Breathing Water

Breathing Water by Timothy Hallinan Read Free Book Online

Book: Breathing Water by Timothy Hallinan Read Free Book Online
Authors: Timothy Hallinan
town shops. The shutters over her windows were kept closed.
    So no one knocked on her door. And when she died, when Da was eleven, it was more than a week before the smell announced it, and two of the village men forced their way in and came out running, their hands over their noses and mouths.
    In the year that followed, people gave the house a wide berth. One of the village grannies, a woman who had dreamed several winning lottery numbers, said she heard the sound of weeping coming from the house. No one else heard it, but no one else had dreamed winning lottery numbers either.
    Naturally, the boys talked about going in. And talked about it and talked about it, until finally Da said she was going in. And quickly, before she could lose her nerve, she pried open the front shutters, hoisted herself over the sill, and let herself drop to the floor. Stood there, holding her breath, listening to the house creak in the heat. Felt the dust on the floor beneath her bare feet. Heard the rustling of mice in the walls.
    Heard the weeping.
    It came from upstairs. It flowed like water, without pauses for breath, a river of grief. Whoever or whatever was making that sound, it did not need to breathe. But it needed comforting. With every hair on her arms standing upright, Da went to the stairs.
    There was no increase in volume as she climbed. The weeping filled the air evenly, like dust in a storm, the same everywhere.
    The stairs took Da up to a short hallway. The weeping came through the open door at the end of the hall, a room that was tightly shuttered,because it was even darker than the hallway. Da slid one foot forward, then the other, moving as silently as she could. It seemed to her that it took a very long time to reach the door, and when she did, she put a hand against the jamb for balance and looked in.
    The bed was terribly stained. Da’s mind reeled back from considering what had caused the stains, and she forced her eyes past the stain, to the edge of the bed, to the corner of the room. And stopped.
    Slowly she looked back at the bed. Nothing, nothing but the stains. She looked away again, and felt her knees weaken.
    The woman was sitting on the edge of the bed, slumped forward over her lap. Long gray hair hung loosely all the way to the blanket, covering her face. But when Da looked at her, she was gone.
    Da grasped the doorframe with both hands and let her eyes scan the room. While her eyes were moving, the woman was clearly visible. When she looked directly at the bed, it was empty. But the weeping continued whether the woman was visible or not.
    Da forced herself to study the empty bed. This time she could see something: The pillows beyond the spot where the woman had been sitting were wavering , as though Da were looking at them over a steaming kettle.
    “Please,” Da said, and then stopped to clear her throat. “Please don’t cry.”
    The weeping continued.
    “Don’t cry,” Da said. “It’s all over. Whatever broke your heart, it’s over. You need to go.”
    A moment of silence, and into it Da said, “And if you can’t go yet, I can come back. If you don’t want to be alone, I mean. I can come see you again. I can be your friend.”
    Nothing.
    “You don’t have to be alone,” Da said.
    Then the bed creaked and the crack between the shutters seemed to widen, letting in more light, and Da took a lightning step back.
    She could see the pillows clearly.
    Da heard the house again, heard the wood groan and shift, heard the mice in the walls. Heard, as though from very far away, the boys outside calling her name. She felt the weight of her own body return to her, and she shifted from foot to foot, wondering what would be themost polite way to take her leave, just in case something remained to say good-bye to.
    After a moment she backed away from the door. Halfway down the hall, she stopped and said, “Bye,” and gave a wai of respect. Then she turned and walked, without hurrying, to the head of the stairs,

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