*
The thunderclouds had drifted away. I straightened the bedclothes, but slept fitfully. Towards morning I started awake from a dream in which I was in a café in the market place in Ruizele, propping up the bar with a couple of classmates and Mr Bouillie. The atmosphere was joky, until the door opened and we saw Willem standing there in the harsh light, stark naked.
“What are you doing here?” I burst out in amazement.
He shot me one of his haughty looks, flicked little clouds of ash off his shoulders and said, “I’m back. Changed my mind.”
*
Roland was having breakfast with my mother when I came downstairs.
“There’s a letter for you,” she said.
She had laid it beside my plate. I recognised the school crest. A blossoming branch entwined with the words Saint Joseph.
I ripped open the envelope and skimmed the letter from the corner of my eye: “tragic accident… snatched before his time… express our deepest sympathy for his parents… you are invited to attend the funeral service in class formation, as a fitting tribute to your fellow former pupil.” It also suggested we bring one hundred francs to go towards a wreath.
I tore the letter into four pieces.
My mother was shocked. “You will be going, won’t you?”
“I’ll go on my own. I’ll ask Pa for the car. He won’t be needing it on Saturday, what with moving house.”
“It’s in the paper,” Roland said. “It happened at the seaside. He’d been with relatives, I think.”
“His aunt,” I said.
“You should have seen that photograph, with the lorry, and that bike of his. Not a pretty picture.”
“I want to go and see him… pay my respects,” I said. “They brought him to the mortuary yesterday.”
“Why don’t you wait until your father gets back,” my mother said. “He can drive you there.”
“I don’t want to wait until tonight. I’d rather go before it gets busy. It’ll be quiet there now.”
“You bet it will,” Roland said, grinning.
I glared at him.
He cleared his throat, drank down his cup of coffee, and said in an apologetic tone, “You know what? I’ll take you there if you like.”
*
The antechamber of death. A low pavilion with a glass entrance flanked by rose beds and a sign saying MORTUARY planted among flowering lavender bushes.
A hall with a floor of gleaming granite and a counter behind which sits a young woman wearing demure make-up. At the request of each mourner she makes a brief call to some remote place in the depths of the building, where the dead are assembled on hard, straight-backed chairs, passing the time with back issues of magazines and desultory exchanges about the weather.
“I’ve come for De Vries,” I said. “Willem de Vries.”
Roland’s shoes squealed on the floor behind me.
The young woman flicked the pages of a register, lifted the receiver and dialled an extension. She said we were to wait over there, in the waiting room across the corridor.
I heard her murmuring into the phone and noted a certain urgency in her tone, as if she were talking to him in person, telling him to comb his hair, to be sensible and mind his manners, and no, he was to put that comic away, he could return to it later.
The walls of the waiting room were decorated with photographs of hazy parkland landscapes. A little stack of solemn brochures lay on the table.
Thoughts at the graveside.
Callest Thou, Oh Lord?
On the cover a drawing of a hand and a heart crowned with thorns against a background of flames: See, I make everything whole again. Roland stood with his back to me, staring out of the window at the car park.
People trooped down the corridor. Sniffling, coats being buttoned up. I heard the young woman intoning her professional condolences.
“It’s them,” Roland said. “I can see that sister of his. What’s her name? Katrien…”
He swung round and moved away from the window.
The young woman came to fetch us. She accompanied us down the hall, until it branched off in a long corridor. “Sixth door on the right,” she said, turning on her heel.
A soft drone of mournful music poured from speakers fitted in the ceiling. The doors were painted a dingy blue, with pearl-grey plastic handles that made me think of the reserved neutrality of doctors’ surgeries; as if the dead might be holding office there for their relatives, with their hands loosely folded on the desk in front of them, smiling amicably and saying, “I was just watering my radishes. It started up here, in my chest. Can I offer you something to drink?”
Sixth door on the right. My courage sank to my shoes. My heart pounded in my throat.
Roland lagged behind. His eyes glinted anxiously in the dimly lit corridor. “If it’s all the same to you I’d rather wait outside.”
Looking the other way, he said, “Not my thing, to be honest. Freaks me out.” He strode ahead to the end of the corridor, where a plant languished in a pot. “Sorry about that.”
Him, scared. The killer of kittens. Squasher of butterflies.
I pushed open the door. From the ceiling emanated the same mournful music, seemingly to blot out the possibility that the dead might still be breathing, exhaling the last lingering air, like bubbles rising from a sinking bottle.
He lay in his coffin with purple cloths draped across his stomach and hands bandaged like stumps. They had dressed him in a cream-coloured shirt, which he wouldn’t have been seen dead in when he was alive, not even for an exam — indeed, he used to go out of his way to buy the most garish Hawaii-print shirts he could find and equally ghastly ties, just to rile the teachers. There was something odd about the way the pale fabric was stretched taught across his chest, as if there were planks propping it up underneath.
His mouth was held shut with a bandage round his chin. His fair hair was for the most part tucked away, and in the glow of the spotlight illuminating his face, his cheeks showed signs of bruises and scratches under the generous coating of powder.
His skin was puffy, his lips swollen like the mouth of a river god in a Roman wall fountain. His forehead was creased, his eyebrows faintly wrinkled, as though he were sunk in thought about the extraordinary situation in which he found himself.
Next to a vase of arum lilies on a pedestal stood a glass of holy water and a palm frond. For a moment I pictured him blinking crossly at having water sprinkled on his face, sitting up, tearing off the bandage and raging, arms akimbo, “Hey you, what’s going on?”—which was what he always did when I was offended and turned away to sulk and wallow in self-pity.
There was a timid knock on the door. From the corridor came the sound of Roland coughing and rattling his car keys.
I wiped my tears, leaned over and put my lips to Willem’s forehead. The cold was unbearable.
I stepped out of the room, pulled the door behind me and left him to think things over.
CHAPTER 4
THIS BODY, it could be the body of a stranger. It was only because it mimicked my every move so slavishly in shop windows and mirrors and revealed more and more of my father’s face each time I shaved that I was moved to think: don’t I know you? I’m sure I’ve seen you somewhere before.
This face staring back at me has the same closed, self-absorbed look as the house used to have on summer evenings when all the shutters were closed and, up at the top, under the roof, were the shadows of children having pillow fights and tripping across the floorboards long past bedtime.
Willem would be nearly forty now. Balding like his Pa, maybe, or sleek like his mother, settling contentedly into a looser-fitting body, spreading and warm like a well-worn sofa.