Read The Cave Painter & The Woodcutter Online
Authors: Don Hannah
Tags: #Solo, #Don Hannah, #family, #memories, #printmaker, #art, #loss, #relastionships, #forgiveness
He said, “It's up to you. But I'll do whatever I can.”
And, for a considerable length of time, he did, and would have continued to do so.
If he hadn't fallen in love with Cal when Ryan was in grade twoâ“This is it, Di, the Great Love of my life”âif he hadn't moved to Vancouver to be with him, if Cal hadn't gone back to his Mormon ex-wife in Calgary, if Simon hadn't gotten AIDS and come back to Ryan and me to die.
It almost worked.
It worked there for a while.
It worked as much as anything else that our fucking generation was so hot about.
We are stardust. We are golden. Jesus. Woodstock. Fuck.
The romantic light has gone. She is standing.
Now, I knew I'd never get away with a story like that at Ryan's wedding. That's not the kind of story you can share with the folks at the Mount Zion Newly Reformed Church of God in Christ.
The sense of something looming behind her.
Oh, his death, oh the misery of his death. The first death where I was there, where I was holding someone, holding his hand, and Ryan was there, tooâ
“Simon's not going to die, is he?”
“Yes, Ry, he's going to die.”
“Shouldn't he be in the hospital?”
“They can't make him better, and he loves us and came home to us.”
“Can he hear us?”
“He knows we're here.”
But did you? At that point, was that as big a lie as “He'll be in Heaven soon and watching over us”? Those last days, you were a skeleton on the bed, nothing but bones held together by skin that was falling apart. The only sound a death rattle. When you stopped talking, stopped making Ryan laugh, he got scared. He was still mad at you for Cal, for leaving, but we three were there together in our house. And there was a week, before things took a turn for the worse, when we were very happy.
Steph and Mom both came, you rallied, rallied so magnificently that all of us thought, “Oh, well, maybe, maybe there will be some sort of miracle.”
Then you went blind, and everything after that was hell.
The looming figure fades. There is, for the first time, the sense that she might be in a room in a house.
In Jericho, neolithic Jericho, nine thousand years ago, or more, they took the skulls of their dead and modelled faces on them with plaster. They used cowrie shells for eyes. I started doing those drawings after you died. One day my dealer phoned from the gallery and said, “I just sold one of your Jericho drawings to a writer who'd really like to meet you.”
And there he was. Pete.
With his dark hair, and his dark eyes, and the little mole on the edge of his lip. And a book about archaeology and the creation of gods.
“This is it, Simon, the love of my life. He's been to Jericho, worked on a dig there when he was young. He's researching a piece called âThe Parking Lot on Top of the Lascaux Cave.' He fell in love with my work, then he fell in love with me. He loves Peggy Lee as much as we do! Andâbonus!âhe's handsome!”
I know that you and Pete would've liked each other. And Pete tried very hard with Ryan, he did. Teaching him to drive, helping him with homework and all those late-night conversations, the questions about religion, about who wrote the books of Moses, about the flood and Noah and Gilgamesh, about neolithic Israel andâ
How could Ryan turn on us all? How could he marry into a family that is so damn, soâ
I mean, all of that “we don't hate the sinner, we hate the sin” business! Sin! Jesus. How could our son believe in sin?
At Ryan's wedding, there were so many things I wanted to say.
“Simon loved you so much. Elaine's family should know a bit about him.”
“I want this to be Elaine's day,” Ryan said, and so I wasn't allowed to say anything.
And on Elaine's Day, which is ostentatious and liquor-free, for everyone except my sister, Steph decides to make amends for all the childhood years when she had ratted me out or teased me. Steph decides that I am being wronged and that she will take a stand on my behalf.
We'd almost made it through the damn thing. The bride and groom had already left, I thought we were home free. But then Steph overhears Ryan's new sister-in-law talking about government subsidies for the arts. “At times like these, we should only support what's reallyreally useful.”
“So you don't think the arts are useful?” says Steph.
“I imagine that certain things are quite enjoyable for some people, but how much of it is actually necessary?” And then, “After all, we can't get government support for all the work we do at Right to Life.”
And Pete says, “I think we should get your mother back to the hotel.”
And Steph says, “You want to know what I think contributes little that's âreallyreally useful'?”
And I think, “Oh Jesus no.”
And Miss Prissy Pants goes, “And what would that be?”
“People who sanctimoniously impose their beliefs on others.”
“Meaning?”
“Meaning, people who oppose women's health issues, who preach abstinence, who talk endlessly about the sanctity of heterosexual marriage as if Jesus Christ had come back from the dead solely to support it, and then think nothing of spending twenty-five hundred dollars on a white wedding dress so that we can all pretend that a young woman who we all know to be three months' pregnant is still a virgin!”
Thanks, Steph.
Thanks for that.
She's poking around again. She will find a few unetched copper plates.
I gave them a drawing. When they got married. Pete and I gave them money, of course, and Grammy's silver, but I wanted to give them something from me. One of the Jericho drawingsâcowrie-shell eyes.
Something else for Elaine to stick in that box marked “Not In My House.”
A small sample of what she does have in her house.
The laminated poster in the guest room. It's a picture of the top of a table, and on the table, a piece of yellowing parchment with curled edges, as if it were a Ye Oldie type note that God has left in his kitchen. It reads, “Dear Son, I have a job for you. All you will need are these. Love Dad.”
And sitting on the parchment are a big ugly mallet and three crucifixion nails.
It's hanging on the wall at the foot of the guest bed so it's the last thing you see at night, and the first in the morning.
“All you will need are these. Love Dad.”
Pete and I just stared at it, stunned, the both of us. I go, “How is this possible? I mean, it's sadistic and stupid and cute all at the same time.”
Pete says, “I couldn't feel more like an unwanted Jew if I was staying at the Taliban Inn.”
She puts the plates on the table.
I once showed Elaine a book of photos of the paintings from Lascaux. I was trying to make her understand why what was happening to that cave had me upset. The images meant nothing to her. The great bulls, the swimming deer. She was sitting at the table, leafing through the book, one beautiful image after another passing meaninglessly before her eyes. Then she closed it, kind of shrugged apologetically, “I really don't understand modern art.”
She is looking about. She sees a can of Silvo and goes to pick it up. Stops.
Not all that long after the war, seventeen hundred people are tromping through the cave every day. But, fairly soon, it becomes obvious that this parade of carbon dioxide is probably what's creating the mould that's creeping over the animals on the walls, so, after a couple of decades, access is restricted.
But the town of Lascaux suddenly can't live without that new tourist money. So they build a duplicate cave next door, a plastic replica, and then they pave over the top of the real cave so the tourists will have some place to park their damn cars.
And the real Lascaux, with its hot asphalt roof, what do they do with the poor, sick cave? Seal it off from the rest of the world, install air conditioning, and so the cave itself stops breathing, Lascaux stops being a living thing. It's not a cave anymore, it's more like a climate-controlled building where you can't open the windows. It's like the hospital where Steph went for knee surgery, this sick building that recirculates its own dead air. Poor Steph is suddenly sick with some strange illness. “We have no idea what happened to your sister, she seemed fine last night.” And then she's sicker, and thenâ¦
DIANNE is alone in the darkness.
And then she's dead. Suddenly she's dead.
She didn't even take the surgery all that seriously. But then, it wasn't the surgery that was the problem: it was the hospital itself, the fucking building. The week before, we were in her garden, she was hobbling around with a crutch, “It'll be good to get back to normal,” she said. And then she was dead.
And I just keep thinking about the time we made guitars out of cardboard boxes, Steph and me, and called ourselves the Beatlemaniacs, and practised lip-synching, “I Want To Hold Your Hand” and “Do You Want To Know A Secret,” and we both wanted to be John but I won 'cause I was bossier. And while I cry, Pete holds me. He's so tender, and so great to Mom through it all, poor Mom, who was just starting to enter her bewilderment.
Ryan and Elaine sent me this sympathy card. “Jesus embraces you in your sorrow,” it says, “Blessed reunions in Heaven tomorrow.”
“Here's comfort,” I said, holding it out to Pete.
“A card?” he says. “His only aunt dies and he sends you a card? He better be a helluva lot more thoughtful to your mother.”
She goes to the table and begins to clean the copper plates.
But Ryan has always been kind to Mom. No matter where he was with me or Steph, he has always, always been wonderful to his grandmother. He was so helpful after she moved up here to be nearer to us. The bad winterâthe winter he was seventeen and Pete and I could do nothing right, nothingâwhen he moved into Mom's apartment, he was polite as could beâdidn't play that crappy Christian rock full tilt at her place. And she adored him, her only grandchild. Elaine, she wasn't so wild over. “It's a phase,” she said, “all this Jesus business, he'll grow out of it.” But when he didn't, she was bigger than we were. When she went to visit the newlyweds, it's off with them to church. Then, reading Bible stories to her great-granddaughters. And when the girls were older, she loved being part of their home school, helping Elaine teach them letters and numbers. She doted on them until she started to get confused, calling them Dianne and Stephanie instead of Martha and Maggie. Started calling Ryan “Ross” as if he were no longer her grandson, but the brother who had died while she was still back in New Brunswick. She moved out of chronological time.
And she was leaving the burners on, and forgetting that she didn't live in New Brunswick anymore. She got lost on her own street. Then it's all downhill; she's incontinent and forgetting to get dressed and eating with her fingers and saying, “Can you tell me what my name is? I can't seem to remember. I know I have a name, don't I?”
“It's just you and me now,” I tell Pete. “Nearly everybody else appears to be either crazy or dead.”
And he says, “Don't you long for the good old days when it was God who was dead?”
“It's so unfair,” I say. “I'm starting to feel like Job. I don't see how things could get much worse.”
Which was a stupid thing to say 'cause things can always get worse; they can always get lots worse.
Especially when people start sending you the words of Christ written in red.
She has picked up some of the torn, crumpled Bible pages to polish the plates.
When we all first saw Marthaâtiny, hours oldâSteph said it first: “She looks like Dad,” and we were so delighted, like it was some kind of miraculous trick. As if our genes were trumping Elaine's, somehow, and this baby was mostly from our side.
But then, before her first birthday, things become complicated because somehow she also seems to look like Elaine's mother. Everyone on their side says so. How can that be? I've seen picturesâthe woman looked like a moose. Is it because we all need this baby to connect the living and the dead?
And after Steph died and little Maggie was born, there was my sister, magically brought back. And I suppose this is how reincarnation first got started, “Oh look, she's come back to us from the dead. I'd know those eyes of hers anywhere.”
Now that it's happened, I can't imagine not being a grandmother. I'm determined to make this work. I'm not thrilled that Ryan's bought into Elaine's idea of religion, but who am I to judge? I say to Pete, “I have to work within all of that. When I go visit, it won't kill me to go to church every now and then.”
“Okay,” he says. “We'll do it.” He calls Maggie and Martha his M&Ms, “How are my sweet little M&Ms?”
The first time we went, the minister greets us from the pulpit, which I could have done without, but the welcome was genuine. It's clear that everyone there adores Ryan. “You must be so proud of your son,” people say to me over and over. I'm told how he works tirelessly on committees, how he organizes things for kids, he's in charge of fundraising for a new roof, he's straightened out the books, he's just a godsend.
He belongs there. Like Dad at the Lions Club. He's so content. He and Elaine seem so content.
He has a wonderful singing voice. I'm standing beside him, we're all singing “What a Friend We Have In Jesus,” and I hadn't heard him sing since his voice broke. He and Simon used to sing. “Baby Beluga” and “Que Sera, Sera” and “Fever” and “Stormy Weather.” Instead of “gloom and misery” they used to sing “booze and grizzlies everywhere, stormy weather.”
And so things seemed to be going along okay. I mean, Steph was dead and Mom was losing her mind, but Pete and I were great, and we had found a way to work things out with Ryan and his family. I'd found a way to be a grandmother.