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Authors: Emma Donoghue

BOOK: Landing
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It bothered Jude that her father had a second wife with a name so like that of the first, but fancier. Rochelle was a few years older than Ben; she'd proposed to him on her seventy-fifth birthday, at a tea dance in Key West. Maybe the similarity of the names would make it easier for him to remember what to call Rochelle, if the day came when he started getting "confusion episodes," Jude thought vindictively.

"The little operation on her hip went just great—"

Damn, she should have remembered to ask. "That's wonderful."

"You holding up okay, honey?"

"Oh, you know." She wasn't going to comfort him, and let him tick his daughter off the list.

"Jude, if there's anything you need, anything at all..." The line crackled with static. "What's that, honey?" he asked somebody in the background.

Don't call us both honey.

"Hey, Rochelle says you should come down for a vacation, get a bit of colour. I could cover your flight—"

"I like the winter," she reminded him.

"Yeah, but under the circumstances..."

Jude had developed a new intolerance for euphemism. Why couldn't he just say
now your mother's dead
? Now Rachel, whom Ben had once loved—presumably, or enough to marry late, beget one daughter, and stay with for eighteen years before succumbing to the heavy mascara of Julia McBride from the general store—was cinders, sprinkled under the snow-bent lilacs. (There hadn't been any chance to clarify this part of her mother's wishes, after the "cheapskate" conversation. Jude seemed to remember Rachel remarking that she admired lilacs because they put forth their heavenly bloom promptly every May and then went back to stubborn green for the rest of the year. But perhaps that was one of Jude's own thoughts. Once people were gone, you found yourself carrying on imaginary conversations with them.)

"I should head off to work now, Dad."

"Sure, sure. It's marvelous how you've got that little museum up and running."

Her teeth met with a click. She knew he couldn't care less about roots, his or anyone else's. How else could he have grown up as a third-generation resident of Ireland, Ontario, spent almost sixty years there, then flitted off to Florida? Ever since Ben had shucked off his old life—and wife—his voice had had a kind of indecent merriment to it, a quality of sunshine.

Jude knew she was being absurd. Fifteen again: squatting on the creaky top stair, waiting for her parents to call her downstairs and tell her about the divorce. That was the summer everything had gone wrong. Before that, the Turners had been broke, but Jude hadn't cared; what did she need pocket money for, when all the things she liked to do were free and she knew so many of the locals, it was like living in a book?

"Keep in touch, honey, you hear?"

Keep in touch.
That's what you said to old acquaintances when you bumped into them in the street.

"Will do." Jude put the phone down and listened to Silence fill up the house.
My house,
she practiced saying in her head.

Foreign Correspondents

So are you in a hurry now
Or are you going away,
Or won't you stand and listen
To these words I'm going to say?

—ANON
The Black Horse

On the twenty-second of February, her mother had been dead a month. Jude marked the day by going down to the phone booth at the crossroads and calling home, to hear Rachel's careful, rather British intonation one last time. "You have reached the Turner residence..." Only when she'd trudged back through the dirty snow, tears freezing into hard tracks down her face, did she figure out that she could have heard the message from home by pressing the right sequence of buttons. She made herself record a new, briefer sentence right away: "Jude here, leave a message." She had to do it four times before she sounded halfway normal.

Jude suddenly regretted that they'd switched to voice mail a few years ago; if they'd kept their old answering machine, at least she could have held on to the tape. She had a few letters from her mother, and photographs of her, though not many—camera-shy, Rachel had the knack of evading the lens—but no video footage, no trace of her voice, even. Maybe when her mother had reached the age of eighty, it would have occurred to Jude to get around to recording her.
Textual evidence poor, artifacts sparse.
Like the traces of some obscure ancestor's life, thought Jude, for once wishing she were more modern.

She hadn't read more than a page of anything in weeks. She hadn't picked up her guitar in so long, her calluses were going soft. She hadn't made so much as a loaf of bread.

In the crammed, orderly shed that acted as the museum's archive-cum-office, Jude put herself to work removing rusty staples from a bundle of 1930s letters between Mrs. Gertrude Pleider of Ireland, Ontario—dead of complications after a fall from her motorized scooter outside the turkey factory at ninety-two, that was twenty-six more years than Rachel had got,
stop it Jude just stop it—
and her cousin Miss Jane Vorden of Wetaskiwin, Alberta. Jude was usually grateful for donations, especially of manuscripts rather than crack-backed rocking chairs or moldy snowshoes, but rusty staples got on her nerves.

She printed out this week's "From the Archives" page, slipped it into a plastic cover, and pulled her boots on to go pin it up on the notice board outside.

Some Destitute Orphan Immigrants

Arrived 6 May 1891 NOBLE, Thomas Age: 16 Sex: M indoor farm servant on SS Norwegian from Liverpool to Quebec

Arrived 4 June 1891 WEINER Adolph Age: 10 Sex: M scholar

Arrived 4 June 1891 WEINER Pauline Age: 10 Sex: F scholar

Arrived 4 June 1891 WEINER Maggie Age: 11 Sex F scholar, all on SS Parisian from Liverpool to Quebec

Glad Soontiens, a textile artist and Jude's best ally on the board, paused to read over Jude's shoulder. She let out a smoker's laugh. "All those little Weiners. What does 'scholar' mean?"

"Kid who'd been to school, I guess."

"Bet they got split up quick and turned into cow-herders."

"Adoption's a slim possibility," Jude told the older woman.

"By the way. Did Rachel ever finish that Stars and Stairs quilt of hers?"

"All but," said Jude, concentrating on pressing in another thumbtack. "It still needs batting, I think."

"Drop it over, I'll fix it up for this year's show."

Jude's eyes were a blur. By the time she managed to turn away from the notice board, Glad was halfway down the street.

After the CBC radio news there was an item about Pakistan, which reminded her in a roundabout way of Síle O'Shaughnessy. Jude thought of the flight attendant sitting with her sheer-stockinged legs crossed, sipping only the best Italian coffee, gazing out windows at bright squares or rainy streets, looking glamorous, anticipatory.

The beige computer was half-hidden behind a crate of microforms; Jude mostly used it to look up databases such as the "Ontario Register of Births and Deaths." It occurred to her now that none of the volunteers knew her password, which was PASSWORD.

Oh go on if you're going to,
she told herself.

Sender:
[email protected]

To:
[email protected]
Date: 22 February 11:22
Re: Greetings

Dear Síle (apologies for not knowing how to add the accent over the i in your name!)

You should take it as a compliment that this is the first non-work e-mail I've ever sent. I just wanted to say hi and that I owe you a breakfast. If you happen to fly into Toronto sometime I could jump on the highway, if you've got a break between flights and want to "eat like a beast."

Jude was aiming for a breezy tone here, so she wouldn't sound like some hick from the boonies desperate for a date. The truth was she never
jumped on
the clogged highway to Toronto; she only went if she had to use research libraries or catch some major exhibition at the Royal Ontario Museum.

Today I'm supposed to be indexing some letters, and a complete run of an anti-Confederation newspaper from the early 1860s. (Confederation was when Canada decided to be a country, in case you're interested.)

Unlikely,
Jude groaned to herself, and backspaced over the sentence.

Looking at the "Historic Bridges of southwestern Ontario" calendar on the office wall, I see it's been seven and a half weeks since Heathrow (well, since I was there; you've probably been back twenty times). The reason I didn't get in touch till now is that my mother turned out to have a brain tumor and has been dying. I mean, she died on Jan. 22.

As it's taken me about ten minutes to compose the last two sentences I think I better call it a day before I make it a habit of weeping all over you.

Weird grammar, needy tone; Jude backspaced as far as "call it a day."

If you've got a minute in between zigzagging all over the known world, you could let me know if you got this.

Bye,

Jude (Turner)

She was about to hit SEND when something occurred to her, and she edged around the paper-stacked desk to the reference bookcase.

P.S. I just looked you up that bit about the Rechabites. It's Jeremiah 35:7:

Neither shall ye build house, nor sow seed, nor plant vineyard, nor have any: but all your days ye shall dwell in tents: that ye may live many days in the land where ye be strangers.

The funny thing is, I'd remembered the Rechabites' tent-dwelling as a bad habit, or maybe a punishment.

But rereading the passage, I think they're actually being advised to stay mobile, so as not to be vulnerable to siege warfare! Does that metaphor work for you, Síle? Do you see yourself as an elusive road warrior who'll never get walled up in one place and have to barbecue rats like us settled folk? Anyway. Bye again.

She almost thought better of it and erased the whole paragraph, but actually it read livelier than what came before it, and ending on a biblical tangent was better than with the announcement of her mother's death.

Sending Message: "Greetings. "Out Basket Empty.
As if the words were a flock of swallows tossed from a cage, chasing each other across the midwinter sky.

A thump on the storm door made her jump. Rizla's big brown face against the glass, eyes rolled back, tongue lolling.

"Sorry if you're desperate for some heritage, but the museum's closed on Mondays," she said, moving forward to hug him, but she mistimed it; he'd already stepped back to kick some snow off his boots.

"Can't stay, I've got the wheels off some piece-of-shit Pontiac. Doing okay?" Rizla asked.

Jude's throat locked again. "God, I'm tired of all this sympathy," she breathed out. "Did I ever tell you, Bub knocked on my door after the funeral and offered to shovel my drive for the rest of the winter?"

"Bub your mute neighbour?"

"Turns out he's got plenty to say, once he gets started. Very eloquent on death having all of us in its sights, and how my mother was the genuine article; she baked him a blueberry crisp the day he moved in. He's doing a distance learning module on electricity, and his real name's Llewellyn."

Rizla let out a hiccup of laughter. "Yep, I guess that wouldn't fly at the turkey factory." He took out a can of ginger ale and popped it with one finger. "Dropping by later for the roast beef special?" He was the sole mechanic at the Garage, the town's gas station-cum-café.

Jude shook her head. "I've got squash to reheat. Gwen's coming over this evening after I watch her snowpitch tournament, you want to join us?" She asked it without much hope.

"Would that be for leftover squash, or a real dinner?"

"If you need a burger that much—"

"Just messing with you," he told her, his grin showing his uneven teeth. He put his can down on some brown files.

Jude snatched it up. "Those are the Krebniz family letters; I only have them on loan."

"They're kinda smeary already," he said, flicking through them.

"Those are tear stains," she told him, seizing the files. "None of the three brothers ever saw each other again."

"History! What a downer," he observed, swigging his ginger ale.

"So tonight, maybe you could come by after, for a beer?"

"Nah, I think I can live without another lecture about my 'redneck attitudes.'"

"Aren't you ever going to let that drop?"

Rizla curled his lip. "Your friend may change old farts' diapers for a living, but she reckons she's pretty upscale."

"Just because Gwen didn't appreciate your Holocaust joke—"

"Hey, if anyone's entitled, First Nations are," he said with a smirk, "we got genocided too. Besides, what about that time in the diner?"

Jude sighed. "So she asked the waitress to wipe the table."

"It was the way she did it," Rizla reminisced, "kinda snitty. I figure, any gal that kicks up a stinkola about a dab of ketchup, she'll be the same way later on."

"Later on, when?"

He glared at his crotch. "You think her ladyship would ever sleep in the wet spot?"

Jude's guffaw surprised her.

At lunchtime, she walked the two blocks home through driving snow, feeling as hollow as a reed. Her right hand, holding her cigarette, was numb despite the glove. One of these days she'd have to grow up and give up smoking.

Despite the mailbox's NO JUNK PLEASE, SAVE THE TREES sign, it was stuffed with flyers as usual; she felt unaccountably annoyed. She kicked the clumped snow off her boots and unlaced them in the hall. There was one voice mail, a guy in Mitchell responding to her classified about the 1994 Honda Civic. Jude flinched at the thought of her mother's car disappearing from out front, then reminded herself that she could do with the money; without Rachel's pension, the gas bills were hitting a lot harder.

When she threw the flyers into the recycling, a wet-edged envelope slid out of the bundle. It had a blurred postmark that said
Baile Atha Cliath,
which was gibberish to Jude, but the stamp showed a carved Celtic cross and her heart started to boom. She sat on the bottom stair in the dim hall, and took her penknife off her belt to slit the envelope, her hands shaking as if she'd had too much coffee.

17 Stoneybatter Place
Stoneybatter
Dublin 2
Republic of Ireland
14 February

Well hello there Jude the Obscure. I hope you can make head or tail of my writing? because ironically enough for a techie like me (who can boast of having watched the first live birth on the Net in '98) my printer's just expired in a cloud of black smoke so I'm having to copy out this letter from my screen BY HAND. Only the fact that the shuttle picking me up for a flight to Boston is running half an hour late justifies such a waste of energy. I cant believe what a primitive business this is, making squiggles on paper with black drops from a tube...

I did wait six weeks to see would you give in and contact me first, but clearly you're the Strong Silent Stubborn Type with whom a girl should never get into a battle of wills. Or of course more prosaicly? [my spellcheck's never heard of this word] you may have lost my card, since things are always going astray in transit; over the years I've lost most of my favourite earrings down hotel drains. (In my spare time I'm happy to wear odd earrings but on the job we have to be tediously well groomed.)

Our friend Mr. George L. Jackson was Pentecostal, it turns out: seventy-five, divorced with four grown children. (The inquiry was ghastly, but I didn't actually lose my job.) Do you think about him much? I do, especially on night flights, when the lights are low and lots of passengers are asleep. He ran his own small plastics company, and he was flying to England for a trade show. No previous history of heart disease, but that's what did for him. The airline flew his eldest daughter over to collect his body and paid for the embalming. So now you know as much as I do.

My hand is tired already, I'm going to have to stop before I've actually said much. I wonder how long this will take to get to you by mule, elk, or whatever the Mounties are using these days? I'm trying to picture your little hamlet of Ireland, Ontario, and I realize the images in my head are all out of
Northern Exposure,
which is actually Alaska, isn't it? Small-town life has always given me the creeps—no cinemas (I'm such a film slut I'd see two a day if I had the time) or music venues or juice bars when you need a strawberry-pear smoothie—the hideous homogeneity—how can you bear it?

Shut up, Síle, you're being very rude ... Maybe it's just me, cities turn me on. I need to feel free as a kite—I happen to be based in Dublin but it could be anywhere really (well, anywhere with a population of more than a million!), life being a moveable feast, to use the old Catholic phrase. Kathleen (my girlfriend) disagrees, she says emigrants are always a bit pathetic.

Outside the window on my street of skinny terraced houses I can see some valiant purple crocuses pushing up. (I don't know how to grow anything myself but my neighbour Deirdre and I have an MBA, she uses my windowsill as an overflow for her pots.) Clearly spring—my favourite season—is round the corner.

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