The Glass Ocean (4 page)

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Authors: Lori Baker

Tags: #Fiction, #General

BOOK: The Glass Ocean
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He takes Hugh Blackstone by the arm then, and together they depart the room, whispering of the necessary preparations, while my father and Harry Owen linger behind.

He touches my father’s arm.

Have you decided to go, then?

Oh, yes.
My father is quick about this, has no doubts, smiles his gentle smile.
Yes, of course I shall go.

Where does it come from, this unexpected certainty?

Harry Owen releases him then, but my father remains behind among the orchids, which seem to float, like hallucinations, in this very hot room. Feverflowers: my grandfather’s pets. Gently he caresses the ice-green blossom,
Angraecum funale
—the corded ghost. It is smooth, soft, cool, lightly furred. Whose cheek is this I touch? Then a sudden stirring, a sibilant, soft rustle; Clotilde is in the doorway. Her skin is pale and cool as ivory; so pale, so cool; like one of Petrook’s sculptured goddesses.

This though is an illusion.

She laughs. Flesh and blood.

Papa says to tell you dinner is served
, she says, and half lowers herself in a hideously ironic curtsey. Then she runs away, like a child, boots clattering noisily upon the floor. Leaving him gawping.

•   •   •

Delectable. Delectable. Oh mother mine.

•   •   •

They will speak no more this night about the journey that is to come (for it will come, despite certain reluctances, it approaches them already, slipping quickly toward them across the waves). Instead, in a hot, dark, dining room, as the dead look on, they raise and lower their spoons and listen as my grandfather speaks of journeys past. He is eloquent, and he has been everywhere: Bain Dzak, Cyprus, the Canary Islands, the Basque regions of Spain, Argentina, Baalbeck . . . he speaks of these with affectionate nostalgia, as another might speak of long-missing friends. Yet what a dismal company they make! My mother is not there; the procuress only, she does not eat the meal; or eats it elsewhere; somewhere; in another room; somewhere else, in the warren. So it is the four men. My father, gazing at the table-cloth, starting slightly each time anybody speaks to him—Hugh Blackstone, eating little, saying less, regarding them all with his cynical yellow eyes—Harry Owen, wrapped up in his tweed, growing appalled as his glance explores the collector’s cases, finding here, stretched out in supplication, the black leathery hands of a gorilla or a chimpanzee, so like ours, yet so unlike; there, the famished, begging grins of cayman, alligator, crocodile.

•   •   •

What can it mean, this collecting of my grandfather’s, all of it, any of it? These creatures in their sullen, half-rotted profusion represent not the multiplication of knowledge but instead its opposite—the impossibility of knowing anything at all. Many things, dead; corpses, carapaces, shells; collected, catalogued, cut open once, then cut again—flayed—essence gone, destroyed in the cutting, if it ever was there at all.

•   •   •

They are no different, these four. Grist for the mill. As they know. Anxiously sipping their soup through clenched teeth. And him, too, the servant with the Asiatic features who stealthily slips in, lights the lights, departs again. Him especially.

Objects in the collection of.

•   •   •

Lacking only the ether, the scissors, the arsenical soap, and the pin.

•   •   •

There is one thing living, though. It is the sound of my mother’s voice. A trill of laughter, musical, soft, is coming from somewhere in that place, from some unseen room or unknown corridor (filled, no doubt, with other carcasses, other carpets, other artifacts). My mother, alivest thing in that cabinet of mummies, living and dead, is laughing.

Leo hears her. His eyes are round, startled, his spoon suspended in dense midair. What’s that look on his face? It’s not surprise; it’s something else. Something like surprise. Apprehension, that’s what it is. Apprehension, bordering on fear.

•   •   •

He knows already, of course. He already feels the trouble she will be. It’s there, in her voice, for he who has ears to hear it. Attraction and repulsion. He wants to run away, but he can’t. It’s too late already.

•   •   •

What can Harry Owen think, glancing up from his soup, seeing the fear on my father’s face? And then, too, seeing the cayman grinning at him from behind my father’s shoulder. Grinning confidentially, with something like a wink.

He hears her, too, of course, this Harry Owen. My father isn’t the only one with ears.

•   •   •

Dash!
cries Felix Girard.
Open another bottle of ’28!

Alcohol does help sometimes, it’s true.

•   •   •

They are waiting for her to appear again, Harry Owen and my father both. If the truth be told.

But she’s hidden herself. She, the desired one. She’s plaiting her long golden hair, tucking herself into bed with lizards and vultures looking on, so that in the end, when my father and Harry Owen can bear to wait no longer, it’s the bell suspended above Petrook’s shop door that bids them a cheerful good night, not she. Despite their hopes. The man himself is still sitting there, hunched like a spider over his desk, with a sallow cup of tea at his elbow, tepid, grassy liquid gleaming dully in the well of the saucer; when he sees them he pauses in his work for a moment, glances up with those dark, feral eyes, then quickly away. Not much of a leave-taking this. They two will part disappointed on the pavement, Leo Dell’oro, Harry Owen, two friends well met, one turning left, one right, into that stinking garbage tip of a city. The night air heavy, hot, black; thick with cinders. A red glow on the horizon, sulfurous stench. Analogy to hell artlessly implied. Thick guttural vibration, this is the life of the city, its arteries pumping, darkly, warmly, all the engines turning over, then turning again. The vital essence sparked. It is a place on the verge of the future. Upstairs, oblivious to all, my grandfather and his friend Hugh Blackstone will go on, and on, the exotic servant opening another bottle, then another. Behind that lighted window. There are so many lighted windows in this city, curtains drawn, a scrim descending, shutting out, shutting in; and so much is going on behind them, who knows what. Vertiginous thought. Best look away. These two are done anyway, for now.

Such an awkward parting.
Perhaps I shall see you again. Perhaps
. One toward Mayfair, the other, God knows.

•   •   •

Of course they will sail, in the end. Despite all doubts. They haven’t any choice, not really.

•   •   •

My father has decided already, on the strength of a certain blue glance. This is foreordained. The other will dither for a while, finally read
Felix Girard’s Ghosts of Bain Dzak,
find it brilliant, say he is sailing on the strength of it, when really prompted by boredom. Ambition. Rebellion. Because his father prefers him to pursue the clove trade, while he prefers not. Hence: dislike of hearth and home. Restlessness. Dissatisfaction. And something else he cannot name. Will not.

Such is
her
influence.

Like a planet, she draws her acolytes.

Not that she does it on purpose. Misunderstandings that might arise are never her fault. She’s innocence in a tower, guarded by dragons, plaiting her golden hair.

Of course she, too, will sail. This is her desire. Regardless who may disapprove: and many shall. But she’s willful, my mother, and fiercely attached to her father, the bear.

•   •   •

Papa will stay with Clotilde always. Papa will never go away again!

•   •   •

She is a child, sitting on his lap, poring with him through books containing exotic colored plates of faraway places. He has just completed his own book,
Felix Girard’s Ghosts of Bain Dzak
, after years holed up in the attic in his father-in-law’s house with his fossils spread out around him on two long, scar-topped, spindle-legged tables. All day and all night he spent there, in those two cramped, inconvenient rooms, writing; my mother as a baby crawled among his loose and discarded papers on the floor, as a tot leaned on his shoulder while he wrote, contaminated his inkwell with spiderwebs, whirled like a dervish through all his accumulated research until she finally collapsed, exhausted from her games; then he read aloud to her from his work. She was too young to understand much, but what of it? It is the voice that matters, and all these years later she still recalls the sound of it, her father’s voice, intoning:
In the distant steppe, the camels stride . . .
Wherever she was, curled up at his feet on the floor, or against the wall among the piles of discarded papers, dropping into sleep with his words in her ears, the simple line,
In the distant steppe, the camels stride . . . ,
like an invocation, heavy with the fragrance of the unknown.
In the distant steppe . . . the camels
. My mother is in her father’s arms. She is asleep, and sleeping, dreams of the things he has seen, of which he has written and then read aloud to her, of the bazaars of Khuree, of swift, small horses and of courageous horsemen whose boots curl up at the toes, of fantastical sandstone buttes weirdly shaped by fierce desert winds, of the skeletons of dragons he has carved single-handedly out of the stone; dreams, until it seems as if she has seen these things herself, has been there with him, with her father, the bear.

•   •   •

But then it all is over, the book is finished, the manuscript wrapped up in plain paper, and mailed to London. He begins to think, once again, of travel.

•   •   •

Papa will not go away. Papa will stay with his Clotilde always
. One babyish hand on his cheek, the other buried in the luxuriant ginger beard.
Papa will never go away again.
Attempting to extract, in the unguarded moment, a promise she can use against him later.
You know I’d like that, Tildy. Better than anything else in the world. To be always and ever with my Tildy!
And reaching into one of his pockets, he pulls out a sweet he’s hidden there especially for her.

•   •   •

But never does he promise. Felix Girard will not make a promise to Clotilde unless he intends to keep it.

•   •   •

And he does travel: bravely, selfishly, mercilessly, relentlessly—once he has finished his book, he travels. First, briefly, to Spain; then southward, staying longer, down into the Canary Islands, and on to Morocco. Then another trip, to Greece, is extended into Malta, and then on to Tunisia. In between, the stops home, to Paris, and more gifts. An egg from which she is allowed to raise a wild dove that perches on the curtain rods and shits on Madame Girard’s curtains before escaping out the open window. Then a pair of spice finches in a gilt cage—she’ll spend hours watching these, with their brilliant red beaks, pert black eyes, brown-speckled breasts. Their movements are like clockwork, their songs like high notes plucked upon taut wires. She feeds them bits of apple and orange, trains them to perch on the heel of her hand, to let her spread out, with her small fingers, their small fragile wings. She is enamored; but in a few weeks the spice finches are forgotten, and Felix Girard is leaving once again. He is departing for Sfax; his cases are packed, they are in the entry hall.
Papa does not love me! If he loved me he would take me with him to Sfax—

Ah, Tildy! Sfax is no place for a little girl. It’s a hot, rough, nasty place. They eat goats’ eyes for dinner in Sfax. Would you like to eat goats’ eyes, Tildy? Of course not. Nor anybody else’s eyes neither. You shall come with me when you are older, to someplace better than Sfax.

But he does not tell her when, or where; my mother is not fooled, she grabs hold of his beard, pulls fiercely, all the while screaming,
Papa does not love his Clotilde! He does not love her at all!

•   •   •

My grandmother, Marie-Louise Girard, has her own ways of coping with this. She floats off, with a resigned air, among the bright blooms in her father’s conservatory. This is the world she came from, the world she will return to. There, surrounded by the yellow and white winter orchids, with a watering can in her hand, she hums quietly to herself,
Mmmm. . . .

•   •   •

She has surrendered my mother to Felix Girard long since. Clotilde’s first word, pronounced a month after her father returned from Mongolia, was
Up
, by which she meant to say that she refused to lie for one minute longer in her bassinette. Her second word, after Marie-Louise picked her up out of the bassinette, petted her back, and pressed her affectionately to her breast, was
Papa!

Marie-Louise can say only one thing about this daughter who runs wild, ripping all the curling papers out of her hair, crawling in the mud beneath the shrubbery looking for worms, who spends all her time in the garden playing “camels and tigers” with the Mongolian servant, Dash—carried round and round, dizzyingly, on those exotic brown shoulders:

Qu’est-ce qu’un sauvage!

What else can she say? It’s true: my mother is a savage. And she is lost to Marie-Louise: sometimes it is impossible to get back that which has been taken. It recedes, is ever out of reach, a blossom on a branch that bends infinitely away, a bird retreating to a higher and higher perch; pursue it too sharply, and it will fly.

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