Everyone Brave Is Forgiven

As the train came in to the platform they took their bags from the rack and disembarked. They embraced, and Hilda dissolved into steam. Once she was gone, Mary leaned into a corner for a while. No one interrupted her. Half the city wept into walls now.

Afterward, she stood for a while on the empty platform. She pulled her gloves on and herself together, and walked out into the streets.

Everywhere there was rubble. Bathtubs lay exposed, their yellow ducks icebound. Beds in which women had been conceived and born and then conceived in and labored in themselves—those brass theaters of involuntary dialogue—lay silent and bent, seesawing on bisected floors, weeping duck down into the street. The feathers swirled with the snow. It was too much for her—how easily she was discouraged now!—and she fled into a café and drank straw-colored tea. She wrote to the manager at the Lyceum, asking if Zachary’s whereabouts were known. When it was done and folded, the flat taste of the sealing gum lingered.

In the maps in the newspaper they brought her, the enemy’s swastikas were pressed up against the neighboring coasts—so close that one could look up from the page and almost smell the diesel and the sweat. In the Atlantic the U-boats completed the encirclement. On the inside pages of the paper were endless notices. London’s districts had been divided and subdivided as the lines of communication shrank. There were ten new rules if one lived here; twelve if one lived there. This was the place she had grown up in, whose singular law had recently applied from Bombay to Belize. Her great extrovertive city was besieged. Slowly the feeling returned that had come over her when she first took charge of her school. What one felt toward the enemy, finally, was fury.

She pushed the cold tea away and walked through the snow to Tom’s old office at the Education Authority. In the lobby she knocked the snow off her boots and told the receptionist that she wouldn’t leave until she was seen.

They let her up to see the new man, who was called Cooper. As he rose to greet her, he seemed to become blocked between his chair and the desk. He straightened ineffectually.

“Please,” said Mary. “No need to get up.”

He sank back down, apologizing with a vague gesture for what Mary took to be a bad back, or limited physical grace, or apathy.

Cooper was older than Tom—she put him in his mid-thirties. He was fair and slightly overweight. He had a mustache growing in. Behind him on the wall of the office was a small watercolor of Hampstead Heath that she had given to Tom in the summer. She had laughed until she gasped for breath as she watched Tom hang it there, one evening when his colleagues had all gone home. He had needed three nails and seven profanities. Afterward they had been quite indiscreet, and a great deal of paperwork had fallen from the desk to the floor. Tom had always kept his desk in such a mess.

Cooper saw her looking at the picture. “It’s Hampstead Heath.”

“Is it?” Mary caught herself saying, quite automatically.

How soon one became diminished. The man made a gesture that was imprecisely dismissive—whether of her or the heath or the watercolor, she couldn’t judge. “Dreadful, I’m afraid,” he said.

Mary felt a sadness as weary as his manner. Of course the poor man dismissed the painting. Such was the past, after all: it left the present cluttered with objects the survivors were immune to. She sat, folded her gloves in her lap, and lit a cigarette. He clasped his hands on the immaculate desk and looked down at his cuffs, as though she might have asked his permission. There was an ashtray—Tom’s, the heavy blue glass with the ambiguous inclusion in the heart of it that Mary had always rather hoped was an eyeball. Since Cooper made a point of not sliding the ashtray across the desk toward her, she made a point of using the carpet.

She said, “I should like to be assigned a new school. My preference is for primary, but if the only vacancies are at secondary then I can teach French, Latin and composition, as it says in my file. I am available immediately.”

“Do you not think,” said Cooper after a moment, “that under the circumstances it might be better to wait a while before you go back to work?”

“Wait for what? For children to forget their times tables? For H’s to be dropped in great mounds?”

He humored her with a smile. “I’m sure you know what I mean.”

“But I am quite all right. I am unharmed and able to return to duty.”

There was a long silence. “Must I spell out the sensitivities?”

“I’d rather you gave me a job.’

Cooper wouldn’t return her smile. He stood—apparently it was not so hard after all—and walked across the office. With his back to her and his hands clasped behind it, he looked out at the snow.

“My predecessor was very young, and decided to reopen some schools. I’m afraid the excitement of promotion got the better of his judgement.”

Mary shook her head. “His duty was to provide school places.”

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