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Authors: Nuala O'Connor

Miss Emily (6 page)

BOOK: Miss Emily
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“Well, I will so,” I say, slipping on the new gray wool coat that cost Uncle Michael twenty dollars and that I intend to wear until my feet slide into the grave.

Mrs. Child says in
The Frugal Housewife
not to let the beauty or cheapness of things tempt you to buy anything unnecessary. Well, my coat is both beautiful and necessary, and it certainly wasn't cheap, but Uncle said I needed it. I wear it with pride against the chill that creeps into the air each evening.

I walk toward the center of Amherst. Daniel Byrne, who helps with Mr. Dickinson's horses and more besides, passes me on Main Street; he tips his cap and smiles.

“Mr. Byrne,” I say, trying to be a little formal, but something about him makes my mouth twitch and beam.

I glance backward after he has passed and find that he is looking behind at me also. I whip my eyes forward, and my heart batters in my chest. I walk on, finding that I am very glad of the decent look of my new coat. I say a silent thanks to my Uncle Michael for gifting it to me.

Miss Emily Takes to Her Bed

S
OME UNNAMABLE GLOOM HAS SETTLED ON ME, AND
I
HAVE
retreated to my room to deal with it alone. But Vinnie does not approve of such withdrawals, and she hovers, trying to oust me. She goes to my window and settles the curtain pleats; this is my sister, always fixing, always soothing, the eternal housekeeper. She fattens my pillows with swift thumps.

“What is it, Emily? You must aim to be less pensive.”

“It is nothing, Vinnie. I feel weary and restless, a little overburdened. That is all.”

“You will always be the same old sixpence,” she says, wiping the tears that fall from my eyes, though I don't wish them to. “Try to think cheerfully, Emily. ‘Be light in thought,' as Mother says.”

“I shall try,” I say. “I will take my rest now.” I lie back.

“Emily, you mustn't wallow for long. Ada was quite put out this morning—she was ready to instruct you on the making of potato scones. She stomps around the kitchen now like an angry sprite.”

“Send her my apologies. Tell her I am tired. But tell her I will be as right as Irish rain tomorrow. Say that, Vinnie, won't you?”

“Yes, Emily, I will use those exact words,” she says, kissing me and taking her leave.

Under its foliage and roses, my wallpaper is filled with arrows, each of them pointing the same way around the walls of my room, from east to west and on eastward again. The arrows tell me to complete my circle as I begin it. For life—and writing—is a never-ending loop of begin, push on, end, begin again. I usually take comfort from the arrows' instruction on the inevitability of beginnings and endings, but today has not been like any day I have had before. Once this malaise descended upon me, the hours attained a stillness that I would like to preserve.

It is mild for an October day, and the sky is pink-bright. I get out of bed and push the window up to let the world into my room. But it does not come. The day is like an illusion hovering over me; it is as if I am the only person who exists. Nothing goes forward or backward—it just is. And I know that all of this stillness is something to do with my heart; it pulses, pushing me forward, but yet I am unable to move. I often wish I were a sparrow or a blade of grass so that problems of the heart and humanity might not bother me. And yet my mind is always at its clearest when something is off balance in me.

I cross the room and lie on my bed and think about words. When my heart or my head hurts, when my body betrays me in sickness, I have words to play with. But, more than play, they own me. I am their servant, and I serve willingly, with as much grace as I can muster. I have so little power over them, in truth. Words— all words—chill and scorch me.

Each dash I create is a weight, a pause, a question. I select them with care. The exclamation point is juvenile, while the dash is much more promising—a mature mark. Each dash interrupts, emphasizes, connects and pushes apart the words around it. The dash is a waiting beat—
dah
—
dah
—
dah.

My lexicon bulges, but my picks from it are slender: I favor
the blunt and the simple. I prefer one syllable to two. I like curt words: death, bird, pearl, bee, stone, crown, stab. These to me are the words that sing and that deserve their place in a poem, as surely as the nightingale deserves her perch in the wild.

With words I question, I complain, I code. I love to riddle.

Riddle–me, riddle–me,

Riddle–me–ree,

Perhaps you can tell

What this riddle may be:

As deep as a house,

As round as a cup,

And all the King's horses

Cannot draw it up.

Words lie in me like water in the riddle's well. They tempt me, like nothing else. Not man, not God, not even dear Dollie, in all her exquisiteness. And what is temptation but a forestalling of joy? And what is joy but the thing that we most desire? Yes, words tempt and tease me, and they send me teetering forward. Vital, immortal words.

Vinnie styles me “mad” sometimes; she loves to flit from person to person like a bee sucking nectar, and she does not understand my need to retreat to words. And Austin thinks me wild, in my ideas, in my notions. But convention never has been, and never will be, my first choice. I have not chosen to live as woman is supposed to live. The choice is mine, so who can object when I push it further and dwell in lands that exist only in my mind and on paper? Vinnie would take exception if she knew the extent of my escape into writing and words.

But those landscapes of my invention—poem lands—are
more real to me than Amherst. More real than the Homestead and all who dwell in her. The rustling passions of life are contained more truly for me in the words of poetry than in the everyday world. Life, as lived, is so desolate at times.

And why do I write? I ask myself daily, for the answer differs at every dawn, at every midnight. I write, I feel, to grasp at truth. The truth is so often cloaked in misleading speech. Sometimes I let words fall carelessly from my lips when I am with people, but alone I make them settle carefully onto paper. There they must be accurate, and they must work as a choir works to sing a tune well. I like to hear my own words in my own voice, and there are days when I sit at my desk and read aloud to myself from my word hoard. The words please me, the hymnal beats, too. And when they displease me, I take my pen and change them and start again. Read, cross out, read. Send to Sue. Adapt, choose, cross out.

Oh, chimerical, perplexing, beautiful words! I love to use the pretty ones like blades and the ugly ones to console. I use dark ones to illuminate and bright ones to mourn. And when I feel as if a tomahawk has scalped me, I know it is poetry then and I leave it be.

Miss Ada' s Head Is Turned

I
T IS AN ENTIRE WEEK SINCE
M
ISS
E
MILY DARKENED THE
kitchen door. I miss her, even though half the time she gets in my way. She sits, draped over the stove, jotting words on the back of sugar wrappers, lost in her head.

The only visitors to my kitchen these past days were Mr. Austin, for a few moments, and Daniel Byrne, who came in to sharpen all the knives at Mr. Dickinson's request.

Mr. Austin flung open the back door, strode in and stood in the middle of the kitchen. I stopped trimming the chops I had in hand and stood before him.

“How goes it, miss?” he said.

“Grand, sir.” I looked up into his face. He is handsome to be sure, I thought, but his red hair is as bedraggled as a scarecrow's; he would not look out of place in a field of corn. Or footing turf on an Irish bog.

Mr. Austin glanced around the kitchen, as if trying to find something to fault, but all was neat and ordered. “Very well,” he declared, and he was gone as quick as he came.

Daniel Byrne was a less alarming intruder; I welcomed the sight of him when I opened the back door to his shy knock. Like
myself, he is from Dublin. He is a big fellow, with straw-colored hair and an easy manner.

“How long have you been in America, Daniel?” I asked as he took the knives he had come to sharpen from the drawer and laid them out.

“Since I was fourteen years old.” He may be in Amherst a few years, but he still sounds like the boy from Ringsend that he is.

“You surely didn't come alone?”

“No, my father and my brother were with me. But after a spell they went west, like so many more. I like it well enough here, so I stopped.”

“And your mother, did she stay in Dublin?”

He dipped his head. “My mother died when I was a baby.”

“I'm sorry to hear it.” I felt bad for asking, and I wanted to say or do something to cheer him. “Will you have some coffee or tea when you're done with the sharpening?”

“I will.” He hissed a knife blade back and forth along the leather strop and tested its bite with a scratch of his thumb. “I'll be able to vote soon, Ada,” he said.

“Is that your way of telling me you're nearly a man, Daniel Byrne?”

“It might be.” A hint of scarlet rose in his cheeks. I busied myself scalding the pot and wetting tea leaves. Daniel finished the work quickly. He checked each knife against his skin and gave them all to me to return to the drawer. “There you go,” he said, as if it were I who had asked him to do the job.

“Thank you, Daniel. Will you eat something with your tea? I made a sponge cake with blueberry jam.”

“I had better get on, actually, but thank you. Next time.” His eyes lingered on my face until we both turned our heads away. “I'll go,” Daniel said, and he went quickly back out to the yard, but he
left a part of himself behind in the kitchen, a sort of warm space that I found I welcomed very much.

Mrs. Dickinson comes in and asks me to make an Irish soda bread—she fancies something different, being more used to yeast bread—and I am happy to oblige.

“A change is as good as a rest, Mrs. Dickinson,” I say.

“Indeed.” She turns her back to me and leaves the room. Sometimes I wonder why I open my beak to the woman at all.

In her book Mrs. Child says that water for bread should be warmed during chilly, damp weather, the very type these October days bring. I am busy wondering if I should heat up the buttermilk—against my normal action—when Miss Emily slides into the room.

“Miss, you have returned to me.” She smiles, and I ask her to measure out two cups of flour and a teaspoon of pearl ash. “Or do I have to do everything myself?”

She takes her utensils from the cupboard—a big glass to measure by and a large silver spoon that she likes to stir with. These are her bits, and no one is permitted to touch them; she guards them shyly.

“Two cups,” she says, and I nod. She begins to scoop; her face is as washed out as the flour.

“Now, miss, we'll get on with it.” I heat the buttermilk. If Mrs. Child says it should be done, it must be so.

“I have been a little low, Ada,” Miss Emily says in a quiet voice.

BOOK: Miss Emily
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