he had a mood disorder and selective memory.

“We were talking about your ex.  Anything you want to tell me?”

“A serial convert, my ex.  Addicted to fads and passing fancies.  Easily duped.” She laughed, but felt low, betraying Kay.

“I could find him,” Dan said.  “It’s the least I could do for you.”

“I’m doing fine,” she said, resenting his condescension, but he looked hurt.  “If I change my mind, though, I’ll definitely get in touch with you.”

She saw the Mediterranean in the distance, and thought of the time she’d taken students on the Lake Champlain Ferry, pointing out Valcour Island, and explaining how the British fired at the island all night, wasting precious ammunition, believing it was an enemy vessel, while the Americans looked on.  “Imagine that,” she’d told students.  “Watching your enemy being fooled, and not having to lift a finger.”

Last night’s vivid sunset came back to her and the envy she wanted Kay to feel that she was living out Kay’s dream by returning to the place of her honeymoon.

“Look, we made it!” Dan said.

They’d reached Mojacar, the village looking like the pictures in her guidebook.  A shutter opened at one of the houses, and at the fountain, a yellow cat lapped at the water.

Dan drove down the hill to the hotel, leaned over, and opened her door.  She felt a small desolation when he shouted, “Hasta la vista, baby.”

She saw the waiter watching her through the lobby window, giving her a wink.

The waiter was gone when she went inside, and still no other guests in sight.  No wonder Kay had forebodings about the trip.  If they’d traveled to Spain together, Ellen would’ve belittled the hotel and the backward village.  Would Kay even care to know that the landscape now contained Mini-Hollywood?

She must’ve expected that her room would’ve been plundered, given the trepidation she felt outside her door, but the room was as she’d left it.  She’d only unpacked toiletries and the expensive lingerie she’d bought when Kay first proposed the trip.  She rifled through her suitcase for the silk scarf Kay had given her when Ellen admitted that she’d tried to find one just like it.  “Take it,” Kay had said.

She’d wear it tonight in the dining room.  No need to look like a lonely old woman.  She put on the lingerie and the scarf, and lay down, smelling traces of Kay’s lavender scent.

Her heart raced when she heard a tap on her door, but it was probably Dan, inviting her to join him for a fling on his last night in Spain.  She’d insist on paying for everything.

“Señora?” whispered the waiter at her door.  “Señora Peterson?”

He blushed and seemed shocked when she opened the door, as if he’d blundered into the wrong room   He glanced at the unmade bed and her clothes scattered about.  “Señor Cookay,” he said, handing her a note.

“It has come to my attention that I have misplaced my notebook.  Can you enlighten me?” said the note.

Why didn’t Dan ask her in person?   Was he afraid of her?

“No, señór.  No,” she said, and gave the waiter some pesetas.  He grinned and scuttled off.

Dan Cooke was unreliable. He probably left the notebook in the car, or lost it, after his little spell, but she worried he’d tell people later that she’d swiped the notebook and the Indalo trinket.

She emptied her purse on the bed.   No notebook, only her traveler’s checks, the Indalo trinket, Dan’s business card, and the postcard she’d written yesterday.

“I feel like a different person here,” she read, followed by an exaggerated infatuation with the hotel and the views.  “I hope that you’re well, and the worst is behind you.  I think of you constantly.”

She tried to picture Kay feeling utterly bereft, understanding absence, and what she’d really lost last week.  Then she tore up the card, and began a letter.

“Are you happy now?” she wrote, the question she should’ve asked when she told Kay that she’d announced her retirement. “You came as close to love as you’ll ever get, and it scared you.   You—”

She felt she was reading a journal entry about herself.  She couldn’t imagine what would come next, how she’d even face going to the dining room, so she tried to summon the hopeful feeling she’d had when Dan proposed today’s expedition.  Then she pictured the night she’d gone to Kay’s the first time, the delectable sensation of watching Kay  through a tall window, seeing her checking herself in the mirror before coming to the door.

The sound of boats returning now made her feel disoriented for a moment.  She glanced at her little hotel room, the lemony walls and gusting curtains, then went to the window, seeing nodding boats, their sails lowered, and people collecting fish.  Dan was right about how hard it was to keep track of time here.  The day hadn’t begun to fold itself away despite the late hour.

How silly it seemed now to worry about going to the dining room, being seen by anyone, as if her biggest fear was the judgment of inconsequential people.

She tried on various outfits, deciding on the one she’d worn today, but with the silk scarf, and then she returned the items to her purse.  She felt surprisingly lighter.     Everyone already believed that she was untrustworthy and reckless, a woman historied with misfortune and envy, and infatuated with guilt. Only fools would risk getting close to her, since she’d likely steal anything intimate she could get her hands on.

“Take me,” Kay had said when they first made love, as if she had nothing to lose. “Take me.”

Susan Elizabeth Howe

Susan Elizabeth Howe’s second poetry collection, Salt, was published by Signature Books in 2013.  Her first collection, Stone Spirits, won the publication award of the Redd Center for Western Studies.  Her poems have appeared in Poetry, The New Yorker, Shenandoah, Southwest Review, and other journals.  She is a reviewer and contributing editor of Tar River Poetry.  A faculty member of the Brigham Young University English Department, she lives with her husband Cless Young in Ephraim, Utah.