Authors: Charles Dickinson
Finally, Robert said, “Herm was here while you were at lunch.”
Joe Marsh's eyes lost their heated light and he picked a cigarette from his bandoleer and lit it. “Shit,” he muttered. “He wasn't supposed to be here today. What'd he say?”
“That he was in the neighborhood. That he was sorry he missed you.”
“He
times
it so he'll miss me. Aren't I entitled to a lunch break?”
“Sure you are.”
“He tell you about your promotion?” Joe asked sullenly.
“Promotion?”
“You're assistant manager. Herm made the decision himself. He wants me to teach you the finer points. But to go from seasonal help to assistant manager in just three months is unheard of in the annals of SportsHeaven.”
Then Joe Marsh quoted a salary and in his mind Robert added $30 and the total was more than he had ever been paid to do anything in his life, even to be a sports scribe.
S
ALT CRUNCHED LIKE
nuts under his feet on the walk leading to Ara's house. It was â11Ë.
Her house was a single story with dark shutters and painted white brick, and being white seemed freshly carved from the snow that surrounded it. The shrubs in front were shaped like urns and their caps of snow reminded Robert of overflowing ashes.
She opened the door before he knocked. She wore a thick cream wool sweater coat belted at the waist, a turtleneck shirt, navy blue corduroy pants, socks, and slippers. The house smelled of smoke. It gave the impression of striving for tidiness; she might not have aspired to that state until guests were expected, and then she had too much ground to make up. A pile of newspapers in a stand by the fireplace leaked dust like radiation. The living room was packed with books on shelves to the ceiling, in stacks against the walls, on the mantel above the fireplace, and all these books seemed to be turning fractionally to dust at the edges. The air was dry. Heat clicked in the walls. When he turned to shut the door a blue kernel of static electricity jumped between his fingers and the doorknob, scaring him, angering him with the pain.
Then Ara took his hand and another blue charge from her fingertips jolted him. He cried out, “Hey! Am I under attack?”
“I'm sorry. The place is so dry. I sometimes think I will explode in here some day.” She directed him to the sofa placed before the fireplace. “Have a seat. Can I get you an Irish coffee?” Then she left before he could answer.
She had been grading papers. An empty coffee mug and a full ashtray were balanced precariously on the arm of the sofa, which was a deep burgundy, the fabric worn in spots and stained darker in others. Wing chairs were set to either side of the sofa, but they were occupied with towers of books and papers.
She returned with an Irish coffee for each of them. Whipped cream revolved slowly atop the liquid like the very peak of a developing thunderhead.
Ara pulled back the fireplace screen and threw a log on the fire. She idly stepped on sparks that survived the flight through the air to the floor. The logs she used were made of newspaper soaked in combustible paste and rolled tight in a machine. When they burned, the printed words rose white on black for an instant, a last bid to be read before the fire consumed them.
She positioned the fire screen again and wiped her hands. She lit a cigarette. Robert sneezed and the air at the corners of the room seemed to shift and resettle. Her house had a slovenliness he had associated with single men; he found this rather endearing, and knew it would become annoying.
“How was work?” she asked. She had swept her papers into a pile and dropped it on the floor at her feet, then curled onto the sofa, legs tucked in, facing Robert.
“I got a promotion today,” he said.
“Congratulations. To what?”
“Assistant manager.”
“I'm good luck,” she proclaimed. “My merest touch conveys it.”
“Think so?” he asked, uncomfortable with the certainty she gave her statement. If she was good luck, why was Ben dead?
She listened as Robert told her of Herm's visit.
“It seems sneaky,” she said.
“I thought so, too. He's unhappy with Joe, but I think he feels responsible for him. He's brought him along this far. Joe was sort of a hero to Herm once, and now he has to face the fact his hero is not very good at his job.”
“He's not a good businessman if he works that way,” she said.
“I'm no judge of that.”
“Stick with me,” she said in that same assured manner, “and you'll be manager.”
“I'm not sure I want to be.”
“You don't want to be boss?”
“No,” he said. “I only took the job to avoid being kicked out of the house. I got a job in order to appear that I would be leaving sometime in the future. And by workingâÂand donating to the family fundâÂI have put an end to overt calls for my departure.”
“Calls from who? Ethel?” Ara asked.
Robert was startled to hear the name. He said, “Sure, you probably know Eth.”
“Ben talked about her. We spoke a Âcouple times on the phone. We never actually
met.
”
“Yes, Ethel is the one who wants me out,” Robert said. “She long ago came to the conclusion that Ben made a mistake in inviting me to live there in the first place. Ben has been gone more than two years now. She honored his wishesâÂhis memoryâÂthat long, but now that's over, I think. If I hadn't landed this job I'd be out in the street.”
He had finished his drink and she took the cup, letting it swing by the hook of her finger. It wound down like a clock, until it stopped and she tapped an ash into it.
“You came for a crow tale, didn't you?”
“That would be nice.”
“That is all that lured you here tonight?”
He studied her. A pale, curious smile turned her mouth up at the ends. Her gray eyes rested carefully on him; in the eye toward the fire a papery light danced.
“A crow tale is why I came tonight,” he said. “Homage to Ben.”
“If you miss him you can talk to me.”
“I'll remember that.” She had made him wary, and he felt the need to inspect carefully for echoes and ramifications everything they said.
“Did he ever talk about me?” she asked.
“Yes,” Robert said, but uncertain exactly when. “He knew he was a bother to you. He talked about so many things.”
“Did you ever really
listen
to his voice?” Ara asked. “He could seduce crows with his voice.”
“You know, I sometimes barely remember what his voice sounded like,” Robert said. “I only remember segments of what he said. I neverâ”
“See?” she challenged. “You're letting him get away.”
“I can't help it,” Robert said, alarmed. “It's just memory.”
“But if
you
let him get away, and I do, and his family doesâÂpretty soon, Ben is gone.”
Robert said, careful of a deepening to the gray in her eyes, like a cloth staining from behind, “Ben
is
gone.”
“Not if we're careful.” She spun his cup on her finger, and those few drops he had not drunk and her ash fell in her lap when the centrifugal force set them free.
He was looking for a way out then, a way home. The crow tale had even lost its hold on him. Ara, living alone, seemed to be caught still in a deeper phase of mourning Ben. She worked every day in his old office, surrounded by him, his icons, then returned at night to an empty house. And she made a point of keeping Ben fresh in her mind; he was the only company she could count on.
“There is nothing wrong with forgetting things about Ben,” Robert said gently.
“Maybe you'd rather I didn't tell you a crow tale tonight,” she said, threatening him, but with a pain of exclusion in her voice. She would miss the tale as much as Robert.
He covered his eyes. “I don't know, Ara. I don't know what to say to you. You're the first person I've met since Ben where I didn't know everything I needed to know about them.”
Ara laughed softly. “Don't say another word. Once upon a time there was a crow. And heâ”
“Don't make fun of it, Ara.”
“You're right. I won't. Ben told every crow story as if he was relating verifiable scientific data.”
“It was always the truth,” Robert said. He heard Ben's voice.
Ara hooked her hair behind her ears. Something had come to rest within her. The fire burned like a man slowly reading.
Â
Chapter Thirteen
Wounded Wing
A
CROW,
A
RA
said, was shot through the wing in flight and began to fall to the ground. The crow was able to control his fall only to a slight degree, and this sense of helplessness in the air frightened him more than the pain in his wing or the flash of light from the ground that barely preceded the bullet.
As the crow tumbled out of the sky he searched for the best place to land. A thicket in the distance promised good cover and possibly food, for the crow understood by the uselessness of his wounded wing that he would be grounded for quite some time. The crow also saw ahead a marsh he would be careful to avoid. And nearby was a large expanse of green grass upon which the crow would stick out like blood on snow. That must be avoided at all costs, for crows in perfect health had few friends, and a wounded crow caught in the open was almost certain to die at the feet of an enemy.
The crow, half falling, half flying, tried to make it to the thicket. But the air was full of sharp currents and a wind blew him far off course until the thicket rolled out of sight over the horizon behind him.
The wind pushed him toward the ground like a flat, slapping hand. The crow had no control over his flight as he neared the earth, and though he squawked in fear and beat his good wing, the action only tipped him on his side and the landing was brutally painful, scraping the bird's head, tearing black feathers loose.
The crow had landed in a deep square pit of cold stone. It was the worst place the crow could have possibly imagined. The walls were much too high and sheer for the crow's good wing to carry him out, though he tried to fly clear until the effort and pain exhausted him. It was nearly dark. He allowed himself a short nap.
When the crow awoke the moon was in the center of the night sky. He had nearly forgotten where he was and how he had come there. But the pain of movement in his wounded wing brought the awful details of the past hours clearly to him. The crow understood that he was trapped. He would have to manage until his wing healed or some other means of escape presented itself.
Sleep and a long flight (he had been halfway home when he was shot) had left the crow with a huge appetite. He began to search the stone pit for food. There were shadows everywhere, cast by the moon, and the crow had to look hard into them for long periods of time to gauge their harmlessness. This made the search for food a long and tedious process. An hour was spent just searching along the base of one wall of the pit. The crow found a small mound of straw along this wall and he took the feathers that had fallen from him and buried them deep inside, where hawks would not see them from the air, and owls would not smell them in their night passings.
Living in the straw were numerous tiny red mites and the crow devoured them almost without thought. Their taste was bitter. In minutes a burning grew in his chest. In the cracks of the wall he found a half dozen small land snails. He speared three with his beak, the cracking of their shells echoing off the walls. He left three for later. Their taste was almost earthen; they were the color of dirt.
In another corner of the pit was a patch of water no more than a centimeter deep. The crow saw the moon in it. The water tasted faintly dusty, but cool and delicious, and he drank deeply to put out the heartburn of the red mites.
He began to work along the next wall. He ate a daddy longlegs spider, and a cricket that survived all the way to the crow's stomach; he heard it in there chirping. But all this insect food did not ease his hunger. It only depressed him, calling attention to his troubles. His bad wing ached terribly. Spots of dried blood on the back of the wing shone in the moonlight. He came upon more straw along the third wall. It was crawling with red mites, but the crow ignored them. He hopped up onto a stack of wood and by poking with his beak into the cracks between the lengths of wood he found and ate more spiders and a cockroach.
At the far end of the stack of wood the crow found a paper bag. He tore through the paper in seconds. Delicious smells roared out of the tear in the bag to strike the crow nearly senseless. Inside the bag were more bags of clear greasy material and the crow had a little more trouble with them, but one at a time he tore them open.
In the first bag were cookies shaped like boats and covered with powdered sugar. The sweet taste made the crow's eyes water. He broke one cookie into bits with sharp blows of his beak, then ate the sugary crumbs. He finished half a cookie, with four entire cookies to go, when he made a decision that would increase his chances for survival. He would save the cookies, indeed he would save everything in the bag, so he would have something for later.
In another clear bag was a sandwich of dry white bread and two thin pieces of spicy meat. The crow ate a shred of the meat, loved it, but forced himself to save the rest. In a third bag were potato chips. Their salt was delicious to the crow but made him so thirsty he had to hop back to the shallow mirror of water for a drink.
The fact this was the only water in the pit was not lost on the crow. He could die of thirst if he was not careful. All the food in the world meant nothing. If it did not rain he would be in trouble; if it rained too much he would be in trouble.
These thoughts depressed him afresh. They seemed to squeeze his wounded wing like cruel fingers. He hated relying on forces outside himself.
The final item in the bag was an orange. Its skin was bleached yellow in the moonlight. The orange had a weight and health to it the crow found reassuring. He was tempted to tap its skin with his beak point and let the juice run into him and extinguish the mite fire in his breast. But he was not at a point desperate enough to require that moisture. The orange was the only thing he had that held that liquid. It was his sole treasure.
The crow pushed the ripped bags and their contents into the corner formed by the wall and the stack of wood. He made a check of the fourth wall of the pit and found nothing except a haphazard pile of spikes. In amongst this inhospitable jumble was a lone red mite, perhaps having mistaken the bed of nails for a pile of straw.
A great deal of time had passed by then. The moon had shrunk and paled and rolled out of the center of the sky. Stars, once icy and firm, were melting away. Soon birds would begin to call. The day would begin and the crow would have to confront a fresh danger.
In the daylight he would be an easy target in that deep pit open to the air. If he wasn't discovered by an enemyâÂa hawk or prowling catâÂthat day or the day after, it was only a matter of time before his position and condition were known.
The fact of his wounded wing would sweep over the countryside. Crows might come to help him, but they would not outnumber the predators, or those with just the simple desire to see a crow come to a bad end.
Therefore, in the last hour of darkness, the crow searched for a place to hide. He made a quick inspection of the piles of straw, but they barely hid the red mites. Hiding all day among feverish insects did not appeal to the crow. And he would be required to remain motionless, lest the straw covering him be jostled loose, and thus ineffective.
He returned to the pile of wood. The top boards had pivoted slightly on the boards beneath, touching the wall while the bottom boards did not; a long, narrow cavern, damp and smelling of spiders and pine sap, had been formed. The crow lowered his head to look into the cavern mouth. There was not much to see, nor much room. The crow would have to back in, there being no room to turn around once he was inside.
He busied himself for some minutes positioning the bag of food so it provided some slight cover over the mouth opening. As he worked he was conscious of his wounded wing. He had not tried to fold it since landing, and he did not think he could back into the small cave without doing so. There was not room for the wing in its present state, open and dragging along beside him, leaving faint swipes of blood on the floor when he moved.
It was quite light out by then. The stars were gone entirely and the moon was only a transparent slice. Birds of every kind sent up a racket of morning greetings and boasts. Occasionally the crow saw a bird fly overhead. These dark bullet streaks made him very nervous. One bird might see him and the word would pass in an instant, from finch to sparrow to starling to hawk. Thus would his time run out.
At the cavern mouth he shut his eyes and tried to fold his wounded wing. A pain large as the sky hit him. He felt a grating of something vital deep in the wing. The effortless track his wing had worked upon had been violently skewed. Nothing in the wing seemed to fit together any longer. He spread and folded his good wing. He did it again and again to study the machinery of muscle, bone, and feather that he had not given two thoughts to in his lifetime. He hoped to find a clue to the bad wing in the good. But there was nothing to be learned. He had been shot and that was all he needed to know.
The crow stood still a moment. The pain made him dizzy. When he was able, he hopped across the floor to the spot of moisture and drank a little.
Twin beams of light swept over the mouth of the pit. They were almost faint in the growing daylight; the crow thought he might have imagined them. Then he heard the crunching of stone, the sound of an engine, the engine being switched off. Doors opened and closed.
The crow heard a man speak.
The crow rushed back across the pit floor to the cavern opening.
A
RA SHIFTED, STOOD,
and set another paper log on the fire. She lit a cigarette. Robert, who had been listening with eyes closed, looked over at her. She produced faint poppings of bone, stretching her arms high over her head, and pushing first one hip and then the other out to the side.
“Have you heard this one?” she asked.
“No,” Robert said. This was a lie. He had heard the tale from Ben almost three years before. He remembered the room and the night and the casual enthralling charm of Ben's voice as he told it. Robert knew how the story progressed and ended; but he lied to encourage Ara, who told the story well.
T
HE CROW WAS
as close to panic as a crow was liable to come. The sound of men, of engines, filled the bird with a helpless dread. Predators the crow could fight against; the crow did not actually fear the hawk or cat or owl until that moment in the battle when the crow's death was inevitable, the event of the next moment, and then the fear was of death.
But the crow feared man. Man could reach beyond the limits placed upon him to do harm to the crow. The bullet that had wounded him was a perfect example. A sky black with hawks circling over the stone pit was infinitely preferable to one man looking without any particular curiosity down from the pit's rim.
With a flat, obstinate determination to survive, the crow folded his wing as close to his body as he could, and his fear of the men took a little of the bright detail off the pain he felt. Gravel shifted underfoot above. Men were talking in low voices, sort of sleepy and removed. The crow heard a scratch, a moment later a smoking black nub of burned match fell into the pit. The crow shuddered. He turned his tail feathers to the cavern opening and backed in. His bad wing snagged on one of the boards, closing the crow's eyes against the pain, but then the wing came free and the way was clear. The crow backed as deeply as possible into the cavern, until he felt his tail feathers push into the V formed by the meeting of the cold pit wall and the stacked boards.
The crow could not be seen from above. Only if someone made a point of getting down and looking into that opening could he be seen. If the crow had only hawks and owls to worry about he would have been utterly safe.
The crow was tempted to sleep through the day and wipe from his memory everything he knew about his past, his present, and his future. He would awaken a blank. But then he would try to use his wounded wingâÂif only the past would be erased along with his memory of it.
From his hiding place he heard more men arrive; more wheels on stone, more engines. The light at the opening of the cavern intensified. The voices were excited, happy to be there. They went through a period of sociability and discussion when laughter was common.
However, this gave way to long periods without conversation that worried the crow greatly. When the men talked he could imagine where they wereâÂif they were close or distantâÂand he could judge their moods. But in their silence they could be anywhere.
The men created high whining machine sounds of progressing octaves, and sharp, rapid hammering of iron on iron. Now and then something fell atop the pile of lumber with a
boom!
that stopped the crow's small heart.
Late in the morning he heard a man walking on the floor of the pit. He had never been so close to them. But though they removed boards from the pile and created a racket of machinery and iron, they did not discover him.
Sometime later the crow heard one voice call above the noise and bit by bit the commotion ceased. Men remained in the pit, talking again in that happy tone of the early morning, but a comparative silence settled.
Food smells reached the crow. He was ravenously hungry, having had nothing to eat since the few insects and crumbs of sugar cookie hours before. The torn bag of food remained at the mouth of the cavern but he did not dare try to reach it. He would wait until dark, when he knew from experience that men went into hiding.
He was assailed by aromas of meat, fruit, sweets, coffee, and apples. They swirled down and became trapped with him in the tiny cave of wood. They made his wing hurt more; they put a fresh point on his despair.
In time the scents dissipated and the good-Ânatured talk of the men ceased. The noises commenced and continued throughout the afternoon. An hour after the meal break the crow was brightened to see the sunlight at the mouth of the cavern blacked out. It vanished as if swallowed by an instant night. The crow had been through eclipses (the spirit of the Smarter Crow passing across the sun) and so waited for the darkness to leave, the light to return.