DALE BAILEY
THE RAIN AT THE END OF THE WORLD
THEY DROVE NORTH, INTO ever-falling rain. Rain
slanted out of the evening sky
and spattered against the windshield where the humming
wipers slapped it away.
Rain streamed from the highway to carve twisted runnels in the
graveled berm.
Raindrops beaded up along the windows and rolled swiftly away as the
slipstream
caught them up. All about them, only the rain, and to fill the voiceless
silence,
the sounds of tires against wet pavement and rain drumming with
insistent fingers all about
the car. And in these sounds, Melissa heard another
sound, a child's voice, repeating a
scrap of some old nursery rhyme: rain, rain
go away, come again some other day.
For
forty-nine days, nothing but rain, everywhere, all across the United States,
in Canada, in
Mexico, in Brazil, in England and France and Germany, in Somalia
and South Africa, in the
People's Republic of China. It was raining all around
the world. Rivers of water flowed out
of the sky, tides rose and streams
swelled, crops rotted like flesh in the fields.
Weathermen
were apologetic. "Rain," they said during the five-day forecast.
"Just rain." Statesmen
expressed alarm, scientists confusion. Religious fanatics
built arks. And Melissa--who
once, in a year she could barely remember, had
fantasized making love in the rain --
Melissa saw her life swept away in the
rain. They drove north, to the mountain cabin --
three rooms for her and Stuart,
her husband. And all about them the unceasing rain.
Melissa
sighed and studied the book she had tried to read as they drove east out
of Knoxville that
afternoon. A failed effort, that, defeated by the swaying car.
She glanced at Stuart and
almost spoke, but what could she say? The silence was
a wall between them; they'd lost the
rhythm of conversation. They hadn't
exchanged a word since they had changed highways at
Wytheville, when Stuart
snapped at her for smoking.
Staring at him now, Melissa thought he
was changing, a subtle transformation
that had begun -- when? Days ago? Weeks? Who could
say? -- sometime during the
endless period after the clouds rolled in and rain began to
descend like doom
from the heavy sky. In the dash lights, his once ruddy features were
ghastly and
pale, like the features of a corpse. Pasty flesh stretched taut across the
angular
planes of his skull; his mouth compressed into a white line. Shadow
rippled across his
tense features, across his hairline, retreating from a sharp
widow's peak though he was
only thirty-five.
"Do you have to stare at me?" he said. "Why don't you read your book?"
"It's getting dark."
"Turn on the light then."
"I don't want to read. It was making me
sick."
Stuart shrugged and hunched closer over the wheel.
Melissa looked away.
At first, it
had been refreshing, the rain, lancing out of the afternoon sky as
she drove home from her
art history class. She parked the car and stood in the
yard, staring up at the gray sky, at
lightning incandescent in swollen cloud
bellies. Rain poured down, spattering her cheeks
and eyelids, running fresh into
her open mouth, plastering her garments close against her
flesh.
By the thirteenth day -- she had gone back by then and added them up, the
endless
days of unrelenting rain -- the haunted look began to show in Stuart's
eyes. His voice grew
harsh and strained as discordant music, as it did when she
tested his patience with
minutiae. That was his word for it: minutiae,
pronounced in that gently mocking way he had
perfected in the two years since
the baby. Not mean, for Stuart was anything but mean; just
teasing. "Just
teasing," he always said, and then his lips would shape that word again:
minutiae,
meaning all the silly trivia that were her life her gardening, her
reading, her occasional
class.
By this time the pressure had begun to tell on them all. You could see it in the
faces
of the newscasters on CNN, in the haunted vacancies behind the weary eyes
of the scientists
on the Sunday talk shows vacancies of ignorance and despair.
How could they account for
this rain that fell simultaneously over every square
inch of the planet? How could anyone?
By this time -- the thirteenth day -- you
could detect the frayed edges of hysteria and
fear. Evangelists intoned
portentously that the Rapture was at hand. Certain government
experiments had
gone awry, a neighbor, who had a friend whose brother-in-law worked at Oak
Ridge
national labs, confided ominously; flying saucers had been sighted over an
airbase in
Arizona.
On the twenty-seventh day -- a Saturday, and by this time everyone was keeping
count
-- Stuart walked about the house with the stiff-kneed gait of an
automaton, jerkily pacing
from window to window, shading his eyes as he peered
out into the gloom and falling rain.
"Why don't you call Jim?" Melissa had said. "See if he wants to do something.
Get out of
here before you go crazy." Or drive me crazy, she thought, but didn't
say it. She was
reading Harper's and smoking a Marlboro Light -- a habit she had
picked up two years ago,
after the miscarriage. She had always planned to quit,
but she somehow never did. It was
too easy to smoke, at home alone. Stuart had
discouraged her from going back to teaching.
Take some time for yourself, he had
said. And why not? They didn't need the money now that
Stuart had made partner.
And it would have been too hard to be around kids.
"I don't want to
call Jim," Stuart had said. He peered out into the rain.
"I wish you'd quit smoking. It
stinks up the whole house."
"I know," she said. And she had tried. But as soon as she quit,
she started
putting on weight, and Stuart didn't like that either, so what was she to do?
Smoke.
Now, driving through rain across the ridges separating Virginia and West
Virginia,
she fumbled in her purse for a cigarette. The flame of the lighter
threw Stuart's angular
face into relief, highlighting a ghostly network of lines
and shadows that brooded in the
hollows around his eyes and beneath his cheeks.
For a moment, before the flame blinked out
and darkness rushed back into the
car, she knew what he would look like when he was old.
But he was handsome
still, she thought, distinguished even, with the first hint of gray in
his dark
hair.
Still handsome after twelve years, still the same Stuart. He had noticed her
at
a time when few men did, had made her feel beautiful and alive, as if she shared
his
color and energy, his arrogant charm. And just then, leaning over beside her
in freshman
composition, he had been boyishly vulnerable. "Look," he'd said,
"I'm not very good at this
kind of stuff. Do you think you can help me?"
That was a long time ago, but the old Stuart
was still there; sometimes she
could see vulnerability peeking through the cool and distant
resolve he had
woven about himself after the baby. She had talked about adoption for a
while
and she had seen it then -- the ghost of that insecurity in the hard curve of
his jaw,
in the brazen tone of his voice. As if the miscarriage had been his
fault.
She cracked her
window and blew smoke into the downpour. Stuart coughed
theatrically.
"Leave it alone,
Stuart," she said.
Stuart grimaced. He flipped on the radio and searched for a station with
one
hand. Most of the stations had gone off the air by now, same as the television
networks.
Why, no one could be certain.
Hysteria, Melissa suspected. The government had shut them
down to prevent
hysteria. In the last week or two news reports had become increasingly
disturbing,
often bizarre: floods of epic proportions in the Mississippi and
Ohio River valleys and
just about everywhere else, roving gangs in the sodden
streets, doom cults who practiced
human sacrifice to appease angry weather gods,
videotapes of the giant toadstool forest
that had erupted over miles and miles
of empty western territory. In many places, money was
no longer good. People had
taken to bartering for canned food, gasoline, cigarettes.
By day
thirty-six, Stuart had himself begun to stock up on gasoline and the
non-perishable food
crammed into the back of the Jeep. He had wanted to buy a
gun, but Melissa had drawn the
line there; the world might retreat into
savagery, but she would have no part of it. At
night, the two of them sat
without speaking in the living room while the rain beat against
the roof. They
watched the news on television, and then -- on the forty-second day of rain,
when the airwaves rang with commentary about surpassing Noah -- the cable went
dead. Every
channel blank, empty, gray. The cable company didn't answer; radio
news reported that
television had gone out simultaneously across the country;
and then, one by one over the
next few days, the radio stations themselves
started to go. Without warning or explanation
they simply disappeared, static on
the empty dial.
Stuart refused to give up; every hour he
turned on the radio and spun through
the frequencies. Static, more static, an occasional
lunatic babbling (but who
was a lunatic now, Melissa wondered, now that the whole world had
gone insane?),
more static. But the static had a message, too: Roads are washing away, the
static said, bridges are being obliterated. The world as we know it is being
re-made.
Now,
driving, Stuart spun through the channels again, FM and then AM. Static and
static and then
a voice: calm, rational, a woman's cultured voice in an echoing
studio that sounded far,
far away.
They paused, listening:
"It's over," the woman was saying.
And the interviewer, a
man, his voice flat: "What's over? What do you mean?"
"The entire world, the civilization
that men have built over the last two
thousand years, since Homer and the Greeks, since
earlier--"
"For Christ's sake," Stuart said, stabbing at the radio; Melissa reached out to
stop him, thinking that anything, even lunacy, was better than this silence that
had grown
up between them in the last years and which seemed now, in the silent
car, more oppressive
than it ever had.
"Please," she said, and sighing, Stuart relented.
" -- apocalypse," the
man was saying. "The world is to be utterly destroyed, is
that what you're saying?"
"Not at
all. Not destroyed. Re-created, refashioned, renewed-whatever."
"Like the Noah story? God
is displeased with what we've made of ourselves."
"Not with what we've made," the woman
said. "With what you've made."
A lengthy pause followed, so lengthy that Melissa for a
moment thought they had
lost the station, and then the man spoke again. She realized that
he had been
trying to puzzle out the woman's odd distinction, and having failed, had chosen
to ignore it. He said: "What you're saying, though, is that God is out there.
And He is
angry."
"No, no," the woman said. "She is."
"Christ," Stuart said, and this time he did
punch the search button. The radio
cycled through a station or two of static and hit on yet
another active channel.
The strains of Credence Clearwater Revival filled the car --
"Who'll Stop the
Rain?" -- and that joke had been old three weeks ago. He shut off the
radio.
All along, he had been this way, refusing to acknowledge the reality of their
situation.
All along, he had continued to work, shuffling files and depositions
though the courts had
all but ground to a halt. It was as if he believed he
could make the world over as it had
been, simply by ignoring the rain. But by
yesterday -- day forty-eight -- the pressure had
truly begun to tell on him.
Melissa could see it in his panicked eyes.
That day, in the
silent house with Stuart gone to work, Melissa stood by the
window and looked out across
the yard at toadstools, like bowing acolytes to the
rain. Pasty fungoid stalks, cold and
rubbery as dead flesh, had everywhere nosed
their way out of the earth and spread their
caps beneath the poisoned sky.
Melissa went about the house on soft feet; she shut curtains
in the living room,
closed blinds in the office, lowered shades in the bedroom. Ail about
the house
she went, shuttering and lowering and closing, walling away the rain.
When Stuart
came home that afternoon, his hair was plastered flat against his
skull and his eyes
glowered from dark hollows.
"How was your day?" she said. She stood at the top of the
stairs, in the door to
the kitchen, holding a pot.
He stood below, on the landing, one hand
in the pocket of his rainslick jacket,
the other grasping the leather briefcase she had
given him for Christmas last
year. "Fine," he said.
That was what he always said. The
conversation was as ritualized as some ancient
religious ceremony. And so she said, "What
did you do today?"
"Nothing."
That was fine, too, that was formula. She turned away. She
didn't care what he'd
done all day any more than he cared what she'd done. She didn't care
about flow
charts and tax law and office politics any more than he cared about her garden
or her classes or any of the hundred things she did to fill the empty days. That
was how it
was -- even though the rain had begun to erase the world they had
known, to sweep away
without discrimination the tax laws and the flow charts,
and the gardens and art classes,
too.
But that night -- the forty-eighth night of a rain that would never end -- that
night
was different. In the kitchen, as she placed the pot on the stove, she
heard his footsteps
squeak across the linoleum. He was behind her. She smelled
his cologne, weak beneath the
moist earthwormy stench of the rain. She turned
and he was standing there, a droplet of
rain poised at the end of his nose. Rain
dripped off his slicker and pooled on the linoleum
floor. Rain flattened his
hair against his skull.
"Stuart?" she said.
The briefcase slipped
from his fingers. Rain glistened on his cheeks and in his
eyes. The other hand came out of
his pocket, extending towards her.
Toadstools, pale and spongy against his pale and spongy
flesh, as colorless as
the pasty skin of some cave-dwelling amphibian, extruded from his
fist.
Toadstools, spotted and poisonous, dangled from between his fingers.
"Toadstools are
growing in the yard," he said.
"I know."
"We have to get to higher ground."
"It won't be any
different there," she said. She had a vision of the mountain
cabin, three rooms, and all
about them the entombing rain.
"It's raining all around the world," she said.
He turned
away. The toadstools dropped from his fingers as he left the room.
Melissa stared at the
fungoid stalks, cold and colorless as dead flesh against
the linoleum. She shuddered when
she picked them up.
And so this morning. on the forty-ninth morning, they had fled at last.
The
highways were virtually abandoned; occasionally four-wheel drives zipped past,
flying
harried in either direction, driven by panicked, pasty-looking men. In
fields to either
side of the road, lakes, ponds, seas swelled and grew.
Mushrooms sprouted at the horizon,
overshadowing the trees; on hilly slopes they
saw houses and barns decaying beneath masses
of putrid mold. Three times the
pavement had disappeared before them, submerged; three
times Stuart had dropped
the Jeep into four-wheel drive and edged forward, fearing
sinkholes and
washouts; three times their luck had held and they had emerged to wet
pavement
once again.
They fled east, up 81 to 77, north into West Virginia and the
Appalachians. They
had a cabin there, near a ski resort in Raleigh County. Melissa
remembered when
they had bought it a year ago. When Stuart had bought it; he hadn't
consulted
her. He had come home late one day, clutching the papers, his eyes wild and
feverish.
"I used the money," he had announced, "I made a down payment on a
cabin and two acres of
woodland." Something cold and hateful pierced her then.
Stuart had spent the money, the
baby's money, and the spending came like the icy
needle-probe of reality:
There was no baby.
There would not ever be one.
Now, on the forty-ninth day, they/led northward into night,
seeking higher
ground, but the rain stayed with them, omnipresent and eternal. It fell out
of
the sky in solid sheets, flowing over the black pavement and soaking Stuart when
he
pulled over to refill the tank from the gas cans strapped in the back of the
Jeep. Cursing
he would climb back inside and crank the heat to its highest
setting, and each time Melissa
would remember her long-ago fantasy of making
love in the rain. She took a last drag from
the cigarette and let the wind have
it, watching in the mirror as it tumbled away,
extinguished by the rain.
Sodium lights appeared, lining the highway. Ahead, a mountain
loomed dark
against the gray sky. The road rose to meet it, rose, and rose, and plunged
down
toward a granite wall. A tunnel -- the second one since Wytheville -- opened up
before
them at the last moment, and Melissa clenched her fists, fearing
washouts, fearing
cave-ins. Then they were inside, the sound of the rain
disappearing as they crossed under
the mountain and into West Virginia. Bars of
shadow and light flashed across Stuart's face
and the hum of tires against dry
pavement filled the car. The wipers scraped against the
dry windshield, back and
forth, back and forth, and then they emerged from the tunnel into
a shifting
wall of rain.
"Christ," Stuart said. "Do you think it'll ever stop? Do you think
it'll rain
forever?"
She looked away, out the window, into the falling rain, and that rag of
nursery
rhyme returned to her. "Rain, rain go away," she said. "Come again some other
day."
Night closed in around them. Mountains rose above the road like the shoulders of
giants,
black against the black sky. Melissa smoked her last cigarette. Far
ahead, huddled high
against an arm of the ridge, Melissa saw a sprinkle of
lights, all that remained of a
once-bustling town. The cabin lay farther north,
isolated still higher in the mountains.
Three rooms, Stuart, and all about them
the besieging rain.
At last, the lights came up
around them.
"Would you look at that?" Stuart said, pointing.
She saw it then, as well, a
blazing Texaco sign towering above the highway.
Beyond it stretched a strip of hotels, gas
stations, and fast-food restaurants
-- most of them dark, abandoned.
"It could be a trap,"
Stuart said, "to lure in the unwary."
She sighed.
"We should have bought that gun."
"No
guns," she said.
"We'll have to risk it. Ii they have gas, we could top off the tank,
refill our
cans. Maybe they'll have kerosene."
Without another word, he exited to the strip,
passed the boarded-up ruins of
fast-food restaurants and hotels, and stopped the Jeep
beneath the canopy by the
Texaco's islands. She watched as he studied the parking lot
suspiciously; he put
her in mind of some frightened forest creature, and she had the
disquieting
thought that men weren't so far removed from the jungle. Satisfied at last, he
killed the engine; the noise of the rain grew louder, almost deafening, drowning
out her
thoughts. She opened the door and stood, stretching.
"I'm going to the restroom," she said,
without turning; she heard the pump come
on, gasoline gush into the tank.
"You want anything
from inside?" he asked.
"Get me a Coke and a pack of cigarettes."
The bathrooms were across
the parking lot, through the downpour. Melissa
shrugged on her rain coat, slipped the hood
over her head, and darted across the
pavement, one arm cocked ineffectually above her,
warding off the rain. The
interior of the restroom stank of urine and bleach; mold had
begun to blossom
here, sodden, cancerous roses along the base of the dry-wall. A trash can
overflowed in one corner. Melissa's nose wrinkled in disgust as she covered the
toilet seat
with toilet paper.
When she returned, Stuart was waiting in the Jeep.
"Can you believe it,"
he said. "He took money, good old-fashioned American
money. Fool."
"You get my stuff?"
He
gestured at the dash. A can of Diet Coke waited there, sweating condensation.
"What about
my cigarettes?"
"I didn't get them. We have to be careful now. Who knows when we'll be able
to
see a doctor again?"
"Jesus, Stuart." Melissa got out and slammed the door. She walked to
the tiny
shop. The attendant sat behind the register, his feet propped against the
counter,
reading a novel which he placed face-down when the door chimed behind
her.
"What can I do
for you?" he said.
"Pack of Marlboro Lights, please."
He shook his head as he pulled the
cigarettes from an overhead rack. "Shouldn't
smoke, lady. Bad for you."
"I've given up
sun-bathing to compensate."
The attendant laughed.
She looked up at him, a young man, not
handsome, with flesh the color and
texture of the toadstools she had scraped off the
kitchen floor. Flesh like
Stuart's flesh, in the midst of that subtle change of his.
But
nice eyes, she decided. Clear eyes, blue, the color of water. Eyes like the
baby might have
had. And this thought moved her to say something -- anything,
just to make contact. "Think
it'll ever stop raining?"
"Who knows? Maybe it's a good thing. Cleansing."
"You think?"
"Who
knows? Wash the whole world away, we'll start again. Rain's okay by me."
"Me, too," she
said, and now she thought again of the fragment of radio program.
Is God out there? the
host had wanted to know. And is He angry?
She is, the woman had replied. She is.
Melissa's
hand stole over her belly, where the baby, her baby, had grown and
died. Abruptly, the
crazed logic of the idea, its simple clarity and beauty,
seized her up: This was the world
they had made, she thought, men like Stuart,
this world of machines and noise, this world
of simple tasteless things. This is
the world that is being washed away. Their world.
Outside, Stuart began to blow
the horn. The sound came to her, discordant, importunate.
Melissa glanced out at
the Jeep, at Stuart, impatient behind the steering wheel, anxious to
be off,
anxious to get to higher ground. Three rooms in the mountains, just three. She
and
Stuart and all about them the imprisoning rain. It fell still, beyond the
roof over the
fuel islands, blowing out of the sky in sheets, dancing against
the pavement, chasing neon
reflections of the Texaco sign across black puddles.
"Lady? You okay? Miss?"
"Missus," she
said, out of habit. She turned to face him.
"You okay?"
"I'm fine, just distracted that's
all."
The horn blew again.
"Nice guy."
"Not really. He tries to be, sometimes."
The horn
again. Impatiently.
"You better go."
"Yeah." She dug in her purse for money.
"Forget it. Like
it means anything now, right?"
She hesitated, "Thanks, then."
"You're welcome. Be careful.
Who knows what the roads are like in the
mountains."
She nodded and stepped out into moist
air. Stuart had gotten out of the Jeep. He
stood by the open door, his flesh orange and
spongy beneath the street lights,
his arms crossed against his chest. He stared at her
impatiently, beyond him
only darkness, only rain. Water fell from the night sky, against
the gleaming
pavement, the buildings, the shining neon Texaco sign. Against everything,
washing
it all away.
"Hurry up," Stuart said.
And she said, without even realizing she was going to
say it, "I'm not coming.
You go ahead." When she said it, she was suffused suddenly with
warmth and
excitement and life, a sensation of release, as if a hard knot of emotion, drawn
tight in her chest through long years, had suddenly loosened.
"What?" Stuart said. "What
are you talking about?."
Melissa didn't answer. She walked past Stuart and the Jeep,
stopping at the edge
of the canopy that sheltered the fuel islands. She shrugged out of the
rain
coat, let it drop to the pavement behind her. Ignoring Stuart, she lined up the
tips of
her toes against the hard clear edge of the pavement where it was wet,
where the roof left
off and the rain began.
Stuart said, "Melissa? Melissa?"
But Melissa didn't answer. She
stepped out into a world that was ending, into a
gently falling rain. It poured down over
her, cool and refreshing against her
cheeks and lips and hair, caressing her with the hands
of a lover.