Read The Brief History of the Dead Online
Authors: Kevin Brockmeier
The food was excellent. Marion could sense her bad feelings drifting away from her as she ate, and by the time she was finished, her mood had lifted entirely. She watched Phillip drink the last of his coffee and return the spoon to his cup with a tiny clink, pushing them both to the side of the table. Then, as an afterthought, he wadded his napkin into a ball and dropped it in after the spoon. Next he folded his two empty sugar packets together and put them in the cup, as well. She was pretty sure that if the cup had been just a little bit larger, he would have found a way to fit his entire plate in there. He reminded her of the little girl with the peppermint stick, forcing as much of the candy into her mouth as she could. Looking over Phillip’s shoulder, Marion could see the girl still slouching down in her chair, playing with the ends of her hair as the mah-jongg tiles clacked into place around her. Marion winked at her, but the girl didn’t notice. Phillip noticed, however, and, assuming the wink was meant for him, he winked back at Marion, a look of delighted surprise taking over his face. This was the funniest thing Marion had seen all day. It must have been half a minute this time before she realized she was smiling.
As they were leaving the restaurant, Bristow hollered out from across the room, “Come back soon, Byrd family!” Phillip tipped an imaginary hat to him, and Marion nodded, and then they were outside.
The weather was fiercely bright, as though a lamp had been lit behind the sky. A few birds could be seen following a seam of wind over the buildings, soaring in a straight line until they were too small to see. And way up there in all that blue a single well-shaped cloud slid past, its shadow moving slowly over the grass.
Marion didn’t feel like going home just yet. “What do you think about sitting in the park for a while?” she asked Phillip. There was a time when she would have invented an excuse, any excuse, to turn him away so that she could be alone. She would have sent him on an errand, perhaps, or insisted that she had one of her own to perform, or laid claim to some last-minute doctor’s appointment. Then, after he was out of sight, she would have found a bench or a fountain-ledge to sit on, someplace where no one else would join her but where anyone might—the sort of place where she could indulge in her solitude, yes, but also in the possibility that something wonderful, something she never could have expected, might come along to break it. For a long time that had seemed to her to be the key to life: life—
real
life—was really just a solitude waiting to be transfigured. If Phillip was with her, the solitude she needed would be shattered, and along with it whatever wondrous thing might have come her way if she had been alone. Now, though, everything was different. Phillip was part of her solitude, just as he had been so long ago, when they were first getting to know each other. They could wait for the world to change together. Both of them were aware of the transformation, and both of them were secretly gratified by it, though modestly and never out loud, for fear that it would go away.
“What time are we supposed to be at your mother’s?” Phillip asked.
“Sixish, I think we said.”
“Then I would
love
to sit in the park for a while,” he told her.
They had taken to inviting Marion’s mother over for dinner a few nights every week, but recently she had begun needling them to come to her place for a change, and they had finally promised to join her for an evening of drinks and gin rummy. It was bound to be an awkward affair. In many respects, they barely knew each other anymore. Who was this woman, Marion found herself thinking when they visited her, who lived all alone in her small apartment in the heart of the city? With the row of strange African sculptures on her shelves? Who chewed her fingernails and cried all the time? Marion and Phillip had come to the conclusion that Marion’s mother was in mourning again for Marion’s father. The woman had died when she was not much older than Marion. She was still not much older than Marion, and it was obvious that she had not expected to lose her husband a second time. Her home was filled with mementos from the latter phase of their marriage, the phase that had commenced after they both died—photographs, theater programs, and handwritten notes that she turned over and over in her hands like small deposits of precious minerals. Marion never quite knew what she was thinking at such moments—or at any moment, for that matter. Christians always talked about the possibility of being reunited with their loved ones in the afterworld, but no one ever seemed to consider the idea that after twenty years of separation or more those loved ones might have pared themselves down into mere sticks of what they used to be, that they might have changed into utter strangers. Marion hoped the same thing wouldn’t happen to her. If too much time passed before she saw Laura again, they might barely recognize each other. She didn’t know if she could handle that.
The sun and the mild air had brought half the people in the city out to the clearing. There were men and women, teenagers and geriatrics, parents and children. There were people on their way to work, people heading to stores or restaurants, and people who simply had nowhere else to go. Marion was watching them flow around her, drifting by in slow-moving pairs and clusters, when she heard it again, her daughter’s name, coming from somewhere over her shoulder. “Laura Byrd,” a voice said. This time she was certain.
Phillip gripped her elbow. He had heard it, too.
She interrupted the two men who were walking behind her. “Excuse me, did I hear the two of you talking about a Laura Byrd?”
“That’s right,” one of them said. “Friend of yours?”
“Laura Byrd is my daughter,” and she gestured to Phillip. “Our daughter.”
“Laura Byrd with the red hair?” he said doubtfully. “Who used to work for Coca-Cola?”
Breathlessly she said, “Yes, yes, that’s her.”
“Go figure,” the man said, grinning. “I was her boss.”
Marion was stunned. There was a long moment of absolute silence during which she must have been staring at the second of the two men, because he shrugged his shoulders and remarked, “Sorry to say, but I was just
his
boss. I didn’t know Laura Byrd from Adam. That’s what I was just telling him.”
“And I was about to say, ‘Antarctica? The environmental impact specialist?’”
“Oh,
that’s
right,” it dawned on the second man. “The photograph in the newsletter.” He chuckled. “Now I remember.”
“I thought you would. Well, she’s another one unaccounted for.”
The two men broke their look, and the second explained, “A lot of the old Coca-Cola gang are here in the city for some reason. We’ve been going over their names.”
“A lot of names here,” the first one agreed. “But no Laura Byrd.”
Phillip broke the silence. “This is still quite a curiosity. Bumping into the two of you like this.”
It was apparently an afternoon for such curiosities, for just then a woman who happened to be passing by seized short and tapped the man who had said he was Laura’s boss on the shoulder. “I’m sorry. Did I just hear you say something about a
Laura Byrd
?” She stressed the name at all three syllables.
“You don’t know her, do you?”
“Maybe. I mean, I’m sure there’s more than one out there. But I used to live with a Laura Byrd back when I was in college.”
It took Marion only a few questions—which college? when did you graduate? what did she look like?—to establish that the woman’s Laura and their own were one and the same. She felt the first few threads of something cinching together inside her, some new way of seeing the world, but she couldn’t quite make it come through. It was like a light flashing behind the leaves of a tree: barely visible through the branches, but there all the same, almost bright enough to identify.
Before long the men from Coca-Cola had to leave for an appointment. Laura’s old roommate had no other plans for the afternoon, though, and she attached herself to Marion and Phillip as they went through the clearing conducting their survey. “Do you know a Laura Byrd? Does the name ring any bells?” A good number of the people they spoke to had never heard of Laura before, but more than a few of them thought they recognized the name and almost half knew her well enough to show some surprise.
How could so many people come together in an unfamiliar city and remember the exact same woman?
It was no simple coincidence, Marion was sure of that.
By the time they gave up for the day, it was late afternoon, less than an hour before they were scheduled to meet Marion’s mother for dinner. The shadows at their feet were already stretching out to meet the horizon, and the crowds in the park had dwindled to almost nothing. They walked the last few blocks home and collapsed at opposite ends of the couch. Marion was as tired as she had been at any time since she’d first arrived in the city, when she had slept for seventeen hours straight. But for once she didn’t mind. This was a different sort of weariness than the weariness she’d experienced when she was alive. It was a good weariness, that pleasant mental fatigue that comes from too much sunlight and too much expectation. She watched as Phillip closed his eyes and napped for a few minutes. He had always been like that—able to drop off to sleep in a matter of seconds, then rouse himself again twenty minutes later, his attention sharpened to a fine point. She found the ability too mysterious to be jealous of it. After he woke up, she gave him a moment to yawn and stretch, and then asked, “So what do you think it’s all about?”
“You mean Laura?”
“I don’t understand how all those people could have known her, Phillip. And I don’t understand why she isn’t here. Where is she?”
“You’re just full of unanswerable questions today, aren’t you?” he said. “Maybe she is here somewhere, but she just hasn’t turned up yet. Or maybe she’s changed so much that we can’t recognize her. Or maybe she’s still alive. Maybe there’s a different afterlife for everybody, and this is Laura’s, and we’re all just waiting for her to die so that everything will make sense to us.”
“Don’t say that.”
“Or then again, maybe the man who asked us for the match this afternoon was right, and God is just out there playing games with us to see how we’ll react. Or maybe it’s chance. In the end, maybe it’s nothing but chance.” He smoothed a crease from his pants as he stood up. “There’s the long answer. The short answer is, I don’t know. But I’m glad
we’re
here, Marion.”
He went to the sink to wash his face. She heard him running the water until it was hot enough for the pitch to change, then the rapid welling sound as he cupped his hands to the faucet followed by the sudden collapsing splash, like a tarp giving way, as he emptied the water onto his face. When he came back out, his hair was slicked back in mixed wet and dry strands, except for a thin loop that had come loose from the thatch to dangle over his eye. “
We’re
here,” he concluded, “and things are pretty good, and that’s enough for me.”
He sat down beside her on the couch. She was tired and so she rested her head on his shoulder.
“This is nice,” she said after a while. “You didn’t really help me with my question, but this is nice.”
“I know it is. It’s been a long time, hasn’t it?”
“What do you mean, ‘It’s been a long time’?”
“A long time since we could just sit together quietly like this. A long time since you would let me, or since I would risk it. You know, sometimes I look back on the last ten years of our lives, and it feels like we were nothing but roommates. I was the bumbling roommate you had to pick up after, and you were the sensitive roommate I had to keep from upsetting. I don’t know what did it to us. Maybe it was Laura’s going away to college, the two of us being alone together after all that time. I don’t know. But that’s what we were, isn’t it? The crazy thing is that I didn’t even notice until it was all over. It took dropping dead, of all things, for me to see things so clearly.”
It sounded as though he were about to laugh, but the laugh turned into a spasmlike inhalation, and he sneezed loudly, jarring her head with his shoulder. “Whew! Excuse me. I wasn’t expecting that. Anyway,
that’s
what I mean by ‘It’s been a long time.’ I mean I’m glad I’m your husband again. I’m glad you’re my wife. If my vote counts for anything, I say we keep it that way. I must have tried to tell you that a dozen times today, when you haven’t been so… frustrating.”
As usual, his speech had cracked apart into a mass of springs and cogs at the end, the parts of a statement rather than the statement itself. He had left her with the impression that he was about to clarify himself but had decided to opt out at the last second. Still, she knew what he meant, even if she wasn’t quite sure how to respond to him. Finally she just gave up and said what she was thinking, which was, “I didn’t know you’d realized anything was wrong.”
The look he gave her was as old as time. He leaned over and said, “I’m going to change out of these clothes before we head back out, okay?”
Then he stood up and disappeared into the bedroom, shutting the door.
It was a mistake for her to think of him as innocent, uncomplicated. She knew that. But there was something about his fussiness, his obedience to certain long-established routines, along with the carelessness with which he presented himself to the world, that made it easy for her to imagine him as a child. She had imagined, for instance, that he was the one who had never seen their marriage clearly—or seen himself clearly, for that matter. That he was the one who was half-broken by every little sickness that came his way, and by nostalgia for the way he used to be, and by worry over what had happened to Laura. But she was beginning to suspect that it had been her all along. She was the innocent one. She was the child.
She felt for a moment the child’s guilt and panic that she was to blame for something—for finally getting to know him, maybe. She knew that it wasn’t the
getting to know him
part that would convict her in the end. It was the
finally
.
She cast the feeling aside and forced herself up from the couch. It was five-thirty, almost time to leave. She had to get dressed. Outside, the sun had all but disappeared, and the apartment had filled with those textureless blue shadows that were just a few degrees darker than the sky. She could hear Phillip snapping his jacket together in the bedroom. Each snap locked into place with a satisfying little click, much louder than it ought to have been in the falling darkness. She went to the door and prepared to knock, lifting her hand to the wood. It was an interesting sound.