Iย walk along the gravel path that divides the back lawn, neatly, like a hair parting. It has rained during the night; the grass to either side is damp, the air humid. Here and there are worms, evidence of the fertility of the soil, caught by the sun, half dead; flexible andย pink, like lips.
I open the white picket gate and continue, past the front lawn and towards the front gate. In the driveway, one of the Guardians assigned to our household is washing the car. That must mean the Commander is in the house, in his own quarters, past the dining room and beyond, where he seems to stay most of the time.
The car is a very expensive one, a Whirlwind; better than the Chariot, much better than the chunky, practical Behemoth. Itโs black, of course, the colour of prestige or a hearse, and long and sleek. The driver is going over it with a chamois, lovingly. This at least hasnโt changed, the way men caress good cars.
Heโs wearing the uniform of the Guardians, but his cap is tilted at a jaunty angle and his sleeves are rolled to the elbow, showing his forearms, tanned but with a stipple of dark hairs. He has a cigarette stuck in the corner of his mouth, which shows that he too has something he can trade on the black market.
I know this manโs name:ย Nick. I know this because Iโve heard Rita and Cora talking about him, and once I heard the Commander speaking to him: Nick, I wonโt be needing the car.
He lives here, in the household, over the garage. Low status: he hasnโt been issued a woman, not even one. He doesnโt rate: some defect, lack of connections. But he acts as if he doesnโt know this, or care. Heโs too casual, heโs not servile enough. It may be stupidity,
but I donโt think so. Smells fishy, they used to say; or, I smell a rat. Misfit as odour. Despite myself, I think of how he might smell. Not fish or decaying rat: tanned skin, moist in the sun, filmed with smoke. I sigh, inhaling.
He looks at me, and sees me looking. He has a French face, lean, whimsical, all planes and angles, with creases around the mouth where he smiles. He takes a final puff of the cigarette, lets it drop to the driveway, and steps on it. He begins to whistle. Then he winks.
I drop my head and turn so that the white wings hide my face, and keep walking. Heโs just taken a risk, but for what? What if I were to report him?
Perhaps he was merely being friendly. Perhaps he saw the look on my face and mistook it for something else. Really what I wanted was the cigarette.
Perhaps it was a test, to see what I would do. Perhaps he is an Eye.
I open the front gate and close it behind me, looking down but not back. The sidewalk is red brick. That is the landscape I focus on, a field of oblongs, gently undulating where the earth beneath has buckled, from decade after decade of winter frost. The colour of the bricks is old, yet fresh and clear. Sidewalks are kept much cleaner than they used to be.
I walk to the corner and wait. I used to be bad at waiting. They also serve who only stand and wait, said Aunt Lydia. She made us memorize it. She also said, Not all of you will make it through. Some of you will fall on dry ground or thorns. Some of you are shallow-rooted. She had a mole on her chin that went up and down while she talked. She said, Think of yourselves as seeds, and right then her voice was wheedling, conspiratorial, like the voices of those women who used to teach ballet classes to children, and who would say, Arms up in the air now; letโs pretend weโre trees.
I stand on the corner, pretending I am a tree.
A shape, red with white wings around the face, a shape like mine, a nondescript woman in red carrying a basket, comes along the brick sidewalk towards me. She reaches me and we peer at each otherโs faces looking down the white tunnels of cloth that enclose us. She is the right one.
โBlessed be the fruit,โ she says to me, the accepted greeting among us.
โMay the Lord open,โ I answer, the accepted response. We turn and walk together past the large houses, towards the central part of town. We arenโt allowed to go there except in twos. This is supposed to be for our protection, though the notion is absurd: we are well protected already. The truth is that she is my spy, as I am hers. If either of us slips through the net because of something that happens on one of our daily walks, the other will be accountable.
This woman has been my partner for two weeks. I donโt know what happened to the one before. On a certain day she simply wasnโt there any more, and this one was there in her place. It isnโt the sort ofthing you ask questions about, because the answers are not usually answers you want to know. Anyway there wouldnโt be an answer.
This one is a little plumper than I am. Her eyes are brown. Her name is Ofglen, and thatโs about all I know about her. She walks demurely, head down, red-gloved hands clasped in front, with short little steps like a trained pigโs on its hind legs. During these walks she has never said anything that was not strictly orthodox, but then, neither have I. She may be a real believer, a Handmaid in more than name. I canโt take the risk.
โThe war is going well, I hear,โ she says. โPraise be,โ I reply.
โWeโve been sent good weather.โ โWhich I receive with joy.โ
โTheyโve defeated more of the rebels, since yesterday.โ
โPraise be,โ I say. I donโt ask her how she knows. โWhat were they?โ
โBaptists. They had a stronghold in the Blue Hills. They smoked them out.โ
โPraise be.โ
Sometimes I wish she would just shut up and let me walk in peace. But Iโm ravenous for news, any kind of news; even if itโs false news, it must mean something.
We reached the first barrier, which is like the barriers blocking off roadworks, or dug-up sewers: a wooden crisscross painted in yellow and black stripes, a red hexagon which means Stop. Near the gateway there are some lanterns, not lit because it isnโt night. Above us, I know, there are floodlights, attached to the telephone poles, for use in emergencies, and there are men with machine guns in the pillboxes on either side of the road. I donโt see the floodlights and the pillboxes, because of the wings around my face. I just know they are there.
Behind the barrier, waiting for us at the narrow gateway, there are two men, in the green uniforms of the Guardians of the Faith, with the crests on their shoulders and berets: two swords, crossed, above a white triangle. The Guardians arenโt real soldiers. Theyโre used for routine policing and other menial functions, digging up the Commanderโs Wifeโs garden for instance, and theyโre either stupid or older or disabled or very young, apart from the ones that are Eyes incognito.
These two are very young: one moustache is still sparse, one face is still blotchy. Their youth is touching, but I know I canโt be deceived by it. The young ones are often the most dangerous, the most fanatical, the jumpiest with their guns. They havenโt yet learned about existence through time. You have to go slowly with them.
Last week they shot a woman, right about here. She was a Martha. She was fumbling in her robe, for her pass, and they
thought she was hunting for a bomb. They thought she was a man in disguise. There have been such incidents.
Rita and Cora knew the woman. I heard them talking about it, in the kitchen.
Doing their job, said Cora. Keeping us safe.
Nothing safer than dead, said Rita, angrily. She was minding her own business. No call to shoot her.
It was an accident, said Cora.
No such thing, said Rita. Everything is meant. I could hear her thumping the pots around, in the sink.
Well, someoneโll think twice before blowing up this house, anyways, said Cora.
All the same, said Rita. She worked hard. That was a bad death. I can think of worse, said Cora. At least it was quick.
You can say that, said Rita. Iโd choose to have some time, before, like. To set things right.
The two young Guardians salute us, raising three fingers to the rims of their berets. Such tokens are accorded to us. They are supposed to show respect, because of the nature of our service.
We produce our passes, from the zippered pockets in our wide sleeves, and they are inspected and stamped. One man goes into the right-hand pillbox, to punch our numbers into the Compuchek.
In returning my pass, the one with the peach-coloured moustache bends his head to try to get a look at my face. I raise my head a little, to help him, and he sees my eyes and I see his, and he blushes. His face is long and mournful, like a sheepโs, but with the large full eyes of a dog, spaniel not terrier. His skin is pale and looks unwholesomely tender, like the skin under a scab. Nevertheless, I think of placing my hand on it, this exposed face. He is the one who turns away.
Itโs an event, a small defiance of rule, so small as to be undetectable, but such moments are the rewards I hold out for myself, like the candy I hoarded, as a child, at the back of a drawer. Such moments are possibilities, tiny peepholes.
What if I were to come at night, when heโs on duty alone โ though he would never be allowed such solitude โ and permit him beyond my white wings? What if I were to peel off my red shroud and show myself to him, to them, by the uncertain light of the lanterns? This is what they must think about sometimes, as they stand endlessly beside this barrier, past which nobody ever comes except the Commanders of the Faithful in their long black murmurous cars, or their blue Wives and white-veiled daughters on their dutiful way to Salvagings or Prayvaganzas, or their dumpy green Marthas, or the occasional Birthmobile, or their red Handmaids, on foot. Or sometimes a black-painted van, with the winged eye in white on the side. The windows of the vans are dark-tinted, and the men in the front seats wear dark glasses: a double obscurity.
The vans are surely more silent than the other cars. When they pass, we avert our eyes. If there are sounds coming from inside, we try not to hear them. Nobodyโs heart is perfect.
When the black vans reach a checkpoint, theyโre waved through without a pause. The Guardians would not want to take the risk of looking inside, searching, doubting their authority. Whatever they think.
If they do think; you canโt tell by looking at them.
But more likely they donโt think in terms of clothing discarded on the lawn. If they think of a kiss, they must then think immediately of the floodlights going on, the rifle shots. They think instead of doing their duty and of promotion to the Angels, and of being allowed possibly to marry, and then, if they are able to gain enough power and live to be old enough, of being allotted a Handmaid of their own.
The one with the moustache opens the small pedestrian gate for us and stands back, well out of the way, and we pass through. As we walk away I know theyโre watching, these two men who arenโt yet permitted to touch women. They touch with their eyes instead and I move my hips a little, feeling the full red skirt sway around me. Itโs like thumbing your nose from behind a fence or teasing a dog with a bone held out of reach, and Iโm ashamed of myself for doing it, because none of this is the fault of these men, theyโre too young.
Then I find Iโm not ashamed after all. I enjoy the power; power of a dog bone, passive but there. I hope they get hard at the sight of us and have to rub themselves against the painted barriers, surreptitiously. They will suffer, later, at night, in their regimented beds. They have no outlets now except themselves, and thatโs a sacrilege. There are no more magazines, no more films, no more substitutes; only me and my shadow, walking away from the two men, who stand at attention, stimy, by a roadblock, watching our retreating shapes.