'Bad news,' he said.
'What is it?'
'Your mother's come down with something bad.'
'She's sick? What is it?'
'I think she's dying, kid. They found it too late.'
'What?' I said.
'What?'
'What did they find?'
'It looks like cancer. She doesn't want to go to the hospital.'
'Cancer where? What part?'
'Take the first plane you can get. Wire and I'll meet you at the airport. You need money, I'll send it right out. But, look, hurry it up if you can. I should have called you weeks ago but I couldn't get myself to believe it. Everything's caving in. How the hell am I going to get in touch with Mary?'
'Where's the cancer?' I said.
'It's inside. It's in the female region. Look, can't we talk about it later? The doctor can tell you these things better than I can.'
'Who's the doctor?'
'I got Weber.'
'Get him the fuck out of there,' I said. 'I don't want Weber in there with her. Get another doctor. Anybody. Just get Weber out.'
'It's all my fault,' he said. 'I've done everything wrong. I should have had her examined years ago. I should have had her examined for the other thing. Now there's this thing and it's too late. It's funny, kid, but she said the same thing you did. She said to get Weber out.'
The plane, smelling vaguely of a child's vomit, ranged through stormclouds over the mountains and then broke clear into a calm blue afternoon. When I came out of the toilet a man stopped me to introduce himself. He said his wife would like to have my autograph. He said she had recognized me and he wondered if I would say hello to her on the way back to my seat. I told him she had mistaken me for someone else. He said it didn't matter; sign any name. And I did, I signed Buster Keaton, and when I stopped at her seat she took my hand and told me how very nice it was to meet me, how kind I was to interrupt my busy flying schedule in order to say hello to an admirer. An hour before we landed, the man came to my seat and offered me a twenty-dollar bill. Throughout the flight I kept getting mental pictures, against my will, of a growth inside my mother's womb.
The vase held seven wizened zinnias. My father whispered to me as she slept. It was the cervix. It had been discovered at an advanced stage. The doctor had wanted to take everything out. She had refused. She told my father that she had known about it for a long time. There had been unexplained bleeding and she told him she had felt the thing spreading, a radial plague, spreading like medieval death. Only her collapse had told him that something was wrong. And she had refused to let them take anything out. God has been defeated, she said. And nothing anybody could do with their knives and clamps could ever change the fact of this defeat. He was in my body and I let Him out. He was the light of my body and I blew Him out. I believe in the Middle Ages. Fire for witches and plague for the sins of the world. I believe in ancient Egypt. These things were read to me in a garden full of sunlight by a beautiful and shining woman.
I opened the window. All the sweet reek of April filled the room and when I sighed it was almost possible to believe that something out there returned the sigh, something raving in the wind as it stirred those groping trees, something terrible on the grass, an instant in which nature gave in to rape, birdshaped and muddied in blood.
Jane touched me on the shoulder. The Reverend Potter was standing in the doorway like a ship in an upright bottle. My father leaned over to tie his shoe. I heard the bells of the ice-cream truck.
And in the morning I cut myself shaving. The bleeding stopped seven minutes later and I knew it was safe to go out.
'She was a different breed of cat,' my father said. 'She knew things nobody else knew. There was something magic about that woman. I don't believe in devils or saints or evil spirits. If you can't see it, is my theory, then it isn't there. But when your mother talked about these things it wasn't so easy to be a skeptic. Her mother drowned when she was a little girl. Maybe it did something to her. She remembered things that happened to her when she was only two years old. Maybe she just dreamed them but if they were just dreams she could make them sound deadly real. When she was carrying Mary, the minute she knew she was carrying Mary, she said it was a girl. She said it was the kite-soul of her mother. The kite-soul. It sounds Oriental, doesn't it? Something Buddhists or Hindus might believe in. Something to do with reincarnation. I've never come across that phrase before or since. But to get back to Mary. Mary when she was born resembled me more than anyone. And when Jane was born it seemed a sure bet that the blond side of the family had been lost somewhere, your mother's side, and her mother's side. Ann felt desolate. I think she felt a whole race had faded away in some genetic catastrophe. Then you were born. She looked at you and said there he is, up out of the Irish seas like Lycidas. I loved her like I'll never love anything in this world again. When you were born she was happy and I didn't care what she said or how little I understood. She was happy and that was all that mattered. I have that much to thank you for anyway.'
As she edged closer to death, he said, he began drinking heavily. Then one day he stopped drinking. He cut it out completely. He stopped drinking and got into his Maserati and took the first of a series of strange drives over the dark narrow roads around town. He would go out shortly after midnight and begin driving. He would take it up to 110, corner at 75, slam it way out to the fringe, the delicate pressure of his foot on the accelerator becoming part of a game of tender balances, and his hands on the wheel daring him closer to the bright splashing eyes in the adjacent lane. In the rain one night he went into a spin and ended up in a ditch. He got out of the car, bleeding around the head, and walked back to town. He went about a mile out of his way to pass through the Negro section of Old Holly, past the bars and old frame houses. He was waiting for a man with a knife to come out of a doorway at him. All this time, he told me, he had been trying to steal death from her body. By confronting it himself, he would keep it away from her. And on that last night a man leaned out of a bar and began following him. My father turned a corner, clenched his fists and waited. It was still raining and he could taste the rain mixed with blood running into his mouth. The man came around the corner and walked up to him and began to tapdance. My father stood there and the man danced around him, shuffling slowly and mumbling some old scat lyric. When he started to walk away, the man followed at a distance of several yards, gliding and tapping with the loose elegance of the indomitably drunk. My father walked backwards for almost half a block, watching the man come closer. Then he turned quickly and began to run, and he could hear the feet still tapping behind him, diminishing now, and the voice growing dimmer, a weary moan from swamps or cotton, words of an unknown language.
For several years I had thought of my father as the witness. Now, at her death, he became more than that. Our bond tightened and he closed in on me. We stood on the grass with scores of people. The splendor of her coffin was a comfort to everyone. I watched them and knew they were proud of her. To be buried in such luxury. Surely her life must have been something of a grand episode. For a moment I thought of those fabled khans and their nymphomaniacs who are always crashing into trees somewhere between Paris and Nice. There is substance to most cliches and we admire these men and women for having the wit to die as they have lived. The thought passed quickly and then down went mother in her silver Ferrari, a single rose clinging to the lid.
'She's watching us,' my father said. 'You think she's down there but she's not. Not her. She's watching us. She's watching to see what we're going to do to each other.'
When Meredith returned from England she got a secretarial job in Manhattan. I went into the city one day to buy some shoes and we met later for lunch.
'How's the job coming along?'
'I love it,' she said.
'Back in the swing of things yet? I guess it takes a while. That was quite a vacation.'
'New York is the most exciting place in the world to work. London is fun to walk around in and New York is fun to work in.'
'I missed you,' I said. 'I guess you could tell that from my letters.'
'They were nice letters. They were very creative. I can't tell you how sorry I was to hear about your mother.'