The Wreckage (35 page)

Read The Wreckage Online

Authors: Michael Crummey

Tags: #Historical

He hadn’t felt anything for Mercedes in so long he assumed it had leached from him somewhere in his travels, in the years of itinerant work and drinking, in the long string of temporary relationships. But he was wrong about that. He felt as if he was exhuming a creature preserved in a peat bog for centuries: the body intact, the face leathery and tanned black by the bog but still identifiable. The material of the clothes retaining its original colour under a camouflage of wet turf.

He left the camp after the tidal wave of wind and heat ripped through, the single spectral pulse of it and the violent recoil, as if it was cast out on a line and jerked back to the place it was thrown from. Windows shattered. Anything movable tumbled first in one direction and then the opposite. Utterly, utterly silent afterwards as he picked himself up from the ground and walked out the gates. Some kind of cloud rising over the hills in the distance, a grey bloom exfoliating steadily, a long central column towering like the stalk of a plant. The cloud was eerily symmetrical, as if it was the product of intelligent design, and it chilled him to watch it expanding moment by moment as he walked up out of the valley, the sky darkening over him.

When he crested the hill above the camp he could see what was left of the shipyard in the distance. Buildings and warehouses, destroyers and carriers reduced to piles of scrap metal. Beyond that, more devastation than it was possible to catalogue. He turned away from the city, walking for more than an hour in the opposite direction without a plan, until he passed the French Temple. The building was still intact and empty when he stepped inside and he walked toward the altar, brushed a pew clear of shattered glass.

Others began arriving shortly afterwards. He didn’t acknowledge them and no one spoke. It was as if they were gathering for some prearranged service. By late afternoon the sanctuary was crowded and people had already begun dislodging pews to shift them out of the way. Some of the survivors had made their way from neighbourhoods near the city centre and most of those were badly burnt. One boy lay against the wall near Nishino, shaking with some kind of fever. His upper body was naked and the skin appeared to have been torn away in one long strip from his torso, raw muscle over the rib cage, the wound outlined in vermilion and black. His mother sat near his head and the boy was asking her for ice cream, repeating the question relentlessly without pausing for an answer. Nishino could feel the mother watching him, realized finally it was his uniform that drew her gaze, that she was expecting some sort of direction or assistance from him. It seemed then that the eyes of everyone in the church were on him and he began to shake under that weight, a tremor running through his shoulders, his teeth chattering.

He gathered up his kit bag and went through a doorway beside the altar. Took the set of stairs to the basement and wandered through the dark corridors until he found an unoccupied room. It had no windows and there was only enough light from the hall to confirm it was empty. He pushed the door shut and lay against it in the pitch, trying to quiet his breathing, to stop his teeth knocking. The muffled sound of the people on the floor above him filtering into the darkness.

He would have to get rid of the uniform. He began emptying the pockets, making a small pile of items to one side. He fished out the medallion last and sat holding it, tracing the outline of the king’s head with a fingertip, his hands still shaking.

It was his sister who had brought it to him. She was only ten at the time but had inherited all of their mother’s responsibilities short of managing the family’s money. She cooked for the men, worked the farm and kept the house, cleaning, washing and mending clothes. On Saturdays, when his father drove produce to the market and spent the night with his mistress in New Westminster, she stripped sheets, washed the bedroom floors, straightened closets.

“Where did you get this?” he asked her.

“I was putting away his clothes,” she said. She looked down at her feet, embarrassed by the obvious snooping she’d done. “There’s something written on the back.”

He reached for the medal. “You should be ashamed to be looking through his things.”

“The first part of it is Father’s name. I don’t understand the rest.”

“You should be ashamed to know so little of your own language.”

“What does it say, Noburo?”

“Mind your own business,” he said, putting the medal away in his pocket.

His father’s mistress was a white woman, a childless widow who ran a market stall established by her husband before the First World War. He had been killed in action in France and in the years since she had taken to wearing the dead man’s clothes and knee-high rubber boots. Nishino met her when he was still a boy, when he and his father drove the vegetables to New Westminster, and he was fascinated by the woman at first. She smoked cigarettes and swore a blue streak and drank whisky. She seemed not to care what anyone said or thought about her. After the truck was unloaded they drove a few miles outside of town to a river, where his father spent the late afternoon fishing for trout while Nishino swam a little ways upstream. Some afternoons the woman came out to meet them there and she and his father would wander off into the trees for half an hour.

The affair wasn’t a closely guarded secret but it was carefully shaded and bordered, operating so far beneath the surface of the family’s days it was possible to ignore it completely. It was only after his mother’s death that it started to seep into their lives in a public way. His father began spending nights with her in New Westminster and the woman occasionally came to the house in Kitsilano for meals, although there was never a suggestion of anything as brazen as having her sleep in the dead wife’s bed.

The increasingly open nature of the relationship meant that plenty was said about it in the community. On two occasions small gangs of white men drove out as far as their farm to break out the windows and warn his father away from the woman. They were all drunk. They threatened to burn the farm to the ground if Nishino’s father refused to screw his own kind.

The engraved symbols on the back of the medal his sister found read
Hisatsune Nishino. Private First Class. The Somme. Ypres. 1917–18
. His father would have met the woman through his acquaintance with her husband in the New Westminster Regiment. When she came to visit the farm in Kitsilano she carted an armful of newspapers and magazines with her,
The Vancouver Sun
and
The New York Times
and
The Washington Post, Atlantic Monthly, Anvil, New Masses
, and she spent the evening poring through them angrily, editorializing as she went. There was no world event beneath her opinion. Chancellor Hitler recognizing Manchukuo and publicly supporting a Japanese victory in China. The expropriation of American oil companies by President Cardenas in Mexico. Nishino’s father sat smoking and nodding slowly, never contradicting or arguing with the woman. Austria and Hungary recognizing Franco in Spain. The League of Nations adopting a resolution to investigate the use of poison gas by Japanese troops in China. “Poison gas,” she said. “And the goddamn League of Nations adopting resolutions. Is that what you and George fought the war for?”

Nishino left the farm in Kitsilano at three in the morning after one of these visits, walking all the way into Vancouver. He left a note addressed to Hisatsune Nishino, Private First Class, to say where he was headed. Boarded a ship bound for Tokyo, his father’s medal still weighting his pocket.

The traffic in and out of the church continued steady for days. Nishino rarely left his room in the basement for fear of losing it to other squatters, waved his pistol around when necessary to keep it to himself. He ate almost nothing. He slept most of the day and night and dreamt often of his mother, the woman always at work in the farmhouse or out in the fields, smiling up at him as she finished each task. Or lying on her deathbed and breathing strangely, each inhalation abrupt and mechanical and so widely spaced one from another he felt panicked, holding his own breath, waiting for the next.

He jolted awake in the darkness, sucking in a lungful of air. Shimmied his way toward the wall and leaned his weight against it. It was late, he guessed, not a sound from the church overhead. He searched around with his hands until he located the bottle he’d been drinking from. He was almost through the last of the alcohol. He tried to count the days since he’d arrived but couldn’t even say whether it was day or night outside the room. He felt like a prisoner in the crypt, berated himself for leaving the camp, slinking off like a coward to hide in the bowels of a Catholic church. Even Chozo Ogawa had been granted a soldier’s death and he found himself envying the boy.

It was the thing he despised most in the POWs, how they clung to life even when there wasn’t a shred of respect to be gained in it. And it was clear to him now that he was no different, that the country where he’d become a man had infected him with the same weakness. He lacked the courage to turn the gun on himself, whatever the weight of shame he carried by living.

He drifted into sleep again, was woken by the sound of footsteps on the stairs at the end of the corridor and he listened to them approaching. Voices too muffled to make out. The
sss ssss sss
of English.

He tried to find his glasses where he’d laid them on the floor, sweeping his hands in wide arcs. The footsteps slowed in the corridor and came to a stop outside his door. He scrambled for his kit bag and took the handgun from the holster, moving back to the farthest corner of the room. He heard the word
flashlight
.

The door slammed open and a single beam flicked over the room before coming to rest on him. He couldn’t see anything beyond the blurred circle of light. He placed the gun against his head and squeezed the trigger repeatedly, long after it was clear the weapon was empty of ammunition. Only a cold clicking sound jarring his temple.

“I am very pleased,” a voice behind the light said, “to meet you.”

MERCEDES

1.

B
EFORE THEY WENT LOOKING
for Wish’s house in Calvert that morning, they’d driven all the way down to Renews. They stopped in front of the church and walked across to the grotto. The statue of Mary in the same alcove but everything else was barely recognizable from the first time Mercedes had seen it. She took off her sunglasses.

“This was all bare,” she said. “There wasn’t a green thing for miles.”

A thick coat of vines covered the stone walls, the knoll behind it overgrown with a cultivated copse of trees. The Stations of the Cross laid out along a path shaded by spruce and fir, cypress and hawthorn and mountain ash. The state of the place surprised her in a completely predictable, prosaic way. To see she’d been away long enough for those trees to be planted and mature, that a lifetime had passed in her absence. It made the time left her seem meagre, insufficient to what she wanted of it.

Wish clearly wasn’t going to offer anything easily. There was a practised deceit in his manner, a vulnerability that seemed false, that was meant to disguise real damage. He confessed just enough to hide the truth, went only as far as she could push him. The calculation of it all infuriated her, the guile.

Bella said, “What’s wrong, Mom?”

“Nothing,” she said. “It’s just.” She took a deep breath. “What do you smell here, Bella?”

“Nothing.”

“Try, for God’s sake. Take a whiff.”

Isabella rolled her eyes and started sniffing at the air. “Nothing,” she said again.

Agnes said, “Spruce. Salt water.”

“I haven’t been able to smell anything since I woke up in hospital.”

“Why didn’t you mention this to the doctor?”

“They wouldn’t have let me out if I told them, would they?”

“Well you’re going back,” Bella said, “first thing.”

“Not till we get back from the Cove.”

“Don’t argue with me, Mom.”

“I’m not arguing. I’m telling.”

“Don’t be so goddamn stubborn.”

“Wait till you get old,” Mercedes said. “Then talk to me.”

“Jesus
Christ,”
Bella said.

Mercedes watched Isabella stalk off past the old convent and down toward Aggie Dinn’s Cove. Agnes gave her a look and Mercedes nodded in Bella’s direction to say go after her. When they were out of sight she looked up at the statue of Mary, at the woman’s blank gaze. She brought a hand up to her cheek, felt the hard metal plate under the dead skin. How stone would feel to the touch under a layer of cloth. She took another breath through her nostrils. Nothing. It was as if she was in the process of leaving the world one sense at a time.

She crossed herself and said, “Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Blessed art thou amongst women.”

She hadn’t said the rosary or the Ave since she’d converted to marry Johnny Boustani in 1946. He insisted they raise Marion in the church and took a hand in what he called her spiritual instruction. She’d always ridiculed Johnny for his little ritual observances, saying the rosary in the living room while she cleared the supper dishes, lighting candles at the feet of the saints, saying novenas to St. Theresa. When they put their first house in Lowell up for sale in 1959, he buried a figurine of St. Joseph upside down in the garden for luck. “A goddamn grown man,” she’d said, “praying to dolls.”

He gave up the church after Marion died. They had Isabella baptized but never darkened a church door afterwards. Mercedes hadn’t so much as overheard the rosary for decades. She didn’t know which mysteries were meant to be recited on which day and had forgotten the order they were laid out in, but she pressed on below the statue of Mary, throwing them out in a jumble as they came to her. Crossed herself when she was done. If she’d known what saint to bury for luck, she’d have done that as well.

When they left the wharf in Tilting, Mercedes made her way out past the cuddy of Gerry Foley’s longliner to sit in the bow. Her eyes tearing up in the breeze. She fished her sunglasses out of the shoulder bag, put them on against the wind. Little Fogo Island looming on the horizon, growing steadily. It felt almost as if she was the one sitting motionless, that the place was coming to meet her finally, after all these years of waiting.

Rounding the headland and a first view of the Cove. Most of the buildings fallen in on themselves, the lumber stripped of paint and ochre, gone grey with the weather of thirty years. The church still standing, though she could see that every last window was gone, the large double doors off the hinges. And up the south side the house she’d grown up in tilting awkwardly, like a child’s drawing of a house.

“That’s our place,” she said, calling back to Wish and pointing.

“Which one?”

“There,” she said. “The last one on the south side.” He shaded his eyes. “You don’t remember?”

He shook his head apologetically and she called past him to Isabella.

“Our house,” she shouted.

Isabella nodded miserably, without bothering to look.

All the way up the path to the house she was thinking of Clive Reid, his name whittled into the beam under a pile of rubble on the land-wash. She knew from Agnes that he’d drowned years before, trying to take up his trap in rough weather. But seeing his name carved into the beam brought him back whole. “The Tennessee Waltz.” That first unexpected kiss. The rush of it clinging to her for weeks, even after she decided she had no interest in Clive himself. And the guilt, like the pale underside of a leaf flying up in a wind. A married man and she’d done nothing to protest or stop him.

Her grandmother was just beginning her slide into illness at the time and the delicacy of her constitution made her more observant somehow, more wary. She was the only one who noted any change in her. Mercedes insisted her grandmother was imagining things, but the old woman’s certainty wore her down.

“I kissed a man,” she admitted finally.

They were separating cream from the milk in the cold room and the old woman set down the pan she was holding. “What man?” she said.

Mercedes wouldn’t look at her.

Her grandmother raised Mercedes’ chin with one hand, then drew back and slapped her face with all the force her ancient body could muster. “This is a godly house you live in,” she said. “You would do well to remember that.”

Wish arriving in the Cove then, all limbs and long face, a conspiratorial smile that made you think he had something important to say to you later on, when he could get you alone. Crossing himself at the sight of crows. She’d heard her grandmother prattle on about his kind enough to know what the old woman would think of him. And something in Mercedes found that an irresistible draw.

From a distance the house seemed solid enough, but she could almost feel it waver once she was inside. Pitch dark until she remembered her sunglasses and took them off. The walls peeling and water-stained, the floors rotting out. She went along the hall to the parlour, which was empty, the hand-built chairs and settee, the hutch and end tables gone now, sold or stolen by antique dealers who scoured the outports to supply shops in Quebec and Ontario and New England. She tried to recall the close, polished scent that had defined the room when she was a girl, but even her memory of smell seemed to have left her.

Mercedes turned from the door to the staircase behind her. Went up one step at a time, testing her weight on each one. The naked bed frame still in her parents’ room. She pictured her grandmother lying there after Mercedes’ father was buried. When she offered Mercedes her wedding ring. She gripped the left post at the head in both hands but couldn’t budge it. Decided to wait there until Wish came up from the shoreline.

The path from the house back down to the harbour was uneven and she had to concentrate to avoid stumbling as she went.

She was taking long slow breaths and each one made her head ring. Spruce gum and new grass, the scoured-clean smell of salt water in the wind. It was like an air bubble popping in the inner ear cavity, a distant muffle of sound instantly dialled sharp and clear. Juniper and rotting lumber, the sour odour of alder bushes. She could smell Isabella’s shampoo wafting back to her, honey and yeast, and beyond that the barely perceptible smudge of the sheep taking over the Cove.

A wager with Hiram, Wish told her, standing in the old bedroom, his hands filthy with rust. I’d have screwed a knothole, he said. She started to feel dizzy as he spoke and she gripped the straps of her shoulder bag with both hands. She was suddenly and for the first time afraid of the man, of what he could do to her memory of him. A whiff of ammonia in her nostrils and she thought she might faint until the smell of the house came rushing past it, mildew and old iron and the punky odour of rooms shut up with themselves for years, mouse droppings and mothballs. The cheap aftershave Wish was wearing, alcohol and leathery mint, and something awful beneath that. Sweat and old age and fear. Corruption. She wanted open air and she left him there, walking too quickly down the wonky stairs.

Isabella was getting farther and farther ahead of her on the path. “Bella,” she said. She felt like lying down where she stood, stretching out in the grass beside the path and sleeping. “I need a second,” she said.

Bella came back to her. “You okay, Mercedes?”

“I just need a second.” She lifted the dark glasses with one hand and wiped at her eyes.

“What happened up there, Mom?”

“Nothing. Nothing much. It’s just,” she said. “Everything.”

“Can we go now?” Isabella said. “Are we done here?”

“I want to see the graveyard,” Mercedes said. “Then we can go.”

The cemetery fence was down, the remains of the palings almost lost to the high grass and spruce that circled the clearing. A handful of Gerry Foley’s sheep had made their way into the graveyard and were grazing among the headstones, which were sunken and tipped, or cracked at the base and fallen into the grass where they were being swallowed by a slow green tide of moss. The oldest marble stones were worn bare by age and the elements, the carved lettering of names and dates stripped away and lost. Mercedes wandered around the space, trying to recall where her father was buried. She stood in the centre of the graveyard and turned a slow circle.

Isabella pointed to a squat black marker of polished stone. “That’s got to be recent,” she said.

They walked over together and found her father’s grave, her mother and grandmother laid to rest on either side. A small plaque at the foot of the plot in memory of Hardy.

Bella ran a hand over Helen’s marker, the black stone as smooth as glass. She said, “You never considered coming back for her funeral, Mom?”

“Johnny tried to talk me into it. Said I’d always regret it if I didn’t.”

“And?”

“What’s one more regret?” She waved a hand in the air. “I have to sit down.”

Isabella helped her onto the grass and sat beside her. The sheep had congregated on the opposite side of the clearing, and they watched the animals work over the ground. They were lackadaisically methodical, the sound of them cropping the new growth on the graves like a glimpse of life at work in some secret place, the world’s subterranean appetite on display.

Bella motioned her chin toward the church, where Wish was making his way along the path. “Prince Charming at six o’clock,” she said.

“Call him up for me, would you?”

Bella watched her mother a moment longer before she stood and called to Wish.

“I’ll meet you over at the boat,” he shouted.

“Tell him to come up,” Mercedes said.

“Mom wants you a second.”

Wish laboured into the clearing, out of breath and limping. He rubbed a finger under his nostrils. “Almost too old for this,” he said.

Mercedes looked up at him, thinking he might be talking about more than the walk.

He gestured toward the headstones. “This is your crowd, is it?”

“It is.”

“Your mother,” he said, pointing to the black marker.

“What’s left of her.”

He leaned toward Isabella. “Her mother never thought much of me, first or last.”

“I’m not sure I blame her,” Bella said.

Mercedes smiled at her daughter.
Saucy as the black
. It was the one thing Mercedes was certain had passed directly from her.

Wish said, “I think it was more along the lines of a philosophical difference with me and Helen.”

“That’s what I always thought,” Mercedes said. “No one told us youngsters anything in those days.”

Wish crouched and leaned awkwardly on one arm to settle on the ground. “What do you mean?” he said. He seemed relieved to be talking about something other than what had gone on in the old house.

“Mom got sick the year before she passed away. She was living with Agnes by then. Had a fever so high she was out of her mind half the time, didn’t recognize anyone, didn’t know where she was. Kept asking for the priest.”

“The priest?”

“Ag thought it was just the fever, you know, foolish talk. But she went on and on about it and it looked like they were going to lose her. Ag sent David across to Tilting and he carried the priest back. Left them alone in the room awhile.” Mercedes looked across at Wish, his mouth working hard. She said, “Mother’s people were from somewhere in Conception Bay but they had nothing to do with her once she came here with Father. I always thought it was just her being pregnant before she married.”

Other books

The Captain's Daughter by Minnie Simpson
Dead Girl Walking by Christopher Brookmyre
The Second Betrayal by Cheyenne McCray
DINNER - 27 Easy Recipes by Nancy N Wilson
Highway 61 by David Housewright
Fight Song by Joshua Mohr
Star Soldiers by Andre Norton
What Lies in the Dark by CM Thompson
Still Waters by John Harvey