Read Mortals Online

Authors: Norman Rush

Mortals (51 page)

“That isn’t it.”

“Right,” he said. He began a random sequence of pressures, assuming that he would strike the spot at some point. The sole of the foot is not Asia, he thought. Maybe this would help.

“I don’t think we loved our siblings enough,” she said.

“Oh right. That’s inane, Iris.”

“No I’m serious.”

“You mean we should have stayed in America and loved them, just loved them a lot, and none of this would have happened?”

“All I know is that my sister is lost.”

“A lost cause.”

She sighed in a conclusive way and he was encouraged to think she had come to the end of the topic, for now.

She sat up sharply. “Oh boy,” she said.

“What?”

“You can stop now.”

He released her feet and began grinding his hands dry in a bath towel. She went off toward the bathroom, thanking him over her shoulder, in advance.


They had eaten. She had liked the collation he’d gotten up, especially the crab salad. They were at the kitchen table. Three candles provided their light, their only light. They were sipping chilled fresh guava juice. They were closer. Tonight he would give her a
wrenching
orgasm, if at all possible.

“We have to discuss your brother,” she said, not eagerly.

“How is he?”

“It’s hard to tell on the phone. We spoke a lot. He’s like you. It’s hard to tell how he is. We spoke a lot about the book and the arrangements and whether he could, well, impose on you to read it.”

“Well and how’s his roommate?”

“I’ll come to that in a minute.”

“Come to it.”

“I shall. I have to say, though …”

“What?”

“Don’t be … your usual way on this.”

“My brother has never been anything to me but a source of pain and embarrassment, to start with a given.”

“Okay, so you’re hostile. But I learned something talking to him you never bothered to mention. Our name isn’t really Finch, or yours isn’t, so mine isn’t.”

“What are you talking about?” he asked, spacing his words for emphasis.

“Well, in passing it came out, when we were talking, that your family changed its name from Fisch, F-i-s-c-h, to Finch, which is fine, if they wanted to do it, but it does raise the question of why you never mentioned it.”

“It just never arose. It’s ancient history.
Look
. Look, it was during the First World War, for God’s sake, and there was a lot of feeling against Germans, so my grandfather decided to change the family name.”

“Germans?”

“Yes of course.”

“Well I thought Fisch was a Jewish name.”

“No it was because we were
German
, Iris. And then when the Lindbergh baby was kidnapped there was a Fisch involved in that, so my grandfather had to consider it a doubly good idea.”

“Your brother obviously thinks it’s a Jewish name. He says you’re Jewish, or half or some part.”

“Well, a perfect example of my brother’s nonsense. Look, and may I
add that by the time Hitler came along, they were very glad to be Finch, I would guess, with what Hitler did for being German.”

“You’re saying the family was never Jewish?”

“Never, so far as I know. Fisch is a common German name. It can be Jewish, of course. But we weren’t. The family is from Stuttgart.”

“Your brother is so convinced.”

“My mother has whatever papers there are, if you want, you can follow it up. But Rex says things just for effect, you know, Iris.”

“It would be interesting if you were Jewish, Rex.”

“Look, if it’s interesting to you, then get in touch with my mother. If there are any papers, she has them, so get in touch with
her
. Take up genealogy. You might enjoy it.”

He said, “I’m sorry. I am not testy about this, in fact. I’m just not interested in it. If you want to pursue it, fine with me.”

“You
are
testy, so forget it.”

“No I’m not. It’s just that life, now with the assistance of my dear brother, is presenting me with more tasks than I can currently shake a stick at. This is Rex getting attention, Iris. You know the line ‘Family I hate you’?”

“Yes, Ezra Pound.”

“You mean I’ve quoted it to you before?”

“Yes, and we discussed it. I don’t admire Ezra Pound. And I don’t admire the sentiment. I know things about your brother that are pitiful.”

“I have a feeling you’re going to share, as they say.”

She looked pityingly at him, and said, “I intend to. There are certain things you have to do …”

A sudden impulse to break secrecy startled him. He fiercely wanted to tell her something he had learned about Boyle that he shouldn’t tell her. Probably it was to get sympathy. There were heavy movements going on behind the scenery. There was some very unusual conferencing taking place. Things were abnormal, or getting to be. The agency was going to do something instead of sitting there collecting data forever. He could tell. He didn’t like it. He was about to break secrecy, in a minor way only, really. He wanted to.

He said, “I want to tell you something funny about Boyle, Iris.” She looked amazed. They were both so practiced at circumlocution when it came to his work with the agency that what he was saying felt major to her, obviously.

He went ahead. I am not thinking, he thought.

“This is Boyle for you.

“There are certain times when the chief of station may have to call all his actors together into one conference, to get at something, to fix something, to stop something from happening that it’s urgent to stop.

“These are called action inquests or operation inquests, if they’re taking place after the fact, or called just, well, plenaries, if they’re for preemptive emergencies.” There was no need for him to offer technical terms. But he felt like it.

“By his actors, I mean the whole range of operatives, from contract agents like me to staff members, officers, to various special short-term contract parties, informants, occasionally. Now of course the key thing, a key thing, is to preserve internal ignorance about who is working for the agency. The actors are supposed to know who their boss is, no more than that.

“Now in a very large station there are sophisticated ways of planning things and maintaining general anonymity, using high tech. You can convene and deliberate and get what you want and nobody finds out who the next guy is. But in smaller stations, it’s a lot more difficult. As you can imagine.

“So Boyle had a situation come up in Central America. Namely Guatemala. He was new in the post. The technology was out of commission for some reason. And this need arose. So Boyle improvised. He found a venue and called a plenary and got his thirty or forty actors in one room, with every one of them wearing a paper bag over his or her head, with eyeholes and mouth holes cut into them, and Boyle presiding and shouting out to them to press the mouth holes tight across their faces so that words were not muffled up in these bags. And there were numbers on the foreheads of the bags, so he could keep track of who was contributing.”

Ray was laughing. So was Iris.

“That is hilarious! And Ray, thank you for telling me! And I mean that. And it shows me something I didn’t know about the business you’re in. It was interesting!”

She had a grateful look, soft, he thought.

“This goes no further, of course.”

She nodded, offering a friendly, comic-mournful expression he realized he craved from her. That was better.

She took his hands across the table. “Your brother’s book, Ray.”

“I’m listening.”

“First, he’s been working on this for years. It’s huge. I’m going to do my best to describe it. The title for the whole thing is either
Strange News
or
Bright Cities Darken
 …”

“Clarae urbes
. He stole that from Horace.”

“What?”

“The phrase. Also
Strange News
is Elizabethan. Yes, it’s Thomas Nashe. The title has been used.”

“Please don’t just pour out scorn and objections before I even get two words out on this subject. Please. You don’t know how important this is.”

She went on. “It’s in four sections, Sentences, Paragraphs, Incidents, Plots, and each section contains a thousand items, that is, a thousand sentences, a thousand …”

“I get it.”

“And each item or exemplar, as he calls them, is on a separate page, so you can tell how many reams of paper you were hauling around.”

“No wonder my knee hurts. That’s a joke. May I ask a question?”

“Sure.”

“A
sentence
on a single page, a paragraph …? Can you explain what that’s about?”

“Well, as I understand it, it’s so you absorb, in a complete way, the particular item on the page, really take it in. He described the book in various ways, but mostly he described it as an anatomy. And he was explicit that I should tell you that it was
not
, was
not
just
faits divers
, you would know what that means. I can tell you what he told me it means …”

“I know what it means.”

“Every individual element is numbered, but the numbers don’t mean anything. What I understood him to say was that they were just numbers. He also described the book as a machine and also as a game, or was it that there’s a game buried in it? Can’t remember.”

“It’s a machine to destroy my spare time, what little I have. Machine is right.”

“It’s so hard to remember everything he said. Oh, one was that you shouldn’t start reading this with the idea that it’s some kind of Commonplace Book. It isn’t. Nothing is from other books. It’s all real, from letters, overheard items, his observations, stupid things said in the media. There are very few names. There are initials, mostly, where they’re needed. He said you would recognize some of the people and incidents. Don’t groan like that. Some of the items are from his childhood. He said he’s been working on it all his life, but not knowing it until he got into his twenties.

“Sigh all you want. This is important. I’m even leaving things out.”

Her eyes were moist. He needed to control his feelings about Rex. Questions like who in hell Rex expected to be readers for such a piece of massive self-indulgence could wait.

“Give me a second to think, Ray. Oh, another way he put it. This book
is about literary significance, that’s the subject, was the way he put it. He even thought of calling it Significance. Now this is me speaking, but what I gathered is that he thinks if you read through this you’ll find here, scattered around, what narrative literature does in an extensive way, but in very emblematic or condensed form …”

“Ah, so you would never need to read another novel again, something like that? Because if you did you’d see … well … after Rex it would all be déjà vu. Is that what he meant, would you say?”

“Ray …”

“He is putting an end to literature, rendering it nugatory, shall we say. No small thing to do. It must be something like this. The most original novel or story that ever was or will be is in
fact
a mixture of tropes and images and connectives and trajectories that my brother has captured and pinned down in his book for your pleasure! A wonder, in short.”

“Well, Ray, you’ll have to decide if that’s a fair summary. It’s certainly a hostile one.”

“And have you read his book?”

“God no. I’ve read very little, just here and there.”

“And how do you like it?”

“Some of it is hilarious, I think. Some of it is just more or less mysterious, but you get glimmerings of … something. Some is brilliant, though, which is the case whether your anticipatory sarcasm is justified or not. A lot I just didn’t have time to really get, to concentrate on. But I’m not the one to judge, you are, I can’t judge it as a whole.”

“So this is just about stories, narrative literature. Not poetry.”

“Correct. Oh no. Poetry, I have to tell you this, he is very dismissive about. He claims he doesn’t care about it. He thinks it’s
lesser
. I tried to remember his exact words because I was pretty sure you were going to ask me. Here’s how he put it. Poetry is about the poet … in a way that stories are not about the storyteller. Structurally narcissistic, he called poetry. He isn’t out to vivisect poetry, so you can relax.”

“You have no idea how abysmal his notion of poetry is, how sophomoric.” He wanted that sentiment to reach me, Ray thought.

Then he said, “He is … I was going to say an idiot. For example, does he think
Paradise Lost
is about Milton the man? But pardon me if I point out that this is classic Rex. He hands me a literary task and what? demeans my specialty. Incredible. My life is incredible.”

“No, Ray, it’s my fault. You know how I am. This is awful. I was groping around with him trying to get a clear grasp on what I was supposed to convey to you about what this was. And he wasn’t always clear. Which is
another thing, oh God, another thing … So I was the one who brought up poetry. This was not something he was volunteering for you to be sure you knew. I am trying to do everybody justice. I was the one who said does this have anything to do with poetry. I got it
out
of him. It is
important
that you believe me about this, Ray.”

“You know that I haven’t spoken to him for years, Iris. He knows that. We are not reconciled in any way.”

“You have to be, though. I’ll explain it.”

“I’m perfectly happy this way.”

“You won’t be. You’ll see. So. I’m not competent to tell you more about how the different ingredients, I guess you would call them, elements, relate, in the book. I think in the Sentences, he takes care of metaphor, as I recall, maybe similes, maybe aphorisms. Also you have your choice of how you want to read this collection. You can go randomly, like reading the
I Ching
, if you want …”

“Like a pillow book. Like the hugest most monumental pillow book ever.”

“I think I’ve told you everything I can, Ray.”

“And I am expected to do what, once I read this thing? Use my contacts in this hub of international publishing, Gaborone? I have nothing to offer in that department, I hope he knows. I have no connections in publishing. I never had any. There’s no one I could recommend this to who has. That is the fact. If he imagines I have literary friends in power, he is mistaken.”

Other books

The Treason of Isengard by J. R. R. Tolkien
The Darkening by Robin T. Popp
Missing Hart by Ella Fox
Tempting Evil by Keri Arthur
Antología de Charles Bukowski by Charles Bukowski
Sister Wife by Shelley Hrdlitschka
Wicked Pleasures by Lora Leigh
Under the Udala Trees by Chinelo Okparanta