* * *
When Tim’s foot turned yellow, Dr. Nigst said they would have to take his leg.
“How much?” Mary Frances said. Even just a little was too much, but she would give anything now, anything they asked to have Tim back.
“Please, just a moment, Madame, and I will tell Mr. Parrish about the surgery. If you would step outside—”
“Outside?”
“He is in tremendous pain. I’m sure you do not want to see—”
She didn’t even have to think about it; this new sure thing rose in her now and pushed her forward. She leaned over Tim, her lips to his ear. His hands were already twisting at the sheets.
She said, “Darling, that leg is going to kill you. They are going to cut it off.”
“Oh Christ please,” he said. “Cut it off, cut it off.”
She looked at Dr. Nigst as if she had won something. That would be the last of it: Tim would heal, he would come to walk again, and they would return to Le Paquis. It was just his leg. She had never been the sort of woman who allowed for the worst.
“Cut it off,” she said.
But somehow the pain got left behind.
* * *
Tim reclined in the hospital bed he had not left in weeks and held a book open in his lap. He turned pages he did not read. He looked at the book without seeing it, looked out the window, looked at her. She thought how hard it was not to hate the thing that pulled your lover into himself, no matter what it was. She wrote that down.
She wrote everything down now, what Dr. Nigst said or the nurses, what Tim said when he was lucid, what he screamed when he was not. She wrote to keep a stitch running through her thoughts, to have something to do with her thoughts, because what was happening was important and someday she would need to remember. Someday she would need to remember everything, even this.
And the words across the page, page after page, meant time moved forward. The light falling across the room, the nurse that came at noon, at four, the meals that came, uneaten now, she wrote to move from one to the next to the next. It was the darkness that was uncountable. In the dark, when all Tim could manage was a whimper, he begged her to drag him to the window, break a mirror, lift a pillow, please — would she help him? Of course she would. In the dark, she would do anything.
But in the morning, the shots would come, he seemed better, and they bore on.
“Do you know,” he said, “from where they cut it on down, I can’t remember one goddamn thing about my leg.”
She lifted her eyes from her notebook. He was looking at the place it should have been, the drape in the sheets, the leg that wasn’t there but still somehow throbbed and burned and itched.
“I can’t either,” she said.
“It might have had an ingrown toenail, but I’m not sure now. I can’t remember. It looked like all the others.”
She had the sudden thought maybe she would cut her hair, cut it all off in a handful at the base of her scalp. She would like to be shorn. She would like to lose something that didn’t matter.
“We’ll find something,” she said. “Something that works. And once you’re better, we’ll go back to Vevey and our house and our garden.”
“Our garden? It will have to be your garden now.”
“Don’t be silly, darling. We’ll starve.”
Tim had started to tremble and blanch. The nurse was on her way.
“Tell me, Mary Frances,” he said. “Tell me how we will go back.”
And she began.
Vevey, Switzerland, Spring 1939
It would be the last time they took the train to Milan. They had no reason to take it now, no business in Milan, but they used to love to take the train, and these last times were what was left to them. Le Paquis was sold, their trinkets sorted, boxes packed. At the end of the week they would take the Normandie to New York, and on to California, the new home they would buy in the desert, the whole of Europe slouching toward war.
They spent money as if it were paper now: they bought books and left them in cafés, they drank gimlets and good wines and ate whatever they pleased: potato chips and beer for dinner, plates of fried minnows sparkling with salt. They bought gifts for everyone they knew, vellum stationery and broad-nibbed pens, Italian paintbrushes, hats, perfume. They bought fourteen months’ worth of Analgeticum, each ampoule wrapped in a cardboard comb and sleeve, nested like honeybees in a steamer trunk she’d pushed beneath the narrow bed at the Hôtel Trois Couronnes. When the Analgeticum ran out, Tim would lose his other leg. If he lived that long.
They bought the drugs from Dr. Nigst, and only the Analgeticum helped Tim’s pain, not the cobra venom or bee stings, the careful diet or the mountain air, not morphine or whiskey or beating his head bloody against the hospital wall. And they sold the Analgeticum only in Switzerland, where the end of the world was coming soon.
The full trunk beneath the bed became a kind of liquid calendar. They had fourteen months. They knew how it was going to go; they had it all locked away. What was there to do but take the train once more to Milan? What was there to do but be together?
* * *
Tim woke, his midnight shot run out and the electric licking in his guts already chattery and loud. He watched the ivory face of the clock. He could hear Mary Frances breathing like the breath of the clock, slow measured rounds, the minute hand, the seconds, the dial spinning in him now faster and faster until he keened on his springs. He reached for Mary Frances, and Mary Frances reached for the ampoule and syringe. She scored the glass top with her teeth to break it open, drawing up the dose, fast into a muscle, any muscle — his arm, his hip, his thigh. He watched her face now, still sleeping or half sleeping, the thick hum of sleep on her breath and the needle aspirating in her closed hand. She rubbed the spot she’d hit and whispered things he could not focus to hear. Seconds more, seconds more; they waited.
It took longer to do everything now. Once the shot hit, she swung herself across his lap, one foot flat on the bed beside his hip, watching as he pressed himself against her. She smiled at him — oh, the mornings, the slow turns she made, her dark hair loosely braided down her back, her eyes always open, her hands on the sharp new jut of his ribs. It was June; they had been married now three weeks, four days, and they rubbed themselves against each other every morning in one way or another, like flints and sticks, and half the time, miraculously, they caught.
The shot took hold and gave him time.
Later she bathed and dressed. Her head was empty in the morning; the day had yet to wear her down. She was working on a new book, several books, the coupling of sentences harmonic and loud like the coupling of trains. The love-life of an oyster is a curious one. Spatting and spawning, spawning and spatting. She relied on rhythms now, the blue ribbon in her hair matching the blue in her sweater, the blue shadow she painted on her eyelids down by the lash. Spawning and spatting, spatting and spawning.
She called the line aloud into the other room.
“Tim? What do you think?”
He was probably asleep. But she knew one day she could do something wrong with the needle or the dose, she could leave too much within his reach. She knew he was probably asleep, but her hands gripped the edge of the marble vanity, and for a full five seconds, she couldn’t bring herself to go and see.
Then, “Darling,” he said. “I didn’t hear it. Come tell me again.”