The Warm Embrace of Night
The door to the sleeper car stands open before you reach it. A narrow rectangle of amber lamplight spills onto the corridor floor, and the wool blanket on the berth has already been turned back at one corner, the way a page is turned back in a book someone means to return to. The corridor behind you smells of cold metal and distant diesel, faint, the way diesel always is at this hour, more memory than fuel. The smell of wool comes from inside the car. Old wool, clean, warmed through. You step across the threshold and the air changes against your face.
It is two forty-seven in the morning. The platform clock outside is still visible through the corridor window, its hands holding that number with the patience of something that has been holding numbers all night. The car is narrow. The lamp above the pillow casts a cream-colored light that does not flicker, has not flickered, gives the impression of having been lit some time ago and left to settle. You set your bag down on the floor. The floor is warm through the soles of your shoes. Your shoulders, which have been carrying the platform and the cold and the long walk from the ticket hall, lower by a small degree. Not all at once. The kind of lowering that happens without instruction, the way a coat slides from the back of a chair when no one is watching.
The door behind you eases closed on its own weight. The corridor sounds thin and then thinner and then gone. What remains is the hum of the car itself, the low sustained note of a train that has been running for hours and intends to run for hours more. You exhale. A long exhale, longer than you meant. The kind that empties more than the lungs. Your jaw, which has been set since some hour you can no longer place, softens. The small muscles at the hinge let go. The tongue rests away from the roof of the mouth. There is nothing to say to anyone here. There is no one here to say it to.
You place one hand flat against the wall of the car. The wall is warm. Not the warmth of a radiator, exactly. The warmth of something that has been kept. Beneath your palm, through the painted metal, you feel the first deep pulse of the wheels finding their rhythm under the floor. A slow four-count, then a slow four-count again. The train is moving. You did not notice it begin. The window beside the berth is dark glass with the platform lights still passing along its edge, slower, then slower. You can see yourself faintly in the reflection. The face there is the face that boarded, and also already not quite that face.
Your hands, which have been holding things all day, ticket, handle, collar, coin, lower to your sides. The fingers uncurl. The thumb stops looking for the edge of something to press against. The palms open the way palms open when there is finally nothing to carry. You sit on the edge of the berth. The mattress gives in the soft, used way of a mattress that has held many people and remembers the shape of holding. The blanket, when you draw it across your lap, carries a warmth that does not quite belong to the room's own heat. You do not examine this. You let it be warm. Another exhale. Longer than the one before. It stretches itself to match something. The four-count under the floor takes the breath and braids it gently into the rhythm of the wheels, and the breath, finding itself in good company, lengthens further.
Your belly, which has been held in against the cold, releases outward against the blanket. The breath goes lower. Not into the chest now. Into the space below the ribs, where breath goes when no one is asking anything of you. Somewhere outside, far off, a single bell sounds. Muffled. Passing. It is not for you and it is not against you. It is simply a sound the night is making somewhere, and the train carries you past it the way a river carries a leaf past a stone. The last platform light slides along the edge of the window and is gone. The glass goes fully dark. In the dark glass your reflection is still there, softer at the edges than the one that boarded, the shoulders lower, the mouth less set.
Your hips settle deeper into the mattress. Your knees, drawn up under the blanket, find the angle they want and stay there. Your ankles cross, uncross, cross again, and rest. Your feet, inside their shoes, register that they are no longer walking, and the muscles along the arches let go a tension you did not know they had been keeping. The wheels speak their language to the track below. A clattering that is almost conversation, almost melody. Four beats, four beats, four beats. The car rocks gently on its springs, the small lateral motion of a cradle that has been doing this a long time and knows how.
You draw the blanket higher, up to the collarbone. It is still warm. The lamp above the pillow holds its cream-colored light steady, as if it has been burning for hours, waiting for exactly this moment to be the light you read the ceiling by. You lie back. The pillow receives the weight of your head without comment. One more exhale, the longest yet, and the breath finds the wheels and the wheels find the breath and the two of them go on together into the dark beyond the window, where the country is passing without needing to be seen. The lamp holds. The wheels keep their four-count. The car moves on through the dark with you inside it, warm, held, carried.
