The Memory Palace (17 page)

Read The Memory Palace Online

Authors: Mira Bartók

BOOK: The Memory Palace
12.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Whatchu lookin’ at?” My grandfather snarls at my mother.

Our mother is staring off into space. She has barely touched her meal. “Eat the lamb,” he says to her. “Finish your goddamn plate.”

“Not this again,” says my grandma.

“I cook all day for you whores. Now eat!”

“I’m not hungry,” my mother says in her small flat voice.

“You eat what’s on your goddamn plate.”

“Bastard,” says my grandma under her breath.

“What did you say, you son-of-a-bitch?”

“Ignoramus,” says my grandma softly. She starts to laugh her nervous laugh, then says, “Third-grade education. Can’t get a job. Can’t even write a sentence.”

“I’ll teach you a lesson you won’t forget, you motherfucking bitches,” says Grandpa. “Misery loves company.”

She laughs hard until her voice chokes with tears. Grandpa pushes his chair back from the table and stomps downstairs. When he comes back up from the basement, he is holding something shiny in his hand; his face the color of beef.

Grandpa points a gun at my mother’s head and says, “Nobody leaves this room until you eat that lamb.”

I nudge her plate toward her to stop the sound of all of us holding our breath, but she doesn’t want it, doesn’t want the lamb at all. Her plate is full of greasy meat and bones, and smells of garlic and something I can’t quite
remember from the world downstairs where Grandfather keeps his dark and urgent life, his good cigars.

“Eat the goddamn lamb,” he says again, and takes another step toward the table.

Later, we are all still alive. When my grandfather falls asleep, I slip down into the basement. Below the stairs there’s a cellar room where Grandfather comes and goes. Above the cellar door, a broken clock and a Mason’s oath of honor. Beside the door a faded print of the Lord’s Prayer: “Our Father Who Art in Heaven Hallowed Be Thy Name.” For once I find the room unlocked and go inside. There are rows of canned tomatoes, hot yellow peppers, twenty years’ worth of toilet paper and insulation, a hunting knife and a gun. There’s a rifle, ammunition, an arsenal of war in case the Russians bomb us, the Communists, the hippies, or the Cubans and we are left to die here all alone.

I sit in the cool dank room until my eyes adjust to darkness. It’s quiet here, calm. I sit for twenty minutes or an hour or so or more. No one comes. It’s peaceful among the peppers and the guns. All those jars in rows, such order, such silence. I hear someone walking above my head. I shut the door behind me and go into the other part of the basement where the television is, where my grandma keeps her books, the big ones: Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Dickens, and James. I reach behind them till I find what’s hidden, shiny and smooth, Grandma’s stack of
True Crime
magazines. I hear a door open and Grandfather’s heavy feet at the top of the stairs; he singsongs my name into the basement to see where I have gone. “I’m down here, Grandpa,” I say. “No need to worry.” I place the magazine I’d taken inside an oversized book,
Beowulf
or maybe
Westward Ho
. I put it there so I can hide it fast.

Everyone is napping or pretending to nap, and Ginger creeps downstairs with her tail between her legs to sit beside me and gnaw her bone. I turn on the record player. The needle falls onto the worn-down vinyl groove. It’s Maria Callas singing Verdi. I tilt my head to listen. Her voice reminds me of my mother when she sits at the piano but cannot play, her hands suspended above the keys. The song is the ache I feel when I look at Renaissance paintings at the
museum—not the angels or the saints, the bloody Christs or prim Madonnas, but what is in the distance: the cypress trees on the horizon, pink clouds tinged with gold, birds disappearing into blue mountains. Callas sings the beckoning world I see inside the white pelican’s eye. Her voice fills me up like a bottomless well and I open the window so she can sing into all the tidy darkening yards and secret lives, into the windows of the red brick houses and the trees where the owls live, where in my dreams I travel and build a home of sticks and feathers and leaves. I sit back down and turn the pages of the latest
True Crime
. I read about nice old men who lure children into their homes, feed them peppermint candy, soda, and chocolate cake, then kill them, put them in a pot to boil. Callas’s voice soars, drowning out the waking voices above my head, the shifting of feet on creaking floors, windows slammed shut next door. I feel sorry for these old men I read about, how hungry they are for innocence, for someone else’s life—a beating heart, a tiny hand, a delicate and beautiful ear.

When it’s time to leave for my lesson, I tiptoe past Grandpa, who is passed out on the couch. “Come on,” I whisper to my mother, still planted in the kitchen chair in front of her plate of cold congealing meat. “It’s time to go.”

She stares ahead at nothing, fork in one hand, in her other a burning cigarette. “Let’s go,” I say. “It’s getting late.”

I want stay a little longer today, even though it means coming home in the dark; maybe copy of one of the Audubon prints. Maybe today I will start to sketch the pelican. My mother says nothing; I sit down next to her at the table.

“We should call and tell him we’re going to be late,” I say. “Should I wait for you? Should I see if Rachel wants to go?”

The clock ticks three o’clock, four o’clock, five. I hold her hand; it is soft and cool. Her fingers are long and slender, and can reach far beyond one octave on the piano. They possess a kind of music I could never play in a million years.

We are frozen at the table in the kitchen, with its white lace curtains stained yellow from smoke and the spindly pathos plant hanging in the
window above the sink. I can hear the sound of a sitcom from the downstairs TV and my grandma’s nervous cackling. Suddenly my mother turns to me, as if she just noticed I am there. Her voice is devoid of feeling.

“We can’t go there anymore.”

She has no explanation. I think, could it be just a fleeting fear, one among many? Maybe she’s afraid I’ll get kidnapped. Or a cyclone could hit on our way home. Hadn’t she predicted the flood in July? All those fallen trees, the waters rushing into the streets like the end of the world? My mother warns me all the time now, about what is coming down the road:
A tree could fall on your head. A man could rape you. A hurricane could sweep you away.
Should Rachel chop up more pills in her food? Would that do the trick? But there are so many Sundays; I’ll get the Khachaturian next week or the week after that. My mother stares right through my face as if I am a ghost and says, “There are those who wish us dead.”

When school starts up after Christmas, my mother announces one day that a man has been following her. “He’s planning to kidnap and rape us. Do unmentionable things. It’s been planned for months now. Don’t you know that the Gestapo is everywhere? Outside the window, beneath your bed?”

She keeps the man’s letters in the same drawer where she stores copies of ones she writes to some doctor in Los Angeles. She says he was her psychiatrist when she first became ill and that he raped her at every appointment. “This bastard is targeting all three of us,” she says. “It’s only a matter of time.”

At first I think the letters from my mother’s stalker are real, and I’m frightened. They are full of sexual references to her body and to her “sexy little girls.” But when I examine them more closely, I’m not so sure. They have my mother’s loopy, trembling
m
, her messy sprawl of words when she is on a downward spiral, the way she signs our report cards right before a trip to the psych ward. The t’s are crossed and the
i
’s are dotted so hard that there are holes right through the onionskin paper.

“Go to your room; pull the shades down. Stay away from the window. Someone is watching us. I don’t want you to go to school today.”

Is that when our mother begins to come into our room late at night when we are deep in our watery dreams? In our grandfather’s house, where closed doors are taboo except for his? Where all the locks have been removed, all the keys thrown away? It’s so easy to just barge in, flip on a light, and interrogate a small, startled child.
Has a man ever touched you there? Is that sperm on your leg? Are you having sex for money? Why won’t you tell me the truth?
Did Rachel and I heave the dresser against the door then, or did that come later, the next year or the next? We huddle beneath thin blue covers as the door creaks open and the light from the hallway pours in.
I am your mother! I have a right to know!

At night, Rachel climbs into my little bed; we hold hands and tremble. I try to think of all the Audubon birds I know and list them in my head: Painted bunting, swallow-tailed hawk, great cinereous owl, whip-poor-will, the hemlock warbler... When our mother finally returns to her bed in the basement, I lie awake thinking about Audubon, trekking across America, seeking all those elusive birds. I consider what Mr. Benjamin told me once, how Audubon killed up to a hundred birds at a time to create a perfect picture. When I think of my mother beating her cold white fists against our flimsy door, and how I can’t go to my lessons anymore, I don’t know whether to kill her or to take her in my arms and sing her to sleep.

Each wintry Sunday leading up to my recital in February, I still got dressed and ready to go. My mother could always change her mind. I tried to practice as much as I could, like Mr. Benjamin had suggested, just in case. He had once told me how difficult it was for Audubon to rally support for his
Birds of North America.
Few believed in him, and most thought he was crazy, his goal out of reach. I envisioned Audubon in the Louisiana bayou with nothing but a shotgun and his paints, surrounded by a labyrinth of brackish waters, interlocked and never-ending. At home, a dark and interminable swamp surrounded us all—my mother’s moments of faint lucidity had disappeared, and Grandpa’s rages became the norm. The days when our mother seemed to not know whether my sister or I came or went were few and far between. Now she had eyes at the back of her head. And yet, when I sat at the piano or
when I drew, I felt a glimpse of something boundless and divine, something Audubon must have found in the forest, at the edge of a bog, on the shore of a vast and shimmering sea.

The day of my recital I woke to the songs of birds—chickadees, juncos, and sparrows, the ones that stay behind, even in winter. I was up before everyone except Ginger, who, like every morning, came running to me to lick my face. Outside my window, the lapis sky was tinged with pink. I packed a sandwich, suited up, and headed out the door. It had rained the day before, but during the night the temperature had dropped. By morning the ground had turned to ice. I plodded slowly across the slippery yard, walked past the tree-lined border separating our yard and the world beyond, and made my way to the woods.

After a couple tries, I found a tree I could climb. I perched on a low sturdy branch glazed with ice. I leaned against the trunk and waited. I don’t remember if I thought about my recital that day, but I remember what I drew: a little black-capped chickadee,
Poecile atricapillus
, clinging to the underbelly of a branch. More chickadees arrived and I worked quickly to capture their busy little bodies, their black crowns and throats, their puffy white faces and rusty flanks. They didn’t seem to be afraid of me at all. I could have picked one up and held it in my hand if I wanted, but was content to listen to their song: two single notes, low-pitched and slow. I drew until they vanished in one swift sweep up toward the sky.

That February 1972 I turned thirteen, started my period, and kissed a black-haired boy who smelled of wintergreen. I let my hair grow long and kept it wild. On Sundays I shoveled manure at the horse stables in the park in exchange for free rides, and one day I lost my virginity on a fast brown mare while racing through a bumpy field without a saddle. I thought about this secretly in English class, while reading William Blake’s
Songs of Innocence,
and drew birds and tigers around the margins of the text. I thought of that liquid feeling of losing time and self while sailing through a meadow; how birds
rise up from the grasses with one single
whoosh;
how no one can reach you when you have four strong legs and are galloping toward the horizon. No one can catch you when you are in a tree, minute as a hummingbird beneath a leaf, or on the ice spinning circles around a pond.

I never returned to Mr. Benjamin’s. Instead, I bought the Khachaturian at a music store and learned the piece on my own. I would play it my way, right or wrong. And maybe someday, in the distant future, I would walk up to my teacher’s big oak door once again.

These were the things I drew after my year with Audubon: red tanagers eating berries on a branch, the great blue heron, the cormorant and quail. I sketched the common birds around me—sparrow, robin, mourning dove, and chickadee—until, after weeks and months of keen observation, they ceased to be common, but rather things of infinite wonder. I drew what surrounded me, and what lay deep in my wildest dreams—a firebird like one from our Russian fairy-tale book, a bird that sings to the lonely and forsaken deep in the heart of the woods. I thought of the firebird when I played the Khachaturian for the recital that never came, and when our mother burst into our rooms late at night. And one night, in a dream, I followed the white pelican. I grew wings and flew from my grandparents’ roof over the small square yards of red brick houses and rows of sycamore, buckeye, and pine. I flew back to Mr. Benjamin’s quiet house, with its plush carpet of red, his gleaming pianos, his steadfast and magnificent birds. And I kept going—high over Severence Hall, the Art Museum, and lagoon of golden koi and swans, over Terminal Tower and the seedy Flats, the winnowing Cuyahoga, bubbling with petrochemical debris. I kept flying far above the clouds, beyond the dying, smoke-filled city.

 

Flood

Flooding in streets, awoke to more rain. Went for coffee and toast then out again at four a.m. for the obligatory pie. Fell asleep at motel, thinking I wouldn’t mind sitting in on a séance to see if I can plummet something or someone in my subconscious I have never known and should have known, someone from my family perhaps? Then I thought, I wonder how those white birds can fly so far from the lake, and yet are in this area when it rains? These days, one must carry an umbrella wherever one goes.

Other books

Mated by Ria Candro
Battle Earth by Thomas, Nick S.
Eva Moves the Furniture by Margot Livesey
Cattleman's Courtship by Carolyne Aarsen
Whispers of the Heart by Woster, Barbara
Darkling by Sabolic, Mima