Scent of Apples
Bienvenido N. Santos
When I arrived in Kalamazoo it was October and the
war was still on. Gold and silver stars hung on pennants above silent windows of
white and brick-red cottages. In a backyard an old man burned leaves and twigs
while a gray-haired woman sat on the porch, her red hands quiet on her lap,
watching the smoke rising above the elms, both of them thinking the same thought
perhaps, about a tall, grinning boy with his blue eyes and flying hair, who went
out to war: where could he be now this month when leaves were turning into gold
and the fragrance of gathered apples was in the wind?
It was a cold night when I left my
room at the hotel for a usual speaking engagement. I walked but a little way. A
heavy wind coming up from Lake Michigan was icy on the face. If felt like winter
straying early in the northern woodlands. Under the lampposts the leaves shone
like bronze. And they rolled on the pavements like the ghost feet of a thousand
autumns long dead, long before the boys left for faraway lands without great icy
winds and promise of winter early in the air, lands without apple trees, the
singing and the gold!
It was the same night I met Celestino
Fabia, "just a Filipino farmer" as he called himself, who had a farm
about thirty miles east of Kalamazoo.
"You came all that way on a night like
this just to hear me talk?"
"I've seen no Filipino for so many
years now," he answered quickly. "So when I saw your name in the
papers where it says you come from the Islands and that you're going to talk, I
come right away."
Earlier that night I had addressed a
college crowd, mostly women. It appeared they wanted me to talk about my
country, they wanted me to tell them things about it because my country had
become a lost country. Everywhere in the land the enemy stalked. Over it a great
silence hung, and their boys were there, unheard from, or they were on their way
to some little known island on the Pacific, young boys all, hardly men, thinking
of harvest moons and the smell of forest fire.
It was not hard talking about our own
people. I knew them well and I loved them. And they seemed so far away during
those terrible years that I must have spoken of them with a little fervor, a
little nostalgia.
In the open forum that followed, the
audience wanted to know whether there was much difference between our women and
the American women. I tried to answer the question as best I could, saying,
among other things, that I did not know that much about American women, except
that they looked friendly, but differences or similarities in inner qualities
such as naturally belonged to the heart or to the mind, I could only speak about
with vagueness.
While I was trying to explain away
the fact that it was not easy to make comparisons, a man rose from the rear of
the hall, wanting to say something. In the distance, he looked slight and old
and very brown. Even before he spoke, I knew that he was, like me, a Filipino.
"I'm a Filipino," he began, loud
and clear, in a voice that seemed used to wide open spaces, "I'm just a
Filipino farmer out in the country." He waved his hand toward the door.
"I left the Philippines more than twenty years ago and have never been
back. Never will perhaps. I want to find out, sir, are our Filipino women the
same like they were twenty years ago?"
As he sat down, the hall filled with
voices, hushed and intrigued. I weighed my answer carefully. I did not want to
tell a lie yet I did not want to say anything that would seem platitudinous,
insincere. But more important than these considerations, it seemed to me that
moment as I looked towards my countryman, I must give him an answer that would
not make him so unhappy. Surely, all these years, he must have held on to
certain ideals, certain beliefs, even illusions peculiar to the exile.
"First," I said as the voices
gradually died down and every eye seemed upon me, "First, tell me what our
women were like twenty years ago."
The man stood to answer.
"Yes," he said, "you're too young . . . Twenty years ago our
women were nice, they were modest, they wore their hair long, they dressed
proper and went for no monkey business. They were natural, they went to church
regular, and they were faithful." He had spoken slowly, and now in what
seemed like an afterthought, added, "It's the men who ain't."
Now I knew what I was going to say.
"Well," I began, "it will
interest you to know that our women have changed--but definitely! The change,
however, has been on the outside only. Inside, here," pointing to the
heart, "they are the same as they were twenty years ago. God-fearing,
faithful, modest, and nice."
The man was visibly moved. "I'm
very happy, sir," he said, in the manner of one who, having stakes on the
land, had found no cause to regret one's sentimental investment.
After this, everything that was said
and done in that hall that night seemed like an anti-climax, and later, as we
walked outside, he gave me his name and told me of his farm thirty miles east of
the city.
We had stopped at the main entrance
to the hotel lobby. We had not talked very much on the way. As a matter of fact,
we were never alone. Kindly American friends talked to us, asked us questions,
said goodnight. So now I asked him whether he cared to step into the lobby with
me and talk.
"No, thank you," he said,
"you are tired. And I don't want to stay out too late."
"Yes, you live very far."
"I got a car," he said,
"besides . . . "
Now he smiled, he truly smiled. All
night I had been watching his face and I wondered when he was going to smile.
"Will you do me a favor, please,"
he continued smiling almost sweetly. "I want you to have dinner with my
family out in the country. I'd call for you tomorrow afternoon, then drive you
back. Will that be alright?"
"Of course," I said. "I'd
love to meet your family." I was leaving Kalamazoo for Muncie, Indiana, in
two days. There was plenty of time.
"You will make my wife very
happy," he said.
"You flatter me."
"Honest. She'll be very happy. Ruth is
a country girl and hasn't met many Filipinos. I mean Filipinos younger than I,
cleaner looking. We're just poor farmer folk, you know, and we don't get to town
very often. Roger, that's my boy, he goes to school in town. A bus takes him
early in the morning and he's back in the afternoon. He's nice boy."
"I bet he is," I agreed.
"I've seen the children of some of the boys by their American wives and the
boys are tall, taller than their father, and very good looking."
"Roger, he'd be tall. You'll like
him."
Then he said goodbye and I waved to
him as he disappeared in the darkness.
The next day he came, at about three
in the afternoon. There was a mild, ineffectual sun shining, and it was not too
cold. He was wearing an old brown tweed jacket and worsted trousers to match.
His shoes were polished, and although the green of his tie seemed faded, a
colored shirt hardly accentuated it. He looked younger than he appeared the
night before now that he was clean shaven and seemed ready to go to a party. He
was grinning as we met.
"Oh, Ruth can't believe it," he
kept repeating as he led me to his car--a nondescript thing in faded black that
had known better days and many hands. "I says to her, I'm bringing you a
first class Filipino, and she says, aw, go away, quit kidding, there's no such
thing as first class Filipino. But Roger, that's my boy, he believed me
immediately. What's he like, daddy, he asks. Oh, you will see, I says, he's
first class. Like you daddy? No, no, I laugh at him, your daddy ain't first
class. Aw, but you are, daddy, he says. So you can see what a nice boy he is, so
innocent. Then Ruth starts griping about the house, but the house is a mess, she
says. True it's a mess, it's always a mess, but you don't mind, do you? We're
poor folks, you know.
The trip seemed interminable. We
passed through narrow lanes and disappeared into thickets, and came out on
barren land overgrown with weeds in places. All around were dead leaves and dry
earth. In the distance were apple trees.
"Aren't those apple trees?" I
asked wanting to be sure.
"Yes, those are apple trees," he
replied. "Do you like apples? I got lots of 'em. I got an apple orchard,
I'll show you."
All the beauty of the afternoon
seemed in the distance, on the hills, in the dull soft sky.
"Those trees are beautiful on the
hills," I said.
"Autumn's a lovely season. The trees
are getting ready to die, and they show their colors, proud-like."
"No such thing in our own
country," I said.
That remark seemed unkind, I realized
later. It touched him off on a long deserted tangent, but ever there perhaps.
How many times did lonely mind take unpleasant detours away from the familiar
winding lanes towards home for fear of this, the remembered hurt, the long lost
youth, the grim shadows of the years; how many times indeed, only the exile
knows.
It was a rugged road we were
traveling and the car made so much noise that I could not hear everything he
said, but I understood him. He was telling his story for the first time in many
years. He was remembering his own youth. He was thinking of home. In these odd
moments there seemed no cause for fear no cause at all, no pain. That would come
later. In the night perhaps. Or lonely on the farm under the apple trees.
In this old Visayan town, the
streets are narrow and dirty and strewn with coral shells. You have been there?
You could not have missed our house, it was the biggest in town, one of the
oldest, ours was a big family. The house stood right on the edge of the street.
A door opened heavily and you enter a dark hall leading to the stairs. There is
the smell of chickens roosting on the low-topped walls, there is the familiar
sound they make and you grope your way up a massive staircase, the bannisters
smooth upon the trembling hand. Such nights, they are no better than the days,
windows are closed against the sun; they close heavily.
Mother sits in her corner looking
very white and sick. This was her world, her domain. In all these years, I
cannot remember the sound of her voice. Father was different. He moved about. He
shouted. He ranted. He lived in the past and talked of honor as though it were
the only thing.
I was born in that house. I grew
up there into a pampered brat. I was mean. One day I broke their hearts. I saw
mother cry wordlessly as father heaped his curses upon me and drove me out of
the house, the gate closing heavily after me. And my brothers and sisters took
up my father's hate for me and multiplied it numberless times in their own
broken hearts. I was no good.
But sometimes, you know, I miss
that house, the roosting chickens on the low-topped walls. I miss my brothers
and sisters, Mother sitting in her chair, looking like a pale ghost in a corner
of the room. I would remember the great live posts, massive tree trunks from the
forests. Leafy plants grew on the sides, buds pointing downwards, wilted and
died before they could become flowers. As they fell on the floor, father bent to
pick them and throw them out into the coral streets. His hands were strong. I
have kissed these hands . . . many times, many times.
Finally we rounded a deep curve and
suddenly came upon a shanty, all but ready to crumble in a heap on the ground,
its plastered walls were rotting away, the floor was hardly a foot from the
ground. I thought of the cottages of the poor colored folk in the south, the
hovels of the poor everywhere in the land. This one stood all by itself as
though by common consent all the folk that used to live here had decided to say
away, despising it, ashamed of it. Even the lovely season could not color it
with beauty.
A dog barked loudly as we approached.
A fat blonde woman stood at the door with a little boy by her side. Roger seemed
newly scrubbed. He hardly took his eyes off me. Ruth had a clean apron around
her shapeless waist. Now as she shook my hands in sincere delight I noticed
shamefacedly (that I should notice) how rough her hands were, how coarse and red
with labor, how ugly! She was no longer young and her smile was pathetic.
As we stepped inside and the door
closed behind us, immediately I was aware of the familiar scent of apples. The
room was bare except for a few ancient pieces of second-hand furniture. In the
middle of the room stood a stove to keep the family warm in winter. The walls
were bare. Over the dining table hung a lamp yet unlighted.
Ruth got busy with the drinks. She
kept coming in and out of a rear room that must have been the kitchen and soon
the table was heavy with food, fried chicken legs and rice, and green peas and
corn on the ear. Even as we ate, Ruth kept standing, and going to the kitchen
for more food. Roger ate like a little gentleman.
"Isn't he nice looking?" his
father asked.
"You are a handsome boy, Roger,"
I said.
The boy smiled at me. You look like
Daddy," he said.
Afterwards I noticed an old picture
leaning on the top of a dresser and stood to pick it up. It was yellow and
soiled with many fingerings. The faded figure of a woman in Philippine dress
could yet be distinguished although the face had become a blur.
"Your . . . " I began.
"I don't know who she is," Fabia
hastened to say. "I picked that picture many years ago in a room on La
Salle street in Chicago. I have often wondered who she is."
"The face wasn't a blur in the
beginning?"
"Oh, no. It was a young face and
good."
Ruth came with a plate full of
apples.
"Ah," I cried, picking out a ripe
one. "I've been thinking where all the scent of apples came from. The room
is full of it."
"I'll show you," said Fabia.
He showed me a backroom, not very
big. It was half-full of apples.
"Every day," he explained,
"I take some of them to town to sell to the groceries. Prices have been
low. I've been losing on the trips."
"These apples will spoil," I
said.
"We'll feed them to the pigs."
Then he showed me around the farm. It
was twilight now and the apple trees stood bare against a glowing western sky.
In apple blossom time it must be lovely here. But what about wintertime?
One day, according to Fabia, a few
years ago, before Roger was born, he had an attack of acute appendicitis. It was
deep winter. The snow lay heavy everywhere. Ruth was pregnant and none too well
herself. At first she did not know what to do. She bundled him in warm clothing
and put him on a cot near the stove. She shoveled the snow from their front door
and practically carried the suffering man on her shoulders, dragging him through
the newly made path towards the road where they waited for the U.S. Mail car to
pass. Meanwhile snowflakes poured all over them and she kept rubbing the man's
arms and legs as she herself nearly froze to death.
"Go back to the house, Ruth!" her
husband cried, "you'll freeze to death."
But she clung to him wordlessly. Even
as she massaged his arms and legs, her tears rolled down her cheeks. "I
won't leave you," she repeated.
Finally the U.S. Mail car arrived.
The mailman, who knew them well, helped them board the car, and, without
stopping on his usual route, took the sick man and his wife direct to the
nearest hospital.
Ruth stayed in the hospital with
Fabia. She slept in a corridor outside the patients' ward and in the day time
helped in scrubbing the floor and washing the dishes and cleaning the men's
things. They didn't have enough money and Ruth was willing to work like a slave.
"Ruth's a nice girl," said Fabia,
"like our own Filipino women."
Before nightfall, he took me back to
the hotel. Ruth and Roger stood at the door holding hands and smiling at me.
From inside the room of the shanty, a low light flickered. I had a last glimpse
of the apple trees in the orchard under the darkened sky as Fabia backed up the
car. And soon we were on our way back to town. The dog had started barking. We
could hear it for some time, until finally, we could not hear it anymore, and
all was darkness around us, except where the headlamps revealed a stretch of
road leading somewhere.
Fabia did not talk this time. I
didn't seem to have anything to say myself. But when finally we came to the
hotel and I got down, Fabia said, "Well, I guess I won't be seeing you
again."
It was dimly lighted in front of the
hotel and I could hardly see Fabia's face. Without getting off the car, he moved
to where I had sat, and I saw him extend his hand. I gripped it.
"Tell Ruth and Roger," I said,
"I love them."
He dropped my hand quickly.
"They'll be waiting for me now," he said.
"Look," I said, not knowing why I
said it, "one of these days, very soon, I hope, I'll be going home. I could
go to your town."
"No," he said softly, sounding
very much defeated but brave, "Thanks a lot. But, you see, nobody would
remember me now."
Then he started the car, and as it
moved away, he waved his hand.
"Goodbye," I said, waving back
into the darkness. And suddenly the night was cold like winter straying early in
these northern woodlands.
I hurried inside. There was a train
the next morning that left for Muncie, Indiana, at a quarter after eight.