October Light (33 page)

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Authors: John Gardner

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BOOK: October Light
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“French horn player?” Dr. Phelps asked joyfully, head thrown back like a swordsman's. “Margie here plays the flute. You children know each other?”

They both grinned shyly. They played in the same school orchestra, the same school woodwind quintet.

“You bring your flute tonight, Margie?” Dr. Phelps asked. He was an organizer, also an avid musician.

“It's in the cah,” she said. A whisper.

“By cracky, we'll have a concert here, before we're through. I saw DeWitt in there with his guitar. James, we're gonna make your house a concert hall!” He turned around, beaming, to look at James. He wasn't there.

“James?” Estelle said.

“Well don't that beat heck,” Dr. Phelps said merrily, lifting his wild white eyebrows and poking his thumbs in his vest.

“Is that you, Dr. Phelps?” Sally Abbott called down.

“Where on earth can he have gone to?” Ruth exclaimed.

In all the commotion, no one had heard the truck start up, but they saw the lights now, careening out toward the road.

“Why that snake in the grass!” cried Ruth Thomas, and made a face.

6

It was a terrible temptation for Sally Page Abbott—as they meant it to be. It reminded her of a thousand happy times, Estelle's piano playing drifting up the stairs, Estelle and the Thomases and Dr. Phelps all singing
—They asked me how I knooooo
—and the glorious smell of cocoa and cinnamon-toast, and in the kitchen people talking, Rev. Walker and some young people and possibly, she couldn't be sure, a stranger. It was the kind of thing she wouldn't have missed for the world, ordinarily, and she was half inclined to think she was a fool to be missing it now, but still she hesitated, standing with her ear to the door-crack, trying to determine what was right, pursing her lips, her palsied old head slightly trembling, her heart full of trouble. If there were a fire, it occurred to her, they'd break her door down and find her looking a sight. Better fix her hair, put on her good bathrobe and slippers just in case.

As she was making her bed, puffing up the pillow, thinking, I must hide those applecores, she heard footsteps coming up the stairs—someone young and light, probably Lewis. She heard whoever it was go into the bathroom and close the door and use the toilet. When he came out she called, “Is that you, Lewis?”

The footsteps stopped, then came somewhat tentatively toward her. “It's Rafe Hernandez, ma'am,” a voice said, formal and apparently embarrassed. “You must be Mrs. Abbott?”

Sally looked at the bedroom door as if it had tricked her, then tried to see through the crack. Remembering herself, she said: “How do you do?”

“Very well, thank you,” Hernandez said, more formal than before. He had a touch of foreign accent. “Is there anything I can get you?”

She gave a little laugh. “I thought you were my nephew Lewis.”

“Ah yes, ha ha. These things will hoppin!”

Her heart beat rapidly. It was difficult to know how to deal with an introduction in these circumstances. No doubt it was hard for Mr. Hernandez too. He merely stood there. She bent down to see if she could see him through the keyhole, but he was standing out of line. She straightened up again, flustered, patting her hair back in place. “Hernandez,” she said. “That's a Latin name.” She laughed politely, showing interest. “Are you visiting friends here?”

“I'm visiting with Rev. Lane Walker, yes. We knew each other many years ago.” He paused, then said—desperate, perhaps, though he hid it well—“He's spoken of you often.”

“How kind of you to say so!” She laughed again.

“It's a pleasure to meet you.”

She could see him, in her mind's eye, bowing to the door. As a matter of fact she was doing that herself.
“My
pleasure, I'm sure,” she said. “Is this your first visit to Vermont?”

“My very first. I must say, it is as beautiful as everybody says!”

“Well yes,
we
like it.”

He was silent a moment, no doubt still smiling, bowing at the door.

She picked at her collar with stiff, crooked fingers, hunting for something more to say. It had always been Horace who had the knack for conversation with strangers; she'd smile, delighted, getting by on her looks, and would hurry away to make tea. Theirs had been a wonderfully sociable house, while Horace was alive. He had a way about him. Everyone said so. He had always just finished some interesting book, or heard something curious at his dentist's office, or had acquaintances in common with the stranger. “Pittsburgh!” he would say, “I have a cousin in Pittsburgh! Furniture business.” She said: “Where do you call home, Mr. Hernandez?”

“Well, Mexico City, many years ago. At present I have a parish in Tucson.”

She felt an instant's panic. She knew no one in either place. “Then you're a priest?” she said.

He laughed rather oddly. “Yes, a man of the cloth.”

“Well well,” she said. “How interesting!” She leaned closer to the door. “I hope you haven't met with any racial prejudice.”

“Oh no,” he said, and laughed. “Not at all, not at all.”

She smiled and nodded, gratified to hear it, but nevertheless wondered what her wretched brother James might have said. “We're backward, here in Vermont,” she confided. “It's because we have no industry, my husband used to say. People don't move in, so we never get to know them. I suppose it's only natural for people to be afraid of the unfamiliar—the ‘intruder,' as they think.”

“That's natural, yes.”

“I've always said we tend to think if we're white, of great, apelike black boys raping poor innocent white girls, you know? We never stop to think how frightening it must be for a black girl to walk down an unfamiliar street filled with white people.”

“That's so, yes. That can be very frightening for them. On the other hand, of course …”

She nodded to the door, encouraged. “Well, someday all that will be behind us, thank heavens.”

“Yes, that's so, no doubt. I hope not too soon.”

She tipped her head, suspecting the man might be teasing her. “Not too soon?” she said.

“Individual differences, cultural differences”—she could imagine him thoughtfully gesturing as he spoke—“those are wonderful things. I would hate to see them go.”

“Yes,
that's
certainly true.” She was nodding emphatically. (How difficult it was to have a serious conversation through a closed door! There was a lesson in that!) Sally said, “They're wonderfully colorful, the minorities. What would we do without our Italians and Jews, or the coloreds with their beautiful, queer speech?” She laughed. She caught a glimpse of her smile in the mirror above the desk.

“Exactly,” Mr. Hernandez said happily, “or these wonderful tight-mouthed New Englanders.” He flattened his voice and pitched it somewhat higher, mimicking Robert Frost:
“Wheah had ey heahd the wind befoah / Change like this to a deepah roah?”
He laughed, delighted at his own performance. “It's a language I'd hate to see die,” he said.

Though she continued to smile, Sally was a little distressed. She had not thought of herself before as one of the colorful minorities. Her people had been here before the Iveses, the Dew-eys, even the Aliens.

The Mexican continued, unaware, it seemed, of her slightly ruffled feelings, “But it all has to go in the end, you're right. Lazy, fat Mexicans, coloreds with their rhythm and beautiful, queer speech, Jews with their skullcaps and keen intelligence, tight-mouthed, tight-fisted New England farmers—”

“Some things will probably survive, of course,” she said cautiously.

“Yes, I'm sure that's true.” He sounded eager to please, yet Sally was increasingly unsure of herself, inclined to be suspicious. As if glad Sally had reminded him of the fact, he said: “As more and more blacks and New Englanders marry and have children, we're sure to see an increase in stubbornness among black people, and a marked relaxation of morals in New England.”

Her hands began to shake. She could no longer doubt it. He was attacking her! What had she done? But it wasn't only that. He was a priest. What in the world was wrong with him? They were supposed to be gentle and understanding.

She said, “I'm afraid I don't quite follow you, Father.”

His laugh, she thought, was distinctly hostile. “My fault,” he said. “You must forgive me. It's the language barrier.”

Her heart was pounding and her cheeks felt hot. She had half a mind to unbolt the door and look at him, find out for sure what the trouble was. But before she could decide whether or not to do it, heavy footsteps were coming up the stairs, climbing very slowly, as if with the greatest difficulty, and she knew it was her friend Ruth Thomas.

“Is that you, Ruth?” she called.

“Hello, Sally!” Ruth called back, cheery. And then at once: “Father Rafe, we've missed you. You mustn't stand chatting with this stubborn old woman. We need male voices!” She seemed to have made it to the top of the stairs.

“Yes of course,” he said, and his voice, it seemed to Sally, was cheerful again, without a trace of hostility. “I've been having a wonderfully interesting conversation, one of the most interesting I've had in some time.” He made it a kind of apology to Sally.

“It's good of you, Father,” Sally said, “to come and talk with a stubborn old woman.” For Ruth's benefit, or mainly for Ruth's, she put an angry little emphasis on
stubborn.

“Nonsense,” he said lightly. “Stubborn? All human beings are stubborn. It's the reason we're survivors.”

“Sally, why don't you come join us?” Ruth called.

Sally hesitated, thinking for the hundredth time of giving in, but before she could decide, Ruth had dismissed her—”Well, do as you like!“—and she heard Ruth go into the bathroom and close the door.

“Goodnight, Mrs. Abbott, I'm glad to have met you,” the Mexican said. She heard him going lightly down the stairs.

When Ruth had gone down too, with hardly another word, closing the kitchen door behind her, Sally sat wincing on the edge of the bed, wringing her hands, feeling guilty and misjudged and full of woe. Over and over she asked herself what had happened, what she'd done. She might have guessed—though she didn't—that her brother had intentionally offended the priest. (It would have come as no surprise.) But her mind was filled with a chaos of righteous indignation and distress, perfectly reasonable self-defense and unfair but convincing self-deprecation. The priest—smug and soft-spoken though he'd never laid eyes on her—could have no idea how much she and Horace had done for the poor and underprivileged in their day—how, right to the end, when, aflutter with panic, she knew she was losing everything, she'd kept up her contributions to Foreign Missions. He could not know how she'd listened with sympathy and interest to visitors from tragic inner-city churches and deplored the evils or prejudice in Boston. Yet she knew, for all that, that she was in some way guilty, had unknowingly let some cruel insult slip, had offended the man inside the priest and deserved every bit of his hostility.

Her feeling of distress and confusion grew, pressing in like a cold, invisible creature from outside. The walls of her bedroom hummed with the music and talk below—she could make out not one word of it now, with the door pulled shut at the foot of the stairs—and the light pouring out onto the cars in the front yard, making the glass and metal glint and reminding her faintly of cars parked behind the North Bennington Church at Christmastime, or cars parked around the school on the night of a Sage City concert, stirred her misery still more. Laboriously, she pulled her feet up into the bed and lay back against the pillow. She closed her eyes.

Anguish. How terrible that one must feel it all one's life, from time to time, whatever one might learn, whatever one's decency! Horace had said once, speaking like a novel, cheerfully, though the thought was grim—they'd had a little quarrel—“We humans are all such poor miserable things. However we may hope, we know perfectly well all we have is each other. Pity how we struggle and fight against our own best interests.” Horace had frequently said things like that. She'd found his opinions distinctly frightening, and sometimes, lying beside him in bed, feeling completely alone in the universe except for Horace, she would suddenly feel so anxious that, without quite meaning to, she would wake him and get him to talk with her a little. If only they'd had children! She could remember all too vividly—and felt it again now—how it had felt, lying on her back, feeling as if she were endlessly falling, sinking toward death, as if she'd somehow become conscious of the earth's fall through space, her whole body listening to the noise of wind, the creakings of the otherwise silent, falling house. As if to steady herself, pull back against the fall, she would touch her husband's wool-pajama'd arm, but the falling continued, and she would half-realize, with growing alarm, that she was losing the oldest battle in the world, the battle we wage from the moment we're born, when we stretch up our arms, kick our legs, and finally raise up our bodies. She would rouse herself from fear, struggling upward toward the ordinary, and pressing her face against his shoulder would wake her husband up; and as Horace would rise to consciousness, she would mysteriously cheer up, her spirits would lift …

Sally blinked and came awake. She pressed up on one elbow, and when it wasn't enough to drive the feeling away, she pivoted her legs off the side of the bed and felt for the floor. She stared down into the yard again, listening to the hum of the party below. She felt giddy, mysteriously endangered, somehow dead wrong. “They give us no choice,” she said, tears in her eyes, speaking to the ghost.

Distinctly, as if from right beside her, a voice said sharply, “Sally!”

She was startled half out of her wits. She was absolutely certain it was Horace's voice, though she knew, of course, that it couldn't be. Was she dreaming? She decided then that it must have been Dickey's voice, for he was calling now through the closed door, “Aunt Sally?”

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