The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
3
What Happened in the Night
*
The boy heard the hard-edged sound in the middle of the night. He
came awake, reached
out for the floor lamp, and, once it was on, sat up and looked
around the room. The time on
the wall clock was just before two. The boy could not imagine what
might be happening in
the world at a time like this.
Then the sound came again-from outside the window, he was sure. It
sounded like
someone winding a huge spring. Who could be winding a spring in the
middle of the night?
No, wait: it was like someone winding a spring, but it was not
really a spring. It was the cry of
a bird. The boy carried a chair over to the window and climbed up
onto it. He pulled the
curtains back and opened the window a crack. In the middle of the
sky hung a large white
moon, the full moon of late autumn, filling the yard below with its
light. The trees out there
looked very different to the boy at night than they did in the
daylight. They had none of their
usual friendliness. The evergreen oak looked almost annoyed as it
trembled in the occasional
puff of wind with an unpleasant creaking sound. The stones in the
garden looked whiter and
smoother than they ordinarily did, staring up at the sky impassively
like the faces of dead
people.
The cry of the bird seemed to be coming from the pine tree. The boy
leaned out the
window and looked up, but from this low angle, the large, heavy
branches of the pine hid the
bird. He wanted to see what it looked like. He wanted to memorize
its color and shape so that
tomorrow he could find it in his illustrated encyclopedia. His
intense desire to know had
brought him fully awake now. Finding birds and fish and other
animals in his encyclopedia
was his greatest joy. Its big, thick volumes lined one shelf of his
room. He had yet to enter
elementary school, but he already knew how to read.
The bird fell silent after winding the spring several times in a
row. The boy wondered
whether anyone else had heard the cry. Had his father and mother
heard it? His grandmother?
If not, he could tell them all about it in the morning: a bird that
sounded just like the winding
of a spring was sitting in the pine tree last night at two o'clock.
If only he could catch a
glimpse of it! Then he could tell everybody its name.
But the bird never raised its cry again. It fell silent as a stone,
up there in the branches of
the pine bathed in moonlight. Soon a chill wind blew into the room,
as if giving him some
kind of warning. The boy shuddered and closed the window. This was a
different kind of bird,
he knew, not some sparrow or pigeon, which showed itself to people
without hesitation. He
had read in his encyclopedia that most nocturnal birds were cunning
and cautious. The bird
probably knew that he was on the lookout for it. It would never come
out as long as he waited
for it to appear. The boy wondered if he should go to the bathroom.
That would mean walking
down the long, dark corridor. No, he would just go back to bed. It
was not so bad that he
couldn't wait until morning.
The boy turned the light out and closed his eyes, but thoughts of
the bird in the pine tree
kept him awake. The bright moonlight spilled in from beneath the
curtains as if in invitation.
When the wind-up bird cried one more time, the boy leaped out of
bed. This time he did not
turn on the light, but slipping a cardigan over his pajamas, he
climbed onto the chair by the
window. Parting the curtains just the tiniest bit, he peered up into
the pine tree. This way, the
bird would not notice that he was there.
What the boy saw this time, though, was the outline of two men. He
caught his breath.
The men knelt like two black shadows at the base of the pine tree.
Both wore dark clothing.
One had no hat on, the other wore what looked like a felt hat with a
brim. Why are these
strange men here in our garden in the middle of the night? the boy
wondered. Why wasn't the
dog barking at them? Maybe he ought to tell his parents right away.
But his curiosity held him at the window. He wanted to see what the
men were doing.
Then, without warning, the wind-up bird cried out again. More than
once, it sent its long,
creaking sound out into the night. But the men did not seem to
notice. They never budged,
never looked up. They remained kneeling at the base of the tree,
face-to-face. They seemed to
be discussing something in low tones, but with the branches blocking
the moonlight, the boy
could not make out their faces. Before long, the two men stood up at
the same moment. There
was a good eight-inch difference in their heights. Both men were
thin, and the tall one (the
one with the hat) wore a long coat. The short one had on more
form-fitting clothes.
The shorter man approached the pine tree and stood there, looking up
into the branches.
After a while, he began patting and grabbing the trunk with both
hands as if inspecting it,
until, all at once, he jumped up onto it. Then, with no effort
whatever (or so it seemed to the
boy), he came zipping up the tree like a circus performer. The boy
knew this tree like an old
friend. He knew that climbing it was no easy feat. Its trunk was
smooth and slippery, and
there was nothing to hold on to until you got up fairly high. But
why was the man climbing
the tree in the middle of the night? Was he trying to catch the
wind-up bird?
The tall man stood at the base of the tree, looking up. Soon after,
the small man
disappeared from view. The branches rustled now and then, which
meant that he must still be
climbing up the tall pine. The wind-up bird would be sure to hear
him coming and fly away.
The man might be good at climbing trees, but the wind-up bird would
not be that easy to
capture. If he was lucky, though, the boy was hoping he might be
able to catch a glimpse of
the wind-up bird as it took off. He held his breath, waiting for the
sound of wings. But the
sound of wings never came, nor was there any cry.
There was no sound or movement for a very long time. Everything was
bathed in the
white, unreal light of the moon, the yard like the wet bottom of a
sea from which the water
has just been suddenly removed. Entranced, motionless, the boy went
on staring at the pine
tree and the tall man left behind. He could not have torn his eyes
away if he had tried. His
breath clouded the glass. Outdoors, it must be cold. The tall man
stood looking up, hands on
hips, never moving, as if he had frozen in place. The boy imagined
that he was worried about
his shorter companion, waiting for him to accomplish some mission
and come climbing down
out of the pine tree. Nor would it have been strange for the man to
be worried: the boy knew
that the tall tree was harder to climb down than up. But then, all
of a sudden, the tall man
stalked off into the night, as if abandoning the whole project.
The boy felt that now he was the only one left behind. The small man
had disappeared
into the pine tree, and the tall one had gone off somewhere. The
wind-up bird maintained its
silence. The boy wondered if he should wake his father. But he knew
he could not get him to
believe this. "I'm sure you just had another dream," his father
would say. It was true, the boy
did often dream, and he often mistook his dreams for reality, but he
didn't care what anybody
said: this was real- the wind-up bird and the two men in black. They
had just disappeared all
of a sudden, that was all. His father would believe him if he did a
good job of explaining what
had happened.
It was then that the boy realized: the small man looked a lot like
his father. Of course, he
was too short to be his father, but aside from that, he was exactly
the same: the build, the
movements. But no, his father could never climb a tree that way. He
wasn't that agile or
strong. The more he thought about it, the more confused the boy
became.
The tall man came back to the base of the tree. Now he had something
in his hands-a
shovel and a large cloth bag. He set the bag down on.the ground and
started digging near the
roots of the tree. The shovel cut into the earth with a sharp, clean
sound. Now everybody was
bound to wake up, the boy thought. It was such a big, clear sound!
But no one woke up. The man went on digging without a break,
seemingly unconcerned
that anyone might hear him. Though tall and thin, he was far more
powerful than he looked,
judging from the way he used that shovel. He worked steadily,
without wasted motion. Once
he had the size hole he wanted, the man leaned the shovel against
the tree and stood there
looking down. He never once looked up, as though he had forgotten
all about the man who
had climbed the tree. The only thing on his mind now was the hole,
it seemed. The boy did
not like this. He would have been worried about the man in the tree.
The boy could tell from the mound of earth the man had dug out that
the hole itself was
not very deep-maybe just up over his own knees. The man seemed
satisfied with the shape
and size of the hole. He turned to the bag and gently lifted a
blackish, cloth-wrapped object
from inside it. The way the man held it, it seemed soft and limp.
Maybe the man was about to
bury some kind of corpse in the hole. The thought made the boy's
heart race. But the thing in
the cloth was no bigger than a cat. If human, it could only be an
infant. But why did he have
to bury something like that in my yard? thought the boy. He
swallowed the saliva that he had
unconsciously allowed to collect in his mouth. The loud gulp he made
frightened the boy
himself. It might have been loud enough for the man to hear outside.
Just then, as if aroused by the boy's gulp, the wind-up bird cried
out, winding an even
bigger spring than before: Creeeak. Creeeak.
When he heard this cry, the boy felt intuitively that something very
important was about
to happen. He bit his lip and unconsciously scratched the skin of
his arms. He should never
have seen any of this, he felt. But now it was too late. Now it was
impossible for him to tear
his eyes away from the scene before him. He parted his lips and
pressed his nose against the
cold windowpane, transfixed by the strange drama that was now
unfolding in his yard. He
was no longer hoping for other members of the family to get out of
bed. No one would wake
up anyway, no matter how big a sound they made out there. I'm the
only person alive who can
hear these sounds. It was that way from the start.
The tall man bent over and, handling it with the utmost care, laid
the thing in the black
cloth in the bottom of the hole. Then he rose to his full height and
stared down at it lying
there. The boy could not make out the look on the man's face beneath
the brim of his hat, but
he seemed somehow to be wearing a grim, even a solemn, expression.
Yes, it had to be some
kind of corpse, thought the boy. Before long, the man reached a
point of decision, lifted the
shovel, and began filling in the hole. When he was through
shoveling, he lightly tamped the
earth beneath his feet and smoothed it over. Then he set the shovel
against the trunk of the
tree and, with the cloth bag in his hand, moved away with slow
steps. He never looked back.
He never looked up into the tree. And the wind-up bird never cried
again.
The boy turned to look at the clock on his wall. Squinting in the
darkness, he could just
barely make out the time as two-thirty. He kept watch on the pine
tree for another ten minutes
through the opening in the curtains, in case something should move
out there, but an intense
sleepiness overtook him all at once, as if a heavy iron lid were
closing over his head. He
wanted to know what would happen with the short man up in the tree
and the wind-up bird,
but he couldn't keep his eyes open any longer. Struggling to slip
off the cardigan before he
lost consciousness, he burrowed under the covers and sank into
sleep.