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Unlike some others she could name, though, she would have patience. She would hatch once again from her pebbled eggs a brood of quilly young. She would step with dignity among the weeds of the Lily Pond and slay for their sakes a generation of frogs. She would love her current husband, a dear he was, patient and solicitous, a great help with the children. She would not long: longing was fatal.
And as they all set off on the long and dusty road of that year's summer, Alice was brought to bed. She named her third daughter Lucy, though Smoky thought it was too much like the names of her two others, Tacey and Lily, and he knew that he at least would spend the next twenty or thirty years calling each of them by the others' names. "That's all right," Alice said. "This is the last, anyway." But it wasn't. There was still a boy for her to bear, though even Cloud didn't yet know that.
Anyway, if Generation was the thing they wanted, as Sophie had once perceived as she sat huddled and dreaming by the pavilion on the lake, this was a gratifying year for them: after the equinox came with a frost that left the woods dusty and gray but let summer linger, spectral and SO endless that it summoned distrait crocuses from the ground and called the restless souls of Indians from their burial mounds, Sophie had the child which was attributed to Smoky. Compounding confusion, she named her daughter Lilac, because she dreamed that her mother was coming into her room bearing a great branch of it heavy with odorous blue blooms, and awoke then to see her mother come into her room bearing the newborn girl. Tacey and Lily came too, Tacey carrying carefully her three-monthold sister Lucy to see the baby.
"See, Lucy? See the baby? Just like you."
Lily raised herself up on the bed to peer closely into Lilac's face where she lay nestled now against cooing Sophie. "She won't stay long," she said, after studyihg it.
"Lily!" Mom said. "What a terrible thing to say!"
"Well, she won't." She looked to Tacey: "Will she?"
"Nope.;: Tacey s.h.i.+fted Lucy in her arms. "But it's okay. She'll come back. Seeing her grandmother shocked, she said. Oh, don't worry, she's not going to die or anything. She's just not going to stay."
"And she'll come back," Lily said. "Later."
"Why do you think all that?" Sophie asked, not sure she was yet quite in the world again, or hearing what she thought she heard.
The two girls shrugged, at the same time; the same shrug, in fact, a quick lift of shoulders and eyebrows and back again, as at a simple fact. They watched as Mom, shaking her head, helped Sophie induce pink-and-white Lilac to nurse (a delightful, easefully painful feeling) and with her sucking Sophie fell asleep again, dopey with exhaustion and wonderment, and presently so did Lilac, feeling perhaps the same; and though the cord had been cut which joined them, perhaps they dreamed the same dream.
Next morning the stork left the roof of Edgewood and her messy nest. Her children had already flown without farewell or apologya"she expected nonea"and her husband had gone too, hoping they would meet again next spring. She herself had waited only for Lilac's arrival so that she could bring news of ita"she kept her promisesa"and now she flew off in quite a different direction from her family, following her beak, her fanlike wings cupping the autumn dawn and her legs trailing behind like bannerets.
Little, Big Striving like the Meadow Mouse to disbelieve in Winter, Smoky gorged himself on the summer sky, lying late into the night on the ground staring upward, though the month had an R in it and Cloud thought it bad for nerve, bone, and tissue. Odd that the changeful constellations, so mindful of the seasons, should be what he chose of summer to memorize, but the turning of the sky was so slow, and seemed so impossible, that it comforted him. Yet he needed only to look at his watch to see that they fled away south even as the geese did.
On the night Orion rose and Scorpio set, a night as warm almost as August for reasons of the weather's own but in fact by that sign the last night of summer, he and Sophie and Daily Alice lay out in a sheep-shorn meadow on their backs, their heads close together like three eggs in a nest, as pale too as that in the night light. They had their heads together so that when one pointed out a star, the arm he pointed with would be more or less in the other's line of sight; otherwise, they would be all night saying That one, there, where I'm pointing, unable to correct for billions of miles of parallax. Smoky had the star-book open on his lap, and consulted it with a flashlight whose light was masked with red cellophane taken from a Dutch cheese so its bightness wouldn't blind him.
"Camelopardalis," he said, pointing to a dangling necklace in the north, not clear because the horizon's light still diluted it. "That is, the Camelopard."
"And what," Daily Alice asked indulgently, "is a camelopard?"
"A giraffe, in fact," Smoky said. "A camel-leopard. A camel with leopard's spots."
"Why is there a giraffe in heaven?" Sophie asked. "How did it get there?"
"I bet you're not the first to ask that," Smoky said, laughing. "Imagine their surprise when they first looked up over there and said, My G.o.d, what's that giraffe doing up there?"
The menagerie of heaven, racing as from a zoo breakout through the lives of the men and women, G.o.ds and heroes; the band of the Zodiac (that night all their birth-signs were invisible, bearing the sun around the south); the impossible dust of the Milky Way rainbow-wise overarching them; Orion lifting one racing foot over the horizon, following his dog Sirius. They discovered the moment's rising sign. Jupiter burned unwinking in the west. The whole spangled beach-umbrella, fringed with the Tropics, revolved on its bent staff around the North Star, too slowly to be seen, yet steadily.
Smoky, out of his childhood reading, related the interlocking tales told above them. The pictures were so formless and incomplete, and the tales, some at least, so trivial that it seemed to Smoky that it must all be true: Hercules looked so little like himself that the only way anyone could have found him was if he'd got the news about Hercules being up there, and was told where to look. As one tree traces its family back to Daphne but another has to be mere commoner; as only the odd flower, mountain, fact gets to have divine ancestry, so Ca.s.siopeia of all people is brilliantly asterized, or her chair rather, as though by accident; and somebody else's crown, and another's lyre: the attic of the G.o.ds.
What Sophie wondered, who couldn't make the patterned floor of heaven come out in pictures but lay hypnotized by their nearness, was how it could be that some in heaven were there for reward, and others condemned to it; while still others were there it seemed only to play parts in the dramas of others. It seemed unfair; and yet she couldn't decide whether it was unfair because there they were, stuck forever, who hadn't deserved it; or unfair because, without having earned it, they had been saveda"enthroneda"need not die. She thought of their own tale, they three, permanent as a constellation, strange enough to be remembered forever.
The earth that week was making progress through the discarded tail of a long-pa.s.sed comet, and each night a rain of fragments entered the air and flamed whitely as they burned up. "No bigger than pebbles or pinheads some of them," Smoky said. "It's the air you see lit up."
But this now Sophie could see clearly: these were falling stars. She thought perhaps she could pick one out and watch and see it fall: a momentary bright exhalation, that made her draw breath, her heart filled with infinitude. Would that be a better fate? In the gra.s.s her hand found Smoky's; the other already held her sister's, who pressed it every time brightness fell from the air.
Daily Alice couldn't tell if she felt huge or small. She wondered whether her head were so big as to be able to contain all this starry universe, or whether the universe were so little that it would fit within the compa.s.s of her human head. She alternated between these feelings, expanding and diminis.h.i.+ng. The stars wandered in and out of the vast portals of her eyes, under the immense empty dome of her brow; and then Smoky took her hand and she vanished to a speck, still holding the stars as in a tiny jewel box within her.
So they lay a long time, not caring to talk any more, each dwelling on that odd, physical sensation of ephemeral eternitya"a paradox but undeniably felt; and if the stars had been as near and full of faces as they seemed, they would have looked down and seen those three as a single asterism, a linked wheel against the wheeling dark sky of the meadow.
Solstice Night There was no entrance but a tiny hole at the window corner where the solstice-midnight wind blew in, piling dust on the sill in a little furrow: but that was room enough for them, and they entered there.
There were three then in Sophie's bedroom standing close together, their brown-capped heads consulting, their pale flat faces like little moons.
"See how she sleeps away."
"Yes, and the babe asleep in her arms."
"My, she holds it tight."
"Not so tight."
As one, they drew closer to the tall-bed. Lilac in her mother's arms, in a hooded bunting against the cold, breathed on Sophie's cheek; a drop of wetness was there.
"Well, take it, then."
"Why don't you if you're so anxious."
"Let's all."
Six long white hands went out toward Lilac. "Wait," said one. "Who has the other?"
"You were to bring it."
"Not I."
"Here it is, here." A thing was unfolded from a drawstring bag.
"My. Not very like, is it."
"What's to be done?"
"Breathe on it."
The breathed on it in turns as they held it amidst them. Now and again one looked back at sleeping Lilac. They breathed till the thing amid them was a second Lilac.
"That'll do."
"It's very like."
"Now take the a"
"Wait again." One looked closely at Lilac, drawing back ever so slightly the coverlet. "Look here. She has her little hands tight wound up in her mother's hair."
"Holding fast."
"Take the child, we'll wake the mother."
"These, then." One had drawn out great scissors, which gleamed whitely in the night-light and opened with a faint snicker. "As good as done."
One holding the false Lilac (not asleep but with vacant eyes and unmoving; a night in its mother's arms would cure that) and one reaching ready to take away Sophie's Lilac, and the third with the shears, it was all quickly done; neither mother nor child awoke; they nestled what they had brought by Sophie's breast.
"Now to be gone."
"Easily said. Not the way we came."
"Down the stairs and out their way."
"If we must."
Moving as one and without sound (the old house seemed now and again to draw breath or groan at their pa.s.sing, but then it always did so, for reasons of its own) they gained the front door, and one reached up and opened it, and they were outside and going quickly with a favorable wind. Lilac never waked or made a sound (the wisps and locks of gold hair still held in her fists blew away in the quick wind of their pa.s.sage) and Sophie slept too, having felt nothing; except the long tale of her dream had altered, at a turning, and become sad and difficult in ways she hadn't known before.
In All Directions Smoky was wrenched awake by some internal motion; as soon as his eyes were wide open, he forgot whatever it was that had awakened him. But he was awake, as awake as if it were midday, irritating state, he wondered if it was something he ate. The hour was useless four o'clock in the morning. He shut his eyes resolutely for a while, unconvinced that sleep could have deserted him so completely. But it had; he could tell because the more he watched the eggs of color break and run on the screen of his eyelids the less soporific they became, the more pointless and uninteresting.
Very carefully he slipped out from under the high-piled covers, and felt in the darkness for his robe. There was only one cure he knew of for this state, and that was to get up and act awake until it was placated and went away. He stepped carefully over the floor, hoping he wouldn't step into shoes or other impedimenta, there was no reason to inflict this state on Daily Alice, and he gained the door, satisfied he hadn't disturbed her or the night at all. He'd just walk the halls, go downstairs and turn on some lights, that should do it. He closed the door carefully behind him, and at that Daily Alice awoke, not because of any noise he'd made but because the whole peace of her sleep had been subtly broken and invaded by his absence.
There was already a light burning in the kitchen when he opened the back-stairs door. Great-aunt Cloud made a low, shuddering sound of startled horror when she saw the door open, and then "Oh," she said, when only Smoky looked around it. She had a gla.s.s of warm milk before her, and her hair was down, long and fine and spreading, white as Hecate's; it had been uncut for years and years.
"You gave me a start," she said.
They discussed sleeplessness in low voices, though there was no one their voices could disturb from here but the mice. Smoky, seeing she too wanted to bustle some to overcome wakefulness, allowed her to warm milk for him; to his he added a stiff measure of brandy.
"Listen to that wind," said Cloud.
Above them, they heard the long gargle and whisper of a flushed toilet. "What's up?" Cloud said. "A sleepless night, and no moon." She s.h.i.+vered. "It feels like the night of a catastrophe, or a night big news comes, everybody awake. Well. Just chance." She said it as another might say G.o.d help usa"with that same degree of rote unbelief.
Smoky, warmed now, rose and said "Well," in a resigned sort of way. Cloud had begun to leaf through a cookbook there. He hoped she wouldn't have to sit to watch bleak dawn come; he hoped he wouldn't himself.
At the top of the stairs he didn't turn toward his own bed where, he knew, sleep didn't yet await him. He turned toward Sophie's room, with no intention but to look at her a while. Her restfulness calmed him sometimes, as a cat's can, made him restful too. When he opened her door, he saw by the moon-pale night-light that someone sat on the edge of Sophie's bed.
"Hi," he said.
"Hi," said Daily Alice.
There was an odd smell in the air, a smell like leaf mold, or Queen Anne's-lace, or perhaps the earth under an upturned stone. "What's up?" he asked softly. He came to sit on the other side of the bed.
"I don't know," she said. "Nothing. I woke up when you left. I felt like something happened to Sophie, so I came to see."
There was no danger that their quiet talk would waken Sophie; people talking near her in her sleep only seemed to comfort her, to make her deep draughts of breath more regular.
"Everything's all right, though," he said.
"Yes."
Wind pressed on the house, beating it in fitful anger; the window boomed. He looked down at Sophie and Lilac. Lilac looked quite dead, but after three children Smoky knew that this scary appearance, especially in the dark, wasn't reason for alarm.
They sat silent on either side of Sophie. The wind spoke suddenly a single word in the chimney's throat. Smoky looked at Alice, who touched his arm and smiled quickly.
What smile did it remind him of?
"Everything's okay," she said.
He remembered Great-aunt Cloud smiling at him as they sat troubled on the lawn of Auberon's summer house the day he was married: a smile meant to be comforting, but which was not. A smile against distance, that only seemed to increase distance. A signal of friends.h.i.+p sent out of infrangible foreignness; a hand waved far off, from across a border.
"Do you smell a funny smell?" he said.
"Yes. No. I did. It's gone now."
It was. The room was full only of night air. The sea of wind outside raised small currents in it which now and again brushed his face; but it didn't seem to him as though this were Brother North-wind moving around them, but as though the many-angled house itself were under sail, making progress through the night, plowing steadily into the future in all directions.
Those who had the entree entered the private apartments by the mirror-door that gave onto the gallery and was kept shut. It was only opened when one scratched at it, and was closed again immediately.
a"Saint-Simon Twenty-five years pa.s.sed.
On a night late in the autumn, George Mouse stepped out the window of what had been the third-floor library of his townhouse and through a small covered bridge, which connected his window with the window of what had once been a kitchen in a tenement that adjoined his building. The ex-kitchen was dark and cold; George Mouse's breath was manifest in the light of his lantern. As he walked, rats or mice moved away from him and his light, he heard their scratches and rustlings but saw nothing. Without opening a door (there hadn't been a door for years) he went out into the hallway and started carefully down the stairs, carefully because the stairs were rotten and loose where they weren't missing altogether.