Читать книгу The Second Baptism of Albert Simmel - Rodney Clapp - Страница 5
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ОглавлениеDecades ago, when the people called Americans still thought of their country as young and its promises inexhaustible, these surroundings were all different. Albert ruminated on this in the dusk, ending one more long workday with the trudge home from the train station. He walked in what formerly was called a suburb. But he did not walk on a sidewalk. He stepped freely, casually, down the middle westbound lane of a six-lane freeway of Old Chicago.
Other pedestrians streamed along the same roadway. The vast stretch of lanes, seventy or eighty feet across, had been built to accommodate speeding automobiles and behemoth tractor-trailers. The freeway was the size of a substantial river, and once it had clogged and roared with traffic, a whitewater estuary frothing on a concrete and asphalt bed. Now there was no traffic other than foot traffic. A few pedestrians walked in pairs, talking quietly. But most sojourned apart, several arms’ lengths from the closest walker. Far from white water gorged and rushing, the freeway was tonight, as on every night for a long while, a mostly dry riverbed. Here and there trickled the currents of pedestrians. And soon, with the sunset, these intermittent currents would cease.
As Albert knew from his mother, and from books, the suburbs were once inhabited by the relatively wealthy, the so-called “middle class.” These days there was no middle class. The decidedly wealthy lived in the core city, at the east end of the commuter train line Al had just ridden. Mother said the suburbs had been referred to fondly as the “‘burbs,” a term that made Albert think of “burps” or “blurbs,” things comfortable and innocuous and mildly amusing. Babies burped, and books were reassuringly blurbed by the author’s friends. For as long as Albert himself could remember, however, people called the suburbs the “subs.” This emphasized that they were the home of the underclass, the subordinate folk who subsisted on vegetables and eggs collected from backyard coops, who toiled for the rich city-dwellers or cobbled together a series of handyman and odd jobs. Or just went without work and resorted to other means of survival.
The surface Al and others trod on was no longer smooth and unbroken. Even in their heyday, the freeways incorrigibly cracked and potholed. Lacking constant maintenance, the roads’ cracks widened, their potholes yawned open into what Al supposed would better be designated kettle-holes or cauldron-holes. After heavy rains, the holes filled and a duck or two might float on the larger ones. Weeds and wildflowers heaved up through the cracks in the pavement. Not only weeds and wildflowers: trees, saplings and medium-sized pines and oaks and elms, stood at intervals. In especially overgrown stretches, blanched white cement split into jagged squares and rectangles, resembling tombstones lying flat and scattered in a bombed cemetery. All this made the freeways passable only for foot transit and the infrequent bicyclist or horseback rider.
Albert arrived at a corridor where the freeway was adjoined on both sides by the ruins of shopping malls. The hastily constructed, gargantuan boxed buildings had at many places collapsed. At others walls and sagging semblances of roofs remained, though no plate glass windows were still whole. Strangely, what best endured were flimsy plastic signs. In garish if now faded colors, they skewed atop the rubble piles of walls that had long ago crumbled, roosted on rusty poles now bent and leaning. The ruins loomed at a considerable distance from the road. They were surrounded by vast, flat, ruptured parking lots. Albert imagined that the parking lots had once been like encircling deserts, where shoppers abandoned their vehicles and hiked toward the stores as if they were oases.
What surprised Albert was not that the malls were currently unsightly and uninviting. He lived in a world full of the decaying structures of another era. He was struck more by the fact that those who built and eagerly frequented the shopping emporia apparently really did regard them almost as paradises, as oases. And this to an extent that they never noticed that the buildings and parking lots were unattractive, that they were not visually pleasing destinations at which to arrive or among which to wander and pass time. Historians Al had read emphasized that in the period at the height of the malls’ popularity, great emphasis was laid on the functionality of architecture. Stores were built simply to contain (some were even called “big box stores”) and to shelter, as briefly as possible, the goods that visitors would rush to buy and remove to their own premises. Customers, it seemed, were so fixed and concentrated on the function of shopping that they lost awareness of the environment in which they spent entire days of their lives. No wonder the heedless, mindlessly acquisitive inhabitants of this earlier era were known in Al’s day as “squandrels.”
But now Al realized he was dallying. The evening shadows lengthened at his back. The sun was falling faster, the sky leaching its blue and turning red. Unlike the forebears who had ambled obliviously amid the malls, at various hours of the day or night, Albert could not afford to lose attention to his surroundings, or linger here after dark. He resumed a more deliberate pace. Ahead he saw lanes that split off from the freeway. They would curve, then loop, on to a smaller road that plunged between older, taller trees, into a neighborhood of houses with sprawling backyards, partly inhabited apartment complexes, taverns, shops, and churches. There, before darkness gathered into an impenetrable mass unpunctuated by electric lighting, Albert Simmel would be home.
≤
Albert pulled to and locked the heavy wooden door. Typically he climbed the outside stairs and entered directly into his flat, the rehabbed top floor of the Episcopal Church of St. Brendan the Wanderer. But tonight he wasn’t hungry. He left the open air through the church’s front door. Something—he thought it was the doe and her fawn intent on berries blocks from his home, near enough to an Edenic belt of woods to remain relaxed, and gracefully craning their necks and peering at him out of shining obsidian eyes—something put him in a mood of loss. Al probed with a hand and rested a palm against the cool stone wall, waiting for his eyesight to adjust. Soon the blindness left him and the dim evening light bloomed through colored glass. Speckled in filtered greens and purples, he made his way across the narthex to the rear of the sanctuary. He lighted four candles: one for a church friend who recently succumbed to influenza, one for Granddad Madison, one for his father. And one for Valerie, sweet Valerie. He sat in a wickered chair near the candles. He pictured and prayed for each loved one, but it was Valerie, far and away it was Valerie, he missed more than any other. He missed her so much his ribs ached. He missed her so much his teeth hurt.
Of his grandparents, Granddad Madison, gone now for a dozen years, had affected Al the most. He was a short, barrel-chested man with eyeglasses and one bright streak of silver at the front of his thick hair. He worked twelve hours a day at the drugstore he and Grandma operated, and still had energy to burn. A few years after he and Grandma bought a home, Granddad decided they needed a basement. He hand-dug it right under the standing house. Over time he experimented with a series of hobbies, from woodworking to toy train tableaux to guitar playing. He nurtured a flower garden and grew miniature cacti traveling salesmen delivered at the store. And every night from dark to one or two in the morning, he read.
Among Albert’s favorite childhood memories were overnights at Grandma and Granddad Madison’s house. After Grandma had gone to bed, Granddad and Albert rested in two leather chairs, reading their respective books. Albert occupied Grandma’s special chair, but only after she had evacuated it for the day. (No one except Granddad ever sat in his chair, even if Granddad wasn’t anywhere near the house.) Al and Granddad Madison drank bottled soda and munched on salty peanuts. At intervals Granddad asked where Al was in some story Granddad had recommended and plucked from his shelves. When Al provided details, Granddad smiled and gazed out the blank night window, as if he were recalling some lost friend or distant golden event of his youth. Then, often, the old man would exclaim, “Oh, I want to read that again!” Dropping his current book into his lap like a neglected pet, he took Albert’s book, flexed the spine and pressed his fingers down the gutter with delectation, leaned forward, and began reading aloud. He read intensely if not boomingly (Grandma was asleep in the next room), speeding his pace as the plot surged, slowing with savor over sumptuous descriptions, chortling in delight as he repeated especially admired lines. During these impromptu readings he occasionally stopped abruptly, even at mid-sentence. He raised a knee, gouged one elbow deep into the armrest of his chair, tipped to one side like a sailboat struck by a sudden gale, and let loose a ripe, long fart. Then, as if he hadn’t even paused, he resumed his recitation.
Al remembered Granddad Madison to God. He next shifted attention to his father, buried now for four years. His dad had died in his mid-sixties when he succumbed to a respiratory virus. Ray Simmel had been legendary, at least within the family, for his toughness. He delivered mail, which meant riding horseback fifteen miles a day, four days a week. Albert had heard of a motto from the Old American postal service, about getting the mail through in rain, sleet, or snow. But what his father truly dreaded was lightning. On at least half a dozen occasions bolts had crashed close enough to, as Ray put it, “singe the hair on my balls.” He described the preliminary iron odor and taste on his tongue, the prickly sensation across his back and legs. Then within moments a monumental spear of light, wider than a tree trunk and white as ivory in the noon sun, would split the sky and stab into the ground. The strike deafened. It stunned all the senses. Usually Ray had found shelter in an abandoned building or under a freeway overpass, but once a storm closed too rapidly for him to dismount and stake his horse. The lightning strike temporarily blinded the terrified animal, which ran into the side of a house and broke its neck. Ray staggered home, soaked and bruised, and was back on his route two days later.
Given so much that Ray Simmel had survived, it was all the more bitterly ironic that one January he took a cold, and could not shake it. He hacked vile, bilious sputum for weeks, then went feverish and descended into a coma. It was the first time in Albert’s entire life that his father was bedridden. With the quarrels over his son’s relationship with Valerie, Ray and Al had not been friendly for years. By the time Ray lay unconscious and incommunicative for three days, Al felt the anxiety rise on him like floodwater. He found himself sitting sentinel beside what surely would become a deathbed. He gave his father up as lost to the world, and wished he had spoken affectionate words while Ray could still hear them. Late the next afternoon, he took the hand of the husk that had been his father, squeezed it, and declared, “I love you, Dad.” Immediately, firmly, the hand squeezed back. Startled, Al jerked his hand from his father’s grip. It was as though he had been grabbed by a ghost, embraced through the veil of mortality. So it was that Albert added one more regret to the long chronicle of his sorrowful war with Ray Simmel: the regret that when his father had tried, one last time, to make peace and heal the breach, Albert had responded as if bitten by a rattlesnake. In hours the elder Simmel really was dead. Two days later he rested in his grave. Recalling the moment after all these years, Al muttered, “Lord, have mercy.” Was that a prayer or a cry in the dark? he wondered. Was there a difference?
He turned his thoughts to Valerie. Her hazel eyes and shoulder-length hair flashed in his mind. That was all he could stand. He rose from the wickered chair and proceeded upstairs.
≤
Situated just off the kitchen of Al’s second-story apartment was the spacious living room. Behind it ran a long hallway, leading to three bedrooms. There were bay windows across the front of the living room. The recessed windows looked directly out into the leafy canopies of trees. The elevation, with its tunneling length, made the apartment feel like a cave in the sky. Al burrowed into the rearmost, master bedroom. Before long he slept.
He dreamed. He was at a house in the mountains. A huge wooden deck jutted off one side of the house. Before the deck was an enormous, absolutely still lake. In the odd way of dreams, he somehow knew that lake was as deep as it was beautiful. The place was busy with relatives, bustling with Albert’s uncles and aunts and cousins and nephews and nieces. The door of the house giving onto the deck was left wide open. From the door issued a grandmother with a cherry pie on one hand and a pumpkin pie on another. Mother trailed with a thick, fudge-frosted chocolate cake. Children sensed the arrival of desserts and dashed across the lawn toward tables on the deck. Grownups clustered in conversational pods continued their talk and laughter, but followed the food with their eyes.
Then Granddad Madison, who had already been dead for years, appeared at the reunion. He was not frightening. No one was shocked at the ghost, but no one spoke to him or remarked on his company. The comfortable babble of the living, of folk who knew one another at their worst as well as their best and had nothing to hide, carried on uninterrupted. Granddad strolled among the family, assuming the slightly sheepish smile of a man arrived late at an appointment.
And there, there at the edge of the deck, stood Dad. Like Granddad, he too had died. He too was unthreatening. He too was mute. Unable to resist, Albert approached and greeted him. But Dad could not, he did not, speak. Even his eyes did not answer. His absence ached harder, his unbridgeable distance was rendered more keenly real, by this strange presence without presence. He was a cipher, written in body English intact but baffling, legible but defying interpretation.
Then Al heard a voice. It called to him, once, then twice, rising in volume. It sounded like Valerie’s voice, the lovely music of Valerie’s voice. He turned and there she stood, just out of the water at the edge of the lake. She wore a summer dress with her freckled shoulders naked. She raised a tanned arm and curled her fingers in beckoning. “Albert,” she said. “Albert. Come here.”
Al started from his sleep. He sat up, gasping. For the first time in this familiar, recurrent dream, the dead had spoken.