Paullina Simons

Bellagrand


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they have sack races. We could race and beat the very small children. You get to weave your own basket. You learn to make pumpkin butter.”

      “Ugh.”

      “Apple butter?”

      “Better.”

      “There is a corn maze.”

      “I don’t like mazes. I always get lost.”

      “I never get lost. You can come with me.”

      She shook her head. “I don’t know. I have so much work at Rose’s. We’ve taken too long today as it is. We walked nearly to Walden Pond! We haven’t been very good workers on Sundays, I’m afraid.”

      “You’re right. But even the good Lord rested on Sunday.”

      Feebly she protested. “But even on the Sabbath you have to take care of the sick. The Lord didn’t rest when there was work to be done, did He? And … Rose has been chiding me for my absent-mindedness, for my derelictions. I don’t want to displease her. It’s like displeasing God.”

      “Come on,” Ben said. “The world is not a sad and solemn place.” He took hold of her calloused hand. “Don’t fret. Be glad like the belle of Belpasso. Be glad in the trees and the silence. Come to the maze with me.”

      “You know there is nothing like that we can do except dream it.” She had been soaking her hands in milk every night to lessen the visible hurt of her work. Perhaps Ben didn’t notice they still felt like sandpaper.

      “We can do anything,” he said. “For a few hours on Sunday, even the weary can sing in the trees. Even monkeys eat red bananas and have bliss.”

      “Ben …”

      “Don’t Ben me. Just say you’ll come with me.”

       Three

      SUNDAY FROM NOON TO TWO.

      Harry asks if she brought him the newspaper.

      Gina hands him the newspaper.

      He leafs through it purposefully. He is clean-shaven. When she asks why he always shaves, he says they make him shave on Sundays. It’s God’s day, they tell him. It’s also visitors’ day. They want me to look my best for you, with my prison pajamas and my clean-shaven face.

      She wants to ask if she looks her best for him. She wears a white crepe de chine blouse and a plaid fitted skirt. He likes it best when she wears fitted styles to emphasize on her the things that he used to murmur he loved. Her tapered waist. Her long arms and legs. Her slender hips. Her high breasts. Her smooth neck like royalty’s, the throat he loves to lay his lips upon.

      His gray eyes are not full of bliss. They’re sad and solemn, and they barely glance at her as he reads, as he holds out his hand for a smoke, the ring gone from his finger a long time. There are scrapes and scratches on his knotted knuckles she hasn’t seen before. She wants to reach across the partition and take his hand, but he is holding the newspaper.

      The hour passes. Another conjugal Sunday with Harry. Like Mass earlier in the day: the liturgy, the supplication, the sermon, the presentation of gifts, the laments. The dry Communion. The guard calls time. Gina stands for Harry, as earlier she stood for Jesus, and collects her bag.

      He stares at the newspaper for another moment. Then he gets up too.

      I’ll see you next Sunday, okay, mio marito? she says. Be well. She bows her head.

      Don’t forget to bring me the newspaper.

      Of course. I won’t forget.

      Last week you forgot.

      Ah. Yes. I’m sorry. I won’t forget.

      Is it cold out? He glances at the light coat she has put on, the thin crepe beige wool.

      It’s crisp. Not too cold yet.

      The leaves?

      They’re falling.

      Mimoo?

      She is good.

      Are you still with Rose?

      On the weekends, yes.

      He is silent for just one moment too long. You don’t work in these clothes, do you? he says. His eyes are on her white silk blouse.

      No, I change to come see you.

      He nods. You always look so fresh, as if you just ran in from outside.

      I did, she says, run in from outside.

      They stand face to face, the table, the barrier between them. They blink at each other, wary, affectionate, sorrowful.

      Have you heard from Purdy?

      Not yet, she says. But last time I saw him, he said it all looked good for Christmas.

      Now it’s really time for her to go. His hand squeezes into a fist.

      So what words of wisdom does our holy Rose have for me this week?

      Gina puts on her hat, ties the silk ribbons under her chin. He doesn’t take his eyes off her.

      There can be art and love, Rose says, but art and economics are mutually exclusive.

      Harry nods, as if he approves. But not economics and war, he says. Because millions of boys are about to be slaughtered for economics. Perhaps someone will draw a picture of the carnage. Then they can call it art.

      She turns to leave. He turns to leave. At the door she turns to glance at him one last time. He has already turned. She sees his eyes on her, profound, somber, unwilling to let her go. She raises her gloved fingers to her lips and blows him a lingering kiss. He disappears through the steel-reinforced door. Slowly she leaves too, flagellating herself with another thing Rose said: Those whose hands are pure don’t need to glove them.

      Because the pumpkin farm and the corn maze await.

       Four

      WHILE THE SUGAR MAPLES in Concord looked as if they were on fire under the sun, and Gina finished her Saturday duties at the Wayside, she changed into a slim, embroidered, above the ankle, rust-colored crepe day dress with a lace collar. It had a black velvet belt and silk appliqué. Her nails were painted a rust color also. Her wavy hair was piled expertly, fake-casually atop her head. She put on gold hoop earrings and wore bracelets on her wrists. She covered herself with a wool cape and walked out through the gate and into the street where Ben was waiting.

      They went for an evening walk into town, where they found a small restaurant with hay bales at its doors. They walked in like a gentleman and a lady. He held the door open for her, took her cape, her hat, her gloves. Gina could not remember the last time she and Harry had the money to go out together for an evening. She didn’t want to remember.

      It couldn’t be true, she thought, as the server pulled her chair away from the table to allow her to sit, that since Harry’s all-consuming, life-transforming pursuit of her back in 1905, she had not been to a restaurant for dinner? She pressed her lips together to banish the memory and the tears of self-pity that weren’t far behind.

      There was candlelight and fine china. Voices were hushed and the laughter delicate. She wanted to tell Ben that no Italian she knew spoke so low and laughed so daintily, but didn’t. When they ordered, she spoke so low, and when he made a joke, she laughed so daintily. During aperitifs Ben asked her why she kept herself in such check. “That’s not how I remember you.”

      “I’m grown up now.”

      “Yes, but you were a girl on fire when I knew you. Where is the Sicilian?”

      She