One Night Two Souls Went Walking Read online




  One Night Two Souls Went Walking

  Also by Ellen Cooney

  All the Way Home

  Gun Ball Hill

  Lambrusco

  The Mountaintop School for Dogs and Other Second Chances

  The Old Ballerina

  A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies

  Small-Town Girl

  Thanksgiving

  The White Palazzo

  One Night Two Souls Went Walking

  Ellen Cooney

  COFFEE HOUSE PRESS

  Minneapolis

  2020

  Copyright © 2020 by Ellen Cooney

  Cover photograph by Dil, @thevisualiza, on Unsplash

  Book design by Rachel Holscher

  Author photograph © Greta Rybus

  Coffee House Press books are available to the trade through our primary distributor, Consortium Book Sales & Distribution, cbsd.com or (800) 283-3572. For personal orders, catalogs, or other information, write to [email protected].

  Coffee House Press is a nonprofit literary publishing house. Support from private foundations, corporate giving programs, government programs, and generous individuals helps make the publication of our books possible. We gratefully acknowledge their support in detail in the back of this book.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Cooney, Ellen, author.

  Title: One night two souls went walking / Ellen Cooney.

  Description: Minneapolis : Coffee House Press, 2020.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2020002803 | ISBN 9781566895972 (trade paperback)

  Classification: LCC PS3553.O5788 O54 2020 | DDC 813/.54—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020002803

  Printed in the United States of America

  27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

  To Jo

  Contents

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-one

  Twenty-two

  Twenty-three

  Twenty-four

  Twenty-five

  Twenty-six

  Twenty-seven

  Twenty-eight

  Twenty-nine

  Thirty

  Discussion Guide

  Funder Acknowledgments

  The Publisher’s Circle of Coffee House Press

  One Night Two Souls Went Walking

  One

  Once when I was small I asked my parents, What is a soul?

  My father called it a mystery, like the genie in Aladdin’s lamp. He knew I’d been reading stories of Arabian Nights. But what he said could not be true. A soul can’t slip from a body and speak to you and grant wishes, if you rubbed yourself like rubbing a lamp. I had tried, many times.

  My mother said that if she had to compare a soul to a character in a story, she’d pick Tinker Bell, the best thing about Peter Pan.

  So I began to imagine a fairy inside me, curled up sleeping for most of the time, perhaps on a cushion of my guts, or some pillow of an organ.

  “Wake up, Soul,” I would say, but it didn’t matter. I had to accept the fact that it could not be told what to do. I never had a clue when it would remind me it was there, whirring about like crazy, fluttering inside my rib cage, zipping around wherever it wanted to go, because of course it would do that; it had wings.

  And it knew about the other thing. Like that was its job.

  “The other thing” was what I called it when there was ordinary, everything ordinary, life going on as it does, and then suddenly there’s a something else. I could never describe it to myself, but I could have called it “the thing that doesn’t have words.”

  Once I heard a thrush sing in twilight, its notes ascending, its melody like no other, and then I had to feel sorry for flutes, whenever I heard one. Maybe the flutist was a genius of a musician, but my soul had learned a flute is not a bird.

  In the waiting room of my dentist, a stranger suddenly smiled, and the light of that face was beautiful, when one second earlier, I thought I was looking at someone ugly and weird.

  In stacks of the library where I wandered, where almost no one went, where everything was old and a little beat-up, a ray of sunlight came in, filled with swirling bits of dust, when nothing else was moving, and I saw it wasn’t dust but particles of the spirits of those books, free and out playing around, like no one was watching.

  Moments. They were moments. They belonged to the other thing and they could never be broken, as you can break a clock, but not time.

  I would say to my soul, “Wide awake! Good job!”

  But you can’t believe in fairies forever.

  The first time I saw the cathedral, on a drive with my parents, I felt I was looking at a castle. And then bells began pealing.

  I could not understand why the car wasn’t stopping so we could go inside. I begged.

  Once I sat bedside with a painter who yearned as a child to be taken into the art museum he could see in the distance from a window of his family’s apartment. Their building was in a neighborhood of tenements as far away from the museum, to him, as the other side of the moon. He’d grow up to have work of his own on its walls—but that’s not what he wanted to talk about with his chaplain. He wanted to talk about longing for art when he didn’t yet know what it was, outside of the sketches he secretly made, and how something inside him would leap and get excited when his eyes took in a flash of colors, perhaps in a woman’s dress, or on the shelves of a storefront, cans and bottles and cardboard containers arranged just so. The funny thing was that the painter had no memory of the first time he entered that museum. His soul hadn’t bothered to register the actual event.

  He was nearing the end of his life. “I’m putting my soul in order, Reverend, like I never did with my studio,” he told me.

  I understood him, exactly, about the museum. But for me and the cathedral, it was different. I remembered.

  I knew what a funeral was. My grandfather was being laid to eternal rest.

  I had barely known him, even though he was the only one of my grandparents alive beyond my babyhood. He was an often-frowning figure who always seemed covered in shadows, at the far end of the table at big family gatherings, the first to be served, the first to stand up and leave. My parents and sister and brothers always seemed to put up a guard when he was present, which they didn’t do with other people. Apparently he had a temper he was never interested in controlling.

  “He’s gone to light,” I was told.

  Entering the cathedral, I kept my excitement hidden. At last, at last, at last.

  It was as splendid and breathtaking and lavish and solemnly gorgeous as I had hoped: four priests, eight altar servers, a pageant of a procession, the rising and falling of the organ, the incense mingled with all the flowers. In my family’s pew, my parents were mad at my brothers for slouching and kicking each other. They didn’t want to be here.

  The altar was shining, all dressed up: embroidered white cloths, gold and silver, multitudes of candles, the biggest white lilies and tulips I’d ever seen.

  I was going to find something out about souls! I was going to feel my own, waking up, moving about, in a new, non-baby way!

  And once I did, I knew I would never be the same, like losing my baby teeth, and then came that first real
one, poking up from my gum to fill the emptiness.

  But after a little while in the service, I noticed something. Of everyone on the altar wearing vestments or cassocks, no one was a woman or a girl. I hadn’t noticed that in the procession.

  On the walls behind the altar were paintings, old, oils. My father didn’t mind when I whispered to ask who they were. Before I was born, everyone in my family went regularly to church—to this one. Sometimes I could not believe how unfair it was to belong to a family of people who quit church.

  The paintings were of Apostles, and they were saints named Joseph, Francis, Patrick. They were rich with a vibrancy, an aliveness. They were actual men being shown at their best. The light around them seemed to come from the sun.

  Then I saw that the one female presence was off to the side in an alcove: a white stone statue I knew was Mary, life-size, standing above a secondary altar, her gaze looking downward at vigil candles, flickering in frosted-glass cups. Trails of wispy smoke rose toward her. Her face was finely chiseled, and completely without expression. Her hands were at her sides, palms upward. Her head was covered with a stone veil, her body draped in stone folds of a gown, and also a cloak.

  Even with the garments and the heat of the candles, she looked cold. She looked as if someone would be angry at her if she didn’t stay still all the time, or tried to speak.

  Meanwhile in our pew, my sister pretended to read from the mass book. Secretly inside was a laminated card that listed the rules of lacrosse. I was mortified by that, as I was mortified by my brothers’ behavior.

  But now everything was different. I understood that my soul had chosen this time to take a nap, after looking around and deciding there would not be the other thing, because of the feel of what was left out.

  All the voices rising and falling on the altar were the voices of men. Clearly, something here was very wrong. It reminded me of when my brothers altered the radio in our mother’s car, so all that came out was the bass. She would tell them she’d kill them if they kept messing with the treble. She would un-control her temper. She’d shout, “Stop turning off the treble! The treble has to be on!”

  “I am going to be a priest,” I said to myself.

  I felt logical about it. I did not have a sense I was a little girl planning my future. I felt my future was already going on. I felt practical.

  I had figured out that the reason there were only men and boys on the altar was that all the women and girls were at some other church. Or they were simply not available for a funeral on a weekday morning. I knew that my grandfather had wanted the bishop to officiate; they were friends. I knew the bishop was somewhere away, and had sent his regrets.

  Women and girls were unavailable like the bishop. I felt that the altar was saving a place for me, for when I grew up.

  “I will be available,” I was telling the cathedral. It was as simple and real to me as my sister announcing, the day before, “I need a new sport, so I’m going to learn lacrosse.”

  Then at eight, I went to the birthday party of a girl in my neighborhood. A priest was there.

  He was the girl’s uncle. He was tall and handsome in a movie-star way, and he moved with elegant smoothness on the living room rug: the only grown-up willing to dance with the kids. Fifteen minutes of the party were set aside for music and dancing, which I hadn’t known, or I wouldn’t have gone. Michael Jackson songs were playing. The older kids made fun of Michael Jackson and mocked the songs for being bubblegum-stupid. But the priest showed everyone he could moonwalk.

  A priest could moonwalk! I was awestruck. When he approached me, and told me it made him sad that I was playing the part of a wallflower, I thought I’d giggle like a baby from the joy that he was paying attention to me.

  He knew my family. What would it take to bring my parents and my big teenage sister and brothers back to the fold of the church?

  “Fold,” I echoed, in my head. I knew he didn’t mean it like what you do with clothes or a piece of paper. He meant it as the thing someone does with their arms, in an embrace.

  I was happy to assure him that the day would come when they’d be back. I thought I’d leave it at that. But a burst of courage came into me.

  “When I grow up,” I confided, “I’m going to be a priest, like you”.

  I took his failure to respond to me immediately as a sign of encouragement. I thought he was silently urging me to tell him more, so I explained that after I became a priest, my family would show up in church because of me. I was different from them, I pointed out, but all of us were stuck with each other. They would want to keep track of how I was doing. My only worry was that, being the sort of people they are, they might not behave appropriately—for example, when I emerged on the altar investments, they’d clap and cheer.

  “I’m trying to figure out what a soul is, to get myself ready,” I said.

  As I held my breath, waiting for any inside information the handsome priest might offer, I saw that he was looking at me with an expression of great disapproval, like maybe he was about to scold me. Inside my skin, I went prickly, head to toes, as if a rash had broken out, invisibly.

  “Are you telling me you’ve had the calling?”

  Now he looked a little amused.

  I wondered, What calling? Was that my mistake, like the ringing of a telephone with a message meant for me, but I wasn’t around for it? Or maybe the message hadn’t yet come, and I should be patient and wait?

  “You funny little girl,” he then said. “Don’t you know what everyone calls a priest?”

  My mouth had locked shut. I couldn’t understand what his question had to do with a soul and what I’d just told him.

  He answered the question himself. “Everyone has to call a priest Father. See my niece over there? She’s always talking about growing up to have lots of children. What if she said she wants to be the dad of her kids, not their mom? Wouldn’t you think there’s something very wrong with a mother who goes around saying she’s a daddy?”

  The music had stopped. When the priest walked away to join the grown-ups gathering at the table with the cake, I rushed to the door and ran home, and never went back to that house.

  Soon, I was wondering about a new idea.

  “Can a soul show up in X-rays?”

  I was having an annual physical. I didn’t know if my doctor had grandchildren, but if he did, I was jealous of them. He was a Sikh, kind and gentle, and the first man I knew who went to work in a turban.

  On television shows that were medical, I told him, X-rays were always showing cloudy white shapes.

  Talking about souls was already established with us. I had told him on a previous visit about my father’s comparison to the genie in the lamp, which he shook his head at, because, as he put it, with great authority, I felt, there is no such thing as a genie. I agreed with him. I didn’t tell him about the fairy.

  He felt that my question was excellent, and so was my theory of an inner white cloud. But given the special properties of a soul, it was unlikely to allow itself to be photographed, not even with the finest equipment in the field of radiology. He didn’t say what the special properties were, like they were a secret you had to be a professional to know.

  “I’m sorry,” he said. “But I can’t order an X-ray for you, when nothing is suspicious about your health.”

  After that, I never mentioned souls again, not even when his stethoscope was at a spot on my chest where maybe mine was asleep. We started talking about hospitals and what it’s like to go to work in the field of medicine.

  The medical center I’d grow up to be part of was not yet built. My doctor’s practice was connected to the brown-brick hospital where I was born, like everyone else in my family. Ivy was all over the walls. The entrance had an awning like a fine hotel or apartment building.

  I never said no to going along when my parents or sister or brothers had to be treated for something—that was how I learned to say I’d stay out of sports. I could say I was saving myself fro
m all those injuries.

  My doctor felt I’d make a good physician. He said so all the time. But which kind? He’d list specialties, like a guessing game. For bones? For blood? For organs? For skin? I’d shake my head. He retired before I had a chance to tell him that the only one he never asked me about was the only one that was right.

  Two

  Welcome to the night shift, where nothing ever happens.

  The medical center is huge in its awayness: steel and glass and stone, lights muted in the deep surround of the dark.

  In the background are towers of firs that maybe remember, in their roots and tree-bones, how all this land not so long ago was a forest. On a moonless night like this one, you can smell some pine on a breeze and not know where it came from, unless you knew already—those trees are a solid wall, invisible.

  Once at Christmas a high school came with a crane truck owned by someone’s father. They strung lights in some of the boughs, and patients began asking for their windows to stay uncovered when dusk came hard and fast, way too early. It wasn’t just the season. Night outside a hospital window, when you’re the one in the bed, is not like other kinds of dark.

  The lights were only there about a week. But before I enter the building I think the wires and bulbs are still in place, and juice will somehow return to the batteries, and look! There they are, bursting back on in little explosions, red, yellow, blue, white, green, some holding steady, some blinking like eyes.

  I believe in expecting light. That’s my job.

  “I believe in expecting light,” I say, as if it doesn’t matter they can only be words to hang on to, out of habit, when there are no other words, when I am looking at darkness.

  And so here I was, turning off my car, at a little before eleven, heading for the start of my shift. I was in my first month of nights. I was upside down and inside out, with the drag inside me of a profound sort of jet lag that felt it would never leave me.

  I don’t wear clerical black, but I wear a white collar, a full one, and lightweight clerical blouses in colors that more or less match fruits and vegetables: peach, celery, plum, cranberry, asparagus, yam, lemon.