Authors: Mark de Silva
Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Science Fiction, #Apocalyptic & Post-Apocalyptic, #Crime
Though food and lodging were provided for, no allowance had been made for clothing. Except for his boots, which coconut oil had saved, and his heavy leather gloves, which served him now not on a ship’s deck but in the paddies, bringing in the neighbors’ harvest for a share, Rutland’s garments, mildly supplemented by old garb villagers had given him, were in tatters.
He carried the pot of water along the main avenue bisecting the village, past the row of houses of the wealthiest townsmen. These were seven- or eight-room affairs—two rooms being reserved for the servants—built around handsome courtyards, whose short walls of clay limed white were covered with engravings of birds and lions.
Further along, the houses scaled down to three rooms, then mostly two, and then, for the lion’s share of the avenue, just a single large room. Rutland’s did not even reach this standard. It was just large enough for sleeping and sitting; cooking had to be done in the yard. But it was his, which was new. Through his efforts it might grow.
He hung the water from a vine strung across a pair of coconut palms, above the twigs and woodchips and charred branches of last night’s fire. He picked up one of the sticks and turned for his neighbor’s house, one he had slept in many nights, before he’d been able to shelter himself.
A fire burned in a ring of stones in the grass outside Rajarathnan’s house. He too would be cooking soon. Rutland planted the charred stick in the fire and caught the eye of the man and his wife, Priya, sitting in silence in the house. All nodded.
Rajarathnan had been a natural host. He bore the burden of the Englishmen lightly, especially Rutland, whom he’d once assured was great company next to Francis Crutch, a stormy shipmate of Rutland’s he’d had to house for two months. He said this neutrally, though, as if really he didn’t much mind him either. Rutland himself had always liked Crutch, his irascibility, which even good breeding could not mold or mask. He had known him in boyhood. He was no different now.
The stick smoldered an earthy red. Rutland took it back to his own yard and plunged it into the pile of firewood. It began to smoke. There was enough wood to start a fire, but he’d have to collect more after he ate to take him through to dawn.
Near the outer wall of his little hut he found two small sacks of rice and a large basket full of limes, raw pumpkin slices, coconut meat, and wild leaves he didn’t know the names of, nor seen elsewhere, not even in India. Next to it was a smaller basket of sweet fruit, which the villagers were not obligated to provide. Four purple mangosteens. The supplies would have been left by other villagers—Elara and his wife. It was their turn.
He took one of the sacks and tossed it onto a pile of three others. This was his currency. The idea had not been his but John Loveland’s, another shipmate. Though he lived just fifteen miles away, Rutland hadn’t seen him in almost a year, from the time their various keepers, being known to each other and seeing no harm, allowed several of the Ann’s crew to lunch together. The men converged on Loveland’s village, where they’d learned, though they couldn’t quite believe it, he lived independently.
Each arriving man got a jolt seeing Loveland in a pristine white tunic. It gave him a clerical appearance, though no one could say the church or the god. More than that, it was the starkness of the contrast with their own rags that surprised them. That and the scale of his home: three rooms, like a middle-class townsman. Rutland remembered the faraway look on Knox’s face; the way he wandered through the rooms and the yard, as if private property were a miracle; and the way he stared into the white of the foreign tunic.
Before any sort of gulf could open up between the men, or misunderstandings could multiply, Loveland gave his method, which had nothing to do with religion: “Do not take your food dressed.”
It was simple commerce. The king had ordered the towns-people to provide food for them; he hadn’t said they must prepare it too. After some argument with the councilors, Loveland’s abjection, which they were beginning to find obscene anyway (this perhaps
was
a religious matter), persuaded them to go along with his plan, so he might earn enough from selling the rice to clothe himself decently. From then on his daily grain came raw. A year of that, Loveland said, had led to this, gesturing to the wealth around him.
From that day, the other Englishmen of Hotteracourly followed suit. It meant they had to go hungry sometimes. But it also meant they had an income now, one that could be transformed in principle into anything at all. A burning stomach, Rutland thought, was a fair price for that sort of alchemy. Bartering had its limits.
Rutland poured the other sack of rice into water on the cusp of a boil. He added a few thick flakes of sea salt. The starch of the rice thickened the water. There was no meat tonight, though the flesh of the coconut was as good as meat to him now. He poured off some of the froth and put the coconut and pumpkin slices in with the rice to simmer.
He turned to the half-knit cap he’d started on the day before. Caps were the real wealth-makers now, for him and the crew. This idea traced to, of all people, the unruly Crutch. When he’d bought some clean clothes at the village trading post with money from raw rice he’d sold, Crutch saw knitted caps for sale. Badly chafed by the equatorial sun, he wondered how he might acquire one, not having quite enough money for it.
So he bought some cheap cotton yarn, in red and yellow, and some needles, on the condition the shopkeeper would show him how to make a cap of his own. He sat down with Crutch and did. After several aborted efforts, Crutch produced a comfortable, imperfect cap with a wavy brim that managed to keep the light away.
But the caps could offer more relief than this, he saw. Sinhalese traders frequently wandered through the villages selling them. Crutch would do the same. He, and later his shipmates, began knitting and selling these caps on long walks through the villages, offering them for a bit less than the shops and the other roving traders.
Through the sale of rice and caps, Rutland himself had found his way to some small amount of independence. Whereas the Englishmen had previously been passed around the village as unwanted lodgers, they were now in a position to buy building materials, and even the labor of the villagers, to house themselves.
Trade had been only a pretext for Rutland when he’d first joined the crew of the
Ann
, a merchant vessel, in London, in 1658. Now, though, this well-bred man of privilege was finding that commerce could ennoble your life when pedigree failed, and you found yourself scrabbling with common stock for survival.
Rutland’s place was mostly built now. The walls were made of rattan-fastened boughs, which he let stand without the usual clay plastering, as he’d not yet adjusted to the exceptional heat (nor would he ever). The roof was thatched with banana leaves and tall grass in an oddly patterned weave that the villagers were expert in. The oddness, apparently, made it watertight.
Rajarathnan had been most helpful of all in building the shelter, and he asked for nothing in return. It was his floor Rutland had first slept on in Belemby. Rutland would stay in a room separated from the main house by a thatched wall and take his food on a small table and stool—an honor the family paid him, as they themselves, like most others, ate on the floor. He slept on a mat, as they did, and after a time he found it no less comfortable than any bed in England.
Knox hadn’t adapted so readily. He was the worst, in some ways, seeming stubbornly lost, as if he didn’t understand this world and didn’t think he should. But then, he’d had to watch his father die. Anyway, Rutland thought, Knox’s eye was sharp and might evolve. Maybe he’d even start trading like the rest of them and get himself a house.
Rutland returned to the pot dangling above what was now a crackling yellow fire. He stirred the mixture and tipped the pot into his usual basin. The night was only beginning to perfect itself. He sat in the light of the fire and took his meal. Before the sun was lost entirely, he got to his feet with two mangosteens in his waist pocket and one in his hand. He squeezed the fruit and the thick purple rind split along a seam. A clear juice ran down to the dirt below and swelled into muddy lumps. From the shell he pulled the fruit whole, a tiny white orange. He took the segments into his mouth and headed out to the forest in search of an armful of wood as the fire wound down.
12
One whore pushed the other along the sidewalk leading out of the city hospital. The wheelchair wobbled and bounced along the cracks, and with each impact Jen’s body came throbbing back to life. She was swathed in gauze, soft and hard, for the three cracked ribs, the two snapped clavicles, the broken orbital, the dislocated shoulder, and the subluxated elbow of the opposite arm. (These were just the injuries above the waist.) Her limbs felt as if they were not quite hers, as if a slightly firmer shock might separate them from her altogether. Perhaps that’s what was needed, the thought came to her and went.
Mariela, the other whore, born Ecuadorean into respectable circumstances but long since transplanted to the social fringes of North America, led the chair down an incline to the pavement. The jolts came in a triplet, the first and third accented. The chair crossed that neat, narrow avenue, freshly corrugated after a recent collision, under heavy rains, between a Camaro, a Kawasaki, and an ambulance carrying victims of another car accident. The motorcyclist left with a bruised femur and a wrecked bike. The Camaro’s passengers, four teenage boys, were effectively cremated on site, their bodies being inextricable from the flaming car. Those in the ambulance escaped unscathed, though the two in the back died shortly after of their original injuries.
“I need a couple of things,” Mariela said. “We do. But I can do this after, if you want.” Jen’s head shook and then bobbed fractionally. Her eyes held a long blink as her head came to a rest, slumped.
Mariela steered the chair through the propped double doors of the grocery. The clerk gave her a glance before fixing on the blue rubber wheels of the chair. He made his way up from the loose sweats Jen wore (Mariela’s), the billowy sleeveless shirt, the soft cast at the elbow, the sling, and the figure-eight splint peeking out at both shoulders, to her right eye, watering lightly, the lens saturated with blood on the outer half. His gaze flicked back and forth between the splint and the inflamed eye.
“I’ll just get this stuff real quick,” Mariela said, mostly for the clerk. She picked up a green basket from the stack beside the door, leaving Jen near the deli counter. Wax paper separated the slices stacked into squat towers, of beef, of chicken, of sausage dotted with bright white fat, and of hams and turkeys, honeyed, baked, boiled, smoked, and cured.
Around the towers plastic wrap had been hung, so that the top slice, not being papered over, could be plainly seen. Despite the wrap, the meat on top had suffered; the edges of the slices had dried and darkened. Near the center the textures were more natural. Each was a signature, each played on Jen’s eyes: the slick marbled surface of rare roast beef, heavy with blood; the fine uniform density of ham; the coarse grain of roasted pork; and the lighter, airier textures of chicken.
Behind the stacks, more tightly wrapped in plastic than the slices, was a small slab of the corresponding creature, prepared just so. In the case of the chicken slices, it was a half of a chicken behind them, the only animal whose form remained. At the other end were the sausages, where the shapes of the creatures going toward them had been entirely erased.
“Turkey, right?” Mariela returned with a full basket.
“Thank you,” Jen said, with a gravity that seemed to transcend turkey. The clerk came around and took off the plastic wrap on the slices. Jen motioned to the slab instead. “Thin.”
He hoisted the animal and pushed the saw pedal. The blade whirred, the teeth flashed. The man drove the bird through the ring, shaving nine or ten limpid slices from the slab that collected on the far side of the blade in a translucent pile.
“That it?” the clerk asked the women as he wrapped the meat in paper and dropped it in a plastic bag.
“Is that it?” Mariela asked.
Jen turned to the basket. Tuna, skim milk, English muffins, a six-pack of Michelob, a small bottle of Advil, then cold udon in a ginger sauce and a bag of green apples under that. Her eyes lingered on the fruit, though she had something else in mind.
“Cigarettes?” she said.
“Yeah,” Mariela said.
“Dunhills,” Jen said.
Mariela gave her a funny look. Jen had started smoking them as a joke, back at UVA, when as a sophomore her interests seemed to have turned a bit tony in her friends’ eyes. She’d declared in classics that year. She’d always loved to read, to disappear—in fiction, in plays—so why not find out where it came from, how it first happened? And if you didn’t actually use a pipe, like a don in an old leather chair, weren’t Dunhills what you smoked reading Aeschylus?
Now she enjoyed them. Somehow they smoked as if they weren’t even burning. But the tragedies ended up unfinished—she dropped out in her junior year. Or took a break, really. Even three years later, that’s still the way she saw it, still the story she told her family, even if they didn’t put much stock in it anymore. But that last year in school, she hadn’t even been able to make it to classes, let alone pass them. So why hang around campus pretending you were in a condition to do what you couldn’t?
The origin of that condition was still obscure to her. One thing she knew was this. Over those months, nights reading the ancients sipping wine had turned into mornings swigging vodka curing hangovers. At the same time she remembered an encroaching feeling of uselessness, uselessness to herself. Her family had picked up that something was wrong, her brother especially, but they avoided the questions—about the missed Christmases, the sporadic silences, the slurred speech—for fear of the answers.
Was drinking a cause or an effect, though? AA people liked to say booze always masked other problems. But often it seemed to Jen the only problem she had with alcohol was the
grace
she found in it. She was perfectly fine without it, no tears, only a little lifeless perhaps, a little bored. But with it, and especially in the hour-long window before she’d had too much, she felt as if her inner life perfectly aligned with the one outside. Nothing was left out of place. She became
herself
, the best version of her. And if you discovered you could turn into yourself like that, wouldn’t you do it as often as you could, come what may? The only time she saw surprise on the face of her college psychiatrist was when she told her this. It frightened her friends too. She had trouble explaining the thought any further, but the words never felt wrong.