Fiction: A Eulogy for Eurydice
Later, much later, when we were less inhibited, when having
left the world outside we had retreated to the covers that bound her body to
mine, it was difficult to imagine that things could have been any other way.
There was a strange comfort in our bodies, her frame pressed against me, limbs
that had woven past each other, skin juxtaposed on skin, the rise of my chest
bearing strongly against her. She laughed at this curious entanglement, a
filling laughter that resonated in my ears, her mouth agape, head thrown back
on the cushion that peeked through the sheet of her dark hair strewn about. I
was young, excited, each inch of my body struggling to keep itself fixed to me,
to not meld with her already, find myself dissolving slowly in the ecstasy that
had bubbled in this proximity. And just as suddenly, she stopped laughing and
looked at me intently.
With a warning palm on my chest, she asked, “Are you
attracted to me?”
Before the answer, let there be some rain, with the
attendant sound that leaves make as the water drizzles through them. Let there
be the smell of fresh air that wafts through the stench of flesh, of sweat, of
sex. Something, anything, that would bring me out of the play of bodies and
toward the question. I was scared, then, for the first time that she was
searching in me some depth of being, something that fit within her like the
interlocking pieces of a puzzle. There was, in those words, the urgency of a pressing
question that had to be settled before one traded in flesh, before we gave
ourselves to each other.
“Yes,” I lied.
I noticed then her complexion darkening, noticed that within
her blood was slowly rising, reddening where I pressed down on her. I noticed
the widening of her eyes, the flickers of recognition coursing through her
lashes. Even then, she smiled, ran her fingers through my hair, pulling me
close with an edacity that had regained hold of her. She wanted to possess,
even ephemerally, something that she had seen slipping away fast, as if the
little of us that she had managed to salvage would be exhausted before the
night faded. Before she woke up the next day and left a note that did not
indicate, among other things, where we might meet next. Her hands were inflamed
with the same urgency. They fumbled, slipped, found their way around by sheer
force. Where they lingered, she scratched, marking on me the places that she
had been. Here, and here, and here, she whispered, cutting, naming, traversing.
When they held me, they did so with certainty, an already-after of an act, as
if the pleasure she was seeking now had already been granted to her, as if she
had already deserved what there was to have.
I too had not let go of her body; I was still breathing in
the scent where my face had lodged into her. I was, now that I remember it,
indescribably hard for her. Some cause had welled up to this moment, had
spurred the flow of things, of moments that had brought us here.
“Stop,” she said.
Confused, I let go. She retreated into the bed, cutting a
huge swath below me. Distance. I realised that she was trying to put some
distance between us, as far as a polite leaning away might allow, more a
tendency than motion, more a hint than admonition. Even then, she reached out,
cupped my face in her palms and asked, “Are you ok?”
“Yes. Are you fine?”
She nodded, then looked away. The rain, still falling, had
settled into a steady rhythm, like the sliding of drawers, like clockwork
ticking. After a while, she looked at me again, pointed at herself and said,
“Just on the outside.”
When I recounted the events of the night in the days after,
I remembered her with a fondness that did not burgeon into ecstasy. Yes, I
recalled, she was beautiful in an exciting sort of way, like when you are
introduced to some place new and have to figure out the path back home. Such
wonderful sights that a new city brings with itself, where mere buildings
present their stature as edifices. I recalled the inflection of her words, her
teeth, her tongue, her lips that fashioned syllable after syllable in utter
promiscuity. And I recalled the alienness of her flesh, its sheer brownness
invading the impression of a palm on breast, preventing it from turning into
legible print, into words that I could not roll back. And my body remembered,
in the thousand sites of their inflammation, the style of her touch, the many
points of ingress that she had left upon me.
There was a postcard, from somewhere north of Denmark, where
the land touched its frontiers with the sea. In it, behind a picture of a
solitary swing set apart from a bustling diner, looking at a calm sea that
extended skyward, she had written to me about literature, about words that we had
discussed long ago in another diner in another city.
“Rilke writes,” her handwriting said, “about Woman in the
starkest of language, a poet who is perhaps gazing into the abyss that is Woman
with just his flashlight. A woman that is to him already dead, lost to all
action because she is lost to the world. Reminds me of you, Ayush. It is
perhaps an imagination both of inspiration and sex that makes you unmake the
woman so much in words.”
Underneath, in neatly scrawled handwriting, she had penned
her name and that of Eurydice. One must imagine that she had felt in the moment
of her arrival at the swings, framed against the panorama of the Atlantic, a
moment of truce with the figure she had become. To become Eurydice was to lose
herself to Rilke, yet to gain some semblance of a gaze that made her into
something for the world. To become Eurydice was to always be in a game with
Orpheus, a game of desire and relinquishment; to enter into a truce with her
was to be in a game with everyone in the world, of advancing and retreating
with the people she met, the ones she could and could not love, the ones who
could and could not love her.
I wandered for a while in the city before returning to the
postcard. A small delay, inserted into the rhythm of correspondence that made
its way across continents. The rains had given way to a winter slightly cold,
and the trees were old and worn out. I felt that I knew them personally, each
branch of each tree that lined the streets that were now empty because people
had retreated into their homes. Fresh air, that allowed me to think of space
and distance and the distinction between sea and snow, fluidity and settlement,
here and there. Yet, something of the frantic night returned to me in those
moments, a stirring deep within me, as if my body were rising to the
realisation of this pause I was poised within. Perhaps only now I felt the
weight of the lie that I had let slip, and in the remembrance, it appeared
true. It was true that I was attracted to her; now that she was not here, her
words seemed to beckon me toward where she was; a challenge, as if issued by
the world itself. And if there was some residual doubt about it, let it be that
I had pulled the attraction of this moment as far as it would stretch into the
past, perhaps till even before we met. Was that not how we choose to tell our
stories?
So I wrote back to her, hastily, on a postcard that I had
grabbed from the shelves of a corner stationers’, which showed a street so
familiar you could not pin down where it was. In barely legible longhand, I
scribbled to her what I felt was a defence of poets everywhere and for every
time.
“Rilke writes not about Woman, but about Woman dead. He
writes from a place without life, from the underworld itself. How alive must
the world be for it to be marginally alive for somebody dead?”
And I posted it at the office of the Postmaster, across the
street from a café, indistinct from every office of every Postmaster,
indistinct from every café out there in the city. It is strange to lose a city
with a person, stranger still when life that has thrummed through you so far in
this corner of the world seems to appear suddenly transported millions of miles
away, across the space of deserts and oceans, sharded by the gates that we make
and the words that we speak. It was as if Bangalore had hollowed itself out to
make space within itself for Copenhagen, as if I was being beckoned toward a
place I had no business being.
#
She had escaped the humdrum of all cities, she told me, with
a handheld camera. A view of the world, she said, that allowed her to frame
what others merely existed within, create a background art of sorts. In the
long gallery where her work was displayed, housed in thin folios that boasted
bleeding images of the war, she walked confidently, thrusting me from exhibit
to exhibit, talking to me about the finer points of how one assays a conflict
when the land you stand on is given to detonating percussions. “The biggest
problem, Ayush,” she said, “is holding your camera steady. Do not let anyone
tell you otherwise.”
The photographs were desaturated, their colour presenting a
past-ness that the dates on them betrayed. Who knew if the eyes I gazed into
were at that moment dead, covered under so much rubble that the natural order
of the world had been re-established? Death by burial: do we not all bleed
downward into our graves?
She interrupted me, her fingers plucking off the piece
mid-air, as if suddenly animated by a dim memory. Her eyes, now upon me, now
forced to follow the trajectory of her own hand, registered some recognition
among those images. “Farah,” she said, as if to remember a name was to offer a
story. “Twenty-three.”
The register at the gallery held the names and ages of each
of these subjects. Farah, twenty three. Zainab, twenty four. Aziza,
twenty five. And on and on, like a roll call in the underworld. “Leave
them behind,” she said, watching my intent gaze upon the faces of people I
barely knew and had had no occasion to study. “Perhaps some privacy from
being always so watched?”
Let there be a passing glance, the thickness of that moment
set against the sirens of distantly passing automobiles, the fluttering of a
million pigeons, the beckoning of a city that houses two bodies not its own.
She tore me away from the display, past the meandering corridors of the museum
and later, stolen away from the world, she would sneak me into her room. It was
difficult then to imagine that we were not once here already, that this was not
a reprise of what had happened once already. I struggled to remember the warmth
of her skin, the colour at the drop of her shoulders, the razor edge of her
nails on my waist. A familiar dissolution suggested itself to me, amid a scent
that I knew, amid the many struggles with touch that I was privy to.
There, cupping my neck, she looked at me and asked, “Are you
attracted to me?”
A journey of a thousand miles had reached its natural end. I
was like Orpheus on the lyre, and this here was the underworld, though there
was no haste, right at this moment, to be anywhere but here.
The underworld; why think of the underworld at a time like
this? I noticed her eyes widening, filling their orbits fully, as if she was
struggling to see clearly. Her breath came in short spurts, huffing her away
into the space of the room. And her lips were quivering as they reached up to
mine.
“Yes,” I lied.
In that moment, I realised that I was wrong, that there was
really no distinction between this Eurydice dead and Eurydice alive for all the
world, or Eurydice right here in front of me. Her body had decomposed itself
into tiny bits, the odds and ends that she had been leaving in places, in
cities far and wide, and forgetting about them. She had dropped herself between
the photographs, a toe here, a limb there, such that her touching me was no
more than pawing at bare flesh where one could find it, as when somebody tries
to anchor themselves to something human. Hers was the clawing of dismembered
flesh, an arm disjointed at the shoulders, torso rent from hips, thighs from
feet, nose cleaved from face like in that other old legend.
She came at me in a thousand different pieces, and I
returned to the gallery again, where flipping through a thousand photos, you
could mutter: Asma, thirty-three, whizzing bomb. Fiza, thirty-four,
bouncing bullet to the skull, Reya, thirty-five, raped and maimed by soldiers.
She was a passionate woman, one who had passively made the deaths of others as
her own, allowed them to stir her deeply.
When I remembered our encounter later, the streets of the
foreign city seemed a little more like my own. I knew of the routes that
proliferated around my small apartment, and the buses that would whisk me away
from it, from her. She complained to me once, after that second night when we
had lived as friends brought back from the brink of desire, that I was always
trying to break apart from her. To run off, she said, and laughed
because the choices were either the sea on one end or white men with big guns
on the other. And both of these options were certain death.
“What was it that the old poet wrote?” her handwriting asked
me. “Is there balm in Gilead? Tell me, will Gaza ever find its
Gilead?”
I could not understand her singular occupation with war that
was not our own, whose men and women and children were not being buried in our
backyard. Despite the map, perhaps, there was a certain proximity that I had
developed with Copenhagen, the city that slept in silence, where blood flowed
only in pictures. These were not issues that we must die for.
So I wrote back to her, deliberately, on a postcard that I
hoped would make it past what I thought the frontlines of the warzone were:
past smoke through which silhouettes moved with laser pointer guns, and barbed
fences that poked through the desert sand, and half-eaten buildings tipping
over one another, images that came floating my way. Strangely, though she was
what seemed like a million miles away, something of the old attraction,
something in the savagery of the attraction between our bodies, returned to me.
And it returned to me in a flash what she had said many months ago: the
unmaking of a woman.
I dreamed that I would shoot the postcard through empty
space, and that it would arc in the skies like a bullet does, shattering her
into a thousand pieces. Amidst the stench of rotting bodies, bones jutting from
splintered wrists, skin chafed away from muscles, I would find the parts of her
that I would be forced to put together. That I would be forced, against my
will, to make her whole again.
“It was Poe, I suppose,” was all I could manage to write.
Later, much later, when news of her passing reached me
before her last postcard could, I would think back on this occasion and wonder
if I should have written something more. It seemed appropriate, did it not,
that there was to her message only this much response, only these many words.
In his passage to the world, Orpheus must be silent, lest he should fail to
hear the sure footsteps behind him, but perhaps, this too is his fault. Perhaps
if he were to keep talking, there would be some semblance of companionship,
some comfort in the winding paths. I wonder when he turned around, could he at
least glimpse her before she was gone?
#
1.
The day she died, I forgot how to tell the past apart. It
was as if the urgency of living with proximate conditions was suspended,
something like drowning face-down where gravity urges along the suffocation. I
woke up often with a feeling that I could not tell my fingers apart, that the
simple act of making the bed would see me stumbling over objects: two pillows,
a fraying duvet, a phone turned off, a lazy book whose seventeenth page was
thumbed down by the repetition of the days, a bedspread whose edges disappeared
into the thin lines that divided weeks, and the sheer weight of her absence.
Outside, it was June, and it remained June for as long as I could remember.
2.
If I could choose the place of our meeting, it would be a
museum corridor, faced with as many photographs as there are days in a year.
She was someone who insisted upon gazing at the world, in the hopes that
someday you might spot something quaint enough to call your own. Somewhere
along Bedford Avenue, she confided, she had found a silver-crested, one-legged
pigeon. “There,” she had said, “that is my bird.” Her claim to ownership was
simple: if you found something in the world that only you could truly describe,
then it is yours. Let that be the case then.
3.
In autumn, I was asked to speak how I remembered her, about
how she wanted to be remembered. “You write well, so maybe make something out
of it,” said her sister over a hasty phone call, caught within the business of
arranging for a place and the many people who would make up her funeral, the
ins and outs of a ritual where we collectively discuss death to be able to
live. And I wondered if I could describe her uniquely, if by virtue of me
talking about her, something of hers would remain to call my own.
Her last postcard had specified that I should speak about
her. It was not posted, but salvaged by those whose work it is to assuage the
families of the deceased. They could not find her entirely, so they found me
one day, sitting at the desk oblivious of the emptiness that had caught me by
surprise.
4.
A thin branch of philosophy sees death as not nothingness,
rather as an introduction to an order that differs from what we are caught
within. Bergson said that the chief problem with metaphysics is that we
privilege existing over nothingness and inquire after it, that we privilege
order over disorder and seek meaning within it. Levinas says that death is an
initiation into what is yet mysterious: like falling in love, like coming face
to face with somebody who is not you. It is supposed to be a happy philosophy;
it is actually depressing. It promises something without recourse to
completion: to bury something, to forget someone is convenient.
5.
Of all the ways to die instantly, perhaps the bullet is the
most symbolic. It registers its metallic touch faster than its sound; it
explodes in ways that are lateral to its own trajectory, the ripples in air
affecting lives far beyond its own location. A bullet is small, precise,
incisive, a nick in time like a thin beat of a powerful, cosmic heart. In my
dreams, I see it slowly trace its arc, across seven hundred metres of dry air,
and then she explodes with a bang, over and over. Perhaps the next time it
rains over the city, she will trickle down from the skies.
6.
If we are to talk about death or loss, we should perhaps
defer to the poets. “I thought that love would last forever; I was wrong,” That
is Auden. “What else need we know before death? Have we not heard the cries of
birds fall upon the dying sun? And watched the crows fly across the darkening
mists?” That is Jibananda Das.
In the corner bookstores, they also sell paperbacks that
teach you how to deal with grief and loss, one day at a time. Nobody teaches
you how to deal with the loss of your own life, the many ways in which we come
unstuck from the flow of time. And nobody tells you how to write a eulogy.
There are, in the process, so many false starts.
7.
Orpheus was charged with escorting Eurydice out of the
underworld, with the sole condition that he would not turn around to ensure
that she was there, following right behind him. To drive toward a destination
without knowing if both of you would reach the place, if you have indeed been
able to carry someone out of hell, if you were not at the centre of a vast
cosmic joke that the gods of the universe were pulling on you.
I think the Greeks let Orpheus off easy. Imagine then the
man escorting the ghostly woman through the sinuous paths of the underworld,
walking backwards. He holds Eurydice’s face in his gaze, compelled to find his
way out with nobody else but a person who is less than alive. Would Orpheus
stumble? Would we call him blind? Would he still doubt? The tragedy is not
absence, but the constant pressure of selecting of what we allow to be absent,
of which absence we allow to enter our lives.
8.
She was a friend. We had not met in a museum, no. We had met
over a planned date at a diner, and like the curious person she was, she had
asked me if I would write her eulogy after her passing. This is not fiction;
and her face had not betrayed the earnestness with which she was testing the
waters.
I remember asking her how she would want to be talked about.
If the many achievements, which I would discover in attentive moments that
spanned years, would suffice to tell people the kind of person she was, or if
she would like to be referred by the sequence of her effects on people.
“No,” she said, “begin with the details of my death. Make it
medical.”
This is perhaps the only guilt I carry now. I have realised
that we were both wrong then, that if I am speaking here, I am speaking not
only about her but about me. But I agree with her. Perhaps, the medical details
of her death are important.
9.
She died covering a war. She was blasted at close range by
someone --- by whom, it is not known. Or they won’t tell. It makes no
difference. In the final tally, they could not spot one of her arms or part of
her face. They say the could not spot her at first, so close was her complexion
to that of the ground, that until the blood had caked over, it was all
uniformly coloured.
She died, from what we know, on November 8. Her camera could not be recovered. Those are the details.
Ayush Mukherjee is a Bangalore-based writer and educator, previously published in Tasavvur and The Threepenny Review.
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