I wondered if they were waiting for me. If I did get out of the park, it would be my luck to stumble out the Cumberland exit, where the burning was heaviest. I ran my hand around the orchid’s wristband.
Light through the leaves startled me. I kneeled forward, sure it was going to be bright shields.
It was a bunch of people with flashlights. When they passed—I pressed myself back against the rock, and one light swept right over me, for a moment directly in my eyes beyond the branches—it was pretty easy to see that they were mostly white; and they had rifles. Two of them were very angry. Then one among them turned back and shouted: “Muriel!” (It could have been a woman calling.) The dog barked, barked again, and rushed through a wandering beam.
I closed my mouth.
And my eyes.
For a long time. A very long time. Perhaps I even fell asleep. When I opened them, my neck was stiff; so was one leg.
The sky was hazy with dawn. It was very quiet.
I got up, arms and knees sore as hell, climbed over the rocks and kept on down the other side till I came out of the trees at the edge of the clearing.
The cinderblocks on the near side of the fireplace had been pushed in.
Smoke dribbled into the air. Ashes greyed the grass.
There was no one there.
I walked to the furnace, between cans and package wrappers. On the bench was an overturned garbage carton. With my boot-toe, I scraped at some cinders. Half a dozen coals turned up as eyes which blinked, simplified, and clapped up.
“Lanya?”
They squatted to the furnace, simulatable in every break on those fenestrated, rusty fill-ins. Only for a distance in civet furrow, here hid awfully just a million savants at the pot. An open egret hung around a perch—still she could stay here any night. The honey worts and wolfling braces amazingly lined askew in weevils or along a posthole should report.
“Lanya!”
An apple to discover? Still they should have saved around what or fixed her. Except in the underpinned white shell, here are some scabs in purple; every beach but effluvia. And they had bought us up to mix here so few concepts with the lazy drinks, had sat sober or reinstated our personal fixated intensity. Soon they cauterized what you, constancy and exegesis, were found very loose around him that we had each, without Denny explaining, fished to fascinate them, beautifully or lazily. They should have allowed her less than an alligator has an eyelid never pulled her from a quiver; terror still felt less alive.
“Lanya?”
I turned to fixative among the walkings.
Beyond the leaves, the figure moved so that I still couldn’t
The blue envelope, barred along its edge with red and navy, is held to the bottom of the above page with yellow, bubbled Scotch tape. There are two, canceled, eight-cent stamps in the upper, right-hand corner. The postmark is illegible. The Bellona address reads:
Mrs. Arthur Richards
The Labry Apartments (#17-E)
400, 36th Street
Bellona, U.S.A.
The return address, written in the same hand (both in green ink):
Ms. Julia Harrington
7 Lilac Vista
Los Angeles 6, California
The letter itself has either been removed or lost.
When I came up the stairs, her office door was closed. So I wandered from the study to the kitchen into Lanya’s room and back. Finally I sat on the edge of the desk in the hall, tilted the Newboy volumes from between the statuettes, piled them beside me, and began to flip pages.
Which was funny: After five minutes I still hadn’t read one whole poem, or one complete paragraph from the essays or stories. My eyes could only focus before or behind the page. That part of the brain, directly behind the eye, that refracts the jewelry of words into image, idea, or information, wouldn’t work. (I even wondered a while how much of that was because I’d heard him speak.) The books had generated ghosts of themselves, and I couldn’t read the words for their after-images. I kept picking up different volumes, hefting them, closed, on my palm, putting them down, then hefting my emptied palm again, feeling for the ghost’s weight. My stomach began to hurt because I was concentrating so widely. I put them all back—first I ordered them by the dates on the copyright pages—and walked for a while (remember the fourth day on speed?), returning to the desk, pulling the books out again, leaving—really finding I’d wandered away just as I’d turn around to go back.
What it is around these objects that vibrates so much the objects themselves vanish? A field, cast by the name of a man, who, without my ever having read a complete work of his, the hidden machinery of my consciousness at some point decided was an artist. How comical, sad, exhausting. Why am I a victim of this magic? But for all I recognize out of me, I wonder furiously who would hold Brass Orchids on their hand, hefting for noumenal weight?
“Kid?” Madame Brown’s body and face were sliced by the door. “You’re here. Good.”
“Hello.” I closed The Charterhouse of Ballarat. “You ready for me to come in now?”
She opened the door the rest of the way; I got off the desk.
“Yes, let’s begin. I hope I didn’t keep you waiting…?”
“That’s okay.” I walked into the room.
Coming in to the dull green walls, dark wood up to the waist, a day bed with a green corduroy spread, three big leather chairs, a tall bookshelf, dark green drapes, I had to readjust my spatial model of the house: It was the biggest room on the floor and I’d never been in it.
On the wall was a swing-out display rack, like in poster shops. I walked over, started to open it, glanced at Madame Brown—
“Go ahead.”
—and turned the first leaf, expecting George:
The raddled earth hung above tilted, lunar shale. On the next, a bulky astronaut stared out his half-silvered faceplate. All the pictures—I went through some dozen—were of the moon, or Mars, or the familiar faces of astronauts, necks ringed with helmet clamps—two of a younger, closer-cropped Kamp—or their polished angular equipment (the foil-wrapped module foot under which Kamp’s moon mouse had fled), plastic flags, or pale, cirrus clouds, hind lit by exhaust-light as the rocket rose above its stanchions.
Let Kamp smirk out on our session? No, I turned to a chalky scape, backed by an earth with clouds like a negative thumb-print. Or a saucepan of soured milk a moment before it boils; and went to a chair.
“Comfortable there?” Madame Brown closed the door. “You can lie down on the couch if it’s easier for you to talk that way.”
“No. I’d rather see you.”
She smiled. “Good. And I’d rather see you.” She sat in one of the other chairs at a slight angle to me, a hand on the arm, a hand in her lap. “How do you feel about talking to me?”
“A little nervous,” I said. “I don’t know why: I’ve talked to enough shrinks before. I was thinking, though, it’s all right here because there aren’t any mental hospitals left, so you can’t put me away.”
“Do you feel that the other doctors you talked to—perhaps the doctors you saw before you went into the hospital the first time—put you away?” She said that pretty openly, not with any sarcastic quotes around put you away.
But suddenly I was angry: “You don’t know very much about crazy people, do you?”
“What do you want to tell me about them?”
“Look—I’m very suggestive. Labile…like they say. I incorporate things into my…reality model very quickly. Maybe too quickly. Which is what makes me crazy. But when you tell us we’re sick, or treat us like we’re sick, it becomes part of…me. Then I am.” And I wanted to cry, at once, surprisingly, and a lot.
“What’s the matter?”
I wanted to say: I hate you.
“I don’t…don’t think you think at all!” Then I cried. It really did surprise me. I couldn’t move my hands. But I lowered my head to stop what hurt in the back of my neck. Water trickled the side of my nose. Thinking: Christ, that was fast! and sniffing when the silence got on my nerves.