Authors: Raymond Carver
In the empty
rooms each evening, he eats
alone, watches television, reads
the newspaper with a lust
that begins and ends in the fingertips.
There is no God,
and conversation is a dying art.
This foot’s giving me nothing
but trouble. The ball,
the arch, the ankle—I’m saying
it hurts to walk. But
mainly it’s these toes
I worry about. Those
“terminal digits” as they’re
otherwise called. How true!
For them no more delight
in going headfirst
into a hot bath, or
a cashmere sock. Cashmere socks,
no socks, slippers, shoes, Ace
bandage—it’s all one and the same
to these dumb toes.
They even looked zonked out
and depressed, as if
somebody’d pumped them full
of Thorazine. They hunch there
stunned and mute—drab, lifeless
things. What in hell is going on?
What kind of toes are these
that nothing matters any longer?
Are these really
my
toes? Have they forgotten
the old days, what it was like
being alive then? Always first
on line, first onto the dance floor
when the music started.
First to kick up their heels.
Look at them. No, don’t.
You don’t want to see them,
those slugs. It’s only with pain
and difficulty they can recall
the other times, the good times.
Maybe what they really want
is to sever all connection
with the old life, start over,
go underground, live alone
in a retirement manor
somewhere in the Yakima Valley.
But there was a time
they used to strain
with anticipation
simply
curl with pleasure
at the least provocation,
the smallest thing.
The feel of a silk dress
against the fingers, say.
A becoming voice, a touch
behind the neck, even
a passing glance. Any of it!
The sound of hooks being
unfastened, stays coming
undone, garments letting go
onto a cool, hardwood floor.
The moon, the landscape, the train.
We are moving steadily along the south shore
of the lake, past the spas and sanitoriums.
The conductor comes through the club car to tell us
that if we look to the left—there, where those
lights are shining—we will see a lighted tennis
court, and it’s probable, even at this hour, we’ll
find Franz Kafka on the court. He’s crazy about
tennis and can’t get enough of it. In a minute, sure
enough—there’s Kafka, dressed in whites,
playing doubles against a young man and woman.
An unidentified young woman is Kafka’s partner. Which
pair is ahead? Who is keeping score? The ball goes back
and forth, back and forth. Everyone seems to be playing perfectly,
intently. None of the players even bothers to look up
at the passing train. Suddenly the track curves
and begins to go through a woods. I turn in the seat
to look back, but either the lights on the court have been
extinguished suddenly, or the train car is in such
a position that everything behind us is darkness.
It is at this moment that all the patrons left in the club car
decide to order another drink, or something to snack on.
Well, and why not? Kafka was a vegetarian and a teetotaler
himself, but that shouldn’t crimp anyone’s style. Besides,
no one in the train car seems to show the slightest
interest in the game, or who was playing on the court under
the lights. I was going forward to a new and different
life, and I was really only half interested myself, my
thoughts being somewhere else. Nevertheless, I thought it
was something that was of some slight interest and should be
pointed out; and I was glad the conductor had done so.
“So that was Kafka,” someone behind me spoke up.
“So,” somebody else replied. “So what? I’m Perlmutter.
Pleased to meet you. Let’s have a drink.” And saying this, he
took a deck of cards out of his shirt pocket and began to shuffle
them back and forth on the table in front of him. His huge
hands were red and chapped; they seemed to want to
devour the cards whole. Once more the track curves
and begins to go through a woods.
Again the flying horses, the strange voice of drunken Nicanor, the wind and the persistent snow which got into one’s eyes, one’s mouth, and every fold of one’s fur coat.… The wind whistled, the coachmen shouted; and while this frantic uproar was going on, I recalled all the details of that strange wild day, unique in my life, and it seemed to me that I really had gone out of my mind or become a different man. It was as though the man I had been till that day were already a stranger to me.… A quarter of an hour later his horses fell behind and the sound of his bells was lost in the roar of the snowstorm.
—
ANTON CHEKHOV
“The Wife”
They’re on a one-way flight, bound from LAX
to SFO, both of them drunk and strung-out
having just squirmed through the hearing,
their second bankruptcy in seven years.
And who knows what, if anything, was said
on the plane, or who said it?
It could have been accumulation
of the day’s events, or years on years
of failure and corruption that triggered violence.
Earlier, turned inside out, crucified and left
for dead, they’d been dropped like so much
garbage in front of the terminal. But
once inside they found their bearings,
took refuge in an airport lounge where they tossed
back doubles under a banner that read
Go Dodgers!
They were plastered, as usual, as they buckled
into their seats and, as always, ready to assume
it was the universal human condition, this battle
waged continually with forces past all reckoning,
forces beyond mere human understanding.
But she’s cracking. She can’t take any more
and soon, without a word, she turns
in her seat and drills him. Punches him and
punches him, and he takes it.
Knowing deep down he deserves it ten times over —
whatever she wants to dish out—he is being
deservedly beaten for something, there are
good reasons. All the while his head is pummeled,
buffeted back and forth, her fists falling
against his ear, his lips, his jaw, he protects
his whiskey. Grips that plastic glass as if, yes,
it’s the long-sought treasure right there
on the tray in front of him.
She keeps on until his nose begins to bleed
and it’s then he asks her to stop.
Please, baby
,
for Christ’s sake, stop.
It may be his plea
reaches her as a faint signal from another
galaxy, a dying star, for this is what it is,
a coded sign from some other time and place
needling her brain, reminding her of something
so lost it’s gone forever. In any event, she stops
hitting him, goes back to her drink. Why
does she stop? Because she remembers
the fat years preceding the lean? All that history
they’d shared, sticking it out together, the two
of them against the world? No way. If she’d truly
remembered everything and those years had dropped
smack into her lap all at once,
she would’ve killed him on the spot.
Maybe her arms are tired, that’s why she stops.
Say she’s tired then. So she stops. He picks up
his drink almost as if nothing’s happened
though it has, of course, and his head aches
and reels with it. She goes back to her whiskey
without a word, not even so much as the usual
“bastard” or “son of a bitch.” Dead quiet.
He’s silent as lice. Holds the drink
napkin under his nose to catch the blood,
turns his head slowly to look out.
Far below, the small steady lights in houses
up and down some coastal valley. It’s
the dinner hour down there. People pushing
up to a full table, grace being said,
hands joined together under roofs so solid
they will never blow off those houses—houses where,
he imagines, decent people live and eat, pray
and pull together. People who, if they left
their tables and looked up from the dining
room windows, could see a harvest moon and,
just below, like a lighted insect, the dim glow
of a jetliner. He strains to see over
the wing and beyond, to the myriad lights
of the city they are rapidly approaching,
the place where they live with others of their kind,
the place they call home.
He looks around the cabin. Other people,
that’s all. People like themselves
in a way, male or female, one sex
or the other, people not entirely unlike
themselves—hair, ears, eyes, nose, shoulders,
genitals—my God, even the clothes they wear
are similar, and there’s that identifying strap
around the middle. But he knows he and she
are not like those others though he’d like it,
and she too, if they were.
Blood soaks his napkin. His head rings and rings
but he can’t answer it. And what would he say
if he could?
I’m sorry they’re not in. They left
here, and there too, years ago.
They tear
through the thin night air, belted in, bloody husband
and wife, both so still and pale they could be
dead. But they’re not, and that’s part of
the miracle. All this is one more giant step
into the mysterious experience of their lives.
Who could have foretold any of it years back when,
their hands guiding the knife, they made
that first cut deep into the wedding cake?
Then the next. Who would have listened?
Anyone bringing such tidings of the future
would have been scourged from the gate.
The plane lifts, then banks sharply. He touches
her arm. She lets him. She even takes his hand.
They were made for each other, right? It’s fate.
They’ll survive. They’ll land and pull themselves
together, walk away from this awful fix —
they simply have to, they must.
There’s lots in store for them yet, so many fierce
surprises, such exquisite turnings. It’s now
they have to account for, the blood
on his collar, the dark smudge of it
staining her cuff.
My wife has disappeared along with her clothes.
She left behind two nylon stockings, and
a hairbrush overlooked behind the bed.
I should like to call your attention
to these shapely nylons, and to the strong
dark hair caught in the bristles of the brush.
I drop the nylons into the garbage sack; the brush
I’ll keep and use. It is only the bed
that seems strange and impossible to account for.
Reading a life of Alexander the Great, Alexander
whose rough father, Philip, hired Aristotle to tutor
the young scion and warrior, to put some polish
on his smooth shoulders. Alexander who, later
on the campaign trail into Persia, carried a copy of
The Iliad
in a velvet-lined box, he loved that book so
much. He loved to fight and drink, too.
I came to that place in the life where Alexander, after
a long night of carousing, a wine-drunk (the worst kind of drunk —
hangovers you don’t forget), threw the first brand
to start a fire that burned Persepolis, capital of the Persian Empire
(ancient even in Alexander’s day).
Razed it right to the ground. Later, of course,
next morning—maybe even while the fire roared—he was
remorseful. But nothing like the remorse felt
the next evening when, during a disagreement that turned ugly
and, on Alexander’s part, overbearing, his face flushed
from too many bowls of uncut wine, Alexander rose drunkenly to
his feet,
grabbed a spear and drove it through the breast
of his friend, Cletus, who’d saved his life at Granicus.
For three days Alexander mourned. Wept. Refused food. “Refused
to see to his bodily needs.” He even promised
to give up wine forever.
(I’ve heard such promises and the lamentations that go with them.)
Needless to say, life for the army came to a full stop
as Alexander gave himself over to his grief.
But at the end of those three days, the fearsome heat
beginning to take its toll on the body of his dead friend,
Alexander was persuaded to take action. Pulling himself together
and leaving his tent, he took out his copy of Homer, untied it,
began to turn the pages. Finally he gave orders that the funeral
rites described for Patroklos be followed to the letter:
he wanted Cletus to have the biggest possible send-off.
And when the pyre was burning and the bowls of wine were
passed his way during the ceremony? Of course, what do you
think? Alexander drank his fill and passed
out. He had to be carried to his tent. He had to be lifted, to be put
into his bed.