Authors: Mary-Beth Hughes
But what I'm really trying to remember, what I want to get right, is the moment I finally reached the top of Borobudur. It was early afternoon but already the sun had dipped behind a nearby mountain so the light on the littered flattop was filtered green through the swaying trees. A mist in the air landed on my skin like a cool astringent, something Betsy might pull out of our picnic-basket-sized refrigerator to put on our cheeks on August nights on our tatami mat. This air and the sad shape of the vast Buddha heads with their beaded hairdos made me long to go home, just that. But not to Denmark; I'd already told Stefan he could have the cottage by the creek. He'd probably trimmed the wild overgrown hedges into topiary by now waiting for me to return and take my rightful place. No, I wanted to be with Betsy in Tokyo, and inside the only Buddha head that hadn't been toppled or riddled with gunshot, I looked out through the slit of the eyes and imagined our future. I would call her on my birthday. I would come home, with the twins of course, and together we would rethink our whole plan, start over. I knew what she'd say, Your geezer will never let you escape! And
I'd say, He has no hold on me. And she would be impressed by my new maturity. And chances are we'd be very conservative with our appearance for a while, just while the glue dried on our new life. That's what I saw, and then I looked down and spotted Mustache by the burned-out snackbar waving madly, his new friends slipping in and out beneath the palm trees. They had all seen me and soon they would reunite at my birthday party. Now they could drift out into the forests if they felt like it. That fluid, unpredictable style of friendship really irked my old American. No word for loyalty, he said, on more than one occasion. But later I found out he was wrong about that, something my new Americans refuse to understand. Hey, hey! I could see the shape of Mustache's mouth calling, and it looked sweet with affection for me. But at the top of Borobudur the only sound I could hear inside the Buddha head and inside my very pip was the tiny, swirling, shifting breeze of certainty and peace.
T
HE OUTER OFFICE WAS MUCH THE SAME AS SHE REMEM
-bered it. Mrs. Guski's thick, neat oak desk, a manageable stack of buff folders in the far right corner. A small red-haired boy in a blazer knocked unhappy heels against the chair leg. He'd been waiting for a while, a path of tears nearly dry on his freckled cheek.
Ann McCleary had boys of her own, long grown; boys she'd left to stew in that very chair. Her line: If you got yourself there, you'd done something to deserve it. She'd made a single exception with Terry, age seven, when a polished oxford lace-up went skidding under the desks to catch the attention of a girl he favored. Even younger, even in nursery school, Terry had some tiny sweetheart stilled to contemplation, to watching him. She smiled to think of him, not the handsomest of her boys, but the one, the one who lit up the room.
Terry and his flying shoe; his father just in the grave a month, and he was making trouble. She'd come down to this very office,
to Sister Mary Arthur who was nearly a girl then herself, a young woman with large responsibilities. Ann McCleary had appreciated her qualities from the start, the kindness, the steely discipline that made her a deft judge of the foibles of others. Terry still as a stone, not kicking the edges of the chair leg, face turned down, the brown eye that wandered inward when he was upset wandered now, and Ann gave him the look, then retracted it. She remembered that like something physical, pulling back and seeing the situation for what it was. Dear heart, she'd said, just out of Mrs. Guski's hearing, let me speak to Sister.
And Mary Arthur needed little enlightenment, they understood each other without much conversation. Just this once, Ann McCleary took one of her childrenâthere were five in all, the last born only months before she lost her beloved Danâ just this once she'd intervened between cause and effect. Off to the Dairy Queen, then home where he watched
One Life to Live
while she ironed, and then
Dark Shadows
with his brothers when they came home from school. His sister, Kathleen, demanded an explanation. Hands on her hips, already the litigator, always fierce for justice. He's sad, explained Ann to her only daughter.
We're all sad, said Kathleen.
Give me a kiss. Ann set the iron on its trivet, reached both hands to smooth back the bangs, grown in too long, that blocked her daughter's blue eyes. What did you hear about your grand project, is it to be Argentina or Brazil?
* * *
Mrs. Guski never fooled with color in her hair, unlike so many in Holy Cross parish with frosted bobs. We're all becoming beach-blanket blondes, said Ann McCleary on more than one occasion, but Mrs. Guski had given up. Even the nuns, the young ones especially, did better. And Mary Arthur had always been elegant, her shining hair cut by an expensive hand. She was the public face of Holy Cross and no one begrudged her the care, the handsome suits or the good shoes, not the way they did Father's vintage Karmann Ghia, a disgrace and an embarrassment.
But not an indecent man, really, and a fancy car was a small thing after all; he knew when to hide it away. And he'd backed her up when she'd said she wanted a funeral, no more waiting. I can't wait anymore, she'd said. And Father Jim Rielly understood, and two Saturdays later pulled down the garage door in the early morning and went in the side porch to the sacristy to make sure his best purple vestments were ready, and of course they were. Monmouth County was especially hard hit, New Jersey struck almost as if the towers had stood on its side of the river. But only two from Rumson, it turned out, and this was about affluence and influence some said. Who with any pull would take an office there? But Terry hadn't felt that way at all. So Ann McCleary knew influence and affluence were just part of the endless chatter. He'd come down for Sunday
supper, a rare appearance, not like her other boys with tow-heads and pregnant wives. Girls who'd been so ambitious now trailed toddlers through her beds and borders, breast-fed on the screened-in porch as if the neighbors were blind, and dumb. Terry, busy with business and still unsure about settling down, a favorite with his nieces and nephews, gave each a card with his new office address, just moved in. Views to Kansas, he said, to California, even, astonishing. They would all go visit, he said they must, and from his desk survey the world.
The Rumson police, the Little Silver police, the Middletown police especially insisted; they'd already had funerals of their own and knew what to expect. The roads were cordoned off from the Sea Bright Bridge to the Avenue of Two Rivers and cars parked for a mile all the way down Rumson Road. Women in black sling-backs climbing the rutted grass along the road made the shortcut through the tennis club across the school yard to the gray shingle church, capacity four hundred; someone said a thousand stood inside and out to hear Father Jim say no words could gather the force he needed to say his prayer, they would all join him in silence. Kathleen in the choir loft, alone, sang “Danny Boy” for her brother, for her father, and the thousand beyond prayer, beyond tears, shook and trembled now.
Her mother had said, No, not that, meaning the dress of black chiffon. It's not a cocktail party. At the house, just before, they all snapped at one another. The toddlers wept and no one could decide who would be the one to drive their mother.
In the end she'd ridden with Kathleen who knew when to be still, unlike the boys, hugging her too hard, clutching at her hand. Boys were the bigger saps, she'd always known. Kathleen could drive without talking and she knew how to get through a police barrier without making the well-intentioned feel like fools.
Sister Mary Arthur must have been there, must have been crucial and efficient, and would have come to the club later, all were invited, encouraged to gather by the water where the boats rocked in the small cove and cleats on sails knocked a beautiful music across the treetops, last of their dusty green. Early October, soon the leaves would be down and the boats in dry dock, she couldn't have waited another moment. She wore black, none of this nonsense of color for her. Though many in yellows even, and blues. Sister Mary Arthur would know to wear mourning, but Ann McCleary had no memory of her at all that day. She saw Kathleen in her cocktail dress, which suited her, truth be told, bare-legged and barefoot in a dinghy with one of the Henderson boys, the one who saw it all, he claimed, from the Staten Island ferry. Long ride, said Ann. Excuse me, Mrs. McCleary? You saw it all, it must have been a very long ride. She was a stickler for exact speech. She was toggled far from sense with grief. Both versions arrived on dinner tables sooner or later. All admired her for going ahead, for deciding to acknowledge the loss when so many were waiting, and for what?
Her daughter Kathleen was thirty-five years old the day her brother likely died. At first they thought if anyone could survive, it would be Terry. They pictured him and the several others he'd no doubt been able to rally, rushing out of the falling ash, rowing to safety. They said it out loud, lifted up with the knowledge of his character, what would surely keep him, and anyone fortunate enough to be in his vicinity, safe. Kathleen had combed the city for the first sign. Not giving up. Even when her mother said, Come home, dear heart. Please. A little girl when she lost her father, Terry nearly seven and never to be a father himself, or a husband. Never had the chance, she'd overheard near the water, over the clang of the boats, the same wineglass still in her handâEat something, Momâshe caught the sob. Never wanted to be either, said Ann, he had no example to follow. And who's fault was that. Only her own. Only mine, she said, when asked.
Ann McCleary, said Sister Mary Arthur, smiling, stepping out of her sunny office, arms open by the hips, chest lifted, an unconscious mimicry of the gentle open arms of the Virgin. Come in. She gave an even glance to the miscreant in the chair, sighed. Come in, Mrs. McCleary; Ann, please.
Ann had a job in mind, and Sister heard her out. She listened and nodded and said, Let me think about this a bit?
Of course, yes, said Ann McCleary, standing. This was quick, and now in her mortification, it wasn't what she was
expecting. She'd grown used to a certain deference, people let her ahead of them in any line. And all the rest she didn't like to believe she noticed, because for so long she hadn't. Now to perceive her privilege was to have survived, and that was unthinkable.
You were good to take the time, she said.
Please, said Sister Mary Arthur, with the composure to stand quite still, to not glance at her desk or lean toward the side door, toward her next task. Please, she said, let's speak soon.
What did that mean? Ann McCleary who understood everything, who never needed any human utterance interpreted or explained. On her way out, she looked down at the little redhead knocking his heels and thought, at least he knows what he's doing here.
So she wasn't waiting for the call that evening. Not a bit. She was nursing a glass of red wine for her heart, though wine hadn't saved her husband's young heart from failing. She was nibbling a scrap of cheese on a Triscuit when the phone rang and it was Sister Mary Arthur explaining her need for a lower-school library. A vision, she said. One I've harbored for years.
A terrible thought went through Ann McCleary's mind, even Sister Mary Arthur was after her imagined millions. And they were imaginary, though the papers went on about them. That, and everything else, the construction nonsense, the bullhorn the president picked up and to her mind never put down, and for what. She went with Kathleen and the boys, but not their
wives or their children, to stand in the frightening pit, to walk through cordons of police and to look up into the empty sky, and she waited. Waited for someone to say something she could listen to. Someone had mentioned the smell. Was it one of her boys? But she couldn't sense a thing. She was waiting to hear someone who wouldn't lie to her. But she knew the cost of that kind of speech because she'd seen it happen, once. But first, they'd stood in line at the Armory on Lexington to give up his hairbrush and the business card Terry had been so proud to hand to the babies, who chewed on them. Don't worry, Mom, they're engraved! Feel.
They'd gone down into the dark stone underground and waited as the lists were turned again and again, empty pages from the city examiner, from the morgue. Who thought to place them here in the cold stone room, airless. Kathleen unwrapped a protein bar from the checkered basket of a volunteer. Eat, Mom, please.
On the third day, Terry's company set up a center for the families at a midtown hotel. Black slick elevators coursed up the high tower to the rooms dimly lit, a false lemon fragrance in the air. The Internet. The phone banks. The food, constantly refreshed: pancakes, steaks, any kind of eggs. Like Easter, said Ann. And Kathleen said, Maybe we should go home. But she wanted to hear what the CEO had to say. So they went with the others, over a hundred, maybe two hundred. Who could count. And they sat in a tiered room, round tables with blue
tablecloths, pads and pens. The microphones were difficult to adjust. Men in suits skipped up the sidelines and back and whispered to clumps of other suited men with heads down, hands in pockets.
They'd heard bits and pieces. They all knew about the stairwells now. They all had maps of the area, and diagrams of the buildings, they knew which elevators stopped on which segment and which went to the top. They had a sense of timing and possibility. They'd been tracking these things for days. Two days now. And on the third, the microphone settled finally into a stand, a man grayer than the rest broke free and said, after running a thumb across the mesh and hearing the purr, the crackle: I'm the chief executive officer and I'd like to tell you what I know. He said, Anyone who arrived at work on Mondayâ
Already the hands were in the air. How could they know? How could they know, was there a list somewhere, an attendance list perhaps? Something that could be distributed?