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Authors: Lydia Millet

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BOOK: Sweet Lamb of Heaven
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BIG LINDA HAD
been working, she said—her work for decades had been training orcas like Shamu. She's pursued that vocation for most of her adult life.

She hadn't been doing the shows for a while, though, she'd gotten middle-aged and taken on more of a supervisory role, because to get in the pool with the animals you had to be in peak physical form. There'd been human deaths, of course, she said, maybe you read about them, saw them in the news, and trainers knew the real story, that it wasn't trainer error that caused those deaths but rather psychosis, because the great, predatory whales lived captive lives of aching, maddening frustration, shut up in their small cement tanks.

Some were more aggressive than others. Tilikum, she said.
Blackfish
.

Of course killer whales aren't whales in the sense of
baleen
whales, the kind of whales that cruise gently through the deep, slowly straining millions of krill and copepod through large maws full of white comb-like structures (she told us). The orcas were toothed whales, big dolphins really, though also apex predators, if we were familiar with the term. They were so highly intelligent that parts of their brain appeared a good deal more complex than our own—the part that processes emotion, she said, was so highly developed that some neurologists believe orcas' emotional lives are more complex than those of humans.

We know so little about them, she said, even the scientists, but they have language, even different dialects. They have culture. There are three kinds of orcas in the wild, all with their different cultures.

“They are astonishing creatures,” she said, her voice trembling. “Some peoples hold them to be sacred.”

I think I wasn't the only one to feel how much she cared, in the moment when she said that—how palpable her passion was—and how also, on this large, horse-faced older woman, passion like that looked almost pitiable.

Anyway, her favorite whale was a youngster who'd been bred and born in captivity, which is still fairly rare, she said, they die off more quickly than they can reproduce, the captive ones. His mother and father were popular with the crowds who visited the aquarium-amusement park where she worked (swiftly I shut down the mental link
children
, blocked an image of children laughing, splashed by the orca's leap).

Big Linda was alone one morning at the pool—the pools they live in, she added, only have to be twice the length of an orca's body. Main Linda cleared her throat, jerking Big Linda out of her sad reverie.

There was a silence, a pleasant tranquillity, said Big Linda. This was Florida in summer; there were palm trees overhead, the smell of heating pavement.

“I can't say what it was like, exactly,” she went on, shaking her head and staring at the floor in front of her. The others also looked at the floor, as though listening to the shameful confessions of an addict. “I don't know how to describe it.”

I saw Burke nodding slowly, pensive, also not lifting his eyes from the linoleum. I had no idea what Linda was getting at, couldn't make sense of it in the least, and was gazing distractedly at the side table, thinking about eating a cookie—they had some that were an unnatural shade of pink, those long rectangular wafers stamped with a waffle pattern that seem like play food. Lena had play food—she had fruit and vegetables made of wood that you could slice and put back together with Velcro. She had berry pie slices made of plastic.
No!
Stop
.

“First I thought I was making it up,” said Linda, “truth is I'd been real unhappy there lately, I don't like how we keep the animals—you have to understand, we only stay, most of the trainers stay because we're sorry for them, deeply sorry. We stay to do what we can for these creatures. For years I couldn't leave because of that, I'm so attached to them, you know, the little guy especially. Not
that
little, of course, since he's fourteen feet long.” She laughed nervously.

I got up, telling myself to block out the lingering image of Lena at play, and gingerly approached the snack table; I put one of the waffle cookies on the tip of my tongue. Like balsa wood with sugar, I thought, and sawdust between the layers—sawdust with sugar. Still I chewed it, studiously not letting my thoughts stray back to Lena with her toys.

“Point is I was stressed out. Still. I finally had to admit to myself that something was there. I mean not the clicks and whistles and chirps, the usual elements of calls that we occasionally hear, you know, the vocalizing . . . it wasn't that.”

I stopped mechanically chewing the balsa wood/sawdust wafer and turned toward the circle, where others were also gazing at her, their faces unreadable to me. She meant she'd heard the
killer whale
, I thought, and had an abrupt urge to laugh.

Instead I swallowed the mouthful and sat down on my chair again, careful to make no noise. I wanted to be very polite. It was Big Linda, I thought, who'd always been so kind to us—to think of ridiculing her made me wince. I would be unfailingly polite, I would be more attentive than I had been before, and I would suppress the instinct to laugh. It'd be hysterical laughter anyway, I told myself: again I had signs of incipient hysteria, as I had after Ned heard the voice. Both euphoria and hysteria had risen in me as I jogged along our street in the dark. Now they threatened to rise in me again.

But I was still a wretch. My misery came crashing back. I felt no lightheartedness at all; I was as heavy as lead.

“I always heard it, whenever I was at the tank, and I couldn't tell you how I got anything from it, but I knew—something about the way it was, somehow the rhythms were linked, how he'd be moving around and I'd be hearing it. I knew it was connected to him. He'd just been separated from his mother, you know, he'd just been weaned, but in the wild the male orcas stay at their mothers' sides for their whole lives. He'd been taken away from her, you could tell he was lost, basically, and then there was this—it was a kind of wall of sound, I guess, a wall of sound that also felt like a wall of feeling.”

In the end—to me at least—a baby, a whale, there was nothing more nonsensical there than anywhere else.

Male humpback whales have been described by biologists as “inveterate composers” of songs that are “strikingly similar” to the products of human musical tradition.
—Wikipedia 2015

I TRIED TEXTING
Ned's various numbers, the temporary cell phones he'd used recently as well as his old number, the one he'd had for years. I repeatedly typed messages such as
I'll do anything you want me to
,
I accept your terms
,
Give her back and I'll do whatever you say
. For several nights there was no amount of abjection I wouldn't stoop to.

Finally I pulled up short and pretended to be made of granite, went from spineless to fossilized. There wasn't a middle ground. I knew it wouldn't last, either, the rock-like immobility, the erasure of my real life.

It was unbearable to submit to my profound weakness and so the only choice was to shore up surface strength.

Plants might be able to eavesdrop on their neighbors and use the sounds they “hear” to guide their own growth, according to a new study that suggests plants use acoustic signaling to communicate with one another. Findings published in the journal
BMC Ecology
suggest that plants can not only “smell” the chemicals and “see” the reflected light of their neighbors, they may also “listen” to the plants around them. —
National Geographic News

ONE EVENING AROUND
dusk there was a call from a new number, and when I picked it up after one ring, as I picked up all calls—instantly, slavishly—I heard her.

“Mommy?” said Lena, on the brink of tears.

“I'm here! I'm here!” is all I remember saying.

The phone was passed from Lena to someone else, an adult voice I didn't recognize. A contract was being faxed, it said, and I would have to sign it in front of a notary. We both understood, technically, that it wasn't binding, wouldn't hold up in court since it was being signed under duress, etc., but Ned also knew
I
knew that if I didn't stick to its terms this would simply happen again.

“But worse,” said the person, inflectionless.

After I signed the contracts and they were delivered, Lena would be brought back to me.

These events unrolled quickly. The contracts were received and signed, Will and Don read them, as well as Reiner, who turned out to be a corporate lawyer. Will drove me to a notary at the fire station that stayed open all night, and after that a messenger took the packet from me. Then we went back to the motel and waited.

I took no pill and drank no wine, determined to be sober as a judge. Instead of drinking I walked around and around the outside of the motel, my heart beating fast, my cheeks hot, until my calves burned and the soles of my feet were sore. Freezing, I walked for hours. Every brief headlight near the end of the road made me breathless.

It was after midnight when the car pulled up and two men got out, two men I didn't know, though I wondered in passing if I recognized one of them as a cop.

Then Lena was here, I had her with me again, and the motel guests were close, and Don and Will, Don's father smiling widely as he leaned on his wavering cane. Everyone was hugging Lena or patting her, congratulating me, whatever. We were in the warm lobby without having walked there—we'd floated, I think now, and when I finally looked up there were no men and there was no car. Vanished.

SO NED HAS BECOME
a condition again, a feature of life. Our end date is still the election, contractually, after which Lena and I should be released—but for now we're indentured. We're flying to Alaska next week for the official candidacy announcement, to do our duty as mannequins.

Ned's staff booked the tickets; Ned's staff booked the rental car. We're staying in our old house for almost a week. Without speaking to me at all, only sending me emails containing flight confirmation numbers and the rental car details, Ned's staff took charge of the arrangements.

Lena's still saying little about her time in kidnapping—I can't tell how deep the injury may go, though Don found us a counselor forty-five minutes away and we drive to see her three days a week. It doesn't seem to be the case that anything of substance occurred while she was in Ned's hands. That is, as long as she hasn't blocked a trauma. All that happened, apparently—once the initial violation had occurred when she was drugged and taken from me—was that she stayed in a hotel suite with a babysitter. And of course she was frightened because they told her I was sick.

It sounds like it was one of those big chain hotels, more like apartments in an office park, possibly in Massachusetts somewhere, the PIs say, with generic but pleasant enough bedrooms off a central living room and kitchen. The babysitter had her own room, and so did Lena, between which the doors were left open.

Apparently she only saw Ned once. The first morning he stayed away and had the babysitter tell her that she was safe, I was safe, the illness wasn't life-threatening. Everyone was safe, but she was staying there for her own protection in case the sickness was contagious. He made his single in-person appearance that evening, bearing ice cream and an expensive, wholesome-looking doll wearing a red-velvet ice-skating outfit. After that he sent her toys daily through the caregiver: animated movies, books, doll clothes.

She kept the doll for longest, toward which she felt a parental responsibility, but finally she asked me to take it to the same donation bin in the grocery-store parking lot where we'd taken the other items he'd sent. The gifts must have left a sour taste in her mouth.

The babysitter, a kindly, bland-sounding woman, prepared their meals: whatever Lena wanted, up to and including large ice-cream sundaes, chocolate layer cake, and piles of frosted cookies. For exercise she was taken to the indoor hotel pool, which, to hear Lena tell it, was always deserted, except for the babysitter and her. She liked the hot tub, which kids weren't allowed to go in: she had received the babysitter's special permission.

She watched a lot of TV.

Now that she's back I can stand to hear about it, I want to know every detail she imparts. Her experience has taken her sense of security and consistency from her—her exuberance has been curtailed. She doesn't sob or clutch at me, but she moves more cautiously than she used to, she's more measured.

One afternoon a guest checked in—a tired man from Quebec who didn't appear to hear any voices; he was so tired he barely even heard ours—and Don asked if she wanted to offer him a tour. She was polite and dutiful, mainly, I think, to protect Don's feelings. She didn't want to seem ungrateful. Yet the tour was subdued. She skipped the ice machine entirely.

I'm so angry at Ned for taking it from her, that free, unreasonable joy that was her greatest possession.

SO MY FEAR
has turned mostly to anger, which is much easier to live with—I see now why it's popular.

But I continue to need distraction so to expend my nervous energy, maybe dispel the rage, I scroll and scroll and click and click once she's tucked in at night.

I've been going to the meetings faithfully, knowing we're leaving, trying to absorb as much as I can before I say goodbye to this strange circle. I can't take Lena with me to the meetings and there's no one I trust to watch her when I'm occupied except Will, so I've been vague about the meetings, implying only that they're about “recovery”—my own therapy, as she has hers. Fifteen minutes before they start I drop Lena at the library.

I've been trying to learn if anything unites the motel guests beyond the fact of having heard—whether, for instance, a message was conveyed to anyone. For me there hadn't seemed to be a message, as I've written, for me the voice had been like weather, but I shared Navid's questions, we all did: they were basic. I wanted to know if the voice had carried portents for others—if they'd felt like the Maid of Orleans, if any had believed they were receiving instructions or prophecies. It was a whale that spoke to Big Linda; well, whales have often figured in myths and stories. It seems well within the standard imaginative canon.

BOOK: Sweet Lamb of Heaven
10.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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