Read Charlie Johnson in the Flames Online
Authors: Michael Ignatieff
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Kosovo (Republic), #Psychological Fiction, #Political, #Psychological
âNobody makes us Mr Memory,' Charlie said. âWe do it to ourselves.'
He got Jacek to drive him to the airport the next day. Outside the house, he held Magda tightly between his still-bandaged hands and as he got into the car he felt that he had done well to restrain more effusive displays. Actually, he had been pretty effusive. What he said to her, very close, was that she had been good to a stranger, and she replied that he had never been a stranger. With that, she kissed him, a little peck right on his lips, and he got into the car feeling happy.
The road was bare and dry between ploughed fields and Jacek said almost nothing till they were at the airport. âSo we go out again or what?' he asked when the car was at the ramp in front of departures.
âI want to go to Belgrade,' Charlie said.
âAnd kill that son of a bitch?' Jacek said with his usual wry lack of affect, opening the door of the Lada and giving Charlie a gentle push to help him up. It was one of Jacek's better moves, Charlie thought later as the plane lifted off for London, giving words to a thought that had been in both of their minds, just beneath the level of awareness, from the second they had seen that lighter applied to the hem of that dress.
Yes, kill that son of a bitch.
S
IX
                                                                 Â
W
hen he got to his front door, he opened it with his key and stood in the hall and put his bag down. He went into the sitting room on the left with the floor to ceiling bookshelves the length of the far wall. He could see the rows of Mika's books, the ones with the Russian titles on the spines that he hadn't the heart to throw away when he cleared out the house in Dedham and that he kept promising himself he'd learn how to read one day. There were Frank's too, one row above, the stout-hearted memoirs of battle, and a couple of ones â
Home Carpenters' Almanac
, for example â that Charlie had salvaged from the garage. By the television stood the rows of Charlie's video tapes and next to the stereo system his blues and country and western: fifteen separate Johnny Cash. âI shot a man in Reno,' Charlie said to himself, âjust to watch him die.'
In the middle of the room, placed so that it faced the bay window and had a good view of the street, was the music stand and Elizabeth's flute. He could see she was still working on the Haydn, because the music was on the stand. He'd been away for a month.
âCharlie?' She was on the top step of the landing looking down at him standing in the hall. He nodded and she came down slowly, drying her hands on her apron. She was wearing the black dress, and her hair was up. She had the long silver earrings on that brought out the fine shape of her neck.
âYou going to a party?' he asked.
âRae and Barbara are coming over. I'm cooking. Life goes on Charlie,' she said, reaching the bottom step.
âWhere's Annie?'
âAt the Duggans. On a sleep-over.'
He followed her through the living room into the kitchen at the back. The table, by the sliding door out into the garden, was set for three. He watched as she set a fourth place.
âWhy the beard?' she asked, and he said that he hadn't been able to hold a razor, but now he could and later he would go upstairs and get rid of it.
He went over to the cupboard, took out the single malt he knew was there and got a glass, then corrected himself, took out two and sat down at the table, still in his coat, and tried to get the cork out of the bottle. She watched him and came over and took it out of his hands and poured two inches for him.
âYou too,' he said and she did as he asked. She drank the whisky, with a grimace, straight down, but she didn't sit with him. She went back to her cooking, and he sat there watching her back. She had good legs, like her mother, firm calves and a nice taper down to the ankle.
âYou can't get away with not talking,' she said over her shoulder. âYou did that before and you can't do it this time.' She was right, of course. He did have a habit of shutting everything down when he didn't know what to think or feel. He would just go mute and there had been times in their marriage when it went on for days, for example at the end of that thing with whatever her name was. Re-entry was always hell. He felt like a diver, having to come up slowly, fifteen feet at a time, with the wobbly blue sky so far away above him and never getting any closer. The best way was just to take it easy, letting the surroundings go to work on you. He sat by the table and looked about him, remembering when the wall had stopped there and they had knocked it through to make the kitchen bigger. The history of the room, and the house in which it stood, was reeling him in, and so were the cooking smells on the stove. She was doing that thing with chicken and vegetables that started on the burners and ended up in the oven and came out tasting of paprika and pepper.
He should stay: his father had, his mother had. Look where it got them. No really, look where it got them, faithful to the end, Mika holding Frank's head in her arms on the garage floor, saying Russian prayers over him. Or so she said. He hadn't been there. He had been here. In this house when his dad died, an ocean away, in theirs. He drank, cupping the glass with two bandaged hands and looked at her and knew he had to say something.
âIf the office hadn't phoned,' she said.
âI just couldn't.'
âDon't do this to us.'
âI'm not doing anything.'
She let that pass. âWhat happened?' It wasn't that she didn't know. She must have made ten calls to Jacek and Magda. She would have had the gist from them and from the office. But she wanted to hear it from him. He owed it to her.
âWe got caught in an ambush and a girl got killed.'
âI saw the footage, Charlie. She was burning.' She had her back to the stove and she was vehement and angry, because it made her sick to think he was fobbing her off. But it was all that he could get out of his throat. He was trying to understand why it was that when you told a story, once, for good â in this case to Etta â it all dried up inside you when you were ordered to tell it again.
âCome on, Charlie. Tell me.' She never begged.
âI got burned. I was trying to put her out.'
âOh Charlie, Jesus Christ, if only you'd rung us,' she said, in a voice full of pain for him, and for them. He could tell she was doing the best she could. She was trying. He could tell from the catch in her voice.
âI know.'
âYou need to see a doctor.' She stayed with her back to the kitchen surfaces, but her hands made a gesture towards him.
âMy hands are fine. Really. Want to see?'
âI don't mean your hands.'
It cut him to hear her say that. She was the one he had the history with, and whatever else was wrong, she knew him well.
âI don't need a doctor.'
She shook her head and bent so that her hair came down over her face, as if she wanted to hide from the sight of him for a moment. Then she straightened, turned her back and steadied a lemon on the chopping board to slice it.
âThey got burned. But they're fine.'
She began stirring something in a cup. She was making salad dressing. He could smell the lemon. âWhy Jacek rather than me?' Her back stayed turned.
âDon't know.'
He really didn't, now that he was here. He could say Jacek had been through it all with him and she hadn't. He could say, though she would have thrown the salad dressing at him, that it was a guy thing, needing the comfort of a man, although that was actually part of the truth. Nothing was clear now, because he could see all that he had spurned by not coming home and how much of him was here between these four walls. Everything was rooting him to the spot and taking away the power of speech. There was the fact that he knew the name of the village in northern Italy, and could even see that tiny, neat as a pin shop where he had stood outside, too big and clumsy to be allowed in, while she sat inside buying the glasses that she had put by every place on the table where he was nursing his drink. He knew why she set a table like this, when it was only for Barbara and Rae, two friends of hers from work, why she dressed up. It was what her mother did. He knew the exact components of her salad dressing â garlic, Dijon, salt, pepper, one part lemon to two parts olive oil â because it was her dad's recipe. The weight of all these facts crushed down on his chest. But he said nothing and she just shook her head again and gave the lemon a hard squeeze.
He knew he ought to be taking control of the situation and steering them both in the right direction. He knew what that direction was too â it should all end with him putting out his hand and saying he wanted to go to bed, and she would take it and help him off with his coat and take him upstairs. And then he would throw his clothes on the chair and lie down in the bed and she would come and they would lie side by side and after much effort of will he would reach over and put his arm around her and with more effort of will he would say he was sorry for not having been able to phone or give her any indication of where he had been. He could see the right path all right.
âGo upstairs and shave,' she said. âThey'll be here in ten minutes.'
He did as he was told, finding his shaving things put away beneath the sink, and their place taken on the shelf below the mirror by her cleansers and pads. He lathered himself up, averting his eyes from the eyes that met him in the mirror, and cut himself a few times.
When he looked, she was leaning against the door-frame, watching how his old face came up clean as the razor peeled away the whiskers. He just kept on going, watching her out of the corner of his eye, when he went on to treat his cuts with the styptic pencil.
He spoke her name to the mirror. âElizabeth.' Liz Drew as was. Eldest daughter of Bart and Carla Drew of Norwood, Massachusetts. âYou're kidding,' she said, and her face lit up, when they met for the first time at a party in London and he told her that he was from Dedham, just up Route 1A. After all these years, she was still the girl most likely to succeed. Age had not dimmed her. She was still smiling out of her graduation picture. Not now, of course, but she could. He felt, in an absurd way, that it was to his credit that he hadn't destroyed that in her.
He could see Bart in that thick cardigan Carla knitted for him against the icy night air, sauntering down at Charlie's side to the liquor store at the bottom of their road. They came back with enough stuff, as Bart put it happily, to launch a rocket to Mars, and they drank all of it. That was how Christmas should be, Carla said, when it was all over and he was on the floor beside her, picking that tree decoration stuff, the silver thread, out of the plush pile of her carpet.
âCharlie.' He could hear Elizabeth whisper his name in the dark woods behind her parents' house, when they were side by side on the path amid the feathery snow, the year they got married.
âYes,' she said. âTell me,' not there, not twenty-four, wrapped in a scarf against the cold, but here and forty-six, with her hair up and her earrings catching the light from the hall.
âI don't know about this thing with Rae and Barbara,' he said.
She had the wry look on her face. âMy war correspondent husband,' she began, âthe guy who gets shot at for a living and he can't hack dinner with Rae and Barbara. No kidding.' She was trying to work one of the better routines from the happy time, her line in comic scorn. It had actually been a bond. He was the useless one, she the one with the comic scorn. It had worked for years and years, and in deference to this, he managed a smile and followed her downstairs to dinner.
It was hell all right. Rae and Barbara couldn't leave it alone. They had seen the footage and they wanted to hear it all first hand, and he had to do his party trick, and he thought that if he had been hoping to regain some credit for good behaviour, he deserved some in the circumstances. But Elizabeth wasn't handing out any medals.
âPoor soul,' Barbara said when he got to the part about how the burned woman went through the flanged plastic doors in the field hospital and didn't come back. What was truly interesting, he thought, was how quickly the silence after that was filled with talk, how they went on to other things, as if he had said something embarrassing but unimportant. Elizabeth listened to him, angry no doubt that Rae and Barbara had got more out of him than she had. She stared at him across the glassware, her hand along the fine line of her jaw, her elbow resting on the table. Afterwards, as their talk eddied around how terrible the world was and how violent, and how did he do what he did, she let him twist in the wind for a while, he could tell, before she got up and cleared the dishes and then threw him an unexpected lifeline, by changing the subject. This left him free to sit there and drink that old red he had bought some time ago and listen to them talk about school.
He could tell that Rae and Barbara knew they had walked into bad marital weather, but they were the good kind of people who just ploughed their earnest conversational furrow, believing feigned obliviousness would help a couple through a bad patch. He stayed silent and watched them talk. He had time to look over at Elizabeth, to look at her as if he was just a guest and could get up at the end of the night and never see her again. He reflected that it was good that she knew who she was and that she had never based her life on assumptions that weren't true. For example, after coming to London to study, she had known she would never make an orchestra, and had gone into teaching, and having done that, she realised she was a better administrator and had become deputy head, an American no less, with an even stronger mid-Atlantic accent than his now, of the school where Rae and Barbara were teaching. Rae taught maths and Barbara chemistry, and Elizabeth was their boss. She liked her job, and they liked her, and Charlie looked on and took it all in, as if he was just passing through.