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Afterlands
By Steven HeightonMariner Books
Copyright © 2007 Steven Heighton
All right reserved.ISBN: 9780618773411Hartford, Connecticut, September 1876
An Esquimau playing Mendelssohn is a tremendous novelty. The local gentry
fill the seats of the Main Street Memorial Hall, whiskery gentlemen in frock
coats and wing collars, the ladies in gowns and layer-cake hats trimmed with
ribbon and mock flora. Their elegant figures are shored up by trusses or
corsets—synthetic exoskeletons fortified with whalebone. If any members of
this audience make a connection between their own underclothes and the
presence onstage of a child from the Arctic whaling grounds, they don't let
on. They are effusive in their praise of the little Esquimau. She is clearly a
prodigy. She is only ten years of age! She has been playing the piano for
only three years! How charming she looks in her cream cotton dress with the
puffed sleeves, the ends of her braids joined at the small of her back with a
red ribbon bow. As they whisper and nod, a lush welling of self-appreciation
and security warms their chests.
In fact, Punnie is not playing as well as she did when rehearsing
for the recital with her teacher, Mr Chusley, who will be performing after her
and before the chief attraction, a master recitalist from Leipzig who is said to
have known Mendelssohn personally. This lean and tousled master, seated
severely in the front row, will be aware that the girl has committed a few slips.
What he doesn't know is that her playing also lacks its usual earnest,
beguiling zest. Punnie is dizzy and has to concentrate to suppress the dry
scraping cough that has been gaining on her since April. Throughout the
summer holiday she has been practising, as much as four hours a day.
There is something unnerving, quietly violent, in her discipline. She's the sort
of only child who lives for the endorsement of adults. More and more these
days she coughs while she rehearses. She and her parents, Tukulito and
Ebierbing—Hannah and Joe is how they are known to Americans—came
down from the Arctic after the rescue over three years ago, but the poor child
still carries the Far North in her lungs. So Mr Chusley puts it. He even urges
her to practise less.
Actually Punnie's cough began not in the Arctic but after their
journey south.
Stiff in the aisle seat of a middle row, Tukulito sees that her
daughter is struggling, but the audience is so caught up in the spectacle of
this oddly pallid Esquimau child playing one of Mendelssohn's Songs without
Words—op. 30, no. 1 in E flat—that they don't notice. Tukulito's face has the
waxen stillness of somebody watching the last stages of a shipwreck, trying
to contain her alarm—a stillness that could be mistaken for calm. This is her
usual expression. Only her eyes, sharp with practical understanding and
quick sympathy, lend life to her face; enough life for a dozen faces.
In fact, the child is something of a prodigy. Mr Chusley, a soft
little man with sombre brown eyes, rumpled clothes and clovescented breath
(and, unluckily for his dreams, stumpy hands and fingers), has said that he
foresees fine fine things for the girl. Very fine indeed. And Tukulito grasps
that this is not a man given to flattery. A stutterer, he keeps his utterances
short. I've never yet tutored a child possessed of such a, such a faculty of
silent concentration. Your Punnie seems to me utterly undistractable.
Chusley does not then detour into ethnological conjecture, like some of the
well-meaning Groton neighbours, on whether this is a specialized trait—a
result of the savage's need for vigilance by the seal's breathing hole, or his
wife's Oriental patience, acquired in the igloo waiting with the children for her
mate's return. . . . For some years the life of the Esquimaux has gripped the
romantic imagination. They've become a staple of polar adventure novels,
which emphasize their fortitude, their loyalty, their stealth, their rare
inscrutable lapses into cunning and violence. In the 1860s the fascination
with Esquimaux even hatched a short-lived fad for duelling with bone
harpoons. The Polaris debacle and Lieutenant Tyson's subsequent drift on
the ice with eighteen other castaways have made them even more popular;
Tukulito's husband Ebierbing was in some ways the hero of Tyson's
published account of the drift (as Second Mate Kruger was its villain), and
this Esquimau family have been celebrities since settling in the port town of
Groton, Connecticut.
Tukulito still thinks about Mr Kruger but has not heard from him in
some time.
The child is small for her age, no grand piano ever looked huger.
She will start a piece straight-backed on the bench but as she plays she will
tip gradually forward so that by the last bar her face is just above the keys.
(Mr Chusley has tried to correct this.) Her playing is stronger now, op. 67,
no. 5 in B minor, "The Shepherd's Complaint." Those firm-pacing, stately
notes in the minor until, just as the ear is tiring of the solemnity, the tune
resolves into major.
Two rows ahead of Tukulito are a pair of gentlemen who arrived
late and claimed these last seats in the house. The man on the aisle has
black hair of collar length, pomaded and combed straight back to cover a
bald patch. The rims of his ears stand well out from the sides of his narrow
skull. The other has a shaggy head of white hair and, fuzzing the slabs of his
claret cheeks, side-whiskers that Tukulito sees whenever he turns to address
his companion. His voice is genial and raspy. The black-haired man doesn't
turn or even move his head when he speaks, but she hears him too: the
ponderous baritone of a butler or mortician. Her hearing is the talent not just
of a quiet observer used to being discussed, but also of the Arctic's first
professional interpreter, sought after by expeditions for the last twenty years.
The black-haired one's accent is difficult to place, though she
gathers he is a visitor, from Canada. She swallows her own impulse to cough
so that she can keep listening to him as well as to Punnie. He might remark
on Punnie's playing. It matters to her as much as ever that the white people
regard her family as something more than a sideshow attraction.
He says softly, I would agree that the question of the Esquimaux'
nationality is a highly vexed one. But I maintain that the girl must be deemed
Canadian, because her home, in Cumberland Bay, is in Canadian territory.
But that would make her a subject of the British Empire, wouldn't
it?
Indeed it would, sir.
The white-haired man chuckles. You can hardly expect us to
accept that, Mr Wilt. As you know, the family resides down here in Groton
now. And the Polaris expedition was an American enterprise. No, no, Mr
Wilt, our claim is thoroughly staked!
Hush! This from a beard and monocle in the next row.
For a few moments, they hush.
Then: Some have declared, sir, that your Polaris expedition was in
fact a German one.
The shaggy bear's-head shakes wryly. So now you're claiming the
Esquimaux for Germany!
Wilt gives a formal snort and then, as if conscious of being
overheard, he whispers, It must be remembered that her parents enjoyed
their first contact with civilization in England. They took tea and dined with
the Queen herself! The accent of the mother, I am told, is still English!
True enough, Wilt, but—
I understand furthermore that her husband has returned to the
Canadian Arctic.
Returned, Mr Wilt, with another American expedition! And he is
expected home within the year. Home, Wilt, to Groton!
This last phrase, inanely disembodied, hovers in the brief silence
as Punnie completes her third of the Songs without Words—the "Cradle
Song," op. 67, no. 6 in E. Its dying trill is deftly executed. She stands under
the soaring proscenium arch, buffeted by applause. Her hands dangle at her
sides. The tight hard line of her mouth, which always gives her an aspect of
stern determination, so adult, now suggests barely contained discomfort.
She looks out at the crowd. As if overcome by the response, she brings a
hand to her mouth, a fetching gesture, it appears, of bashful pleasure,
astonishment at these accolades— but Tukulito understands. Her daughter's
coughing can't be heard over the ovation. The two patriots surge to their feet
with the rest of the house, and while continuing to clap heartily they go on
hauling the child back and forth across international borders.
Some, of course, might submit that they are a nation unto
themselves.
Well, but the Danes have also laid claim to that region, haven't
they?
It is news to me, sir, but I would be little surprised.
Tukulito remains seated, sheltered in the dark cavity formed by
the people standing around her. The gentlemen's words are not unamusing;
still, shame flares along her collar and prickles her scalp under the hairpinned
Brussels cap. After twenty years she is still not hardened to being spoken of
as if absent or incapable of understanding. At first, in London, she quietly
relished all the curiosity and attention, accepting it as evidence that her
people's faith in their own specialness was not misplaced. The Chosen
People is what any nation thinks it is, until history disappoints it; or destroys
it. In time her growing knowledge of English allowed her to grasp and forced
her to brood on the commentary of onlookers, especially during her and
Ebierbing's tenure as fur-clad "Living Exhibits" at P. T. Barnum's American
Museum in New York, in 1862. By and by her outlook was changed, her
pleasure in public life reduced. This shame is familiar. This shame is the trite
undertow of her adult life. But now it forms part of a new and hybrid emotion
as her corseted chest floods with the heat of her pride, and anxious love.
These Sons and Daughters of the Distant North, Ladies and Gentlemen,
possess some ninety words for Snow! Yet only a fraction of human feelings
are clearly nameable. Most feelings are complex chords, like the ones
Punnie plays, minor or major or suspended, each composed of many notes,
a current joy, a lingering shame, a hunger, a loss, all sounding together in a
pattern never to be revived. In New York during the war her first child,
Butterfly, then later up north King William, slipped from the bone-crib of her
arms, and Captain Hall, their beloved American sponsor, died up there as
well. Punnie, her Punnie, is adopted after the custom of her people. Her
Punnie, her pulse, the very spark in her eyes.
The North took her last baby, let the South preserve this one. She
rises to join the ovation but is too short to see her daughter on the stage.
Copyright © 2005 by Steven Heighton. Reprinted by permission of Houghton
Mifflin Company.
Continues...Excerpted from Afterlandsby Steven Heighton Copyright © 2007 by Steven Heighton. Excerpted by permission.
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