The Air We Breathe (4 page)

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Authors: Andrea Barrett

BOOK: The Air We Breathe
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While Miles spoke, Naomi and Eudora leaned against either side of the doorframe exchanging quiet comments and looking, Leo thought, like two animals similar in general health and sleekness but different in their natures: a hawk and a heron, say, or a coyote and a dog. Eudora—about twenty, he correctly guessed—stood on the left, tall and large-boned, strongly muscled but not at all fat, her light brown hair framing hazel eyes and pale skin that flushed easily. Leo had glimpsed her many times, when he and Ephraim went out to the porch for morning rest hours and she came in to make the beds and mop the floor, but in this context he finally saw more than the long blue cotton apron, the combs holding back her hair, and her chapped hands.

“My mistake,” Miles was saying as Leo examined the two young women. “I didn't understand, at first, how little context most of you have for the work I've been describing. That was foolish of me. Let me try again.”

We turned, hoping for something to grasp, but soon learned that by “context” he didn't mean anything to do with our lives. He meant history. The
Megalosaurus,
he said, had been discovered in 1824 by William Buckland, an Englishman who'd lived with his family among a menagerie that included a hyena and a dancing bear. Gideon Mantell, accompanied by his wife, had stumbled upon the
Iguanodon,
after which Richard Owen, examining those and other finds, invented the name for the order. In London, in 1854, Waterhouse Hawkins filled the Crystal Palace with models of those prehistoric creatures, also mounting in Philadelphia the first skeleton of the
Hadrosaurus
.

Twenty minutes, forty minutes, an hour. During the first two sessions, Miles had forgotten to take a break for our snack, even though food had been laid out invitingly. We'd been too timid to complain, then, but this time, with a smaller group, Ephraim rose early in the second hour and pointed at the laden table.

“Oh, of course,” Miles said, slightly flustered. “Let's take ten minutes. Please enjoy your refreshments.”

We stood back while Miles poured a cup of hot chocolate and went over to the window, apparently drawn by the row of pigeons who'd settled along Hygeia's shoulders and head, spacing themselves at intervals so precise they might have used a measuring tape. Except for Leo, the rest of us crowded around the food. Leo moved toward Miles to ask if he knew the work of the Russian paleontologist Vladimir Kovalevsky.

Miles's face lit up. “Darwin's Russian correspondent!” he said. “His work on fossil horses inspired Huxley. Such an interesting thinker. How do you know of him?”

“He studied in Odessa,” Leo said. “As did I, briefly. He's still much discussed there, because of his influence on Dollo—do you know, in this country, about Dollo's law?”

“Of course,” Miles said enthusiastically. “Here, we paraphrase it as: ‘No major evolutionary change is ever reversed.' During the evolution of the hoof, the toe bones, once lost, don't reappear.”

“The phrasing's different in Russian,” Leo said, “but the meaning's the same. What's lost is gone for good.”

Miles looked at him thoughtfully and asked a few more questions. As he did, Leo grew more animated, pushing his fine dark hair away from his face. He was the first to take his seat, and when Miles began to speak again, returning to the subject of his own finds, Leo listened eagerly to his description of a giant creature with skull-frills of bone. He barely noticed the evening nurse who ducked inside the doorway and tapped Eudora on the arm.

THOSE BONES STICKING
out like a ruff, Eudora thought as she followed the nurse down the hall. She'd never know, now, why a creature might have those sprouting from its skull. But this was the nature of her job as a ward maid: she was pulled constantly from one task to the next, never hearing the ends of conversations. Anyone—nurses, doctors, orderlies—could ask her for help, and everyone did. Without complaint she fetched files, retrieved lab results, made beds, damp-mopped floors, wiped down walls and furniture with a cloth wrung out in disinfectant. There were ward maids who hated those interruptions, but to her they felt as natural as her childhood.

Still she could remember the feel of watching from her crib as her older brothers and sisters swept into the kitchen, all four shouting and arguing before disappearing again, their mouths filled with something delicious their mother had made. Once she could walk, they'd treated her like a pet. Ernest might carry her off on his back, to serve as a lookout for one of his and Eugene's games. Or Helen might dress her in Eugene's cast-off clothes, blacken her eyebrows, tuck her hair under a cap, and declare her a tramp, only to have Sally remove the cap, tie her to a tree, and turn her into a princess awaiting rescue.

In a single day she might be used as a mascot in four different imaginary worlds, never completing a single game but delighted by so many adventures. When she grew tired, or when Eugene, who was very strong, accidentally grew too rough, she could retreat to her father's taxidermy shop and hide among the drying animal skins, the knives and chisels and trays of glass eyes. Or she could run to her mother's fragrant kitchen, where a beefsteak kept her eye from turning purple after she'd fallen into one of Sally's traps. She'd grown so tall, she often thought, and gained such muscles in her arms and legs, from the effort of keeping up with her rowdy siblings. Later, when she started helping out at her Aunt Elizabeth's cure cottage, she'd learned to divide her attention a dozen ways without diluting it. She liked her own swift adaptations to the constant change and the exhilaration of successfully juggling all the boarders and their requests.

Someday she'd find more ambitious work that made use of that adaptability. For now, though, this suited her fine. She chatted with everyone on her floors while carefully folding closed the brown paper bags pinned to our bedside stands, slipping them into the covered tins, and wheeling those to the incinerator out back. Picking up clean sheets and towels at the laundry and delivering the dirties was nothing; wheeling us to the laboratory or the X-ray facility, when the orderlies were overworked, she relished for the surprising confidences that emerged on these short journeys. She liked the pay envelope, too, and the chance to meet people from so many different backgrounds and places.

In fact she liked almost everything but the cleanup after what the nurses called “a situation.” Sometimes that meant a patient had died. Other times it was something like this: Raymond, sitting up to take his temperature and unexpectedly throwing an enormous hemorrhage. The nurse, easing Eudora into the now-empty room, said, “You're so good at this,” as if the flattery would change the task. “No one else is as thorough as you are, and we're shorthanded this evening.”

Clean rags, cold water, boiling water, disinfectant. She
was
good at this, she knew; she had just the right touch, swift and light but exceedingly careful. Never spreading the tainted blood past the site of the spill, never flicking it onto herself, never letting water drip from the used rags onto anything else. Each rag quickly sealed in the covered bin and then, after the linen on both beds was changed, the floor mopped, and the furniture wiped, the bin whisked away for the rags to be burned. She could turn out a room in an hour.

Six o'clock came and went as she worked, and she missed her chance to hear the rest of Miles's story. But at least, as she found when she put on her coat and went outside, Naomi had waited for her.

“Do you want a ride home?” Naomi asked. She looked over her shoulder at Miles, bundled into the back seat in a heavy wool jacket. “I mean, if you don't mind…”

“It would be my pleasure,” Miles said. “Your friends are mine.”

“That would be wonderful,” Eudora said. “Snow's coming, I think. And it's been a long day. I enjoyed your talk—what I heard of it, anyway.”

She and Naomi tied her bicycle onto the back of Mrs. Martin's Model T and then cranked the engine. Just as it was turning over, Miles asked if they needed help.

“Thank you,” Naomi said patiently, “but we're fine—I do it myself, all the time. Eudora's only helping because she wants to learn to drive on her own.”

Eudora sat beside Naomi, up front, so she could watch the dials and gauges. The wind blew, the clouds chased each other across the moon, and the car flew between the trees and then around the enormous curve that, from our perch on the porches, obscured for a long stretch anyone arriving or departing. While Miles watched the clouds, Naomi tried, for the third or fourth time, to explain to Eudora how to set the spark and the throttle levers.

“Start over,” Eudora said. Why did she find this so hard to remember? Otherwise she was very good with machinery.

“Look,” Naomi said, tapping the levers on the steering wheel as they came to a rise. “If you're in high gear when you get to a hill, push the spark lever back till it's at the second or third notch, and open the gas to seven or eight notches. As soon as you hear the engine start to labor, use the clutch to put it in low gear and then move the levers like this. It's simple.”

“I'll remember this time,” Eudora said, even as she felt the details slipping away. In the headlights, which brightened as they picked up speed, soft fat clumps of snow began to rush at the windshield. She turned her head toward the back and said to Miles, “I missed the end of your story. Would you mind telling me more about that dinosaur?”

Eagerly he leaned forward and, as Naomi shifted gears and told Eudora to listen as the sound of the engine changed, repeated what he'd told us. Naomi steered along the edge of the lake, where some geese who should have headed south earlier were huddled by the benches in the park, and then drove into the village, past the lights and the people walking through the wet flakes. Miles completed his story and then said, shyly, that he thought the afternoon had gone well.

Eudora agreed. They passed two doctors who worked at the private sanatorium up by the tobogganing hill; three boarders from Mrs. Martin's house, standing in front of the theater; the mayor, walking his dachshund; one of the druggists talking with the director of the second-best funeral parlor. The dachshund, Eudora saw in the light pouring out from the theater, trotted along on his dwarfed legs as if he were exactly as important as the mayor.

They passed the village train station, so much more welcoming than the siding at Tamarack State, and then pulled up at Eudora's house. Inside, she knew, her parents would be sitting at the table, waiting dinner for her, listening to the empty rooms. If she was lucky, Eugene might have come over from the garage, in search of a home-cooked meal. If not, she'd be on her own, caught in her parents' silence. What did they do all day, now that she was working at the sanatorium and everyone else was gone?

“That was a treat,” she said to Naomi, opening the car door. “Thank you.”

As she was about to walk back and untie her bicycle, Miles cleared his throat and said through the open door, “I wonder if you—I mean this for both of you—I know you're both busy but you did seem interested in what we were talking about…Would you like to join in our sessions? Officially, I mean, not just listening on the side like you've been doing.”

Naomi hesitated just as Eudora said, “I'd be delighted.”

MILES WAS DELIGHTED
that they'd said yes. Later that week, tucked into his bed at Mrs. Martin's house, he wrote to Edward Hazelius:

I hope this finds you well. I am doing well myself, very comfortable in my fine room. Just now I am in my excellent bed, the windows open and the alpaca shawl you so thoughtfully sent on my shoulders. The electric lamp shines down on my tray, which neatly holds my pen and papers; the covers are snugged over my legs; what more could I want?

Well, my health, of course. And to be back in my own house and, if not back at work, at least planning travels with you and Lawrence. Our last trip has been very present to me these weeks, as I go through my journals from that summer and talk to strangers about our work. The experiment I described to you continues—our group had its third meeting this week—and although I meant to speak only at the first meeting, and only as an example to the others, I've found myself surprisingly caught up in the pleasure of sharing what I know. Also I've been stimulated by the realization of how very little the Tamarack State inmates know about the world around them. In education (or lack thereof), background, and training they are not dissimilar to the hands at your plant or mine.

Because of this I'm often forced to backtrack, defining terms as I describe aspects of where we went or what we found; even the simplest principles of sedimentary deposition are beyond them. But this week I made real progress, I think. There is one inmate who seems particularly alert and whose face I use as a sort of living barometer; when I have his attention, I know I'm speaking well. This week he asked me about Kovalevsky! That a man in his position should know that name…

Sorry—that blot marks the entrance of my very vigorous landlady, Mrs. Martin, come round with our evening glasses of hot milk and some fresh gingerbread. A crisply starched apron; her hair perfectly coiffed and a smile on her face—you could not find a better housekeeper, and there are reasons this is the most expensive cure cottage in the village. As always we get what we pay for. Her daughter, who helps her out, has offered to drive me weekly to the sanatorium.

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