CENTRAL LUZON
1.)ALL OVER THE WORLD
by
Vicente Rivera, Jr.
ONE
evening in August 1941, I came out of a late movie to a silent, cold
night. I shivered a little as I stood for a moment in the narrow
street, looking up at the distant sky, alive with stars. I stood
there, letting the night wind seep through me, and listening. The
street was empty, the houses on the street dim—with the kind of
ghostly dimness that seems to embrace sleeping houses. I had always
liked empty streets in the night; I had always stopped for a while in
these streets listening for something I did not quite know what.
Perhaps for low, soft cries that empty streets and sleeping houses
seem to share in the night.
I
lived in an old, nearly crumbling apartment house just across the
street from the moviehouse. From the street, I could see into the
open courtyard, around which rooms for the tenants, mostly a whole
family to a single room, were ranged.
My
room, like all the other rooms on the groundfloor, opened on this
court. Three other boys, my cousins, shared the room with me. As I
turned into the courtyard from the street, I noticed that the light
over our study-table, which stood on the corridor outside our room,
was still burning. Earlier in the evening after supper, I had taken
out my books to study, but I went to a movie instead. I must have
forgotten to turn off the light; apparently, the boys had forgotten,
too.
I
went around the low screen that partitioned off our “study” and
there was a girl reading at the table. We looked at each other,
startled. I had never seen her before. She was about eleven years
old, and she wore a faded blue dress. She had long, straight hair
falling to her shoulders. She was reading my copy of Greek Myths.
The
eyes she had turned to me were wide, darkened a little by
apprehension. For a long time neither of us said anything. She was a
delicately pretty girl with a fine, smooth. pale olive skin that
shone richly in the yellow light. Her nose was straight, small and
finely molded. Her lips, full and red, were fixed and tense. And
there was something else about her. Something lonely? something lost?
“I
know,” I said, “I like stories, too. I read anything good I find
lying around. Have you been reading long?”
“Yes,” she said. not looking at me now. She got up slowly, closing the book. “I’m sorry.”
“Yes,” she said. not looking at me now. She got up slowly, closing the book. “I’m sorry.”
“Don’t
you want to read anymore? I asked her, trying to smile, trying to
make her feel that everything was all right.
“No.” she said, “thank you.”
“No.” she said, “thank you.”
“Oh,
yes,” I said, picking up the book. “It’s late. You ought to be
in bed. But, you can take this along.”
She hesitated, hanging back, then shyly she took the book, brought it to her side. She looked down at her feet uncertain as to where to turn.
She hesitated, hanging back, then shyly she took the book, brought it to her side. She looked down at her feet uncertain as to where to turn.
“You
live here?” I asked her.
“Yes.”
“What
room?”
She
turned her face and nodded towards the far corner, across the
courtyard, to a little room near the communal kitchen. It was the
room occupied by the janitor: a small square room with no windows
except for a transom above the door.
“You live with Mang Lucio?”
“You live with Mang Lucio?”
“He’s
my uncle.”
“How
long have you been here? I haven’t seen you before, have I?”
“I’ve
always been here. I’ve seen you.”
“Oh.
Well, good night—your name?”
“Maria.”
“Good
night, Maria.”
She
turned quickly, ran across the courtyard, straight to her room, and
closed the door without looking back.
I
undressed, turned off the light and lay in bed dreaming of far-away
things. I was twenty-one and had a job for the first time. The salary
was not much and I lived in a house that was slowly coming apart, but
life seemed good. And in the evening when the noise of living had
died down and you lay safe in bed, you could dream of better times,
look back and ahead, and find that life could be gentle—even with
the hardness. And afterwards, when the night had grown colder, and
suddenly you felt alone in the world, adrift, caught in a current of
mystery that came in the hour between sleep and waking, the vaguely
frightening loneliness only brought you closer to everything, to the
walls and the shadows on the walls, to the other sleeping people in
the room, to everything within and beyond this house, this street,
this city, everywhere.
I
met Maria again one early evening, a week later, as I was coming home
from the office. I saw her walking ahead of me, slowly, as if she
could not be too careful, and with a kind of grownup poise that was
somehow touching. But I did not know it was Maria until she stopped
and I overtook her.
She
was wearing a white dress that had been old many months ago. She wore
a pair of brown sneakers that had been white once. She had stopped to
look at the posters of pictures advertised as “Coming” to our
neighborhood theater.
“Hello,” I said, trying to sound casual.
“Hello,” I said, trying to sound casual.
She
smiled at me and looked away quickly. She did not say anything nor
did she step away. I felt her shyness, but there was no
self-consciousness, none of the tenseness and restraint of the night
we first met. I stood beside her, looked at the pictures tacked to a
tilted board, and tried whistling a tune.
She
turned to go, hesitated, and looked at me full in the eyes. There was
again that wide-eyed—and sad? —stare. I smiled, feeling a remote
desire to comfort her, as if it would do any good, as if it was
comfort she needed.
“I’ll return your book now,” she said.
“I’ll return your book now,” she said.
“You’ve
finished it?”
“Yes.”
We
walked down the shadowed street. Magallanes Street in Intramuros,
like all the other streets there, was not wide enough, hemmed in by
old, mostly unpainted houses, clumsy and unlovely, even in the
darkening light of the fading day.
We went into the apartment house and I followed her across the court. I stood outside the door which she closed carefully after her. She came out almost immediately and put in my hands the book of Greek myths. She did not look at me as she stood straight and remote.
We went into the apartment house and I followed her across the court. I stood outside the door which she closed carefully after her. She came out almost immediately and put in my hands the book of Greek myths. She did not look at me as she stood straight and remote.
“My
name is Felix,” I said.
She
smiled suddenly. It was a little smile, almost an unfinished smile.
But, somehow, it felt special, something given from way deep inside
in sincere friendship.
I
walked away whistling. At the door of my room, I stopped and looked
back. Maria was not in sight. Her door was firmly closed.
August,
1941, was a warm month. The hangover of summer still permeated the
air, specially in Intramuros. But, like some of the days of late
summer, there were afternoons when the weather was soft and clear,
the sky a watery green, with a shell-like quality to it that almost
made you see through and beyond, so that, watching it made you
lightheaded.
I
walked out of the office one day into just such an afternoon. The day
had been full of grinding work—like all the other days past. I was
tired. I walked slowly, towards the far side of the old city, where
traffic was not heavy. On the street there were old trees, as old as
the walls that enclosed the city. Half-way towards school, I changed
my mind and headed for the gate that led out to Bonifacio Drive. I
needed stiffer winds, wider skies. I needed all of the afternoon to
myself.
Maria was sitting on the first bench, as you went up the sloping drive that curved away from the western gate. She saw me before I saw her. When I looked her way, she was already smiling that half-smile of hers, which even so told you all the truth she knew, without your asking.
Maria was sitting on the first bench, as you went up the sloping drive that curved away from the western gate. She saw me before I saw her. When I looked her way, she was already smiling that half-smile of hers, which even so told you all the truth she knew, without your asking.
“Hello,”
I said. “It’s a small world.”
“What?”
“I
said it’s nice running into you. Do you always come here?”
“As
often as I can. I go to many places.”
“Doesn’t
your uncle disapprove?”
“No.
He’s never around. Besides, he doesn’t mind anything.”
“Where
do you go?”
“Oh,
up on the walls. In the gardens up there, near Victoria gate. D’you
know?”
“I
think so. What do you do up there?”
“Sit
down and—”
“And
what?”
“Nothing.
Just sit down.”
She
fell silent. Something seemed to come between us. She was suddenly
far-away. It was like the first night again. I decided to change the
subject.
“Look,”
I said, carefully, “where are your folks?”
“You
mean, my mother and father?”
“Yes.
And your brothers and sisters, if any.”
“My
mother and father are dead. My elder sister is married. She’s in
the province. There isn’t anybody else.”
“Did
you grow up with your uncle?”
“I
think so.”
We
were silent again. Maria had answered my questions without
embarrassment. almost without emotion, in a cool light voice that had
no tone.
“Are you in school, Maria?”
“Are you in school, Maria?”
“Yes.”
“What
grade?”
“Six.”
“How
d’you like it?”
“Oh,
I like it.”
“I
know you like reading.”
She
had no comment. The afternoon had waned. The breeze from the sea had
died down. The last lingering warmth of the sun was now edged with
cold. The trees and buildings in the distance seemed to flounder in a
red-gold mist. It was a time of day that never failed to carry an
enchantment for me. Maria and I sat still together, caught in some
spell that made the silence between us right, that made our being
together on a bench in the boulevard, man and girl, stranger and
stranger, a thing not to be wondered at, as natural and inevitable as
the lengthening shadows before the setting sun.
Other
days came, and soon it was the season of the rain. The city grew dim
and gray at the first onslaught of the monsoon. There were no more
walks in the sun. I caught a cold.
Maria
and I had become friends now, though we saw each other infrequently.
I became engrossed in my studies. You could not do anything else in a
city caught in the rains. September came and went.
In
November, the sun broke through the now ever present clouds, and for
three or four days we had bright clear weather. Then, my mind once
again began flitting from my desk, to the walls outside the office,
to the gardens on the walls and the benches under the trees in the
boulevards. Once, while working on a particularly bad copy on the
news desk, my mind scattered, the way it sometimes does and, coming
together again, went back to that first meeting with Maria. And the
remembrance came clear, coming into sharper focus—the electric
light, the shadows around us, the stillness. And Maria, with her
wide-eyed stare, the lost look in her eyes…
IN
December, I had a little fever. On sick leave, I went home to the
province. I stayed three days. I felt restless, as if I had strayed
and lost contact with myself. I suppose you got that way from being
sick,
A pouring rain followed our train all the way back to Manila. Outside my window, the landscape was a series of dissolved hills and fields. What is it in the click of the wheels of a train that makes you feel gray inside? What is it in being sick, in lying abed that makes you feel you are awake in a dream, and that you are just an occurrence in the crying grief of streets and houses and people?
In December, we had our first air-raid practice.
I came home one night through darkened streets, peopled by shadows. There was a ragged look to everything, as if no one and nothing cared any more for appearances.
I reached my room just as the siren shrilled. I undressed and got into my old clothes. It was dark, darker than the moment after moon-set. I went out on the corridor and sat in a chair. All around me were movements and voices. anonymous and hushed, even when they laughed.
I sat still, afraid and cold.
“Is that you. Felix?”
“Yes. Maria.”
She was standing beside my chair, close to the wall. Her voice was small and disembodied in the darkness. A chill went through me, She said nothing more for a long time.
“I don’t like the darkness,” she said.
“Oh, come now. When you sleep, you turn the lights off, don’t you?”
“It’s not like this darkness,” she said, softly. “It’s all over the world.”
We did not speak again until the lights went on. Then she was gone.
The war happened not long after.
At first, everything was unreal. It was like living on a motion picture screen, with yourself as actor and audience. But the sounds of bombs exploding were real enough, thudding dully against the unready ear.
In Intramuros, the people left their homes the first night of the war. Many of them slept in the niches of the old walls the first time they heard the sirens scream in earnest. That evening, I returned home to find the apartment house empty. The janitor was there. My cousin who worked in the army was there. But the rest of the tenants were gone.
I asked Mang Lucio, “Maria?”
“She’s gone with your aunt to the walls.” he told me. “They will sleep there tonight.”
My cousin told me that in the morning we would transfer to Singalong. There was a house available. The only reason he was staying, he said, was because they were unable to move our things. Tomorrow that would be taken care of immediately.
“And you, Mang Lucio?”
“I don’t know where I could go.”
We ate canned pork and beans and bread. We slept on the floor, with the lights swathed in black cloth. The house creaked in the night and sent off hollow echoes. We slept uneasily.
I woke up early. It was disquieting to wake up to stillness in that house which rang with children’s voices and laughter the whole day everyday. In the kitchen, there were sounds and smells of cooking.
“Hello,” I said.
It was Maria, frying rice. She turned from the stove and looked at me for a long time. Then, without a word, she turned back to her cooking.
“Are you and your uncle going away?” I asked.
“I don’t know.”
“Did he not tell you?”
“No.”
“We’re moving to Singalong.”
“Yes, I know.”
“Well, anyway, I’ll come back tonight. Maybe this afternoon. We’ll not have to say goodbye till then.”
She did not say anything. I finished washing and went back to my room. I dressed and went out.
At noon, I went to Singalong to eat. All our things were there already, and the folks were busy putting the house in order. As soon as I finished lunch, I went back to the office. There were few vehicles about. Air-raid alerts were frequent. The brightness of the day seemed glaring. The faces of people were all pale and drawn.
In the evening, I went back down the familiar street. I was stopped many times by air-raid volunteers. The house was dark. I walked back to the street. I stood for a long time before the house. Something did not want me to go away just yet. A light burst in my face. It was a volunteer.
A pouring rain followed our train all the way back to Manila. Outside my window, the landscape was a series of dissolved hills and fields. What is it in the click of the wheels of a train that makes you feel gray inside? What is it in being sick, in lying abed that makes you feel you are awake in a dream, and that you are just an occurrence in the crying grief of streets and houses and people?
In December, we had our first air-raid practice.
I came home one night through darkened streets, peopled by shadows. There was a ragged look to everything, as if no one and nothing cared any more for appearances.
I reached my room just as the siren shrilled. I undressed and got into my old clothes. It was dark, darker than the moment after moon-set. I went out on the corridor and sat in a chair. All around me were movements and voices. anonymous and hushed, even when they laughed.
I sat still, afraid and cold.
“Is that you. Felix?”
“Yes. Maria.”
She was standing beside my chair, close to the wall. Her voice was small and disembodied in the darkness. A chill went through me, She said nothing more for a long time.
“I don’t like the darkness,” she said.
“Oh, come now. When you sleep, you turn the lights off, don’t you?”
“It’s not like this darkness,” she said, softly. “It’s all over the world.”
We did not speak again until the lights went on. Then she was gone.
The war happened not long after.
At first, everything was unreal. It was like living on a motion picture screen, with yourself as actor and audience. But the sounds of bombs exploding were real enough, thudding dully against the unready ear.
In Intramuros, the people left their homes the first night of the war. Many of them slept in the niches of the old walls the first time they heard the sirens scream in earnest. That evening, I returned home to find the apartment house empty. The janitor was there. My cousin who worked in the army was there. But the rest of the tenants were gone.
I asked Mang Lucio, “Maria?”
“She’s gone with your aunt to the walls.” he told me. “They will sleep there tonight.”
My cousin told me that in the morning we would transfer to Singalong. There was a house available. The only reason he was staying, he said, was because they were unable to move our things. Tomorrow that would be taken care of immediately.
“And you, Mang Lucio?”
“I don’t know where I could go.”
We ate canned pork and beans and bread. We slept on the floor, with the lights swathed in black cloth. The house creaked in the night and sent off hollow echoes. We slept uneasily.
I woke up early. It was disquieting to wake up to stillness in that house which rang with children’s voices and laughter the whole day everyday. In the kitchen, there were sounds and smells of cooking.
“Hello,” I said.
It was Maria, frying rice. She turned from the stove and looked at me for a long time. Then, without a word, she turned back to her cooking.
“Are you and your uncle going away?” I asked.
“I don’t know.”
“Did he not tell you?”
“No.”
“We’re moving to Singalong.”
“Yes, I know.”
“Well, anyway, I’ll come back tonight. Maybe this afternoon. We’ll not have to say goodbye till then.”
She did not say anything. I finished washing and went back to my room. I dressed and went out.
At noon, I went to Singalong to eat. All our things were there already, and the folks were busy putting the house in order. As soon as I finished lunch, I went back to the office. There were few vehicles about. Air-raid alerts were frequent. The brightness of the day seemed glaring. The faces of people were all pale and drawn.
In the evening, I went back down the familiar street. I was stopped many times by air-raid volunteers. The house was dark. I walked back to the street. I stood for a long time before the house. Something did not want me to go away just yet. A light burst in my face. It was a volunteer.
“Do
you live here?”
“I
used to. Up to yesterday. I’m looking for the janitor.”
“Why,
did you leave something behind?”
“Yes,
I did. But I think I’ve lost it now.”
“Well,
you better get along, son. This place, the whole area. has been
ordered evacuated. Nobody lives here anymore.”
“Yes,
I know,” I said. “Nobody.”