The Garden of Blue Roses

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The Garden of Blue Roses Page 1

by Michael Barsa




  MICHAEL BARSA

  Underland Press

  For Kim, Sacha, and Katja

  Resistance to something was the law of New England nature; the boy looked out on the world with the instinct of resistance; for numberless generations his predecessors had viewed the world chiefly as a thing to be reformed, filled with evil forces to be abolished, and they saw no reason to suppose that they had wholly succeeded in the abolition; the duty was unchanged. That duty implied not only resistance to evil, but hatred of it. Boys naturally look on all force as an enemy, and generally find it so, but the New Englander, whether boy or man, in his long struggle with a stingy or hostile universe, had learned also to love the pleasure of hating; his joys were few.

  —The Education of Henry Adams

  Roses red and roses white

  Plucked I for my love’s delight.

  She would none of all my posies—

  Bade me gather her blue roses.

  —Rudyard Kipling, Blue Roses

  I was a Greek that night. Not slick-tongued Sinon but a soldier on the inside, in the belly of the Horse. One of the murderous 40—Calchas or Teucer or Neoptolemos, killer of Priam. Girded with a short sword, a leather breastplate, a helmet formed of boar's tusks, I was excited and terrified to be shut inside, in the humid blackness, and wheeled to the gates of Troy. Would it work? I peered at myself through a magnifying glass. My wooden face was blank. I closed my eyes and imagined it, the face of someone who wasn't sure if he was a hero or a fool. Then I selected my thinnest brush—a Windsor Newton of Kolinsky sable, the finest miniature brush in the world—and bent low over my modeling desk with its scalpels and paint pots and crane-arm lamp. I blended flesh—cinnabar red, yellow, white, olive green—and dipped the brush's tip. Now the final touch. To breathe life into my lips. But no. I paused. Snow blew against the study's window, forming a constellation of cold white dots. They had a pattern—I sensed it even then—and like the ancient Greeks I began furiously connecting them. A horse. A soldier. A car hurtling wildly out of control.

  The telephone was ringing.

  I pictured the device in the kitchen, a clanging monster as old as the house itself, and wondered: were people more deaf before rock concerts and bulky pounding headphones? Suddenly it stopped. Relief. Silence, but not quite—the wind howled, floorboards creaked. I heard my sister: "W-what? That's impossible. How . . . ?"

  The Greek slipped through my fingers. He lay there, vulnerable and faceless as a larva, while Klara cried out, then slammed the phone. Rapid footsteps. The door swung open. Her hair was a black frazzled mess, her woolen pants streaked with dust. It must have been from the attic, the only place our housekeeper Marta didn't clean.

  "Has something happened?" I managed.

  She nodded as if the words were stuck in her throat and she was trying to shake them loose. She leaned against a hook. This was where Father had once dangled a human head. It was shrunken to the size of a grapefruit, with mottled purple skin and a puckered mouth—a curio from a long-ago trip to a writer's conference in Peru. "There's been an accident."

  An icy ravine. Police cars. A spotlight on Mother's Volvo, crumpled into a wall of snow. Klara collapsed in sobs, while I glanced about, unsure if this strobe-lit scene was real or one of Father's novels come to life. Father was John Crane. That John Crane. "The most unusual and acclaimed horror writer of our time." This was a lie. His books were trash. Full of gimmicks. They littered checkout lanes in supermarkets and were taught in lesser community colleges, where his trademark style—"the Master of the Slasher who writes in rhyming couplets"—might seem profound. Still I couldn't purge them from my mind. I peered into every corner of that ravine, searching for ominous shadows or a glinting devilish eye, and into the car itself for the slightest otherworldly stir:

  He sensed it in the wintry night,

  A whiff of fresh undead, a rotting putrid blight

  That told him what had happened here

  Upon this smoking, charred, and empty bier.

  Did the officers sense anything amiss, anything strange about the scene? No, they were dull and provincial—they just wanted to get things over with. One of them silently drove Klara and me to the station. A young policewoman greeted us there with cups of coffee and a clipboard thick with forms. Klara filled out the forms in a distracted hurry, while I gazed at a wall full of admonitions: NO SMOKING, NO EATING, NO RADIO PLAYING. When no one was looking I tucked my cup beneath a plastic chair. I cannot tolerate caffeine.

  The bodies were in the basement, on slabs of steel—Mother with shards of her sunglasses still nestled in her platinum bob and Father in his tweedy, seedy best. "I think I see Father breathing," I whispered to Klara. She gave me a stern look and told me to hush. I would not. Instead I began poking him in the face to wake him up. Even when his head flopped to one side and his jaw hung open crookedly, I laughed and said: "What an actor!"

  I didn't trust his death. Father was an author. He was words. You can't kill words—can't lock them up and drive them off a cliff. That night I peered into their room—at the roll-top desk and fireplace and four-poster bed, at Mother's brush clotted with glittering loops of hair and the ladder to the attic where Father wrote. While working he was like an apparition, only descending in the dead of night for his special visitations, as he called them. In my secret diary I called them something else; I called them moods, as in: Father came to me in one of his moods tonight. Afterwards I'd stumble to my window and see him wandering the grounds—a thin hunched figure flitting between the trees. I pictured all the evils of his books—buried bodies and Satanic rites, communes with witches and animal sacrifices and the weird obstetrical needs of half-human births—as I wondered: What did he do out there?

  "Milo?"

  I whirled around. Klara lurked in the vast stone hallway, arms folded over her nightgown, her face waxy with grief. She had Father's nose—a hawkish protuberance—and she was breathing heavily through it.

  "I think he's still up there," I gestured. "In the attic."

  She glanced past me. Even as a young girl she'd sneak up to see him, claiming to be his amanuensis, proud of herself for knowing what that meant.

  "Close the door," she said.

  I couldn't. She had to do it herself. A bare pale arm grazed my chin. I remembered her dusty pants.

  "What was he was working on, Klara?"

  "It doesn't matter now."

  I knew she was lying. As a boy I'd once burst into her room with a kitchen knife, reciting a passage from his fourth novel, that infamous psychological horror that catapulted him to world-wide fame:

  Keith's virgin killing was sublime,

  A young man's thrill, a murder just in time

  For art school graduation. What were classmates for

  Except to help achieve our dreams? His name was Franklin, poor

  Kentuckian, a lover of Picasso (self-promoting, compromised)

  And all clichés in art, which Keith despised.

  So there he was, tied to a chair,

  The ultimate artistic feeling: being scared,

  While Keith made of his throat a blood soufflé

  That puffed and oozed and rasped away,

  And Keith, his fingers black, said "look" and licked the gore

  And thought of many, many more

  Artistic turns he'd make, like Cubism for real!

  Or landscapes full of bodies! Battlefields

  Had always turned him on, so make it new!

  Oh yes, he would, he saw them now,

  Those necks and arms and bellies and pricks

  And eyes devoured by can
dle sticks.

  He dropped the knife and left his friend, so keen to make

  The kind of art that would forever slake

  His need for full divine transcendence—

  Supreme and shining incandescence.

  She was furious. Not about the knife but about the book itself. A Portrait of The Artist As A Young Psychopath. It wasn't yet in print. So how had I known it? Had Father bestowed his precious verse on me first? I refused to answer her questions, even as she boxed my ears and knocked me to the ground, and I sensed the same jealous impulse now—the same desire to keep his memory for herself—as she turned and walked away. I didn't protest. I let her have it—let her have all the frail dead parts of him locked away up there. I knew it would never be enough for her. Father had always been her idol, her colossus. Now she had nothing—just a few relics and the myth.

  It snowed on the day of the funeral. The cemetery was hushed and still, almost beautiful under its fresh white blanket. Icicles hung from mausoleums and the trees were like crystal shrouds. It was one of the oldest cemeteries in southern Vermont, on a small knoll near Bennington College where students communed with the dead and spooked their girlfriends into skulking, wide-eyed sex acts. Now they were all crowded behind a distant barricade, these students, waving and gawking at the suddenly boxed-up famous writer and his cold, grieving children. ("There they are! The kids! Not really kids anymore, eh?") I tried to ignore them. It was impossible. They were everywhere. At one point, just as the coffins were lowered into the ground, a band of black-clad teens snuck into the cemetery with copies of Father's sixth novel, We Are the Dead, which they ignited using cigarette lighters. They chanted lines about how "the dead never die" (it was a vampire novel) before tossing the flaming volumes into nearby shrubbery. Klara was just then reading an obscure passage of Milton. She had to stop until the groundskeepers extinguished the conflagration and chased away those zit-covered pyromaniacs.

  Afterwards the haze and smoke lingered, as did the crowds. Everyone had come for a carnival: they sang and raised their own lighters and wrapped pine branches around their necks as in Killer Trees. Everyone except one, that is. I noticed him near the ceremony's end: a still point amid the topsy-turvy tableau, a figure in a dark overcoat leaning against a fence. And the strangest part was that I recognized him, he was familiar, though with all the hubbub I couldn't remember how, couldn't reconstruct a past.

  Then he was gone. Or perhaps I lost sight of him. My sister hastily finished reading and hurried toward me. She looked exhausted, like a painting by Gustav Klimt, Adele something-or-other, her eyes drooping and her hair in a rounded heap. "Come," she said. We drove home in silence. As we climbed out of the car she leaned against me, hunching so she wouldn't tower over me. I allowed my hand to slip around her waist. I didn't think she'd mind. I was trying to be supportive, as people say. Still I looked at her, just to be sure. Her lips were pressed together as if she'd just stubbed her toe, and she was gazing at the spindly woods behind the house, whose grey stones and peaked rooftops glowed in the dying light. "You know that Mother always dreamed of doing something with this property," she whispered.

  "Such as?"

  "Hiring a gardener. Making it beautiful."

  It seemed like an offhanded comment, a way to dull the pain, and at first I let it go, puff, into the bone-chilled air, too preoccupied with holding her up to imagine any connection between these words and that mysterious figure (whom I'd already decided had been a mirage). I was conscious of being the sort of brother I'd never been: caring, attentive, present to her needs. Amazing what tragedy can do.

  "Well it's certainly not the season now," I said as I guided her across the icy driveway.

  "I suppose you're right."

  The next day I forgot about him entirely. We were visiting the lawyer. Father had been rich enough to hire the best law firm in New England, but he stuck with an old shyster who worked out of a ramshackle cottage on the outskirts of Manchester. We sat around a kitchen table he'd made himself and ate hot scones and cheese. He talked almost exclusively to Klara. He only ever addressed me to shout: "Look at you! All grown up!" But I didn't care. I noticed how distracted Klara was. She was nibbling a scone. Then she paused and wiped away the crumbs. Suddenly she was concentrating intensely on something the lawyer was saying. "Would you mind repeating that?"

  He did. That's when I understood, after several blinking moments, what had just occurred. Legal title to our property, over a hundred acres, had passed to her alone, to manage as she saw fit, while I merely received the right to live there "for the duration of my natural life." I was stunned. What about the other assets? The money? These were held for Klara in a complicated trust, while I received a stipend like a college student, along with the right to object if she "wasted" assets in a way that was "detrimental to the estate."

  "That's it?" I said.

  The lawyer put down the will and scrutinized me over his gold-rimmed reading glasses. "You're lucky to have such a responsible sister," he said. "I wouldn't worry about a thing."

  So she would take care of me, I supposed he was saying, and it might have worked out that way—might have been lovely, in a way. But Klara then leaned forward with a troubled frown. You'd think she was the one left with nothing but a right to protest. "What about the insurance?" she asked in a low voice.

  "That's paid to both you and Milo outside the will. Assuming it was an accident."

  Assuming? I felt like the Trojan Horse, my belly a sudden hollow full of murderous enemies. "What do you mean?" I asked.

  "The police report hasn't been finalized. We should know more in the morning."

  I couldn't wait. As soon as we got home Klara lunged up to her room. She looked more devastated than ever. I said I wanted a glass of water and closed the kitchen door. There was a message on our answering machine. A Detective Schanzenbach. "Nothing urgent, just need to clear up a few details." Breathe, I told myself. My finger slowly circled the old rotary dial.

  "Yah?"

  He was eating. I could practically smell the hamburger. He wanted to know whether we'd found a note or whether Father had been acting strangely of late. I laughed.

  "He was the strangest man I knew."

  "Nothing else you or your sister can tell us?"

  I bit my lip. Where should I begin? The attic? The Peruvian shrunken head? "My father was never a good driver."

  After hanging up I realized that Klara was crying. I heard it through the old metal ductwork. Clearly she wasn't wholly focused on her newfound wealth—or maybe she was, and it just reminded her how she'd gotten it. I left the kitchen. The crying only became louder. Our house has strange echoes. It was coming from all over, like the walls themselves were weeping. I was tempted to run away, to avoid a future of such sounds. Part of me knew Klara and I couldn't really care for each other, that too much lay between us and death wouldn't change a thing. But where could I go? Neither of us was suited for the modern world. Our parents had made sure of that. I had visions of freezing bus stops, distant impersonal cities where people rushed about doing jobs I could hardly comprehend. So in a moment of stubbornness—some might call it fear—I told myself that my place was here, by Klara's side, that we'd weather the postmortem storm together.

  Marta was gone, so I marched back to the kitchen and prepared a can of Klara's favorite cream of mushroom soup. I took it to her on a tray. She was curled up in a ball, yet shot up when she saw me, her nightgown falling off one shoulder. She didn't put it back. "Milo? What are you…?" Then she saw the soup. Her eyes welled up. She patted the edge of her bed, and I sat and let her stroke my hair, and I even cried a little too. But mostly I kept watching her, waiting for her to say something else about the accident, about what might have happened.

  She never did.

  Perhaps we needed a blind man. That's what Father would have said. He loved telling the story of Oedipus—who pressed Teires
ias, a blind seer, to reveal his father's killer. "He is here," Teiresias says, referring to Oedipus himself, who doesn't know it yet. Father said you could learn a lot from the Greeks, who in their stilted way conveyed unspeakable horrors. It was unfortunate that what he learned most was how to distort them—to use them as vehicles for his mindless displays of slaughter. Father was adept at stealing from every source he could find: stealing and twisting them for his own terrible ends.

  But the real tragedy of Oedipus wasn't that he'd unwittingly killed his father. It was that he'd ultimately learned the truth. So when the detective arrived the following day, I couldn't help feeling anxious, especially when I saw the eager-beaver look on his shiny face. Klara hardly said a word as she ushered him into the living room and laid out tea and an old tin of butter cookies. "This house is exactly how I imagined it," he said, chewing. He glanced at the spilling bookshelves and the swirling floral canvases that Mother had painted and the dusty curtains in front of our tall narrow windows. "A little spooky, like his books."

  I had half a mind to show him the Peruvian shrunken head. But Klara beat me to it. She said what was on both our minds: "Have you found anything?" She was sitting upright, twisting her fingers in her lap. He swallowed and nodded, and I could see his chin: loose, on the way to fat. "An interesting development."

  I leaned forward. Yet I should have known better. We were dealing with amateurs. "Your parents' car was going over 50 miles per hour when it crashed through the guardrail," he said.

  "My God," said Klara.

  "Your father seems to have been drunk."

  Klara sighed, almost relieved, while I kept thinking: Then why was he behind the wheel? Even under the best of circumstances, he was a nervous, hesitant, turtle-slow driver.

  "He was on his way to an important reading," Klara said, as if anticipating my objection. "His first one in years."

  "That's the funny thing," the detective said. "We didn't find anything in the car. No notes, no speech, not even a book."

 

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