“Blessed is he whose
transgressions are forgiven. . .”
Alice Munro’s Runaway,
includes a story titled “Trespasses,” a word only slightly less archaic,
perhaps, than “transgressions.” In
typical Munro-vian fashion, she weaves together several plot lines and a
gallery of fully human characters who move relentlessly toward an end that is
as foreordained as any ending she’s ever written. In fact, the story begins with a tableau—four
unidentified people performing some unspecified ritual late at night, on a
river bank—a scene which is also the story’s own dramatic climax. In the story’s first page and a half, Munro
shows us where we’re going; then she spends the next half hour of reading time explaining
how we got there.
Great stories defy summary, so I’m on dangerous ground, but
I’ll try anyway. Lauren, an eleven or
twelve year-old “only child,” meets Kate, who works at the restaurant where
kids her age stop after school. When
Kate shows Lauren a ton of attention, singling her out from her friends,
readers can’t help becoming fearful.
Slowly, the truth emerges: Kate
has spent some significant time finding Lauren, a child she believes to be her
own, a child she once gave up for adoption.
But Lauren—still very much a child—knows a story Kate
doesn’t because once upon a time she stumbled on a vial her father quietly
explained held the ashes of her sister, a baby who was killed just before
Lauren was born. He warns her, however,
never to bring up the story in front of her mother, who cannot bear any
reminder of the accident which took the baby’s life. That baby’s name was Lauren.
When Kate threatens to open up the whole story, something
must be done. Soon, the story of the
accident emerges, a story which began in a fight about abortion because
Lauren’s father wasn’t interested in another child. Lauren’s mother took off in the car, an
accident ensued, and the baby—the adopted child Kate had given up—was killed
because she wasn’t fastened into the seat.
The story is rife with pain—her father’s, for not wanting
Lauren; her mother’s, for her inattention; and Kate’s, for once, long ago,
giving her child away.
So one night, in an attempt to find what people call today
“closure,” the four major characters of “Trespasses” head out to the spot of
the accident, repeat some lines from the Lord’s Prayer, and leave behind the
baby’s remains.
That’s not the end of the story, however. In some ways, the denouement is even more
horrifying because Lauren, the only child, is left carrying the greatest burden
of all, the child of a marriage that has been bleeding grief ever since she was
born. Her parents are distanced, from
each other and from her. The only adult
who’d ever shown her any love, Kate, now leaves, having rejected Lauren once
she discovered the child wasn’t hers.
Munro doesn’t trumpet closure for the adults of this story;
we really don’t know whether or not they’ll ever find the peace they’ve never
felt. What we know, however, is that
this second Lauren will wear forever the livery of her parents’
trespasses.
It’s a story that reminds me of the great Old Testament
curse of sin, that it will live for generations—“punishing the children for the
sins of the fathers to the third and fourth generation.”
The Blessedness with which Psalm 32 begins is created by
that most marvelous of nouns—forgiveness.
But forgiveness really can’t be appreciated with anything less than a
full-bodied understanding of sin, our sin.
The miracle of our forgiveness works only when our sin is wholly
acknowledged.
The miracle of forgiveness—and it is a miracle—is
experienced only when we know our sin.
Which is to say, those who know real forgiveness once knew, for real,
their sin.