A timeless luminescence
played off the bathroom tiles as the flames of the tea candles
shivered and flickered in their faceted glass holders. Amelia
remarked the translucent glow upon her exposed skin as she swept a
cloud of bath bubbles towards her breasts rising from the hot water
like tropical islands. Alacrity and Karma she could call them, those
odd words Duncan had spoken one night while in his liminal state.
Alacrity and Karma, twin tropical islands in the south seas of his
unconsciousness. She closed her eyes feeling the welcome flush of
warmth upon her cheeks, grateful for this moment of calm and
normality as the lavender-scented bathwater released her from layers
of psychological restraint, layers reaching back even to that nascent
aversion to the idea of giving birth, one that had passed through
various stages of denial, self-reproach, selfishness and acceptance.
It was fortuitous neither of them had wanted children. As she swirled
water around her hips, she imagined Duncan and his twin brother in
their Mother's womb, each in their own amniotic sac with their
umbilical cords making her think of astronauts floating in space, or
deep sea divers with oxygen hoses, or monkeys swinging on lianas
under the rain forest canopy. With the loss of his twin brother, and
his unlikely-to-be married younger brother, Duncan was forever going
on about being the last of the line, and she sensed he derived a
stubborn dignity in this preponderant closure, almost one of negative
pleasure. Perhaps that was why he'd wanted to visit his childhood
home that afternoon, before they'd even returned to theirs. They'd
driven past his old elementary school, now condominiums, and then
stopped at his old church across the corner from it, where they had
got out and walked around. The trees had overgrown concealing the
substantial presence of the large church. Duncan had recalled the
time when as a young teenager, he'd followed his Father, who was on
the church house committee, through a window and out to an attached
roof ladder and up to a small door to the massive square towered
belfry to inspect the excessive build-up of bat and pigeon droppings;
a dank and fetid smell had risen from the dark and slippery interior
where the bells had long ceased to ring. Many bags of guano had
been redeemed by a contractor hired to clean it up. So many memories
he'd said, so many. His parents had been the first to wed in the new
building's chapel, but now the structure was up for sale. When they'd
gotten home, he'd searched his files for an old magazine he'd
inherited from his parents, a copy of the The Presbyterian Record
from June of 1964 with a photograph of the church on the cover, a
flood of parishioners cascading down the main entrance to the
sidewalk, a photograph in which he was sure he could see his parents in the
crowd and he and his brothers hidden in the sea of suits, hats and
dresses. There were so few people now left to attend. “I wouldn't
be surprized if it was turned into condominiums,” he'd said, before
describing an imaginary series of rooms in the belfry tower with a
spiral staircase between them, rooms filled with books and antique
furniture, an impossible future Gothic fantasy of his desire. They
had then left the car at the church and walked down the street to
look at his childhood home, which was well-kept and in better
condition than he remembered. The school, the church and the home
were three points forming what he had said formed an isosceles right
triangle of childhood that could fit into a football field. The
growth of neighbourhood trees and the rise of a four-storey apartment
block on the corner across from the family home—on the empty lot of an old Esso gas station—blocked the
views of the sky from his old den windows. The slender Linden tree of
his childhood had grown to an absurd thickness for such a small front
lawn, it's breadth just defeating his encircling arms. It would
outlive him he'd said, his life was as ephemeral as the aphids that
used to live within its dappled expanse.
From her initial fears that
Duncan would awake without memory, as if he'd sipped water from a
mysterious river running through his dreams, she felt that his
strange sleep had had the obverse reaction, arousing his deepest
recollections and stirring up the silt of pale nostalgia. She had
experienced feelings of relief and thankfulness before finally
settling upon a sense of delicate uncertainty, retaining an unspoken
concern for a sudden relapse. Except for his novel propensity to
strip the prosaic and habitual of its banality, he seemed quite
normal. His having cleaned the fridge was perhaps a welcome
side-effect, but she hoped he would soon loose interest in the
mundane. Life was complicated enough without awakening the auto pilot
of daily life. As for the Norwegian outbursts, she was baffled, and
had given up trying to record them for later translation
possibilities. She hoped they would just stop. Seeing him standing
before his bookshelves casually reading a small paperback entitled
The Spirit of Aikido, after
dinner, she'd been
reassured that his old self was intact. Books were still his great
love, as language was for her.
A new assignment to
translate a popular young adult novel provided a structural
resilience to her life for the next quarter, allowing her to feel
confident in the approach of the holidays and the new year. She'd
already performed a quick read through of the text, one overladen
with adolescent love triangles, physical transformations and dark
forests. She would have to resist her temptation to embellish the
narrative with too rich a vocabulary, a propensity she noticed in
herself, and one she would monitor as she followed the line and the
voice of the adolescent narrator. If there had been such an abundance
of young adult books when she'd been young, she wondered if they
would have helped with her anxieties and doubts. As for own her
reading, she recalled going from Nancy Drew to Catch 22, a
book pinched from her Aunt's bookshelves. Then there had been the
shelves of Agatha Christies and Georgette Heyers, books by Margaret
Miller and Helen MacInnes, and the large selection of classics in her
uncle's collection. She wasn't sure if her reading choices had been a
symptom of her fleeing adolescence, or mere circumstance.
She drew the sponge up and
squeezed hot water behind her neck. Was this new assignment, she
wondered, due to her agent having pressed the emotional button? The
young translator whose husband was in a coma, his businesses in
limbo, their livelihood in jeopardy? A woman in need of the
proverbial helping hand? Pity? Concern? She slipped her chin down
into the water and blew soapy bubbles with her lips, the hypothetical
question transformed into opalescent structures moving upon the
surface of the water, an evanescence that slowly drifted towards her
distant toes.
Raising herself, the
shifting water echoing off the smooth white tile, she reached for a
towel and dried her hands and forearms, then took up the sheets of
paper resting on the toilet seat nearby, printed pages of Duncan's
recollection of his dreamscape while in his coma-like sleep. The day
after he'd awoken, he'd asked her to bring her laptop to the hospital
so he could describe the inner world before it faded from his memory.
She had watched him type with his fine, ten-finger skills—the most
practical course in high school he'd said, telling her all about his typing teacher, an older woman with her sleeveless dresses revealing the
slack upper arm flesh that wobbled when she pointed to a line of text
on the blackboard with her yardstick as the class pounded away on the late 1950s Royal Aristocrats seeking speed and accuracy, speed and
accuracy, the watchwords for their future lives. It had not taken him
long to type it out, but he had been briefly overcome with exhaustion
at the end, much to the concern of the nurses who had popped in to
take another battery of tests.
His description was but
another text to interpret and translate, she thought. One she hoped
would provide clues to understand his experience. She'd read his
halting sentences a dozen times wondering if he'd just made it up out
a mania of past emotions and memories, but she still found herself
drawn to them in the hope of finding meaning, significance, insight,
and perhaps a silhouette of some form of truth.
Dream Fragment
It all began aboard a large sailing
vessel. I awoke in a small cabin with a porthole. I remember my
landfall, my disembarking. I found myself alone, descending a sloping
gangway to the dock, a young man ascending at equal pace, an
approaching simulacrum of my younger self. Without stopping, he
passed me a rusty skeleton key before vanishing in the fog and mist.
All of a sudden it was night. The narrow streets and dark alleys
running off from the quay were wet and slick. The occasional store
windows revealed empty display areas like theatrical stages between
performances. A full moon provided light. I found myself before a
tall brick and stone wall and began following the course of it in the
hopes of finding a door. Letters in an unknown script were
occasionally scratched into the rough stone. I came to a large upside
down Gothic arched door made of stout oak and decorated with richly
carved rosettes that upon closer inspection, revealed a diversity of
faces, Green Men with differing expressions. The point of the arch
lay near my feet, the keyhole in the middle, eye level, the open
mouth of one of the faces. I looked through but only the only thing
visible was darkness. I inserted the key sideways and turned it and
the tumblers silently, effortlessly aligned, and the the door opened
inwards of itself and I stepped carefully over the narrow point and
pocketed the key. A passageway ran to the left with a gradual
downward grade and as I began to walk, I ran my fingertips against
the dark walls feeling ridges like the wales of corduroy, or spines
of books, reminding me too of running a stick along
fences as a kid. Coming to large double doors without handles or
knobs, I pushed them open and found myself beneath a geodesic dome
structure, moonlight reflecting angular shadows, grids and triangles,
upon the pathway before me, one that led to fifteen foot high
bookshelves on either side, each with a rolling library ladder
attached to a smooth runner rail. I breathed in the intoxicating
alchemical aroma of paper, cloth and leather bindings feeling I'd
found a hidden paradise, a lost or forgotten library. I looked down
the path and noticed it came to an end, and thinking it odd, I walked
the long distance to that supposed dead end only to discover that it
opened to the left with a gradual curve which I continued to explore.
I had to overcome my desire to look at the books, their buckram,
leather and cloth bindings diverting my attention, their gilt titles
seducing me to withdraw a volume, breath in its particular scent,
feel its unique shape and texture, and behold the imagined title
pages of elaborate design. Only when I came to the end of the curve
which abruptly turned right and then back towards the direction I had
come, did I begin to recognize a familiar layout, one that Amelia and
I had walked with Melisande, a layout of a medieval labyrinth. I then
gave in to my desire to look at the books themselves and I scaled one
of the ladders and randomly pulled a book off a high shelf, a heavy
full leather binding with panelled boards and gilt tooling, one of a
multi-volume set with the title Canticles of Sand. I opened it
to see exquisite green and blue marbled endpapers and fore edges; it
was a finely printed book with engravings of strange coastal
landscapes. Putting it back in place, I glanced at the titles around
me and many were in foreign languages. Deciding to explore the
pathway, I descended the ladder and continued along the path,
occasionally stopping to look at a book that caught my eye—the
books only had titles, neither author names nor publisher's imprint
at the foot of the spine. I vividly remember these titles: Perpetual
Conceptions, Gelid Harmonies, and Specular Apothegms.
It was about then that I heard the
footsteps. At first I was unsure from which direction they came, and
remembering Melisande's explanation of labyrinths having but one
entrance and one path, I realised that if the footsteps were
following me into the labyrinth, I could not escape them. They would
find me along the way or at the centre. The bookshelves were back to
back and didn't have spaces between. The only possible hiding place
would be to scale a ladder and somehow manage to clamber on top of
the highest shelf, their tops forming what I imagined would be a
mirrored pathway of the one below, an additional pathway with the
hazard of vertigo. To slip and fall would not
be inconsiderable. All of these thoughts passed through my mind as I
listened to the footsteps echoing in the passage, and still I
couldn't decipher from which direction they issued. I remember trying
to lower my breathing rate and stay calm, but even though I possessed
the key, I felt I was trespassing. With my senses heightened due to
fear, I listened to the footsteps which were firm, even and
resounded with a frightening persistence. I made the decision to walk
towards the centre, and I began as quickly and quietly as possible.
The footsteps increased in their speed. I began to lightly run, and
likewise, my pursuer, who I sensed was a man, began sprinting. From
that point I remember starting to run wildly, bouncing off the edges
of bookshelves as I turned corners, the occasional book falling to
the path. It then occurred to me to pull books off the shelves to
hinder him, but my love for books got the better of me, and I
reasoned it would take the same amount of time to dislodge them than
I would gain in frustrating his pursuit. It didn't matter in the end,
for as I came round a large bend which I conjectured to be at the top
of the labyrinth, the path was blocked with four foot stacks of
books. I climbed one of the ladders and seeing it was free from
obstacle, I positioned myself near the top and began pushing myself
along the rail with my right arm and my right foot. After careening
around large curves and long straight sections, I had to occasionally
stop at the sharp turns to transfer to another ladder. I heard him
behind, travelling the other side, the sound of metal on metal, the
rubber wheels squealing along the floor, his vigorous and aggressive
physical exertions knocking books off as he went.
When I felt I was gaining on him, my
ladder shuddered to a stop almost throwing me off, but I held on with
one hand and pulled myself back. The wheels had broken. Looking
forward in the dim light, I couldn't see any other ladders, so I
climbed up and reached for the top of the bookshelf unit and hoisted
myself up. I tried to dislodge the ladder but failed. Kneeling,
feeling slightly dizzy, I glanced back and I could see a hooded
figure in dark clothes, his pale hands gripping the ladder as he
pushed off with one foot. Standing up, I looked across the expanse of
the labyrinth and found I was not too far from the centre, but if I
followed the path, it would take me back in the direction of my
pursuer, so I contemplated vaulting the path below to the tops of far
bookshelves across from me. It was then I felt the impact of a heavy
book on my shoulder thrown by my nemesis from below. He then began
scaling the ladder and I picked up the book at my feet, and unable to
overcome my curiosity I quickly read the title that almost did me in,
Cordis Divisio, then I threw it down at him, hitting his back
and stalling him momentarily. I ran along the tops of the
bookshelves and could hear him following. Books skidded by me, one
hit my arm, another almost hit my head. I could see that I was
approaching the middle of a semi-circular arc with a straight line
running towards the centre of the labyrinth, and I made my way
carefully there only to find it broke to either side in short
dead-ends arcs, and across from me, the circular outline of the
centre. Looking back, I saw he was slowly coming towards me,
still holding a book in his left hand. I ran back to the beginning of
the straight path, turned around again, and ran quickly as I could and made the leap across the pathway below.
I made it across, but overshot the leap
and found myself slipping over the inner edge. I was clinging to the
top of the bookshelf unit, trying to find a foot hold, when I heard
him land above me. Looking down I could see a large, sharply pointed
sun dial on a stone pedestal. I then looked up, and the man was
holding a pale hand out to me, and with the other, he began to pull
back the hood on his jacket, but before I saw his face, I lost my
grip and fell towards the sundial.
I then awoke and found myself in the
small room aboard the ship once more. And the whole sequence started
over, and over, and over. I was caught in this nightmare loop until I
awoke in the hospital and not in the ship's cabin, the machines
around me beeping, the nurses hovering over me, and Amelia behind
them with a look of deep anxiety upon her face.
*
Amelia shivered, put the pages back on
the toilet seat, turned the hot water tap on, slipped down into the bath, and contemplated if, and when, she would tell Duncan he'd
been calling Gavin's name before awakening in the hospital.
© Ralph Patrick Mackay
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