All of the lights were on in the Trask house. The door stood partly open, and the house was cold. In the sitting room Lee was shriveled up like a leaf in the chair beside the lamp. Adam’s door was open and the sound of voices came from his room.
When Cal came in he asked, โWhat’s going on?โ Lee looked at him and swung his head toward the
table where the open telegram lay. โYour brother is dead,โ he said. โYour father has had a stroke.โ
Cal started down the hall.
Lee said, โCome back.
Dr. Edwards and Dr. Murphy are in there. Let them alone.โ
Cal stood in front of
him. โHow bad? How bad, Lee, how bad?โ
โI don’t know.โ He
spoke as though recalling an ancient thing. โHe came home tired. But I had to read him the telegram. That was his right. For about five minutes he said it over and over to himself out loud. And then it seemed to get through into his brain and to explode
there.โ
โIs he conscious?โ
Lee said wearily, โSit
down and wait, Cal. Sit down and wait. Get used to it. I’m trying to.โ
Cal picked up
the
telegram and read its bleak and dignified announcement. Dr. Edwards came out, carrying his bag. He nodded curtly, went out, and closed the door smartly behind him.
Dr. Murphy set his bag
on the table and sat down. He sighed. โDr. Edwards asked me to tell you.โ
โHow is
he?โ
Cal demanded.
โI’ll tell you all we
know. You’re the head of the family now, Cal. Do you know what a stroke is?โ He didn’t wait for Cal to answer. โThis one is a leakage of blood in the brain. Certain areas of the brain are affected. There have been earlier smaller leakages. Lee knows that.โ
โYes,โ said Lee.
Dr. Murphy glanced at him and then back at Cal. โThe left side is paralyzed.
The right side partly.
Probably there is no sight in the left eye, but we can’t determine that. In other words, your father is nearly helpless.โ
โCan he talk?โ โA
littleโwith
difficulty. Don’t tire him.โ Cal struggled for words. โCan he get well?โ
โI’ve heard of
reabsorption cases this bad but I’ve never seen one.โ โYou mean he’s going to die?โ
โWe don’t know. He might live for a week, a month, a year, even two
years. He might die tonight.โ
โWill he know me?โ โYou’ll have to find that out for yourself. I’ll send a
nurse tonight and then you’ll have
to get
permanent
nurses.โ He stood up. โI’m sorry, Cal. Bear up! You’ll have to bear up.โ And he said, โIt always surprises me how people bear up.โ They always do. Edwards will be in tomorrow. Good night.โ He put his hand out to touch Cal’s
shoulder, but
Cal
moved away and walked toward his father’s room.
Adam’s head was
propped up on pillows. His face was calm, the skin pale; the
mouth was straight, neither smiling nor
disapproving. His eyes were open, and they had great depth and clarity, as though one could see deep into them and as though they could see deep into their surroundings. And the eyes were calm, aware but not interested.
They turned slowly toward Cal as he entered the room,
found his chest, and then rose to his face and stayed there.
Cal sat down in the
straight chair beside the bed. He said, โI’m sorry, Father.โ
The eyes blinked slowly the way a frog blinks. โCan you hear me,
Father? Can you understand me?โ The eyes did not change or move. โI did it,โ Cal cried. โI’m responsible for Aron’s death and for your sickness. I took him to Kate’s. I showed him his mother. That’s why he went away. I don’t want to do bad thingsโbut I do them.โ
He put his head down on the side of the bed to escape
the terrible eyes, and he could still see them. He knew they
would be with him, a part of him, all of his life.
The doorbell rang. In a moment Lee came to the bedroom, followed by the nurseโa
strong, broad
woman with heavy black eyebrows.
She opened
breeziness as she opened her suitcase.
โWhere’s my patient!
There he is! Why, you look fine! What am I doing here? Maybe you better get up and take care of me, you look good. Would you like to take care of me, big handsome man?โ She thrust a muscular
arm under Adam’s shoulder and effortlessly hoisted him toward the head of the bed and held him up with her right arm while with her left she patted out the pillows and laid him back.
โCool pillows,โ she said. โDon’t
you love cool
pillows? Now, where’s the bathroom? Have you got a duck and a bedpan? Can you put a cot in here for me?โ โMake a list,โ said Lee. โAnd if you need any helpโ with himโโ
โWhy would I need help? We’ll get along just fine,
won’t we,
sugar-sweetie?โ
Lee and Cal retired to
the kitchen. Lee said, โBefore she came I was going to urge you to have some supperโ you know, like the kind of person who uses food for any purpose good or bad? I bet she’s that way. You can eat or not eat, just as you wish.โ
Cal grinned at him. โIf you’d tried to make me, I’d
have been sick. But since you put it that way, I think I’ll make a sandwich.โ
โYou can’t have a
sandwich.โ
โI want one.โ
โIt all works out,โ said Lee, โtrue to outrageous form. It’s kind of insulting
that everyone reacts about the same way.โ
โI
don’t want a
sandwich,โ Cal said. โAre there any tarts left?โ โPlentyโin
the
breadbox. They may be a little soaky.โ
โI like them soaky,โ Cal said. He brought the whole plate to the table and set it in front of him.
The nurse looked into the kitchen. โThese look
good,โ she said and took one, bit into it, and talked among her chewings. โCan I phone Krough’s drugstore for the things I need? Where’s the phone? Where do you keep the linen? Where’s the cot you’re going to bring in? Are you through with this paper? Where did you say the phone is?โ She took another tart and retired.
Lee asked softly, โDid he speak to you?โ
Cal shook his head back and forth as though he couldn’t stop.
โIt’s going to
be
dreadful. But the doctor is
right. You can stand
anything. We’re wonderful animals that way.โ
โI am not.โ Cal’s voice was flat and dull. โI can’t
stand it. No, I can’t stand it. I won’t be able to. I’ll have to
โI’ll have toโโ
Lee gripped his wrist fiercely. โWhy, you mouseโ you nasty cur. With goodness all around youโdon’t you dare suggest a thing like that! Why is your sorrow more refined than my sorrow?โ โIt’s not sorrow. I told
him what I did. I killed my brother. I’m a murderer. He knows it.โ
โDid he say it? Tell the truthโdid he say it?โ โHe didn’t have to. It
was in his eyes. He said it with
his eyes.
There’s
nowhere I can go to get away
โthere’s no place.โ
Lee sighed and released his wrist. โCalโโhe spoke patientlyโโlisten
to me.
Adam’s brain centers are affected. Anything you see in his eyes may be pressure on that part of his brain which governs his seeing. Don’t you remember?โhe
couldn’t
read. That wasn’t his eyesโ that was pressure. You don’t know he accused you. You don’t know that.โ
โHe accused me. I know
it. He said I’m a murderer.โ โThen he will forgive
you. I promise.โ
The nurse stood in the doorway. โWhat are you promising,
Charley?
You
promised me a cup of coffee.โ
โI’ll make it now. How is he?โ
โSleeping like a baby. Have you got anything to read in this house?โ โWhat would you like?โ โSomething to take my
mind off my feet.โ โI’ll bring the coffee to
you. I’ve got some dirty stories written by a French queen. They might be tooโโ โYou bring ’em with the coffee,โ she said. โWhy don’t you get some shuteye, sonny? Me and Charley’ll hold the fort. Don’t forget the book, Charley.โ
Lee set the percolator on the gas jet. He came to the table and said, โCal!โ โWhat do you want?โ โGo to Abra.โ
2
Cal stood on the neat porch and kept his finger on the bell until the harsh overlight flashed on and the night bolt rasped
and Mrs.
Bacon
looked out. โI want to see Abra,โ Cal said.
Her mouth dropped open in amazement. โYou want what?โ
โI want to see Abra.โ โYou can’t. Abra’s gone to her room. Go away.โ Cal shouted, โI tell you I want to see Abra.โ
โYou go away or I’ll call the police.โ
Mr. Bacon called, โWhat is it? Who is it?โ
โNever you mindโgo
back to bed. You aren’t well. I’ll handle this.โ
She turned back to Cal. โNow you get off the porch.
And if you ring the bell again I’ll phone the police. Now, get!โ The door slammed, the bolt scraped, and the hard overlight went off.
Cal stood smiling in the dark for he thought of Tom Meek lumbering up, saying, โHello, Cal. What you up to?โ
Mrs. Bacon shouted
from inside. โI see you. Go on now! Get off the porch!โ
He walked slowly down the walk and turned toward home, and he hadn’t gone a
block before Abra caught up with him. She was panting from her run. โGot out the back way,โ she said.
โThey’ll find you gone.โ โI don’t care.โ
โYou don’t?โ
โNo.โ
Cal said, โAbra, I’ve killed my brother and my
father is paralyzed because of me.โ
She took his arm and
clung to it with both hands.
Cal said, โDidn’t you hear me?โ
โI heard you.โ
โAbra, my mother was a whore.โ
โI know. You told me. My father is a thief.โ โI’ve got her blood, Abra.
Don’t you
understand?โ
โI’ve got his,โ she said. They walked along in silence while he tried to rebalance himself. The wind
was cold, and they quickened their steps to keep warm.
They passed the last
streetlight on the very edge of Salinas, and blackness lay ahead of them and the road was unpaved and sticky with black ‘dobe mud.
They had come to the
end of the pavement, to the end of the streetlights. The road under their feet was slippery with spring mud, and the grass that brushed against their legs was wet with dew.
Abra asked, โWhere are we going?โ
โI wanted to run away from
my father’s eyes.
They’re right in front of me all the time. When I close my eyes I still see them. I’ll always see them. My father is going to die, but his eyes will still be looking at me, telling me I killed my brother.โ โYou didn’t.โ
โYes, I did. And his eyes say I did.โ
โDon’t talk like that. Where are we going?โ โA little farther. There’s
a ditch and a pump houseโ and a willow tree. Do you
remember the willow tree?โ โI remember it.โ
He said, โThe branches come down like a tent and their tips touch the ground.โ โI know.โ
โIn the afternoonsโthe sunny afternoonsโyou and Aron would part the branches and go insideโand no one could see you.โ
โYou watched?โ
โOh, sure. I watched.โ
And he said, โI want you to go inside the willow tree with me. That’s what I want to do.โ
She stopped and her
hand pulled him to a stop. โNo,โ she said. โThat’s not right.โ
โDon’t you want to go in
with me?โ
โNot if you’re running awayโno, I don’t.โ
Cal said, โThen I don’t
know what to do. What shall I do? Tell me what to do.โ โWill you listen?โ
โI don’t know.โ
โWe’re going back,โ she said.
โBack? Where?โ โTo
your father’s
house,โ said Abra.
3
The light of the kitchen poured down on them. Lee had lighted the oven to warm the chilly air.
โShe made me come,โ said Cal.
โOf course she did. I knew she would.โ
Abra said, โHe would have come by himself.โ โWe’ll
never know
that,โ said Lee.
He left the kitchen and in a moment he returned.
โHe’s still sleeping.โ Lee set a stone bottle and three little translucent porcelain cups on the table.
โI remember that,โ said Cal.
โYou ought to.โ Lee
poured the dark liquor. โJust sip it and let it run around your tongue.โ
Abra put her elbows on
the kitchen table. โHelp him,โ
she said. โYou can accept things, Lee. Help him.โ โI don’t know whether I
can accept things or not,โ Lee said. โI’ve never had a chance to try. I’ve always found myself with someโnot less uncertain but less able to take care of uncertainty. I’ve had to do my weepingโalone.โ โWeeping? You?โ
He said, โWhen Samuel Hamilton died the world went out like a candle. I relighted it to see his lovely creations, and I saw his children tossed and torn and destroyed as though some vengefulness was at work. Let the ng-ka-py run back on your tongue.โ
He went on, โI had to find out my stupidities for
myself. These were my
stupidities: I thought the good are destroyed while the evil survive and prosper.
โI thought that once an angry and disgusted God poured molten fire from a crucible to destroy or to purify his little handiwork of mud.
โI
thought I
had
inherited both the scars of the fire and the impurities which made the fire necessaryโall inherited, I thought. All inherited. Do you feel that
way?โ
โI think so,โ said Cal. โI don’t know,โ Abra said.
Lee shook his head.
โThat isn’t good enough. That isn’t good enough thinking.
Maybeโโ And he was silent.
Cal felt the heat of the liquor
in his
stomach.
โMaybe what, Lee?โ โMaybe you’ll come to
know that every man in every generation is refired. Does a craftsman, even in his old age, lose his hunger to make a perfect cupโthin, strong, translucent?โ He held his cup to the light. โAll impurities
burned out and ready for a glorious flux, and for thatโ more fire. And then either the slag heap or, perhaps what no one in the world ever quite gives up, perfection,โ He drained his cup and he said loudly, โCal, listen to me.
Can you think that whatever made
usโwould stop trying?โ
โI can’t take it in,โ Cal said. โNot now I can’t.โ The heavy steps of the nurse sounded in the living
room. She billowed through the door and she looked at Abra, elbows on the table, holding her cheeks between her palms.
The nurse said, โHave
you got a pitcher? They get thirsty. I like to keep a pitcher of water handy. You see,โ she explained,
โthey breathe
through their mouths.โ โIs he awake?โ Lee
asked. โThere’s a pitcher.โ โOh, yes, he’s awake
and rested. And I’ve washed his face and combed his hair. He’s a good patient. He tried to smile at me.โ
Lee stood up. โCome along, Cal. I want you to
come too, Abra. You’ll have to come.โ
The nurse filled her pitcher at the sink and scurried ahead of them.
When they trooped into the bedroom Adam was
propped high on his pillows. His white hands lay palms down on either side of him, and the sinews from knuckle to wrist were tight drawn. His face was waxen, and his sharp
features were sharpened. He breathed
slowly between pale lips. His blue eyes reflected back the night light focused on his head.
Lee and Cal and Abra stood at the foot of the bed, and Adam’s eyes moved slowly from one face to the
other, and his lips moved just a little in greeting.
The nurse said, โThere
he is. Doesn’t he look nice? He’s my darling. He’s my sugar pie.
โHush!โ said Lee.
โI won’t have you tiring my patient.โ
โGo out of the room,โ said Lee.
โI’ll have to report this to the doctor.โ
Lee whirled toward her. โGo out of the room and close the door. Go and write your report.โ
โI’m not in the habit of taking orders from Chinks.โ Cal said, โGo out now,
and close the door.โ She slammed the door
just loud enough to register her anger. Adam blinked at the sound.
Lee said, โAdam!โ
The blue wide eyes looked for the voice and finally found Lee’s brown and shining eyes.
Lee said, โAdam, I don’t know what you can hear or understand. When you had the numbness in your hand and your eyes refused to read, I found out everything I could. But some things no one but you can know. You may, behind your eyes, be alert and keen, or you may be living in a confused gray dream. You may, like a newborn child, perceive only light and movement.
โThere’s damage in your brain, and it may be that you are a new thing in the world.
Your kindness may
be
meanness now, and your bleak honesty fretful and conniving. No one knows these things except you.
Adam! Can you hear me?โ The blue eyes wavered, closed slowly, then opened. Lee said, โThank you, Adam. I know how hard it is. I’m going to ask you to do a much harder thing. Here is your sonโCalebโyour only son. Look at him, Adam!โ
The pale eyes looked
until they found Cal. Cal’s
mouth moved dryly and made no sound.
Lee’s voice cut in, โI don’t know how long you will live, Adam. Maybe a long time. Maybe an hour.
But your son will live. He will marry and his children will be the only remnant left of you.โ Lee wiped his eyes with his fingers.
โHe did a thing in anger, Adam, because he thought you had rejected him. The result of his anger is that his brother and your son is dead.โ
Cal said,
โLeeโyou can’t.โ
โI have to,โ said Lee. โIf
it kills him I have to. I have
the choice,โ and he smiled sadly and quoted, โ โIf there’s blame, it’s my blame.’ โ Lee’s shoulders straightened. He said sharply, โYour son is marked with guilt out of himselfโout of himselfโ almost more than he can bear.
Don’t crush him with
rejection. Don’t crush him, Adam.โ
Lee’s breath whistled in
his throat. โAdam, give him your blessing. Don’t leave him alone with his guilt.
Adam, can you hear me? Give him your blessing!โ A
terrible
brightness
shone in Adam’s eyes and he closed them and kept them closed. A wrinkle formed between his brows.
Lee said, โHelp him, Adamโhelp him. Give him his chance. Let him be free. That’s all a man has over the beasts. Free him! Bless him!โ
The whole bed seemed to
shake under the
concentration. Adam’s breath came quick with his effort and then, slowly, his right hand liftedโlifted an inch and then fell back.
Lee’s face was haggard.
He moved to the head of the
bed and wiped the sick man’s damp face with the edge of the sheet. He looked down at the
closed eyes.
Lee whispered, โThank you,
Adamโthank you, my friend. Can you move your lips?
Make your lips form his name.โ
Adam looked up with sick weariness. His lips parted and failed and tried
again. Then his lungs filled. He expelled the air and his lips combed the rushing sigh. His whispered word seemed to hang in the air:
โTimshel!โ
His eyes closed and he slept.