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Nadja
and the Dream of Teeth
At the time there are three distinct women. Two orbit around his person
like meteors that arrive and disappear, pendulous and pending, with the
rigidity and regularity of the calendar. They are dark and light, one
and the other. The fair one is more than fair. Her skin is pellucid. Thin
webs of capillaries and veins map her arms, her breasts, the small of
her back. The other, the dark one, is Mediterranean, raven-haired, Homeric.
She smells of cigarette smoke and has hands older than her age. There
is a husband somewhere. Cruel. Oafish. He keeps her meanly and she stays.
The third is Nadja, herself. She is his earth, past which the others streak.
"I have made you an appointment," she tells him. "At half-nine
tomorrow."
He presses his fingers to his face, toward the eye socket. The pain is
there, where he touches. Not in the tooth itself, but on his face. Always
he has avoided dentistry. But now, she has made the appointment and, when
the time comes, she will drive him there.
The two
others, the dark and light ones, we shall call Mim and Mam.
Mim keeps exotic animals. Large brilliant birds, ataractic reptiles, silky-haired
dogs. She walks a wolfhound, Erté-like, on a tartan leash, its
dusky coat shimmering in the sunlight. She wears black always and walks
with catlike grace, taut muscles rippling effortlessly and surely. On
certain evenings she will stride into McLoughlin's and the big dog will
stay at her feet through two and sometimes three gin-and-tonics. The dog
is said to be gentle.
The other one, the dark one, he calls "Calypso," and when she
kept him, the moment seemed infinite and timeless. She fusses about him
yet, fusses about what he eats and drinks and thinks, pleasuring him with
a maternal concern that he had long forgotten. To his soul, dusty and
cretaceous by nature, she brings the mist of the sea, the juices and oils
of the fields, the energy of the sun. She gives him hope and calls him
her "Father Confessor," for she too has her secrets, her venom,
her lusts. He never touches her but for her hand and her crone-like fingers.
It is to Nadja however that he has decided to remain grounded, connected.
For her, too, he has given up the drink, the three-o'clock whiskeys, the
bottle of Beaujolais at dinner, the Armagnac before bed. Of course, he
has lied. He is always aware of his duplicity, for he said, in a moment
of self-incriminating fury, that she would never again see him with a
drink in his hand. And he keeps that promise, to be sure. But he continues
when she is not there, when he is alone, when she is away.
"Ah,
they're not going to do anything, ya big baby," she teases as she
walks him up the scrubbed steps of the dental offices. "Not today
at least. They just want to see what's wrong. I doubt if they'll do anything."
Behind them traffic wheels steely and smokey.
He doubts her doubt and lets her handle the insurance forms and the new
patient forms. In true fear, he watches a soap opera on the television,
high up in the corner of the waiting area. She returns and smiles and
pats his leg.
"You'll be fine."
He knows he will not.
The cleaning is painful. He considers leaving at this point, but stays
on out of resignation rather than shame. He imagines the dentist chair
as an allegory of life itself so he needs stick it out. His jaw twinges
sharply as he bites down on the X-ray tabs. He does as he is told. They
take pictures from several angles, wheeling a long tubular lens towards
and away from his mouth, and later they show him the film. With a pencil,
they point out the dark shadows up in the roots of his skeletal image.
There is infection. Other appointments are made with more specialized
dentists . They are far enough in the future that he plans on forgetting.
He knows that she will not.
On the way home, he considers asking her if he could break his shallow
promise with a few drinks for the pain, but then decides against it. He
understands that they are both deceiving each other. He must let it go
on.
Mam tells
him that her grandmother is a witch. One of the ancient folk who know
about the shapes of roots and the patterns of tea-leaves. She understands
the meanings of dreams and of bones on a table and of the splitting of
a fig. Dark-eyed Mam explains that a dream about teeth is revealing. Powerful.
If in the dream the tooth causes pain, then the dreamer will soon hear
of a loved one lost. If, however, the tooth is in pain and falls out on
its own, then the dreamer himself is marked. She tells him this that afternoon,
when he has called her with birthday greetings. He begins the call both
loving and nostalgic, but hangs up shaken. He will not sleep. Not chance
dreaming.
He tells Nadja about the dreams, about teeth and how they point to death.
She had known Mam once, had feared her, but considers her now merely annoying.
Afraid to
sleep, he leaves the house that evening, abandoning Nadja to whatever
dreams might visit her alone. He walks to McLoughlin's, his local, to
salve both teeth and fears with beloved Jameson's. Traffic is light, and
the evening still grey in this northern clime where sunset stretches quietly,
softly, until of a sudden between ten and eleven one notices the blackness.
The entrance to McLoughlin's twinkles with tiny, fairy lights that he
associates with Christmas, but which seem tonight like a galaxy of stars
outlining the windows and doors. The building is darker than the pewter
sky around it. Inside, in the corner, Mim sits, head in hands, no beast
by her feet tonight. Her skin shines forth from within the dimness of
the bar.
"You look horrible," she says, bending her head forward for
him to kiss her cheek.
"I've been to the dentist. And I must go back."
She merely nods.
He wonders if she knows of Mam, if he could explain the dream of teeth.
He orders a whiskey, and sips slowly, swishing the liquor around his teeth.
Quickly, he orders another.
"Are you in for the long term? Cause I'm leaving after I finish this."
"I don't want to sleep. I mustn't."
In the doorway an old one stands. She is selling paper poppies for the
Legion. The barman sends her out.
"She can stand out there, but not in here," he explains to those
closest to the door.
He continues to Mim. "I am out for the night. I can't go home."
Both Mam and Mim know of Nadja.
"Are you staying here or moving on? You can come with me if you want."
He does not answer, so she stands, kisses him on the top of the head and
leaves him there, alone. He watches her pass through the doorway, sees
the crest of her white feathery hair pass in front of the high-set window,
and decides, himself, to join her. Along the river, they walk like two
odd birds: she, tall, graceful, and heron like. He, some flightless, squat
aboriginal creature.
Mim's home is a world of sharp angles and surfaces. There is much glass
and polished stone. Cats slink behind his legs, birds breathe behind covered
cages, the dog lies before the door. There is athletic coupling on the
floor, hashish in the bed, bracing tumblers of gin during a bath. Treacly
music sounds anonymously from speakers within the walls. Again the fumbling
and groping. Again the drinks, the smoke. Light- headed and nauseated,
he rushes to the back door and spews in the garden. He showers again.
Mim sleeps face-down, diagonally across her bed. A patterned sheet crosses
her bottom. He dresses quietly, steps over the dog and lets himself out
into the darkness.
He usually calls Mam when she's at work, so now he must look in the book
for her number. He tries three different phone-kiosks before he finds
one with its book intact. He rips the page out, brings it closer to his
face, so he can see the number. She answers sleepily.
"It's me." He envisions her in her bed, a voluminous night gown,
her hair down and flowing darkly.
"Hello?" She pretends she does not know him, pretends it's a
wrong number.
"I have not dreamed." He hears the husband, hears the phone
replaced on the cradle. It falls softly.
The sun once
again has risen and he sleeps, his back supported by the false Tudor beams
of McLoughlin's exterior. His shoes are wet with dew and his skin tightens
with a matinal stickiness. He reviews the night. Mim and her glossy flat.
The call to Mam. The return to McLoughlin's. He remembers the dream. He
was on the beach. White houses rose against blue sky. There were steep
cliffs, onto which flowering shrubs clung precariously, tossing rhythmically
in the white breeze. His tooth had pained him throughout. He walked along
the long pebbly beach, holding his hand against his face. But it was there,
he had not lost it in the dream.
He thinks of Nadja now. How it must be she, the loved one who, he was
sure to learn, had died. Surely, a toothache means the death of a loved
one. Mam had said so. He sees her dead. He sees himself alone, with morticians
and priests, cousins and kin. He imagines himself giving the eulogy? Would
they expect it of him? Could he do it? Sitting there in the parking lot
against the stucco and timber, he feels his eyes filling with tears. He
regrets all that he had done and all that he had failed to do. He thinks
of what he will say there at the front of the church on the day of her
funeral and his speech makes him sob. He wishes she were with him now,
for he does not think he can go on without her.
He trudges
home, in the morning traffic. The market already has arranged the cut
flowers in tiers of buckets outside the shop. A businessman enters the
Dry Cleaners with a handful of shirts. Mrs. Casey is already scrubbing
the three steps to her house. Having turned onto Woodhill, he stares at
the emergency vehicles and police cars, as if he had expected them, as
if they were necessary. He does not move, but watches blankly, rubbing
his cheek. A policeman walks down the steps carrying a large gun in a
clear plastic bag. Two others bring a burly, bearded man from the house.
The man is crying.
"I thought it was him. He was calling my wife. I meant it for him."
The police tell him to say nothing.
In the early morning, within the pulse of flashing blue and red light,
the bearded man still does not see his man, who stands against a grey-dishrag
sky, numbly watching.
^
Biography
J.P. Bohannon's fiction
and poetry has appeared in The Irish Edition, The Santa Barbara
Review, The Baltimore Review, ART/LIFE and Oasis.
He lives outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
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