Mother would sit by the window and her fingers would move slowly over her upper lip, where there was colorless hair like the peachfuzz on the cheek of a boy (I could not see it under her fingers but in the fingertips of my own hand I had the memory of it) and I would smell the burning leaves, but I could not see what it was she looked at—outside the window it was too bright, a wide whiteness like the heart of a fire with vague shapes being consumed in it like kings with melting crowns burning up on a pyre: I put my arm around her and said, “I love you, Mommy.” She said nothing. My father said, “She can’t hear you, Essie. Go and play.” When winter came she would be well again, but would watch me as though she were about to go away on a long long journey and never come back, or would come back only when I was grown and we had forgotten one another. It was I who went. The train wound up through the Catskill Mountains where the air smelled of oil and beyond the spackled train window the world swam with blue. I cried, and at night I was cold. There was no one with me on the train because my father couldn’t leave the milking and the wheat harvest, and my mother had to feed thrashers. I wanted to write to them and tell them I loved them and wanted to come home, but I had nothing to write with and no paper but the note my father had printed, bending down to it, squinting through the thick gray glasses that made his eyes seem larger than chickens’ eggs. I had a dream, I remember—a kind of waking dream—in which my mother seemed to speak to me very clearly, saying “Essie, can you make us some tea?” I started and looked all around me; the voice had been clear as could be; but there was only the half-empty car swaying on the mountains’ turns, and vague faces like objects in a fire, and rainbows at the edges of my glasses.
I did not like Batavia—the funny way the people talked, the bright red brick streets that a half-blind child could barely cross without falling, the stores where no one knew your name or, for that matter, cared, and in winter the snow drifts where sighted children squealed and played and blind children floundered and grimly pretended to laugh. And as for the Blind School itself, a horror! It was not their fault. The halls were long, and for what seemed a long time I could never remember where they went: the light that came in through the windows at the ends was gray, filtered through the shade of elms, and whatever direction you looked—north, south, east, west—the light was the same. I walked slowly, keeping to the wall, running my fingertips along the cool, smooth, painted cement, and the others ran past me, shouting (it seemed to me) angrily, and sometimes bumped me. I stood once by a door beneath a high wooden arch—I could just make it out in the dimness of the place—and I couldn’t remember where the door went. A boy came through it, holding his hands out toward me, a boy no older than myself, I think, and I watched as he came closer and closer, and I couldn’t speak. He bumped into me and jerked his head toward me, a face without eyes or nose or mouth, as far as I could see in that murderous light, and he held my arm tightly, as if to keep me from getting away, and with his free hand ran his fingers over my cheeks and eyes; then he released me as though I were a thing not alive, and he went around me, silent and indifferent, and felt his way on down the hall. Every night I prayed that my father would let me come home again, not because the people were unkind to me—it was not that—and the other children all prayed the same. I didn’t want to learn braille: my fingertips were stupid, every form felt exactly the same to me, and the very idea of reading a coarse page of scattered bumps seemed as hopeless as reading the stipple of a plaster wall. I did not believe I needed to learn. At home I sat in the front row of the one-room schoolhouse where I went, and if I concentrated I could see what the teacher printed on the blackboard. I had listened carefully, and at home, sitting with my mother at the diningroom table, I had worked carefully, painfully, with the books I brought home from school. I was getting better, I thought. But in the Blind School they put me in the next to the last row, and the room was dimmer than our schoolroom at home, and sometimes I could not see the teacher. I felt sick, as if I were sinking in quicksand or endlessly falling through empty space, and I said to the teacher one day, “I can see, Miss Ford. Please, please. I can see.” She took my hand—she was an old woman, kind—and bent her face to me, gentle. She had no eyes or nose or mouth. You can see what sort of dreams I have.
“It would be inhuman,” I said. “One has no right to bring blind children into the world.”
He said nothing, puffing away at his cigar, and I knew that in his deep, dim-witted way he was mulling it over.
“Freddy,” I said, “for heaven sakes!”
“I don’t know,” he said and reached to touch my hand.
“Suppose your parents had had the choice—suppose their doctor had known and had warned them. Would you want—”
“Don’t ask,” I said.
“Now Esther that’s foolish,” he said. “We all have our handicaps. Nobody’s life is perfect.” Cross as a bear. It was all so simple, so right and obvious and true: I am happy ninety-eight per cent of the time, as Mother was, and I let the two per cent poison the rest. And so he is good, yes; the minister’s talk of how no one but God is perfect is just like atheism, like denying there’s sunshine because you’ve lost your sight.
How incredible, though, that faith in life! No wonder if sometimes one envies him—and sometimes almost hates him. Heavy-minded, ponderously reasonable, he muses on the fitness of unreasonable things, and drops like old wood clothespins to a basket the pros and cons of giving a child a life devoid of vision. “A lot of them make great musicians,” he said. I laughed. Freddy can’t tell high from low on a piano.
“Well,” he said, getting up, “I’ll leave it to you. That’s only fair.”
I did not want it left to me, and it was not fair.
I wanted—what?
No, words again. Large gestures.
I wanted to be beautiful.
I wanted to be loved for myself alone, as God loves even giraffes.
There is a moral to this. There is no such thing in this world as love. Until the day we go to Heaven, there is only childish infatuation and jealousy, duty, despair.
A sickly moral, admittedly, but better than endless burning.
I wanted him to make me feel pretty. Isn’t that sad?
“I am not myself today,” Esther said.
2
She awakened to find the bed empty, as usual, and the weight of wordless, irrational unhappiness still over her. She sat up and waited to be completely awake, then turned and reached her legs down, long and thin and white, she could guess; more dreadful than her darkest fears. She began immediately to move her lips, resuming her endless dialogue with her soul. It was a long time since Clumly had made love to her. It was because he was getting old, he said, but she knew it was more than that. They’d been, generally, morning lovers, in that glowing first age now endlessly receding like her memory of sight. She would awaken to the gentleness of his hand on her breast—she’d had pretty breasts once, though they were small—his leg lying lightly over hers, his penis growing against her hip, and she would turn to him, still half-asleep, and smile, and he would kiss her, just a peck, and climb up on top of her, and she would part her legs and close around him like a fist. But something had happened, and now she lay waiting through the months like an etherized patient for what would never come. Her waiting disgusted her and made her feel ashamed: she was old, her desire was to her obscene. Her very womanhood, all she could offer him once, as it seemed to her, had become a revolting imposition. He had learned to get up and go downstairs before she awakened, and she, if she awakened too soon, had learned to pretend to be asleep until he made his escape. After they were up and dressed it was better, almost exhilarating, a trap avoided. When he was gone finally, she felt relief. Relief for his freedom, not just her own. She would begin her chores, endlessly talking to herself without uttering a sound, watering the ivy and the dining-room ferns—one finger in the dirt to find the level of the water—dusting, sweeping, mopping, waxing; she would talk on the phone to the boy at
Loblaws’ Market or to Vanessa Hodge or to the Superintendent of the Methodist Sunday school where, sometimes, she taught (she’d taught there regularly once, but she’d had discipline problems); she would fix her lunch—a braunschweiger sandwich and a glass of wine—and would begin down the long, drab corridor of afternoon.
It is easier to bear a cross than to be one. She still sometimes thought, but without real interest or hope, of suicide. And at times, strange to say, she suffered acutely from jealousy. When she met a young woman, she could sometimes not resist the temptation to ask to touch her face. Even if the girl was plain, Esther would tell herself she was pretty and would wonder if her husband did too. She knew he was not that kind of man, and yet for all her certainty, the fear was there. How she longed to release him, or at very least show him some proof of her gratitude! She was unable even to say the words any more, because her voice, which had once been soft and sweet, had grown harder now.
She always spent almost the whole of the afternoon preparing supper for Clumly, always stew, but she had many varieties of stew, and sometimes soup for a first course, with side dishes of frozen peas or stringbeans or spinach. When she tried to make steaks or some kind of roast she burned her fingers. While she cooked she had a little wine. Not much, just enough to bring a feeling of warmth.
And so she made do, today as on other days. Something was wrong down at the police station, that was the trouble. She could always tell. He blamed himself for that young policeman’s murder, of course. That was like him. And he blamed himself for the escape of that insane magician, and that too was natural, though it was not his fault. If there were only anything she could do!
At five-thirty, when she had supper ready, her husband had not yet come home. He was late almost every night, these days. She stirred the stew irritably and turned the burner off under it. She had no right to feel irritable, of course. He wasn’t staying down there for the fun of it. He might have phoned, though. That was like him, letting her worry and fret. If she told him afterward that he’d worried her sick he would behave as though that were merely her problem—as though there wasn’t a reason in the world for her to have worried, even now, right after two murders in Batavia, when everyone in town was worried sick and the papers were full of it, people told her. “Everything’s fine,” he would say to her. He would talk cheerfully of this and that, or would settle with his newspaper and after a while read the obituaries aloud. Sometimes she was ready to believe he did it on purpose, to make her miserable. But that was thinking negatively. It was of course necessary to guard against thoughts like that. To keep her mind busy she examined the question of what to have for dessert. “Canned peaches,” she said. She went down the cellar stairs and moved easily through the darkness to the shelves of canned fruit, took a jar from the section where the peaches were, and started back up. She heard something and paused for an instant. Rat, perhaps. “Filthy cave of a place,” she said. Her foot bumped something and she bent over. Empty beer bottles. She went chilly for a moment, then dismissed it. She continued up into the house and locked the cellar door behind her, as usual. (She had no strong feeling about locking doors, herself. It was one of her husband’s rules.) She put the peaches away in the refrig and went in to the livingroom to turn on the television to listen to the news. There was nothing interesting. They hadn’t yet caught the magician.
At six-thirty the phone rang. It was Fred.
“Esther,” he said, “I won’t be home until late tonight, maybe even early in the morning.”
“Is something wrong?” she said.
“No no, everything’s fine.”
She said, “I had your supper all ready.”
“I’m sorry. You have yours and put a little away for me, I’ll warm it up when I get home.”
“You sound tired,” she said. It crossed her mind that he did not sound tired. He sounded full of excitement.
“Well, yes, tired,” he said. “You’ll be all right?”
“Try not to be longer than you need to,” she said.
“That’s fine,” he said, “don’t worry about a thing.” He hung up. As soon as the receiver was on its hook she was wearied by the thought of spending the whole evening here alone, fretting. She went to the kitchen to have a little wine and halfway through her second glass she decided she would go out.
It was very pleasant out at this time of day, which was why she had decided against calling a taxi. It was beginning to cool. The sun was no doubt fairly low by now. Sounds carried more clearly than at other times, the way they would carry across a lake. She listened to the shouts of a group of boys a block or so away, playing flies and grounders, if she wasn’t mistaken, and the sound of a hose spraying grass a house or two from where she walked. She could hear traffic moving, far in the distance. She walked quickly, though she was not in a hurry. The sidewalk on LaCrosse was old and broken, and here and there it buckled abruptly, throwing one slightly off balance. At Oak Street she turned right, toward the center of town, but before she reached Main Street she cautiously crossed the street and took the cut-through to Ellicott and then Washington. Here the air felt closer—the close-set houses and the trees impeded the breeze—and sounds took on a new density: her footsteps came back to her from all directions at once, from the walls of old houses, the windows and old metal signs of walk-down grocery stores and beauty shops, from parked cars, from thick old hedges clipped at the level of one’s waist. No one spoke to her. She thought of calling on the new organist at the Methodist church; she lived here somewhere on this street. But she couldn’t think which house it was. Now she was hearing, far away, the noise of a drum and bugle corps or, possibly, a band. Coming from the high-school athletic field, probably. The school was right at the end of this street, where Washington ran into Ross.
Car brakes screeched beside her and she jumped, but it was all right. She was still on the sidewalk, it was not for her that he had stopped. The driver called, “You want a rrr-rrr—want a rride, Mrs. C-C-Clumly?” She recognized the voice. Ed Burlington. “No thank you, Ed,” she answered, and gave him a little wave. She leaned toward the sound of the car’s idling motor. “How have you been?” She’d had him in Sunday school when he was still in the grades. He was out of high school now, surely. A good boy, very serious. He’d been an Eagle Scout, when he was in high school—Fred had read her the piece about it—and she’d felt as proud of him as she’d have been if she were his mother. She hadn’t bumped into him for, it must be, three years or so. She moved off the sidewalk a step, cautiously, toward him.
“J-j-just ff-fine, Mrs. Clumly. I got a g-g-great j-j-j-job, I work for the puh-paper.”
“Wonderful,” she said.
He said, “Are you sure you don’t w-w-want a rrr-ride?”
She shook her head. “No thank you, Ed. I need exercise.”
He said nothing for a moment, but he didn’t leave yet. At last: “They didn’t th-th-THINK I couldddd-do it, at ff-first, because of mmy handicap. B-but the writing p-p-p-p-p-part I do vvv, uh, vvv, uh, the writing p-p-p-p—part I do vvv, uh, vvvvery well.”
“I’m sure you do,” she said.
“I see your husband all the t-t-t-t-ime, Mrs. Clumly. I didn’t get to do the mmmmMURDERS, b-b-b-but I dddd, uh, ddddd, uh, I dddd, uh, b-b-but I ddddd-”
She was fleetingly conscious of a difficulty about how to arrange her face as she waited for him to slam through the d into his word. Should she help? A thousand times she’d wondered that, when she was waiting for an answer from him in Sunday school. She could feel the uneasiness of the whole class growing, could feel the teacherly smile on her face going frozen, her mind backing off from the pain of watching it, and she could feel, too, the rising force of his effort, a hint of stubbornness and anger coming into the struggle as it became, as if because of the stubbornness and anger, impossible. At last, as if in rage against all the observers of his tongue’s anguish, Ed Burlington would clap his hands or stamp his foot, and the word would burst into daylight, like spirit
through recalcitrant clay. And so it was now:
“DID get to write on the Woodworth robbery!”
She touched the ends of her fingers together. “The Woodworths? I didn’t hear!”
“Oh y-y-yes. They were robbed one-one day b-b-b-by a wwwwwwwild 1-1-1-looking m-m-man. I wwwwrote it up.”
“My goodness,” she said. Fred must have skipped reading it to her on purpose, sheltering her. She thought instantly of the bearded man who’d broken out of jail. “Did they catch the robber?” she asked.
“N-n-n-never dddd, uh, did.”
“My goodness,” she said. It came to her that she was going to visit the Woodworths. “Well it’s so good to see you, Eddie,” she said.
“Same t-t-t-t-, uh, same t-t-twice OVER,” he said.
She gave him her little wave. The sound of the car enveloped her, a roar like some kind of animal’s, with a queer clicking noise in it, and then, as though a part of the sound, the half-pleasant smell of exhaust rose up around her. She gave her little wave again. Then, cautiously, she turned around and got herself back onto the sidewalk.