Authors: Carol Shields
Carol Shields is an internationally known author who has won many awards for her novels and short stories. Her most recent novel,
The Stone Diaries
, was the winner of the 1995 Pultizer Prize, a National Book Critics Circle Award, the 1993 Governor General’s Award for Fiction, the McNally Robinson Award for Manitoba Book of the Year and was also short-listed for the Booker Prize. Her other books include
Happenstance, The Republic of Love, Swann: A Mystery, Various Miracles, The Box Garden
and
The Orange Fish
. Shields lives and works in Winnipeg.
ALSO BY CAROL SHIELDS
Swann
Happenstance
The Box Garden
The Orange Fish
Small Ceremonies
The Stone Diaries
The Republic of Love
Copyright © 1985 by Carol Shields
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in Canada in 1995 by Vintage Books, a division of Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Originally published in 1985 by Stoddart Publishing Co. Limited, Toronto.
Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data
Shields, Carol, 1935–
Various miracles
eISBN: 978-0-307-36723-5
1. Title.
PS8587.H46V37 1996 C813’.54 C95-932886-6
PR9199.3.S55V37 1996
The author wishes to thank the Manitoba Arts Council for its support.
v3.1
For my daughter Meg
The author and publisher wish to acknowledge with thanks previous publication of the following stories: “Mrs. Turner Cutting the Grass,”
Arts Manitoba
, “Dolls, Dolls, Dolls, Dolls,”
Aurora/CBC Anthology
, “Sailors Lost at Sea,”
Dandelion
, “Purple Blooms,”
Quarry
, “Flitting Behavior,”
CBC Anthology
, “Various Miracles,”
Canadian Forum/Anthology of Prairie Women Writers
, “The Metaphor Is Dead,”
Prairie Fire
, “Accidents,” “Love So Fleeting,”
The Malahat Review
, “Fragility,”
Saturday Night
, “Invitations,” “The Journal,” “Home,”
Fiddlehead, “Salt,” The Antigonish Review
.
Tell all the truth but tell it slant
—Emily Dickinson
SEVERAL OF THE MIRACLES
that occurred this year have gone unrecorded.
Example: On the morning of January 3, seven women stood in line at a lingerie sale in Palo Alto, California, and by chance each of these women bore the Christian name Emily.
Example: On February 16 four strangers (three men, one woman) sat quietly reading on the back seat of the number 10 bus in Cincinnati, Ohio; each of them was reading a paperback copy of
Smiley’s People
.
On March 30 a lathe operator in a Moroccan mountain village dreamed that a lemon fell from a tree into his open mouth, causing him to choke and die. He opened his eyes, overjoyed at being still alive, and embraced his wife who was snoring steadily by his side. She scarcely stirred, being reluctant to let go of a dream she was dreaming, which was that a lemon tree had taken root in her stomach, sending its pliant new shoots upwards into her limbs. Leaves, blossoms and
finally fruit fluttered in her every vein until she began to tremble in her sleep with happiness and intoxication. Her husband got up quietly and lit an oil lamp so that he could watch her face. It seemed to him he’d never really looked at her before and he felt how utterly ignorant he was of the spring that nourished her life. Now she lay sleeping, dreaming, her face radiant. What he saw was a mask of happiness so intense it made him fear for his life.
On May 11, in the city of Exeter in the south of England, five girls (aged fifteen to seventeen) were running across a playing field at ten o’clock in the morning as part of their physical education program. They stopped short when they saw, lying on the broad gravel path, a dead parrot. He was grassy green in color with a yellow nape and head, and was later identified by the girl’s science mistress as
Amazona ochrocephala
. The police were notified of the find and later it was discovered that the parrot had escaped from the open window of a house owned by a Mr. and Mrs. Ramsay, who claimed, while weeping openly, that they had owned the parrot (Miguel by name) for twenty-two years. The parrot, in fact, was twenty-five years old, one of a pair of birds sold in an open market in Marseilles in the spring of 1958. Miguel’s twin brother was sold to an Italian soprano who kept it for ten years, then gave it to her niece Francesca, a violinist who played first with the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra and later with the Chicago Symphony. On May 11 Francesca was wakened in her River Forest home by the sound of her parrot (Pete, or sometimes Pietro) coughing. She gave him a dish of condensed milk instead of his usual whole-oats-and-peanut mixture, and then phoned to say she would not be able to attend rehearsal that day. The coughing grew worse. She looked up the name of a vet in the Yellow Pages and was about
to dial when the parrot fell over, dead in his cage. A moment earlier Francesca had heard him open his beak and pronounce what she believed were the words
“Ça ne fait rien.”
On August 26 a man named Carl Hallsbury of Billings, Montana was wakened by a loud noise. “My God, we’re being burgled,” his wife, Marjorie, said. They listened, but when there were no further noises, they drifted back to sleep. In the morning they found that their favorite little watercolor—a pale rural scene depicting trees and a winding road and the usual arched bridge—had fallen off the living-room wall. It appeared that it had bounced onto the cast-iron radiator and then ricocheted to a safe place in the middle of the living-room rug. When Carl investigated he found that the hook had worked loose in the wall. He patched the plaster methodically, allowed it to dry, and then installed a new hook. While he worked he remembered how the picture had come into his possession. He had come across it hanging in an emptied-out house in the French city of St. Brieuc, where he and the others of his platoon had been quartered during the last months of the war. The picture appealed to him, its simple lines and the pale tentativeness of the colors. In particular, the stone bridge caught his attention since he had been trained as a civil engineer (Purdue, 1939). When the orders came to vacate the house late in 1944, he popped the little watercolor into his knapsack; it was a snug fit, and the snugness seemed to condone his theft. He was not a natural thief but already he knew that life was mainly a matter of improvisation. Other returning soldiers brought home German helmets, strings of cartridge shells and flags of various sorts, but the little painting was Carl’s only souvenir. And his wife, Marjorie, is the only one in the world who knows it to be stolen goods; she and Carl belong to a generation that believes there should be no
secrets between married couples. Both of them, Marjorie as much as Carl, have a deep sentimental attachment to the picture, though they no longer believe it to be the work of a skilled artist.