On the night train to
Jennifer watched but didn’t see, images not registering beyond a flash of recognition here, a note to self of that was a farm there, each town slipping silently into the background of the humming train as it sped through the night. The old woman who sat opposite Jennifer had nodded off, her chin slipping into the lace of her collar, her jowls drooping lower and her lips puckered into a frown. When she came onto the train, there was an air of strength about her, even though her footsteps were slow and faltering, a knobby cane providing a third leg. She had purposefully extracted a slim livre poche from her purse, never meeting Jennifer’s eye, never asking her purpose or identity, and proceeded to read the entire way, all the way, at least, until the sun went down, at which point the volume was stowed back within her purse and her chin nodded down and her bright eyes lost their intensity, slipping shut behind heavy, wrinkled eyelids. Whatever strength she exuded by day was sapped with the setting of the sun. Jennifer looked away, now, embarrassed the woman might wake and find her staring so intently.
Quiet in the train car, all quiet.
Jennifer couldn’t find respite as the old woman could, as the man with a bulbous nose next to her could, a nose that produced a soft, watery snore every kilometer or so, as the young child on her papa’s lap could, her thumb stuck in her mouth and ringlets of hair matted against her cheek from where it squished into the flannel of papa’s shirt. No; she wished she could close her eyes and slip into dreams until
“Will Jessica come? Will Jessica come?”
“I’ll try and persuade her.”
Her kid sister didn’t come. Jessica was acting – a bit part – in a
“May I sit?”
Jennifer looked up in surprise at a human voice after the hours of silence. He said it in English, which surprised her as well, since the accent was French. What had given away her Otherness? The owner of the voice had strong, Gallic features, a mop of unruly dark hair on his head, a bold nose, piercing eyes. Large hands. He wore an overcoat, out of place in the warm car of the train. Unsure what else to do, she gestured at the seat next to the sleeping old woman, whose head now drooped lower into her lace, so it nearly tucked into her décolletage.
“I saw you were awake.”
Jennifer nodded.
“I, too,” he said, gesturing grandly towards his chest, “could not sleep. I think, I feel, something troubles you this night.”
Her mouth dropped open. A low, keening church bell tolled somewhere outside the train’s window, one quick call to whoever lived in the anonymous village as they glided past. She blinked.
“My mother’s boyfriend – husband,” – she needed to correct herself, still, after ten years – “passed away. I came for the funeral. Not a good trip.” She tried a laugh. “A memory I’d just as soon forget.”
He nodded as if he expected exactly this tale. “Tell me how you feel.”
She blinked again. “Excuse me?”
“This man, who died, this…”
“Paul.”
“Tell me how you feel.” Jennifer’s hands twitched against the handle of her purse, clutched still in her lap after the hours of riding; she had forgotten to stow it overhead.
“My mother will be undone by this. When my father left her fifteen years ago… She had only ever been a housewife. She didn’t know how to exist if she wasn’t an appendage. And then with Paul, here,
Jennifer looked at her feet, embarrassed to have said so much.
“Stop telling me about your mother,” he commanded suddenly into the silence, so that the old woman’s eyes fluttered half-way open before being dragged down again by the weight of her lashes. “Stop telling me about your sister. Tell me about yourself.”
Jennifer gave a quick laugh. “Myself?” She squinted at the train ceiling, hoping for guidance. The dark landscape outside the window could provide no cliff notes, no cheat sheet.
“Tell me a memory.”
It was the first one that presented itself to her, which made her laugh again, because she hadn’t thought of it in at least twenty years, but here it was now, the image appearing in the blurred glass of the train window.
“We’d taken this canoe trip,” she said slowly. “Lord knows why. It must have been some glorious summer day and my parents got it into their heads that we would canoe from one end of the river in town to the other. Only about a mile! It was a small town, you know? Hardly an outing, and the only time we ever did it, even though we lived in that town for nineteen years. We must have been…” She squinted again, counted seconds as the train rumbled. “I must have been ten years old, Jessica about eight.” He frowned at her, so she hastened towards her point. “So my parents canoe us to this park at the other end of the lake, where we picnic, you know? In the sun, the blanket, the basket, the pre-packaged sandwiches, the whole thing. And as we’re walking back to the canoe on this little path – through the woods, right? – Jessica – poor Jessica – she walks right over this wasps’ nest and one of them stings her.”
She looked to see if these words had any effect, but the man was still only staring, so she cleared her throat and continued.
“One of them stings her, see, but Jessica, she was so young she didn’t know what had happened. So what does she do? Instead of running to my dad who’s safely in front of her, she ran back through the wasp’s nest to my mom and promptly got stung twice more.” Jennifer could picture her sister still, her thin arms flailing, her mouth open in a wail of pain, fat tears leaking from her eyes, the panic in her expression. She shuddered, but then smiled.
“And see, I probably would never remember that outing at all if the bee stings hadn’t happened. I’d wouldn’t remember the afternoon where we were fitted for life jackets, climbed into the wobbling canoes on the river, my parents rowing in time with one another, the way they rowed back as fast as they could while we pressed the leftover ice from the picnic lemonade against Jessica’s welts, wouldn’t remember any of it at all if the pain and catastrophe hadn’t happened. Is that it?” she asked, suddenly. “Is that what it is? That we only remember things once they become traumatic, and otherwise they are lost? Because all my memories, all my…” Her tongue clove to the roof of her mouth. The Frenchman’s mouth had a sour twist to it. She leaned back into her seat, relieved to find the old woman was still asleep.
“I’m sorry,” she said softly. “I’m no good at this. I’ve never been any good at this.”
“At what?” he drawled out in concern.
“Talking about myself.” His eyes widened, those large hands twitched. It was not what he had expected.
“Perhaps I’ll leave you,” he suggested, after a long pause. Jennifer nodded, but he didn’t see it in the dark.
“Perhaps that would be best.”
2 comments:
R Starr,
I assume you are not Ringo Starr; the words to his songs are not this deep. An interesting story, although your first paragraph is so descriptive, I was startled to find Jennifer totally ignores to picture you so vividly paint.
You develop characters very well, but I'm bothered by jennifer. When asked to tell something about herself, she simply reverts to sharing a story that is once again about her sister Jessica (albeit, a younger version).
Nontheless, I was left wanting more, which I suppose is the hallmark of a good short story.
Hope you continue to blog. DUtah
Congrats, Danny Utah, on picking up on the point! Jennifer spends all her time thinking/worrying about other people, and even when pressed to tell a memory of her own, the memory is entirely about someone else still... Perhaps that's why, when in a moment, in a memory of her own, she doesn't recognize the landscape outside her window - it becomes mere shadows in the dark. I'm glad you read it right
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