The illuminatus! trilogy (27 page)

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Authors: Robert Shea,Robert Anton Wilson

Tags: #Science fiction; American, #General, #Science fiction, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Visionary & Metaphysical

BOOK: The illuminatus! trilogy
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Saul found his voice. “Your offer is appreciated but declined,” he said. “Frankly, I find your tawdry mysticism even more adolescent than your sentimental vegetarianism and coarse lasciviousness. The trouble with the Illuminati is that you have no sense of true drama and not even a patina of subtlety.”

Her eyes widened as he spoke, but not with surprise at his resistance—either she was really alarmed, and sorry for him, or she was a great actress. “Too bad,” she said sadly. “You’ve refused Heaven, so you must travel the harder path through the halls of Hell.”

Saul heard a movement behind him, but before he could turn a sharp sensation pricked his neck: a needle, another drug. Just as he was guessing they had given him a strongger psychedelic to escalate the effect, he felt consciousness
slipping away. It was a narcotic or a poison.

The wagon started with a jerk: we were off to see the wizard, the wonderful wizard of arse. What was it Hagbard had said to me, the first time we met, about straight lines, courtrooms, and shit? I couldn’t remember, my mind drifted, Joseph K. opening the law books and finding pornographic illustrations (Kafka knew where it was at), deSade keeping a precise mathematical tally in the brothel, how many times he flogged the whores, how many times they flogged him, the Nazis counting every gold filling in the corpses at Auschwitz, Shakespeare scholars debating about that line in Macbeth (was it benches or banks of time?), the prisoner may approach the bench, you can bank on it, buddy, bank on it … PIGS EAT SHIT PIGS EAT SHIT … and Pound wrote “the buggering bank,” he rejected Freud, but even so he got a whiff of the real secret … how one homo ominously loopses another….

“My God,” the Englishman said. “When do we get out of the teargas area?”

“We’re out of it,” I told him wearily. “That’s regular Chicago air now. Courtesy of Commonwealth Edison and U.S. Steel over in Gary.”

The McCarthy woman was weeping quietly, although the Mace had worn off by now. The rest of us rode silently, a little caravan of dried snot and tears, the parmesan cheese odor of stale vomit, some lingering acrid Mace fumes, the urine of somebody who had peed himself, and that high sulphur dioxide and slaughterhouse aroma of Chicago’s South Side. The quality of mercy is very strained; it drippeth like the pus from chancre. Abandon hope all ye who enter here. Chairman Mao appeared and lectured us: “Ho is just a poetaster. Now, if you want to hear some real socialist verse, consider
my
latest composition:

There was a young lady from Queens
Who gobbled a plateful of beans
The beans fermented
And she was tormented
By embarrassing sounds in her jeans!

Indicates the anal orientation of capitalist society,” he explained, dwindling into a pool of blood on the floor next to the kid with the broken arm.

* * *

(In 1923, Adolph Hitler stood beneath a pyramidal altar and repeated the words of a goat-headed man:
“Der Zweck heiligte die Mittel.”
James Joyce, in Paris, scrawled in crayon words that his secretary, Samuel Beckett, would later type: “Pre-Austeric Man in Pursuit of Pan-Hysteric Woman.” In Brooklyn, New York, Howard Phillips Lovecraft, returning from a party at which Hart Crane had been perfectly beastly—thereby confirming Mr. Lovecraft’s prejudice against homosexuals—finds a letter in his mailbox and reads with some amusement: “Some of the secrets revealed in your recent stories would better be kept out of the light of print. Believe me, I speak as a friend, but there are those who would prefer such half-forgotten lore to remain in its present obscurity, and they are formidable enemies for any man. Remember what happened to Ambrose Bierce….” And, in Boston, Robert Putney Drake screams, “Lies, lies, lies. It’s all lies. Nobody tells the truth. Nobody says what he thinks….” His voice trails off.

“Go on,” Dr. Besetzung says, “you were doing fine. Don’t stop.”

“What the use?” Drake replies, drained of anger, turning on the couch to look at the psychiatrist. “To you, this is just abreaction or acting-out or something clinical. You can’t believe I’m right.”

“Perhaps I can. Perhaps I agree more than you realize.” The doctor looks up from his pad and meets Drake’s eye. “Are you sure you’re not just
assuming
I’ll react like everybody else you’ve tried to tell this to?”

“If you agreed with me,” Drake says carefully, “if you understood what I’m really saying, you’d either be the head of a bank, out there in the jungle with my father, grabbing your own share of the loot, or you’d be a bomb-throwing revolutionary, like those Sacco and Vanzetti fellows. Those are the only choices that make sense.”

“The only choices? One must go to one extreme or the other?”

Drake looks back at the ceiling and talks abstractly. “You had to get an M.D. long ago, before you specialized. Do you know any case where germs gave up and went away because the man they were destroying had a noble character or sweet sentiments? Did the tuberculosis baccilli leave John Keat’s lungs because he had a few hundred
great poems still unwritten inside him? You must have read some history, even if you were never at the front lines like me: do you recall any battle that refutes Napoleon’s aphorism about God always being on the side of the biggest cannons and the best tacticians? This bolshie in Russia, Lenin, he has ordered the schools to teach chess to everybody. You know why? He says that chess teaches the lesson that revolutionaries must learn: that if you don’t mobilize your forces properly, you lose. No matter how high your morality, no matter how lofty your goal: fight without mercy, use every ounce of intelligence, or you lose. My father understands that. The people who run the world have always understood it. A general who doesn’t understand it gets broken back to second lieutenant or worse. I saw a whole platoon wiped out, exterminated like an anthill under a boot. Not because they were immoral or naughty or didn’t believe in Jesus. Because at that place, on that day, the Germans had superior fire power. That’s the law, the one true law, of the universe, and everything that contradicts it—everything they teach in schools and churches—is a lie.” He says the word listlessly now. “Just a lie.”

“If you really believe that,” the doctor asks, “why do you still have the nightmares and the insomnia?”

Drake’s blue eyes stare at the ceiling. “I don’t know,” he says finally. “That’s why I’m here.”)

“Moon, Simon,” the Desk Sergeant called.

I stepped forward, seeing myself through his eyes: beard, army surplus clothes, stains all over (my own mucus, somebody else’s vomit). The archetypcal filthy, dirty, disgusting, hippie-commie revolutionary.

“Well,” he said, “another bright red rose.”

“I usually look neater,” I told him calmly. “You get a bit messed over when you’re arrested in this town.”

“The only way you get arrested in this town,” he said, frowning, “is if you break the laws.”

“The only way you get arrested in Russia is you break the laws,” I replied cheerfully. “Or by mistake,” I added.

That didn’t set well at all. “Wise guy,” he said gently. “We like wise guys here.” He consulted my charge-slip. “Nice record for one night, Moon. Rioting, mob action, assaulting an officer, resisting arrest, disturbing the peace. Nice.”

“I wasn’t disturbing the peace,” I said. “I was disturbing
the war.” I stole that one-liner from Ammon Hennacy, a Catholic Anarchist that Mom was always quoting. “The rest of the charges are all bullshit, too.”

“Say, I know
you”
he said suddenly. “You’re Tim Moon’s son. Well, well, well. A second-generation anarchist. I guess we’ll be locking you up as often as we locked him up.”

“I guess so,” I said. “At least until the Revolution. Afterward, we won’t be locking you up, though. We’re going to establish nice camps in places like Wisconsin, and send you there
free
to learn a useful trade. We believe that all policemen and politicians can be rehabilitated. But if you don’t want to go to the camp and learn a productive trade, you don’t have to. You can live on Welfare.”

“Well, well, well,” he said. “Just like your old man. I suppose if I looked the other way, while some of the boys took you in back and worked you over a bit, you’d come out still making wisecracks?”

“I’m afraid so,” I smiled. “Irish national character, you know. We see the funny side of everything.”

“Well,” he said thoughtfully (he was awfully fond of that word), “I hope you can see the funny side of what comes next. You’re going to be arraigned before Judge Bushman. You’ll find yourself wishing you had fallen into a buzzsaw instead. Give my regards to your father. Tell him Jim O’Malley says hello.”

“He’s dead,” I said.

He looked down at his charge-slips. “Sorry to hear it,” he mumbled. “Nanetti, Fred,” he bawled, and the kid with the broken arm came forward.

A patrolman led me to the fingerprint room. This guy was a computer: “Right hand.” I gave him my right hand. “Left hand.” I gave him my left hand. “Follow the officer.” I followed the officer, and they took my picture. We went down some halls to the night court, and in a lonely section the patrolman suddenly hit me in the lower back with his club, the exact spot (he knew his business) to give me liver problems for a month. I grunted but refused to say anything that would set him off and get me another clout, so he spoke. “Yellow-bellied faggot,” he said.

Just like Biloxi, Mississippi: one cop is nice, another is just impersonal, a third is a mean bastard—and it doesn’t really matter. They’re all part of the same machine, and
what comes out the end of the gears and levers is the same product, whatever their attitude is. I’m sure Buchenwald was the same: some of the guards tried to be as humane as possible, some of them just did their job, some of them went out of their way to make it worse for the prisoners. It doesn’t matter: the machine produces the effect it was designed for.

Judge Bushman (we slipped him AUM two years later, but that’s another story, coming up on another trip) gave me his famous King Kong scowl. “Here are the rules,” he said. “This is an arraignment. You can enter a plea or stand mute. If you enter a plea, you retain the right to change it at your trial. When I set bond, you can be released by paying ten percent to the bailiff. Cash only, no checks. If you don’t have the cash, you go to jail overnight. You people have the city tied up in knots and the bail bondsmen are too busy to cover every courtroom, so by sheer bad luck you landed in a courtroom they’re not covering.” He turned to the bailiff. “Charge sheet,” he said. He read the record of my criminal career as concocted by the arresting officer. “Five offenses in one night. You’re bad medicine, aren’t you, Moon? Trial set for September fifteenth. Bail will be ten thousand dollars. Do you have one thousand dollars?”

“No,” I told him wondering how many times he’d made that speech tonight.

“Just a moment,” said Hagbard, materializing out of the hallway. “I can make bail for this man.”

MR. KHARIS: Does Mr. Celine seriously suggest that the United States Government is in need of a guardian?

MR. CELINE: I am merely offering a way out for your client. Any private individual with a record of such incessant murder and robbery would be glad to cop an insanity plea, Do you insist that your client was in full possession of its reason at Wounded Knee? At Hiroshima? At Dresden?

JUSTICE IMMHOTEP: You become facetious, Mr. Celine.

MR. CELINE: I have never been more serious.

“What is your relationship to this young man?” Bushman asked angrily. He had been about to come when the cop dragged me off to jail, and he was strangling in some kind of gruesome S-M equivalent of coitus interruptus.

“He’s my wife,” Hagbard said calmly.

“What?”

“Common-law wife,” Hagbard went on. “Homosexual marriage is not recognized in Illinois. But homosexuality per se isn’t a crime in this state, either, so don’t try to make waves, your honor. Let me pay and take him home.”

It was too much. “Daddy,” I said, camping like our friend the Padre. “You’re so masterful.”

Judge Bushman looked like he wanted to lay Hagbard out with a gavel upside of his head, but he controlled himself. “Count the money,” he told the bailiff. “Make sure he pays every penny. And then,” he told us, “I want the two of you out of this courtroom as quickly as possible. I’ll see
you
September fifteenth,” he added, to me.

MR. KHARIS: And we believe we have demonstrated the necessity of this dam. We believe we have shown that the doctrine of eminent domain is on sure constitutional grounds, and has been held to apply in numerous similar cases. We believe we have shown that the resettlement plan offered by the government will be no hardship for the plaintiffs….

“Fuckin’ faggots,” the cop said as we went out the door.

“All hail Discordia,” I told him cheerfully. “Let’s get out of this neighborhood,” I added to Hagbard.

“My car is right here,” he said, pointing to a goddam Mercedes.

“For an anarchist, you sure live a lot like a capitalist,” I commented as we got into that beautiful machine crystallized out of stolen labor and surplus value.

“I’m not a masochist,” Hagbard replied. “The world makes me uncomfortable enough. I see no reason to make myself more uncomfortable. And I’m damned if I’ll drive a broken-down jalopy that spends half its time in a garage being repaired merely because that would make me seem more ‘dedicated’ to you left-wing simpletons. Besides,” he added practically, “the police never stop a Mercedes and search it. How many times a week do you get stopped and harassed, with your beard and your psychedelic Slaveswagon, you damned moralist?”

“Often enough,” I admitted, “that I’m afraid to transport dope in it.”

“This car is full of dope,” he said blithely. “I’m making
a big delivery to a dealer up in Evanston, on the Northwestern campus, tomorrow.”

“You’re in the dope business, too?”

“I’m in every illegal business. Every time a government declares something
verboten
, two groups move in to service the black market created: the Mafia and the LDD. That stands for Lawless Delicacy Dealers.”

“I thought it stood for Little Deluded Dupes.”

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