The
Harvest
Amy
Hempel
Originally
published in The Quarterly, and then in Amy Hempel's short story
collection, At the Gates of the Animal Kingdom. Available online at www.pifmagazine.com
The
year I began to say vahz instead of vase, a man I barely knew nearly
accidentally killed me.
The
man was not hurt when the other car hit ours. The man I had known for one week
held me in the street in a way that meant I couldn't see my legs. I remember
knowing that I shouldn't look, and knowing that I would look if it wasn't that
I couldn't.
My
blood was on the front of this man's clothes.
He
said, "You'll be okay, but this sweater is ruined."
I
screamed from the fear of pain. But I did not feel any pain. In the hospital,
after injections, I knew there was pain in the room — I just didn't know whose
pain it was.
What
happened to one of my legs required four hundred stitches, which, when I told it,
became five hundred stitches, because nothing is ever quite as bad as it could
be.
The
five days they didn't know if they could save my leg or not I stretched to ten.
The
lawyer was the one who used the word. But I won't get around to that until a couple
of paragraphs.
We
were having the looks discussion — how important are they. Crucial is what I
had said.
I
think looks are crucial.
But
this guy was a lawyer. He sat in an aqua vinyl chair drawn up to my bed. What
he meant by looks was how much my loss of them was worth in a court of law.
I
could tell that the lawyer liked to say court of law. He told me he had taken
the bar three times before he had passed. He said that his friends had given
him handsomely embossed business cards, but where these lovely cards were
supposed to say Attorney-at-Law, his cards said Attorney-at-Last.
He
had already covered loss of earnings, that I could not now become an airline
stewardess. That I had never considered becoming one was immaterial, he said,
legally.
"There's
another thing," he said. "We have to talk here about
marriageability."
The
tendency was to say marriage-a-what? although I knew what he meant the first
time I heard it.
I
was eighteen years old. I said, "First, don't we talk about
dateability?"
The
man of a week was already gone, the accident driving him back to his wife.
"Do
you think looks are important?" I asked the man before he left.
"Not
at first," he said.
In
my neighborhood there is a fellow who was a chemistry teacher until an explosion
took his face and left what was left behind. The rest of him is neatly dressed
in dark suits and shined shoes. He carries a briefcase to the college campus.
What a comfort — his family, people said — until his wife took the kids and
moved out.
In
the solarium, a woman showed me a snapshot. She said, "This is what my son
used to look like."
I
spent my evenings in Dialysis. They didn't mind when a lounger was free. They
had wide-screen color TV, better than they had in Rehab. Wednesday nights we
watched a show where women in expensive clothes appeared on lavish sets and
promised to ruin one another.
On
one side of me was a man who spoke only in phone numbers. You would ask them
how he felt, he would say, "924-3130." Or he would say,
"757-1366." We guessed what these numbers might be, but nobody spent
the dime.
There
was sometimes, on the other side of me, a twelve-year-old boy. His lashes were
thick and dark from blood-pressure medication. He was next on the transplant
list, as soon as — the word they used was harvest — as soon as a kidney was
harvested.
The
boy's mother prayed for drunk drivers.
I
prayed for men who were not discriminating.
Aren't
we all, I thought, somebody's harvest?
The
hour would end, and a floor nurse would wheel me back to my room. She would
say, "Why watch that trash? Why not just ask me how my day went?"
I
spent fifteen minutes before going to bed squeezing rubber grips. One of the
medications was making my fingers stiffen. The doctor said he'd give it to me
till I couldn't button my blouse — a figure of speech to someone in a cotton
gown.
The
lawyer said, "Charitable works."
He
opened his shirt and showed me where an acupuncture person had dabbed at his
chest with cola syrup, sunk four needles, and told him that the real cure was
charitable works.
I
said, "Cure for what?"
The
lawyer said, "Immaterial."
As
soon as I knew that I would be all right, I was sure that I was dead and didn't
know it. I moved through the days like a severed head that finishes a sentence.
I waited for the moment that would snap me out of my seeming life.
The
accident happened at sunset, so that is when I felt this way the most. The man
I had met the week before was driving me to dinner when it happened. The place
was at the beach, a beach on a bay that you can look across and see the city
lights, a place where you can see everything without having to listen to any of
it.
A
long time later I went to that beach myself. I drove the car. It was the first
good beach day; I wore shorts.
At
the edge of the sand I unwound the elastic bandage and waded into the surf. A
boy in a wet suit looked at my leg. He asked me if a shark had done it; there
were sightings of great whites along that part of the coast.
I
said that, yes, a shark had done it.
"And
you're going back in?" the boy asked.
I
said, "And I'm going back in."
I
leave a lot out when I tell the truth. The same when I write a story. I'm going
to start now to tell you what I have left out of "The Harvest," and
maybe begin to wonder why I had to leave it out.
There
was no other car. There was only the one car, the one that hit me when I was on
the back of the man's motorcycle. But think of the awkward syllables when you
have to say motorcycle.
The
driver of the car was a newspaper reporter. He worked for a local paper. He was
young, a recent graduate, and he was on his way to a labor meeting to cover a
threatened strike. When I say I was then a journalism student, it is something
you might not have accepted in "The Harvest."
In
the years that followed, I watched for the reporter's byline. He broke the
People's Temple story that resulted in Jim Jones’s flight to Guyana. Then he
covered Jonestown. In the city room of the San Francisco Chronicle, as the
death toll climbed to nine hundred, the numbers were posted like donations on
pledge night. Somewhere in the hundreds, a sign was fixed to the wall that said
JUAN CORONA, EAT YOUR HEART OUT.
In
emergency room, what happened to one of my legs required not four hundred
stitches but just over three hundred stitches. I exaggerated even before I
began to exaggerate, because it's true — nothing is ever quite as bad as it
could be.
My
lawyer was no attorney-at-last. He was a partner in one of the city's oldest
law firms. He would never have opened his shirt to reveal the site of
acupuncture, which is something that he never would have had.
"Marriageability"
was the original title of " The Harvest."
The
damage to my leg was considered cosmetic although I am still, 15 years later,
unable to kneel. In an out-of-court settlement the night before the trial, I
was awarded nearly $100,000. The reporter's car insurance went up $12.43 per
month.
It
had been suggested that I rub my leg with ice, to bring up the scars, before I
hiked my skirt three years later for the court. But there was no ice in the
judge’s chambers, so I did not get a chance to pass or fail that moral test.
The
man of a week, whose motorcycle it was, was not a married man. But when you
thought he had a wife, wasn't I liable to do anything? And didn't I have it
coming?
After
the accident, the man got married. The girl he married was a fashion model.
("Do you think looks are important? I asked the man before he left.
"Not at first," he said.)
In
addition to being a beauty, the girl was worth millions of dollars. Would you
have accepted this in "The Harvest" — that the model was also an
heiress?
It
is true we were headed for dinner when it happened. But the place where you can
see everything without having to listen to any of it was not a beach on a bay;
it was the top of Mount Tamalpais. We had the dinner with us as we headed up the
twisting mountain road. This is the version that has room for perfect irony, so
you won't mind when I say that for the next several months, from my hospital
bed, I had a dead-on spectacular view of that very mountain.
I
would have written this next part into the story if anybody would have believed
it. But who would have? I was there and I didn't believe it.
On
the day of my third operation, there was an attempted breakout at the Maximum
Security Adjustment Center, adjacent to Death Row, at San Quentin prison.
"Soledad Brother" George Jackson, a twenty-nine-year-old black man,
pulled out a smuggled-in .38-caliber pistol, yelled, "This is it!"
and opened fire. Jackson was killed; so were three guards and two
"tiertenders," inmates who bring other prisoners their meals.
Three
other guards were stabbed in the neck. The prison is a five-minute drive from
Marin General, so that is where the injured guards were taken. The people who
brought them were three kinds of police, including California Highway Patrol and
Marin County sheriff's deputies, heavily armed.
Police
were stationed on the roof of the hospital with rifles; they were posted in the
hallways, waving patients and visitors back into their rooms.
When
I was wheeled out of Recovery later that day, bandaged waist to ankle, three
officers and an armed sheriff frisked me.
On
the news that night, there was footage of the riot. They showed my surgeon
talking to reporters, indicating, with a finger to his throat, how he had saved
one of the guards by sewing up a slice from ear to ear.
I
watched this on television, and because it was my doctor, and because hospital
patients are self-absorbed, and because I was drugged, I thought the surgeon
was talking about me. I thought that he was saying, "Well, she's dead. I'm
announcing it to her in bed."
The
psychiatrist I saw at the surgeon's referral said that the feeling was a common
one. She said that victims of trauma who have not yet assimilated the trauma
often believe they are dead and do not know it.
The
great white sharks in the waters near my home attack one to seven people a
year. Their primary victim is the abalone diver. With abalone stakes at
thirty-five dollars a pound and going up, the Department of Fish and Game
expects the shark attacks to show no slackening.
Originally
published in The Quarterly, and then in Amy Hempel's short story collection, At
the Gates of the Animal Kingdom.
Amy
Hempel was born in Chicago, and now lives in New York. She is the author of
Reasons to Live, At the Gates of the Animal Kingdom, Unleashed, and Tumble
Home. Her fiction and non-fiction have appeared in Vanity Fair, The Mississippi
Review, Grand Street, Columbia, The Quarterly, Mother Jones, Zyzzyva, and other
leading magazines.