IT COULD HAVE BEEN SAID, it probably was said among certain of her friends, that Frankie was leaving Africa because of a love affair—but that was only part of the truth. The truth had to do with her work, her life generally. The truth was that it was that love affair on top of the other love affairs. The ones that ended because someone was transferred away, or chose to quit aid work, or just wanted to get away from Africa, or was married, or was, as with Philip, in some irrevocable way unavailable.
As Frankie knew she probably was, too, she’d gotten so used to the inevitable ending to things. And although she liked to think of herself as still open to experience—to love, she supposed—she was aware that the evidence was pretty compelling against it.
The work itself was part of what did it, of course. Ended things. But also began them. The extremity of it, the absorption in it, the fatigue, the high. The charge that passed among people laboring together in such hard circumstances, such challenging ones. The wish to take pleasure where you could, the sense that you needed it, that you had somehow earned it. Most of the people Frankie worked with felt this way. They joked about it, actually, they used it as a kind of aphrodisiac. They all had the feeling, living always so close to death, that they wanted somehow to affirm life. Sex was good for that.
Timing had been part of her coming together with Philip. He was closing out an emergency surgical stint in Sudan—there was at least a temporary peace in the area, so the crisis, which was what Philip’s work was about, was just about over, for the time being anyway. Now a more normal, steady human misery was the problem. Malnutrition and hunger were a part of that everyday misery—and they constituted Frankie’s work. She was arriving just as Philip left, then, arriving to supervise the feeding station, to set it up the way her NGO felt it worked best so that the local people could take it over. He would go, and Frankie would stay, at least until things were working satisfactorily. An assured ending before it even began.
Its beginning seemed foreordained, shut in together in the medical compound as they essentially were. This was what she told herself, anyway. What she always told herself, she realized. Later, when she asked herself, Why him? Why not one of the others? she didn’t have an answer, not really. She knew how easily it could have been one of the others. But at the time, she chose to see it as inevitable. Him, him and no other, the lie she told herself, the lie she always told herself, the lie that turned her on.
It had started in more or less the usual way. They were sitting around talking after dinner, maybe seven or eight of them, all a little drunk. Several of them, Philip included, were smoking, and Frankie’s eyes were stinging a bit in the thick air. Someone had put an old Leonard Cohen tape on the boom box, and the voices in conversation were all pitched loud in order to be heard over it. They were speaking of the events of the day for each of them. Philip and Rosemary had done an emergency Cesarean on a fifteen-year-old girl who’d been in labor and bleeding for three days. Her family had carried her for miles, and then she’d been picked up by an aid truck coming out from the little airstrip. The baby was all right, but they weren’t sure if the mother would make it.
Another of the doctors was monitoring a young man who had been running an unexplainable high fever for days, and there was a girl who’d cut herself accidentally, whose wound was badly infected. There was dysentery, gangrene, tuberculosis. They shook their heads at these catastrophes, at the ruination, the endless crises, the odd, gonzo rescue of someone. They laughed. They actually laughed. What else were you to do?
Frankie’s day had been hard enough, but less dramatic, so she wasn’t talking as much as the others. Also, there was the fact that she’d arrived the day before and didn’t really know anyone yet. Still, she was glad for the macho silliness all around her. Glad because it was familiar, it was the lingua franca of this work. Glad because it made all of them easy to meet, easy to know. It made her feel at home, even though she was having to learn, once again, the layout of the compound.
The room she was in was square, with a thatched ceiling and whitewashed walls, a concrete floor. There was a bench along each side of the table. Kerosene lanterns were set on it, and a jumble of glasses and beer bottles and ashtrays was scattered over it. In the intervals between songs on the boom box, she could hear workers cleaning up in the open-air kitchen. Philip had gone after dinner to the building where the medical staff was housed to get a bottle of Scotch he’d bought on his last trip to Nairobi, and now he was moving around the table, pouring shots for everyone.
“Frankie,” he said as he filled her glass. He stood back. Light from the kerosene lantern glinted in his glasses. “Such a very Ameddican name.” He was a Brit, definitely ritzy. Frankie had gotten so she could hear the class differences when the English spoke, even when those differences were being mocked, as they were now.
“Francesca,” she corrected. “Such a very Italian name.”
“But you’re not …?” He frowned.
“No. I am, such an American. But in that American way, a bit of a mongrel.”
“A Mongol?!” The music was very loud.
“Mongrel. Mutt.”
He sat down next to her on the bench, his legs turned the opposite way from hers, his back to the table. “You don’t look like a mutt. You look like … a setter. Irish. High-strung.”
“Is this a game? Do I choose a dog for you now?”
“It could be. I could use a game, after my day.”
Someone called to him from the other side of the table, and he twisted around. The other doctor, Alan, made some gesture, and Philip laughed loudly. Frankie wasn’t sure if the gesture referred to her, but it irritated her anyway.
“A Newfoundland,” she said.
“What, darling?” he asked, turning back to her.
“You know, one of those large, gentle bearlike dogs that leaves strings of slobber all over you.”
“I would never,” he said, grinning. “Though I’d love the opportunity.”
That was it. That quick. That direct.
It was a little difficult to arrange, but they managed it over and over in the next month. Frankie had had a brief affair with an African man just before this, an affair that had ended because she wasn’t interested in marriage, wasn’t interested in moving with him back to the United States. He was angry about this. And then she’d been angry that this, finally, was what he had wanted. Was really all he had wanted. Then he was angry that she had the nerve to be angry at him. Who did she imagine she was? And the contempt he had had for her as a woman all along—a very African contempt—came pouring out.
So she felt some relief at starting things up with Philip, the relief of being with someone who understood her life, whose own life was in many ways similar. Neither of them, she assumed, had any long-term expectations of the other. Still, during the month or so they were working next to each other, they conducted their affair with a hunger, a recklessness, that startled them both.
Once Philip had left, she assumed it would be over. She was surprised, then, when he contacted her in Nairobi after she was back. He was staying on there for a while, for various work-related reasons. Just his voice on the phone thrilled her, caused her to feel a heavy, dropping sensation in her abdomen.
They saw each other four or five times a week for the next month or so, mostly at her house, always at night; and then just before he left for good, they took almost a week together in Lamu. When they climbed the stone steps of the house they had rented, holding the lantern the steward had left out for them, its soft light moving up over the old, uneven walls, making strange shadows, Frankie felt a weakness in her legs at the thought of everything they would do with each other, to each other, at the way in which their bodies belonged to each other. She realized over those days that something had shifted for her. That without changing any of her underlying assumptions, she had been imagining this going on. Imagining a life together—though it wasn’t located in any particular place, though it consisted only of Philip and her. Though it was, in other words, impossible.
But after he’d gone for good—there was, it turned out, a wife and children to “visit” in England—Frankie swung quickly back to her first understanding of things. She was sorrowful, she was pained, but within a few weeks, she was angry, mostly at herself—for her romanticism, for her sexual vulnerability.
And then slowly, over the next months, the months before she was to go home for her annual leave, she began to feel it was time to end this. Not just the kind of relationship she had with Philip, but her relationship, too, with Africa, with this whole way of living. They seemed connected somehow—the passionate affairs that ended, one after another, and the deep but temporary engagement she felt with her version of Africa’s life. And it was always deep: the indelible memories of the children, of the mothers, the ones she’d failed as well as the ones she’d helped. The work that was so compelling.
And then was done. Finished. On to the next job.
All of this was what she was lost in thinking about on the dirt road in New Hampshire when the car appeared. When she stepped into the ditch at the side of the road. When she watched the car disappear, then rise over the next hill, dropping out of sight, rising again. She didn’t give much thought to it then, or to the smell of smoke she’d been vaguely aware of for a while. She used both of them, though, as the signal to turn and head back.
The way home, all uphill, seemed longer. Seemed endless, actually, she was so tired.
The house was still, and she went upstairs and straight to bed. She thought she might sleep now. And only a few minutes after she’d lain down, she could feel the almost dizzy, falling sensation of complete exhaustion.
Later she woke again briefly. Something had pulled her out of her deep sleep, she didn’t know what. Then she heard it—in the distance, a long, faraway, insistent sound, a honking. Animal, she thought for a moment.
It came again. Not animal: mechanical. But she didn’t remember what it was or what it meant—she thought of it just as an odd, forgotten noise she would have to reaccustom herself to.
——
Her father was the only one home when she finally got up for the second time, around eleven. Hearing her clanking in the kitchen, he came in from the new wing, where he had his study now. He watched her heat milk for her coffee, and they talked of this and that—the trip home, how she had slept, a great blue heron he’d spotted down by the pond earlier this morning. Her mother, he told Frankie, had gone to town. Shopping. She remembered then the sound of the porch screen door smacking shut that had half waked her earlier. That, and the car starting up under her window.
As they were talking, Frankie noticed how stooped his shoulders seemed—the liability of being a scholar, she supposed. In the end, it gets you, hunched endlessly over all that recorded knowledge. He was wearing, as usual up here, a pair of brown cotton slacks—his UPS pants, she and Liz used to call them—and an old shirt, fraying at the collar. He had a little rounded potbelly, almost exactly bisected by his belt, and long, skinny legs. His face, too, was long and thin. His nose was beaky under his wildly curling eyebrows, half white now. There was a slightly simian aspect to the way he looked, mostly on account of the unusual distance between his nose and his upper lip, but he was attractive anyway, partly because of the gentle attentiveness he brought to bear on any conversation, any new person.
She looked like him, she supposed. Certainly more than she looked like her mother. She was almost as tall as he was, and as slender, and she had his long face; but, as he used to say to her from time to time, she’d invented her own coloring, different from anyone else’s in the family. She had red hair, and her eyes were light—an oddly pale blue that could look washed out and empty when she was tired, as she was today. Liz was dark, like their mother.
Frankie had often thought that if she’d looked more like Liz, she would have had an easier time of it in Africa. As it was, her appearance had made people turn to stare at her in the street. Her skin itself, which was paper white, sprinkled everywhere with pale brown freckles, was part of that. The little children she worked with sometimes laughed at her “dots” and sometimes were terrified by them, as if they were the result of some spell, some curse called down upon her.
Today she was exposing a lot of those freckles in her shorts and tank top, in her bare feet, which made a light, whispering sound on the kitchen floor as she walked back and forth. She was aware suddenly of how happy she was to be dressed this way—happy to be barefoot, happy not to have to worry about giving offense with her body, as she would have in Africa with this much skin visible. It seemed to her an easy and very American happiness. The happiness of no rules.
She carried her coffee out to the porch, her father following her. They sat in the old Adirondack chairs facing the distant blue hills. The nearer hills were green. She was aware, suddenly, of birdsong everywhere and, somewhere off in the distance, a steady hum, a motor—someone haying or brush hogging. This was almost a constant here, she realized abruptly. The sound of someone else working—the background noise of summer life.
Her father was speaking now of some work he was doing. He had a project, apparently, just as her mother had said. Yes, he was reading for a prize, something to do with historical writing for a wider, lay audience. His face changed as he spoke of this, and she saw how proud he was of it, and remembered now that he’d spoken of it briefly last night, though she’d been too tired to ask about it, to really take it in. This would explain the books stacked everywhere, she thought, even out here on the porch. Though there had always been books stacked everywhere, wherever they went, whatever new house they moved into. Books that drove her mother mad: Why did he need so many? Where would they all go?
They chatted now about several he thought were strong contenders. He dug one out from the pile next to his chair, the chair he always sat in out here. He read a few paragraphs from it, looking up to see her reaction.
Frankie agreed, it was fascinating, and then a little silence fell between them. She was looking at him, thinking how unchanged he seemed. Always the same, with these shifting, fleeting enthusiasms to which he brought so much energy. She had a quick, surprised moment of sympathy for her mother’s perspective, for her fatigue with Alfie’s endless projects.
“Oh!” he said suddenly, as if just remembering something. “Did you hear the fire horn in the night?”
She had to think for a moment, but then she recalled the odd noise as she was drifting off after her walk. “Yes. Oh! That was it. Yes.” And she imitated the sound, the long, distant honk she had at first thought was an animal. It was a good imitation, and her father made his quiet laughing noise, his head tilted slightly back, his face transformed in pleasure.
“It woke me actually,” Frankie said. “Though I’d been up earlier. I’d been out walking around. Jet lag.” The moon on the road, the cool night air. “I wondered what that was. That noise.”
“That’s what it was,” he said.
She had some more coffee and set the cup down on the broad wooden arm of the chair. “Was there, in fact, a fire?” she asked.
He nodded. “The Kershaws. It’s gutted, they say.”
They, in this case as in most cases when they were quoted, referred to Sylvia, the one who went out into the world and heard the gossip and brought it home. Frankie’s father almost invariably repeated it in this form, which she and Liz used to laugh at behind his back. Now she made herself respond as he clearly wanted her to: “My God! Are they okay?”
“Oh, no one was there. They’re not up yet.” Meaning they hadn’t arrived from wherever else in the country they lived, almost certainly farther south—which was why to be here was to be up. Probably farther west, too.
“Well, that’s good, I guess.”
“Yes, they were lucky, in that sense. It’s a terrible thing otherwise, of course.”
“Of course. It would be.” After a moment she said, “It’s funny it should burn with no one there.”
“Oh, these old houses.” He shook his head, sighed. “They’re tinder, basically. Anything could have caused it. They’d had the electricity turned on for the season, they say, so it could have been that—some old, worn-out wiring. Or someone told your mother that the painters were in over the spring. Who knows? Maybe rags, that kind of thing.”
“I suppose it’s possible.” Though this had always seemed unlikely to Frankie. But then it occurred to her that she was probably confusing spontaneous generation with spontaneous combustion. One a fairy tale, one not. She thought.
“Eminently possible.” They sat in silence for a moment or two. She wondered what he was thinking. His eyes, she noticed now, were empty in repose, staring out at the meadow, the hills.
“I sort of forget who the Kershaws were.” She corrected herself. “Are.”
He turned to her, looking almost startled. He cleared his throat, a tic she’d forgotten until just now. He said, “Well, she’s the Olsens’ daughter.”
And he went on to bring her up-to-date with their history—how the elder Olsens were retired now and had moved to California, how they came up now only for a week each year and stayed with the Kershaws, who’d taken over the house. How “young Kershaw”—this was what her father called this man who must be fifty-five or so—was a lawyer for some white-shoe Boston firm and got up only for a week or two himself each summer.
Frankie wasn’t listening to his words so much as she was hearing the shift from what had been his fleeting sorrow over the fire to eagerness about all this information; and she was struck again by the intense preoccupation he, as well as her mother, had with this little, closed-in world.
And then she checked herself. This wasn’t fair, and she knew it. They read the Times every day, they watched the news. They could commiserate with her—they had commiserated—about the repressive and corrupt nature of the Moi government, about the violence in Sudan or Somalia or Kenya or Uganda, about clean-water issues in Africa generally, about the criminality of the banking system in Switzerland. They could speak of these things passionately. But always, Frankie felt, with a certain inherited vocabulary: Tribal conflict. Numbered bank accounts. Globalization. Islamic radicalism.
And when she spoke of her work, of the children—of the dying, or even of the rescued—they had trouble listening. “I don’t know how you do it,” they’d say, and Frankie thought she could hear in this the wish not to have to listen to any of the details, not to have to imagine it.
But after all, why should they? How much had she ever asked to understand what might be difficult in their lives?
She watched her father talking—now about the sale of a property down the road. She smiled at him, she sipped the dregs of her cold, bitter coffee. She thought about where she’d been the day before, about how far she’d come to be sitting here. How glad she was to be sitting here, and, yet, already a little bit restless, a little bit bored.
She heard the car in the driveway, and then the slamming of its door. The screen door banged shut, and there were footsteps, noises in the kitchen. Her mother’s noises.
The steps came to the doorway out to the porch, and Frankie looked up.
Her mother looked from her to her father and back, and Frankie felt the sense she sometimes had as an adolescent, the sense of having laid some claim to him that her mother didn’t like—or, at any rate, would try not to acknowledge.
Now she said brightly, “Well! Here you are, you two!”