Irritant
by Diana Kiesners
As soon as she gave it to him, he had misgivings.
"What is it you want, anyway?" she had said.
Your heart.
And now it made him squeamish, almost, the thought of
it: a raw thing, fascinating and repellant. Now it was his because he
had, just to make conversation, asked for it.
"Look," she said, "you've already
dropped it."
It was true. The instant it was in his hand he had
forgotten about it, had started thinking instead what a lot of trouble
it might be.
"You'll get dirt on it," she said,
stretching out her hand. "If you're not going to take care of it,
give it back."
But he wouldn't. In the few moments it had been in his
hand, he had come to think of it as his. Though he had no use for it, he
wasn't willing to let it go.
Over the next few days he discovered that there was
something not quite right with it. Though he cared for it according to
schedule and even devoted some extra time to it, it only sat mewling
reproachfully in a corner -- just as though he had not looked after it,
had not followed the instructions to the letter. He tried to ignore it,
but it was disturbing him in his work. He was forced to call her up to
see what could be done.
"Yes," she said, "it tends to whine.
Maybe it wants to go out?"
Heartless, that was what she had become.
And so he took it out, resentfully and not at all sure
it would work.
If it didn't work, if it turned out to be an
investment of energy with no return, he would waste no more time. He
would call whatever agency it was that looked after pathetic spineless
things that sat in the corner and would not move.
But in the park it perked up and even gambolled a bit
with others of its kind. He enjoyed this, and for a while he was content
to watch it as he sat with his head against the bench. It was the first
real sun of the year and it was warm on his face.
Something -- a policeman's whistle or a distant
screech of tires -- woke him, and he was immediately impatient. Where
was it? Off in the bushes somewhere, doing who knew what. And his
enjoyment shrivelled and became a poor thing, not to be classed with the
greater and more measurable kinds of enjoyment that life had to offer.
No one could see it as something magnificent, worth working for or
writing about or paying money to see. A single heart was a meagre
everyday thing. Almost everyone had at least one; some people had
several, far grander, he suspected, than the one he was (temporarily)
committed to.
He could imagine himself with a much better class of
heart, perhaps two sleek ones, walking them down a boulevard, pretending
to be unaware of the envious stares of less well-endowed passersby. The
boulevard was full of paparazzi but he would steer his two companions to
a table in a café , leaving instructions with the maître d' that they
were not to be disturbed. The whispers would rise around them like a
cloud of incense. He would take no notice, and then -- but the bench he
was sitting on was decrepit and worn and the paint was flaking off. A
piece of trash blew against his foot. He went and yanked the heart out
of the bushes where it was sniffing at dead leaves and took it home.
He would not pay attention to it, resenting it for the
fact that it was so obviously his. It was always underfoot. He couldn't
knot his tie without finding it tangled in the fabric, getting in the
way of his fingers, so that he had to relearn motions that had become
mechanical long before he came into this accidental ownership. He had
been tricked into responsibility. It was unacceptable, and he stayed out
of the house as much as he could. When he came home, there it was at his
feet, tripping him up and making disgusting noises.
All the same, a few days later he was panicked because
it had grown listless. He gathered it up to take it to the park, but it
would not play and lay barely thudding on the bench beside him while
children ran by with balls and dogs sniffed curiously at it. Terrified,
he bundled it up in some old newspapers and took it home again.
He read everything he could find related to its care
but all his information seemed contradictory and inconclusive. One book
recommended one thing, the next said the opposite. All of it was stated
with such authority that he lost a lot of time trying to make sense of
it. He began to hang around newsstands reading women's magazines but,
though these contained handy checklists, nothing seemed to work.
Although he didn't like to, he was forced to call its
owner for advice.
"You want me to write you a manual," she
said. "Well, I don't have the time. I'm starting a new job. You'll
have to struggle along on your own."
And he could not provoke her into taking any more
interest than that. As though he were some sort of kennel.
He made the usual mistakes but did not commit anything
too serious. Sometimes he misinterpreted its needs and a couple of times
dropped it on the floor. Though it didn't flourish like some he had seen
(enviously observing other people's in the park), it didn't die either.
He would take a trip, he decided. Alone. It was business,
he explained to its pink lassitude. It didn't bother to respond. Never
mind, he would soon be rid of it. He whistled as he packed, thinking of
his carefree future. Then at the last minute he threw it into a corner
of his suitcase together with some balled-up underwear and grimly closed
it. The extra weight made the suitcase heavy as a stone, and he had to
pay for it at the airport.
The flight was terrible. The jet bounced and dove like
a paper airplane and all around him people were being sick or praying.
He sat with his head in his hands, thinking that he should have provided
some air holes and hoping that the flight would be short. A crash seemed
no worse a possibility than having to live through the aftermath of his
neglect.
After the harrowing landing, he tore open his suitcase
before an astonished customs official and rummaged until he found where
it had worked its way into one of his socks. Then he tossed it aside
again, embarrassed, as though he were quite indifferent to it, even
surprised to find it there. He hadn't thought to declare it, and there
might possibly be some regulations about quarantine. But no one seemed
to be in the least interested in it or to care that it was there. Once
again he saw that it was probably not worth having and felt tricked and
angry.
He had thought he would resent having to share his
hotel room, to make space in the closet, alter his routine. But he
seemed to have lost the habit of habit. He no longer observed any
schedule in his dealings with it, having left his books at home. In
spite of himself, he came to accept its idiosyncrasy. And, gradually, he
came to understand its various communications and to respond to them,
not stopping any more to question their logic or look at his watch. He
still ate his dinner with a book in his hand but his concentration
hadn't the density it used to -- it was riddled with peepholes and
permeable to the slightest sign of the heart, which might be sitting on
the table, eating off his plate. Once in a while he would push it off
the table, and it would crawl back up again.
It had grown independent. He watched it with
apprehension in the places they frequented (in each new city,
accommodation had to be made for it; suitable locations were scouted
out, evaluated, and later compared to those in subsequent cities). It
liked green places, disliked crowds. But it could no longer be counted
on to stay close at hand. Once, after he had dozed off, hypnotized by
the sparkle of sunlight on the waves of a pond (and what city had that
been, what place?), he woke suddenly, feeling as though someone had
poked him with a sharp stick. It was gone.
He started around the park at a slow jog, scanning the
bushes as he ran along the road, his blood beating in his ears. He
thought of all the terrible things that could easily happen to it,
particularly on this road where people drove so fast and where so many
others lay bruised and perhaps dead by the side. When at last he
spotted it, not injured or upset but playing quietly by itself in the
fountain he had left, he was furious. He walked into the fountain
without taking his shoes off, meaning to tell it off once and for all.
The water was shockingly cold, so cold that for an
instant he forgot everything. Then he felt a grief so boundless and true
that he dropped to his knees. It will kill me, he thought. It was not
that he was old but that he suddenly saw what a great love might do,
particularly one so inobtrusive and ordinary: how it might slowly eat
away at the base of you so that, when it left, you would find yourself
old. And he did not any longer (as he had been lately) reproach himself
for not having wanted to take it in. His misgivings had been legitimate,
a form of self-preservation.
Eventually there was nothing to do but go home. This
compulsion to test a new love in an old surrounding: it occurred to him
that this was love feeding on itself, eating its way to its own demise.
But there was no choice. Every other place was worn out, used up, and
the motion of an airplane had become a standing still.
By now he had only half a suitcase to himself. The
other half was chaotically stuffed with sentiment -- small pendants with
lockets, museum postcards of lovers entwined and a paperweight of
Niagara Falls shaped like a heart.
Of course it didn't travel in the suitcase any more
but came on the plane with him, where he gave it a window seat. He still
looked around at others with vague discontent, thinking that what they
had was more polished, more attractive, than his own. But the memory of
his grief stayed with him, and he was cautious how he thought about it.
His home felt empty after all the strange places,
which had been full of the energy of unfamiliarity. Here it was as
though all the silence of things not happening had accumulated and grown
solid, an echo frozen into substance. Although his mail had been
redirected, there was a pile of envelopes by the door -- not postmarked,
so they must have been hand-delivered, perhaps a long time ago. He
didn't like to open or even look at them for they must contain some kind
of solicitations that were now beside the point.
***
She came the same night, wearing a more expensive coat
than anything he remembered her owning. In fact, he had altogether
forgotten what she looked like and had trouble placing her. Even the
doorbell had an unfamiliar sound, a familiar word spoken in a foreign
language, and it took an effort to convince himself that he must answer
it.
"I'll take it back now," she said, and
immediately it came bounding out. There was no question of ownership and
nothing he could say. In fact he could barely remember that it had been
given to him. Now here she was, collecting it again, like some
misdirected magazine finally retrieved from a previous address. And she
had several others on a string. He only remembered her having one
before, the one she had given him.
After she left, he found he could not go upstairs. He
was terrified of his home, its size, its emptiness. Each room warned
against entry. Where could he go? And there was his suitcase, still
parked in the entranceway, festive with airline tags. He knew he must
not open it and wondered if he might not leave immediately to travel
again. Leave the suitcase, and the house, forever. He paced the foyer,
trying to make up his mind. In the end he went to bed. It had become too
late to go anywhere.
The next day he dressed in the same clothes and went
to the park. It was spring. The ice had receded from the pond and the
water had been turned on in the drinking fountains and in the Japanese
garden, where it created an illusion of life in the dead landscape with
the little pagoda and carefully-placed rocks.
He walked restlessly around the children's playground.
The children seemed noisier than usual (maybe this was just in contrast
to the quiet of his house), their mothers impossibly young. He watched
the children fighting for a place at the top of the slide, uncertain
whether they looked the way they did because of some optical illusion,
or whether the world had actually become so small and busy. He climbed
the hill to get a better perspective, stopping halfway up to catch his
breath. When he reached the top of the hill, he didn't turn back to look
after all but went on home.
The next day the cherry blossoms were in bloom. He
wished he could bring himself to open his suitcase; he was unaccustomed
to wearing the same clothes for more than one day and felt his skin was
crawling. The day after that, there were carloads of Japanese who walked
arm in arm viewing the cherry blossoms. A group of very old people
practiced tai chi in a pavilion, thin bodies waving like seaweed in a
weak current.
As he walked up the hill his pants chafed his legs and
he thought again of the unopened suitcase, how it was not possible to
open it and how he ran into it and bruised his shins every time he
opened the door even though he knew exactly where it was. Soon he would
have to change his clothes. Even the breeze on his face felt abrasive.
It was spring. He was unprepared. Every inch of him
had been sandpapered, each layer of skin rubbed away until there was
only this last fragile membrane left against which everything -- the
shrill voices of children, the shrieks of gulls -- grated. And it, too,
would go. He wondered if he could get used to this feeling, this
nakedness.
Now that it was getting dark, the breeze bit and
hurried him homeward. The hill was steep, all hills were. A dead leaf
blew up his pant leg, scraping. He bent down and it was like that,
upside down and unbearably chafed, that it occurred to him: this was how
air might feel to a newborn, sand to an oyster.
Diana Kiesners's stories,
poems and non-fiction have appeared in Descant, The Antigonish
Review, The Fiddlehead, event, Prism International,
and The New Quarterly. She is the co-founder, with Maria Gould,
of The Writing Space.