Along the coast the weather was continually fair. Above the blue space, below the sea blue or black at times, and like weathered gates maybe giving access to the deep land above and beyond were the brown sandcrests and hilltops along which the paths climbed; roads of an origin and a purpose and of the people using them — dealers? agents? recruiters? izigijima? — fallen into oblivion. The sun in the hollows of the heavens was a silvered beetle at the hem of a sky-blue robe — but blue is just black seen from close up or grey seen from afar — or, you can express it this way too — the sun was the phosphorescent skeleton of a rider having to roam like an unsatiated and restless spirit through all times and all spaces even though the flesh has long since become blue dust. My heart wasn’t with the lips of sea and strand. Besides, on the side of the demarcation where people like me could move uninhibitedly, there was nothing — no asylum or hideaway or night club or public toilet or workshop or quay or church hall, no bus stop or road sign or cigar factory or drawings in the sand or birds’ nests. My heart stayed elsewhere, where it’s higher and clearer and more healthy, where the landscape is so insignificant that time’s passages could leave no mark and where time therefore does not exist, where there are no emotions or desires or memories to cling to. Perhaps my heart was only a sheet of paper with a number of holes, glued to the rough and by now nearly indistinguishable silhouette of a man traced as target on a metal plate. I couldn’t absorb my restlessness: there was a hole in my chest. The sun is at last a heart. Whenever I could I attempted ascending with one of the twisting and climbing paths, but never succeeded: so many of the passes were dead ends or had fallen in desuetude or had silted up or become eroded or were never intended to lead anywhere. On one such occasion — it was not yet noon and in my imagination I saw how the sky and the sun and even the stars, which by day also travel clothed in blue, become lost in the grey of the high plateaux somewhere above me until there would be just a soft shimmering over the earth, heaven and earth one imperishable because already gone — on one such an occasion when my imagination had like a bird flown up from my body to go and scout far ahead, I was obliged to stand off to one side, tightly pressed against a rock ledge to make way for a convoy approaching from ahead in orange-coloured dust clouds, on their way to the lowlands. There were a few camels heavily laden with grey baggage, a rider with expressionless eyes on a horse — maybe he was blind — and mostly donkeys with pack saddles, driven and accompanied by men with long headcloths wrapped around their heads and mouths and noses so that the light points of dust in their eyebrows were very evident. These men held, like lepers, small tinkling bells in their hands. I watched them coming by, and how they took no notice whatsoever of me, how they disappeared out of sight lower down around a bend of the pass. And I was on the point of continuing my journey, the dust raised by donkeys’ hooves had settled again, the sun was a vulture high up in the air and I considered that this caravan must definitely be coming from somewhere and that they therefore could indicate the route to the highland — or one of the routes — on condition that I remain on their tracks — but in spite of the dust the soil was hard and it was difficult to retrace the fresh marks on the rocky parts; there were too the millions of slits and small hollows and little riffs of old precedent tracks retained intact through the centuries, tracks forking off and disappearing in all directions so that one got the image, knowing it to be true, of a whole world consisting of layer upon layer of tracks — when I heard someone calling behind me. “Murphy! Murphy!” the one voice bawled, followed directly by a choir of further voices. What now? What could have happened? Were these the intonations and incantations of a midday prayer? But
Murphy then? Or are they calling me? I turned around and ran back. A hundred yards from where I last lost sight of the caravan they were now motionless in the twelve o’clock heat. The beasts of burden were not unsaddled but just stood there, quiet, with lowered heads and the reins trailing in the dust; a camel or two stood ruminating with the funny cut-and-hash lip movements so peculiar to them. The drivers were all off to one side of the road, crowded around something on the ground there — here the area along the track was flat for a short distance. They no longer called out but rang their little bells with a sort of absent concentration. I rushed there. Over the skyline, not from the road but from further away, from behind a hill, a man appeared wearing a white shirt and leggings. When he came nearer I could see his blond hair and his blue eyes. Even if he were much older now than years back I still recognized him instantly. It was Murphy. Indeed. Ah, I turned to him and now also remembered — or did one of the caravan drivers inform me of this? I cannot recollect — that Murphy was a frontier guard, that it was his duty to patrol the wire obstacle stretching from here somewhere — no one knows exactly where — inland in a straight line ever higher through the gullies and over the hummocks. I didn’t know in whose service he was, whether it was to prevent the inhabitants and authorities from the other side from breaking out towards us or to restrain our people from penetrating the closed-off strip. He carried a little whip. Together we pushed our way through the crowds with their bells to see what the focal point of their restrained excitement could be. The men in the inner circle stood grouped around a rubbish heap. How did it happen, so my thoughts went, that in my ascent I never noticed this ash heap — it is after all something remarkable in such desolate surroundings! And from when does this garbage date? What does it speak of? Whose was it? Was it exposed by a recent or more ancient sliding of the soil? Was it always here then — and I so sunken in the endless wandering of my searches, which could never reach a destination, that I knew deep in my soul — that I never saw this remarkable aberration? I can’t remember even having heard a suspicious rumbling. . The men were intent on a cadaver lying among the ash, the petrified garbage, the broken-legged or splay-backed chairs, the burst mirrors, the cardboard boxes, the grey planks, the blue rusted chains, the rests of tree trunks from distant kingdoms. It was the corpse of a brown boy, so fresh in appearance that he could scarcely have died earlier than that very morning if it hadn’t been for the rigid, tooth-fixed smile between lips forced open, on his back there as if only to rest for a wee while with the uncovered face and the limpid eyes turned to the unending blue nothingness. His shirt was still clean, unbuttoned to the belly — excepting one dark and damp stain. Over the swarthy skin of the chest I could see a bird tattooed in a dark red line of dots reminding one of a string of shiny rubies. His one arm was bent at the elbow so that the hand pointed straight up. In this hand he held a pistol and the still flexible index finger was neatly and exactly folded around the trigger. From the barrel emerged, stiff and silent, a jet of grey smoke just like the tendril of a creeper or the heart attack of a tree.