Authors: Dorothy Speak
Tags: #Fiction, #Rural, #Sociology, #Social Science, #General
This occurred on the day when the youngest of you, my children, were sitting down in primary school for the autumn term. You were receiving your new scribblers, their pages crisp and virgin and harmoniously ruled with thousands of fine aqua lines. You were given your Pink Pearl erasers, velvety as exposed flesh, while the shining yellow seas of goldenrod beside the school rippled in the wind and the nuns bent like tall black crows over your desks, their wooden rosary beads, fat as crab apples, clattering hollowly. A first-day-of-school lineup at the pencil sharpener stretched down the side of the classrooms and in the cloak closets the autumn jackets hung more neatly than they ever would again and the unmarked chalkboards were black and deep and mysterious as midnight and you’d fallen in love with your new teachers and at that moment it still seemed possible that you might love them beyond the first day of school and perhaps forever.
It was every Wednesday that the Indian doctor and I had met. The following week, he wasn’t waiting on the bench when I arrived. I sat down and watched for him, but he didn’t come. I waited all afternoon, while the dying leaves rained down across the silent lawns and my heart climbed further and further into my throat until I was sure it would choke me. There was no more laughter in the park. No more songs of the sparrow children. The wading pool had been closed for the season, the jets turned off and all the children imprisoned in the schools. Already, the workmen, anticipating winter, had come to unchain the swings from their structures and carry them away prematurely to storage. The leaves of the sumac bushes,
their furry, fist-sized blood-coloured blossoms swollen and rearing up in the branches like hundreds of human hearts, had begun to turn crimson. High overhead, the brilliant maples stirred, restless and foreboding in the heavy autumn winds.
I waited until the sun sank below the treetops and I knew that you, my children, had left school and were at that moment walking home, winding first along the high white sagging fairgrounds fence, then through deep pools of shade in the sad, leafy, twisting streets. Finally I got up and headed south. Passing the hospital, I couldn’t resist going in. I climbed the stairs to the Indian doctor’s office.
Dr. Seth — the receptionist told me — Dr. Seth is in the operating room.
But it’s Wednesday, I answered. He doesn’t operate on Wednesdays.
Well, he’s operating today, she said. He’s filling in for another doctor.
Are you sure? I asked, because, searching her face, I could see that she was lying to protect him.
She grew impatient. Obviously she’d been warned that a woman would arrive and make a nuisance of herself. She’d been told to get rid of me in no uncertain terms.
Dr. Seth has asked that you not come here, that you leave him alone.
What do you mean? I said numbly.
He’s very busy, she said. He doesn’t have time to see you.
Could I at least call him? I asked. Could
he
call
me?
Madam, the woman leaned toward me severely. There’s nothing complicated about this. It’s really very simple. He
doesn’t want you to bother him again. Do you understand?
That evening, your father sat idle in the backyard, nursing a beer. Knowing that the Indian doctor would never again press his lips to my collarbones, I said bitterly, Losing three fingers is certainly a good excuse not to look for a job.
I saw his jaw harden as he bit down on this new wound I’d inflicted. The next day he began to search for employment. Soon he’d found a position as a motor vehicle inspector, which required that he wear a uniform. The first day of work, I helped him on with his jacket. Though the bandages had long since been removed, though the wound was fully healed, it was still uncomfortable for him to dress himself.
Don’t touch the scar, he’d said over and over since the accident. I can’t stand anything touching the scar. It’s the strangest most awful sensation. It’s not pain. But anything touching the scar, anything even grazing it seems to cut straight through to my soul. It makes me want to climb the walls. And I’m afraid, Morgan — I’m afraid that feeling will never go away.
I fastened the brass buttons of his uniform down his chest.
Looking over my shoulder at his image in the mirror, he confided, I never thought I’d see the day when I’d be working for the goddamned government.
You look just like a soldier, William, I said, meaning to inspire him.
But he only answered grimly, I survived the military uniform, Morgan, but this one is sure to kill me…
William, of course, found the fingers that autumn when he was digging in the garden. He took them to Morris and said, “You buried them on me, didn’t you?”
“No.”
“You did. Don’t lie to me. How else would they get there?”
When I say that William found the fingers, I mean that he found the bones. The bones were intact, the joints still operative. The rotting flesh, soft and stinking, had fallen cleanly away, like overripe fruit from a peach stone, leaving the bones white and cured as archaeological specimens.
“I didn’t do it, Dad,” Morris insisted. “I swear to God I never found the fingers. If I’d’ve found them, I’d’ve run back to the hospital with them.”
“You’re a goddamned liar,” William said and he tore off his belt and began striking Morris with it.
“Stop, William,” I said.
But he kept it up until he ran out of energy and Morris’s arms, wrapped round his head for protection like a bird’s wings, were red and raw from the blows and the hard, walnut-sized carbuncle on the back of his neck had split open and was weeping, oozing yellow, like a broken egg yolk.
“How do you know these are your bones?” I asked William.
“Look,” he said, and he laid them out in the palm of his hand. “They’re a perfect fit,” he said, and I couldn’t argue with him. And this was just when we’d reached the point where he was no longer jolted from his sleep every night, yearning for the fingers like a starving man craving the pure, life-giving flesh of white bread. But that night he awakened and searched once more among the folds of the sheets for them.
I haven’t spoken of Katherine.
Today, when I was fumbling in my purse in search of the house keys, something bright leapt out at my eye from the low bushes beside the porch. Descending into the snow, I saw the cotoneaster gay with berries. Armed with a pair of William’s pruning shears, I crept around the foundations of the house and into the remote corners of the yard, marvelling at the rich display of hardy shrubs in full leaf against the fresh snow. Guided by my fingers, I snipped randomly at branches of bearberry, winter creeper, holly, japanese euonymus and carried them indoors, thinking I’d fashion a wreath for William’s hospital door because the nameless woman who sometimes sits beside his hospital bed has sent nothing to cheer him up at The Cedars. I bent a clothes hanger to form a hoop and, acting by feel and by instinct, wove my cuttings around it, enjoying the texture of the rough bark, of the tough glossy leaves, the hard dry berries, the perfume of the sap. I twined branches of vein red dogwood around the arrangement like a life-giving circulatory system. But then I thought: If William sees this wreath, he’ll know I’ve assaulted his shrubs and pruned away at their perfect shapes and the rage he’ll feel could bring on another stroke. Putting on my coat, I carried the wreath across town to Katherine’s grave.
“You must come and get this daughter of yours,” said a nun many years ago, calling in October from the residence where Katherine had gone to live while she studied medicine in Toronto. “She won’t come out of her room. She’s not attending classes. We think she must be very unhappy. Her door is locked. We can’t take responsibility. Come now and take her away. We need the space for a serious student.”
Three times the month before, Katherine had arrived on our porch carrying her suitcases.
“I can’t cope,” she told us. “I’m in over my head. I can’t understand what the professors are saying. The material is too difficult. The math and the science. Everyone else seems to pick them up so quickly. I’ve fallen far behind already. I wasn’t meant to do this. Let me come home.”
“You can’t come back here. Where will that get you?” said William. All through the summer before Katherine had left for school, he’d been bragging to people, “My daughter is going to be a doctor.”
“Nobody with any guts runs away like this,” he told Katherine in September, turning her around even while she had one foot raised to fall on our threshold.
“Let her stay a day or two,” I begged him. “It won’t hurt.”
“If I do that,” he told me, “she’ll never go back.”
In October, we’d no choice but to go to Toronto and fetch her. It was a long silent drive back to Simplicity.
“We’re not quitters in this family,” William lectured her when we got her into the house. “You know we have a rule about that. In this family, once you start something, you finish it.”
Katherine sat on the sofa in her coat, head bowed, unpacked bags at her feet, like a wayfarer still in transit.
“You were on a scholarship,” William berated her. “You were handed your future on a silver platter. I have grade eight, and I was lucky to get that far, on the prairie. Those were the Depression years. Nobody had the luxury of an education, least of all a farm boy. I was never offered anything for free. I would have given my eye teeth to go further in school. You’ve squandered your chances now. You’ve thrown away that scholarship. That was money. Did you ever think of that? Money in the hand. You’re nothing but a quitter.”
“William, don’t,” I said.
“A quitter!”
Katherine was the child we conceived after William came out of hiding following the war, when my letter shamed him, a fugitive from his responsibilities, and brought him home. He’d had no words of greeting for me on his arrival, but I felt that conscription and the loss of his store and the weight of the whole bloody war bore down on me, a killing burden, when he climbed onto me that night. I lay there stoically, thinking, I suppose this is a small price to pay for three square meals a day, while with each angry thrust he said his bitter goodbyes to prairie life, spilling into me all his anguish at being tied now to Lily and me, for what were we to him, against the pure everlasting horizon, the heroic sweep of the Saskatchewan he so loved?
In the daytime, Katherine retreated to a corner chair in our bedroom, where the breezes of October lifted the window sheers and licked at the pages of a copy of
Hamlet
open on her knee. Soon all the crimson and yellow and orange leaves had fallen and the tree limbs were naked and I went around closing the windows of the house. Down in the cellar, I threw shovelfuls of coal into the belly of the iron furnace, which was like an old tree growing in the middle of the basement, its branches snaking across the ceiling. Climbing back up the stairs, I felt grounded by the sight of Katherine’s quiet figure in the chair, filled up by her presence, as though she were living in my womb again.
Then one day when I went outside to hang the wash on the clothesline, I felt the first cold snowflakes of winter spinning down, large and wet and soft against my face, my neck, my hands.
We’ll be happy in this house, Katherine and
I, I thought hopefully, as I hooked the clothespins onto the sheets and shot the line out across the
yard.
We’ll be safe in our warm cocoon
. But, back in the house, carrying the empty laundry basket past the bedroom door, I glanced in at the small form of Katherine bent over her book and saw myself the winter I came home after giving birth in the convent. The recognition gave me such a pain in my chest that I had to grip the frame of the kitchen doorway for support.
I made a pot of tea, carried a plate of dream cake in to Katherine.
“Won’t you tell me how you’re feeling?” I said. “Are you sad? Are you angry? Are you disappointed? How do you feel?”
She looked back at me, her gaze steady. “I just want to read this book, Mom,” she answered simply. In her face, I searched for signs of panic, despair, self-destruction but saw only wisdom. I thought: I must listen to this girl. I must watch her closely because somehow she’s going to point for me a way out of the life I’ve been leading.
Gradually snow covered the ground. On their journey up the street after school, the children’s footsteps, their voices, were muffled, absorbed by the snowbanks, the white roads. Christmas was approaching. Harry Lang climbed up on a ladder and wound lights around his tree. Every evening, while the family watched television, Katherine sat in our bedroom with the door closed and listened to the radio.
“What’s she doing in there?” William asked me.
“She’s — she’s recovering,” I said.
“Recovering from what?” he asked angrily.
“William, not so loud.”
“She left school. She quit. She got what she wanted, didn’t she? Are we supposed to feel sorry for her now?”
“She’s paralyzed by her failure.”
“Paralyzed, my foot. She’s spoiled, that’s all.”
“Shhh! She’ll hear you!”
“Why doesn’t she do something with her life? She’s got to stop feeling sorry for herself. When is she going to get up off her behind and find a job?”
The next day, Katherine went downtown and found work as a typist in a lawyer’s office housed in a restored Victorian mansion. Our house seemed quite empty the day she started working. All morning, passing the bedroom door with my baskets of wet laundry, my duster and sponge mop, I kept glancing over at the chair, expecting to see her there. After lunch, loneliness rose in my chest like a tidal wave and I had to get out. I walked across town, came to the lawyer’s office, stopped for a moment to admire its handsome lacquered door, its gleaming brass kickplate, its arched windows rising taller than a man.
For hours I wandered up and down the wide boulevards of the neighbourhood, past the great brick houses and the Armouries and the classical library with its row of six columns, their leafy capitals etched with snow. In the December streets wreaths and coloured lights had begun to appear. I saw municipal workers climbing up onto extension ladders to string tinsel garlands, red plastic bells above the lanes of traffic. I followed Princess Street, George Street, Canterbury Street until the silent descent of snowflakes in the deep parks and the desertion of the winter avenues at three o’clock on such a wet, grey, heavy afternoon were harder to bear than the emptiness that awaited me at home. Passing once more the lawyer’s offices, my toes numb with the damp and the cold, I longed to enter the vestibule with its amber windows and say:
My daughter works here but I promise not to distract her. I’ve just come in because of the cold. Won’t you let me sit for a while here in the waiting room until I feel alive again?