Lunacy
by Leoncio Deriada
http://lefthandedsnake.wordpress.com/2012/09/29/lunacy-by-leoncio-p-deriada/
Suddenly he was awake. But
the sound of the sea still echoed and he saw that the moonlight was in the
room. It filtered through the pomelo tree in the window.
The dream. He was on the
beach throwing pebbles at the moon. He hit it, and like fireworks, its face
burst into rainbow flames. The peacock splinters filled the heavens. he poised
his hands to catch the drops of blue and red and green, but they all fell into
the sea in sizzling magnificence. He watched the pageant in a mixture of fear
and admiration, till there was no more of the moon but the moan of the tide…
the darkness screamed. He was lost, afraid.
He woke up and saved himself
from that chaos.
He felt his face and his
mouth with his trembling hands. He was not dead. It was great to be alive somehow,
to rediscover that he was one of the inhabitants of this room of hanging
shirts, unplanned lesson plans, and the smell of tempera.
Alex’s tempera of trees and
hills were carelessly thumb-tacked above Dardo’s cot. The moonbeams did not hit
the paintings but they concentrated on Dardo’s prosaic figure, zebra like in
his pajamas. Inside his mosquito net, he must be dreaming of the preserved
animals in his biology room.
Alex hated biology back in
college and so he ended up teaching grammar and economics. Economics! There was
nothing to dream about the law of diminishing returns; he would rather dream of
prehistoric flora and fauna. But there must be color and movement in all:
tangerine toads jumping on ponds of blue bordered by dragon-green thalophytes
and bryophytes, while in the background, Van Gogh inspired paramecia danced a
bayanihan of mammoth slippers all fiery in Martian red.
Alex’s hand dangled out of
the mosquito net (ah, Durer’s hand of the artist!), limp and graceful in a
ballet of its own. The wall above him was a wilderness of canvases –
cardboard, cartolina, Manila paper, formal theme notebook sheets – enough to
shame any thin bloodied impressionist.
Three men in the room. They
would have been four, but Rolly’s girl got him in mid-August before the poor
boy could find a boardinghouse for honeymooners. So right now, in the other
room, Rolly and Tina dreamed married people’s dreams. Children perhaps. Or a
house of their own.
The dreamer of the moon got
up. His cot creaked. He had slept with all his day clothes on. The mosquito net
was not hung; the tiny suckers must have feasted on his moon-maddened blood. It
did not matter anyway. Nobody thought of malaria in the moonlight.
For now his blood was thick,
surging, boiling. The full moon had stirred a high tide in him, a passion or a
curse more intense than a vampire’s. There was a hunger in him, a thirst for
something he did not know yet was there reflected on the leaves the moment the
moon painted the town white with silence.
And this silence roared with
the strength of an ocean against a coral beach.
The beach was far away (90
kilometers) and long ago (five years), when he was still a college junior tired
of class meetings, lectures, and the school paper that printed his sobbing
poems. During those days a vacation or a sound sleep was as precious as
diamonds. And when the summer vacation came, the diamonds were found on the
beach.
Moonlight on the beach in
mid-May never became part of the lost summers. It cam again and again – long
after he had thrown all those tearful verses into the fire and Alex had become
editor of the school paper, long after a girl who could sing told him over
barbecue and coke he had been a very good boy and she liked him very much but
sorry she loved somebody else very very much.
He could have cried. He
could have screamed why didn’t you tell me long ago damn you damn you damn you!
But he was a good boy and he said I wish you all the luck in the world. The
girl smiled and he walked her home in the moonlight.
He did cry later, not
because of his lost first love (that was something to laugh at), but because
the moonlight was so beautiful and the world wasted it by sleeping. That was
the mid-May on the beach far away and long ago.
Teaching poetry to high
school seniors was a matter of God’s grace, he foolishly thought more than
thrice, or else he would not have stayed in this dusty-muddy town for four
years. Then Alex and Dardo came. These gum-chewing boys in college were now
teachers! With some extra gift from the Holy Ghost, they were all ready to set
the town and the world on fire with their liberal arts and ratio studiorum. You
better start from the ABC, he warned them. This is not the Ateneo or La Salle.
Rolly said be careful you don’t stay old bachelors (as if 25 were an age). Look
at Nonong. And soon he’ll lose his moon to the Russians. Laughter. I’m twenty,
Alex said, and the first day of class he reported that five of his 1A students
were older than he. Dardo had something more sensational to say: he was the
smallest boy in 2A. Congratulations, Alex said.
The school year dragged on –
his fourth – and for the fourth time, he resigned himself to the fate of
correcting themes and reading “The Raven” and Rizal’s good-bye in the most
insipid translation. Rolly’s marriage broke the companionship started in
English 1, Room 21, first year A.B. Rolly was barely fifteen then but he was
quite a companion in playing charade and condemning Filipino movies. Together,
they fairly gave justice to the Jesuits.
Rolly knew how to conjugate
Latin and he wanted to go to the seminary. He told Rolly: you’ll get married at
twenty-four. Rolly became Tina’s husband at twenty-two. Indeed, love was blind
and lovers could not hear.
This year Alex and Dardo
were there to share his room in Mrs. Edillon’s house on top of a low hill
overlooking the town. The bachelors, people referred to them as they marched
off to school or to church – intent and invulnerable to all acts of God:
floods, thunder and lightning, winds, women – yards ahead of Rolly who had just
had an appendectomy and a wife.
With his brushes, easel,
palette, and bottled and boxed colors, Alex brought a scrabble set. They played
deep into the night – inventing words, quarreling over them, intimately mocking
one another for ignorance of a certain term. Thinking of the sandwiches he
would lose at Foa Yee’s, Dardo usually said, this is a term in biology. Proof,
Alex said, his voice taunting with the authority of a pocket Webster. The
biologist searched the indices of his pile of textbooks while he man named
Nonong struggled over his addition of the points, now and then watching the
moon filter through the pomelo leaves.
Now the moon stared harder
from its solo eyehood, stirring him to madness, drawing him to somewhere he did
not know but was reflected on the leaves the moment the moon painted the world
with white silence.
He opened the window wider
and without a second thought, stepped out onto the roof under the window where
the pomelo tree extended branches inviting enough to wake up the boy in every
man. And the boy swung the man over the branches noiselessly like the tread of
the moon on the clouds.
Soon he was sitting on the
grass with all his day clothes on. His feet were bare and he felt the moisture
on the grass but he sat there watching the moon, feeling an undefinable
ecstasy, thinking of the beaches of the future, waiting for anything, probably
a vision of himself who, for so long, had been alien and remote.
He was a madman.
Nonong.
And he saw the vision. Alex
was beside him, with all his day clothes on, barefooted and lean-faced and
smiling and serene, and he felt like embracing his nearness, aching all over
with the brotherhood. He looked at Alex but said nothing. Silence made the
strongest bond, even outside monasteries.
But Alex was not a madman.
Was he?
And so they conversed in
silence:
Why are you here?
Didn’t you wake me up many
times to see your moon?
I didn’t wake you up
tonight.
That’s why I woke up.
Silly. How did you come?
Through the window.
Two men in the moonlight.
Did Alex see the moonlight on the beach far away and long ago? Did Alex weep
because the night was beautiful and the world wasted it by sleeping? Did Alex
lose a girl because he was always very good? Did Alex teach in this dusty-muddy
town because of God’s grace?
They said nothing. They sat
on the grass and watched the moon.
Alex wrote verses about the
life of men and the death of cigarettes. (he wrote verses, too, and burned
them.)
Alex painted trees and
hills. (He painted, too. The crazy portrait of a farm boy devouring a pile of
durian done on black cartolina with crayola and Myrisia pomade was still
hanging somewhere in the law library.)
Alex came from Claveria
Street (damn the men who changed it to Claro Recto!), a neighbor to three
banks, a moviehouse for first-run run Filipino cowboy pictures, a girl’ college
where he studied up to the fourth grade, and a blockful of offices. I live on
Wall Street, Alex would say. Haha, Dardo would say.
He came from a house on top
of a cliff, in Calinan, overlooking a river, his river. Last Christmas
vacation he brought Alex and Dardo there. They spent days in the river, not
bathing, just sitting on the boulders and watching the water form into eddies
to spin forever. You should see my river in the moonlight, he said. But it was
December and it rained.
Dardo came from Bansalan, in
the far south, where people planted corn and killed each other on the wayside.
I’m a pacifist, he said and carried a knife to the barber ship the first week
he was in this northern town.
He looked at Alex’s profile
against the glossy leaves of Mrs. Edillon’s potted plants. He opened his mouth
to say something but he forgot what to say. For he saw something.
Deeper than the younger man’s well etched silhouette he saw again, and
well-defined now, the terrible identity that arrested him anew. He saw himself!
And suddenly, the alien and the remote became so fearfully familiar, so near he
wanted to hold it and crush it till it escaped no more. He must destroy this
hound, this reminder, this mirror before it made him completely mad.
And Alex almost screamed for
he saw a transfiguration. His companion stood tall blocking the moonlight.
There was an instant change in his face: his eyes grew dull and blank and heavy
like a somnambulist’s, his lean veined arms extended as if to embrace him.
And Alex saw the hands, the
fingers flexed like talons towards his throat…
The moon was in his eyes!
They grappled on the grass
in the moonlight. In the maze of images in his pulsating moon-maddened mind, he
was aware of the struggle: but it was not against a concrete though protean
form of some voluminous fear. It was a struggle against an abstraction that had
been given texture and dimensions such as he could perceive in his innumerable
nightmares.
Alex gripped the two slender
wrists before those hands could touch him further and shook the other man with
all his might.
You are mad, Nonong! Alex’s
voice was a repressed fear. You are hurting me. Wake up! Wake up!
And the madman woke up from
the trance. He did not hear Alex’s voice but the sudden burst of piano notes
from the house. Mrs. Edillon was playing the piano in the middle of the night.
Was it Schubert Serenade? No. Orchids in the Moonlight?
No. I’ll Be Seeing You? No. Just notes, exercises, now straining into
a magnificent crescendo, now fading…
And he knew he was sick,
mad.
Are you all right? Alex was
worried. You wanted to kill me!
I wanted to destroy
something, some monster that has been hounding me all these years!
But why me – me?
Because you remind me of
many things. Because I see myself in you!
You are mad!
He said nothing.
You scared me. And you are
not even sorry for it!
Sorry. Please forget it.
Forget it! My God, I don’t
understand you!
You do! You do! He turned
him with a sudden violence in his voice. You understand me! You think my
thoughts, you dream my dreams; you feel my pain, my joy. Don’t you see? You are
mad with my own madness!
Alex stared at him puzzled.
Why in hell are you with me?
He shouted. Why aren’t you asleep like all the rest?
I can’t sleep.
Because like me you are mad!
Because like me you are ruled by the moon. Because like me you hunger for
another world!
He paused. Alex looked at
him long. Slowly, in an instinctive gesture of recognition and understanding,
he laid his hand on the other man’s shoulder.
I see, he said simply,
sincerely.
They left the grass and the
moon for the house, saying nothing but feeling the loudness of each other’s
presence. They remembered that the house was locked from inside and to knock at
the door would be a scandal: imagine, boarders leaving the house through the
window and knocking in the middle of the night to be let in!
They looked at each other
and with faint familiar smiles walked around the house to where the pomelo tree
extended branches inviting enough to wake up the boys in men. Mrs. Edillon’s
fingers were mad on the piano keys, as if aware of something unnatural happening
in this world ruled by the moon.
Was Mrs. Edillon also mad?
No. She slept the whole afternoon and could not sleep at night so she played
the piano to wake up lunatics from their trance.
Yes, he had met other madmen
and madwomen before. But where were they now? Some had wakened up into sanity
by selling floor wax and insurance, but just the same: they had been mad,
crazed by color and sound, by sunset and moonlight, by voices in the night…
Lourdes Padilla.
Choy Escano.
Butch Garcia.
Cecilia Bacani.
Samy Borgaily.
Lydia Lascano.
Where were they now? Choy,
Butch, Cely and Samy were married. Paddy was dead. Cancer. She was buried among
the dead of the Assumption nuns of Herran. Lydia was the maddest of all. She
finished chemistry and joined the Belgian Sisters. Now she was teaching grade
Four at St. Theresa’s.
The moon was now on the
other side of the eaves. The darkness in the room was soft and the piano notes
sounded loud but far and haunting like a memory. In the honeymooners’ room,
Rolly mumbled meaningless syllables in his sleep. Dardo stirred in his cot but
did not wake up to see the two men arrive from an unmeasurable journey. Inside
his mosquito net, he must be dreaming of the preserved animals in his biology
room.
For Dardo was not a madman.
For Dardo was not of the brotherhood. So was Rolly – and so were all the faces
of men and women he had met but seen nothing through them – the men and women
who were not mad, who slept while the moon painted the world with white
silence.
Close the window, Alex.
The man from Claveria Street
slowly, reluctantly, closed the window, his movements like a ritual. In the
dark, the loudness of their thoughts rhymed with all the mad piano notes in the
town.
Outside, the moon painted
the world with white silence.
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