Mourners came from all around, and by the middle of the afternoon hundreds filled the basement. The vagrant army shuffled through the space like penguins; without prompting they had happened upon a system of spiralling that ensured each a turn at the centre to gaze on the body. Tristan moved through the warmth and stench with William at his side. Even if he had wanted to escape he couldn't have. The crowd moved as one, unwinding its grief as the day ran down.
Five times Tristan found himself at the centre and each time the hole had changed a little: tokens dropped, regathered, stolen, rearranged. On the third pass he noted that the body had been turned. Later, they would all swear no one saw her moved, that a miracle had occurred.
There was no ceremony because they had not been able to agree on the details. Somewhere in the shrunken hours the crowd began to thin. People left without farewell just as they had arrived without welcome. The only ones still circling were those with nowhere else to go. Little Cam walked a circuit beside Tristan and when they reached the open grave he said, âDo you think there should be a prayer now?'
Tristan looked at the boy then down to Annie. He knew no words to bring her fleshy face back from the dirt.
âWould you like one?'
âYes, please.'
There were fewer than twenty people left in the basement and the sound of the prayer drew them together. Tristan spoke the words slowly, automatically, feeling only their echoing emptiness:
Lord, you teach us that in death you embrace us. In trial you carry us, in uncertainty you guide us and in sorrow you comfort us. We ask you now to embrace our friend Annie, as she embraced life. We ask you to welcome her into your home and to give us the strength to live in a world of loss, a world held together by your great love. We cannot know your ways, Lord, but we ask for the courage to accept your plan for us. For the woman we knew, we thank you, and for the hope you offer us, we thank you. Amen.
A long silence was broken by the clang of a shovel on concrete and they began filling the hole. William approached Tristan.
âYou need to take over now,' William said. âIt's what she would have wanted.'
âNo,' Tristan replied. âThere is nothing left here. It is finished.'
âWhat will you do?' William asked.
âI don't know.' As he spoke the words Tristan felt his sadness grow heavy within him. âI have never known.'
Tristan's head throbbed and his vision, still without colour, held its focus only in moments before returning him to a world of floating debris. Talking had become a terrible drain but there was no denying the story's momentum. He took her hand. Soon she would push him away.
âI don't know if you will understand what happened next.'
âTry me.'
âSometimes you think you understand a thingâyou can turn it into words and the words seem to make senseâbut then true understanding arrives, and you realise that all you'd ever seen before was the shadow of the idea. Death was not new to me, and I understood that even Annie would one day return to dirt. But to see her there, so completely reduced, when only a day before it had been impossible to imagine our world without herâ¦
âSomething left me then. Not hope, but the thing hope rests upon. Belief. William walked away without saying goodbye, as if he had already sensed I was gone. I watched the shovels of dirt land heavily on her body and I felt nothing. I was nothing. I had nothing. I drifted into the path of the oncoming day.
âFor three days I staggered through the streets. I stopped eating. I was fading into certainty. You know those streets, you know how full of life they are, but I couldn't see it. All I could see was a thousand balls, each rolling through the maze: people reduced to movement, movement reduced to pattern. The rector had tried to explain it to me, but even at my lowest moment I hadn't properly understood. Not until those slow dying days, when the knowledge became a part of me. I would have died. There is no doubting it. I walked without eating or drinking, but the physical fatigue was such a small part of my pain that I barely noticed it.
âAnd then I saw you.'
âI don't remember,' she said. There had been a change in her silence. As if she sensed how close she was to knowledge.
âThere was nothing about me you would have noticed. I was just another beggar fallen on the far side of a street you had no business in. I could see, though, from the way you walked, that you had fallen too.'
âWhen was it?'
âThree days ago.'
There was pause as she struggled to remember. âIt was raining,' she said.
âThis was before the rain. It was afternoon.'
âI was going to work.'
âI know. I followed you. I didn't mean to. But there was no mistaking you, even at that distance. My heart lurched in the familiar way, a distant, nostalgic sensation I was too thick-headed to make sense of. I left my few possessions on the street wrapped in a blanket, and I followed you.'
âYou should have called out.'
âIt's becoming our theme,' he said, but neither of them smiled.
âI'm sorry,' Tristan continued. âI don't know if I can explain this. I walked helplessly along the path you laid. Slowly, as if fighting my way through mud. My mind was sticky with the memory of another night in another world, when I should haveâ¦But I'd stopped believing in should.
âA strange thing happened as I walked behind you. For the first time in days my fragmented self moved with a single purpose. No, not a purpose, a yearning. A memory. You found your place beneath the canopy just before the rain came. I was huddled in an alley opposite. I whimpered when you removed your coat. A rat beneath a pile of boxes scurried at the sound, instinct taking it deeper into the maze.
âDo you remember the car that stopped? It was long and black with silver spokes in its wheels. I didn't see him, but I shouted as you drove away. “Don't hurt her, you bastard,” I called out like a madman.
âAs the car moved off, I felt as if the last piece of the puzzle was sliding into place. You turned a corner and disappeared from view, and my life turned rigid again. I did not move, I could not move, but I thought of him, the stranger in the car with money in his pocket and flesh on his mind. I had never properly met you, we had never spoken, and yet I knew that if he harmed you I would hunt him down. Just imagining it filled me with a rage that could never fade to forgiveness.
âAnd that, that single realisation, completes the puzzle. Do you see ? Do you understand?'
Tristan waited but Grace gave no sign of having heard the question. He did not blame her. It had taken him too long to see it as well.
âRemember what the rector told me?
If none of us is responsible,
then none of us is past forgiveness
. He had planted it there, don't you see, the solution to my conundrum. Only the free act can be unforgivable. I stood alone on a wet street and watched you drive away, and I finally understood. To commit the unforgivable act is to be free. And it wasn't too late. It's never too late.'
His words tumbled together, a muddy mash of reason and desperation.
You are crazy
, she would be thinking.
You have
lost your mind
. But that was the opposite of the truth. It was the exact opposite.
âI did not have a car, or the money to pay for one. But I had an obsession and I would not be denied. The suit I'm wearing belongs to a businessman who swims each morning at the public pool. The car is hired under his name. That part wasn't difficult. The difficult part comes now. The difficult part is in the explaining.'
She had gone still beside him but he knew she was listening. For a moment he felt powerful again. A fierceness came over him, a kind of determination he had experienced only once before. It was happening.
âYou are it, Grace. You are my destiny. From the moment I first saw you I knew this simple truth. When the car pulled away, the fear of you being harmed found its way to my core. I could never conceive of it, Grace. I could never even think of hurting you.'
âDo not say it.'
âTo hurt you would be unforgivable. I could no more doubt this than I could doubt the existence of my own hand. And that is how I could prove him wrong.'
âYou are mad. This is the talk of a madman!'
âI did not choose you, Grace. Fate chose you. And I chose to deny my fate.
âI drove the block twice tonight, the first time just to look at you, the second to harden my resolve. You could not have guessed at the mighty urges that clawed and writhed within me. I smiled at you. You smiled back and my heart soared. I wanted to save you. I wanted to save us both.
âI chose the road carefully. I drove it earlier today: I needed to be sure. The corners came fast, each folding into the next, pushing back a little harder. It is addictive, the thrill of speed, approaching that point where skill and danger are delicately balanced. I heard your breathing quicken with my heart. You wanted to speak out, to ask me to slow down. But you did not. As if it was written. As if you knew.
âI felt my history rising up against me, urging me to caution. I beat it back. I have never faced a more daunting opponent but my resolve was strong. I denied my love for you. I say “I” but now we see the word is no longer adequate. I speak of something more, of will alone. It pulled at the wheel, fought against the road. The car lost traction. I accelerated. Did you feel it? There was no ice.
âI meant to commit the unforgivable act, Grace. I meant to kill us both.'
âBut you didn't kill me,' she said. âI am still here.'
Tristan took her throat in his hands and felt it soften beneath his thumbs. He pressed down, feeling the corrugations of her windpipe, experimenting with its elasticity. She stared grey-faced back at him, treating him at last to the hatred he had earnt.
âSo this is how you do it, is it?' she hissed. He pushed harder, and she made no move to fight him. âYou would rather choke an argument than counter it.'
âYou have no argument,' he said.
âI do. You're just not willing to hear it.'
He loosened the pressure; her rasping was too terrible to bear.
âWe all know we will die, Tristan,' she said. âDying doesn't frighten me. But I always thought it would be for something more noble than one man's vanity.'
He closed his one good eye against her accusation.
âYou won't do it,' Grace taunted, sensing the fraying of him.
âWhy won't I?'
He looked at her again. Her lip curled back, revealing the gap in her teeth. She snarled.
âLet me go, Tristan. Let me go. It's not too late.'
âToo late for what?'
âLearning from our mistakes.'
âI am not mistaken,' he insisted.
âSo why are you shaking?'
âTalk and I will listen,' he said, regretting at once the bargain. But how could he demand she stop talking when all he craved was the sound of her voice? âBut be quick. My fingers know what they must do.'
âI cannot speak like this.'
âThen do not speak.' He pushed harder, tasting blood in his mouth, his throat, his imagination. She spat at him. He felt its warmth slide thickly on his cheek.
âI hate you for this.'
âYou should,' he replied. âYou must.'
She leaned into him and he felt her weight straining against his fingers. Her face was too close for him to make out any more than her burning eyes.
âDo you think any but the St Augustine's student thinks twice about the nature of his will?' she challenged. âDo you think there are any others who have the luxury of giving a shit? I knew a girl on the street called Francis. She died of a cough because she couldn't afford medicine. Each evening she faced the same choice: whether or not to risk the cold of the streets in search of the money that might keep at bay the symptoms of that coldness. I sat with her as she died and she described snippets of her childhood. Not once was her fading mind troubled by Augustine's stupid paradoxes. But now you lie here with your fingers to my throat, seeking to make some college boy's point that means nothing to either of us. And all because you were too frightened to talk to me. If I die now it is only because you are a coward.'