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The Yellow Shawl
Francisco Arellana
 
Republic Period
 
 
I. The Man's Story (1953)
PEPE HAS a new place; but it wasn't hard to find. It is only a block away from Taft Avenue and about a hundred yards off San Andres corner. The street is not a first class street, it is practically a dirt road, but it is very quiet. You wouldn't believe it is within a stone's throw of the city's great south national highway.
The place is impressive. It is an apartment building that doesn't look like one at all. It looks more like a mansion. That is probably what it was, a rich man's home, before it was converted to a hostelry.
A wall almost a man's height surrounds it. The gate, two panels of very heavy wood with inlaid beated brass filigree work, this afternoon was ajar - open only wide enough of admit one person at a time.
In the courtyard was a eucalyptus with liana vines, a fountain, a lot of ferns and flowering plants in huge pots, and a square lawn of thick Bermuda grass that has begun to bulge in places.
A concrete driveway leads beneath a porte-cochere, up beside the building, and disappears into the back.
I saw two entrances, a wider side entrance and a front one. I used the front entrance.
A flight of three concrete steps leads to an exposed square concrete landing. The door is tall, the lower third stout oakwood, the upper two-thirds of Florentine glass and ironwork.
Inside, it was very cool. And it wasn't dim at all. Light came from the front door and the open side entrance. There was a central skylight above the system of stairs.
The paneling and the parquet flooring are all strong rich brown oakwood. Against the wall near the foot of the first flight of steps are the mail boxes with name cards and the black buttons with, above them, the cut out brass letters from A to G.
The first stairs are wide and carpeted. Opening on to the landing, also covered with a rug, are three doors-these are Apartments A, B, and C.
Two narrow flights ascend from the first landing on either side of the first stairs. A long strip of rug covers all seven steps.
The second square landing ends in a tall window also of Florentine glass. Two narrow passageways, railed off from the stairwell, connect the landing with a long hall.
Four doors, two on either side, open onto this hall-Apartments D and E towards the rear and Apartments F and G forward. The hall is dominated by another window, again of Florentine glass.
Apartment F is Pepe's.
When I pushed the door in, I saw in the wall facing me, even as the door swung open, another door opening, swinging outward, toward where I stood, out in the hall before the apartment. The doors came to a standstill simultaneously I noticed a man before the farther side of the inner door. I stood and waited. It seemed the man could sustain silence and stillness longer that I could, so I decided to call out to him. Before I did so, I stepped over the threshold. When I saw him stride to the inner door the same time I crossed the threshold, I realized it was a mirror before me, a tall wall mirror.
The vestibule was bare.
The mirror was in the front room, set in a wall section directly facing the entranceway from the vestibule into the front room.
The front room was long and rectangular. There was a wide square back room. I went to the backroom. I sat on Pepe's bed. I took off my shoes but left my feet socked. I stretched out on the bed to wait.
I hadn't had lunch and I was very tired but I wanted to be sure to be there when she arrived. I looked at my wristwatch. It was quarter to two.
She didn't come until about three hours later. I waited, lying in Pepe's bed. The apartments were quiet. In the silence I could barely make out the hum of the traffic a block way. The afternoon was warm but it was very cool in the apartment. There was a window in the front room, the only one in the apartment, but it was a tall massive window; it looked as if all of the front walls have been knocked out for it. The window was completely covered by drawn blinds. There were concealed ventilators. I could sense rather that hear them but I didn't bother to find out where they were.
A hoe drummed the earth in the public garden across the street. Water was run into pails and then after a while sprinkled on earth. Children laughed and shouted in the schoolyard a block away in the direction of the church and the sea. Even the sighing of the surf in the sea, I imagined, came to me.
Every time I heard a car turning into the street I sat up in bed. As the car approached I would swing out of bed and run to the window, I would pull back the blinds and, through the gad between the side of the blinds and the window jamb, I would look into the streets below, I did not leave the window until after each car left.
To and from the window, I passed the mirror every time. From the corner of my eye, I would catch a glimpse of my image as it entered, momentarily occupied, then left the silver frame.
Not so many cars turned into Indiana Street that afternoon. But even so, sometime during my vigil, I lost count. I decided she was probably not showing up at all. Every time I came away from the window I would tell myself that if she weren't in the next car I would leave. But I never did. I had borrowed the apartment for the afternoon and the afternoon was not over yet.
The children were not in the school grounds any more and I could hear the sea very clearly when she came.
I swung out of bed when I heard the car turning into the street. I was feeling weak and a little light-headed. I sat on the edge of the bed and held on the thickness of the mattress to keep from keeling forward.
I rose my feet unsteadily when I heard the car slowing down.
I was already in the front room when the sound of the tires gripping the gravel reached me.
I was striding past the mirror as the car screeched to a stop.
I reached the window, pulled back the blinds, and looked down into the street. The cab was drawn up before the gate, its engine running.
The cab door swung open.
I was leaning against the window jamb. Suddenly, above the purring of the idling engine, I could hear my rasping breath.
I saw her foot as it settled upon the car door sill. It was in a yellow sandal. I caught a glimpse of the swish of the hem of a yellow dress.
The late afternoon sun was sudden, caught in her gleaming hair. Golden was the sunlight upon her yellow shawl. She was in a yellow dress but I didn't know which one.
I didn't notice when the cab drove away.
She stood in the sidewalk before the gate, hugging her handbag - it was the square reed bag - to her body and I could see her plain and plain and whole. It was like the first time I ever saw her and I could hear my booming heart.
Then she raised her face.
I stepped back, away from the window but only far enough not to be seen. Now I could see her face clearly: I saw her brow and her very fine eyes and very fine nose and mouth; I saw her very white throat: how flowerlike her face was, how like a flowerstalk her throat.
I moved to the window again when she dropped her eyes.
She slipped through the gate, her shawl barely touching either panel. She walked up the concrete driveway. She crossed the lawn and disappeared beneath the green and rust-colored canvas awning of the porte-cochere.
I let the blinds go: now she is going up the steps to the side entrance.
I noticed that I have fallen forward against the window sill and that the pale green slats of the blinds were almost against my face; now she is looking at the mail boxes and the name cards and the black buttons and the cut-outs brass letters.
Then I felt my forehead hurting; I had leaned my head too heavily against the sharp concrete edge of the window jamb: now she has found the bell to the apartment.
I pushed myself away from the window; abstractedly I lifted my right hand and rubbed my brow where it hurt: now she is going to ring.
Something had come off my temple to my hand - gritty bits - and I was rolling the stuff absentmindedly between my thumb and fore and middle fingers; I had lifted my hand and was looking at what I was kneading there when the doorbell rang.
It wasn't really a bell: they were musical chimes. They were not meant to startle but I startled at their sound. I looked at my thumb and fingers and saw the bits of stucco there: now she is going up the first flight steps.
I didn't know, as I stood up, that I was swaying until I saw the stucco in my reeling hand: now she on the first landing, looking at the cut-out brass letters on the doors; she will stop only long enough to know how the apartments are arranged and then she will not stop again.
I reeled away from the window and started weaving up the room: now she is going up the room: now she is going up one of the two second stairs.
Between the front room and the vestibule I caught at the door jamb and held myself there with my right hand: now she is on the second landing.
My hand held me trembling to the entranceway: now she is walking up the passageway between the railing and the wall.
It was then I felt the eyes upon me, the eyes watching me; and I began to wheel around.
When I saw the seeking stricken eyes, I didn't know it was the mirror and I didn't recognize them for my own; I looked a long time at the long thin man with the wild wandering eyes and the drawn ruined face before I realized it was my own reflection.
Now she is in the hall outside the door. Now she is at the door.
I lurched into the vestibule and staggered to the apartment door. I broke my precipitate movement by left straight-arming the wall beside the door and catching at the brass door knob with my right hand.
When I pulled the door in she was there. Now I see you face to face; now I see your small white hands: how flowerlike your face is, how small and flowerlike you hands.
She was in the yellow dress with a square neckline and the short puffed sleeves. She was smiling; her eyes were bright and shining; and she was humming to herself.
II. The Girl's Story
He stood before me, holding the door open, his hand resting upon the door knob as if he held himself up that way. When I saw his soft hurt eyes and his pale thin face and his shock of hair, I thought that perhaps I shouldn't have come.
He looked at me a long time without saying anything as if he couldn't believe I was there. I said "Hellow". He didn't answer.
When he spoke, it was to say my name.
Then he stepped aside, away from the doorway. I walked into the small bare anteroom, I saw the tall wall mirror in the inner room facing the entranceway from the outer room and the apartment door.
I walked to the middle of the anteroom and stood there with my back towards him. In the mirror I saw how slowly he shut the door after me, leaned back upon it as if he was very tired, slowly lifted his right hand to rub his forehead with his palm and sweep back his uncombed hair with his fingers. I turned around and faced him when I saw his hurt unguarded hopeless eyes.
He pushed himself forward away from the door and walked towards me in the middle of the anteroom. As he passed me, he asked for my handbag and my yellow shawl. I fell in step beside him and, as we walked to the living room, I slipped the shawl off my shoulders and passed my bag and the shawl to him. We entered the living room. I saw in the looming mirror how he carried the shawl in one hand held stiffly up before him and the other which swung listless by his side.
He stopped as soon as we crossed the doorway. I walked on the middle of the room and stood before the mirror with my back towards him. In the mirror I saw him place the bag on top of a wall table beside the doorway and then raise his arms and very carefully drape the shawl so it wouldn't rumple over the topmost arm of the coatstand to one side of the doorway beside the wall table.
I turned around and faced as he walked towards me in the middle of the long room. He stood before me, his eyes upon me, as if he saw for the first time, not saying anything. Then his eyes fell away. He looked around, swept up a chair by its back, set it right behind me where I stood before the mirror, and asked me to sit down.
I sat down and told him that I couldn't stay very long.
He stood before me, behind him loomed the mirror. In the mirror above him I could see the reflection of my yellow shawl.
"Yes, of course," he said.
Then he began to speak, he walked as he talked, his words sprang from his mouth like birds. He swung his arms; they beat like wings.
He paced up and down the long room from the window to the back room door and I followed him with my eyes.
He stopped at the door into the back room and stood there; then he turned and, looking at me, said: "I can't get you out of my heart any more: I can't unlove you."
He walked down the long room and, as he crossed between me and the mirror and I saw in the mirror the reflection or the shawl spread like a wing above him, he said: "You are all the girls I have ever loved."
He stopped at the window and stood there. A breeze was blowing, the pale green blinds very near his face were beginning to stir. He walked up the long room and as he crossed between me and the mirror and I saw the shawl spread above him like a wing, he said: "Marriages are made in heaven. Marriages are made in hell. This is one marriage that shall never be, on earth, in heaven or in hell."
He stopped at the back room door and stood there; then he turned and, looking at me, said: "Love is dead: love doesn't hear. Love is dumb; love doesn't understand. It is exactly like talking to God."
He walked down the long room and as he crossed between me in the mirror I saw the shawl like a wing spread above him, he said: "It is like knocking on a door that shall never open. It is like storming a wall that shall never fall."
He stopped at the window and stood there. He lifted his face as if to smell the sea, as if to listen to the sea. The pale, green blinds almost against his eyes were rustling in the evening wind that was blowing from the sea laden with sea-scent and sea-sound. Then he turned and, looking at me, said: " I lost you even before I found you."
He was crossing between me and the mirror when he stopped and turned to me and stood before me, between me and the mirror.
I was looking up at him and I was looking at his reflection in the mirror too and I saw him as he was, as he stood rocking before me, and I saw him as his reflection also in the mirror that loomed large behind him when he said: "I might as well live as I might as well die."
Then he turned away from me.
I saw his face as he turned away, I saw in the mirror the reflection of his face as he turned towards the mirror, I saw his tortured twisted face.
It was not so much his face as it was the face of loss.
I saw in the mirror the yellow shawl hovering above him. I saw the yellow wing brooding over him.
Then the wing began to beat and to churn the air.
Then the wing lifted, living the air clear and shaken, filled with a yellow light.
Suddenly it wasn't early evening anymore but deep night. It wasn't now but nine years back. It wasn't an apartment on Indiana Street but the Japanese garrison halfway between Valencia and Garcia Hernandez.
It wasn't he who stood rocking beneath the yellow shawl before me but my father.
And the yellow shawl that beat above him like a wing was not mine any more but my mother's.
I raised my hands and jammed the heels of my palms against my ears. But I heard again and couldn't shut out my mother's screams and father's anguish cry.
He sat on his heels before me, wavering. His hands were on my shaking shoulders. His face, suffering and startled, was very near my eyes: it was clear and blurred by turns.
I didn't know that I was crying until I heard what he was saying over and over again.
"Please don't cry," he said. "How I love you! Don't - don't cry."
But I couldn't stop crying.
III. The Yellow Shawl (1944)
The child woke up when her father lifted her from the bed. She knew it wasn't morning yet because the lights were on and they were very bright. She was already ten and she didn't like being carried anymore, not even by her father. She tried to wriggle lose from her father's arms but found that she couldn't. She saw that she had been bundled up in bedclothes. She was turning in her father's arm to ask him where they were going when she saw the many silent Japanese. She couldn't ask any more. Then she saw her mother: how pale she was, and distraught. Her father told her to go to sleep right in his arms. She tried to but couldn't. The Japanese said: "Come." At the door, her mother saw the lovely vivid yellow shawl and her mother asked the Japanese if she might not take it along with her. The Japanese said: "All right." Her mother wrapped the shawl about her; the night was cold, the air struck at her face where it was exposed. It became even harder to try to get to sleep. She watched the many silent Japanese from her father's shoulder. They walked a long time; they reached a big house. The Japanese took them to a large room and left them there. In the room it was very bright; it was also very bare. There was nothing in it except a cot which was set against the wall facing the door. Her mother took the shawl off her. Her father sat her down in the cot and told her to go to sleep. She tried to but couldn't. She watched he mother walk around the enormous room. Her mother stopped beside the door and stood in tiptoe and reached her arms to hang the shawl from a peg high up on the wall. Then she tired looking without blinking at the big bulb hanging by a cord from the room. Her eyes hurt. She tried to sleep but couldn't sleep. She told her father, then her mother, that she couldn't sleep. They sat on a cot beside her to lull her to sleep. The light was too bright; the room was big and strange. Then the Japanese returned. Her mother stood up, stooped and kissed her, told her to be a good girls and sleep; and left with the Japanese. She looked at the shawl on the peg high up on the wall beside the shut door. Then her father told her to go to sleep. She heard her mother scream. It was so loud she thought her mother was back in the room with them. Suddenly her father was no longer beside her but was pacing up and down the middle of the room from the window to the wall. Every time her father crossed the room she saw how the shawl beat like a wing in the garish light above his head. Her mother stopped screaming and her father stopped pacing and stood still and tense, waiting. Her mother screamed again and her father fell to pacing the floor once more and every time he crossed the room he walked beneath her mother's shawl that hovered like a wing above him; her mother stopped and her father stopped pacing and stood transfixed and tense, waiting. Her mother screamed again and her father, released lurched up and down the enormous room again. The screams came and went, grew fainter and fainter, and then the child couldn't her them any more. Her father stood beneath the shawl that brodded like a wing over him, still and tense and waiting, but the screams didn't come again. The child stared, sleepless, at her father petrified beneath the yellow shawl. She saw her father sway and rock; she saw his incredibly coherent face break and crumble. The child didn't even start at the sound of the animal cry that tore savagely through her father's body and his throat. She watched her father fold and fall. She heard him whimper. Her eyes were wild and wide upon her father's body broken beneath the shadow of the yellow shawl when the Japanese came and carried her father's body away. She felt very wide awake. Her sleepless eyes hurt and felt very dry. She blinked her wakeful eyes long and hard many times trying to make the tears come down but the tears wouldn't come no matter how hard and how long she tried.
     
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