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!
waltz while the mural scene drifts haphazardly past him; castles; black…and…white duomos; uplifted saints on this tuesday during the war; in order to save his disguise and his life。 caravaggio is out on the tiles looking for a photograph of himself。
he pats his bare chest as if looking for his pass; grabs his penis and pretends to use it as a key to let him into the room that is being guarded。 laughing; he staggers back; peeved at his woeful failure; and slips into the next room humming。
he opens the window and steps out onto the verandah。 a dark; beautiful night。 then he climbs off it and swings onto the verandah one level below。 only now can he enter the room of anna and her general。 nothing more than a perfume in their midst。 printless foot。 shadowless。 the story he told someone’s child years ago about the person who searched for his shadow—as he is now looking for this image of himself on a piece of film。
in the room he is immediately aware of the beginnings of sexual movement。 his hands within her clothing thrown onto chair backs; dropped upon the floor。 he lies down and rolls across the carpet in order to feel anything hard like a camera; touching the skin of the room。 he rolls in silence in the shape of fans; finding nothing。 there is not even a grain of light。
he gets to his feet and sways his arms out slowly; touches a breast of marble。 his hand moves along a stone hand—he understands the way the woman thinks now—off which the camera hangs with its sling。 then he hears the vehicle and simultaneously as he turns is seen by the woman in the sudden spray of car light。
caravaggio watches hana; who sits across from him looking into his eyes; trying to read him; trying to figure the flow of thought the way his wife used to do。 he watches her sniffing him out; searching for the trace。 he buries it and looks back at her; knowing his eyes are faultless; clear as any river; unimpeachable as a landscape。 people; he knows; get lost in them; and he is able to hide well。 but the girl watches him quizzically; tilting her head in a question as a dog would when spoken to in a tone or pitch that is not human。 she sits across from him in front of the dark; blood…red walls; whose colour he doesn’t like; and in her black hair and with that look; slim; tanned olive from all the light in this country; she reminds him of his wife。
nowadays he doesn’t think of his wife; though he knows he can turn around and evoke every move of her; describe any aspect of her; the weight of her wrist on his heart during the night。
he sits with his hands below the table; watching the girl eat。 he still prefers to eat alone; though he always sits with hana during meals。 vanity; he thinks。 mortal vanity。 she has seen him from a window eating with his hands as he sits on one of the thirty…siteps by the chapel; not a fork or a knife in sight; as if he were learning to eat like someone from the east。 in his greying stubble…beard; in his dark jacket; she sees the italian finally in him。 she notices this more and more。
he watches her darkness against the brown…and…red walls; her skin; her cropped dark hair。 he had known her and her father in toronto before the war。 then he had been a thief; a married man; slipped through his chosen world with a lazy confidence; brilliant in deceit against the rich; or charm towards his wife giannetta or with this young daughter of his friend。
but now there is hardly a world around them and they are forced back on themselves。 during these days in the hill town near florence; indoors during the days of rain; daydreaming in the one soft chair in the kitchen or on the bed or on the roof; he has no plots to set in motion; is interested only in hana。 and it seems she has chained herself to the dying man upstairs。
during meals he sits opposite this girl and watches her eat。
half a year earlier; from a window at the end of the long hall in santa chiara hospital in pisa; hana had been able to see a white lion。 it stood alone on top of the battlements; linked by colour to the white marble of the duomo and the camposanto; though its roughness and naive form seemed part of another era。 like some gift from the past that had to be accepted。 yet she accepted it most of all among the things surrounding this hospital。 at midnight she would look through the window and know it stood within the curfew blackout and that it would emerge like her into the dawn shift。 she would look up at five or five…thirty and then at six to see its silhouette and growing detail。 every night it was her sentinel while she moved among patients。
even through the shelling the army had left it there; much more concerned about the rest of the fabulous pound—with its mad logic of a tower leaning like a person in shell shock。
their hospital buildings lay in old monastery grounds。 the topiary carved for thousands of years by too careful monks was no longer bound within recognizable animal forms; and during the day nurses wheeled patients among the lost shapes。 it seemed that only white stone remained permanent。
nurses too became shell…shocked from the dying around them。 or from something as small as a letter。 they would carry a severed arm down a hall; or swab at blood that never stopped; as if the wound were a well; and they began to believe in nothing; trusted nothing。 they broke the way a man dismantling a mine broke the second his geography exploded。 the way hana broke in santa chiara hospital when an official walked down the space between a hundred beds and gave her a letter that told her of the death of her father。
a white lion。
it was sometime after this that she had e across the english patient—someone who looked like a burned animal; taut and dark; a pool for her。 and now; months later; he is her last patient in the villa san girolamo; their war over; both of them refusing to return with the others to the safety of the pisa hospitals。 all the coastal ports; such as sorrento and marina di pisa; are now filled with north american and british troops waiting to be sent home。 but she washed her uniform; folded it and returned it to the departing nurses。 the war is not over everywhere; she was told。 the war