The Sunlight Dialogues (105 page)

Read The Sunlight Dialogues Online

Authors: John Gardner

Tags: #ebook, #book

BOOK: The Sunlight Dialogues
12.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He stood with his hands in his coatpockets, studying emptiness.

To the stars he said, “You wanted to see me on my can, is that it?” It was all right, if that was what it was. What mattered was that it might be that and it might not, because it was possible that stars, too, had happened to notice how the world stretched out from a broken bridge—had seen it all in ant’s perspective—or that they knew beforehand, without ever having had to see from the bridge where Hodge had stood.

Freeman’s voice said, inside his mind, or Ben’s, maybe, “You can’t just walk out. But then again it’s no good to get up too close. You know what I mean.”

Hodge scowled, then got in the car. Little by little his system learned to tolerate what he’d seen. He stopped at a gas station and phoned his wife, that is, ex-wife, to tell her what had happened. He would know only long afterward that Tag had repaired the line no more than an hour before. After that, he drove to the police station in Batavia to wait. There he tried to phone Will Jr to tell him, but he was away. Hodge told the policemen, Clarence Pieman and Figlow, the news, wept and told the whole story, with all the details, and told how the troopers were hunting for them now, and wept, and moved beyond his vision of distances. His mind held, not as warring principles but as a solemn resolution, the length and breadth of the valley stretching out as if endlessly from the burning wreck, and the close-knit pattern in the wallpaper of Will Jr’s livingroom. Figlow sat at his desk, silent, and the desklight shining on his tipped-down forehead made his eyes seem only shadows. Beyond him, Hodge could make out vaguely in imagination the hairy intellectual face of Freeman, who could walk out and who, also, had no doubt wanted to see Will Hodge, Attorney, on his can. Which was all words.

He looked at the clock over Figlow’s desk. He felt weightless. It was as if the earth had dropped from under him or had fallen, dragging him with it, off balance with the sun.

2

The phone rang, loud in the emptiness of the house, and Millie Hodge turned to stare at it. She had not known it was fixed. She thought a moment, eyebrows lowered, then raised herself carefully from the couch and crossed, turning the ice around and around inside the glass, to answer it.

The connection was bad, and at first she could not recognize the voice. The small of her back knew before her brain that it was Will. She half-closed her eyes.

“Millie?”

“This is Millie. Is that you, Will?”

“I have bad news,” he said.

“Talk louder.” She leaned over the phone and pressed her lips closer to it. “I can’t hear you,” she said. She had a weird sense that the Runian sisters stood listening behind the door.

She heard him clearly now. “Luke’s dead, Millie.”

She was silent. She heard, or imagined, the dead sisters’ sharp intake of breath.
Oh my! No! The poor woman!
The voices were clear and distinct. Was it only the wind?

“Are you there, Millie?”

“I’m here,” she said.

“Luke’s dead. Do you hear me?”

She nodded, silent.

“He ran his truck off a bridge. The others—”

She waited.

“They got out. They must have suspected. There was only one body.”

It wasn’t possible to cry.

One body?
the sisters exclaimed.
Only one?
They tipped their heads together like weeds in a wind.

“Will,” she said.

“I’m sorry, Millie,” he said. That was all. The connection broke. She listened to the wind, and there were no ghosts’ voices now. No time for fantasy. The house was empty. She turned mechanically away from the phone. The room was cold, for the hot summer had at last broken, and autumn was descending in a rush, as always in Western New York. She drew the ragged old red and purple afghan from the couch and wrapped it around her shoulders. She stood at the window with her arms crossed over her bosom holding the makeshift robe in place. Stony Hill was burning, a red glow northeast of the prison’s flat white light. She stood looking. Her arms were white, her elbows like daggers. Her eyes were like emerald, her lips like amethyst, and in her mourning she was beautiful again; she was calm as stone.

3

She sat on the bedside wringing her hands while Clumly dressed. She could have told him, at least, she was thinking in anguish. But she hadn’t, and the anguish was pointless, not that that did a thing to make it less: She was not going to tell him even now, and she knew it. You can’t ruin a man after all those years of living with him and then tell him, “Oh, say, I ought to tell you something.” She had asserted her rights, had surrendered herself to whatever waves must carry them now; she would wait it out, and suffer with him or for him or from him whatever it was she must suffer, whatever was right.
My duty,
she thought. The word darted in and away again and hovered somewhere in the dark of her mind like a mysterious bird that could change its color, and there in the dark, outside her reach, she could feel it changing, teasing her toward a thought. She clenched her fists beside her knees, resolving to wring her hands no more, then instantly forgot. But he saw nothing of it as he dressed, lost in thought.

A meeting, he said. A speech to the Dairyman’s League. Was it true? But whether it was true or not no longer mattered. He had a life of his own, it was none of her business. A life to spend or squander as he saw fit, as independent of her as she was of him. That was what she’d learned, a startling and terrible but also exhilarating discovery that brought with it a sudden sense of vaulting joy, of freedom—an escape into wilderness and boundless time: she could kill herself if she pleased, she had realized, standing at the open window dreaming of it; because the pain was hers, not her husband’s, whatever pain of his own he might feel. The decision was hers, and if she chose against it for his sake, she did it voluntarily, as his equal. So he too, long ago, might have chosen to stay out of weakness, from dependence on her dependence on him, yes, but even then,
his
weakness: she was not, after all, his prison. She felt prepared almost for joy, but first she had tonight and tomorrow and perhaps next year to stumble through.

He was mumbling something as he dressed, and she closed off the back of her mind to listen.

“My friends, I’d like you to think back to the story of Cain and Abel,” he was saying. “I know that sounds like a minister talking, and I know a man’s known by the company he keeps—” Something was wrong with it, he seemed to think, and he muttered it again, with a slightly different expression. More heavy-handed, in her personal opinion.

“Should you really say that, Fred?” she said.

“Esther, please,” he said.

She sighed.

“—and I know a man’s known by the company he keeps,” he whispered.

Well anyway, he does have a speech to make. It’s not likely he’d stoop to an outright lie. Something wrong with a marriage where people can’t help but suspect each other.
She thought of all those years when again and again she’d wondered with an aching heart if perhaps there was someone else he loved more than her. The Indian girl with the blue eyes. And others, a girl he stood talking to once at a School Board meeting. The waste of it all, she thought dismally.

But that was wrong, of course. There was always some waste, it was the method of Nature, and besides it was none of her business. She listened to him swallowing, pulling his tie snug, and then the almost inaudible yet to her ears distinct scrape of stiffly starched cloth as he put his cufflinks on. He went over to the closet in his stocking feet and she heard the squeak of coat hangers: then he came back, and the suit came down on the bed beside her and she caught the clean smell. She heard him straightening the trousers, then putting them on. He drew in his breath, slipping the belt on, buckling it. Then he leaned toward her again for the coat. “You look tired,” he said.

Before she could answer, the phone rang. She touched her forehead with the fingers of her left hand, meaning to get up for it, but Clumly put his hand on her shoulder gently. “I’ll get it,” he said. “Don’t trouble.”

“It’s no trouble, Fred,” she said. But she didn’t get up.

He carried the phone from the hallway into the bathroom and closed the door, and when he spoke it was too softly for her to hear. She sighed. Her heart felt drained and withered. But after the first words he no longer kept his voice at a whisper. “Dead?” he said. A moment later: “Go on.” He listened again, and then he said, “You’ve got everything in control then? I’m supposed to give—” Another long pause. “Ok. Check. I’m supposed to give a speech, so if you need me I’ll be at the Grange. Right. Ten-four. Right. G’bye.”

He hung onto the receiver a moment before he put it in its cradle. Then he came slowly back down the hall, put the phone on its shelf, and came back into the room. “Luke Hodge is dead,” he said. “It looks like suicide.”

“No,” she said. The room was full of distances, sounds farther off than they ought to be, as though it were the room, not the news, that was not to be believed. She could feel Luke’s presence distinctly, unquestionably alive; but she knew he was dead.

“He drove his truck off a bridge,” Clumly said. “The State Police are there, and Miller’s going over. His father’s at the scene, too, Figlow says.”

“The State Police reported it?”

A silence. At last he said, “Funny you should ask that. No, as a matter of fact. Luke’s mother reported it. Got it from his father. The troopers—” He stood thinking, staring into space perhaps.

“What?” she said.

“Nothing. Kept it under their hat, that’s all. Not even on the radio. Funny.”

She nodded. If there was something wrong, something mysterious going on, she was to blame. Such is the language of the blood.

But Clumly had his shoes on now, and the suitcoat, and he was getting out his good wool coat, though the night was warm.

“Do you really think you should wear that?” she said.

“Now Esther,” he said, “you just leave that to me. There are some occasions when a uniform just isn’t needed, and tonight is one of ’em.”

She was startled. It was not what she’d meant, and his misunderstanding after all these years in the same house, saying the same words at the same time, thinking the same very thoughts, made her suddenly suspect—oh, more than that,
know—
that they’d struck something.
They expect him to come in his uniform,
she thought.
He refuses.
She said, “Dead. I can’t believe it!”

A silence.

“It’s tragic,” Clumly said.

She nodded.

They held their silence like years stretching backward and forward out of sight, like a vast space of quiet ocean at night. He put his hand on her shoulder and, strange to say, with the thought of death enclosing them like the space beyond the farthest stars, like the shell of an empty house, Esther felt safe.

“Be home early,” she said.

“I always do the best I can,” he said.

“I know that,” she said. She patted his hand. She could feel how old it was.

She got up when he started downstairs, and she went down behind him, sliding her hand on the banister smooth as the one at City Hall, and felt comfortable with the closeness of the walls around her and Clumly’s presence below her and, in the air, the scent of his passing, a mixture—mysteriously pleasing to her, almost holy, in fact—of cologne and Ivory soap. She saw him to the porch, listened to his footsteps crunching on the gravel, going down the driveway behind the house to where the car was parked. She heard the door, then the motor starting up, and he backed to the street. She closed the door and turned the key in the lock. She switched off the lights.

They used no sirens, but she could feel them coming, moving toward her like subterranean creatures pressing mysteriously upward out of darkness into the cellar and on to the kitchen where she sat, to nibble her bones. She heard their cars purr softly to the curb out in front of the house, heard the doors open, the occasional mutters of the radio—two cars, perhaps, or possibly three, or one. She closed her hand more tightly on the neck of the bottle.
I am not quite as sober as intended,
she thought with dignity, stock still.
This is unusual. I am not, generally speaking
… She lost the thread. For a moment she couldn’t remember whether she’d turned off the lights. She went through it again in her mind—Clumly’s leaving, her quiet listening there on the porch, her return.
I locked the door, switched off
… She heard them coming up, their boots loud on the porch steps. Voices. “Nobody home, looks like.” “Ring the bell.” “I don’t know. I mean the house all dark—” “Maybe we should wait till tomorrow? You know what I mean?”

She thought sadly of her life, but the details were a trifle confused. She reached out to touch the pistol, making sure it was there. But she didn’t take it in her hand yet, merely waited. They were still talking, on the porch.
Poor Miller,
she thought. She knew pretty well how it must be for him. After all those years, he and Fred there together, “serving together,” as Fred would say, as much like husband and wife as like father and son. She was sorry. She nodded in the dark of the kitchen. The doorbell rang. She touched the pistol again and, after a moment’s thought, picked it up. It was surprisingly heavy now, as heavy as the cast-iron spider she cooked his eggs in.

Perhaps she was going to die. There was no telling. She knew only that they could not have the tapes. She had no idea whether the tapes would seem worth the trouble to them, but if they were, they would have to shoot her to get them. Her mind was made up. How absurd it seemed now, all those years of self-pity when she’d thought she must even the score with him, pay him back for what had no price on it, no more than her own devotion had a price. The ho-hum evenings, the long triviality of breakfasts and suppers, the conversations without talk.
Nobody’s life,
she thought,
is perfect.
Fred’s expression. How true! Yes, yes, how true!

Again, the doorbell.

They had loved each other, she thought, frowning. Again the bird in the back of her mind stirred and fluttered.
Duty,
she remembered. But duty was merely turning love into a thought. Without love—if there was no love—then duty

Other books

Sergei, Volume 2 by Roxie Rivera
All for a Story by Allison Pittman
Caught in the Act by Jill Sorenson
Let Your Heart Drive by Karli Rush
Contessa by Lori L. Otto
The Tall Men by Will Henry