A turn of the key in the ignition, and his driveway
diminished within the rearview mirror.
Likewise his house, a set of windows growing smaller as he drove his car
away from there in the early morning. So
much for all that. He couldn’t bear to
think of the complications. His father
long dead, and his wife with no relations to speak of. An island unto themselves. So much for all that. And if it was so much for all that, what was
to come after?
But he
knew the answer. The answer was in a
book somewhere, on the other side of study.
The answer was in the world, and in the world the key to its own
unmaking. Yes, there had to be something
to that. There had to be some reality
behind the myth.
Driving,
and somewhere along the road his feet left the ground. He was on an airplane, looking down on
Seattle for perhaps the last time. He
might have seen his house if he had only looked closely enough. He might have seen himself in the details of
that city, if he had had eyes for geography, and not for the history that he
saw behind it all. Generations of men
and women, laboring under the weight of their own deceptions and
self-deceptions. Indians, whites,
blacks, and yellows. Nations within
nations to be divided and conquered by time.
He woke
up from a nap and found himself in Canada, sitting in a library. There were shelves of books and aboriginal
carvings, the mixture of English and French that hinted at his location. In the muddle of his exhaustion he could see
the shining expanse of the Great Lakes where frontiersmen had intrigued and
died over wood-hewn outposts, and farther off the Rockies, and beyond that
Seattle persisted, and he knew that his house waited there, empty. He turned again to one of his books. He resumed the search.
Up and
over clouds beyond the Atlantic. He was
in the sight of Big Ben, speaking to an archaeologist over cups of coffee. Londoners squinted at the rain. Everything was overpriced, and drearily
antiquated. The archaeologist told him
to visit a place in Turkey. The
archaeologist resembled his wife’s lover, handsome yet fighting a losing battle
against obsolescence… or was it self-pity?
He only
knew that something fearsome boiled inside of him. He only knew that he had to keep moving, that
he had to find his book. To stay in
motion was the critical thing. When he
stood or sat too still he felt the weight of grief. When he sat or stood still too long he began
to feel angry and betrayed. Oh his
daughters. His beautiful daughters. Even if they hadn’t been his.
Seattle
on the horizon, and within Seattle a house that mocked him, and not far from
the house on the hill overlooking a lake sat the library. He hadn’t yet left the library. It was possible that the library wouldn’t
allow him to leave. He could see what he
had left behind, even though he was somewhere in Asia Minor, trapped inside a
cab with another man who smelled of cigarettes and Turkish food.
Out in
the desert where tour buses passed along a dusty road. But he was at another site, yet
unvisited. He was peering into a cave at
a statue, and the statue had eyes that studied him from a time before
Christ. The young bull perhaps. Her consort.
Her lover. Her beloved.
Her
song of songs.
Stepping
out of a hotel in Hanoi with the typhoon in full sway. The man in the lobby thought he was another
bloated foreigner looking for boys or girls or drugs or all three. His dollars converted into a stack of
parti-colored currency, a brick of indefinite denomination. And in a nearby lane, next to an old woman
who sold noodles from a pot, he talked to a frail skeletal man about a set of
Roman coins, and where these coins might have come from.
He took
a bus into China and drank water from a plastic bottle. He learned the rudiments of Cantonese from
another passenger. Someone spoke of the
Silk Road, and a few days later he was in Beijing, at yet another university,
pouring over pictographs and trying to remember the reigns of various
emperors. Another man in the library
attempted to compliment him on his Chinese.
He did not respond to the compliment.
In
Bangladesh he saw a foreign tourist, a white woman with golden hair. No, not her.
Also not her. Another. He visited a mosque that stood on the remains
of a much older temple, and he realized something. He uncovered an important clue.
The
train through the Carpathians, but not in search of vampires. He got off in a small town where he drank
beer and soup, and then he walked straight out into the woods beyond the town,
not to be seen again for several days.
The locals marveled at his lack of regard for personal safety. They asked each other how he could have
passed his time in those mountains, with winter coming on and no supplies.
A
larger library. A book written in
German. Argentine Spanish spoken from an
intercom beyond the confines of the stacks.
He hadn’t shaved in months and other patrons found his gaze
upsetting. Who was that crazed man? What was his purpose?
And
then, for many weeks, a time that passed beyond the bounds of weeks, wherein
days became centuries and seconds failed to account for all the minutes he had
spent reading, and searching, and wondering.
The airports blurred together.
The taxis assumed the same monotonous overtones. The train stations might have been one single
train station, anchored to a question that followed him wherever he went.
The
book? Where was the book?
Almost
all at once he found it. He released it
from its hiding place, and he began to read it.
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