Read A Fold in the Tent of the Sky Online
Authors: Michael Hale
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clear, cool, water
Peter asked Anita to join him in the lounge and he took the chitchat in the direction of dowsing and Washington State, Seattle, and finally Gordon Quarendon.
“Gordon? Don't know a Gordon. Who's that?” Her face was a blank page that had been crumpled up and unfolded.
“He's a dowser. He was . . .
here
for a while. He showed up about the same time you and Ron did.”
“Jesus, Ron.” She brought her hand to her mouthâas if saying his name were a special occasion, something to be held back, rationed like water in the desert. “I can'tâ” She
shook her head, trying to rattle out the right words. “I have
memories
of remembering himâdoes that make any sense? Ron, that is.” Anita's hand was near her mouth again. “But the authentic part of it's fading real fast. I can't tell them apart anymoreâthe clean ones from theâthe
muddy
ones. Maybe that's why I can't remember this other one, Gordon.”
The TV was on, of course: a car race of some sortâ
low-slung,
fat-tired, logo-speckled machines chasing round and around. Commentators yelling over the revved engines now. Peter wondered why people put up with itâTVs in public places left on like indulged children. Unwatched, undisciplined. He got up and shut the thing off. “I still haven't talked to Larry yet.”
“Larry won't remember anything. Poor Larry shouldn't even
be
here; he should be in a detox center somewhere.
They
know it too, but he's too valuable drunk. Not completely zonkedâbut, you know, sort of on maintenance.” There was a splash from the pool and they both turned to see Simon swim over to the ladder and climb out. He stood there at the edge of the pool for a second, shaking the water from his extended fingers, an absent tick like the sporadically galvanized muscles of a horse driving away a fly. “Blenheim's good at turning a blind eye. In fact, I've seen him actually offer him a drink, just to keep him slightly buzzed; Larry really produces when he's riding the hair of the dog, if you know what I meanâthat's what Susan told me anyway.”
“So this Quarendon, the dowserânothing rings a bell, huh?”
“I wish I could help you, Peter. I'm drawing a blank. Sorry. I
might
have met himâdid he go home or something? I can't believe anyone
wouldn't
like it here unless, you know, him
being from Seattle.” She huffed a smile and got up out of the chair, suddenly wanting to be out of the smoke-free room. “Maybe the sun got a bit too much for him.”
Simon Hayward was on the diving board again, posed, motionless at the end of it; his right hand was out in front of him, palm down, the way one would test the heat rising from a barbecue grill. His hand came up and he did something Peter couldn't seeâup to his chest for an instant. It was like a kiss, it seemed to Peter; the touch a ritual gesture of some kind. Simon stood there a while longer, then quickly climbed down from the board as if he'd heard someone call his name.
Simon was posing himself two questionsâin the last instant before touching the water.
Number (1): Is this my first dive (into water) since 1986âsince my
BONK-ON-THE-HEAD-ENDS-DIVER'S-CAREER
day? And Number (2): What am I going to do about Peter fucking Abbott?
One of the questions, at least, was being answered. He saw it as a breakthrough because the fear of the dive itself had been transformed into the posed question, which in turn distracted him from the invisible barrier he had constructed for himself. As the tips of his fingers broke through the surface, the transition from air to water was like the passing of a second, or a second hand on a watch marching one tick clockwiseâthe wisdom of clocks. He was struck once more by the ineffable mystery of itâtime passing. Time itself a container that held nothing, the nothing it held boundless. Like the Gnostic nostrum about God being an intelligible sphere whose center is everywhere and circumference nowhere, or infinite. Both.
He climbed out of the pool, cool and warm at once as the
sun and breeze hit him; he dripped his way to the diving board again, thinking,
One more.
A memory of being here before, walking this small journey with the sunlight through the palms precisely at this angle.
Did I actually do this before? Am I remembering it from the day Gordon showed me the dowsing trick? Or am I imagining it? Did I go swimming on that version of the day? Or the other version of itâthe one without him?
His memory was everything, he had to remember that. And every time he changed something in the past it only added to, rather than reduced, his store of memories. Eliminating someone or changing something only congested the traffic of his thoughts. Fucking rush hour all day long nowâin his head, memories battling memories; events laminated to parallel events.
Another diveâgo on, do it again, just to be sure.
Like checking the door of his room again, the stove, touching the elements, just to be sure they were off, heading for the door but circling back to check againâabsently. Touching his medal now, to prove something, to disprove the change of things, the shifting.
My rod and my staff shall comfort me . . .
He had found what he had been looking for in Jane's office, Jane's drawers: the dates, and times, and placesâfor all the other psychics but one. This was the question that had led him to the poolâthe new blockage he was playing off against an old one.
Peter fucking Abbott had been adopted. The birth date in his file was approximate: right there next to itâ“(approx.).” The place, even less precise, had been surmised,
conjectured
âhis real father and mother had been like gypsies: no fixed address. The top of his hit listâhe would have
to slide him down a few notches. He would be bumped from the next flight, at least.
This was the problem that posed the second questionâwhat the fuck was he going to do now? Where was he going to get the coordinates? He'd tried the drifting Zen approach into the past but he'd slammed into a brick wall, a tornado of turbulenceâlike what had happened with Gordon Quarendon. He'd come out of his casual glide through the ether with a brain-wringing headache and a palsied tremor in his left hand. It was as if he'd done a belly flop from the ten-meter tower. A quart of water and over-the-counter painkillers had taken the edge off itâthe headache at least. The shakes had lasted another hour.
Never again,
he told himself.
Not without a compass.
Maybe he was creating the turbulence, causing something like the greenhouse effectâtoo many changes to the ethereal climate. Or he was chopping at the branches of his own family tree. Shit, he couldn't see himself related to this guy,
Abbott
âa common second cousin twice removed or some such shitâthe inverted family tree. The root system connecting everyone. It had been like diving into a tidal wave. No. It had to do with coordinates. Spotting againâorienting himself, so he could make a clean, vertical plunge into the past.
So here he was at the end of a real diving board letting his muscle memory refresh itselfâlike riding a bicycle, or so the cliché went. Checking for permanent brain damage. Something of a joke reallyâsince he'd never learned to ride a bicycle. A gap in his education, a hole in his childhood. After his famous bout of convulsions his mother had come to believe that anything could trigger a relapse, that her little Simon was
vulnerable to every possible calamityâthe loss of training wheels part of an absolute equation for disaster.
An embarrassment later on of course, what with the Vancouver bike thing, like a religion to someâall his friends into mountain bikes there for a while, and all the bike shit that went with itâthe spandex, the water bottles, the helmetsâevery weekend the ritual trek up Seymour or out to Whistler. He'd slipped by that one feigning poverty, a twisted ankle, whatever.
He climbed up onto the board and walked out to the edge, out over the breeze-dappled waterâlittle pseudo suns glinting off each peak, cyanosis blue. The heat of the real one was a thermal push on the top of his head. He held his hand out like a metal detector feeling his way through the puzzle of
memories
ârefreshing them. Muscle memory. Testing. Touching St. Christopher: every journey begins with a step, a leap.
He suddenly realized the second question had been answered; but in some arcane dynamic of anxiety conservation, the wall between him and the water had returned. Touch the medal. Again. Againâhe still couldn't bring himself to jump. Once was enough. For now.
Maps. Gordon's trick with the maps: the inkling of an insight. Space maps and Time maps. The solution calling out to him from his own fucking amazing brain, hanging with the ends of his toes on the edge of the diving board.
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here's one for the history books
(click)
Bill McEwan wasn't good at this, he never had been: carving the bird. Slicing meat was something he had always found to be too fussy a jobâbeing left-handed, never quite sure which hand should hold the carving knifeâand with an audience it was even worse. The word “carve” threw him off too; it being a word used in his own profession, carpentry. Wood was something he understoodâthe limits of it, the give-and-take, the moods it got into sometimes, how it changed with the weatherâdifferent kinds of wood each with a personality of its own. Basswood with its generosity of texture, oak like an
old bartender he once knew: hard but predictable. Handling poultry, red meatâany kind of food reallyâwas like dealing with a miserable child.
For this special occasion his mother had decided on a chicken; she'd driven all the way out to the country for it, to her cousin's place out near Lockport. “Right off the farm,” she said. “Farm-fresh. Hand-plucked.” White hairs like a two-day-old beard still showing on the goose-bumped wings.
As he stood up and removed his jacket his mother and the woman he was convinced one day would be his wife stopped speaking; they turned their eyes on him with an expectancy he sensed was being hoisted, rather than allowed to rise of its own free will.
His mother saw him now as his long-dead father, “Stepping into his shoes” was how she put it. She would open her eyes wide with inspiration and say it as if she were the mint and was coining the phrase then and there. This never made sense to Billy; he would never be allowed to step into his father's shoes. The shoes were right where he'd left them the night he diedâin the front closet along with his overcoat.
On special occasions like this one, his mother insisted on setting a place for his father at the table, even now with Laura hereâthis occasion he wanted to be less than special, a dinner as ordinary as any other, at least as ordinary as a meal in someone else's house. As they came to the table Bill had explained that no one else was really coming to dinner; but his mother stepped over his words saying, “Of course he is! He's always with us, Billy. I believe that, don't you, Laura? Do you have any deceased loved ones? They're here with us now tooâI believe that! Standing right there watching us have this wonderful bird.”
He's watching over us, Billy; he's right beside me now. I can feel him.
His mother's constant refrainâas if their lives were a movie serial, like
The Perils of Pauline
, episode after episode just for his father, day after day, cliff-hanger after cliff-hanger.
So Bill McEwan was impatient with the overcooked birdâthe flesh was like bundled string; it turned the knife into a plow. The two-tined fork felt something like a bottomless bailing bucketâa joke of a tool, one of God's practical jokes. And he ended up catching the end of his thumb as the blade slipped on the bird's rib cage. His mother was too quick with the first-aid kit and it embarrassed him as he stood there sucking on his thumb, telling his new girlfriend he did this sort of thing all the time, what with saws and chisels and the like down at the shop: “Blood and sawdust go hand in hand,” he heard himself saying as his mother appeared with the iodine and the Elastoplast.
Later, after the stringy bird and overcooked beansâthe inveterate regimen of apple pie or pumpkin pie or “a bit of both” (
à la mode
or not
Ã
la mode
)âwere all cleared away, his mother brought out the camera.
“Let's go out and get a picture before we lose the light.” She handed it to him with the same look she had used with the chicken.
Your dad would be proud of you, Billy. If God had let him live long enough to really see you here now, in your uniform going off to war. Pearl Harbor a good thing after allâpart of God's big planâfor my Billy at least. And Roosevelt of course. What am I sayingâhe knows that already, doesn't he?âhow good you look in your uniform.
The little box camera was like a brick in his handâhis dad's camera. A Kodak box camera with the little flip-up cover on the viewfinderâyou had to hold it at waist height and line up
the tiny postage-stamp miniature of what was going to be in the picture: his mother and his new girlfriend here under the maple tree, the foliage: “Never again like this, not in a dog's ageâcome on, Billy,” his mother saying as she'd pushed past him. Laura was smiling at him over her shoulder as she followed her out to the yardâin her footsteps.
Here's my mother with the mother of my children,
he said to himself.
Can it be so bad to want to think about making love to a girl with your mom right there beside her?
He backed up and his foot bumped against the bottom step of the back porch; he lost his balance and fell back. As he moved to break his fall, the camera came loose, clattering onto the concrete steps. (His father had sworn by concrete; he'd never trusted wood.) A chip of Bakelite came away from the corner, leaving a jagged hole about the size of a lima bean. He thought of the film right away, the light getting in and spoiling the roll. He covered the hole with the heel of his thumb and slowly got to his feet.
His mother and Laura stayed standing there under the tree, posed, stilled by all the commotion. A frame of difference, though: each of them with a right hand halfway to the heart now. The next instant the setting sun broke through the clouds and hit the tree with sudden, incandescent color that pushed the two women into the backgroundâlike the cellophane around a dozen roses.
“You okay, Billy?” his mother said, the breeze through the golden leaves giving her voice a childish soprano edgeâa flash in his head then, of Laura turning into his mother one day, or there already in the roughâlike a carving waiting, buried in the block of wood. He studied the details for a moment: Laura's neat little pale blue hat with the one feather,
her white gloves clutching the bag; the dress with the kind of shoulders he likedâBette Davis shoulders. His mother was standing there just like her, both of them with a right hand halfway to the mouth now.
“I'm fine. I'm fine. Hold on. Stay where y'are. Stay just like that.” He should tell her about the camera, the hole in it. But not now. He peeled the institutional flesh-tone bandage off his thumb and quickly applied it to the broken corner. “Now smile.” He looked up for a second; they were already smiling, each of them frozen in a smile. The smile we all think of as the best possible smileâthe one that will outlast us.
Later in the parlor, with the radio off and the Victrola playing now: the Andrews Sistersâone voice it seemed like; split off like white light into a rainbowâquietly singing “Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree.”
“I'm going off to war, Laura. It's not just, you know, a visit to the Adirondacks, for God's sake, I might never come back.” His mother had finally gone to bedâJack Benny over with, and then
The Chase and Sanborn Hour
, Charlie
McCarthy
saying things no real person, no polite person would ever say. Like Billy's thoughts about why he'd wanted the program over with. His hand was on Laura's knee, his little finger stretching; even through the wool of her skirt he could feel the band of her stocking inches farther along. The nub of the garter like a benchmark, a raised knot in a plank. “I love you, Laura.” He heard a peeved whine in his voice that wasn't supposed to be thereâa little boy asking for candy.
She had let him kiss her (he'd put his jacket back on, and she wondered if that had anything to do with it: the man in the uniform), a lingering kiss that had forced her back onto the collection of small dense cushions in the corner of the set
tee. Black satin with gold tassels: Niagara Falls, Coney Island, Lake Placidâothers with the names of places she had never heard of. She was aware of the lump against her back more than the kiss, but he did not know that. She was breathing nowâdeeplyâas a way of coping. She thought to herself that in the movies they never said, “Get off me, my back hurts”âKatharine Hepburn might, but only in a screwball comedy. Ginger Rogers would put up with itâfor the sake of the moment. As part of the dance. There was a phony “Sen Sen” taste to his kiss; a drugstore taste. Listerine. She'd expected something elseâsandalwood or cedar. Turpentine.
She looked down at the hand on her thigh, at the brown-stained thumb, and in the faint glow of the hall light it looked like blood, or tree sap, something vital, and for a moment she got the feeling it was too late for her; the giving of herself to him history now, a runaway car already tumbling with its axle and gas tank showing, beyond the edge of a cliff.
October 1942. Batavia, New Yorkâhalfway between Buffalo and Rochester. Where Larry had come into his ownâas a human being. Well, not quite human yetâa sperm and an egg slamming up against each other, soul mates making the beast with two backs and one tail. Big Momma Ovum like Aunt Jemima, it seemed to Simon, with a Jabba the Hut kind of attitudeâall these flailing little wiggly-tailed flunky sperm dudes peacock strutting and fighting to get into her pants. His job was to get to the dance floor and tap them all on the shoulder, cut in on them sort of, before “Stairway to Heaven” starts up: the slow song that got their hands roaming. Play chaperone at the junior prom.
The egg was monogamous at least. He'd read somewhere, or seen something on TV about how the egg, once she had given herself to the leader of the pack, the outer membrane of the cell turned into armor plateâsome chemical response turned her skin into a chastity-belt carapace. Simon kept seeing the scene from the Batman movie where the guy's nifty car did the same trick. Batman/Bruce Wayne was probably a cross-dresser, now that he thought about it. His true identity something else entirely. Gender confusion: where all the angst was really coming from. Anyway . . .
Larry's birth date was July 14, 1943, so he'd aimed for somewhere close to nine months earlier than that. With Larry, thank God, he had a relatively precise target, but there was still a fudge factor to deal with; so it had taken a few RV dives till he narrowed it down to one specific pivotal incidentâthe day before Larry's dad was heading off to defend his country . . .
There now; here now: around October 1942.
Jesus, they were at it already.
Larry's soon-to-be dad was on top of her. No. The guy's pants were still on. He was busy, though, pawing at her, trying to clear a path to the promised land.
Okay. Bingo, touch down. Corporeal Manifestation in the Past. CM in the P. In the flesh.
Simon grabbed the guy by the back of his jacket collar and pulled. He could feel the stubble of his close-cropped military-issue buzz cut on the back of his knuckles.
The woman screamed and he noticed something oddâhis own skin was glowing like footage from an infrared cameraâmultihued, solarized like sixties acid-trip film sequences, like the stuff in
2001
where “Dave” is cruising down toward Ju
piter.
Shit, it must be the light in here
, he thought; his hand all of a sudden passing through the guy's jacket collar and his grip coming to nothing as if he were holding on to Jell-O. The young woman scuttled off the couch and onto the floor like a retreating crab from a turned-over rockâaway from both of them. Panting in barking screams, as she levered herself backwards along the floor into the corner. White thighs showing above the tops of her stockings. A garter belt.
Shit. Corporeal. Sort of,
Simon thought.
Halfway there anyway.
The man was reaching out to her, making hushing gestures. Simon could hear him thinking,
My God, she's going to start screaming “rape” any second now.
He was oblivious to SimonâSimon and his many-colored dream coat. He was thinking he was to blame for sending his girl into a fit of hysterics (Simon heard the word in the man's head: “hysterics”)âthinking this, and at the same time stuffing himself back into his pants, doing up his fly. Army issue. He ran a hand through his hair and with his head turned to one side raised his palm toward her in a gesture of appeasement, surrender. “I'm sorry, I'm real sorry, Laura. I don't know what got into me. I'mâ”
Simon felt something thenâsomething that seemed to focus his body, tune it inâa wave of vertigo, a turning of his brain inside his cranium it seemed like, and he was thereâsolid, as solid as he'd ever been, standing on the floor behind the couch now, in shadow. His hands and arms back to normal, part of the decor. Corporeal. He could smell the woman's perfume or the guy's aftershaveâone or the other, or a hot cocktail of bothâsweat in there too, female musk, rouge, mothballs, and furniture polish. Like his grandmother's house, he realized, the pheromones of the forties. Shit, his
own grandmother . . . he couldn't imagine her getting ripe for anyone.
The man was trying his best to calm the woman down. “Laura, it's all right. I didn't know youâ”
“Didn't you see that! My God, take me home, Billy, Mary Mother of Jesus, it was your father! I swear he was standing right thereâa man.” She was still on the floor in the corner; one of her shoes was caught in her skirt, the heel pointing into the darkest place Billy had ever imaginedâwhite now, a glimpse of a simple V of white underwear. “He was, was allâbloody. On fire! Standing right there behind you when you wasâ” Her face clenched into a voice-eroding sob.
“What the hell are you talking about?” He wiped something from his faceâwhat life was throwing at him.
He turned toward the sound of footsteps clumping downstairs. His mother's voice saying his nameâright then he couldn't imagine his name sounding any other way.
“Go back to bed, Momma; everything's fine.”
His mother pushed open the door and stood there clasping her red satin kimono to her throatâthe one with the dragons on it, the tea stains down the front thankfully lost in the new glare of hall light; the hair falling across her shoulders made her seem girlish and witch-haggard at the same time: “Thank God your father's not here to see this. That's all I can say.”