“Oh, man,” I said. “I can’t talk to you about shit like that now. I’m busy.”
“Sure Kid,” came out real quick, and he stopped leaning on the door frame. “Maybe later. I’ll just hang around…till you have some time.”
D-t handed me the string. “Hey, thanks,” I told D-t, “but I don’t think I should pack that grease trap.” So I didn’t, but it was pretty much all right anyway.
Glanced back.
Frank was gone.
So we scrubbed out the grease-streaked bowl, more or less quiet, questioning such idiot work and finding the value—a chance to do something with D-t—disappeared, defined. Well, the sink wasn’t dripping.
Something (I heard it) was happening in front of the house. I listened, surprised (looked at D-t look up at me), to somebody get up in the front room, run out of the front door—
“Uh-oh,” I said. “Come on.” We went into the hall together. D-t got ahead; I pushed by him out the front door; stopped on the fourth step.
“Jesus Christ!” Frank shouted. “Hey, watch it—!”
“You want a chain, huh?” Copperhead, crouched, wound the links once more around his fist, pulled back, and swung again. “I’m gonna wrap this one around your fuckin’ neck!”
“God damn, man! Look, all I did was…!”
Some in the loose circle glanced up at me; so did Frank, then jumped back as Copperhead swung: “Hey—!”
Copperhead, concentrated as a pool player, raised his fist again.
“ALL RIGHT!” and I walked down the steps. “WHAT THE FUCK ARE YOU DOING?” which got everybody’s attention except Copperhead’s. “COPPERHEAD—! Cut It Out!” thinking: This is going to be the time when I have to tangle with him. Thinking also: It’s just not worth it. But he hooked around and I snatched the end of his chain and yanked. He let go and snapped his fingers back. It must have hurt his hand because it sure as hell hurt mine.
I went up to Frank (who looked as scared of me as he was of Copperhead) and said, “What is this, huh? All right, what are you doing in this—”
“I didn’t—” He started at some movement behind me.
I didn’t turn. “I think you better get out of here.” It must have been Copperhead in some feint. “Go on. Go on, now! Get going.”
He started to say, “Um…” and I realized how used I was to people doing what I told them when they weren’t doing anything else.
“Look,” I said, “though you are making it harder and harder for me to remember it, so far, you have been my most accurate critic; therefore you deserve some consideration. I’m giving you that consideration now: Scoot!”
Frank turned, went gingerly between Fireball and Lady of Spain, who broke the circle for him.
California came back this evening. Must have seen him three/five times before I noticed—we were on the back steps—he’d hung both a gold six-pointed star (Hebrew letters on it) and a black swastika (edged in silver) on his light-shield chain. Jack the Ripper, carrying on about something, started to call California “…a crazy Jew-bastard…” only he saw the star, the bent cross. I could hear the shape the unspoke epithet carved in the silence. Then the Ripper went on about something else. California, since he went away, has changed: his thin hands are tenser; his bony shoulders sit more forward; his blue eyes, between strings of his long hair, are wider and angrier. (How odd symbols are!) I think the change is like what I went through when I got my chain of prisms, mirrors, lenses…The Ripper’s sensitivity surprised me (he did call California a Jew-bastard five minutes later) but then, the derogatory terms we hurl around here with such seeming freedom are actually counters in a complicated game, and the point was the Ripper’s. Penalties for misplay can grow huge—recall the beating Dollar took at Calkins’. The rewards? I suspect, in this landscape, they are just as huge. Am I just being pompous, or is the real and necessary information these epithets generate (making them a real and necessary part of Bellona’s own language) the reminder that it is often just when we are most aware of the freedom of the field in which we move that our actions become most culture-bound?
I turned to Copperhead: “You must be really down on me, man. Because I’m always coming along to mess up your fun, right?”
“Aw, Kid—” Copperhead rubbed his beard with his wrist —“I was not going to hurt him.”
“You were just going to scare him. Sure.” I saw the story coming: Frank’s annoying manner, too blunt questions, a jibe, a look; and a violence crystallized from the day’s boredom.
Copperhead began to tell it to me, insistently. (I tossed him his chain and he caught and put it around his neck without breaking his sentence.) So I motioned him to come on and, half listening, went up the steps with him.
D-t, who’d watched from the top, stood with Dragon Lady. They talked quietly and intently as the guys filed past.
Passing her, Copperhead tried to broaden his anecdote to include her. Maybe because of the small look she gave him (or maybe because her eyes didn’t really meet his at all) he finally went on by, just dropping his hand on her shoulder, and she nodded. And went on talking to D-t. Which is a good introduction to why
over the charred grass stopped conversation. A climb across rocks and among green brush jarred it loose again. Cathedral told Priest the black stone building in the smoke was the Weather Tower.
I still don’t see any vanes, aerials, or anemometers.
We came around a corner, left hips brushing head-sized stones, right hips (elbows up) scratched by bushes.
The man in the middle of the court was bent over a tripod. As we came toward him, he looked up: Captain Kamp.
Who still didn’t recognize me until we were on top of him.
“…Kid?”
“Hello, Captain.”
He laughed now. “Now you fellows looked pretty ominous coming across there.” He debated whether to give his hand for shaking. Which Angel solved by giving his. They hooked thumbs. “Angel,” Angel said.
The pink and brown fists locked, shook. Kamp looked like he’d been expecting the biker shake; later he told me that was the first time he’d seen it.
“Michael Kamp,” Kamp said.
“Cathedral,” Cathedral said:
Shake.
“California,” California said:
Shake.
“Priest…You’re the astronaut, huh?”
Shake.
“That’s right.”
“Spain.”
“That’s Lady of Spain,” Priest amended:
Shake. Kamp got a sort of funny smile but figured he best not say anything. Which was best.
“Tarzan.”
Shake.
“Kid.”
We shook.
And Kamp said, “Sure. I haven’t forgotten you now,” and everybody laughed. Because it had been so formal.
“What you gonna do with that?” Priest went to sit on the chipped steps. He’d been complaining about the sore on his foot.
“That’s a telescope,” Lady of Spain said. “The kind with a mirror, right?”
“That’s right.” Kamp stepped to the other side.
“See,” Lady of Spain said. (The telescope reminds me of a conversation with Lanya and a whole bunch at the nest I wanted to put down.)
“What are you gonna do with it?” Priest asked, leaning forward to bend the toe of his sneaker up and down. His chain swung against his brown sunken chest and out, clinking.
Kamp squinted at the clouds. “Probably not much of anything. Occasionally I’ve seen a few breaks in the overcast. It occurred to me, now perhaps I might get a look at your sky here. After all those stories about double moons and giant suns…”
In the quiet, I thought about all the times people had not said anything about them.
“After all—” you hear about voices breaking the silence? I learned how strong that silence had been from the way his After all snapped in my head—“I saw…some of it.” How long, now, had that silence gone on? “I thought I’d bring the telescope down here to the park—they said the hill here was one of the highest points in the city—and perhaps see if I could just check whether any planets were where they’re supposed to be. I found an Ephemeris in the library up at Roger’s. Only my watch hasn’t been working all week. None of you guys happen to know what the date is, now, do you?”