True (21 page)

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Authors: Riikka Pulkkinen

Tags: #Cancer - Patients - Fiction., #Family secrets - Fiction.

BOOK: True
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THE HOTEL IS
more Parisian than any postcard sent from Paris. Narrow hallways, little elevators, steep stairs, cast iron railings outside the windows. The walls tempt us to tenderness, we should be sweating against each other's skin, but we go to sleep like brother and sister. I can't sleep. The room is an abyss.

I get up during the night, go to the toilet, can't find the light switch. I do my business in the dark. When I open the door, I run into him. He's a shadow—I don't recognize him at first.

I yell. My voice shakes the window on its hinges. He takes hold of my shout as if it were a request and takes me in his arms.

“Shhh. It's all right. Everything's all right,” he says.

I'm trembling, can't stop shaking. “You hate me.”

“No.”

“You do, I can see it.”

“I don't hate you. I love you.”

“That's just a word.”

“But it's still true.”

In the morning he's quiet again, as if he's made of wood. He wants to meet some friends alone, to explain to them who I am before they meet me. I'm left with my anger in the hotel room and muster some curiosity to replace it: I'll go out alone.

I spend the day wandering in a museum. I find a painting that I linger over for an hour. It's a Rembrandt. The woman seems to be floating toward me. Her skin glows. No one knows anything about her hopes, her joys, her affections, but they still light up her face as if a lamp were burning inside her.

I go to the movies. I see a film about some people on the run from professional killers who escape from Paris to the south and end up in all sorts of difficulties. The man in the movie doesn't understand the woman, he says that all he sees is an image. Maybe the woman doesn't even want to be understood. Sometimes she goes dancing, sometimes she commits crimes. Sometimes she just saunters around on the shore with nothing to do. She wants to dance and doesn't care about anything else. She just wants to live, but the man doesn't understand that. She's amazed that people in photographs are always thinking unknown thoughts, about the past, the future, basketball, anything, and the people who look at the pictures will never know anything about those thoughts.

I think about Rembrandt's woman at the Louvre, about all that's inside her that I'll never know. I think about the people in all the pictures, in all the paintings in the world. A whole world behind their smiling faces! The crust of bread they ate that morning! A sneeze! A confession of love waiting to be spoken!

After the movie I take the metro north. A smell of toasted sugar and a swirl of stuffy air in the underground tosses me onto terra firma beside a white church. Suddenly the world is filled with song, steam, and rays of sunlight, the shouts and smiles of street musicians.

Men yell after me, a child runs toward me and offers me a piece of her bagel. The church is ridiculous, pompous, shameless. But I don't want a sanctuary, I want the world—splashes on the street corner and smoke curling on the horizon.

I go up some stairs and walk along a little side street and get lost. I arrive at a square filled with a fragile little park. It covers its melancholy in bright colors that are repainted every spring. There's a Ferris wheel, a carousel, and a row of little elephants going around and around in a circle forever. I pay a long-faced man with a billed cap and gray stubble a franc to rent binoculars and climb into a bright green basket. It rises up into the air. Suddenly I have the whole city, the meandering streets and the tower rising up in the middle of it all. People are bustling far below, crying, laughing, loving and betraying each other, making up, eating a meal.

I could live behind one of those windows. I have the language. No one here would smell the barn on my fingers. I could finally learn to pronounce
aujourd'hui
so that not one syllable would sound like I spent my summers and winters next to a pine forest. I would become a woman of today. Yesterday would become a word I pronounced without nostalgia.

THERE'S A MESSAGE
for me at the hotel reception, the clerk hands the note to me ceremoniously, like a jewel. It's an address and an apology. Under the name it says, Will you come?

I go as if I'm a stranger. Paris has wrapped itself around my gestures, the pine woods are just a memory. His friend's art opening is over, and the celebration reaches all the way to the ceiling. Someone has climbed up on the table, someone else is playing the piano, although they don't know how.

He comes over to me. Hands in his pockets, not hesitating but testing the climate.

“So,” he says.

“So.”

“Do you know anyone here?”

“One person. He's an artist. You know the type.”

He sizes me up. This is the moment when he realizes that he doesn't really know what I'm thinking. The thought rises up inside him, stays in his mind, off to one side, like a persistent insect. I might hate him. How would he know if I hated him more than I love him?

He asks, not seriously, just challenging me to a game: “And what's your opinion of him?”

I speak carelessly, as if I'm discussing the endive: “Somebody said that I love him, but that was an exaggeration, because he keeps my heart in a metal box among the dust and the pocket change.”

“A metal box? What an idiot. Someone ought to teach him a lesson.”

“I already hired a few roughnecks I met on the Left Bank, under a bridge. They'll be here at any moment. I sold our whole love story to a street musician in Montmartre for a franc. He's singing it to the tourists for small change now. He gets some of the details wrong—you wouldn't believe the tasteless things he throws in. As lightweight as the bread around here—airy and meaningless.”

He opens his hand in a gesture of surrender. “Then he must have lost the game, this artist.”

I hesitate over my answer. “Not completely,” I say finally. “There's one thing that separates him from the others. He can see me. He can see me better than anyone else can.”

I'm introduced to the others. I meet René and his wife Yvette. Julien and Oscar, who think artists should be involved in politics, preferably by going wild and throwing their clothes in the corner and coating themselves with blood, or why not semen?

Evá
,
they call me, and I like the sound of it. Suddenly our evening is complete. We move our tables and chairs aside and the restaurateur carries a record player out to a side table. We dance.

Finally, when they can't dance any longer, I dance alone. I carry all of Paris in my arms, lift it into the air like a globe and don't let it fall. I stretch out one hand and let my skirt rise halfway up my thighs.

He's thinking that this is how he'll see me if this thing ever ends. The gentle curve of the soles of my feet at this moment, as the balls of my feet lightly brush the floor and then lift into the air until I look like I'm floating. My neck that sparkles, my smile intended for the whole town.

When night comes creeping into the evening and I've danced until my feet hurt, I sit at the table and listen to René say to him: “Your new woman is exquisite.”

He nods, smiles. He doesn't deny it. And he doesn't deny that I'm his. Maybe because René said it in French:
ta femme.

They start to talk about art. I hear someone toss out a pronouncement of what should be done, how the world should create itself again. Maybe it's René or the eager Oscar who seems to have a firm idea about reality: “Not just one image, but many overlapping ones. You have to account for all the layers of reality. Shadows, sadness, seriousness, along with happiness. And don't forget cruelty, comedy, and banalities. No one can afford to fall into the trap of clearly delineated images anymore. Reproduction is the key word. Copy, copy, copy, that's what it's all about. Icons into the Dumpster, and stacks of copies in their place.”

Someone asks, “Do you intend to paint Evá? Do you have any plans to do it?”

I don't see his expression when he answers but I can hear the tone of his voice. There's pride in it, even tenderness.

“Eeva can tell us her hues herself.”

THE MORNING AFTER
the party we walk along the paths that the street sweeper opens up. We come into each other's space. There's no time, no distance between our skins. I come into his arms, he puts his hands on my buttocks. He slides a finger inside me. He opens me completely, that little notch inside me. He works the edge of his hand into the angle of my vulva and for a moment I'm nothing but a rising sound, a bright whirl that rushes from between my legs to the edge of my scalp.

Is it him or me? Do I make him see worlds that he's only seen from outside before, standing at the threshold? Or is he making me real?

I lower onto him, he's deep inside me, the city shelters us. Sometimes we feel like all this is just a dream. But in this city, just now starting to talk about change—a city that in three years' time will shake up the whole world—right now, we are made of dreams and dreams are made of us.

By wrapping ourselves in dreams, we make each other real.

A
FTER THE TRIP
he invents a jealousy. He starts to ask me about my past. When Elsa's in town and I'm staying on Liisankatu he calls me in the evening to make sure I'm at home. He asks me about my days as if he wants me to give him a report.

“What did you do?”

“What do you mean?”

“Tell me about your day.”

“I went to class, sat in the library, then went for a walk with a friend.”

“Who?”

I drag out my answer, wanting to bring him to the brink. There he is, on his knees, pleading, and I enjoy it without knowing why. I drop a picture in front of his eyes for him to latch onto: “I would have liked to go for a walk with you. I was thinking about you.”

“Who did you go with?”

“Kerttu.”

He's quiet, weighing my answer, wondering whether he can trust me.

“Can I see you?” he asks. “Can we meet tomorrow?”

“Maybe.”

I know this game.

“OK,” I say finally. “Let's meet tomorrow.”

He comes to my house the next day, we close the door, and for a brief time it's like the world doesn't exist.

IN MAY HE
holds a book he's found on the table in his hand like it's a dangerous animal that he's rendered unconscious. He's standing in the living room door with a remarkable look on his face, testy and frightened like a little boy who's done something wrong but doesn't know who he's done it to.

I'm on the floor playing with the little girl, telling her what to do, when he asks his question.

“Who gave you this book? Your boyfriend?”

I look at him and smile as if I don't understand. My smile betrays me. The book is from a boy I met at the university. He walked me home. He gave me the book and wrote a dedication on the inside cover. Why did I leave it lying on the table, right under his nose? Was it so he would pick it up and see a strange name that would taunt him? That's exactly why. Exactly.

“I want you out of here,” he says calmly. “Out.”

“What? I can't go anywhere.”

The little girl looks at her father, frightened. Then at me. The man yells “Out!” and I get up. The little girl runs into her room. I see her looking at us from the doorway, like a bird that's fluttered up to a branch for safety. He pushes me into the apartment foyer.

“No. I'm not going,” I say.

“Get out of here.”

“I've never even met him.”

“Out.”

He pushes me out into the hallway. I laugh, flabbergasted. I realize that there's nothing I can do or say to make this strange performance end. When he's got me out the door and into the hallway his anger subsides and he looks surprised at what he's done, because now I'm crying. He can't back down now. He decides to stay angry, because the fight has to be gone through all the way to the end, each sentence hanging in the air must be plucked, every cruel word must be thrown like a little dagger.

“Go to his house, if that's what you want.”

“There is no one.”

“You're lying. I saw the name.”

I sit in the stairwell for half an hour. The woman who lives next door walks by and says hello. She's heard the fight, knows exactly what's going on. But she tells me to have a good day and walks on.

I see the end. I sit on the steps, unable to get up and leave, not daring to ring the doorbell, and I see the end. I can't let myself see it yet, but I know that's it's in exactly this kind of hollowness.

He opens the door when the half hour is over, apologizes, and I don't know what to do but go in and shape myself to fit his apology. He takes me in his arms. We stand in the foyer, silent. He strokes my back, I fit myself in against his neck.

We already have the complicated rituals of fighting and making up of a man and wife. As he holds me and we construct our mutual consolation he thinks that our rituals are surprisingly similar to the ones he and Elsa have. The same role is reserved for him with both of us, first to be cruel and then, at the end of the argument, tender.

Elsa is quicker to argue than I am. She has more complicated sarcasms and hurtful clear-sightedness. She knows every part of him and uses the knowledge ruthlessly when they fight.

But he and I are starting to get good at it, too.

I can see all of his weakness at these moments. The anger that will later twine itself into me in an aching knot and make me imagine the various ways I can humiliate him begins in these rituals after an argument, which in those first years still ended with no boundary between my skin and his.

But I've already learned his pettiness. I make a note of his every physical and personal failing and take pleasure in their variety.

LATER ON THE
little girl comes to sit in my lap. I'm at the kitchen table, hours after the argument, but she still remembers it.

“Are you going to go away? Out in the hallway?”

“No, honey.”

“Can I sit in your lap?”

She looks at me pleadingly, and it's at that moment that a feeling takes root in her that will later define her. Gradually, over the decades, scenes from this shadow theater of her childhood will shape her into a worrier, someone who covers her uncertainty with meticulousness and strong opinions and doesn't know how to show her husband her need for affection except by getting sick. She'll get a fever when her boss reprimands her at work. When her daughters confront her with unreasonable accusations, as daughters always do, she'll get a migraine. She'll lie in her room in the dark and the light coming in from between the drapes will make her retch.

When she gets sick, her husband's patient, uncomplicated tenderness will astonish her. He'll peek in the door and ask her what she would like, what he should be, how he should help her. It will make her cry. Actually, she'll be crying because she's so incomprehensibly lucky to have found this man who overcame gravity by eating an orange.

Bring some water. And stroke my hair. These are her requests; she'll come no closer to a request in all of her adult life. And her husband will come and stroke her hair, bring her some water, sit beside her and rub her back with steady strokes. Did something happen with the girls? he'll ask gently. A fight or something?

Mm-hmm, she'll say. He knows her. Her migraines, no matter how genuine and unfeigned, are clever disguises her body devises to allow her to make a request. How lucky she is that she has this husband who loves her, day after day, through the night, through dreamy Sunday afternoons and tense Tuesday evenings. Year after year he peels her patiently to find the child who stood with her doll in the kitchen doorway when she was three years old and asked to be held.

But it's a journey to all of this, a decades-long trek. Right now she's still three years old. Her request is naked and I answer it, taking her in my arms without hesitation.

THAT EVENING HE
wraps his arms around me. Again it's easy for me to believe that it's always been like this. The day's argument is a melancholy gap between us. He tries to close it up with words and caresses. Finally he gets up, sighs, and goes to the window. He takes a cigarette out of his pocket, sits on the windowsill, opens the window. I give in a little, sit up on the bed, and lean my head against the wall.

“You shouldn't put up with this,” he says suddenly. “You should go with him, whoever he is, this other man.”

“Why do you say that? I don't want to.”

For the first time I see pain in his face, the pain I'll learn later.

“This won't end well,” he says. “That's why.”

“Don't say that.”

“You should love someone else.”

“Don't ever say that. Don't ever tell me to love someone else.”

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