That winter of 1917-1918 was a dark and frightened time. The Germans smashed everything in front of them. In three months the British suffered
three hundred
thousand casualties. Many units of the French army were
mutinous. Russia was out of the war. The German east
divisions, rested and re-equipped, were thrown at the western
front. The war
seemed hopeless.
It was May before we had as many as twelve divisions in the field, and
summer had come before our troops began to move across the sea in numbers. The Allied generals were fighting each
other. Submarines slaughtered the crossing ships.
We learned then that war
was not a quick heroic charge but
a slow,
incredibly complicated matter.
Our
spirits sank in those winter months. We lost the flare of excitement and we had not yet put on the doggedness of a long war.
Ludendorff was unconquerable.
Nothing
stopped him. He mounted attack after attack on the broken armies of France and England. And it occurred to
us that we might be too late, that soon we might be standing alone against the invincible Germans.
It was not uncommon
for people to turn away from the war, some to fantasy and some to vice and some to crazy gaiety. Fortunetellers were in great demand, and saloons
did a
roaring
business. But people also turned inward to their private joys and tragedies to escape the
pervasive fear
and
despondency. Isn’t it strange
that today we have forgotten this? We remember World War I as quick victory, with flags and bands, marching and horseplay and returning soldiers,
fights in
the
barrooms with the goddam Limeys who thought they had won the war. How quickly we forgot that in that winter Ludendorff could not be beaten and that many people were preparing in their minds and spirits for a lost war.
2
Adam Trask was more
puzzled than sad. He didn’t have to resign from the draft board. He was given a leave of absence for ill health. He sat by the hour rubbing the back of his left hand. He brushed it with a harsh brush and soaked it in hot water. โIt’s
circulation,โ he
said. โAs soon as I get the circulation back it’ll be all right. It’s my eyes that bother me. I never had trouble with my eyes. Guess I’ll have to get my eyes tested for glasses. Me with glasses! Be hard to get used to. I’d go today but I feel a little dizzy.โ
He felt more dizzy than
he would admit. He could not
move about the house without a hand brace against a wall.
Lee often had to give him a hand-up out of his chair or help him out of bed in the morning and tie his shoes because he could not tie knots with his numb left hand.
Almost daily he came back
to Aron. โI
can
understand why a young man might want to enlist,โ he said. โIf Aron had talked to me, I might have tried to persuade him against it, but I wouldn’t have forbidden it. You know that, Lee.โ
โI know it.โ
โThat’s what I can’t understand. Why did he sneak away? Why doesn’t he write? I thought I knew him better than that. Has he written to Abra? He’d be sure to write to her.โ
โI’ll ask her.โ
โYou do that. Do that right away.โ
โThe training is hard.
That’s what I’ve heard.
Maybe they don’t give him time.โ
โIt doesn’t take any time to write a card.โ
โWhen you went in the army, did you write to your father?โ
โThink you’ve got me
there, don’t you? No, I didn’t, but I had a reason. I didn’t want to enlist. My father forced me. I was resentful.
You see, I had a good reason. But Aronโhe was doing fine in college. Why, they’ve written, asking about him.
You read the letter. He didn’t take any clothes. He didn’t take the gold watch.โ
โHe wouldn’t need any clothes in the army, and they don’t want gold watches there either. Everything’s brown.โ โI guess you’re right.
But I don’t understand it. I’ve got to do something about my eyes. Can’t ask you to read everything to me.โ His eyes really troubled him. โI can
see a letter,โ he said. โBut the words jumble all around.โ A dozen times a day he seized a paper or a book and stared at it and put it down.
Lee read the papers to
him to keep him from getting restless, and often in the middle of the reading Adam went to sleep.
He would awaken and
say, โLee? Is that you, Cal? You know I never had any trouble with my eyes. I’ll just go tomorrow and get my eyes tested.โ
About the middle of February Cal went into the kitchen and said, โLee, he talks about it all the time. Let’s get his eyes tested.โ Lee
was stewingโ
apricots. He left the stove and closed the kitchen door and went back to the stove. โI don’t want him to go,โ he said.
โWhy not?โ
โI don’t think it’s his eyes. Finding out might
trouble him. Let him be for a while. He’s had a bad shock. Let him get better. I’ll read to him all he wants.โ
โWhat do you think it is?โ
โI don’t want to say. I’ve thought maybe Dr. Edwards might just come by for a friendly callโjust to say hello.โ
โHave it your own way,โ
said Cal.
Lee said, โCal, have you seen Abra?โ
โSure, I see her. She walks away.โ
โCan’t you catch her?โ โSureโand
I
could
throw her down and punch her in the face and make her talk to me. But I won’t.โ โMaybe if you’d just
break the ice. Sometimes the barrier is so weak it just falls over when you touch it. Catch up with her. Tell her I want to see her.โ
โI won’t do it.โ
โYou feel awful guilty, don’t you?โ
Cal did not answer.
โDon’t you like her?โ Cal did not answer. โIf you keep this up,
you’re going to feel worse, not better. You’d better open up. I’m warning you. You’d better open up.โ
Cal cried, โDo you want
me to tell Father what I did? I’ll do it if you tell me to.โ โNo, Cal. Not now. But
when he gets well you’ll have to. You’ll have to for yourself. You can’t carry this alone. It will kill you.โ โMaybe I deserve to be killed.โ
โStop that!โ Lee said coldly. โThat can be the cheapest
kind of
self-indulgence. You stop that!โ โHow do you go about stopping it?โ Cal asked.
Lee changed the subject.
โI don’t understand why Abra hasn’t been hereโnot even once.โ
โNo reason to come now.โ
โIt’s not like her.
Something’s wrong there. Have you seen her?โ
Cal scowled. โI told you
I have. You’re getting crazy too. Tried to talk to her three times. She walked away.โ โSomething’s
wrong.
She’s a good womanโa real
woman.โ
โShe’s a girl,โ said Cal.
โIt sounds funny you calling her a woman.โ
โNo,โ Lee said softly.
โA few are women from the moment they’re born. Abra has the loveliness of woman, and the courageโand the strengthโand the wisdom.
She knows things and she accepts things. I would have bet she couldn’t be small or mean or even vain except when it’s pretty to be vain.โ โYou sure do think well
of her.โ
โWell enough to think
she wouldn’t desert us.โ And he said, โI miss her. Ask her to come to see me.โ
โI told you she walked
away from me.โ โWell, chase her then.
Tell her I want to see her. I miss her.โ
Cal asked, โShall we go back to my father’s eyes now?โ
โNo,โ said Lee. โShall we talk about Aron?โ
โNo.โ
3
Cal tried all the next day to find Abra alone, and it was only after school that he saw her ahead of him, walking home. He turned a corner and ran along the parallel street and then back, and he judged time and distance so that he turned in front of her as she strolled along.
โHello,โ he said. โHello. I thought I saw you behind me.โ
โYou did. I ran around
the block to get in front of you. I want to talk to you.โ
She regarded him
gravely. โYou could have done that without running around the block.โ
โWell, I tried to talk to you in school. You walked away.โ
โYou were mad. I didn’t want to talk to you mad.โ โHow do you know I was?โ
โI could see it in your
face and the way you walked. You’re not mad now.โ
โNo, I’m not.โ
โDo you want to take my books?โ She smiled.
A warmth fell on him. โYesโyes, I do.โ He put her schoolbooks under his arm and walked beside her. โLee wants to see you. He asked me to tell you.โ
She was pleased. โDoes he? Tell him I’ll come. How’s your father?โ โNot very well. His eyes bother him.โ
They walked along in silence until Cal couldn’t
stand it any more. โYou know about Aron?โ
โYes.โ She paused.
โOpen my binder and look
next to the first page.โ
He shifted the books. A penny postcard was in the binder. โDear Abra,โ it said. โI don’t feel clean. I’m not fit for you. Don’t be sorry. I’m in the army. Don’t go near my father. Good-by, Aron.โ
Cal snapped the book
shut. โThe son of a bitch,โ he said under his breath. โWhat?โ
โNothing.โ
โI heard what you said.โ โDo you know why he went away?โ
โNo. I guess I could
figure outโput two and two together. I don’t want to. I’m not ready toโthat is, unless you want to tell me.โ Suddenly
Cal said,
โAbraโdo you hate me?โ โNo, Cal, but you hate me a little. Why is that?โ โIโI’m afraid of you.โ โNo need to be.โ
โI’ve hurt you more than you know. And you’re my brother’s girl.โ
โHow have you hurt me? And I’mย notย your brother’s girl.โ
โAll right,โ he said
bitterly, โI’ll tell youโand I don’t want you to forget you asked me to. Our mother was a whore. She ran a house here in town. I found out about it a long time ago. Thanksgiving night I took Aron down and showed her to him. Iโโ
Abra broke in excitedly, โWhat did he do?โ
โHe went
madโjust
crazy. He yelled at her. Outside he knocked me down and ran away. Our dear mother killed herself; my fatherโhe’sโthere’s something wrong with him.
Now you know about me. Now you have some reason to walk away from me.โ
โNow I know about him,โ she said calmly. โMy brother?โ
โYes, your brother.โ โHe was good. Why did
I sayย was?ย Heย isย good. He’s not mean or dirty like me.โ They had been walking
very slowly. Abra stopped and Cal stopped and she faced him.
โCal,โ she said, โI’ve
known about your mother for a long, long time.โ
โYou have?โ
โI heard my parents
talking when they thought I was asleep. I want to tell you something, and it’s hard to tell and it’s good to tell.โ โYou want to?โ
โI have to. It’s not so terribly long ago that I grew up and I wasn’t a little girl
any more. Do you know what I mean?โ
โYes,โ said Cal.
โYou sure you know?โ โYes.โ
โAll right then. It’s hard
to say now. I wish I’d said it then. I didn’t love Aron any more.โ
โWhy not?โ
โI’ve tried to figure it
out. When we were children we lived in a story that we made up. But when I grew up the story wasn’t enough. I had to have something else, because the story wasn’t true any more.โ
โWellโโ
โWaitโlet me get it all out. Aron didn’t grow up. Maybe he never will. He wanted the story and he wanted it to come out his way. He couldn’t stand to have it come out any other way.โ
โHow about you?โ
โI don’t want to know
how it comes out. I only want to be there while it’s going on. And, Calโwe were kind of strangers. We kept it going because we were used to it.
But I didn’t believe the story any more.โ
โHow about Aron?โ
โHe was going to have it come out his way if he had to tear the world up by the roots.โ
Cal stood looking at the ground.
Abra said, โDo you believe me?โ
โI’m trying to study it out.โ
โWhen you’re a child you’re
the
center of
everything. Everything happens for
you.
Other
people? They’re only ghosts furnished for you to talk to. But when you grow up you take your place and you’re your own size and shape.
Things go out of you to others and come in from other people. It’s worse, but it’s much better too. I’m glad you told me about Aron.โ
โWhy?โ
โBecause now I know I didn’t make it all up. He couldn’t stand to know about
his mother because that’s not how he wanted the story to go
โand he wouldn’t have any other story. So he tore up the world. It’s the same way he tore me upโAbraโwhen he wanted to be a priest.โ
Cal said, โI’ll have to think.โ
โGive me my books,โ
she said. โTell Lee I’ll come. I feel free now. I want to think too. I think I love you, Cal.โ
โI’m not good.โ โBecause you’re
not good.โ Cal walked quickly
home. โShe’ll come
tomorrow,โ he told Lee. โWhy, you’re excited,โ said Lee.
4
Once in the house Abra walked on her toes. In the hall she moved close to the wall where the floor did not creak. She put her foot on the lowest step of the carpeted stairs, changed her mind, and went to the kitchen.
โHere you are,โ her mother said. โYou didn’t come straight home.โ
โI had to stay after class. Is Father better?โ
โI guess so.โ
โWhat does the doctor
say?โ
โSame thing he said at firstโoverwork. Just needs a rest.โ
โHe hasn’t seemed
tired,โ said Abra.
Her mother opened a bin and took out three baking potatoes and carried them to the sink. โYour Father’s very brave, dear. I should have known. He’s been doing so much war work on top of his own work. The doctor says sometimes a man collapses all at once.โ
โShall I go in and see him?โ
โYou know, Abra, I’ve
got a feeling that he doesn’t
want to see anybody. Judge Knudsen phoned and your father said to tell him he was asleep.โ
โCan I help you?โ
โGo change your dress, dear. You don’t want to get your pretty dress soiled.
Abra tiptoed past her father’s door and went to her
own room. It was harsh bright with
varnish, papered
brightly. Framed photographs of her parents on the bureau, poems framed on the walls, and her closetโeverything in its place, the floor varnished, and
her shoes
standing
diligently side by side. Her mother did everything for her, insisted on itโplanned for her, dressed her.
Abra had long ago given
up having any private things in her room, even any personal thing. This was of such long standing that Abra did not think of her room as a private place. Her privacies were of the mind. The few letters she kept were in the sitting room itself, filed
among the pages of the two-volumeย Memoirs of Ulysses
S. Grant,ย which to the best of her knowledge had never been opened by anyone but herself since it came off the press.
Abra felt pleased, and
she did not inspect the reason. She knew certain things without question, and such things she did not speak about. For example, she knew that her father was not ill. He was hiding from something.
Just as surely she knew that Adam Trask was ill, for she had seen him walking along the street. She wondered whether her mother knew her father was not ill.
Abra slipped off her dress and put on a cotton pinafore,
which was
understood to be for working around
the house.
She
brushed her hair, tiptoed past her father’s room, and went downstairs. At the foot of the stairs she opened her binder and took out Aron’s postcard. In the sitting room she shook Aron’s letters out of Volume II of theย Memoirs,ย folded them tightly, and, raising her skirt, tucked them under the elastic which held up her panties. The package made her a little lumpy. In the kitchen she put on a full apron to conceal the bulge. โYou can scrape the
carrots,โ her mother said. โIs that water hot?โ
โJust coming to a boil.โ โDrop a bouillon cube in that cup, will you, dear? The
doctor says it’ll build your father up.โ
When her mother carried the steaming cup upstairs, Abra opened the incinerator end of the gas stove, put in the letters, and lighted them. Her mother came back, saying, โI smell fire.โ
โI lit the trash. It was full.โ
โI wish you’d ask me
when you want to do a thing like that,โ her mother said. โI was saving the trash to warm the kitchen in the morning.โ โI’m sorry, Mother,โ
Abra said. โI didn’t think.โ โYou should try to think of these things. It seems to me
you’re
getting very
thoughtless lately.โ โI’m sorry, Mother.โ โSaved is earned,โ said her mother.
The telephone rang in
the dining room. Her mother went to answer it. Abra heard her mother say, โNo, you can’t see him. It’s doctor’s orders. He can’t see anyoneโ no, not anyone.โ
She came back to the kitchen.
โJudge Knudsen again,โ she said