Read Exit Unicorns (Exit Unicorns Series) Online
Authors: Cindy Brandner
“Do you still love your wife?”
The very air stilled around the question, as if the heat itself had an ear and waited for his answer.
“I will always love Colleen, but in a different manner now than when we were husband and wife. We grieved our sons together, we will always be bound through them and perhaps being their mother, having carried them under her heart, she may have suffered more than I.”
What he did not add was that Colleen had refused to see Stuart, had turned her face to the hospital wall and said she could not bear to know his face, when it would only be gone from her. He, father of first Michael, then Alexander and finally Stuart had dressed them in christening gowns, wrapping their still wee forms in shrouds of baby Irish lace. In awe, even through his pain, of the perfect peacefulness of their faces. He alone sat by Stuart’s incubator day and night, willing him to live until the nurses begged him to rest before he himself needed a bed in the hospital. He’d been alone when Stuart ceased his struggle; his paltry three weeks having been a valiant fight, as though from the first he’d felt the angels waiting. Near the end, Stuart had opened his eyes, eyes soft and green as springtime and looked, Jamie would swear to his dying day, directly into his father’s eyes.
“He’s askin’ yer permission to go,” a kind nurse had told him. “I’ve seen it before, they’re wise these ones, moren’ if they’d lived a hundred years, it’s time ye held yer son, Mr. Kirkpatrick. Send him to the angels in yer arms, surely there’s no way he’d rather go.”
It was the first time he’d held a son living in his arms. He’d been nervous, scared of doing something wrong, of causing him harm or pain. But then Stuart had been placed next to his heart, his head fitting just so into the crook of Jamie’s elbow and he’d let the tears fall as he kissed the tiny wee feet, each toe a thing of wonderment and the silky soft head with its fine fuzz of red curls, as delicate as a spider’s web with the first glow of dawn upon it. And he said the words that broke his heart forever and took away some part of his wholeness as a man.
“It’s alright, wee man, I can see you’re tired. You’ve put up a fight worthy of ten warriors, no one could ever expect more. You sleep now love, Daddy’s here and he just wants you to have your peace.” He sang to Stuart then, a low and ancient lullaby that spoke of green hills far away, of moonbeam boats that glided through the milky way of dreams and adventures that his son would never know. Stuart Kirkpatrick died that way, secure in his father’s arms, with the warmth of his father’s voice in his ears.
The German poet Rainer Maria Rilke had once said that man’s pain had yet to outlive the garden but Jamie had stopped believing in the garden, had come to see flowers as merely flowers, not a metaphor for some unquenched longing. Here today though, with the heat like a spreading fist gloved in kid leather, he felt a flicker of doubt.
“Is it enough?” she was asking, moving with the one question, her queen out into an extremely vulnerable position.
“Is what enough?”
“This life you lead of books and papers and good manners, is it enough for you?”
“It has to be,” he replied gently, knowing that in light of what she was asking it was an inadequate, foolish response.
“Why?” With one word she had opened the board, leaving it clear for his attack, his move. But rather than playing king, he opted for knight errant. He formed the words, lined them neatly up behind his throat, ready to spill them in a steady and mannered flow. But she with the insanity of innocence, bounded on heedless of the realities.
“I’d give you everything,” she said, trembling, sun stroking her hair to indigo, hazing her lines. “My heart and soul and everything that goes with it, we could have babies, as many as you wanted, sons and daughters, a house filled with them.” She clung to his hand, her own two shaking violently and freezing cold.
There was after all it seemed, an agony he had not experienced and it was this.
He allowed himself a small portion of weakness and with his free hand brushed her face softly, stroking away the tears that had begun to spill. Dear God in heaven but the child meant it, believed it could be.
“It is not possible,” he said, “I carry the genes that killed my sons. I am a blight that forecludes the chance of a harvest.”
“But—” she began and he, the scent of strawberries ripe and red in his senses, struck out her words.
“I cannot love you and you must not love me,” he said gently, firmly and yet unequivocally.
She leaned forward and kissed him. Simply and softly, honey mixed with the thorns of her mouth, the smell of dust and sun and the taste of something sweetly, verdantly green on her tongue.
She felt to him as fragile a dream as the Elysian fields, all the pleasures of Paradise and none of the pain. Here was water to slake his thirst, here a salve to pull the fever from his bones. She kissed as though it were innate to her, as if she had always known kissing his particular mouth.
Long ago, for reasons of sanity or insanity, he’d sought Reason with its fine and careful lines, its rules and evenly spaced stairs, its well-insulated walls and tightly sealed roof. Passion, with its unbounded field and dark wood was rejected as too dangerous, as limitless, unwalled, unroofed and unstable. To taste was to know addiction with one draught, to be unable, ever, to quit oneself of the flavor and need. To discover, perhaps, that there was a God, to kiss his face and find it angry.
There was, however, nothing of anger to be found here. She felt, in his arms, as natural and essential as air and light. All silken youth, she took his very breath and twisted it, laced it with pain and laughter and gave it back to him filled with life. The taste of it in his mouth was terrifying. Still he followed her to the ground in a natural progression, as water will always find earth.
Her blouse was open to the waist, fragile folds of it falling away like petals from a bruised flower. Her flesh swelled and warmed under his hand, breath tightening and muscles quivering. Ready for him, denying him nothing. Seeking to place all the comfort her body could offer within his grasp. He bowed his head with a reverence he’d never known before, resting his face for a moment in the lovely valley created by her young, high breasts.
He took a deep breath, his senses drowning, struggling to surface. Springtime and youth in all its bitter green. The dew of dawn bright mornings stirring the dull roots of pain. Grief, long dammed, broke through desire in horrible, choking waves.
She made no exclamations, expressed no surprise, merely cradled him to her breast and made soft, soothing noises, as if she were the mother his had not known how to be. How long he lay there he never knew. How long does it take a man’s soul to fall in upon itself, to break and shatter into innumerable pieces and begin the first tentative steps toward re-birth?
As the ebb and flow of exhaustion at last calmed the wrenching pull of his grief he noted somewhat fuzzily that evening had begun its encroach, damping the trees and water with shadow. Small birds, liveried in feathered blue, twittered down towards sleep. He pulled himself with great reluctance from the sticky warmth of Pamela’s embrace, covering her gently with the crumpled delphiniums of her blouse. The fracture of parting was physically painful, every cell protesting. He knew his grief had imbedded her within him as a sexual joining would not have done. Blood of my blood and cursed by it, he thought bleakly.
“Jamie?”
He could have wept anew at the unspoken questions that one utterance contained. He forced himself to look up, to see her, to meet the hope that burned hotly in her face.
“I cannot,” was all he said, knowing full well he’d go to the grave seeing her stricken look.
“I see,” she said with a calm finality, as if indeed she’d always suspected it would come to this between them. She did her buttons up, smoothed the delicate material, unconsciously raveling that which had become so swiftly unraveled between them. Pulling the threads of her torn dignity about her protectively.
“I cannot play moth to your star, Jamie,” she said finally, a shadow of something akin to pity in her eyes. “You can’t continue to hold me in your hands if you refuse to hold me in your heart.”
“Does that mean you won’t be coming back to Belfast?”
“In a manner of speaking.”
“I suppose it’s my turn to see,” he said the words costing him far more than he’d anticipated, “you’d best take care, the kind of fire your Casey will take you into will burn a moth until it can’t even recognize itself.”
The face that turned to him in the dusk was pale but composed.
“It’s a very cold world, makes a fire appealing, wouldn’t you say?”
She went to her horse, swung up lightly, a flicker of heat in the waning sun.
“I’m sorry, Jamie.”
“Don’t be.”
The horse tossed its head, cantering sideways, impatient to be gone from this garden. “Sorry,” she continued without contrition, “that you are so afraid of living again, a quick death my father used to say is infinitely preferable to one that takes a lifetime.”
The horse took the reins then, and, in a glimmer, they were gone, girl and beast melted away like myth, like life.
And that, he supposed, was checkmate. Or from the Arabic,
shah-matte,
meaning ‘the king is dead.’
And the heavens reject not:
The desire of the moth for the star,
Of the night for the morrow,
The devotion to something afar
From the sphere of our sorrow.
Only Shelley could answer Shelley:
I can give not what men call love.
From the Greek ‘katholicos’ meaning universal and ‘kyriakon’ meaning ‘belonging to the Lord’ and ‘ekklesia’ meaning ‘assembly’ came the Church, the Holy Mother Church founded upon the rock of Peter, Her hem wetted by the receding tides of paganism. Bound on earth by Christ’s gathering of his disciples in His last days, bound in Heaven by Divine Law. The formation of given over to a simple fisherman, who was to become the shepherd and feed the sheep of the Son of God, the Son of Man.
Peter, keeper of the keys of heaven, denier of Christ, walker on water, a doubter and defender of the first order, a member of the elite circle who walked with Christ on earth. And saw Him shoulder to shoulder with Moses and Elijah after his death. Crucified and buried in Rome, the city that was to become the epicenter of the world’s largest religious community on earth. The first Bishop of Rome, the pope.
Grounded in the theology of Paul—madman, zealot, wandering missionary, tentmaker, lover of Timothy, scourged and jailed repeatedly, crushed in the crux of Judaism and Christianity. A Jew for the Jews, a Christian for the Christians, all things to all men in order to be their savior. Speaking in the tongue of men and angels, he preserved the faith through desolation, frustration and personal darkness. He was the writer of some of the tenderest and most passionate love letters in the history of humanity, words written to his flock, his children, known for all time as the Epistles of Paul.
Rival of Peter, he would meet his end in Rome, beheaded and hoping with his last breath to be reunited with his Christ on the road beyond the grave.
The Church was proclaimed as the presence of the Body of Christ on earth. Christ’s own humanity would allow all of mankind to be taken fully into the heart and mystery of redemption. All part of The Plan, one no human, struggling in darkness and childlike naïveté could fully understand, for to be taken into the heart of God, to see His face, was to surely die.
Small pockets of Christianity began to establish themselves across Asia Minor, the seeds of faith scattered along the trade routes, the coasts, rivers and roads of the Empire’s far-flung interests. From Jerusalem to Damascus, southward, following the scent of spices and sand, into Arabia. Across the burning wastes of Syria into the imperial splendor of ancient Egypt. Across the Adriatic over the Alps men followed the cross and brought the word of the Son of God to all who would hear. To Spain and Gaul and to an island on the edge of oblivion called Britain.
The old religions still existed but their flames were dying low. Judaism, decimated by persecution, taxes and a series of revolts in which Jews sought to recover their homeland and their freedom, gathered about Her huddled and frightened masses, their numbers sadly diminished and poured what fire was left into the pens and scrolls of old men.
In Egypt, they still worshipped their pantheon of sacred creatures. But by the end of the fourth century Isis, Osiris, Ra and the rest would be spirits of memory, not divinity and terrible deeds.
Christianity was the first equal opportunity religion. It cared not for a man’s class, nation, nor the circumstance of his birth. All men were inheritors of Christ’s salvation. To the downtrodden, the cripple, the maimed, the bereaved it was a promise of a better world, beyond the one that had shown them little more than squalid misery. All men were equal in Christ’s eyes, all men capable of holding God within.
With ritual and spectacle, borrowing from pagan rites, Jewish ethics and the metaphysics and philosophy of the Greeks the church gave poetry where before there had only been prose, color to bleakness, light to darkness.