Несовременные записки. Том 3 - страница 27
'Come on, Leo,' he said.
They went in silence. After a while the boy wanted to be taken in arms, and when his father took him he saw tears in his big brown eyes. The man hugged him tight and quickened his pace.
The next morning — that of the parting — had passed for him in a kind of haze. His memory retained then only the very moment they said good-bye to each other, their eyes — his green and his kiddy's brown — filled with tears again. And the whole of the subsequent month was dragging in a fever of waiting, a nasty yet strangely wonderful state of mind when all events and episodes of one's life are inexorably erased out of conscience being none in comparison with a subject of the obsession. Over and over again was he rolling the pictures of their walks, talks, games and smiles in his memory. They were all very usual — and all very singular, for there was something in them which lay beyond their purely material content; something that inexplicably revealed the crazy adoration of the two for each other which they never tried to expose verbally. After all, they didn't need spending words to show it; for them it was just enough to talk, to walk, to play together and to feel this sheer impossibility of existing without each other — slight and elusive signs of their devotion, deep and mutual.
August came; trees began to drop their leaves hesitatingly, as if not believing yet in the forthcoming change of seasons; days, still warm, were followed now by cold, almost frosty nights which left green grass coloured in hoary silver after them. The month had passed; there came the time to ring up, the time to meet. He dialed the number and heard the voice of his former mother-in-law — dull with slow suave intonations. Hello, he said. Give me my Leo, please.
'But he is with Jesebel,' he heard. Jesebel was the name of his former wife. 'She decided not to return home from the sea. I think, she went directly on her stage practice and took the child with her.'
'Where to?'
'Somewhere to Switzerland, as far as I know.'
'What else do you happen to know as far as that?'
'Nothing, to my regret. She didn't inform us in detail.'
A lie. J. D. Salinger, he recollected. A perfect day for banana-fish. A perfect voice for lie. These slow nauseous intonations. You should learn from her how to tell lies, buddy, he said to himself. Listen — no voice tremor, no perplexity.
'You just don't want to say. You're programmed so, aren't you?'
'I really don't know.'
'And when will you know, then?'
'You will know it yourself soon. She will write you a letter.'
Another lie.
'When does she intend to return, after all?'
'Well… she said, in six months approximately.'
Said at random — just to take him off the wire? On the other hand, she told something about this half-year stage practice some two months before the divorce. And now she went on the practice with Leo surreptitiously — without warning him, without giving the address abroad. But why should you get surprised, buddy, he thought, it's purely her — or her family's — style, that of performing things in a manner of well-calculated and unparaded meanness.
'Good bye,' he said and hung up.
The fever of a short waiting turned into the pain of a long one. Autumn, that year cold and rainy, conquered the ancient town which stood dull and grey and sometimes almost invisible beyond the dense veil of drizzle; even the old church could not, as ever before, soften harshness of the weather. Day rolled after day, each extremely different from the earlier ones which had been marked with their meetings — actual or shortly expected. There was no letter, and it was natural, after all — she had found her be-shameless-yet-silent-if-you-want-to-win style which in no case implied clearing things up, and was elaborating it now. He rang up her parents several times. They're all right there, they were saying, and are to come back soon. Address, phone number? Don't know, we've got no feedback, unfortunately. It was a game, primitive and mean: we lie to you, you know it's a lie, and we know that you know it's a lie but good gracious, what is your knowledge based upon? The same be-shameless-yet-silent style; and he had nothing but to go on waiting for these long months to come to end.