The Book of Evening and Delight ~ Randy Nelson

 

Helena finds the little book in one of the archive boxes from the Deagan estate.  She lays it aside because she’s looking for treasure—a Dickens serialization or maybe a Poe first edition.  She needs something rare, something odd or spectacular, that can go into the front window of the shop.  After sorting and cataloguing for two days, she and Alyce have only managed to turn the library table between them into something resembling a vegetable stand.  The entire back room smells of mildew and old money.  For the most part they’ve worked in silence, both of them in white cotton gloves and looking absurdly like mimes.  Helena doesn’t think of the little black book again until after closing time.  She’s straightening up when it comes into her hands once more.

Alyce and the two clerks have already left for the day.  The front door has been locked.  The register tallied and cleared.  It’s past time for Helena herself to leave; but in making space for the next day’s sorting she has picked up the little volume that she’d laid aside earlier, and an odd feeling grows in her as she examines the hard-grained morocco.  The actual touch of the book has a familiarity that reminds her of fairy tales.  There is no embossed title on the cover.  No raised bands, no gilded edges, no marbled endpapers.  On the outside it looks like an address book or a gentleman’s day book from one of the decades just after the Civil War.  At one time it had been nicely bound, but now it falls open to a well-thumbed page where a single gathering has come undone.  The loose threads look like faded strands of a woman’s hair.  Charlese, the passage says, came from a good home.

It is commonly observed, and certainly true, that many of the young women who go under this denomination are the product of reputable homes and delicate breeding.  In the immediate instance one may look to Miss Charlese H___, who will be found most evenings within earshot of Gray’s Tavern.  She is educated, clean, fashionable in dress, and bears herself in the manner of a lady.  According to the gossips of Lombard Street, it was a wealthy and designing villain who ruined her.  Then, pursued by shame and necessity, forsaken by family, she took to her present occupation.  Miss H___ is tall and well figured.  Auburn haired, with sound teeth and a dimpled smile which may be turned to the most pleasant of ministrations.  She is companionable in public, indeed mannered enough to mingle among proper society.  Her discretion may be relied upon except when inspired by hard spirits.  Unparalleled in her arts, never vulgar, and pleasant in all of her dealings is this most excellent of after-dinner companions.  She is adorned with clear blue eyes and the bloom of innocence which is still about her countenance.  May be had for the evening at a most reasonable sum.

Helena lowers the book and tries to think of what she should feel.  Surprise is her primary emotion, and what surprises her most is that her modern, enlightened thoughts seem vaguely out of reach.  She feels a necessary sympathy for Miss Charlese H___ but at the same time an inexplicable attraction to the writer.  Who in the past hundred years has used the word villain and expected to be taken seriously?

Thumbing further into the book, Helena finds more fallen girls, perhaps as many as a hundred, in no particular order that she can discern.  It’s a menu of sorts, as matter-of-fact in its descriptions as a bill of sale for slaves.  Interspersed, in fine italics, are spicy anecdotes and bawdy jokes whose humor expired well before the century.  There are even steel print engravings of some of the girls, surprisingly modern looking ones, who peer out from the page with an honesty and directness that Helena admires.

Helena takes the book home and shows it to Richard as a kind of test, . . . of whom she isn’t certain.  He reads the Charlese entry and then moves on to Nora, Sybrina, and the two Annabels before dinner is ready.  He finds excerpts that demand to be read aloud.  “Did you know,” he calls from the living room, “that London once had a street named Gropecuntelane, for the lowest kind of prostitutes?  And that York, Oxford, and Paris had similarly named streets?”

“I did not know that,” she says bending over and reaching into the oven.

“And that Annabel S___ was the proprietress of a house at Number 11 Mission Street?  Wherever the hell that is.”

“In the Village.”

“Really?  You’ve checked it out?”

“No, Richard.  I sell books.  I have forty minutes for lunch.  I just heard of it somewhere, that’s all.”

“You sound a little pissed.”

“I’m not pissed.  And I’d rather you wouldn’t use that word.”

“If . . .” Richard flicks to the front of the book.  “. . . Thomas Brand said you were pissed, would that be all right?”

Helena stops.  Turns off the water where she has been washing carrots but does not move away from the sink.  “Did you say Brand or Brandt?”

“’Thomas Brand, a gentleman of this city.”

“Read another one.  Out loud.”

“Okay, here’s one.  –As pleasant and plump as a Christmas goose is our Miss Lucy R___, a teacher of schoolchildren by day and a courtesan of the first order by night.  No evening may be more profitably spent.  A handsome, full-breasted girl, somewhat demure in public but as direct as a dredger within the establishment of Mrs. S___.  Once free of social restrictions and shed of her diurnal concerns, our Lucy will straddle a gentleman without so much as lifting her skirts.  Indeed, she exhibits a personal pleasure in being viewed by the assembled company, both ladies and gentlemen together, whilst engaged in her vigorous pursuits.  By appointment only, and never to be approached without proper introduction.  Miss R__  values discretion above all else.”

But Helena is no longer listening.  For a reason that she cannot explain, she’s annoyed by Richard’s detachment.  And she isn’t at all certain where her next words come from because they have never been part of her conscious thoughts.  Still, they do come forth, these words, and they surprise her.  There she is, hovering at the sink but looking into the little antique mirror on the near wall.  She sees a woman’s face, with just the tiniest bit of distortion because of the ancient glass and the crackling silver.  It’s the same tired face that she has to prod into pleasantness every morning; and Helena is hearing herself say, “I hate my fucking job.  I hate being a rag-picker in Alyce’s store.”

In the following week Thomas Brandt drops by the shop exactly twice.  On Monday at ten o’clock he is there to look over a Lippincott’s that Alyce found in the Deagan estate, one with a story by Conan Doyle.  On the second occasion Mr. Brandt comes in to buy.  It’s a Thursday, and it’s late in the afternoon.  He is in his forties, still handsome and exhibiting what Helena considers to be a European sense of style.  His face is strong and tanned.  Unlined by any deep sadness or the slightest concern for money.  His hair has begun to show a few silvery threads, but in every other aspect he appears to be, effortlessly, ten years younger than his age.  He wears a light sport coat and jeans in spite of the August heat and gives the front girl a casual hello that tells her he is already familiar with Bittle’s Books and all of its holdings.  Instead of asking for Alyce or Helena, however, he ambles up to the little mezzanine where the other customer is loitering in the Americana section.  She is a young woman in her twenties, a browser, who examines books and replaces them with mechanical regularity.

At fifteen minutes till five Helena tells the other clerk she can leave and then sets about making herself look busy behind the register.  Mr. Brandt and the young woman keep themselves in different aisles as if fearful of violating some private act of the other.  It’s a sort of minuet they are performing until they actually meet at the end of one row and Thomas Brandt offers a very awkward “excuse me” as he steps out of her way.  She smiles and says something that Helena cannot hear.  Once or twice their eyes meet after that, but then at five minutes till five the anonymous woman is down the stairs and gone, lost in the bustle of commuters on the street.

Brandt meanders through the remainder of the nineteenth century without selecting anything and finally comes downstairs to the register.  “I think I’ll take the Lippincott’s after all,” he says.  “Alyce and I agreed that a check would be okay.”

“Of course.”  Helena smiles.  “Would you like it boxed?”  She knows that one of Mr. Brandt’s eccentricities is his distrust of credit cards.  While he’s scribbling in his checkbook and tearing the draft loose, she smiles.

“You know, it occurred to me, Helena, that there might be another item or two that came along with this one.  Something I might be interested in.”

“I’m sorry?”

“Agh, nothing really.  Just a whim.  I’m keeping you late, and I can come back next week when Alyce. . . .”

“No, no, you’re not keeping me at all.  Please.  What is it that you’re looking for?”

“Well, Alyce did mention that the Lippincott came from old Deagan’s estate.  And I was just wondering, you know.  If there was anything else.  Maybe something a little out of the ordinary that I might be interested in?”

Helena knows instantly.

“The old boy was a hell of a collector,” says Thomas Brandt.  “Sometimes we’d bid against each other for the same item, and I got to know him slightly before he died.  Had a good eye for limited editions.  So I was just hoping that you or Alyce might have run across something a bit off the beaten track.”

Of course he is asking about the little book.  She can sense it in his hesitation, in the pretense of his remark.  He doesn’t have to name it.  Underneath his casual tone is an intensity that he cannot hide.  When she does not answer immediately, Brandt takes another step back toward her and puts a questioning look upon his face, one which is more intense than his voice.

Helena feels the intimacy between them.  Even though they are alone, it almost reddens her face.  But why?  She sells erotica to any number of collectors and, besides, the little book hardly qualifies.  Rather, it’s the secret sharing of this moment that moves her to lie, the sudden knowledge that she can tease him back again, and then again until, who knows. . . .  Maybe someday soon she could present him with a gift.  Helena believes she’s being naughty and playful, as powerfully remote and as particular as the girls who’ve been finely engraved in the deckled pages.  “No,” she tells him, “I’m afraid I haven’t seen anything like that.  But we have a few more boxes to sort through.  I could give you a call if I found anything.”

“Yes.  Yes, please do.”

He departs reluctantly, just as she had hoped he would, turning left on the sidewalk in front of the shop and then stopping to draw a cell phone from his jacket pocket.  He dials with his thumb and nods as he talks.  Helena watches from inside the store.  She can see that the sky is darkening as it’s been doing all afternoon.  The clouds are gathering themselves into a late summer thunderstorm.  The wind is already picking up paper and grit from the street.  She can almost smell the approach of rain.  One old man is already struggling with an umbrella.

And so Helena would have missed seeing her if Thomas Brandt hadn’t stepped into the street and crossed in front of an impatient cabbie who, just now, is lifting himself half out of his window as he shouts away a whole flock of pedestrians.  But there she is on the far side of the street.  Not twenty yards from the fountain and the little grassy park.  She’s standing right there next to the gate.  The girl from the mezzanine.  She’s waiting for Brandt to cross against the traffic.  Then she’s reaching out her hand when he comes near.  And letting herself be folded into a loose embrace.  Kissing him right next to his lips as if they have known each other for years.  The woman is wearing an ombré sundress in indigo and white.  White patent leather sandals, matching white pocketbook.  But her hair is black and thick enough to fall in heavy waves.  Someone has made her up for a photograph Helena thinks.  Someone is playing at Cinderella for someone else.

And in one unthinking instant she follows them.

Helena doesn’t clear the register or tidy up.  She doesn’t lock the work room or log the mail orders before she leaves.  In fact she has barely time enough to set the alarm after grabbing her bag and clicking off the lights.  But they’re already gone, the two pretenders, when she’s finished coaxing closed the two ancient locks on the front door.  All Helena can do is stumble along with the crowd until it has carried her a block south and into a saner state of mind.  Go back, her better judgment says.  Thank God she still has the keys and enough gumption to remember the security code.  She can let her imagination run rampant another time.

She’s about to turn around when she catches it, a flash of indigo on the subway steps leading down.  And this time she cannot help herself.  Helena hurries to the corner and then across another street to the green kiosk and the cast iron maw.  She’s clacking down the steps thinking to herself, “I am mad.  I am absolutely mad.  And they’ll see me.  And what will happen then?”  But they don’t.  They don’t see her at all because they are at the other end of the little island when the train arrives, and they are so caught up in the world of each other that they wouldn’t see a madwoman lurching toward them.  Helena hardly makes it through the doors two cars up before the train is moving again.  And then she’s being jostled through the next compartment down, inching her way toward them, thinking, “I must have lost my mind.”

It’s three stops, maybe four, when they get off.  They are in one of those dark deep tunnels with escalators.  Bare rock where the tiles have fallen away.  No one seems in a hurry because the storm may have finally unleashed the rain up above.  So it’s Brandt and his woman who are first to take to the mechanical stairs.

They emerge into the lesser canyons.  Brick buildings, ivied walls, and trees.  Black lampposts and canvas canopies stretching to the sidewalk.  A church, a store for art supplies.  The quiet hubbub of early evening.  A discreet café called the Periodic Table.  They are somewhere in the West Village, and the sign tells Helena it’s Mission Street.

She has gone half a block before she remembers the name.  When it comes into her mind at last, it knocks all the curiosity out of her in a single blow.  She stops suddenly enough to dislodge a jogger right behind her.  He has to break stride, violating his own heart’s rhythm and offering up a glare.  And then the first raindrops begin to fall.  There are only one or two splats at first, but the limbs of the trees are already swaying and the leaves are making a sound like a rushing stream.

It’s never clear to her in later years whether she was lured.  No one, least of all Thomas Brandt, ever tells her if they’d seen her all along.  They are just there, and it’s not even a surprise when he says her name.  Maybe he has taken her hand again—she cannot remember in retrospect—but his voice is as steady and civil as it has always been.  “Helena.”

Is it a welcome or a simple recognition?  She is saying something in return, but the words themselves are lost to her.

“Well,” Brandt is saying next, “Helena, may I present Ms. Lucille R__.   Lucy, this is my friend Helena. . . .”

“Young,” Helena says automatically.  “It’s Helena Young.”

“Yes of course.  Helena Y__ it is.  I think we’d better get inside before it starts to pour, don’t you?”

The woman does not look as plump as a Christmas goose.  She is tall and elegant in her features, as beautiful as Vermeer’s blue-turbaned girl.  She is saying something soothing and polite to Helena, though Helena is still intent upon the house in front of her, Number 11 Mission Street.  It rises to a mansard roof in a copper that has long been tinted green.  It has cove cut cornices and lintels in gray limestone.  All the rest is red brick tiers, ivy trimmed and no doorman, no pretentious presence to interrupt the tranquility of the street.

Finally Helena realizes that one of them, either Thomas Brandt or Lucy R__, is saying something else about the rain, about the wind that’s kicking up.  There’s a tone of mild concern.  But all Helena can think is horror.  All she do is blurt the obvious truth.  “It’s real, isn’t it?  The book I mean.  It’s not from the past at all.”

“No, of course not.  Though it’s all fairly innocent fun.  Let’s go in before we’re soaked.  We’ll have a drink, and I’ll explain.”

She wants to die before it becomes any more demeaning.  She wants the heavens to open up and drown them all, but there’s no saving the situation.  The rain begins to find a rhythm.  A gust of serious intent throws splatters in her face, after which she shakes her head and says the one emphatic word.  She says it again just as she’s swirling away from them.  No!  And then, before reaching the end of the street, she begins to run.

*

But given time.  Given monotony and fatigue, the daily tedium and the soul-killing routine of Bittle’s Books. Given the gray interior of her life, Helena comes to a realization.  She is furniture, slightly out of style fixtures in other people’s lives or, worse, an obstacle that others have to walk around.  That is her discovery.

In September Helena takes to standing at the front window of the bookshop for longer and longer intervals, peering out between the letters.  She watches the people who go by hardly glancing left or right; but after a time she comes to believe she can identify certain ones, the people who have hidden lives.  There’s the middle-aged woman wearing a silver talon cuff by Pamela Love.  There’s the businessman who has too much energy, too much rapt intent to be headed for an ordinary meeting.

For another interlude of weeks she does no more than walk among them.  It’s autumn after all; and Helena can still take her lunches out of doors, not bothering to eat on many days, but rather intermingling, joining the transgressors in her way.  Occasionally she will brush shoulders with one of them, and it’s like an electrical connection.  She can spot them almost instantly.  They go to their second lives the way people used to go to books.  They’re compelled.

One day she is in her place at the front of the shop, staring into space and thinking of nonexistence, when suddenly she notices that her arms and legs are moving.  She’s pulling on her coat and thinking that she’s due back at Bittle’s by one o’clock and yet not caring.  Outside, the wind is picking up again.  And now Helena’s buttoning her coat and covering up her head.  She’s taking every precaution against the weather and walking, walking, walking until she finds herself once more on Mission Street.

And of course he’s already there.

“I can’t come in,” she says to him.

“You’ll freeze,” he tells her.  “There’s a fire in the study.  Carlton has made some tea.”

Then there’s a maid who’s taking away her sensible coat.  And Thomas Brandt is steering her through the vestibule, past the parlor, past the crackled portraits and the silver urns with flowers.  All at once Helena’s breathing air that seems to revive her, and she cannot help but turn a smile on two women who happen to be passing, arm in arm, through the hall.  They smile at her in return.  This is a house that speaks immediately to Helena.  Its carved mantel in the study.  Its rosewood desks and chairs.  Thomas asks if she will sit with him on one of the matching sofas and take a cup of Lady Grey.  While the curio cabinet shimmers and the room-defining rug holds forth in arabesques.

“One of our members calls it his retreat,” he says to her.  “A sort of oasis in the desert of the dull.  And I’m glad you’re here.  But I want to tell you, Helena, that this isn’t at all what you think it is.  It’s what I was trying to explain when you met Lucy and me on the street.”

“I don’t care.  I’m not a child,” she says.  “I’m sick of . . . whatever it is that’s out there.  It certainly isn’t life.

“Believe me, I understand.  We all do.  But this isn’t a bordello.”  He laughs an easy laugh.  “There are no child prostitutes, no corpses buried in the cellar I’m afraid.  Nothing quite that sensational.  Just our members and a small staff dedicated, I think, to what brought you here in the first place.”

“And that would be?”

“Something more,” Brandt suggests.  “We have little weekly entertainments.  I guess you could say that the entire interior of No. 11 is a theatre of sorts.  Most of our staff are actors who help us keep the illusions alive for a while . . . much like the staff of any midtown corporation.”

“So–,” she says, “the little book from Mr. Deagan’s estate?  What did that have to do with any of this?”

Thomas Brandt claps his hands and smiles.  “Well, you’ve caught me I guess!  The book’s an invention, of sorts.  One of mine actually.  Distributed to members here at the club—Deagan was one of us of course—and we just thought copies shouldn’t be floating around out there in the day-to-day world.  That’s why I offered to buy it.”

“And Miss Lucy R__ . . . ?”

“. . . has a lovely singing voice.  She does, in fact, like to been seen.  And heard.”

“You’re saying that she’s real?”

“As real as a desperately bored, Long Island schoolteacher can be.  I hope that doesn’t startle you.”  Then Thomas takes a calling card from his wallet and passes it into her accepting hand.

“I don’t understand.”

“I’m inviting you to come back some evening, for one of the musical numbers or, I don’t know, some celebrity chef at work.  Give this to Carlton.  And just mix with any of the guests.  I promise you’ll be rejuvenated.  Rewarded.  All the ‘Re’ words. That’s a guarantee.”

“And if I don’t believe you?”

“Then stay away, Helena.  Everyone’s here by choice.”

*

Certain routines begin to change after her visit to Mission Street.  Customer traffic picks up inside the store, and Helena begins to associate the fresh faces with an unexpected profitability in books.  The new customers nearly always come in alone, and nearly always ask for Helena by name.  Some of the faces she recognizes from her earlier walks in the neighborhood, and some seem to have come from very far away.  But no matter, they buy Alyce’s books.  Those who seem most powerfully alone will sometimes stay for a cup of coffee and a chat.  They leave energized and promise to return.

Little acting jobs start to come Helena’s way.  She tells Richard and Alyce that she’s thinking about trying out for a part in an Off-Off-Broadway production, a radical play by a talented writer from Japan.  She may need a few days off, she informs them, or maybe a few afternoons a week.

What further can she tell Richard and Alyce, the two dreary constants in her life?  They distrust any kind of change.  A disruption of the subway schedule can set Richard on edge for days.  A variation in the weather might throw Alyce into a week-long funk.  So Helena is careful to keep them comfortable, to uphold the established routines of home and work.  Richard’s favorite foods.  His devotion to the evening news.  Alyce’s need for a near silence within the shop.

In the following weeks Helena sometimes returns home late but in the mood for more roleplaying, a little light erotica when the lights go out.  The Victorians, she explains.  “At the shop we got in some issues of The Pearl last week.  And an illustrated edition of The Priapeia.”  But Richard isn’t listening then.

No one in the outer world seems to acknowledge Mission Street, at least in any way that matters.  It’s just a street.  But the house in Helena’s little book is a harbor and a refuge against a certain kind of world.  There’s a Gatsby night, when the butlers and maids go about in white-gloved hands.  There are live paintings on another occasion, reproductions of scenes from Pompeii by costumed models.  Then in the following week there’s a naughty power outage.  The entire evening spent “accidentally” in the dark.  These are nights that revive her soul.  Helena hears people using words from other centuries: brocade, alabaster, scalawag.  There are layers and levels within the house.  There are chambers that allow one to look into other chambers.

Someone, soon enough, asks her up to the yellow room.  They need an actress to play the part of Aphrodite, if she could just disrobe and take her place on the marble pedestal?  Of course.  And what, on another evening, about the young harlot’s part in the court of Louis Quatorze?  Would that be going a bit too far?  Would she be comfortable going a step or two beyond, you know, the ordinary thing?

Helena never objects.  During all of her first year at the establishment of Mrs. S___, she never feels exploited or degraded; in fact, she feels as if she’s exploiting them, the members, while money, acceptance, and liveliness are coming her way.  Even as the newness of her experience begins to fade away, even after some of the old girls have moved on and some different ones have been recruited, the house remains a second home for her.  Finally Thomas, her sponsoring member, suggests she might be ready for a more challenging role.  And, yes, she says.  Anything more challenging than “clerk” in a bookstore on lower Seventh Avenue.

It’s a demanding part, Thomas Brandt tells her, a private performance actually, that might lead to still more demanding parts for people of certain tastes.  Would she care to give it a go?  And she does, and does, until this special newness begins to fade as well.  Then one evening Helena’s on her hands and knees in the yellow room, playing the part of a beast, with no more feeling than a cow.  Thomas, or someone, is behind her, hands tightly about her waist; but it doesn’t alter her determination in the slightest.

Richard meanwhile works for an abstraction on Fifty-Seventh Street.  He’s an actuary for some kind of actuarial firm.  It’s always bothered her that he has no imagination.  Her depressive states at home arise like storms at sea; and Richard’s thinking maybe they ought to tell someone.  Maybe they ought to consider a counselor or a health professional.

But Helena herself cannot say what is missing.  She’s made her choice.  She doesn’t believe in fallen women.  Once on a Sunday afternoon, having exhausted himself with her in the great wrought iron bed, Richard, or maybe Thomas Brandt, falls asleep still partially clothed, without imagining the woman’s greater need.  Helena, thinking of earning her initial, straddles him, still nude from earlier efforts.  Her breasts and the pendant between them nearly touching the man’s face, her left arm caressing, no, framing one side of his head.  He finally awakes. She’s smiling a statue’s smile from some far antiquity; and in her right hand she’s holding a letter opener, as thin and sharp as a needle, barely half an inch from his opening eye.  Her whole arm trembling, and the swirling struggle behind her calm façade.  Whether to let it plunge.

The moment passes safely for both of them. Helena laughs a little laugh that says I’m only joking.  It’s all an act.  No one’s ever hurt, not really.  Although Helena is never sure if the man waking beneath her says anything at all.  She goes on, doesn’t she, with her afternoon and evening until the hours become waking dreams.  She isn’t bored precisely.  Her new life is suited to her tastes.  But she’s restless again.  On some days she goes wandering north at noon from the house on Mission Street.  She wants to be among the crowds.  But from time to time she will pass the fog and condensation shrouding the front window of Bittle’s Books and find herself thinking of tragic heroines.  Emma Bovary.  Juliet.  Antigone.  How their names arrange themselves in rhythmic syllables on the covers of hand-bound books.  Anna Karenina.  Lolita.  Medea.  And realizing that she will never be one of these.

Randy Nelson


Randy Nelson is a multiple-award-winning writer and teacher whose stories have appeared in many national and international publications.  He’s currently the Virginia Lasater Irvin Professor of English at Davidson College, where he offers courses in creative writing and nineteenth & twentieth century American fiction. 

Two Seeds ~ Elizabeth Rees

 

A bed, like a field, is open to weather:
too much rain will bruise the fruit.
To plant thanks, to sing to plenty,
I will trickle seeds over your head.

Too much rain will bruise the fruit.
White lilies lean below the water
while I trickle seeds over your head,
I watch night close your green eyes.

White lilies lean below the water
seeping through the widening lip.
I praise the food of sleep, I study
what makes the body root.

Seeping through the widening lip,
water spoons down the shore’s back.
To learn what makes the body root,
we will sit, wait the whole night.

Too much rain will bruise the fruit.
Water spoons up the shore’s back.
We sit the whole night, two sparks —
like a field, a bed yields to weather.

Elizabeth Rees


Three of Elizabeth Rees’s four chapbooks have won national contests, most recently: Tilting Gravity, (Codhill Hill Press, 2010) and Now That We’re Here; (Spire Press, 2008). Her poems have appeared in Partisan Review, Kenyon Review, and The North American Review among many other journals. New work is forthcoming in Agne, Atlanta Review, and Natural Bridge.  She currently works as a poet-in-residence for the Maryland State Arts Council, and teaches creative writing and poetry to adults at The Writer’s Center, an independent center for writing instruction in Bethesda, MD.

6.9 Off Humboldt Bay ~ Jeff Ewing

 

Far from shore the ocean floor ripples,
shrugs and steals our footing, skews
the horizon from its beam. A single wave

larger and darker touches the beach
where elk turn to look out, ears cocked,
hooves raised and trembling. Inland

dust rises like a rug shaken out, hazes
the sky strung loosely from mountain
to mountain, settling after some thought

onto the leaves of the olive trees above
Corning. Later the trees will carry the dust
into the dark, infusing the sparse stars

with a taste of the earth. There’s a joke
that goes: What is the difference between
ignorance and arrogance? I don’t know

and I don’t care. But if by chance you do
this rickety invention can seem—
in early morning and near dinner time

with shaken light breaking or falling
across uncowed hills—a hard place
to leave, should you be asked, in peace.

 

Vincent Reusch

Vincent Reusch’s work has been published in Gettysburg Review, Madison Review, Alaska Quarterly Review and elsewhere.  He was the winner of Roanoke Review’s 2006 fiction prize and has been a runner-up and finalist in several other national contests.  He recently finished his first novel and is seeking an agent.  He teaches creative writing at Concordia College.

 

Crepe Hanger ~ Vincent Reusch

 

I dreamt last night that I was dying.  When I awoke, my wife, Heather, was standing by our bed, wrapped in a bath towel, going through her purse.  “I dreamt I was dying,” I told her.

“Baby,” she said.  “That’s terrible.”

“I was here at our house,” I said.  I lay on my back, looking at the time that our alarm clock projected onto the ceiling of the room.  Six fifteen.  The sun was not yet up, but the sky behind the tree that filled our window was deep purple, and I could see that dawn was close.  “There was a stainless steel sink the size of a casket in the laundry room,” I told her.  “I had just been diagnosed with some fatal disease, and I decided I’d rather die than suffer.  I was to fill the sink with water and to lie down in it.”

“Was I there?” Heather asked, as she pulled from her purse those things that she wouldn’t need for the day, put in those things that she would—pens, her phone, debit card, faculty I.D.

“No, you weren’t,”I told her.  “My mother was the only solid person there.  I could see a few vague shapes inside the house, but I couldn’t make them out.  Mom was running things, and I told her that I would fill the sink with cold water, so that if she didn’t get right to me, I shouldn’t smell too quickly.”

“That’s terrible,” Heather said again.  She poked an earring through her left earlobe, another through her right.  Two small circles of obsidian, rimmed with silver.  I had bought her the earrings before we were married, after learning of her love of dots.  She did not turn to the mirror above her dresser to look at the earrings, as I who don’t wear earrings think I might.

“It’s not as if my mother didn’t love me,” I said.  “She was just being herself, the life-long nurse.  You know how she is.”

“I know,” Heather said, and it was true.  She did know.

Heather had been there the night my mother brought to an end my grandmother’s suffering in the bedroom below ours, the room my grandmother had grudgingly made her own five years earlier.  She had moved in with us after breaking a hip when she slipped on ice while carrying groceries into her apartment.  My mother had stayed with us, too, through most of my grandmother’s recovery.  When my grandmother could walk again she agreed to stay, as long as my mother agreed to leave.  “I don’t need her hovering like a vulture,” Grandma had said.

Heather had also been there several weeks before my grandmother’s death, had been there the morning we’d found my grandmother in her chair, greeting us with her musical, So?, the single word that obliged Heather or me to pause as we passed through the living room, Heather on her way to the washing machine, or I to the bird seed, rushing to fill the feeders that my grandmother so valued and that I so often neglected.  But this morning there was no conversation beyond the opening question, no gossip about her daughters, that Nancy or that Robbie, and when my talk of the early thaw brought only another, So?, Heather and I became suspicious.  When Heather asked her what she’d eaten for breakfast, my grandmother shrugged, waved her hand as if it were of no concern.  When Heather asked if she were warm enough, my grandmother shrugged again, tilted her head, wrinkled her nose.  Then, as if considering better, she nodded.  When Heather asked her who had called earlier, when the phone had rung, my grandmother looked away.  And when I asked if she were having trouble answering questions, my grandmother stared hard at me before nodding the smallest, quickest nod she could.  There was no way around the admission.  She was unable to give pretense as when she needed me to weed the garden and could say, “Tomorrow, I’m going to get out there with my sheers,” or when she couldn’t find her favorite pie tin and she could say, “I’m going to go through that basement today with a fine toothed comb,” both of us knowing that she hadn’t been able to take the basement stairs for more than a year, and that she’d given up in the garden after she fell there two summers earlier, helped up and into the house by a neighbor to whom she’d called out as she sat in the soil.

“I ran the water in the sink, but it was so cold,” I told Heather, still speaking of my dream.  “And I was only wearing underwear, little white ones like I wore when I was a kid.”

Heather was in the bathroom then.  “I’m listening,” she shouted.

“The weather was like it is now,” I said, “fall and spitting rain.  I stopped the water and walked outside the laundry room.  My feet were bare, and I stepped around puddles in the drive.”

Something small and metal, tweezers perhaps, fell into the bathroom sink, a light trinkle as it swirled around the porcelain basin.

“I found a dry spot under the maple in the front yard,” I shouted toward the bathroom door.  “I knew I had to go back in and fill the sink, but I was having second thoughts.  I felt fine.”

“You are fine, sweetie,” Heather said as she walked back into the bedroom.  She was wearing flannel pajama bottoms now, protection against this first cold morning of autumn.  She latched a black lace bra at her stomach, spun it around, poked her hands through the limp loops and slipped them over her shoulders.

My mother had flown home from her winter retreat in Arizona, in order to be with her mother at the hospital after the stroke, my stepfather following on land, pulling the trailer back to Michigan.  When she arrived, three days after we had taken my grandmother to the hospital, the worst seemed behind us.  Grandma was able to talk.  She had packed her bags.  She had taken to pulling her I.V. from her arm, and chiding the orderlies when they rushed into the room in response to the alarm.  While we awaited her discharge, my three aunts and my mother fussed over my grandmother.  Heather and I set up a temporary office in the cafeteria, where she bemoaned the lack of vegetarian fare, and I ate the meatloaf and turkey meals that reminded me so much of the TV dinners I ate as a child, when I was home alone, my mother working the evening shift at the hospital.  We walked from my grandmother’s room to the cafeteria, from the cafeteria to my grandmother’s room.  We smiled at her when she was awake, and we tiptoed out when she was asleep.  We all apologized for calling my mother home from Arizona.  “We didn’t know what to do,” we told her.  “You’re the one who knows about this stuff.”

My mother had, in fact, made a career of ‘this stuff.’  She had put herself through nursing school after her divorce from my father, working eventually as a nurse on the terminal ward of Bronson Hospital, before the erection of the new building where my grandmother was housed, before the cappuccino bar where Heather and I got our lattes, before the piano lounge and the wireless internet.  She worked there at a time before terminally ill patients were sent home to die, when the job of helping them die fell often on my mother, who twice a week worked the night shift.  “That’s when they go,” she would later tell me, reminiscing about her career as a cook might reminisce about the dinner rush.  “Three a.m., the call board lights up like a Christmas tree.”

Heather turned her back to me, displaying the delicate straps of her bra.  “Will you even these?” she asked.  I pinched one small buckle and pulled it up a quarter of an inch.  Her shoulder blades rose and then settled.  “Maybe you can model those little underpants from your dream for me sometime,” she said, turning toward me with a smile, hoping to pull me into the day.

When I was a child and my mother was pacing her way through nursing school, I would lie on the carpet in those underwear, on a summer evening as my mom sat in the kitchen of our small apartment, flipping through medical textbooks and poking syringes into oranges.  I would lie in them in bed at night, thinking of the human body printed on the tissue-paper layers of my mother’s book, how each layer peeled away to reveal what lay beneath—muscle, organ, nervous system, bone.  My pulse would beat back at me through my Charlie Brown pillow, and I would hold myself awake, sure that if I fell asleep the beating would stop.  I would lie in those underwear in the little house my mother later bought by the paper mill, while she sat in the dark dining room, still in her nurse’s uniform hours after work, a sweating glass in front of her, melting ice falling into itself.  I would look at her nursing shoes, stains that I did not know were blood whitewashed a dozen times over, and I would wonder what it felt like to walk on those thick, marshmallow soles.

“I didn’t want to climb into the sink,” I told Heather.  “The water just seemed too cold.”

“Poor baby,” she said, and she found my hand under the blanket, gave it a squeeze, her other hand digging through her purse, looking now for the car key that I knew was in my rain coat, left there after a dinner out the night before instead of in its place on the buffet, where I was sure she had already looked.

“I emptied the little cold water that I’d run,” I told her, “and I started it again, sneaking in a little twist of hot.  My mom opened the door to the laundry room a crack, and I swirled the water and turned up the cold tap, acting as if I were rushing.  ‘I don’t feel sick,’I told her.  But she said, ’Nothing has changed.  Everything is the same as when you were calmer, when you decided this was the right thing to do.’”

Heather squeezed my hand again beneath the blanket.  “That’s not her place,” she said.

“Whose place is it?  I was dying.  It has to be somebody’s place.”

Heather had given up the search for the car key, knowing that she would have to continue downstairs, but not wanting to leave me until I was a little more awake and further from the fear of my dream.  She laid out her clothes for the day on the bed, and from beneath the duvet I could feel the small weight of skirt and sweater as they fell across my body.  “Well she doesn’t have to like it so much,” she said.

“I just kept hoping the sink wouldn’t fill,” I said.

Heather sighed in commiseration as she slid out of her flannel pajama bottoms.  I reached out a hand and she let me touch her nakedness before she pulled on black lace underwear and a gray wool skirt.  Above her head was a picture from our wedding day.  It is of the unveiling of the bride, a Polish ritual.  Heather is in my lap, and the women of the family have gathered round.  They are removing her veil, a long process of finding and pulling pins, as her great uncle plays the accordion and her father sings in Polish of a girl leaving home.  I am hardly visible in the picture.  Beneath my wife’s wedding dress, and the busy arms of her mother, her grandmother, sisters and aunts, I am lost in a shroud of perfume and powder, of satin and chiffon.  Within the circle of these women, the sound of the band fades, and I can hear only her mother’s voice, directing, and the murmured acknowledgment of the women who follow her lead.  I feel my wife’s body relax, settling into my lap, and I know that she’s let go, placed herself wholly in the care of these women.

“If I had been in your dream,” Heather said.  “I would have turned off the water.”

“I know you would have,” I told her.

None of us had been there the night before my grandmother was to be discharged from the hospital, the night she had her second stroke.  When Heather and I walked into her room the next morning, Grandma shrugged her left shoulder and tilted her head, apology in her eyes.  She mouthed the word, So, but there was no sound.

We were told that she could no longer swallow.  For three days, my mother sat by her bed, conducting traffic.  She announced to Grandma the visitors as they came, a steady stream of family and friends and neighbors, and she filled the awkward pauses when the visitors were at a loss for things to say.  “Remember when Mother used to fry all that chicken for the picnics at Pendils Lake every Sunday?” she said to one.  To another she revived the story of the snow storm of ’78.  “Mother sure was grateful for the ride you gave her,” she said.  “Twenty years later, and she still talks about it.”  To me, she said, “Just be here.  Just be yourself.”  By the fourth day, my grandmother’s lungs had begun to fill with fluid, and she developed an aspirated cough.  She stopped paying attention to visitors, and she began to look with suspicion at my mother.  A priest came to the room, and the doctor set another discharge date, this time in coordination with Hospice.

My aunt Barb, the youngest daughter, was angry.  She was angry at the hospital for my grandmother’s second stroke, angry at Hospice for offering assistance in death instead of the rehabilitation we’d all expected three days earlier.  She was angry at the family for not wanting to fight the discharge, and angry especially at my mother, the terminal-ward nurse to whom the family looked for leadership.  In the hallway outside my grandmother’s door, Barb threw at my mom her last stone.  “Mother always said,” Barb told her, “that you were the crepe hanger in the family.”

Although her words had been motivated by pain, by a need to inflict that pain on someone else, Barb was right.  My mother had always been the crepe hanger.  She was a five-foot-tall grim reaper, a little slower now than she used to be, osteoporosis bowing her back, arthritis knotting her fingers.  A weathered wooden gate on a rusty hinge.  I didn’t want her to open for me in my dream.  I didn’t want her knuckled finger curling to motion me through.  But if I had to go, whose hand would I rather hold?  What comfort greater than the firm insistence of those old bones?

When my grandmother came home in the ambulance, her four daughters sat around her bed on folding chairs that I remember from holidays when I was a child.  Half a dozen tanks of oxygen lined one wall of the bedroom.  Barb opened a jar of Gerbers pureed chicken, pulled aside Grandma’s mask, and managed to get a few spoonfuls into her mouth before silently acknowledging that it was only draining into her lungs.

For two days, behind her oxygen mask, my grandmother seemed aware only of her fight to breathe, until my aunt Robbie asked, “Are you ready to join Dad?”  At this, she became lucid.  She shook her head, mouthed the word no, and as the rest of us giggled foolishly, my mother stroked her hair.  “You’re afraid,” she said.  My grandmother nodded.  “It’s okay,” my mother said, and she continued to stroke her own mother’s hair until Grandma closed her eyes and fell into a fitful sleep.

That night, my mother woke Heather and me, three a.m. projected onto the ceiling of our bedroom.  “You should come down,” she said.  My aunts were around the bed again, now in bootie slippers and quilted robes, my grandmother breathing through her oxygen mask one labored breath every half minute.  We told her we loved her.  Her daughters thanked her.  I kissed her cheek.  Heather squeezed her hand.  Two hours later the dim light of approaching dawn pushed into the room, and my grandmother was still alive.  She moaned in pain, and my mother pinched from an eyedropper another four beads of morphine onto her tongue, her handling of the opiate as smooth and second-natured as the priest’s prayer of absolution a day earlier.  She put her hand around Grandma’s ankle, reached under her gown and held her knee.  “She’s cooling,” she said, “but she’s going slowly.  It’s because of the oxygen.”  Another hour passed, another half-dozen drops of morphine.  My aunt Barb slipped another spoonful of pureed chicken under my grandmother’s mask, compelled still by some hope, and when the baby food gurgled into Grandma’s lungs, my mother said, “I’m taking off that mask.”  She looked at Barb.  Barb looked away, and when ten seconds passed without protest, my mother reached for the mask.  Robbie and Nancy joined her, Robbie helping to loosen the rubber straps, and Nancy spinning closed the valve on the tank.  Then Barb reached in, raising the back of my grandmother’s head while my mother slipped the straps free and pulled away the mask.  It took less than half an hour after that, the daughters gathered round, my grandmother’s hands in theirs, our kisses and whispered goodbyes, and then a nod of my mother’s head as she took her fingers from the side of my grandmother’s neck.  “She’s gone,” she said.

While I called Hospice to report the death, my mother bathed and dressed my grandmother in the bedroom, while we waited in the living room, unsure, without my mother’s guidance, what we should say.  We wondered aloud several times how long the hospice nurse would take to arrive.  We studied our watches as if they required some calculation to read.  When my mother had finished, she called us back into the room.  Grandma lay now in lavender pants and a matching top, hair brushed, hands overlapped on her belly.

My mother stood in front of the window, the early morning light so bright behind her that it burned through the contours of her silhouette, rendering her hazy, indistinct, as if she were only half there with us, half somewhere else.  I fancied at first that she was returning from wherever she’d escorted my grandmother, reconstituting herself after a trip to the afterlife.  But as she stepped away from the window, and I saw her sunken eyes, the hollow of her cheeks, saw how much smaller she appeared than she had just a few hours earlier, I stopped thinking about her escorting someone else to an afterlife, and thought instead of her going there herself.  I wondered who would be there for her, who would take charge, give the orders, hang the crepe.

“How did the dream end?” Heather asked, sitting on the edge of our bed.  She poured something from a small frosted bottle onto the tips of her fingers, touched those fingers to the fingers of her other hand, and ran them all through her hair.  I don’t know what this is, what it does.  Her hair looks the same as before, and I think that, even in this small matter, it is the ritual that is important.

“I heard you,” I told her, “and I woke up.”

She smiled and snapped her purse shut.  She put her hand on my arm, just long enough to let me know that she loved me, that I would be okay, that it was time for her to go.  I thought how simple her gesture was, and how impossible that I would have thought to do the same were our roles reversed.  “When my mother’s time comes,” I said, “you’ll help me, won’t you.”

“Of course I will,” she said.  She slipped her wrist through the handle of her purse, leaned down and kissed me.

“I had another dream,” I said.  “You and I were in a high-rise hotel, and tornadoes were swirling all around.”  But she was dressed then, a black sweater pulled over her head, a thin belt buckled around her waist.  She had a full day of student-teacher conferences ahead of her, was already ten minutes late leaving the house, and I realized that on this gray morning I had received all the consolation that my wife had to give.  “The key,” I told her, “is in the pocket of my raincoat.”  She kissed me, smelling somehow already like the crisp fall air that I knew was waiting for her outside, and then I was alone, plans for the day crowding out my dream until it became only a memory of a dream, the single remaining image that of my mother, watching the sink fill with cold water.

Karen Auvinen

Karen Auvinen is a poet, writer, cowgrrl, cook, and essayist who lives and writes in the West.  Her work has been published in The Cimarron ReviewMany Mountains Moving, The Monthly Review, and most recently in Cold Mountain Review.  Her fiction has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and she has won two Academy of American Poets Awards.

She teaches film and literature at the University of Colorado – Boulder and lives in a wood-stove heated cabin at 8500 feet, just above Jamestown, CO, which recently survived a 100-year flood.  Karen writes about food and the sensual, sensate life at  http://1hotkitchen.blogspot.com/