Apart From Love (26 page)

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Authors: Uvi Poznansky

Tags: #Novel

BOOK: Apart From Love
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I draw closer to the door. And the minute I crack it open, I catch a glimpse of Anita, far below.

I hear her saying, “Oh—I forgot!” and the old woman groaning, and again Anita’s voice, saying, “Lemme go back, like, just a sec. Wait, wait for me!”
 

And there she is, running back up, skipping two stairs at a time. Now she stops at the landing just a flight below, and raises her face to me.

So I ask, “You forgot something?”
 

“Yes,” she nods, holding her belly, trying to catch her breath.
 

“What, shall I throw it down to you?”
   

“No.”
 

“What is it, then?”
 

“Oh, Ben. I forgot,” her breast heaves as she takes a deep breath, “I forgot to tell you something.”
 

I wait. I take a step out, across the doorsill, and stand there, close to the railing. From here I can spot a change in her eyes. The shade has vanished and now, they are so bright, gleaming in green, and there is a childlike joy in them.
 

“It was a blast,” says Anita, and her voice is so relaxed, on the verge of laughter. “I mean, that thing we did! I swear, I didn’t dream it could be so much fun!”
 

What she says next takes me by surprise.
 

“Ben,” she wonders aloud, “what was it? Was that music?”

I cannot tell her that it is, because in truth, I doubt it myself. So I shake my head, “No,” wishing I could dare say, That was something else: something intense—but not as complicated as I would have thought, earlier. Perhaps, it was simply a clash, the clash of wills between us—or else, you could call it
Love
.
 

The instant this word crosses my mind, a look passes between us, and I am being held there in place, as if by a spell. Oh, let her not remove her gaze.
 

Let it pierce me, let it go deep. It is hilt of the sword that holds the wound from bleeding.
 

Let her search my heart, because what can she find there, but the cry, Come! Come to me, Anita! I am yours... If you refuse me—if you turn your eyes away—I fear that at this point, I shall fall. You have the power to bring me down—or else, you can make me fly.

The stairs have dropped from view. The railing is but a fuzzy, peripheral impression. I pay little attention to her arms, her legs, her body—only her eyes are in sharp focus.
 

In them I can see a bright flash—perhaps the flash of insight—over the darkness of the pupil, and flecks of golden light, sprinkled in a fine, intricate pattern all around the iris.
 

I cannot begin to guess how long we have been standing there, how much time has elapsed. Perhaps it has been as short as a second—or else, as long as forever; after which she lowers her eyes, and starts turning away from me.
 

“I see,” she says at last. “That was your piece. You think this is just a wisecrack. You think you’re
The Entertainer
.”

Anita goes down a step, and for a minute, does not stir. Perhaps she is waiting, giving me an opportunity to speak, which for some reason, I just miss. Then she sways her hips, a bit seductively I think, and all I can do is stand there helplessly and listen to her footfalls, slowly descending the flight of stairs.
 

By now she is under the landing. I can barely see her, but I think she is whispering, perhaps only to herself, “Why, why can’t you say nothing? Say any word

but that one, ‘cause you don’t really mean it. Nobody does. Say anything, apart from
Love
.”

Chapter 19
Nothing Surrendered

As Told by Ben

N
ow that her footfalls have died away I linger around, feeling awkward. I look down the stairs, and out at the garden below, and my nostrils flare out, drawing a long breath, detecting something different in the air: Some trace, perhaps, of perfume.
 

I cannot make up my mind whether it has been a mistake, I mean, just standing there in confusion, facing her, saying nothing

when in fact, in spite of what she may think, I had it: really, I had the words right there, at the tip of my tongue, to tell Anita how desperately I want her.
 

There is no need, no need, no need to torture myself. This woman is not for me. No, I repeat, not for me. I am lucky, so lucky I have managed restrain myself, somehow, and bite my lips.
 

Nothing has been said, nothing surrendered.
 

Still, even now, I am choking back tears, determined to deny the pain. I know all the reasons in the world to keep silent. The least of them is gossip.
 

I can just imagine my aunt, who was waiting for Anita down there, at street level, keeping herself under the landing, well out of my sight. She must have been stretching her winkled neck, tilting her head in my direction as far as it would go, with the ears perked up, already guessing the whisper of a forbidden affair, and her nose raised, sniffing a scandal in the making, eager to share her suspicions with anyone who would listen.
 

How, then, could I speak, with the old woman there, ready to capture that which I was about to say, and then spin it on, and spread vicious rumors?
 

Still, gossip is definitely the least of my worries. No matter who was lurking there, trying to listen in, I would have dared not only speak to Anita, but even cry out

as if it could bring her back

Stop! Don’t go like that. Don’t you leave me!
 

Yes, I want to believe that I would have done it—
if not for that other thing. What else can I call it but treachery?
 

Indeed, I feel like a traitor. Anita is married to my father. What’s more, she carries his child. I should look away when she is around me. I should guard myself against her. I should guard my sanity. What it is that she does to charm me so, I do not really know. But the more I ache for her

the heavier my sense of guilt. I wonder, can he sense something of what I am going through?
 

Last night I thought I caught him, glancing at me with a strange look, with something close to pity playing there, in his eyes. I could have attacked him right then, at that very moment. Oh, if only he knew!
 

Perhaps then he would cast me aside and curse, even disown me. He would tell me I am no longer a son to him; not his flesh and blood anymore. Believe me, I do not wish to betray my dad. I keep telling myself that I cannot prove my virility by robbing him of his.
 

Still, I am afraid of the demon in me, afraid of what it may do if I lose control, if find myself overcome, suddenly, by a wild impulse. I pray I shall never reach this point, because then I may be tempted to take her, even by force

or else, kill him, so he cannot have her, no one can. And then... I do not even know. I may kill myself, out of shock and failure and despair, and most of all, out of remorse.
 

For now, I am glad I still have a grip over myself. Nothing has been said, nothing surrendered. So I try to tolerate the pangs of conscience, and at the same time, try to blame my father for everything. Oh yes, I argue with him constantly in my mind, because really, what was he thinking? How could he replace my mom, by bringing a girl in here, a girl who is a year younger than me?
 

Seriously now, how could it be my fault, when I was not the one creating an impossible situation

perhaps even a dangerous one
—but instead, found myself stumbling, somehow, into it
? Hell, how difficult was it for the old man to see that his actions would complicate things, wreck them beyond repair, not only for himself

but for all of us?
 

I mean, how dare he take a sexy redhead to his bed, in our home, and then call me to come back, to live here with both of them, in a cramped space, together, like three monkeys rattling a cage? Why, anyone would tell you: this is a zoo, really! I must find an escape

or else, very soon, I shall go crazy, utterly, hopelessly crazy. You do not need a fortune teller to figure this thing out, do you?
 

The nip in the air, and the sound of rustling must have conspired together to rouse a feeling of anxiety in me. I pass my gaze across the landing, where she has stood just a minute ago. Here, a bleak wind is playing with a few leaves, tossing them idly side to side, and then with one gust, hurling then over the chipped edge.
 

And under the landing, a narrow asphalt walkway lays aslant between the weeds. It is veined with cracks, and bordered by a hedge that in springtime, would be flowering
. T
his being the early November, it looks rather bare.
 

I go inside, where the air is stagnant, and pass by the white piano, where Anita and I have played together, only an hour ago. I push the cover away from the keys, and in one bang I come down on them, making them clang

but somehow, the music has gone out of me.
 

Nothing has been said, nothing surrendered. Still, I should have been more careful with her. Silent I was
—but not careful. So now she has taken with her that word, the word she found on my lips, unspoken. I wish she would let it go, and let the pain in my heart remain speechless.
 

For my own sake I should have been much more careful. Now—even in her absence—I find myself in her hands, which feels strange to me. I am surrounded—and at the same time, isolated. I am alone. I am apart from Love.

I wish she could forget that word. Maybe she has forgotten it already. Now, instead of a sense of relief, this thought stirs something else in me: perhaps, rage.
 

She may be laughing at me, at this very moment, together with my aunt. Anita may be trying to coax the old woman to be on her side, and planning to charm her sisters, too, to win all of them over. She may be hatching a scheme to take my mother’s place, to be recognized by all—even by her enemies—as the new Mrs. Kaminsky, because now, with that baby in her womb, she is starting to grow into her new position, as the matron of our family.
 

At this moment Anita may be getting ready for that appointment, about which she refused to talk to me—but I could tell she was eager for it, which for some reason, infuriates me. What could be more urgent, more important to her than what I wanted to tell her? And how can she act as if nothing at all has happened here, between us? How can she do it? How, how dare she ignore me?
 

Heartless woman! I hate Love. I do.

I rub my hands against my temples, trying to soothe myself, thinking that Perhaps, this anguish is entirely unnecessary. There is no need to torture myself. No need whatsoever.
After all, nothing has been said, nothing surrendered.

 

I pace around the walls, in and out of one room, then another. In my bedroom I spot the aquarium

the one grandma gave me, a long time ago

with its faint trace close to the rim, marking the level of water that used to fill it at one time. I remember the colorful fish, which dad bought for me then. In their place, the thing now houses a pile of my old T-shirts. I try one of them on, only to find that it is too tight on me, and that it smells of dust.
 

In the bathroom, the air is damp, even stale. Anita’s comb lays next to the sink, with strands of red hair caught in its teeth.
 

On the shelf, just above it, is my father’s tin of pomade, which he uses to make his hair slick and shiny. To the side of that are his shaving tools. Here is his badger brush, which is spotless. Wiped dry with great care, its bristles are tipped with silver. Resting against it is an elegant leather case, which holds his cut throat razor.

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