Showing posts with label Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stories. Show all posts

Story: Being Orpha

Being Orpha


Somehow or other she lost her voice. Her name, Orpha, was the last word she ever spoke

-- in a whisper.  It sounded like Alpha, a promising beginning. But perhaps creation, once

it has been opened with Alpha, can only be followed by silence.


            Sitting in her chair on the porch she watched the empty parked cars. Frost

scribbled on the windows and a small after-image froze: her fingers dangled in the air

after she crossed herself three times. She often said to herself: I am the only one here.



            Much earlier in her life (she had come over mountains and the ocean), she had

seen rivers that looked like small streams, cities at night that flashed and were gone. Then

she fell from above, and crashed, and ever since then she was in a flat country she never

understood. 



            She would think to herself: It’s only when I’m sleeping that I never say “I’m

dreaming.”



            There were places out of time that all flowed into different corners of the halls.

For instance, her husband Charles reading the Iliad in the yellow chair by the plastic

potted ferns. Or a rubbed-out message in chalk that was blowing over the tire prints in the

oval gravel drive.



            But when she dreamed, she was always the same age she is now.



            When a hand appeared, a face, or a voice was heard from staff or visitors,

everything changed: the black dog’s paws clicked across the porch, then came the tail

eagerly slapping the floor: ear-dreams.



            Orpha on the porch, waving her arms, as if she were imitating the movements of

the leaves,  or  saying goodbye to someone, or hailing one of the parked cars. She had

angry, comprehending eyes. Palms up, she felt strong, and with her eyes closed she could

believe the sunlight that settled upon her was warm fur. Those moments reminded her of

nothing but: I AM.




            Once, it streamed everywhere, and she was present, joined to one place. Those

friendly and curious hands cupped the immense realm beyond the mountains: the edge of

a continent. Death for once was all on the surface – the waves took it away. And she

existed as skin, hunger, love: I AM, I AM. She smiled, but the eyes in her dream still

looked angry. “Why am I here?” she asked herself. “Why am I here?” When she awoke,

she was making motions with her fingers as if she were threading a needle.




            “Those jerks and jabs with her fingers mimic the speech of someone who

stutters,” said the doctor examining her. “Was she a stutterer?”

            “The black dog knows,” she heard.

            Nurse Jane was panting over her, her face contracted in one firm, set expression.

She wanted to shout: “I know words. But do you? No, but you say you do. And that, dear

Nurse Jane, that is the broken promise of speech: you think you are using words, but the

words are using you.”



            They carried her to a freshly made bed. It was a new room. Doctor’s orders. She

heard him say the word change and out of his mouth chattered something like tumbling

coins. (To whom had thoughts ever been so palpable?).

            “Put me out in the forest,” she wanted to say. “Lay me down among the sticks and

the rotting leaves. “

            The doctor: “Did she say something?”

            Nurse Jane: “Orpha, did you say something?”




            I’m the log in the forest that will become the Savior. I’m the sculptor carving the

log in the forest that will become the Savior. I’m the carpenter nailing the Savior to the

post.




            The wind made a sound like an animal squishing through wet leaves. Then the

animal was gone, too.

            But by and by the sliver of light under the door became a thin white bone. A

drawer being opened was a short bark. Then came the click of nails on the floor and the

eager panting, panting, which in the ear-dream again became the ticking of the clock.

Ticking, ticking.

            Anguish.

            Anguish, passing from dark to dark and eyes lying in wait for the light.




            Her neighbor in the next bed was again busy counting, one thousand three, one

thousand four, but this time Orpha’s pulse didn’t race to catch up.

            A single sound was repeated over and over – not a word, not yet a word, but

something like “hmm?” blown through cupped hands.

            Nurse Jane turning to her surprised, said: “If you don’t acknowledge this small

miracle now, Orpha, you’ll be mute forever.”

            “Yes, yes, “ Orpha nodded, chomping on her teeth, as though the words, her first

spoken words in ten years, didn’t really fit her right.

            “I want to say something that can be heard long after I’ve finished speaking,” said

Orpha.

            Nurse June clapped her hands. “Say it! What will it be?”

            “Listen,” said Orpha, nearly shouting. “If the Lord really has words for it, this is

it.”

            “Yes? Yes? Tell me. “ Nurse Jane bent over her. What is it?”

            “Listen:”



(For Orpha Buchart, 1889-1992)

Story: LOVERS

published in BlazeVOX

Lovers

            It was there, high up in the smog-swept, Los Angeles skyscraper -- under the

intense oval light of her instrument, in a silent world of particles and glass -- that the

Microscopist was “destined to breathe her last” (line 5, page 9 of her husband’s diary).

Down below in the parking lot, a swarm of the idly curious watched as cops and medics

leaped into action, speedily spreading out a billowing safety net in front of the building,

eyes anxiously looking to the roof, where an anonymous suicide caller had threatened to

leap. None of this hubbub moved the husband. He had a singular plan.  His diary

described his wife, the Microscopist, as a tiny, shriveled Ancient who had spent years

occupied with a mysterious obsession he had grown to loathe.  He was determined to

storm it, storm the Microscopist’s glassy hermitage and fire upon, shatter, and thoroughly

trash whatever he laid eyes on.

            On the Microscopist’s slide, meanwhile, swirled a fantastical landscape that was

invisible to the naked eye, less in size than a grain of salt.

            (As the Microscopist has explained in her monograph titled “Hidden Beauty,” a

small needle or ivory toothpick or pig bristle was used to strip off each individual

butterfly scale.)

            An invisible art blazing to life under her microscope! The Microscopist whistled

through her teeth as she peered down at the new slide that had come in the mail that

morning: a volcano spewing ash and boulders and a brilliantly hued angel with a fiery

cape billowing like a crimson cloud.  All this, painstakingly mounted on the glass slide,

circa mid-1800s.

            How were these microscopic gems preserved for so long? No one knows. Despite

decades of research, art historians and amateur aficionados and even a wizened expert

like the Microscopist all concurred in hopeless ignorance. How were they preserved? --

from Victorian drawing rooms to dark vaults kept at evenly cooled temperatures, through

the wars, the burglaries, the passing through less-than-appreciative-hands? The mounters

remained mysteriously anonymous, though highly paid. One or two slipped his or her

initial into the design – but what does an initial like ED tell us about the maker?

            Deep in contemplation of the slide, the Microscopist failed to notice that the

silverish whirl-loops of her instrument’s lens had swallowed up her face.

            “Are you asleep?”

            The Microscopist glanced up to see the concerned face of her assistant.  This

assistant agreed with the husband that those teeny pictures on slides were as thrilling as,

say, the first Hollywood talkies. The assistant’s concerned face betrayed a cloying irony. 

            The Microscopist let out a groan of protest. She was not, she wanted to say, she

was not an old fuddy-dud to be laughed at.

            But it was no use.  How to explain the raptures of a minuscule life of

heartbreaking beauty? On a dare, the Microscopist invented something she thought might

amuse the girl:

            “I dreamed I was skiing in the Louvre,” the Microscopist told her. “Through room

after room. And guess what?”

            “I give up,” her assistant drawled.

            “There wasn’t any snow!”

            Her assistant nodded to this, unsmiling. The Microscopist gave an impatient grunt

and waved her away. They sat at glass desks separated by a glass partition with

glass bookshelves lined with photographs of the Microscopist’s husband and their

children and grandchildren in glass frames. Prim and lifeless, as though they were

dressed by a mortician. Their smiles had an eerie incongruity.

            “What a fragile transparency I live in!” the Microscopist murmured to her

wondering self, imposed upon this world of glass. Her voice, sounding hollow and

distant in her ears, disappeared inside the octagon crater of her glass ashtray – in her

mind she heard “shhhtray” – and she laughed aloud: “Shhhtray!”

            A detached hand violently extinguished the cigarette into the crater: a landscape

brushed with ash, the color of her husband’s face in the photographs. “You know

you shouldn’t smoke in here,” her assistant testily emptied the ashtray into a clear plastic

zip-lock.

            “Oh no, no indeed,” murmured the Miscroscopist. “I don’t know where the

cigarette came from.”

            Some evil had put it in her hand, she wanted to add. Everything a premonition of

disaster this morning, she remarked to herself.

            “Did you say something?” her assistant was bent over her, her face betraying that

cloying solicitude that reminded the Microscopist of her husband.

            With a shudder, she recalled finding her husband looking through the lens at one

of her slides yesterday...

            Microscopist: “What are you looking for?”

            Husband: “If anything of mine is there.”

            “Anything of mine!” It had struck her as a peculiarly beautiful answer!

But moments later, she had heard him in the bathroom, brushing his teeth. Listening to

the sound, she had cried to herself in despair: “What is he trying to wash out of his

mouth?” This morning she had a sudden vision of Death stealthily climbing the steel

height of the skyscraper. Death looked a lot like her husband, but very small, about the

size of a grain of salt.

            Higher and higher, her husband was indeed stealthily climbing.  He watched as

each consecutive number lit up. He noted with approval the number thirteen had been

dropped. He turned and grinned directly into the eye of the camera that panned him

overhead. His right hand was hidden under his left armpit, where his shoulder holster and

gun were hidden.  (Line 12, page 11 in his diary: “My eyes and smile don’t blend. My

eyes are cold and I appear to be looking somewhere else even when I’m generating a

warm smile in your direction.”) The elevator opened to a carpeted hall that hushed the

sound of stalking feet.

            The Microscopist switched off her microscope and returned the slides to their

velvet cases. As usual, whenever she put away her slides, she had the awful premonition

that an enormously high-powered fan was about to press her against the ceiling as

casually as if she were a particle of dust. Dust, in her line of work, was absolutely

catastrophic. As catastrophic as her husband, who entered behind her, pulled out his gun,

and took a wild shot aimed approximately at the full-length glass partition.

            Glass burst from the center where the bullet was wedged and split in rippled rays,

but barely put a dent in a photograph of the Microscopist’s dear, invincible husband.

            Hearing the crash, the Microscopist’s heart took a leap: she experienced the

perverse sense of relief that her premonitions were not imaginary.

            But did the shot in the glass mean the saturation point was reached (at eternity’s

end, all parallel lines finally meeting, and the illustrious mounter ED is discovered, at

eternity’s end, to be none other than Edgar Degas!)?

            Staggering forward, she gripped her husband’s arms and the two of them scuffed

along to the window, the husband all spit-and-polish as usual, the Microscopist all

shadow and lace.  Particles swam before her eyes, infinitesimal particles of subparticles;

matter that was hardly material at all. Her husband closed his eyes, his weightless body

swaying in the wind, taking wing, and neither husband nor wife wanted to land.

But together they plunged into the soft folds of the safety net in the sweaty hands of the

startled medics. He heard her mumbling:  “Crowd scenes: packed energy globules,” and

he wondered, Did this explain anything?

            It was a day of lethal smog, remember. Hearts labored, heads were dizzy and

nerves frayed – the kind of day when disaster and farce could easily become confused.

           
            The Microscopist heard among the crowd of stunned onlookers a voice

somewhere between a whistle and a sigh:

            “Which one is mine?”

            “My guardian angel! ” the Microscopist cried aloud. She recognized the angel

from her slide.  I get it, I understand everything, her husband whispered to her in a broken

voice, half-sobbing as he clutched her hand, pulling her out of the safety net, as if he

were pulling out a shadow of himself, yes, he understood, and he felt terrible for ever

mocking the Microscopist’s invisible life as he buoyed her body against his:   …” in

reality, we weigh less than a butterfly scale, an eyelash, or a single tear,” she heard him

whisper. He felt her pat him on the arm, indicating all was fine, nothing was broken, he

can let her go now.  But he gripped her tiny waist and held tight, reliving the sheer

euphoria of their free-fall, and he didn’t want to let her go, not now, not ever.