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A Glass Rose
A Glass Rose
A Glass Rose
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A Glass Rose

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Mumbling the prayers of the Rosary at Stanislaw Machek's wake, his family wondered what happened the night before his youngest daughter Stella ran away to New York City. Only the mother, Rosalja, had been there then, and she sat now, as she had ever since, mindlessly gazing at a bowl of glass flowers in her lap—a story as intense and universal as a Greek Tragedy or the Stations of the Cross.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 20, 2010
ISBN9781452434414
A Glass Rose
Author

Richard Bankowsky

California State University Emeritus Professor of literature and creative writing. Yale and Columbia degrees. National Institute of Arts and Letters and Rockefeller grants in literature.

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    A Glass Rose - Richard Bankowsky

    High praise from the critics for a Glass Rose, Richard Bankowsky's first novel:

    . . . an extraordinary first novel of a gifted new author . . . The New York Times

    A powerful and startling new talent. Cleveland Press

    This is the first novel of a first-rate talent. . . . and there is a range of human nature of far more insight and varied than in many novels, first and last. Chicago Tribune

    A Glass Rose is one of the most compelling American novels to appear in the last several years. Washington Post-Times-Herald

    Bankowsky is, with one novel, among our finest writers. . . .suspense distilled from horror, the drama of innocence violated. . . . He chills the blood and yet at the same time opens the heart to life's essential tragedies. Los Angeles Mirror News

    . . . a brilliantly constructed first novel . . . thoroughly convincing . . . great raw impact from a lead review in Time Magazine

    One of Time Magazine's eighteen Best Books of the the year.

    New York Times recommended reading and Best Books of the year.

    Books by Richard Bankowsky

    A GLASS ROSE

    AFTER PENTECOST

    ON A DARK NIGHT

    THE PALE CRIMINALS

    THE BARBARIANS AT THE GATES

    REX NEMORENSIS

    THE JUDAS TAPES

    HELLO CENTRAL GIVE ME HEAVEN

    GENIUS IN LOVE

    A GLASS ROSE

    A novel by

    RICHARD BANKOWSKY

    Smashwords Edition

    Copyright © 2010 Richard Bankowsky

    FOR CHARLOTTE, who said to me:

    Speak no more like one that is dreaming.

    —DANTE, Divina Commedia

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    PROLOGUE

    Undertaker

    Jozef

    JOY

    Emily

    Helcha

    Stella

    Harry

    Stanley

    SORROW

    Eva

    Marya

    Rozalja

    Pyotr

    Stanislaw

    GLORY

    PROLOGUE

    Undertaker

    IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER AND OF THE SON AND OF THE HOLY GHOST. AMEN.

    I BELIEVE IN GOD, THE FATHER ALMIGHTY, CREATOR OF HEAVEN AND EARTH . . . Bury 'em before sundown's what I believe. Like the Jews. Like out of sight, out of mind; and let the dead bury the dead. And maybe that's no way for a respectable mortician to be thinking, but that poor old sonofabitch has been lying here for seven days now amid tears and wailing and knocking of breasts and these never-ending Polish prayers — fifteen mysteries, a hundred and fifty Aves — and for what? For a little bitch, for a no-good little bitch who in just nine or ten, or however the hell many months she's been away from home now, has already learned that a little thing like her old man's funeral could wait the seven days it must have taken her to paint up her face like that or maybe even to make enough cash laying for those New York Jews so she could drive back home to Anderson in that Packard and show all her stupid Polack friends that old Stanislaw Machek's little girl has learned how to make a fast buck even if her old man never did.

    Well, she's paying you for the extra days, so what's the difference? And what’s seven days more or less to a dead man who, once they close that lid over his face, has nothing to look forward to anyway but the satin-smelling inside of a coffin? Which isn’t really nothing, since it’s just about the best satin money can buy —quality satin for a quality casket, one of the best in the parlor. At least he won’t have to worry about the worms getting in at him for a while; because they really don’t make them any better —not out of wood, anyway. And he couldn’t have expected them to take a metal one. You never even expected them to take one as good as this. Why, when you first walked in here last Friday and saw his crazy old wife sitting in her rocking chair smelling that bowl of glass flowers, and not a single window in the entire house that wasn’t broken and paneless and patched like that with wire and flattened cardboard cartons . . . Why, you would have taken bets that this was one of those plain unpainted pine box affairs, because the way this place looked then . . .

    But you didn’t have to come inside. Before you so much as even stepped out of the truck, it seemed pretty damned obvious that if he could have afforded wood —even pine— he might at least have built himself some front stairs even if he didn’t feel he really needed a porch with a roof on it or a floor in it or a fence with maybe a picket or two nailed to it. Because you sure as hell never figured you’d be getting any richer on somebody who had to tear down half his house just to build himself a couple of ratty old chicken coops, somebody who couldn’t hold on to enough money to maybe buy himself a package of seeds and plant some grass or something, who’d even poured gasoline, or what looks like gasoline, or oil, or whatever it is, all over his front and side and probably back yard too, so that out there, there’s nothing ―nothing but that terrible sour stink around the chicken coops.

    Like something dead, that’s what it smells like; like something that died and was buried, and after a while was dug up again —dug up by whoever the damned fool was that opened that kitchen window back there. He probably thought he’d let out some of that flower-stale air that hung around the coffin when you first walked in here tonight, and together with the fumes of the candles guttering in their sockets was almost suffocating; thought he’d let it out and make the poor little family a bit more comfortable —like walking up to the bereaved with your hat off and your handkerchief all wet and teary up to your nose, thinking maybe to say something about flights of angels and instead coming up with, Alyosha, your saint is beginning to stink.

    Why, if you didn’t know about the chicken coops, you’d swear it was coming out of the casket, swirling up in that candle smoke like one of those decomposition ghosts people meet in graveyards when the moon is right and the wind gone; and if they’re lucky. Because it’s all just the right combination of circumstances like anything else —only more so with ghosts, whether it’s a ghost of the dead or of the living.

    Who would have guessed that the old man you’ve been waiting to bury for seven days now would turn out to be hers, that she’d be the one responsible for the waiting; so that now, after seven days, now that she’s finally here, you’re not even sure whether you’ve been waiting to bury somebody or to dig somebody up. Because sure as hell, for you she was dead. She’s as much a ghost as you’ll ever see —as unreal as anything in a graveyard —a ghost with surprise in her eyes, as though in her play among the headstones she suddenly came square up against another ghost she’d played with and forgotten in life and never thought to see again either in death or after it.

    She must have been just as surprised to see you as you were to see her, walking in like that (and you not knowing that for seven days it was she you’d been waiting for), walking in like that in those spike heels, and all the paint on her face and a cigarette hooked in her mouth, and those bracelets of hers flashing even in the candlelight. It was no wonder you didn’t recognize her at first, didn’t recognize her until after she’d taken off the sunglasses and you saw the eyes widening behind the cigarette smoke —the smoke curling up under the brim of the big black picture hat with the floppy rag flowers on it, and the eyes widening just enough to let you know they recognized you before settling back into that mask it must have taken all of at least seven days to paint on her face and probably more, more like seven months, or eight, or nine.

    Because it must be a little over nine months now —yes, last summer, July— a little over nine months to make her look the part she was already playing that day last summer, nine months to paint an inch thick, to hide behind the lipstick and the mascara and the curling cigarette smoke the little naked face that blossomed up out of the street corner, framed in a bright kerchief and in the open window and looking in at you with an expression mute and uncompromising, like a dog who through some unreason all its own has decided to follow you home.

    You didn’t even see her at first— sitting there behind the wheel, sweating, cursing the goddamned red light —no traffic moving over the bridge into Anderson anyway— wanting to move, to drive on, since only in motion, the air blowing in through the open windows, was there any relief —feeling her, the eyes working into you, and even before you were aware you were looking, seeing the face small in the open window and then big in the seat beside you, the full young ungirdled body stiffening into the corner against the door, the now almost inert face still not speaking, not even looking at you any more, the horns blaring behind you, and automatically, compulsively, the hearse jolting past the green light (the gears not even grinding), and her sitting there beside you unspeaking, looking straight ahead, her eyes bright open, the leather overnight bag small under her bare arms and on her lap, and you too surprised to even think of stopping to let her out, just sitting there, the factory whistle still wailing in your ears, asking over and over again, What is this? Who are you? What do you want? thinking, What in hell is this? She’s only a kid. What in hell’s she think she’s doing? saying, You’ll get in trouble pulling this kind of thing. Don’t you know there are men? Don’t you know a girl like you . . . You could get in trouble, you know? Now listen, you better get out! You can’t . . .

    But she wasn’t getting out. And not only because you weren’t stopping, not only because it was noon and the traffic from the worsted mill was crawling up your back bumper, and the cars parked along Market Street were jammed so tight you couldn’t have stopped even if you’d wanted to, even if you were really thinking of stopping —which you weren’t—you know that now. Knew even then, without even having to say to yourself, You’re it; knew she had chosen you, or somebody or something somewhere had chosen you, had cemented that sonofabitching red light into that corner and blinked it on and off and on again for five or ten or twenty or however the hell many years it’s been stopping traffic and will go on stopping it; just so on one hot and breathless and generally miserable day last summer, precisely at noon (the factory whistles wailing like banshees), it could flash red just as an empty hearse all black and shiny happened to roll noiselessly up —a hearse with New York license plates on it, the only out-of-state plates in that whole goddamned string of traffic.

    Because you were chosen; the whole goddamned bloody strike had been arranged and so many killed just so there couldn’t possibly be enough hearses in the city of Prescott to get them all buried in time and you’d be forced to rent one in New York to handle the overflow and would be driving it back three weeks later after you had got them all decently underground and would stop under that red light—the only car with out-of-state license plates—just so in case you happened to be curious enough to ask, But why pick me? Why pick a hearse? she could answer, just as though it were the simplest thing in the world and you were pretty damn stupid not to see it, Why, you have yellow license plates—her voice young, too young, so that at first you had trouble making the voice and the face come together.

    The face still looked straight ahead, the kerchief knotted under the chin, and the wisps of thin blond sun-blanched hair blowing on the forehead and in the eyes looking straight ahead; the arms long around the overnight bag in her lap, and the hands folded quietly on the thin summer dress blowing around her knees—the dress, too, looking too young, too small (though it reached well down over her knees), filling when she moved, tightening over what you might even have allowed yourself to believe were already woman-thighs; so that even after the voice and the face (the profile) finally did come together, and you knew, were sure that she was only a kid sixteen or seventeen at most, you just couldn’t help wondering about the anomaly under the thin summer dress, saying, Now just a minute. Hold on! I’m not taking you . What is this, anyway? If you want to go to New York, why didn’t you take a bus? You were standing in a bus stop; saying it, or something like it, but only to make talk.

    Because it was at least a half hour to the city and you had to say something, had to justify something, had to justify not so much her hitching a ride with a strange man—a kid, a child, forcing you, a stranger, a reputable and respected mortician, into such a situation—not even what you knew then was your acceptance of it, the discovery that you were actually going to take her, a child, into New York with you; but your wanting to, needing to, even; knowing that if what you were saying then had caused her to start, to blush, to say, Please! Stop! I will get out. I will take the bus (which was only three cars behind you in the rear-view mirror), you might even have said, No. Please. You can’t. I’ll take you. Where do you want me to take you?

    And you even did say it, not all of it maybe, because there wasn’t any blushing, and there was no getting out and so the no, please, you can’t, I’ll take you wasn’t even necessary, and all you had to say was, Where do you want me to take you?—that was enough. And you knew that you had said, not what you had meant to say, but what you’d wanted to. Knew too, even before it was all out of your mouth, that she would understand not what you meant to say—the O.K. So you’ve come this far. So where can I let you off in New York?—because she wasn’t listening to that. She was hearing only what you wanted to say and what she wanted you to say whether you were saying it or not.

    Because saying wasn’t necessary for her, nor for you either. And you had probably already heard her answer long before she made it, maybe even before you had finished asking, probably thinking even then about how you were going to pull it off, where you were going to take her, what you were going to say to Sophie over the phone. For when the answer finally did come, you had not only been accused, you had already been tried and convicted and probably even condemned, feeling the current jolt through your brain and right down into your groin, and the fury, the rage—not at the sentence, not at her, the woman, the eternal judge and executioner, but at yourself, at your crime, at your knowing and wanting that sentence even before it had been passed, at the feel of the gas pedal stubborn under your foot and against the hearse floor, at your hair bristling and blowing all over your head now, at the tires whining, and the highway like a bright hot current snapping by in the opposite lane, snapping, Take me to your place! Take me to your place! Take me to your place!

    And so there was nothing else to do but laugh, and out loud too. And not just because of the ridiculous fury and rage, the damned and downright delicious shock; but because she had said the wrong thing. She had said not what she had meant to say at all, since Take me to your place! actually meant turn around, back into Prescott and up Market Street to the ratty old funeral parlor with the store-front windows (the converted saloon, which from the outside still looked more like a saloon than a funeral parlor), and up the dim flight of stairs into the three-room flat, and Sophie, your wife (even while laughing already thinking of what you were going to say to her over the phone).

    Because you weren’t turning around. You were heading straight on into New York, and with a girl at your side —a kid, a child. And you were laughing because this kid, this child, had made the mistake way back there in Prescott when she first spotted the yellow license plates and assumed you were a New Yorker (or at least an outof-stater), probably without caring whether it was justified or not, probably without even needing to care.

    The fact that you weren’t a New Yorker, that you were really her own kind, probably wouldn’t have bothered her even if you had told her, if you had said, Now wait a minute! You got this all wrong. I don’t live in New York. I’m not what you think I am. I’m just like you. I’m a Polack too. And in a few months from now, I’m even going to bury your old man.

    But naturally you didn’t say it. You were going to play the game, and maybe the laughing was all part of it. You were going to play the smooth city fella, something you never could be, what with your worn shiny undertaker black serge and the celluloid collar; because you were part of the same thing she was, and you knew it; knew that the only people you could ever fool with your borrowed manners and your worked your way through college sophistication were your own people and nobody else, and that was probably the main reason you could never get away from them, why you let yourself get stuck in a little hand-me-down storefront mortuary with a work and child-ridden Polack wife, and a batch of snot-nosed little Polack kids hanging on her skirt and one still hanging on her tit and probably another one already growing in her belly.

    So you weren’t fooling yourself, and maybe you weren’t fooling her either, because she looked like she wasn’t even aware you were laughing. And you sure as hell couldn’t be sure she was thinking you were what you wanted her to think you were. She hadn’t even looked at’ you once since she got in beside you, just sitting there like that, staring out the windshield, the thin bright sun-blanched hair blowing under the kerchief and around the forehead, and the thin summer dress blowing around the tight knees, and her thoughts somewhere out there on the dazzling highway, stretching way out there beyond the windshield somewhere, always ahead of both of you, so that no matter how much of that bright ribbon your wheels wound up, they were still out there somewhere ahead of you, and the gas pedal played stubborn under your foot and against the floorboard.

    But you couldn’t even be sure of that, could you? You couldn’t be sure whether her thoughts were really out there on the highway always ahead of you and that’s why you couldn’t ever reach them, or whether they were spinning off your back wheels like a spool unwinding, like she somehow got a loose thread off the hem of her mind caught in a snare on that corner red light back there and . . . Either way, her thoughts were not there in the hearse with you. You knew that.

    You knew too that no matter where they were you were not in them, neither you nor your laughing either. Knew that she was no more thinking about why you were laughing than she was about why she wasn’t speaking or why she would continue unspeaking through the entire ride, probably not even aware that not speaking was all part of the design, the part that would get you to do just what she wanted you to do. Because she had spoken once, had said what she had had to say, and now what would happen would happen, and so all the rest was silence, silence which you must have known even then was bred not out of strangeness or fear or the plain and simple lack of social garrulity, but out of desperation, a calm and patient and deliberate desperation. Somehow you knew that.

    And you know it even better now. Because the moment she walked in here you could feel the silence around her. Even amid the click of spike heels and the brass-band aura of bracelets and rose-rimmed picture hat and blatant face paint, even when she spoke, kneeling close against the knees of her crazy and rocker-bound old lady—the silence was there. And it’s not just because of the wake either. It’s like an echo of that silence which bewildered you in the speeding hearse almost a year ago —only then it was desperate. And now, after almost a year—like an echo that’s all but bounced itself out—sitting here before her father’s coffin, the painted nails like rose petals running over the rosary beads amid the low monotonous chanting, BLESSED ART THOU AMONG WOMEN, AND BLESSED IS THE FRUIT OF THY WOMB —it’s a silence not of grief or despair or any kind of desperation, but of something else, of relief maybe, or resignation.

    Anyway, with her there were no tears, no wailing, no knocking of the breast—not like some of her sisters, who screamed for their poor dead Tata to come back to them, their eyes wetting the shirt fronts of their embarrassed husbands. Now it’s mostly silence, even with her sisters. Because since she arrived, there’s been hardly a wail, hardly a tear even, except maybe from some of the old ladies of the Rosary Confraternity, who know their job. Maybe it’s the rosary keeps them quiet. Maybe. Maybe it’s her. Maybe she brought it with her, hugged it, clung to it like something precious, like a jewel maybe, or that special flower girls save in iceboxes—or virginity? No, not virginity. Clung to it for almost a year now. Because back there in the speeding hearse you could feel her holding on to it, hugging it as though as long as she kept that, nothing could happen to her, not even what she knew was going to happen, what she wanted to happen, what had to happen.

    Only that wasn’t the story at all; it was the silence that did it—her not speaking even after you’d got out of the hearse and picked your way over the bumpers and opened the door for her and walked her out through the exhaust-filled car tunnel of the ferryboat onto the deck and self-consciously filled your lungs with salt air and pointed out along the bright river, saying, Look, you can even see the Statue of Liberty today, the first words you’d spoken to her since way back there on the highway.

    It was her not speaking even then, her not even looking at you—looking instead out across the bright water where the gulls wheeled like doves above the flotsam, so that you were suddenly aware that you had not seen her full-face once since she looked into you back there under the corner red light—all that, the not speaking and the not looking, that made it all happen like it did. Because during the silence on the highway, after you had planned it all out, had planned exactly what you would tell Sophie over the phone, had picked out the hotel, and even reminded yourself not to forget to stop in a drug store after you had parked the hearse after you had it all worked out, all neat and clean—you knew that it was time to start thinking about how you’d get rid of her, how you’d start her talking by saying something nice and friendly and conversational, something completely stupid like, Look, you can even see the Statue of Liberty today, just as though nothing had happened.

    You were sure then that you couldn’t go through with it; and you had even begun to tell yourself that it was all a mistake, that you were grasping at straws, that you had misunderstood her, and once she’d begin talking, it would all straighten itself out and you could just leave her there on the ferryboat deck watching the gulls cavort. She would be in New York then, and she could get a trolley on Forty-second Street, and she couldn’t expect you to drive her all over the city in a hearse.

    So if she had only said something, something like, It’s going to be a hot day, or something; something that you could have picked up and, pretending you hadn’t understood what she’d said in the hearse, could have finished off with something nice and tactful like, Sure is, I hope it won’t spoil your day in the city. Guess you’ll be taking a trolley cross-town to the shopping center—anything like that. Even if she had said again, Take me to your place, or, Where will you take me? or anything like that, anything, you could have said, Now listen, little girl. What do you take me for? I’m a married man. I . . .—anything. And you could have just turned around when that boat splashed up to the pier, and left her standing there, and got back into the hearse and that would have been it.

    Only she didn’t say a goddamned word; and you couldn’t think of anything to say either. You couldn’t ask her where she was going in New York because you were afraid of what her answer would be. And you didn’t want to know her name or where she lived because you just didn’t want to get involved. And so when—without speaking, and without looking at you, and after a minute or so of gazing out along the river toward the sea—she turned and walked back into the tunnel without even waiting for you, and you saw the back of her—the full ungirdled softness in the too-small thin summer dress and the naked legs and feet in the dirty canvas shoes—and after a while heard the slam of the hearse door echo in the tunnel; you knew you were it. Knew that you just had to find out what she was all about. You were still not sure whether you were grasping at straws or not, whether you were dreaming it all up or not; couldn’t be sure whether she was what she looked like— a simple little Polish girl in a kerchief and a thin summer dress that looked too small for her—a child that even in canvas shoes looked like she was walking barefoot, with a voice even younger than her sixteen or seventeen years, and a face which you were sure (if you could only get to look at a little more of it than just the profile) would come together with the voice—or whether she really was what five little words, and all that silence and the already-woman-thighs tightening around your imagination had made her.

    So maybe that was it. Maybe if you could have just made up your mind one way or the other, if you could have been sure, if she had been then what she is now, or at least if she had looked then the way she looks now with the paint and the bracelets and all, maybe it never would have happened. You could have laughed at her and said something like, No thanks. I’m not buying today; and not because she’s not a looker now; because even with all the paint she’s a knockout, and she sure as hell carries plenty around in front of her. But the not knowing, the standing at the rail in the spray looking down into the gentle heave and swell of the bright water—the gulls piping—thinking of her back there in the dark tunnel sitting in the hearse, trying to remember what her face looked like and the sound of her voice when she said what you knew she had just had to say back there on the highway, and not being able to remember; trying to figure it out, thinking, Maybe she’s running away from home. Maybe she didn’t have enough cash to take the bus. Saw the yellow plates. A ride. Maybe a place to stay the night. A couple of bucks to hold her over till the next guy. Because she must have done it before; knowing she couldn’t have, not with all the silence; knowing you were all wrong, that if it were as simple as that, none of it would have been happening.

    And even if you did go on letting yourself believe that you had figured it all out—even though you couldn’t explain to yourself why you were going through with it if it was all as simple as you tried to make it—you found out later when it was already too late that it wasn’t simple at all, that it was too damn complicated for you, that you would never be able to figure it out; knew it the moment you saw her lift the overnight bag up onto the desk and open it and reach out the bills and place two of them down on the desk. Because it just didn’t make any kind of sense. You had already filled out the registration card and she was right there all the time, and no matter how far away her thoughts were from the hall of that little walk-up hotel, she just couldn’t have missed hearing him, even though he was keeping it low like he was trying not to offend the lady, saying, Make it an outta town address. Just ‘and wife’ here under the date (you thinking, 1926, July—yes, that would make it ‘and wife’ for almost ten years now). Double’s a dollar’n a half. Pay for the first night now. And even he just looked when he saw her lift the money out of the overnight bag, probably thinking he had made a mistake, that you really were man and wife—the newspaper he had been fanning himself with ceasing to move, and his hand going once across the two-day stubble; saying, 3C. Up the stairs. First door to your right, not once getting up out of the tilted splint chair, the key and the half dollar rattling briefly on the desk top.

    So you took them, and you picked up her bag, nodding to her, following her up the stairs—the canvas shoes as silent as bare feet in front of you, and the back of her catching soft full lines of light from the single bulb at the top of the landing. You knew you didn’t even have to wonder whether his eyes were following you or not, knew they were probably back under the newspaper again—the volume of the radio turned up, the voice of the announcer, German or Yiddish or something, rattling behind you, the hall dim under the single light bulb, tight, still, airless. First door to your right. 3C; the key turning easily in the lock, and you thinking, "Maybe she didn’t hear it all. Maybe just the last part, the part about the dollar and a half. Figured she was paying for her own room, that you were just finding her a place to stay, and that now you’d put down her bag and shake her hand and head back out to the hearse and climb back into it and . . .

    And so when the door swung open and the light from the hall fell across the floor to the foot of the old double bed—the daylight yellow through the drawn shade, playing across the pillows---you just put the bag down in the doorway, and made room for her to pass and didn’t even bother to snap on the overhead light. You just stood there in the doorway looking at the back of her, dark before the white bed and against the yellowed window shade, the doorknob still in your hand; and then only half of her, then nothing—the door clicking shut—nothing but the biggest, brightest 3C you’d ever seen; wondering, But why 3C? There are only two floors to the hotel. The ground floor’s a drug store, thinking of her standing there with her back to the door in the soft yellow light, probably already tightening up waiting for the first touch, probably imagining you breathing behind her, coming closer, the door closed behind your soundless moving across the long interminable three feet from door to bed, tightening up, waiting, waiting to uncoil, to spring, to wind around you in a tangle of naked arms and constricting woman-thighs.

    And you were waiting too, standing there, the 3C big in your eyes, thinking, It’s her move. I’ve got to be sure. Turn around! Turn around! See! I’m not there. Now what? but nothing—for a long while nothing but the dim tight airlessness and the 3C big in your face. And you were already beginning to move away when the doorknob still in your hand began to turn, to pull away from you, the 3C going away and the face there looking up at you, looking up at you for the first time since way back there when it first blossomed up out of the street under that corner red light —and you wondered why all along the highway and on the ferryboat you couldn’t remember what it looked like— the eyes bright-open in the glare of the light bulb in the hall ceiling, the kerchief still tight, knotted under her chin, the lips trembling, about to open to speak; and you straining to hear, your lips opening too, as if by opening yours you could force her to open hers too, as though through some secret sympathy of lips you might get her to speak, to break

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