Part 32 (1/2)

”It's the strangest thing,” she said, calming down in the face of no reaction. ”I can see around it, and I can see through the other eye, but all I can think about is what's behind the purple. I'm moving my head all the time to try to see what I'm missing.” She turned her head even as she was speaking. It didn't hurt at all, just lurked there, purpling. ”It's like a stain on the world-a stain on my view, my way of-” She broke off, embarra.s.sed.

”I broke out in a plague of blisters,” he said.

She couldn't help it, she laughed. ”I know! I looked up s.h.i.+ngles on the computer at the library. I always thought they were minor, but they sound terrible, you must be in a lot of pain.”

”It was more Exodus than Revelations. They're almost gone.”

They sat in silence for a moment. Clary was swept with disappointment, sitting beside him, for the failure of their happiness. Of every happiness, every hope. Ridiculous, she thought. Everything was.

”Why do you keep going to church?” she asked him.

”Paycheque.”

She laughed, but turned her head away. Because he had dodged her question, Paul saw. He shook his head to clear it. No need to be anything but honest with her.

”I have the relations.h.i.+p with G.o.d that some people have with alcohol. Something in me is always crying out G.o.d! G.o.d! the way other people's hearts pant for a drink.”

She looked at his face carefully, to see if he was being flippant. ”Sounds destructive.”

He almost asked what she longed for herself, but remembered. Pearce, and Trevor and Dolly. Flap-mouthed fool. Talking about G.o.d-did he have to flare like an oil well?

The elderly neurologist peered into Clary's eye with different machines, booked her for an MRI two months ahead, and asked her twenty questions, to no great effect. Paul sat beside her as if he was her husband, praying silently in a constant flow, a storm sewer running under his thoughts.

”Well,” said the doctor, giving up. ”It will either get bigger, stay the way it is, or go away. It will probably go away. If it does, please phone and cancel the MRI.” That was all.

Clary thanked Paul. She put out her hand and he held it for a moment: not just shaking hands, she thought-some contact, some reconciliation. That they could be friends, at least. He was kind, and she loved his hands. She closed her mind to the rest of it, to desire or hope, and walked away down the corridor. Too many times in this hospital, too many times down hallways, always to no purpose. She couldn't even be sick successfully.

It went away two days later.

To prevent himself from phoning Clary, Paul worked on the homilies for Maundy Thursday and Good Friday. Lent like a prairie fire, burning off the dead material on top, but leaving the metre-long roots, he wrote in his black scratch. Burning off extraneous outer / that we are attached to but need to lose...His belabouring of metaphor never failed to surprise him. He could use Hopkins in every sermon, or Rilke, but of course n.o.body wanted that. They wanted his own clumsy stories and the way he rode a thing to death, because they could understand that. What I do is me: for that I came, fair enough. I say more: the just man justices...Acts in G.o.d's eye what in G.o.d's eye he is-Christ. For Christ plays in ten thousand places... But he would not try again the solemn ma.s.s where he undressed the altar, the knocks to signify the hammering of the nails into Christ's hands and feet. There had been too many comments last year. Sheer Merton: Suddenly there is a point where religion becomes laughable. Then you decide that you are nevertheless religious.

Clary thought she had better talk to Paul. He had left a message on her phone to say he wanted to bring back the carpet. Giving away the d.a.m.ned carpet was the only good deed she had done that was not a blunder, and she was not taking it back. He would be at church all day, because it was Good Friday. She went to church, late, and stood outside the inner door listening, the wood of the door cool under her hand. Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Easter had been her mother's favourite part of the church year, a hugely dramatic time of mourning and then a concomitant (and to Clary's mind, equally over-dramatized) awakening joy; Clary had only felt detached. Standing at the back of the church alone, she was ashamed. How could she not have valued, even for that one week each year, her mother's ecstatic spirit? Her lovely mother, gone from the earth. The only good reason ever to have gone to church was to be with her mother, she thought.

Paul was quiet, as he must be on Good Friday. Last Good Friday she had not known him at all. She looked back at herself then: self-contained, sad, lonely, desperate to be good for something more vital than looking after an old woman.

”We enter this yearly process of being abandoned by G.o.d,” Paul was saying, ending the homily, as Clary cracked the heavy door open and slipped inside. ”But not without hope,” he said. ”Although we become immersed again in the misery of betrayal and death, we know the end of this story, and our awareness of G.o.d grows within us.”

It surprised her that he talked so freely in a sermon, never condescending, when she knew him to be shy and stiff in real life. How could she criticize his foibles when her own were so large and identical? He was, however, the one clear-eyed witness to her heavy-handed charity, and her humiliation. And the one whose opinion mattered most to her. Even remembering the rocking raft of his bed, the phosph.o.r.escent waves, there was no way back to being with him. In fact she thought she hated him.

Everything around her sank, tides pulled the ocean floor away, unreliable sand. She had stayed in the shadows of the side aisle arches, and she stepped quietly backwards, making sure he did not see her, until she could duck out the side door and go home. Good Friday was no day for talking.

47. Triumph.

Noise outside woke Dolly. Not loud: the eaves-drop sound of her parents talking on the front step. She pushed the covers back and got up. The bunk bed creaked and s.h.i.+fted, like it never had at Clary's house, but Trevor did not stir. Dolly went quietly to the window and leaned against the window screen, the sharp metal squares graphing her forehead.

Their bedroom looked out on the front here, instead of onto the back yard like at Clary's. She could see the driveway and Darwin's old car that was theirs now, that he'd left for them when he took Fern to Vancouver, so her dad could give back Clary's mother's car. She missed the Dart. She leaned her elbows on the windowsill and listened. The screen door opened and closed, her mother going inside for something. Her dad sat sideways on the top step, one foot lounging down. She could see the smoke he blew out, and smell it, mixed with beer. Quiet for a Sat.u.r.day night. Maybe it was really late. The street lamp a few doors down buzzed, a different sound than the crickets but slightly the same. No other noise but a motorcycle puttering down the road. The night smell of the pavement was black and wet, like it had rained, but it had not.

The motorcycle slowed, ran softly up the driveway at their house, and stopped. The man pulled off his helmet. It was Darwin, sitting on that big tattered motorcycle. He had long leather pant legs tied over his jeans.

”Hey,” he said. ”How's it going, Clayton?”

Her dad rustled his back on the side of the wall but didn't stand up or go down to meet Darwin. Dolly could not call out herself, because tomorrow was Easter eggs, and she was supposed to be asleep, not listening at the window. But she was tired of her dad not liking Darwin. The motorcycle had the word Triumph on it.

”Going okay,” her dad said, finally, after a couple puffs on his cigarette.

Darwin walked up, still slow, not barging in. ”How's Lorraine?”

Her dad laughed, meanly. ”Took you long enough to ask. Where you been?”

”I go where the wind goes,” Darwin said. He laughed too, but like he meant it. He leaned on the stair-post at the bottom of the steps and unbuckled his side straps.

”What you been doing?”

”Oh, you know, establis.h.i.+ng justice on earth.”

”b.u.t.ting in.” Dolly could see her dad's hand grind his cigarette out on the step. His hand looked white and small. His skinny wrist stretched far out of his jacket cuff, that old blue mark on his wrist-bone showing.

Darwin lifted his head and looked straight at her window. ”Nice night,” he said. She was pretty sure he couldn't see her, but she waved anyway, to show somebody was glad to see him.

”You're getting here late enough.”

”A long ride through the mountains,” Darwin said.

”Got your bike back, eh? Have a beer,” her dad said. He shoved the beer case with his foot, sc.r.a.ping it across the concrete with a snow-shovel noise.

”How's Lorraine?” Darwin asked again.

”She's fine. She's working, my boss's wife got her a couple days cleaning here and there.”

”She ready for that?”

Dolly waited for her dad to say something, but he didn't speak.

After a pretty long time he did.

”How's Vancouver?” he asked Darwin, his voice too loud for the night.

Darwin shrugged his shoulders and smiled.

”Been a while since I was out there-you see Garvin and those guys? Juice and Shayla and them?” Her dad laughed some more, like at a dirty joke. Dolly laid her head down on her arm, straightening out her legs one in front of the other as if she was an Egyptian, and gave her forehead a rest from the metal lines of the screen. She thought about that ad of the boy on the bus, and how his face shone the way her dad's used to.

At the doorway of the kids' room, checking on them, Lorraine heard Clayton say all that about Vancouver, about Shayla Morton and Garvin, that scary creep. She left her hand lightly on the doork.n.o.b, not moving a molecule, and watched Dolly bending down her head. Too much for Dolly to have to hear. She probably remembered Garvin from before.

Darwin said he'd heard they were around.

Clayton popped open another beer. ”Yeah. While you were out there, I was thinking. Maybe I'll drive out there myself in the summer.”