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The Signal Flame
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For my father and my brothers
So now I am still awatch for the signal-flame,
the gleaming fire that is to harbinger news from Troy . . .
—AESCHYLUS, Agamemnon
For three generations they were drawn from water, made fatherless, or orphaned altogether, though there was no augury, blind prophet, or star that told of their fates. Each was raised to be disciplined and just. If there were books, they were well read. They passed down their own history by word of mouth. They were not inclined to speak of spiritual matters, but they believed that God had blessed them, for much had been made of what had been put into their hands, and not one would have said that it was his hands alone that had made it. What they shared were the wars. The wars of emperors, presidents, revolutionaries, fights to which men have always gone to fight, for an ideal, for a homeland, for a people. These were the truths that bound the family to each other and the land to which they returned when the fighting was done. But for one.
part 1
THE INHERITORS OF LOSS
CHAPTER
ONE
A FIRE IN THE GREAT stone fireplace was as constant in the house as the lengthening days when Easter was early and spring was late. But on the morning after his grandfather died, Bo Konar took the logs and the log rack in the living room out to the barn, swept the bricks clean of ash, and dusted the andirons so that they looked like thin faceless centaurs of black. Two days later, after supper, he and his mother, Hannah, greeted mourners at the door and led them from the foyer into the living room, where each knelt before the body of the man waked in a pine casket by the window, and said a prayer. Some lingered then in the kitchen and the wide hallway to talk about Jozef Vinich. How he had come to America after World War I with fifty dollars in his pocket, after the gold his father had left him paid for the train from Kassa to Hamburg and passage on the Mount Clay. How he had risen from yard worker to co-owner of the Endless Roughing Mill. How he had acquired and managed two thousand acres of the most sought-after land in Dardan. How he had built the house where they all stood before he had turned thirty, something few men in that corner of northeastern Pennsylvania could have done.
No one stayed long. After Father Rovnávaha said the vigil prayers for the deceased, everyone in that room got up to leave, even the priest, and Bo sat alone in the lamplight on a straight-backed chair. Freezing rain rapped outside against the window glass. The old Lab they called Krasna snuffed and sighed on the floor. Bo hunched forward with his elbows on his knees and stared at his grandfather, dressed in a white shirt, blue suit, and a black tie Bo had never seen before. The face dull and wax-set. The misshapen right hand on top of the left at the breast. That one holding a string of wooden rosary beads. And he wondered why he and his great-aunt Sue would have to take turns sitting up all night with the body, because there was not a chance in hell that this man might just be asleep.
Where did you go? he whispered into the room.
He heard the sound of running water coming from the kitchen and a sharp note of breaking glass, and the memory rose to him through the fatigue, a memory of the evening when his grandfather told him (a boy of ten then) to go on upstairs and get some sleep. It was spring. The cold spring that came after his father had died in what they said was a hunting accident, though his father was never a hunter. The meal over, light still hanging in the west outside, Bo asked why he had to go to bed so early.
Because we’re going up to the high meadow with rifles in the morning, his grandfather said.
Bo’s mother was rinsing dishes, and out of the corner of his eye he saw the glass she was holding slip from her hand, heard the sound of it shattering against the porcelain sink. Jozef looked over at his daughter, who shook her head as if to say, Please, no. Then back to Bo.
It’s time you came with me, Jozef said.
They were up before dawn. There was toast and coffee set out, but his mother was not in the kitchen. His grandfather took the Marlin three-thirty-six and a Remington twenty-two out of the gun cabinet, and Bo thought of his father. His mother said that he had fought in the war in Europe, and the boy wondered if somewhere there might still be war, if it might have come to Dardan. His grandfather handed Bo the twenty-two. He held the rifle by the forestock, checked the safety, and said, Are we going to war?
Jozef stopped and stared at him. No, son, he said.
Bo looked down at the floor, and Jozef said, We’re going into the woods to find a dog that has taken a liking to deer. That’s all.
Outside they walked past the coop where they kept Duna, a Lab and collie mix, who pushed her nose into Bo’s gloved hand. He wanted to ask if she was coming with them, but his grandfather did not slow, so he put his head down and followed. Through the orchard, past the horse paddock, into the woods, the fallen limbs and frozen, hard-packed leaves sounding like thunder beneath them, until they found the old trappers’ path and walked along the hard dirt, Bo wondering if he would see anything else for the rest of his life but the creased and faded patterns of brown that tracked like roads on a map in the canvas coat on his grandfather’s back.
They came through trees to the edge of the open field, where a silver horizon met silver grass bent down with frost and spread out flat before them. A farmhouse and barn stood at the distant edge of that field, and Bo wanted to ask who lived there, but he did not. His grandfather sat down on a large rock and levered a single round into the Marlin. Bo sat down next to him and moved his hands and feet to keep warm. They waited a long time, until the sun was bright and round above the horizon in the east, when his grandfather put a finger to his lips and pointed in the direction of where a doe had emerged from the trees. He slipped off his mittens, got down on one knee, and brought the rifle to his shoulder. Bo followed the sight line of the barrel and saw that it was aimed not at the doe but at the low-slung figure of a dog like no dog he had ever seen, sleek and hunched and twitching at the far end of the field. He looked at his grandfather, as frozen as the grass, then back at the dog just as it leaped. The rifle cracked and the animal arced back in one round motion, and Bo felt his bowels loosen, the warm spreading around him where he sat. He stood up fast, dropped the twenty-two, and ran.
He did not stop until he had gotten to the farm and collapsed by the dog coop. Duna wandered over on her rope and began to lick the back of his neck, and Bo heard someone coming out of the woods. How could he move so fast, he thought, and never thought that again. Bo turned and tried to get up but lay there on his back staring into the sky and sun. He blinked and the sun was eclipsed by a hat. He waited for his grandfather to kick him and tell him he would never touch one of his rifles again, but Jozef reached out his hand and said, C’mon. Let’s get you cleaned up. Bo took it, stood, and walked with him through the orchard back to the house.
In the cold living room, remembering that day, Bo leaned forward in the chair and dug his palms into his eyes and rose. Krasna’s ears pricked and she got to her feet, and they walked into the foyer and down the hall into the kitchen, where Bo could hear the muffled roar of flames beneath the iron top of the Pittston and feel the heat as he approached its verge. He took off the wool suit coat he had worn since supper and draped it over a coat rack by the door and sat down at a pale and simple table he had made with his grandfather out of beech felled on their land. He ran his hand across the surface of it as if to feel what he could of those days when he first brought
the table into the kitchen and his grandfather touched the surface of it in the same way, and said, Well, son, I do believe you have found your work.
Hannah shut off the faucet and dried her hands on an apron tied around her waist and walked over to the table. Her right forefinger was wrapped with tissue paper and tape and sticking up like a tiny flag post, and she stood not as though she was about to sit but as though she had just risen and stopped for a moment to listen to the unsyncopated ticks of the stove against the regular seconds of the wall clock. She lifted her head and pushed her hair out of her eyes with her left hand and took off the apron.
Are you hungry? she asked.
A little, he said.
She went over to the counter and returned with a plate of kielbasa and nut roll and placed it in front of him with a knife and fork, then reached into the refrigerator for a bottle of beer, pried off the cap with a church key, and put the bottle next to the plate.
Go on, she said, and sat down across from him.
She was nineteen when she became a mother for the first time in February ’41, three days before her husband left for basic training. (He would see his son Bohumír as a baby one more time, in April of that year, before he went overseas.) She looked no different at fifty. Round face set off by high cheekbones. Hair long and flax. Eyes a deep and pupil-less gray. The kind of eyes that make people either stare or look away.
Bo halved a round of the kielbasa and ate and followed it with a swig of beer. He took two more mouthfuls and laid the utensils on the side of the plate. He pointed to her finger. Is it bad?
Just some glass. I’ll be fine.
He pulled the plate with the nut roll on it toward him and finished the slice in four bites, dusted his fingertips, and wiped his mouth on a napkin.
Is Aunt Sue going to want a turn at the casket tonight?
I don’t know, Bo. She’s asleep upstairs.
He watched her eyes move from the clock to the unlit hallway, then back to his plate. Have you had enough? she asked.
Yes, he said.
She stood and kept her hand flat on the table as she rose, her body bent toward it like she was listening still. She took the plate and placed it on the counter and turned back to her son.
Will you walk me past the living room?
He took her arm and pushed in the chair and they moved down the hallway to the foyer. At the foot of the staircase she reached for the newel post, paused, and said, Let Aunt Sue rest. You stay with him. As long as you can, at least.
He nodded and she whispered, Thank you, and walked up the stairs with her hand leading along the banister.
He woke stiff and aching and stood up straight and stretched his legs. It was still dark, and he went into the kitchen and turned on the overhead light above the sink. He rinsed his face and mouth and toweled himself dry, then filled the percolator with water and coffee and plugged it into the wall. He opened the lid on the stove and put paper, kindling, and a quarter-split birch on the coals in the firebox of the Pittston, slid the draft, and waited for the wood to catch. Krasna was lying in her bed by the door. He took his hat and blanket-lined coat from a hook and called her. She looked in the direction of the living room and thumped her tail on the floor.
I told you, he said. He’s not coming with us. Not anymore.
Outside, the rain and sleet had stopped and he could see the sky clearing in patches as the morning came on. He turned his collar up and they walked single file through the orchard, he and the dog, the branches of the trees bare but for the rime that covered them, and he shook his head at the fruit that would be lost if there was another night as cold as last night.
Inside the barn he flipped a light switch and moved in the direction of the stalls. Krasna circled and slumped onto a straw mat in the corner. They had always had goats. Two, sometimes three does they bred for the milk and to sell the kids. When he was a boy, Bo milked them twice a day. Then the job went to his brother, Sam. And then they were sold. Now only the cow was left, a small Jersey his grandfather used to call Miss Wayne. She had not given milk in a long time, but no one wanted to get rid of her. Bo patted her spine and dropped feed into a trough, and she lowed softly and set to eating. He looked around at the empty stalls and saw the window that had been broken in an ice storm that winter and boarded up, and he reminded himself to get to the hardware store for a new pane of glass. Then he whistled to Krasna and went into the chicken coop, where the Barred Rocks cackled and rose when they saw the dog, then settled and began to peck at the scratch he threw to them. He had made his own waterer the summer before, when they reduced the flock to five. It was a number ten plastic bucket with holes punched near the brim, placed upside down in a round cake pan. He turned it over and poured fresh water from a spigot into the bucket, then placed it back in the pan. He found four eggs in three of the nest boxes and put them gently in his pockets and went back outside.
Hannah was awake and cooking bacon in a skillet when he and Krasna came in by the back door.
Any of those hens lay? she asked.
All of them except Celeste and Renée.
Her eyes were streaked with red and she sniffed. Renée will come along. She’s not spent yet.
Do you remember when there used to be a farm around here? he said, and placed the eggs on the sideboard.
I remember. I was thinking just the other day that we ought to bring that flock back up to twelve. Maybe I’ll go out to see Virgil in May and get some new chicks.
She turned back to the skillet, and he hung up his coat and washed his hands in the sink, then walked over to the window and looked out and studied the orchard in the light.
The trees were always the first thing his grandfather spoke of in the morning, weaving a forecast for the day based on the curve of leaves or a bird he might see nesting in the branches. Or he would tell a story that began with the planting of a particular sapling, like the cherry he had bought from one of the truckers who brought timber to the mill and had its root pack bound in burlap and sitting on the front seat of his rig like a passenger, a gift bestowed on him by a crazy old hermit in Wellsboro in exchange for some cigarette tobacco. Jozef gave the man two dollars for it and planted the tree (he told Bo when the boy set to it with his Morseth knife and carved BK in the trunk) when the house was a bare frame of two-by-fours, the earth around it overturned and strewn with rocks and stumps and roots. He had painted in his mind a picture of that tree in bloom at the head of the drive, paving stones winding around it, right to the steps of the front porch. Then came some peach and pear, and soon an entire orchard of apple trees, so that the men who helped him finish the house (men who ferried inside the framing boards, pipes for the plumbing, brick for the chimney and fireplace, plaster and lath for the walls, and hauled up on scaffolding the roof slates and siding shingles) had to be careful not to damage the young trees as they passed, which became a growing design to the northeast and southwest of the terraced land on which the house rose. They would joke in his presence and say that Mr. Vinich had set out to grow an orchard, then decided to build a mansion on it. He never saw it as a mansion, though. Just a good house. The elevation that rose up out of the Salamander Creek Valley was called Rock Mountain for a reason, and had been since the town of Dardan was settled. Jozef Vinich, who grew up in the Carpathian Mountains, built his home in the manner of the nineteenth-century barons of lumber and coal in that part of Pennsylvania. He put what stones the forests and fields around him would give to the foundation, and brought in the rest. And when it was built, it was built so that it would not move, not for generations. Not for any reason other than time’s inevitable decay.
Bo said, Just the other day I saw a hawk in the tree at the edge of the Cortlands’. Sitting up there like a weather vane.
I’ll have to be careful to watch the chickens when I let them out, Hannah said.
I was thinking that ought to take care of the moles in the orchard, Bo said. But there won’t be much fruit on those trees if we get another cold snap.
Hannah brought the skillet from the stove and plated the eggs. Those trees have gotten more care than the two of us put together, she said. They’ll bear. Now sit down and eat.
Father Tomáš Rovnávaha arrived at the house on the mountain at a quarter to nine in his old International Scout. They met him at the door, and he hugged Hannah and took Bo’s hand in both of his and asked if he had slept. Bo said that he had managed what he could.
Rovnávaha nodded slowly and looked down at the floor, then back up at Hannah, and said, Well, shall we?
He was tall and broad-shouldered, the priest, Like an oak, Jozef Vinich had said to him when they first met, and that was what he called the priest in moments when the older man thought it was appropriate. Oakes. His deep black widow’s peak and well-trimmed beard had gone silver before his hair, so his face seemed framed by an argent glow. His parents had come to Pennsylvania when the Austro-Hungarian empire collapsed. Professor Rovnávaha taught Greek and Latin to students at the Jesuit University in Scranton. Mrs. Rovnávaha taught piano at their home in the Hill Section. But there was a war on when young Tomáš graduated from high school in ’43. He joined the First Infantry, landed at Normandy, and fought across France and into Germany and Czechoslovakia, frostbite in the left foot his only accountable wound. When he came home, he went to the University of Pennsylvania on the GI Bill to study philosophy, and in 1950 he entered the diocesan seminary. A late vocation, they called it. St. Michael’s in Dardan was his first assignment as an assistant to the pastor, Father Blok. Tomáš Rovnávaha spoke Slovak to Jozef Vinich when they were introduced, because the man’s voice reminded the young priest of his own father, and Jozef invited him to dinner at the house, where they talked into the night, and the friendship was sealed with an invitation for the priest to come trout fishing on the stretch of the Upper Salamander that ran through the northwestern corner of the Vinich land.