Read Call It Sleep Online

Authors: Henry Roth

Call It Sleep (18 page)

At bed-time, his mind seemed strangely calm, reposed without being resolved, inert after long discord. Beneath the film of apathy, the events of yesterday ruffled the surface only rarely, like the tardy infrequent wreckage of a ship long sunken. They would never be answered these questions of why his mother had let Luter do what Annie had tried to do; why she hadn't run away the second time as she had the first; why she hadn't told his father; or had she; or didn't he care. Nor would there ever be the equilibrium again between his knowing what she had done and her unawareness that he knew; her unawareness of what he had done with Annie, of why he had run away; his father's unawareness of every thing. They would never be solved, never be answered. No one would say anything, no one dared, no one could. Just don't believe, don't believe, never. But when would that queer weight, that odd something lodged in his bosom, that was so spiny, ramified, reminding, when would that vanish? Tomorrow, maybe? Maybe tomorrow.

Tomorrow came. Monday. The cold of the day before had either been imaginary or been thrown off. David was sent to school. Once out of the house, he walked guardedly, even taking a new route to avoid meeting Annie or Yussie. In the morning, he succeeded and again at noon, but when school was out for the day, they ran into him as he came out into the open of the crossing. David, himself, shrank away when they hailed him, but they on the other hand seemed to have forgotten all hostilities. Instead they were merely curious.

“W'od id 'ey do t'yuh in de polliss station?” Yussie engaged his arm to keep him in step with the slower limping Annie.

“Nutt'n'!” He shook him off sullenly. “Lemme go!”

“Hey, yuh mad?” Yussie looked surprised.

“Yea, I'm mad! I'll never get glad!”

“He's mad, Annie!”

“Nisht gefiddled!” she said spitefully. “Pooh! Who wants yuh!”

“Cry baby!” said Yussie disdainfully.

But David was already hurrying off.

At home, he could not help but observe in his mother's actions a concealed nervousness, an irresolution as if under the strain of waiting. Unlike the fluent, methodical way in which she habitually moved about the kitchen, her manner now was disjointed, uncertain. In the midst of doing something or of saying something, she would suddenly utter a curious, suppressed exclamation like a sudden groan of dismay, or lift her hand in an obscure and hopeless gesture, or open her eyes as though staring at perplexity and brush back her hair. Everything she did seemed insecure and unfinished. She went from the sink to the window and left the water running and then remembering it was an odd overhastiness, turned, missed the handkerchief she was pegging to the clothesline and let it fall into the yard. A few minutes later, separating the yolks from the whites of the eggs to make the thick yellow pancakes that were to go with the soup, she cut the film of the yolk with eggshell, lost it in the whites. She stamped her foot, chirped with annoyance and brushed back her hair.

“I'm like my father,” she exclaimed suddenly. “Vexation makes my scalp itch! Today you can learn what kind of a woman not to marry.”

Several times during the afternoon, David had been on the point of asking her whether Luter were coming for supper. But something always checked him and he never formed the question.

To avoid the strange emotion, that his mother's behavior aroused in him, he would have gone downstairs again, even at the risk of encountering Annie or Yussie, but there again, he divined how impatient she would be if he asked her to wait in the hallway. She had seemed cross when he called to her frantically after his meeting with them at three. As she offered no objections he remained indoors and occupied himself in a score of ways—now frightening himself by making faces at the pier glass, now staring out of the window, now fingering the haze of breath upon it, now crawling under beds, now scribbling. He spent an hour tying himself to the bed post with a bit of washline and attempting to escape, and another constructing strange devices with his trinkets. He tried to play the four-handed game of manipulating patterns out of a double string with two hands and the leg of a chair. It was difficult, the old patterns slipped before they were clinched, ended in a snarl. The mind too was tangled, apprehensive, pent-up.

Meanwhile he had observed that his mother's nervousness was increasing. She seemed neither able to divert her mind nor complete any task other than was absolutely necessary. She had begun to sew the new linen she had bought to make pillow-cases with and had ended by ripping out the thread and throwing the cloth back into the drawer with a harassed cry. “God knows why I can't make these stitches any shorter! Six to a yard almost! They'd have parted with a shroud's wear!” And then later, gave up the attempt to thread a cupful of large red beads and dropped them into the cup again and shut her eyes. The newspaper received only a worried glance and was folded up again and dropped in her lap. After which, she sat for such a long time staring at him, that David's uneasiness grew intolerable. His eyes fluttered hurriedly about the room, searching for something that might distract the fixity of that stare. And grazing the coal sack beside the stove, the seams of the ceiling, the passover dishes on top of the china closet, sink legs, garbage pail, doorhinges, chandelier, lighted on the mantle burning with its soft, bluish flame.

“Mama!” He made no attempt to conceal the anxiety in his voice.

Her lids flickered. She who was always near him in spirit, now seemed hardly aware. “What?”

“Why does that light—that light in the mantle stay inside? In the mantle?”

She looked up, combed her upper lip with her teeth a moment. “That's because there are great brains in the world.”

“But it breaks all up,” he urged her attention closer. “All up if you—if you even just blow.”

“Yes.”

“It doesn't burn even when you light it?”

“No.” The dull remote tone never left her voice—as if speech were mechanical, forced.

“Why?” He demanded desperately. “Why doesn't it?”

“Doesn't what? I don't know.” She rose, shivered suddenly. “As though it pierced the marrow! Is it cold in here? Or where I sit? Chill?” And stared at the stove, then followed her gaze after a long pause as if her very thought were delayed, and picked up the poker.

“I don't feel cold.” David reminded her sullenly.

But she hadn't heard him. Instead her eyes had swerved from his face to the wall and she stood as if listening beyond him, as if she had heard a sound in the hallway outside. No one. She shook her head. And still with the poker in one hand, lifted the other to adjust the gas-cock under the mantle-light—

“Ach!” Exasperatedly she flung her hand down to her side. “Where are my senses? What am I doing?” She crouched down before the stove, buried the poker into the ashes with a provoked stab. “Have you ever seen your mother so mixed? So lost? God have mercy, my wits are milling! Ach! I go here and I'm there! I go there and I'm here. And of a sudden I'm nowhere.” She lifted the stove lid, threw a shovelful of coal into the red pit. “David darling, you were saying—?” Her voice had become solicitous, penitent. She smiled. “You were saying what? Light? Why what?”

Heartened by her new interest, he began again eagerly. “What makes it burn?”

“The gas? Gas of course.”

“Why?”

“One lights it—with a match. And then—Er. And then—” As abruptly as her mood had changed a moment ago, it reverted again. That odd look of strain spindled the corners of her eyes, her face resumed that hunted, alert look. “And then one turns—the—the—”. She broke off. “Only a moment, darling! I'm going into the front room.”

That was the end! He wasn't going to talk to her any more! He wasn't going to ask her anything. No, even if she talked to him, he wouldn't answer. Sullenly, he slumped down into his chair and sullenly watched her hurry up the steps into darkness … heard the window slide open, softly, cautiously … and then close again … She came down.

“Not even the cold air can rouse me.” Her fingers drummed nervously on the ridge of a chair. “Nothing does any good. My head is—Oh, I'm sorry, David, beloved! I'm sorry! I didn't mean to run off in the middle of answering you.” She came over, bent down and kissed him. “Do you forgive me?”

Unappeased, he regarded her in steady silence.

“Offended? I shan't do it again! I promise!” Where the broad waxen plane of her cheeks curved into the chin, small dents of contrition appeared—the very furthest away a smile could get from the distracted brown eyes, the creased brow. She shook herself. “Er … Burns, you said. Burns! Everything burns! Yes! Or almost. Kerosene, coal, wood, candles, paper, almost everything. And so gas—at least I think so. Er … And so gas, you see? They keep it in great vats, you know. Some tall—like the ash-cans out in the street, some short, like drums, only bigger. I don't understand them.”

“But mama!” He wasn't going to permit her to pause; she would fade back into her old mood if he did. “Mama! Water doesn't burn when you throw a match in a puddle.”

“Puttle?” she repeated. “What is puttle? Your Yiddish is more than one-half English now. I'm being left behind.”

“Puddle. It's water—in the street—when it rains sometimes.”

“Oh! Water. No, tears sometimes—No! You're right. Water doesn't burn.”

“Is there always a—something burning—when it's light—like that!”

“Yes I think so. When I was a girl, the goyim built an
‘altar'
near a town some distance from Veljish because two peasants saw a light among the trees—yet nothing burning.”

“What's a—what you said? Altar?” It was his turn to be puzzled. “Means old man?”

“No!” She laughed shortly. “An altar is a broad stone—about so high.” Her downturned palms impatiently leveled the air at bosom's height. “They have a flat top. So. And because the ground was holy, they fenced it in.”

“Because why? They saw a light and—and nothing burned? So that was holy?”

“Yes. So it pleased them to say. I suppose that was because Moses too saw a tree on fire that didn't burn. And there the gound was also holy.”

“Oh.”

“Yes. And when you begin going to cheder you'll know more about these things than I do.” She stopped pacing, moved abruptly toward the china-closet. “I think I'll set the table—do something.”

“Was it holy?” He drew her on.

“What? The light the peasants saw? Ach, nonsense! My father said that the truth was an old Jewess had been walking along the road through the woods. Where she was coming from I don't know—”

She paused again. Three plates had been taken from the china closet and set on the table. The fourth, still in her hand, kept fluttering back and forth as though it were impossible for her to decide whether to set it on the table or to replace it on the stack she had taken it from. Finally, with a throaty exclamation, she set it on the table—before the chair on which Luter usually sat.

“Yes! So! Oh!” Her head went back as if returning thought were an impact. “Yes. Coming home, she was. Without doubt. And on the way, dusk overtook her. Yes. It was Friday. Now it chanced that she had candles with her—or so my father said, though he never said why. Perhaps she foresaw that she would be delayed. There's no telling what women will do when they're pious.” Her lips pressed together and she reddened ever so faintly setting the clinking silverware beside Luter's plate. “She foresaw. Let us say, she foresaw. And with night coming on, she stopped beside the road and lit the candles and prayed over them as you've seen me pray. And having prayed, went on, leaving them lit—a Jew may not tamper with the candles once they're burning and the prayer said. Then these peasants came along at night. And devout as she or more perhaps—” With a slight, spattering sound from the end of her lip, one cheek eddied in; she set the cup and saucer above Luter's plate. “And perhaps drunk or surely dull-witted, saw the light in the woods—so my father said—and ran back and roused the village. They saw it and saw it vanish, and approaching, found nothing, heard nothing, only the sound of the woods. What more could they want? Priests came and high priests and consecrated the place.” Her eyes, momentarily meditative, kindled again, whisked to the door. She was listening again.

“Didn't the candles leave another candle?” David strove to force her attention back again. “Like our candles? It's water and candles.”

She shrugged impatiently. “Who bothered to look? The ground was holy; people soon remembered having seen angels; and there's an end. And why hunt for candle-drippings. The altar did the village a mass of good.”

“How?”

“People, benighted ones, they came from all over Austria. They brought their sick, their maimed. They asked aid, they prayed for the dead and for better fortune. And they still do. And—” She paused, almost losing the thread, but regained it with a jolt. “While they were there, they had to eat, they had to buy things, they had to sleep somewhere. Fear not, those little candles kindled the day for the storekeepers in Lagronow. You see?”

“Yes, mama.”

“So much did they benefit Lagronow that Jews, merchants, in other villages also left a burning candle here or there. It never succeeded again.”

“But that wasn't a real one,” he reminded her. “That wasn't a real light. And—and without burning. But Moses, he—”

“Sh!” Sudden and sharp her warning.

David listened: The quick creak of the outer doorway. The slow and heavy footfall, carpet-muffled. That was his father's way, a thrust of impatience followed by deliberation.

His mother, looking very pale, had opened the door a crack and stood there with one ear pressed against it. No sound of voices drifted up, no interweaving of a second footfall. She drew back, staring, shut the door carefully, sighed, but whether out of relief or apprehension, there was no telling, then stood attentive, waiting for him to enter.

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