Authors: M. J. Rose
Wednesday, April 30
th
—9:15 p.m.
“Y
ou shouldn’t have phoned your father but at least there’s no possibility of anyone tracing the call if it went through the switchboard,” Sebastian said. “You can’t phone Malachai either. What if his hotel room phone is tapped? People other than us are desperate for what’s sitting next to you.”
One by one Sebastian lit the candles he’d brought upstairs, and as the room became brighter the scent of paraffin intensified, imbuing the air with an aroma that for Meer, harkened back to long-lost memories. He came and sat down next to her.
“Wouldn’t you kill for the chance to find the memory song and to finally remember the whole story behind all the fractured images that have been torturing you since you were a little girl?” he asked. The depth of sadness in his eyes was almost intolerable to look at.
He didn’t know her well enough to even guess at how far she’d go to quiet her memories. It was Nicolas he was thinking of, Nicolas in his hospital room, dissociated and
disconnected, drawing the haunted face of some lost child and chanting the Jewish prayer for the dead.
“If I talked you through it, would you try to hypnotize me?” Meer asked.
“You don’t have to, I know how. When Rebecca wouldn’t let me bring a hypnotist in to see Nicolas, Dr. Alderman, a member of the Society, taught me.” He hesitated. “You’re kind to do this for me.”
“For Nicolas,” she corrected.
There was every reason for the session to be a success. Sebastian’s voice was a comfortable and comforting timbre and the instructions he gave were similar to those that Malachai used. The lighting was soft—thanks to the power outage and the candles—and there was no noise to distract her and prevent her from entering a deep stage of relaxation.
Except there was a vise on her consciousness keeping her in the reality of the hard-edged moment. After trying three times, Sebastian stopped. “I don’t think this is going to work,” he said. “You’re not relaxing.”
Getting up from the couch, she went over to the piano where the flute rested on the velvet-cushioned seat glowing in the candle’s light.
“I’m sorry,” she said without taking her eyes off of it.
Sebastian walked into the bar area, opened the small refrigerator and pulled out a bottle of wine. “It’s still cold,” he said. He poured two glasses and brought one to her. “You have nothing to apologize for. Come, sit down with me. We have the flute. We’ll figure out the rest.”
As she sipped the wine, she stole looks across the room at the ancient bone instrument, as if willing it to give up its secret.
“Have you ever wondered what triggered Nicolas’s breakdown?”
“I have an idea, but there’s no way to know for sure.”
“You think he saw the child’s skull the gardener dug up at Steinhof?”
Sebastian nodded. “Nicolas was there…all the children were…playing outside. I think Rebecca believes so, too, but whenever I tried to talk to her about it she became irrationally defensive—as if because it happened on her turf it was her fault…” He stopped talking and looked off into the distance. Picking up the bottle, he refilled their glasses, and for a while they sat there in silence.
An hour later, Meer woke up still sitting on the couch. In her head was the music she’d been hearing all her life. She recognized the tune, as if she’d always known it. She opened her eyes and smiled, thinking that she was finally going to be able to play the song and then all this would be over. But in the few seconds between having her first conscious thought and opening her eyes, the memory of the music faded.
“You fell asleep,” Sebastian said from the table where he peeled an orange. “One minute you were sipping the wine, the next your eyes were closed.” He gestured to plates of cheese, bread, sliced meats and fruit. “I brought up some food. You must be hungry.”
She wasn’t but knew she needed to eat something so she managed half the orange and some cheese.
“For safety’s sake, even though it’s unlikely anyone was able to follow us, we should probably take turns sleeping,” he suggested.
“Well, I already had my nap. You go ahead.”
After Sebastian retired to the bedroom, Meer brought
the flute over to the coffee table. As the hours passed, she sat vigil over the instrument. Finally, unable to resist, she examined it once more, scanning up and down the lines of engraved markings, not focusing on any one of them but visually playing with all the shapes.
Through the window, the full moon shone through the gap in the drapes onto her lap, onto the flute, casting the bone in a bluish light, making the incisions appear even deeper than they were. Shutting her eyes, she touched them with her fingertip. One after the next. Tactually discovering each shape.
Meer sat like that for a long time, listening to the occasional sound of a car
whooshing
down the rainy street, touching her treasure, trying not to think, sleepy, almost dozing…
Her finger moved around and around one shape. Sleep…easy, dreamless, quiet sleep was at the center of the circle she touched. Once more around and Meer was certain she’d find the end of the dream and finally be able to rest. Everyone would be able to rest. Not just her. Not just now. Everyone. For all time. Around and around. One circle. Another circle. Three. Four. Five. Six circles. Another. Another. Nine. Ten. Ten circles. One inside the next.
Meer looked down. Her finger was tracing a deeply engraved circle close to the mouthpiece. It wasn’t just a simple circle but several tiny carved circles, a series of tight concentric circles, ten in all.
She remembered this symbol. Had seen it before. But where?
Playing the memory game, she went through an exercise of seeing the circles in her mind, then widening out as if she was stepping back and saw them on a gray metal disk
and then widened out again and again and finally was in her mother’s antique store twenty-five years ago.
The elderly man with the droopy white mustache, gold-tipped walking stick and heavy German accent showed Pauline Logan a clock he wanted her to buy from him.
“Clocks like this were only made for a hundred years,” the man said. “Music clocks, they were called. Very entertaining. Very popular. So popular even master composers wrote music for them. Listen if you will. This piece is very lovely. Beethoven wrote it just for these clocks.”
The music that emanated from that ancient timepiece was Meer’s introduction to classical music; the first piece that wedged its way into her consciousness. Every day for as many months as the clock was in the store, Meer would sit and watch the minutes move forward while she waited for the clock to play its magic music on the hour. It was the only antique in the store that she’d cared about and had cried bitterly when it was sold. As recompense, her mother had offered to give her piano lessons so she could learn to play the music herself. But she hadn’t been able to play the Beethoven piece and she never stopped missing her clock. And it had been
her
clock. She’d learned every inch of it: the face, the steel flutes, the casing, the inner workings and the maker’s mark engraved on the back of the face.
The same mark she was looking at now.
Ten concentric circles.
And exactly like that maker’s mark there were small perpendicular lines marking these circles, too. Little nicks. Meer was sure, even though it had been so long ago, that they were in the same places; certain that everything about these circles on the ancient bone flute was identical to those on the back of the clock that had introduced her to music so long ago: to Beethoven’s music.
It happened instantly, without warning, without the cold embrace she was used to. There was no sense of time flattening out or turning over on itself. She simply knew how to find the memory song. In her mind’s eye she performed the magic: cut the symbol of ten circles in half and, as if they were made of string, laid them out horizontally into ten straight lines.
Ten lines with small marks on them in various places. Not an arbitrary abstract design but a perfect musical staff, and on each of the lines were marks that she now understood as notes.
C-G-D-A-E-B-F#-C#-G#-D#-A#-E#.
She studied the familiar musical sequence and so many different things she’d read, and her father had told her, and her teachers at Juilliard had taught, all coalesced. This was the Circle of Fifths Pythagoras had identified over 2500 years before, tying harmonic relationships to the human energy system. The fifth was also the interval found in most sacred music and said to harmonize human energy. Pythagoras had used music compositions based on this interval to heal illness, to effect mood changes. It was said that through exploring his past lives he’d discovered a constant: a universal life form inhabiting and connecting all living things: vibration. Everything, he said, from a grain of sand to the stars, was in a state of constant vibration.
As if she was reaching out into that collective unconscious that her father always talked about, and plucking the information like a grape from a cluster, she understood that these twelve notes that Devadas’s brother, Rasul, had engraved on the bone flute were his memory song in honor of a truncated life. A song he wrote to soothe the young girl Ohana, who had brought him her lover’s bone, whose heart
had been cut down the middle and separated into before there was tragedy, and after. A song to help Ohana remember that before there was a death there had been a life, and before that life a death and that there would be a life after this death too. The circles would continue on without end and everyone who was once connected would be connected again.
Wednesday, April 30
th
—11:03 p.m.
L
ucian Glass and Alex Kalfus pulled up to the Sacher just after Malachai’s cab dropped him off and the two of them watched him disappear through the hotel’s front door. They’d trailed him all day, from the hospital early that morning to a bookstore with Sebastian and Meer, then to the Beethoven house and then into the Rathaus garden where the three of them had parted ways.
It was easy enough for the agent and the policeman to stay on Malachai’s trail even when he was out of sight thanks to the tracking device still in place. But the team following Meer didn’t have a tracking device, and after she and Sebastian jumped on the tram they’d lost her.
“If you don’t mind, I’d like to wait a while and see if Meer returns,” Lucian said to Kalfus, who gave him a curious look.
“This isn’t just professional for you, is it?”
“It’s a case, Kalfus. A case I want to solve.”
“Are you personally involved with the woman?”
“I’ve never met her.”
The two law officers stayed on watch until one-thirty in the morning but when Meer still hadn’t arrived, Kalfus insisted they call in backup and each try to get some rest themselves.
Lucian couldn’t sleep, though, and sat in his hotel room with the television on and the sound off, sketching scenes from the day. One after another he ripped them off the pad before they were finished and let them fall to the floor until there was a pile of almost a dozen. He didn’t care about them; it was the action, the movement, and the release of the tension that he craved.
Where was she? And why, as Kalfus had asked, was he taking her disappearance so very personally?
My life often seemed to me like a story that has no beginning and no end. I had the feeling that I was an historical fragment, an excerpt for which the preceding and succeeding text was missing. I could well imagine that I might have lived in former centuries and there encountered questions I was not yet able to answer; that I had been born again because I had not fulfilled the task given to me.
—Carl Jung
Thursday, May 1
st
—8:00 a.m.
“G
ood morning.”
The sound of his voice split the silence open, startling her and she jerked up into a sitting position.
It was just Sebastian.
“What time is it?” she asked. “I wasn’t supposed to fall asleep.”
“There’s nothing to worry about. We’re still here. So’s
that.” He pointed to the flute. “It’s eight. The electricity’s back on—would you like coffee? Something to eat? You barely ate last night.”
“Does the hotel have room service?”
“They have a buffet downstairs, but I can ask them to bring up something. What would you like?”
“Coffee. Toast. Some honey for the toast. If they have eggs, I’d like some and juice too.”
When he came back from ordering he told her the manager was going to send someone up with the food right away. “It shouldn’t take long.”
“I need to call my father and find out if he’s all right. And Malachai.”
“All taken care of,” Sebastian said. “While you were sleeping I checked on Nicolas from the pay phone down the street, then called both Malachai and Jeremy. Your father was still sleeping. The nurse said he was resting comfortably and that his fever had dropped during the night. I asked her to tell him you’d be there later this morning. I assume that’s fine?”
“Yes, thanks. How’s Nicolas?”
“Improving. Well, the pneumonia is improving.”
When the food came Meer plucked the juice off the cart while Sebastian signed the bill. After the waiter left, Sebastian double-locked the door behind him, the precaution bringing back the edge of nervousness that her sleep had smoothed out.
“That’s great news about your son.”
“Yes…yes…but he’s still in so much danger. Every day that he remains lost inside his head is exponentially worse.” Sebastian poured himself coffee. “I’m sorry. I’m just so frustrated. I phoned Rebecca, too, but if she was there she wouldn’t take my call. Why is she doing this? I never
abused him, never hurt him. When nothing else works, why not try an alternative?”
“I remember how angry my mother was when my father first took me to Malachai.”
“He told me he didn’t have an easy time of it.”
“None of us had an easy time of it.” Meer picked up the toast and took a bite. She’d been ravenous a few minutes ago but now the food held no interest for her. A surfeit of memories—ones she wished had faded—flared: the bickering behind their bedroom door at night, the hushed arguments, the icy stillness in the house that kept them all separated and isolated during that last winter. What would have happened if she hadn’t told them about the dreads? Would they have stayed together?
“All I know is she’s stopping me from trying to do everything I can for my son and I am not going to let her.” He stood. “I’m going to take a shower.”
Once the door closed behind him she was sorry she hadn’t told him the amazing news that she’d uncovered the memory song. Wasn’t he the reason she’d worked so hard last night? To find the song so he could play it for his son and help him the way no one had been able to help her? Yes. Of course, but after so many years of searching for the music through the fog of endless dreams and half-waking nightmares, she wasn’t quite ready to give it up and give it over. She needed to hear it just once by herself. Last night she couldn’t play it for fear she’d wake him up, but he wouldn’t be able to hear her now over the sound of the shower.
Holding the ancient piece of bone gingerly in her hand Meer waited to hear the water’s steady pounding and only then put the crudely crafted instrument to her lips and arranged her fingers.
Covering one of the holes she blew air into the cylinder
and played a C, a G and then a D. The notes sounded rough, a primitive call brought up from the earth, a tone that contained rain and smoke and fire and cold that filled the room and then slipped outside and encircled the city and the country and then the planet, going wide into the galaxy. So disturbing and complicated were the first three notes, Meer put the crude flute down. Throughout history people had played those same notes on a wide variety of instruments. So it wasn’t just the notes but these particular vibrations that were different. She could still feel them in the room and how they were taking a longer time than was usual to dissipate. Were these the binaural beats her father had talked about?
The steady shower reminded her that she had a limited amount of time.
She had to do this now.
Trying again, she blew with more confidence, holding the C note longer, and then played the second note, this new sound mingling with the restive tone already lingering in the air and the third and the fourth. The beats of the blended music verged on difficult and unqualified noise.
She stopped playing. This wasn’t a game. Not a theory on paper.
Beethoven was right
. She played the next two notes and the next. An unholy blackness settled on her. A treacherous miasma. An awful preamble but she had to do this…get it over with once and for all.
Meer started at the beginning of the song and blew out the first note again, and then the second and then—
“What are you doing?” Sebastian asked.