Landscape: Memory (11 page)

Read Landscape: Memory Online

Authors: Matthew Stadler,Columbia University. Writing Division

Tags: #Young men

 

First I thought of the man down there, and then the birds. I looked up to see them and the clouds got pushed away as if by a hand sweeping a black slate clean, leaving the pinpoints of white pocked forever into the empty slate. Those glorious stars, drenching the sky like milk, precious and liquid, a present to me. I was sunk down deep into the moss, my mouth open to the black, black sky and those thousands of inexhaustible stars. I couldn't sink down far enough, having nothing but air to press me down. If only I could be plunged into a volcano or swallowed by the ripping fault right then, the earth sucking me into its rich black dirt all wrapped around me and rumbling, shaking loose rocks and scree and trees knocked silly to the ground. I tried willing so many things there and then and none of them worked.

I looked down into the black water pounding white against the rocks. The wild shapes were rising again. I thought as clear as I could of that body that must have been battered, the rock cutting into its face and crushing the bones, and the fact of that man dead. I couldn't help feeling the hollowness of my own body.

Something inside me broke loose then. I felt it somewhere below my belly. This feeling broke loose and started a sort of wobbling, a sobbing rising up my throat like sickness. I hadn't known it was there inside me, but there it was now, filling me up entirely, making my body shake and filling my head with spit and snot, bursting in my head like a flower, all watery with tears and snuffling. It was all over me like warmth or a fragrance and I couldn't stop it. It broke out through my eyes and throat in tears and sounds I'd never heard from inside me before, scratchy awful sounds that rattled the bones in my head and stopped only to let me gasp my breath back in again. It was a sound beyond words, some terrible, primitive song inside me wailing in a roar through my body. I couldn't keep it in. I rolled up in a ball, letting it all run through me, like somewhere a river ran wrong and I was now its mouth.

My crying was a convulsion that ended by my body giving up.

Finally I could only lie still and stare down the long drop to the dead man silent and empty, wasted on the black rocks below.

  * * * 

 

It all got so soft then, the breeze calm and the sea gone to washing waves across the rocks, not crashing as before. My head had gone soft from all the noise and fury. And now it had all run dry, drawn out from the middle of me.

A memory came into my head then, like a dream. I'd known parts, but never all of it, and it came in like dreams do, running through my head from beginning to end.

 

I am seven. I sit up in my big bed, looking out the open window, a large oval of glass set on two pins so it pivots open. It is dark and very early, no
clip-clop
or
clanky-clank
from outside. No milkwagon or iceman or horses yet. I rest my arms on the wooden sill and stick my head out into the nighttime air. It smells exactly as it smells in the hollow, exactly. Mostly salt air and moist, but rich with dirt smell too, and sweet wood smoke.

The air is cool across my bare skin. I wrap my warm flannel sheet around my little body and walk sneaky slow like an Indian to the bad-boy stairs. My room is at the very tip-top and it's two long flights down, narrow and steep, but quietest on these stairs because they don't cry if you step right on their edges. I go slow, hiding very small in my sheet.

The parlor sits so quiet, the carpet and chairs and the heavy brocade curtains all sleepy and resting there in the dark. I drop my warm sheet and run frisky to Father's footstool and sit down with a shiver, the plush velvet bristling against my bottom, and me politely chatting with guests, very grown up and interesting, naked as a seal. There's skitter-scatter sounds all from the dark places. So I get my sheet and walk very bravely to the big front door.

Our frame house is wooden but the front steps are heavy stone. They stay warm even after dark but now they're cold. The top step feels cool and smooth on the bottoms of my bare feet. I'm looking west, over Josky's house and the Joyces' and then the high pale dunes, out into the black night sky, all clean and brisk and washed with all the stars. First are the play dunes and next are the big dunes. After that's the desert and it goes on forever. I can smell the sea. There's sand on our stone steps too and I push my palms against it.

Next door's Mattie's and then there's the big dog who doesn't like me. He's howling now, like wolves do but less brave, sort of whimpering. It's spooky but he has a fence. I walk across the wagon lane, along the Joyces' path and onto the sand, pushing my feet in deep to where it's still warm. It's lovely all over me. I doggy-walk on hands and knees up to the top and tumble down into the hollow. All the stars stretch out in the deep black lid above me. I scrunch and squirm, working my body back into the dune, staring up into the night.

 

There's a rumble like God's train is rolling right down the dunes at me, and it's getting impossibly deeper and deeper so it's not a sound anymore but a motion. Now the ground sets to bucking, bumping me up and down into the dunes like wild waves or a motorcar or Father bouncing knees on my bottom, gallop gallop gallop and him whinnying high and wild. An ugly sound comes over the dunes and into me like heat, a horrible sound, long and scraping like pulling metal spikes from concrete or raking giant nails down chalkboards. I feel it singing in my bones.

 

I remember it like this: my body going loose and the backs of my eyes feeling warm and full. Now I call it fear or terror.

 

The face of the sand kept dropping. There were crashing sounds from houses, snapping and tearing sounds, and that awful sound of things pulling apart.

The earthquake set all the church bells ringing. Fire bells rang. Mr. Crowley screamed "Judgment, judgment!" in a horrible cracking howl. I saw him in his undershorts carrying a broken chandelier. Our street was buckled and bent. It hissed and spatn in places where pipes had broken through. I lay at the top of the dune and watched, silent and shivery. I couldn't speak and I couldn't move fast. Everything looked flat and far away like at the cinema.

 

Nothing was familiar anymore. All up and down the street the houses were broken, fences fallen. I could see through places where before I couldn't. Yards disappeared under rubble and the street did too, all tangled and blocked. Some places were big holes like one near me with metal pipes poking out into air and a horse's head I could see reaching up out from the rim, wild-eyed, baring its teeth and foaming. It was on its side, fallen against the dirty wall of the hole, not using its legs right.

I walked away back into the play dunes where everything still looked okay and it was quieter if I got far enough in. I stayed in there for a while. I couldn't think much about things.

 

A woman came later, after some time when I sat in the sand. Her nightie smelled of gas and lavender, brushing up across my nose when she picked me up and held me. She said her name was Mrs. Porfoy and she was big and flush-red in the face, like the fat lady in the theater show, but she didn't sing to me. I was still very quiet, just saying little songs I liked some, just to myself really.

 Mrs. Porfoy led me back into the terrible street, walking me up some way to where a man stood stuffing four little bundles. This was Mr. Porfoy.

Mr. Porfoy gave me his pajama top, which was big as my nightshirt and smelled all of wood smoke and old stockings, and he went bare-chested, all big and pasty white and hairy up his front. He let me ride on his shoulders, my legs wrapped round his neck, bare feet bouncing into his fuzzy chest. Mrs. Porfoy walked beside, carrying two bundles, like Mr. Porfoy did, only smaller.

 * * * 

 

"Can I see Mother and Father now?" I finally asked. People hauled their burdens through what clearings there were, calm and steady, dressed and undressed.

"Soon enough, child," Mr. Porfoy said up to me. "Mrs. Porfoy will be leading us back presently, won't you, dear?" He wiped his sweaty cheek against my leg, all bristly-whiskered and scratching.

"Yes, yes. We're going back, there now. You live near the dunes where you were playing, am I right?" And she nodded her head all closed mouth and certain. "That'll be right to where we're going." The air was dirty and dusty, full of bad smells and noise. Small collapsings and many yells and bells kept on and on, as they did the whole day.

I watched out over Mr. Porfoy's shiny-skinned head. All of the insides of people's houses had tumbled out, spilling from half-torn floors, couches and beds and chairs hanging or caught halfway down. I looked in at a bright green bird in its big cage and then a dog wagging its tail and barking from a sagging third floor. A family came toward us through the dust, pushing a black grand piano past broken bodies and rubble. The father was roped up front like an oxen, with a handful of children pushing the heavy burden from behind.

"This isn't my street," I said. "I live on Kirkham Street."

"This is Kirkham Street, honey," Mrs. Porfoy said. "We're coming up on your place now." But she was wrong. Nothing was there.

"It's not my street," I said again. "I live in a blue house on Kirkham Street."

"Maybe the child lives farther on, sweetheart," Mr. Porfoy put in, patting me with his sweaty hand. "Don't be scaring him now. What are you thinking?" We stopped, Mrs. Porfoy all huffy and silent, just looking at us. Mr. Porfoy let me down off his shoulders.

"Stay right here, child," he said to me. "Right here now so as Mrs. Porfoy and I can take a little look at our map." They walked off into the rubble a few feet away and had a fight. I stayed right there and watched a group of men lean their weight onto a broad wood beam, prying at a fallen wall that lay intact, fallen face flat forward into the street. A couple of kinds of crying came out from under it. A dog and a person and some baby cries all mixed in with the scream of heavy wood moving hard against itself.

I yelled hooray at them lifting and then at the buzz of an aeroplane high up in the blue sky. An aeroplane! Its engine roar so thin and distant, it wobbling its wings in the wild winds so high, high up in the cold cloudless sky. Oh, I marveled at it, flapping hard with my arms and running along the dirty path of people, roaring with all my voice.

"Hold there, honey,'' Mrs. Porfoy yelled long and strong, louder and clearer than anyone could yell, bringing me quickly back to the ground and turning me round from a good twenty yards away. It looked like a mile to me, far away as the aeroplane. I skipped briskly back, all breathless and happy to hear her yelling voice.

"Have you found them?" I asked, excited but tired now of playing. Mrs. Porfoy picked me up again and turned back toward the rubble.

"Mr. Porfoy's got some things to talk about, honey," she said, holding her warm hand to my cheek. "Some things he and you gotta talk about." She put me down in his little office, a neat arrangement of broken beams and barrel staves set around a bit of clear dirt. This was where they had fought. There was black smoke rising up over the hill now, and a steady flow of people north and east.

"What's your name, child?" Mr. Porfoy asked.

"Maxwell."

He nodded a lot, like he understood me.

"That's good. Maxwell. What are your folks called?"

"Mummy and Papa."

He nodded some more.

"I mean by other folks, what do other folks call your mummy and papa?"

"Mrs. Kosegarten and Mr. Kosegarten. Or sometimes Corny calls Mummy Mrs. K. and Papa calls her that too."

He nodded more so I stopped, even though there were more names they called each other and their first names which I hadn't said yet.

"Now listen good, Maxwell, what I'm telling you isn't simple. I've been on this here telephone and heard your papa's been gone to help out rescuing and such. Your mama, too," and he waved back behind him at the telephone or where they'd gone or something important because he kept on waving for a bit. "They went early, couldn't wait around for you."

"Where?" I only half-believed him.

"Oh, I don't know where, but they've gone now. Couldn't be waiting round what with all this disaster. Don't know when they'll be back." And he shook his head, all puzzled, I guessed, because he couldn't figure out why they'd gone so fast and without me.

"Maybe they're waiting," I said, trying to help Mr. Porfoy make sense of it all.

"Nope, not waiting. They've gone for sure," and he nodded some more. We sat there for a moment, puzzling.

"Can I talk on the telephone?" I asked, thinking it was almost as good an idea as my first one. "They'll probably want to meet me."

"Nope, no good. Phone's broke now, just after I heard about them two. It's a real shame, but what with the disaster and all." He waved his arms around at all that had gone wrong.

We sat there together, quiet and helpless. I got very sad and started crying and he held me and I cried and cried on him, wondering how come they left me and why I couldn't meet them at the house or somewhere.

Mrs. Porfoy sat down with us and stroked my hair which helped me cry more and I pushed my face in against Mr. Porfoy's chest, tasting my tears and his sweat, all snotty and snuffly and shaky in my limbs.

 

We joined the procession toward the city, me up again on Mr. Porfoy's shoulders and Mrs. Porfoy singing soft church songs and touching me with her warm wide hand.

She asked me questions about my school subjects. She asked, "And how do you spell 'torn.' "

And I answered, "T-O-R-N."

And she went on to more difficult words like "though" and "carry" and on to mathematics and geography. She kept looking about, right and left and right again. Looking always into the strange, shifting ruins that stretched away in all directions, all the time asking questions.

"What is the largest state in the Union?" she asked.

"Texas," I answered. "And California is second," I added because I knew that fact by heart. There were bodies laid out in rows all along the dirty street.

"And can you name three of the seven seas?" A wing of a great building up ahead shuddered and collapsed inward. At first there was no sound.

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