Saturday, January 08, 2011

3-Day Novel 2010 (Part 4)

On the coffee table: a samovar, paper piles, a yellow origami rose...

...which Ezra had made a few days ago. He is currently stretched on the couch, watching the news, his right leg bouncing up and down, his eyes glazed. The TV is saying something about the rise of militias in the Midwest, and is elaborating on the ideological composition of them, which isn’t worth going into, is rather suitably summarized by “primitivists”, and not of the vegan kind, either. This is followed up by another follow-up of the story from inauguration day: the secret trebuchet that someone had rigged up to lob tar and feather balls onto Obama’s parade route. Names and photographs of those arrested, their cold stares focusing about 300 meters behind the viewer...

“You hungry? I made lentils.”

Eric opens the lid of the pot. Just lentils and a bit of salt water. He ponders for a few seconds, then ladles the thin gruel into his bowl.

“There’s also tea.”

So they pour two cups from the samovar and sit there, watching the ten minutes of filler before the bottom of the hour on CNN, Ezra on the couch and Eric on the ottoman. During commercials they talk about how Ezra’s job search is going. Not well. He is casting his net all over the country. There are rumors on some message boards that an amusement park in Calgary is taking advantage and mass hiring entertainers from the east for some kind of fundie bible-land. Wouldn’t Ezra be averse to that kind of thing, being an atheist Jew and all? Not at all: Ezra has no aversion to taking their money. Also, pay’s a bit thin on the ground in our wonderful Socialist paradise. Commiseration all around. Eric talks about his reduced hours at work. They talk about friends, voicing concerns until the tea is drunk up. Eric gets Ezra another blanket, because tonight’s chill is supposed to be vicious, and they can both hear the whistling through the shitty aluminum siding of the basement entrance.

*

As the wind whistles, Eric undresses...

...slowly and methodically. He places the clothes into the laundry pile and, shivering, snuggles tight into the three layers of blanket. He reaches and turns off the light, which leaves a lingering afterimage. He checks, for the second time, his alarm. For with the pitch blackness in this windowless room, he could easily sleep fully through tomorrow’s shift. And then who would pay for the lentils in the pot?

And there, on his back, he waits to fall asleep. He focuses on the back of his eyelids, where aurora borealises play and swirl, and thinks of them as clouds, as milk in tea, as galaxies--thinks of Ezra and millions of people, the tons of food, the thickness of these walls, still trying to extricate himself from the repetitive tape loops of “Dust in the Wind”, uselessly, and then he flops over to his side, and his hand makes a gesture--not that gesture--any gesture but that one!--the gesture of greeting the emptiness of Anny’s side... he flips quickly, shimmies into the unoccupied space, rousing himself due to the cold, and focuses, focuses on anything but the churning in his stomach, focuses on the arrangement of his desk at work, everything in its place, focuses on recalling at will familiar faces of the clientele, focuses on the tension in his eye sockets, and the wave passes, and he is back to thinking the inking of the eyes is the blackness, the darkness, blackness oiliness, and he’s dissolving under the eyelids, the little death, the little tunnel rising, rising, gently curving, greeted by the smile of the...

...and he’s jolted awake by the mother of all myoclonic twitches--the feeling of falling--reverberating, feeling like someone took a paring knife and ran it all up and down my spine... this kind of sharp iciness like pins and needles, the feeling of static, fuzziness, like the neuron radio of the spine just got mad interference, just got struck by lightning...

...and I can’t stay in this bed. My restless legs find the floor of their own accord, and I am dressed, and outside, and it is snowing. And I look up and all around, and feel the wind on my neck, readjust the scarf, and marvel. The eddies and vortices are jumping cuneiform glyphs, if they could flow like drops of ink in thin layers of water, and they make the streetlights’ shabby orange halos move, make them travel against the prevailing wind, lamplights swaying in night, making the naked tree branches look a little like geodesic domes, or globes, with sparkles, sparklers.

I am out on an arterial. It is practically deserted, except for a few seemingly self-propelled overcoats. I walk and walk. Blocks telescope as I try to remember the way this one Bach prelude transitions into the “lots of notes” part (which I think is called a Cadenza), but cannot. I stop at an intersection crowded by towers on all sides. I have no idea where I am. Here in the night, I cannot see more than a few blocks in any direction. No people are around; no cars either. There is no sound of living machinery, except the hum of the sodium vapour lamps. I begin to grow agitated. I don’t even remember which way I came from, since I craned my neck to look at the towers and turned and turned.

So I pick the street to the right of me. A shop street, which gives way to low-lying buildings, every third one shuttered. Shuttered on prime real estate. Right downtown. The thought is difficult to bear, and slippery.

I am growing cold and tired, and I know I am nowhere close to home, not even walking in the direction. I want to see someone, anyone else on the street, but this does not happen. If anything, the air takes on a more rarefied quality, as if human beings hadn’t walked here with their pheromones, their flaking skin, their wishes.

And then, suddenly, from behind a tall building, around thirty or forty stories in the air, and airship emerges and blinds me with its searchlight.

An airship? A motherfucking zeppelin? As my eyes adjust, I confirm this. It seems like it is anchored to an apartment in that tall, fancy looking building, and as my eyes adjust more, and the steaming street-level vents blow away, and the snow thins out a bit, I see they have a catwalk rigged up, and burly men in arctic gear are carrying furniture out of the building. On the side of the zeppelin, it says “REPO”. I cannot confirm this, but from the main compartment, there seem to hang insectoid legs.

Its searchlight , which had been scanning the street, returns to me. The glare physically hurts, and my heart begins racing. I look around for an alley to duck into, but merely end up walking back. My thoughts begin racing: will they lasso me? Can they? Am I already surrounded? How many more of these behemoths are around? I look around, expecting to see them crawling out of hiding spaces in every tall building, inflating like mosquitoes gorged with blood.

I begin to run. I run and run and duck into the first tiny passageway I can. The inside of my coat is drenched with sweat, which begins to freeze at the collar. I had forgotten tonight was an extreme cold alert. Even the homeless had hidden. They had hidden to allow these monstrosities to loot the ruins and cart everything away to God knows where. Would all our precious shit be dumped into the rapidly acidifying ocean? Would it be deposited on a mountaintop, a hilarious hoax for archaeologists from 10,000 A.D.?

Stumbling down the alley, hitting my elbows on extruding Siamese pipe connectors, banging my knees and shins on mini-dumpsters and lock boxes, I at last see a light of something that looks like a storefront. The wind picks up and knocks me over, once, twice. But eventually, blow as it may, it is just air. It does not stop my progress, lurching as it is. I enlist the aid of a guttural growl. Reaching the door, I find it is open. I stumble in.

The old Chinese woman behind the counter looks surprised.

“We’re closed. Sorry.”

“I just need to warm up for a little.”

“Closed.”

I am crestfallen. I hold out my arms in supplication. “Please?”

She stops for a moment with her activity and gives me an indecipherable look. She points at me, a gesture understood to mean “don’t move!” and goes in through the staff door. I stand there, without moving, without thinking, just watching the steam rise from the soup she had been eating. I wanted so very much to just be that steam...

The old lady returns with a second, even older lady. The second one motions for me to follow. I enter through the kitchen area, down a long hallway where my glasses fog up, the ice melts, and I stumble. She takes me down a flight of stairs, then another. In that hallway, stippled with steam pipes, electrical wires, and other things I can’t even interpret. She opens a door to a dark room with a reddish glow. Within is what I can only describe as a pig iron furnace from Maoist China, the kind they had people running in their backyards. That is what it looked like, and that was the quality of the light it shed. There were other figures in the room, but their features were impossible to make out, for the fire within this furnace had a putty-like texture, a kind of... reticence for illumination.

“We warm you up good.”

“Thank you. How long can I stay here?”

“As long as you need.”

*

My chill being considerable, I sat with the fire...

...for what seemed like hours. And thought returned, and I reflected on my terror, a kind of blind, grasping terror. What had I seen, really? What did it mean? What could it mean? And where was I right now? All the twists and turns of the hallway made it impossible to tell, just as the streets did. The blind alleys of speculating eventually came back to the fire. I stared at the gently undulating dance of orange, red, and sometimes-white on the coals, and it came to dominate more and more of my sight. I beheld landscapes: valleys of white washed out by yellow, washed into monotony by orange. I beheld geological time in the dance of the colours. I beheld the parting of the ways of whole peoples: the valley people and the hill people and the mountain people meeting and warring, intermarrying and carrying on commerce. I beheld all the wheels of the generations happening, the sibling rivalries, the parent-child conflicts, the family feuds, the ancient buried secrets, the dead children by the riverbank. I beheld the herds of the people’s cattle and the bounty of their earth. I beheld their harvest festivals, their dances, their speculations on earth and sky, on mothers and fathers, on self and other, on justice, on order, on creativity, on music. I beheld their disputations as well; their lackluster complacency, their tired hands, their hiding from the stupefying heat of summer, their domestic quarrels cooped up in the dead of winter. I beheld the pomp of their kings, the viciousness of plagues spreading. the play-dances of children, all within the seconds in which a white valley existed as the coals of the fire were stoked.

Soon the fire, and the warmth, came to dominate. And the speculations were no longer speculations. Beholdings were involuntary. The fire was more of a tunnel than a fire.

And that is when it happened. Upon my receptivity, my blank fluttering sheet, it spat, like an enraptured dot matrix printer, the page that follows, and two others like it, flanking it. You must imagine it as instantly scannable, as if it had sprung fully formed from my head. I recognized it immediately for what it was--the pages of a burning book, its ramifications reaching in all the directions of my brain. I tremble at this... want you to know, but I cannot belch it out at you in the same way. You must read it.

Consider: "I am an old scholar, better-looking now than when I was young. That's what sitting on your ass does to your face."

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