The Hidden Letters of Velta B. (18 page)

BOOK: The Hidden Letters of Velta B.
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“Finally,” Rudy said, shrugging out of his coat. With him was Ligita. Apparently, they'd kissed and made up. Rudy bustled past me for the kitchen table where he pulled out our best chair. He waved Ligita to the chair, where, without a glance at me, she sat and pulled her purse—cheap imitation leather—into her lap.

Sensing another female presence in the house, Mother rushed into the kitchen. Behind her came Father.

“Rudy!” Father cried. “Such a surprise!”

“Usually you just call us on the phone when you want something,” Mother observed.

Rudy blushed and looked at Ligita. Rudy had washed out at university, but he had managed to get into one of the best technical schools where he was now only weeks away from earning a surveyor's license. Rudy cleared his throat. “You remember Ligita.”

Certainly we did.

Ligita seemed glued to the chair. She looked as if she'd poured herself into her clothes or perhaps the clothes had been spray painted onto her body. Yes, her jeans and sweater were just that tight, and looking at her filled to overflowing, her cup running over, looking as if abundant life had overwhelmed her, I knew she was pregnant.

“We're marrying right away,” Rudy said.

“Why?” Father was incredulous.

Ligita folded and unfolded her hands in her lap, and stared at Mother's dishes in the cupboards.

Rudy blushed again. “For all the usual reasons.” Rudy patted Ligita's stomach and then it was her turn to change color.

“We're in love, quite obviously,” Rudy said.

“Quite obviously!” Mother beamed. “Love. Marriage. Another wedding. We'll hold it at the hall, of course.”

“Of course,” Ligita said. Her dark eyes shone like obsidian. In less than a minute she had Mother figured out entirely.

“Well, I, too, am in love.” Father passed his hand over his heart.

“Really?” Ligita ventured.

Mother tucked a strand of her dark hair behind her ear and snorted. “Don't encourage him—please.”

Though it was Mother's habit to pour water over Father's words so they wouldn't have a chance to firm up, Father merely winked at her. “Oh, yes, and they are beauties, each and every one possessing speed and balance and perfect symmetry.” For years Father had maintained a theoretical love affair with German-made automobiles. Whenever that slick magazine arrived at the end of each month, Father immediately retired to the latrine, where he gazed with sustained admiration at the many shiny pictures, the only luxury that Father allowed himself.

Father sighed, a sound of vast longing that conveyed decades of wistful desire.

“Someday I will have one of these lovely ladies for my own.”

“What would you do with such a car?” Mother asked.

Father looked at Mother as if she'd grown a third eye. “Why, drive it, of course.”

Mother and Father wasted no time in setting up Rudy and Ligita in the living room. I repaired to the shed, where I felt I could pursue my literary endeavors without interruption. But that very first night, Rudy and Ligita rattled the wooden door and let themselves in without knocking.

“I didn't want to mention it, not in front of Mother and Father; they're upset enough as it is. But there was a fellow on the bus asking after you.”

“He had absolutely enormous ears,” Ligita piped up, and it seemed to me she was smirking a bit.

“Anyway, this fellow wanted me to give you this.” Rudy handed me an envelope. I waited for them to leave then tore open the letter.

 

For, lo, the winter is past; the rain is over and gone. The flowers appear on the earth; the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land.

 

P.S. Dusk is the best time to hunt for the magic fern that blooms. And the river is the best place—no?

 

I glanced at my reflection in the window. Not cute. I whisked a tube of lipstick over my lips, pinched my cheeks for color, and pulled on David's fishing coat. As luck would have it, Mother was busy showing Ligita the inside of her oven. I hurried through the cemetery. The rain had quit, and the earliest of the spring birds flitted and darted from the understory of the trees. The last light, fallen now behind the lowest layer of clouds, cast a horizontal beam that illuminated every drop of water studding silver and gold the buds of every twig of every branch of every tree. Suddenly, I was that Shulamite girl in a garden of diamonds.

“Inara—over here!” David emerged from the brush. His gaze swept the open collar of his fishing coat and the neckline of my dress underneath it. “You look wonderful.”

Behind his words, I heard Solomon's script scrolling like a ticker tape. Dramatic, sure. And crazy. For me to fall in love not really knowing what love is but sure that I was consumed by it and that this must be a good thing. But it was easy to do as the clouds had folded down for dusk and twilight blurred sharp edges, forgiving any blemish. It was easy to allow myself to feel, to be carried away by feelings larger than any I had ever encountered before. David linked his arm in mine and we walked by the water. Eventually, our steps led us through the cribbed aspen to the manor house. It was the only tangible evidence that our family had once owned something fine, and I wanted him to see the crumbling stone statue of Venus rising from the dark pond and how the loss of her left arm and head only added to her noble bearing. I wanted him to hear the strains of waltzes spilling through open doorways. I wanted him to imagine, as I did, that we might someday live here together.

We walked over the flagstone, which at one time, judging from the grout of weeds between each stone, had been pieced and fitted to such precision that a woman in rustling silk could walk without soiling her dress or feet. The mullioned windows of leaded glass and the intricate loops and curls of the decorative wood latticework wrapping the entire upper story of the structure suggested an elegance belonging to a forgotten era. And now, at sunset, when the last stabs of light lanced through the birch and oak, those windows turned to mirrors, casting light all about, honey thick and viscous. I wanted to drink that light, bathe in it.

 

We approached the back of the house where the side door hung crookedly on its hinges. We did not light a lamp. We did not need to: by this time the clouds had thinned and the moon, round and full, threw rectangles of silver light over the stone floor. I unrolled his coat and spread it over the floor.

When you were quite young, you asked about your father, the circumstances of your birth. You asked where he was. You asked me why I did not love him enough to marry him, and that was the question that convinced me, matters of tact and dignity aside, that I should tell you everything. You are my son, blood of my blood. You are David's son, blood of his blood. And so I will tell you he had eyes as blue as a cloudless sky in August. In certain light they looked purple, in other light, silver. No one before had noticed me in the way a girl wants to be noticed. I loved him in the frenetic, anxious, giddy, soul-consuming way a girl does when she falls in love for the first time. I stumbled headlong and clumsily through a tumultuous array of emotion. Time moved in two speeds at once: dizzyingly fast as darkness fell around us, and at the same time as slowly as an old camera, the kind with a shutter snapping one frame after another: a look, a breath, a gesture.

I know you understand. You've written that we inhabit mysteries we don't have words to express. To read your explanation of the latticed nature of the universe makes perfect sense to me. I have witnessed the way needle ice grows slowly, knitting itself into sheets so solid they can support the weight of an army of elephants. I have rooted for mushrooms, have seen the thin white tendrils of the mycelium, that network of roots that binds one fruit of a mushroom to another that might fruit ten kilometers away. I know that the strength of lace rests in the knots that anchor the empty holes. That we are built of more space than solid substance seems in perfect accord with the larger architecture of our visible and invisible world. All fundamental forces of nature, all particles, you wrote, can be thought of as vibrations of tiny strings. A network of thread corseting the heavens, binding the deep. Strings finer than the finest hair, so fine no needle can work it. This intricate warp and weft of thread, this quiet industry, weaves itself on a vast loom that never stops growing.

And so there we were, sitting beside each other. I had waited ten months to see David, but nervousness seized me and I could hardly breathe, let alone speak. And whatever ailed me seemed to afflict David, only it turned him strangely chatty. He told a joke about three retired Estonian race-car drivers. Jokes about the famed unflappable calm of Estonians is a sure icebreaker in almost any social setting. When David launched into an anecdote about a rabbi, a priest, and a mullah, I put a finger on his lips. “You didn't come all this way to tell jokes.”

“No.” David squeezed my hand.

I looked at David, at his gray-blue eyes, and I saw the eyes of the famous lover, one who is beautiful in his coming and going, one who found beauty in an unlikely candidate, the dark Shulamite girl, misunderstood, shunned. So when I looked at my beloved, I could say, as the Shulamite girl did, that his head was as fine as gold, his locks as bushy and black as a raven. His eyes were the eyes of doves by the rivers of waters, washed in the milk and fitly set. His cheeks were like a bed of spices, as sweet as flowers. When I looked at David bending toward me, he was more than David the person, he was David of those passionate letters. David cradled my head under his arm and his lips were lilies dropping sweet petals.
Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth: for thy love is better than wine.

When I looked in his eyes, they replied in that same language, a language beyond words.

Then I kissed him. And with that kiss, I was transported, divided. There were two of me. One kissing David and the other one hovering close by, watching. It was as if my life were a movie and I were both actress and audience. When he pushed my dress above my hips, I kissed him. And when he pulled my dress over my head, I kissed him because there was nothing dirty or shameful in any of it. I loved him and he loved me, and in this moment, we were finding the unsaid part neither of us knew how to say. As surface slid against surface, our soft geometries, we made a soundless language between us that only we two could speak, a language beyond words. And I suppose, as the audience part of me watched myself, that I was putting some distance between the act of love and the feelings of love. Because the truth was, the act wasn't living up to my romantic imaginings. In fact, there was a moment of actual pain. Sharp pressure, wetness down below, wetness above. A tear rolled down the side of my face.

“Are you okay?” David studied my face, the part of me beneath him on the coat. “Did I hurt you?” And I smiled, both versions of me did, because not for the world would I tell him that he had. After all, what's a little blood between people who love each other? We pulled on our clothes; it was cold after all. I rolled up the coat, a spot of blood on it now, and both versions of me were glad for the incumbent darkness.

Afterward, we walked back to the river.

David pulled at a tuft of tall grass and worked it between his fingers. “What happened between us just now is the most sacred thing that can happen between a man and a woman.”

“Oh, I know it,” I said. It was so sacred and special that I don't think I'd ever heard Mother talk about it outside our house, or inside of it, either.

“So, in way we're married now, you and I.” David knotted some grass into a loop, slipped it as a ring around my finger. “This is a solemn seal between us.”

I rubbed at the grass ring with my thumb. It was beautiful because David had made it, but it wouldn't last a day in the kitchen.

David squeezed my hand. “I have to go back to Riga tomorrow and I won't return for at least two weeks.”

“Why?”

“I have to take some tests.”

“Oh—more exams.”

“No.” David reached for my other hand. “Different kinds of tests. For those headaches. I probably just need new glasses or something. I'll be back before you know it.”

“When?”

David smiled, tapped the faces of both his watches. “Two weeks to the day. I promise. I'll be here.” David planted a kiss on my forehead, one on each cheek, and another on my lips. “ ‘Many waters cannot quench love; neither can the floods drown it.' ”

I smiled. “That's chapter eight, verse seven.”

“Don't forget it.”

Through the cemetery I scurried. I had cleared the toolshed when the latrine door flung open.

“Inara!” Father bellowed. “Where have you been?”

“At the river.” I clutched David's coat tightly to my chest.

Father shined his flashlight on my high heels. “Quite obviously you weren't fishing.”

“No. I was reading.”

Father shined the light into my eyes. “Reading?”

I squinted into the light. “The Song of Solomon.”

“Oh—the Bible—that I'm glad to hear. But if you are going to study God's Holy Word, promise me that next time you will cover your elbows. Please don't ever let me see you dressing like a Russian again.” The light panned my face and neck. “And wipe that mess off your face. It's trashy.” Father pulled shut the toolshed door.

My eyes stung. Never had your grandfather spoken to me like this. And then I felt ashamed. His eyes had measured me and found me wanting, and now I could not get to my room and wipe the makeup off my face fast enough.

 

The week after I met your father at the river, we were nervous wrecks, each of us for our different reasons. Ligita listened to a German radio station in the dark and commented on her frayed nerves, which was why she couldn't help in the kitchen or hang laundry. But she was tireless in her arguments with Rudy, possessing the stamina of a champion interlocutor who knew how to grind out an infinitesimal advantage and convert it to palpable gain. That is, she talked and talked and talked, her tongue the grindstone by which she wore Rudy down into numb submission.

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