But it’s hard to know what we can do for the man; I don’t want to see him again. It’s better, we decide, to let military handle his case than to try to do something ourselves. I really can’t bear the thought of seeing Cooper; can only think he belongs in a hospital. So Werhner leaves to see what he can do—a series of tracers, asking for replies with requests to expedite.
When he returns I am still sipping rum, still watching the full moon, its light a gleaming swath on the calming sea.
“It’ll take a little while,” he says. “All things considered, I think it’s the best we can do.”
“I wonder what he told her, if he told her something in that Guam interview.”
“Doesn’t matter now,” Werhner says quietly.
“God, I just want to forget,” I tell him, Cooper’s Do you see things, Voorst? running through my mind. I rise and stretch to shake it off. “Put this behind me. I just want to forget.”
Late in the evening we are lounging at the PastPacific Show, sitting on mats at long, low tables in the center of a mocked-up village of palm-thatched huts. A Balinese ceremony has just ended and the smell of incense hangs in the air, mingles with the odors of roast pig, fish, baked taro, fresh tropical fruits. A Polynesian troupe dances into the center circle, the men in mylar lava-lavas, the women’s hips furious and sensual to fast Tahitian drums, their long grass skirts small waves above their flower-circled feet. What a feast we have had, how it’s cleared my mind. Werhner reclines, nuzzling Erica. I haven’t felt so well in months. I lie with my head in Collette’s lap, among the layers of frangipani and pikake falling in strings from her neck, looking up into her face. She is illuminated by torchlight.
She is simply the most beautiful woman I’ve seen in this evening of beautiful women. Her high cheekbones, her sexy big lips, catch the light in ways that seem to me magical; she seems supernatural tonight. She looks down at me with a fine, tender smile, her eyes green-gold in the light. I mouth the words “I love you.” She is puzzled; I say the words. She understands and breaks into a wide grin. When she leans over to kiss my forehead, I am smothered in flowers for a delicious moment.
“You’ve been good to me,” I tell her, thinking back over this last leg of the trip.
“I’ve been trying my best,” she says. “Lover.”
“Tell me something I can do for you. Really. Take your turn for once, Collette. You show me yours.”
She laughs, looks away. The drums have shifted to a slower, sensuous rhythm, the light begins to flash as torches are whirled.
“There is something,” she says.
I ask her what.
“It’s something I’ve never done before, and I want to now, with you. It’s a marriage,” she says shyly. “Not a legal marriage, but a sort of wedding in the way of my ancestors. This place… well, this place makes me think of it. I have a few things my brother gave me, they’re very old. He told me what to do with them. Will you go through the ceremony with me, Rawley?”
“A tribal wedding?” I ask. I’m not quite certain what she means. “Here?”
“No, not here. I need the ocean, there isn’t anyone from my tribe. But you’ll be. We can go to the island, the island where we were this afternoon. That’d be perfect. I’d have to get some things from the ship—could we reach that island in the dark? We’d have to build a fire, I’ll need a fire. It’s such a nice night. Rawley?”
I look up through the smoky atmosphere and see the large moon poking through the fronds of coconut trees. Really, what Collette’s suggested thrills me to the bones. If we can get a Zodiac, I think, there’s no problem getting to the island in the moonlight. I look over at Werhner—both he and Erica are sound asleep, arms entwined, before a massive pile of pork bones and coconut pudding.
“It’s all right with me,” I say. “I’m ready to go.”
On the island’s beach, above lapping, low-tide waters, in the still beauty of the night, we make a small camp around the wide mats which Collette has brought along. Collette builds a small fire from scrub and hardwood she’s also brought along in the Zodiac. Once she lights it, we recline on the woven straw mat. She draws a diagram with a stick in the sand to show me what she’s done, where we find ourselves:
We are in the center of the four elements, the air above, the earth below, fire and water to either side.
She’s given me a loose thong, an animal-skin loincloth, to wear; she’s wearing a long, sheer embroidered robe, eggshell-white. She asks me to repeat a series of phrases in a language I’ve never heard before. I watch her bowed head as she speaks, her voice soft and guttural, as if she speaks from the origin of language itself. Her eyes are directed downward; as she lifts her face when she is finished, the fire behind me becomes an intense spot of light in her pupils.
Then she takes my hand, holds it palm upward in her lap, and makes a small, quick incision in my wrist with an old ivory knife. The blood comes. She cuts her own wrist, a precise centimeter cut, drops the knife, and firmly pulls our wrists together with her other hand. The sensation is warm, viscous; for a moment as I feel our pulses pounding in unison I experience a strange sense of oppression and joy at the same time.
After a minute Collette sprinkles a powder on both our wrists and the bleeding stops. As she does so she tells me that her people will stand by me until death, and I must stand by them; that with her people I will always find protection, food, drink, shelter, and warmth. Her people, I think… there is a sadness in her eyes as she speaks, but her smile is full and sexy when she finishes, the kind of wide smile that really shows her teeth. When we next make love, she says, we will be married.
I begin to reach for her, but she stops me with her hand. There is another step, she tells me, her eyes brightening. She removes a small drawstring pouch from the basket she is kneeling beside. She tells me she will speak the taala, a phrase she translates as “the words which must not be hesitantly spoken.” As she begins I have the feeling that she has known these words for a long time.
“This is the gift,” Collette says, her voice incantatory and distant, “given of the gods, which lets the eye see to behind the sun. It opens the ear to sounds which only the specters of the ancestors can hear. It opens the nose to smells which only the best of hunting dogs can smell, and, smelling, grow restless. This is the gift that gives wings to the feet for the journey to the unknown land where all totems are silent. Then shall the voice resound like the sound of the antelope and every gesture endure forever and the darkness shall be lifted and the great mysteries revealed….”
As she speaks I chew a powder that tastes of bone meal and seaweed, my mouth dry. I gesture to reach for her after a prolonged silence and she says, “Shut your eyes, Rawley. Shut your eyes.” When I open them again she has disappeared into the inky darkness; I didn’t hear her move. I sit absolutely still, listening, but I hear nothing. I close my eyes again.
My heart is pounding. I wait for minutes and the minutes stretch; I find myself wondering how long my eyes have been closed. I lose my grip on time, look up. The sky above is a vast well of darkness, a sea of stars, snow at the Milky Way. I see Vega, the first star of the evening, a star whose light I first saw appear through the ship’s dome as I talked with Taylor at sunset. And the first star of the navigator’s triangle. The points of light separate themselves, they lead me automatically to a search for the Crab nebula. It is directly overhead. I look, and in looking I begin to feel the sky widen and I begin to fall through it, falling among the stars as the infinity of space opens before me like a window, like a door. I can feel the blood coursing through my veins and arteries, the rhythm of my heart the rhythm of my body.