Tales and Imaginings (12 page)

Read Tales and Imaginings Online

Authors: Tim Robinson

‘But we took no thought! If I had done it by taking thought, by taking a terrified walk on the waters of consciousness

‘… each step supported on the upturned sole of your
reflection’s
foot, as if we were tempting each other further and further out from shore, on waters so still as to give a perfect image

‘… so still neither of us knows if what we see below is endless depths of clarity or a reflected emptiness

‘What a vertiginous conception! But as you were going to say, we are both for instance left-handed; neither of us is the product of reflection. No, in fact nothing is imaged in tranquillity; rather the waters are thrown into restlessness and confusion by an
inexplicable
event. I am not “facing myself”, I am facing an impossibility – I would say “my impossibility”, if I could attach any sense to the phrase.’

‘If you could attach a sense to the phrase you would be halfway
to explaining this episode (but why do we assume it’s only an episode?); you want to reduce it to an allegory, to situate it – that is,
me – in some literary or philosophical dimension, and so lose me. I insist: I am not an image; I belong in the same space as
yourself
. Which is where we have to face the impossible.’

‘One way of facing it is by assuming it’s an episode. We dare not doubt that.’

‘No, the alternative is a relationship inconceivably closer than any marriage, one that could be ended only by murder or suicide. There’s no divorce of self from self on the grounds of mutual
weariness
, even if
it mounts to loathing over the years. Could I ever keep a secret from you? Could I ever surprise you, I wonder?’

‘It’s my deepest faith in myself that I can and will again surprise myself. If you killed that, I should kill you. And I can’t face that death.’

‘No, not that death.’

‘But if my inseparable companion were to double my
solitariness
…’

‘And if you were perpetually there, not just “interrupting” but with your question, whatever it is, dinning out all other concerns

‘Weariness; you used the word.’

‘So quickly our moment of intoxication fades!’

‘Yes. Yes, I want you not to be. I want you not to be, now. And you could as well not be – is that your question, in truth?’

‘The improbabilities we have no choice but to make ourselves out of? It seems they came up twice rather than once, rather than never at all. Or is it that, since we believe the Universe keeps no accounts, if subtraction had happened today instead of addition, no mistake would have been made? No, I don’t come with a question. And it would be delusion, even a comfort, for me to think that you came with a question, however deep and troubling. What can I say? You came, and I can make nothing of it.’

‘Life’s revenge, perhaps.’

‘And now, if not self-delusion, we would welcome a sleep from such awareness.’

‘Well, we have only to close our eyes. At least we hope that’s so. As usual we put our trust in the omnipotence of thoughtlessness!’

‘We fall back on the pillows of the “as usual”. But should we expect to be called out of sleep again some day?’

‘To call out of our sleep, maybe. We can’t ask such questions any more, I think; we are in waiting upon the event. So, are you ready?’

‘Strange that we haven’t actually touched each other. The thought doesn’t even cross our minds until the moment of
leave-taking
, as if the impossibility of it were self-evident.’

‘To touch each other! Mutual annihilation, if we are self and anti-self; total destruction of our world. But look, I can reach out my hand like this, you can reach out yours towards mine

‘No nearer!’

‘You feel it? The tension, the turbulent field of force plucking at your hand?’

‘Hatred would be less frightening, even love. But this totally unfamiliar storm in the fingertips, I can’t even name it. My hand’s trembling.’

‘Another little movement, a couple of inches, and we would touch. Flashpoint! A sensation, maybe beyond pain or pleasure. But we won’t, not this time, at least. We draw back, each into himself.’

‘Leaving something unconsummated, so it feels to me. But
leaving
ourselves unconsumed, at any rate!’

‘Two doubting Thomases, unconsumed by doubt. So, now we will close our eyes. I don’t know if there will be that hunting and that falling again?’

‘From second to second we abandon ourselves to the tides of the impossible. This coming second is no different. So close your eyes.’

‘You never bought me that drink.’

You laugh.

Close your eyes.

You are alone.

I.
A
Spy
among
the
Living

A cardboard oblong:

AT TEN TONIGHT

YOU WILL BE WELCOME

and an address. The house is
so dark and silent I tilt the card towards the streetlight to verify the number. Sodium-flecked laurel bushes, two pillars shedding scales of plaster, a big doorknob of dull brass. The little metal box by the bellpush echoes my name in a whisper, the latch is
released, and I push the door open into a
hallway
without a lightbulb. An unspecific greeting falls from the vaguely lit heights of a tall square stairwell.

Upstairs I find people who pretend to know me; they take my coat and hand me a glass. Their gestures hint at ritual. I sense the relaxed awareness of a moment of transition: a gathering about to call itself to order, a meeting evolving into a party. Was something decided before I came? Will something be announced after I leave? But the moment is
indefinitely prolonged; it spreads and hangs in the warm smoky air.

At opposite ends of a room full of listeners to a quiet music
some indefinable congruence reveals as a couple the two whose home this is. The sense of the occasion is gently sustained and
patterned
between their two presences, like the colours between the closed wings of a butterfly, but of themselves and their relationship nothing authorizes description.

I move to the place I choose in the array, the top step of a
spiral
staircase in a corner. The room above is a glass polyhedron touched on one face by small triangular leaves drawn out of the darkness by its lights. Overhead, the illuminated half of a poplar spire, black sky, restless stars; below me, a cryptic geometry of
relationships
, and the music ever recurring to its own riddles.

Later, late arrivals, laughter, reconstellations, conversations. I rove and listen. Faceless pronouns:

‘They, I and it …’

‘… or this other, us …’

‘I, someone …’ and anonymous phrases:

‘The perfect crime!’

‘Swallowed your tongue?’

‘… sorts and conditions

 

Out of the flux I catch two voices composing a narrative:

‘… herded into a room.’

‘Muddy, hungry after the battle, I imagine. How did they treat you, the enemy?’

‘As you shall hear. Nothing for a long time; then they told us someone was coming.’

‘So you borrowed a comb from the guards

‘… and shuffled ourselves into some sort of a line.’

‘Why?’

‘We had to ask ourselves that before long! But the officer’s role was well played, whether or not it was adopted in response to our stance.’

‘Up the rank before your faces, down it behind your backs, I suppose, the way they do. Not impressed of course: muddy, hungry, defeated — was any one of you singled out?’

‘No individual reprimands. A collective condemnation,
delivered
out of deep thought, standing in the doorway about to leave. The guards translated the verdict for us later: that we were in the wrong order; that if we were not in the right order for the next day’s visitation we would be shot.’

‘And you were left: locked in with the puzzle for the night!
Endless
possibilities! Did you opt for chance?’

‘Unattractive odds! No, we began to debate: rank, height, age, muscle, nerve, brain …’

‘The obvious, the conventional, the satirical, the whimsical, the profound, the ludicrous …’

‘We bewildered ourselves among the criteria of criteria. It was a long night.’

‘And in the chill of dawn?’

‘… reached a position of some dignity. We would decline to present ourselves in any order. We would present ourselves in the greatest disorder the confines of the room would allow.’

‘Very fine, very fine! Applause

 

I turn to trace another dialogue at right angles to the first:

‘… dental or mental, for some reason opened my mouth wider than usual before the mirror, and saw them on the back of my tongue! Marks!’

‘Like writing?’

‘Like writing, said someone I showed them to at a party.’

‘I was there! It was me!’

‘It was you! You were there! Like the beginning of a word,
continued
out of sight down my throat!’

‘We peered and speculated; we could make nothing of it.’

‘A word of wisdom, obviously, something unutterable.’

‘Your secret name perhaps, but we couldn’t even decipher your secret initial.’

‘What liberties you all took, with your flippant gnoses!’

‘How we all hung on your lips that night!’

 

The tale is whirled away in laughter, exposing a quieter exchange:

‘… the murder, and I was called in.’

‘Who but you, the crack cracker of the crux!’

‘I, so wise after so many events – so many that all I recall of the circumstances of this is the classical closure of its setting.’

‘The snow-bound country house, the aeroplane midway in an Atlantic crossing?’

‘A sealed universe of some sort. A finite number of suspects, all available for questioning.’

‘The one not available for questioning, then, not a suspect?’

‘The corpse dead, the deed murder; no doubt about it, though I forget the facts that exclude the doubt.’

‘Just the situation you relish, then. I foresee it all; lines of
reasoning
converge on the culprit, inexorably, as the voices of a fugue converge on silence. Tell me the story.’

‘If only I could! Such inescapable evidences, prompting such acrobatic intuitions, confirmed by such rigorous deductions – I would love to display them!’

‘Oh, any competent hack could provide. But you remember their logical form?’

‘The successive elimination of possibilities. One by one the
suspects
cleared, until only one remains.’

‘No direct evidence against that one?’

‘Nothing but this sum of negatives, leaving one positive. Of course before clapping on the handcuffs I checked my case
scrupulously
. And something strange came to light.’

‘A flawed link in your chain of zeros?’

‘No, rather a further proof of the power of my method. An intricate recombination of the facts that exonerated the others proved the innocence of the remaining one.’

‘Leaving none!’

‘Leaving none. It was one of those beautiful mathematical
situations
– the Bridges of Königsburg, the Quintic Equation – in which one can demonstrate, not the solution, but the insolubility of the problem.’

 

The traitor is driven to his deed by suspicion of himself. Excluded from the sense of these reminiscences I turn inwards, and begin to compose my report:

Out
of
our
several
solitudes
we
each
bring
a
bee,
hoping
for
a
swarm.
Or
a
twig,
and
build
a
little
cage;
will
the
fire
break
out
of
it?
We
each
bring
a
feather
to
this
feather
duster,
pretend
it’s
a
bird,
a
flock
of
birds
that
dusts
the
sky.
What
do
we
take
home?
Dust,
crooked
scratches,
stings.
What
poisons
we
exchange,
sucking
these
wounds!
And
yet
we
grope
along
these
maps
inscribed
on
our
flesh
to
further
meetings,
and
meeting
soon
becomes
mutual
intoxica
tion
.
Is
this
us,
aloft
on
a
wing
that
shades
the
city?
Such
honey
in
our
kisses!
The
fire
in
such
good
heart!
We
melt
together
and
are
gently
baked
into
a
cake
that
savours
its
own
fragrance.
If
any
should
leave
us
now,
our
forgetting
of
them
would
be
the
seal
upon
our
secrecy,
the
little
plate
swivelled
across
the
keyhole.
So
how
could
we
ever
be
betrayed?
We
lay
aside
our
cryptonyms
and
deal
out
identities
like
cards
on
parting.
Next
day
the
little
pasteboard
blanks
lie
on
our
desks
like
diagrams
of
oblivion:
it
is
delicious
ritual
to
cup
them
in
our
hands
and
evoke
pale
lettering
with
our
warm
breath.
Now
our
friend
ships
triangulate
the
city;
at
last
we
know
where
we
are.
As
to
who
we
are,
what
cannot
be
shared
must
be
cut
out!
Only
joint
guilt
can
bind
us
together,
and
the
total
of
our
self-suppressions
will
constitute
the
necessary
murder.

But
how
these
wounds
smart
when
we
are
not
in
each
other’s
soothing
hands!
Who
will
revenge
the
piecemeal
crime?
Each
is
tensed
to
betray;
a
momentary
fear
of
being
overlooked
is
enough
to
snap
a
link.
Then
the
net
begins
to
rot.
Looks
of
indifference
are
intercepted,
forged
confidences
detected,
scattered
limbs
disinterred.
Our
order
unravels,
the
sociable
triangles
lose
their
shape,
a
ragged
perimeter
recedes
from
each
of
us
into
a
blurred
horizon.
Each
is
soon
alone
again,
in
the
cell,
facing
the
question.

A change in the atmosphere recalls my attention. Our hosts seem abstracted; one is blindly turning the pages of a book with little flicks of sound as regular as a clock’s tick, the other has stroked rough a patch of the carpet and scans it as if it were a printed page. Between their two absences the gathering wavers and lapses. An anecdote is briefly wound up as we look for our coats:

‘Leaving the two outsiders: you and the body!’

‘Neither any longer merely the notional prerequisite for a case. Strange how the search for its cause shrouds a fact. The others dismissed, we were for the first time face to face.’

 

Laughter stifles another tale on the stairs:

‘What licence for diagnosis and prognosis too!’

‘Oh, cancerous prophecies! Nothing would do but excision, dumbness, death!’

 

… and, groping along the dark hall:

‘We waited all day, but nobody came. Merely, word was sent, towards evening, that we were all to be shot.’

 

I walk down the street with others, part from them as soon as I can and circle back to station myself in a dark drive opposite the house. I see the last two guests ushered out by a figure indistinct in the hallway. They go off with their arms about each other, exclaiming at the cold. They pause to laugh at each other’s faces yellowed by
the streetlamp. They kiss. I hear their laughter again after they have turned the corner. The street is
deserted. I note the distribution of lights in the house: ground floor quite black, bright slits between curtains in two first-floor windows, a muted glow in the gable above. The glass dome is hidden by the pitched roof, but I can make out the vague tower of light caught up from it by the poplar tree.

Frost. My own spectre hangs before my lips.

The lights change in no way throughout the night. At dawn a lorry shatters the silence. I break away, and run through numb streets to the bus-stop.

II.
The
University
of
the
Woods

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