按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
I do; and she hangs it from a hidden hook by the door。 I've avoided the inside of this room since I met her; terrified of ruining her film。
Katie walks over to a clothesline strung along one wall。 Photographs are clipped to it with clothespins。 〃It's not supposed to get above seventy…five in here;〃 she says; 〃or the soup reticulates the negatives。〃
She might as well be speaking Greek。 There's an old rule my sisters taught me: whenever you go on a date with a girl; always meet at a place you know well。 French restaurants aren't impressive when you can't read the menu; and highbrow movies backfire when you don't understand the plot。 Here; in the darkroom; the possibilities for failure seem spectacular。
〃Give me a second;〃 she says; shuttling from one side of the room to the other; quick as a hummingbird。 〃I'm almost done。〃
She opens the cover to a small tank; brings the film inside it to a spigot; then places it under running water。 I start to feel crowded。 The darkroom is small and cluttered; counters overrun with pans and trays; shelves lined with stop bath and fixer。 Katie seems to have almost perfect dexterity here。 It reminds me of the way she did her hair at the reception; tying it around pins as if she could see what she was doing。
〃Should I turn out the lights?〃 I ask; starting to feel useless。
〃Not unless you want to。 The negatives have fixed。〃
So I stand like a scarecrow in the center of the room。
〃How's Paul holding up?〃 she asks。
〃Okay。〃
A respectful silence ensues; and Katie seems to lose the thread of the conversation; attending to another set of photos。
〃I stopped by Dod just after 12:30;〃 she begins again。 〃Charlie said you were with Paul。〃
There's an unexpected sympathy in her voice。
〃It was good of you to stay with him;〃 she says。 〃This must be terrible for Paul。 For everyone。〃
I want to tell her about Stein's letters; but realize how much explaining it would take。 She returns to my side now with a handful of pictures。
〃What are these?〃
〃I developed our film。〃
〃From the movie field?〃
She nods。
The movie field is a place Katie brought me to see; an open plot in Princeton Battlefield Park that seems to extend farther and flatter than any stretch of land east of Kansas。 A single oak tree stands in the middle of it like a sentinel who won't leave his post; echoing the last gesture of a general who died beneath the tree's branches during the Revolutionary War。 Katie first saw the spot in a Walter Matthau movie; and ever since then the tree has been an enchantment for her。 It became one in a small string of places she visited over and over again; a rosary of sights that anchored her life the more she returned to them。 Within a week of her first night at Dod; she took me to see it; and it was as if the old Mercer Oak were a relative of hers; all three of us making an important first impression。 I brought a blanket; a flashlight; and a picnic basket; Katie brought film and a camera。
The pictures are an artifact I don't expect; a small part of us locked in amber。 We work through them together; sharing between our hands。
〃What do you think?〃 she says。
Seeing them; I remember how warm the winter was。 January's fading light is almost the color of honey; and here we are; both dressed in light sweaters; with coats and hats and gloves nowhere to be seen。 The grooves of the tree behind us have the texture of age。
〃They're wonderful;〃 I tell her。
Katie smiles awkwardly; still unsure how to take a pliment。 I notice stains on her fingertips; the color of newsprint; left by one of the darkroom agents bottled along the wall。 Her fingers are long and thin; but with a workmanlike touch; the residue of too much film dipped in too many chemical baths。 This was us; she's saying; a thousand words at a time。 Remember?
〃I'm sorry;〃 I tell her。
My grip on the pictures loosens; but she reaches for my fingers with her other hand。
〃It's not because of my birthday;〃 she says; worried I've missed the point。
I wait。
〃Where did you and Paul go after you left Holder last night?〃
〃To see Bill Stein。〃
She pauses over the name; but presses on。 〃About Paul's thesis?〃
〃It was urgent。〃
〃What about when I stopped by your room just after midnight?〃
〃The art museum。〃
〃Why?〃
I'm unfortable with the direction she's taking。 〃I'm sorry I didn't e over。 Paul thought he could find Colonna's crypt; and he needed to look at some of the older maps。〃
Katie doesn't seem surprised。 A hush gathers behind her next words; and I know this is the conclusion she's been building toward。
〃I thought you were done with Paul's thesis;〃 she says。
〃So did I。〃
〃You can't expect me to watch you do this all over again; Tom。 Last time we didn't talk for weeks。〃 She hesitates; not knowing how else to put it。 〃I deserve better。〃
A boy's way is to argue; to find a defensible position and hold it; even if it's not heartfelt。 I can feel the arguments crowding into my mouth; the little spurs of self…preservation; but Katie stops me。
〃Don't;〃 she says。 〃I want you to think about this。〃
She doesn't have to spell it out。 Our hands part; she leaves the pictures in mine。 The hum of the darkroom returns。 Like a dog I've kicked; the silence always seems to take her side。
The choice is made; I want to tell her。 I don't need to think this through。 It's simple: I love you more than I love the book。
But to say it now would be the wrong choice。 Part of this isn't about answering the question correctly: it's about showing that I'm correctible; that twice broken; I can still be fixed。 Twelve hours ago I missed her birthday because of the Hypnerotomachia。 My promises would seem empty right now; even to me。
〃Okay;〃 I say。
Katie brings a hand to her mouth and bites at a nail; then catches herself and stops。
〃I should work;〃 she says; touching my fingers again。 〃Let's talk more about this tonight。〃
I stare at the nub of her nail; wishing I could inspire more confidence。
She pushes me toward the black curtains; handing me my coat; and we return to the main office。 〃I need to finish the rest of my rolls before the senior photographers take over the darkroom;〃 she says on the way; more for Sam's benefit than for mine。 〃You're a distraction。〃
The artifice is wasted。 Sam's earphones are still in place; focused on her typing; she doesn't notice me leaving。
At the door; Katie takes her hands away from the small of my back。 She seems prepared to speak; but doesn't。 Instead; she leans over and gives me a kiss on the cheek; the kind I used to get in our earliest days; as a reward for jogs in the morning。 Then she holds the door for me as I leave。
Chapter 18
Love conquers all。
In seventh grade; at a small souvenir stand in New York; I bought a silver bracelet with that inscription for a girl named Jenny Harlow。 I thought it was; in one stroke; a portrait of the young man she wanted to date: cosmopolitan; with its Manhattan pedigree; romantic; with its poetic…sounding motto; and classy; with its understated shine。 I left the bracelet anonymously in Jenny's locker on Valentine's Day; then waited all day for a response; thinking she was sure to know who'd left it。
Cosmopolitan; romantic; and classy; unfortunately; didn't form a trail of breadcrumbs leading directly back to me。 An eighth grader named Julius Murphy must've had that bination of virtues in much greater supply than I did; because it was Julius who got a kiss from Jenny Harlow at the end of the day; while I was left with nothing but a dark suspicion that the family vacation to New York had been for naught。
The whole experience; like so much of childhood; was built on misunderstanding。 It wouldn't occur to me until much later that the bracelet wasn't made in New York; any more than it was made of silver。 But that very Valentine's night; my father explained the particular misinterpretation he found most telling; which was that the poetic…sounding motto wasn't quite as romantic as Julius; Jenny; and I thought。
〃You may have gotten the wrong impression from Chaucer;〃 he began; with the smile of paternal wisdom。 〃There's more to 'love conquers all' than just the Prioress's brooch。〃
I sensed that this was going to be a lot like the conversation we'd had about babies and storks a few years before: well intentioned; but based on a serious misunderstanding about what I'd been learning in school。
A long explanation followed; about Virgil's tenth eclogue and omnia vincit amor; with digressions about Sithonian snows and Ethiopian sheep; all of which mattered a lot less to me than why Jenny Harlow didn't think I was romantic; and why I'd found such a useless way of blowing twelve dollars。 If love conquered all; I decided; then love had never met Julius Murphy。
But my father was a wise man in his way; and when he saw he wasn't getting through to me; he opened a book and showed me a picture that made his point for him。
〃Agostino Carracci made this engraving; called Love Conquers All;〃 he said。 〃What do you see?〃
On the right side of the picture were two naked women。 On the left side; a baby boy was beating up a much larger and more muscular satyr。
〃I don't know;〃 I said; unsure which side of the picture I was supposed to be learning from。
〃That;〃 my father said; pointing to the boy; 〃is Love。〃
He let it sink in。
〃He's not supposed to be on your side。 You fight with him; you try to undo what he does to others。 But he's too powerful。 No matter how much we suffer; Virgil says; our hardships cannot move him。〃
I'm not sure I ever pletely understood the lesson my father was imparting。 I got the simplest bit of it; I think: by trying to make Jenny Harlow fall head over heels for me; I was arm…wrestling Love; which my own cheap bracelet had been telling me was futile。 But I sensed; even then; that my father was only using Jenny and Julius as an object lesson。 What he really wanted to offer was a piece of wisdom he'd e by the hard way; which he hoped to impress upon me while the stakes of my own failures were still small。 My mother had warned me about misguided love; my father's affair with the Hypnerotomachia always in the back of her mind; and now my father was offering his counterpoint; riddled in Virgil and Chaucer。 He knew exactly how she felt; he was saying; he may even have agreed。 But how could he stop it; what power did he have against the force he was fighting; when Love conquered all?
I've never known which of the two of them was right。 The world is a Jenny Harlow; I think; we're all just fishermen telling stories about the one that got away。 But to this day; I'm not sure how Chaucer's Prioress interpreted Virgil; or how Virgil interpreted love。 All that stays with me is the picture my father showed me; the part he never said a word about; where the two naked women are watching Love bully the satyr。 I've always wondered why Carracci put two women in that engraving; when he only needed one。 Somewhere in that is the moral I took from the story: in the geometry of love; everything is triangular。 For every Tom and Jenny; there is a Julius; for every Katie and Tom; there is a Francesco Colonna; and the tongue of desire is forked; kissing two but loving one。 Love draws lines between us like an astronomer plotting a constellation from stars; joining points into patterns that have no basis in nature。 The butt of every triangle bees the heart of another; until the roof of reality is a tessellation of love affairs。 Taken together; they have the pattern of netting; and behind them; I think; is Love。 Love is the only perfect fisherman; the one who casts the broadest net; which no fish can escape。 His reward is to sit alone in the tavern of life; forever a boy among men; hoping someday to tell stories about the one that got away。
The rumor was that Katie had found someone else。 I'd been replaced by a junior named Donald Morgan; a wiry tower of a man who wore a blazer when a simple dress shirt would do; and who was already priming himself to be Gil's successor as Ivy president。 I happened on the new couple one night in late February at Small World Coffee; the same place where I'd met Paul three years earlier; and a cool exchange followed。 Donald managed to say only two or three chummy; i