He sat, distraught and shivering, seeking about for any consolation.
   He must either be in a happy place, or some null place by now.
   Thought the gentleman.
   In either case is no longer suffering.
   Suffered so terribly at the end.
   (The racking cough the trembling the vomiting the pathetic attempts to keep the mouth wiped with a shaky hand the way his panicked eyes would steal up and catch mine as if to say is there really nothing Papa you can do?)
   And in his mind the gentleman stood (we stood with him) on a lonely plain, screaming at the top of our lungs.
   Quiet then, and a great weariness.
   All over now. He is either in joy or nothingness.
   (So why grieve?
   The worst of it, for him, is over.)
   Because I loved him so and am in the habit of loving him and that love must take the form of fussing and worry and doing.
   Only there is nothing left to do.
   Free myself of this darkness as I can, remain useful, not go mad.
   Think of him, when I do, as being in some bright place, free of suffering, resplendent in a new mode of being.
   Thus thought the gentleman.
   Thoughtfully combing a patch of grass with his hand.
   roger bevins iii
   L.
   Sad.
   roger bevins iii
   Very sad.
   hans vollman
   Especially given what we knew.
   roger bevins iii
   His boy was not “in some bright place, free of suffering.”
   hans vollman
   No.
   roger bevins iii
   Not “resplendent in a new mode of being.”
   hans vollman
   Au contraire.
   roger bevins iii
   Above us, an errant breeze loosened many storm-broken branches.
   hans vollman
   Which fell to the earth at various distances.
   roger bevins iii
   As if the woods were full of newly roused creatures.
   hans vollman
   I wonder, said Mr. Vollman.
   And I knew what was coming.
   roger bevins iii
   LI.
   We wished the lad to go, and thereby save himself. His father wished him to be “in some bright place, free of suffering, resplendent in a new mode of being.”
   A happy confluence of wishes.
   It seemed we must persuade the gentleman to return with us to the white stone home. Once there, we must encourage the lad into the gentleman, hoping that, while therein, having overheard his father’s wish, he would be convinced to—
   hans vollman
   A fine idea, I said. But we have no method by which to accomplish it.
   roger bevins iii
   (There has historically been some confusion around this issue.)
   hans vollman
   No confusion at all, friend.
   It is simply not within our power to communicate with those of that ilk, much less persuade them to do anything.
   And I think you know it.
   roger bevins iii
   LII.
   I beg to differ.
   We caused a wedding once, if you will recall.
   hans vollman
   Highly debatable.
   roger bevins iii
   A couple strolling here, on the brink of ending their engagement, reversed their decision, under our influence.
   hans vollman
   Almost certainly a coincidence.
   roger bevins iii
   Several of us—Hightower, the three of us, and—what was his name? The decapitated fellow?
   hans vollman
   Ellers.
   roger bevins iii
   Ellers, of course!
   Bored, we swarmed and entered that couple and, through the combined force of our concentrated wishfulness, were able to effect—
   hans vollman
   This much is true:
   They were overcome with sudden passion and retreated behind one of the stone homes.
   roger bevins iii
   To act upon said passion.
   hans vollman
   While we watched.
   roger bevins iii
   I have misgivings about that. The watching.
   hans vollman
   Well, you had no misgivings on that day, my dear fellow. Your member was swollen to an astonishing size. And even on a normal day, it is swollen to—
   roger bevins iii
   I seem to remember you watching as well. I do not recall the slightest aversion of any of your many, many—
   hans vollman
   Truly, it was invigorating to see such passion.
   The fury of their embraces was remarkable.
   roger bevins iii
   Yes.
   They sent birds winging from the trees with their terrific moans of pleasure.
   hans vollman
   After which they renewed their commitment and departed hand in hand, reconciled, betrothed again.
   roger bevins iii
   And we had done it.
   hans vollman
   Come now. They were young, lustful, alone in an isolated spot, on a beautiful spring night. They hardly needed any help from—
   roger bevins iii
   Friend:
   We are here.
   Already here.
   Within.
   A train approaches a wall at a fatal rate of speed. You hold a switch in your hand, that accomplishes you know not what: do you throw it? Disaster is otherwise assured.
   It costs you nothing.
   Why not try?
   hans vollman
   LIII.
   There in the gentleman, Mr. Bevins reached for my hand.
   hans vollman
   And we began.
   roger bevins iii
   To persuade the gentleman.
   hans vollman
   To attempt to persuade him.
   roger bevins iii
   Together, the two of us began to think of the white stone home.
   hans vollman
   Of the boy.
   roger bevins iii
   His face, his hair, his voice.
   hans vollman
   His gray suit.
   roger bevins iii
   Turned-in feet.
   hans vollman
   Scuffed shoes.
   roger bevins iii
   Stand up, go back, we thought as one. Your boy requires your counsel.
   hans vollman
   He is in grave danger.
   roger bevins iii
   It is anathema for children to tarry here.
   hans vollman
   His headstrong nature, a virtue in that previous place, imperils him here, where the natural law, harsh and arbitrary, brooks no rebellion, and must be scrupulously obeyed.
   roger bevins iii
   We request, therefore, that you rise.
   hans vollman
   And return with us, to save your boy.
   roger bevins iii
   It did not seem to be working.
   hans vollman
   The gentleman just sat, combing the grass, rather blank-minded.
   roger bevins iii
   It seemed we must be more direct.
   hans vollman
   We turned our minds, by mutual assent, to a certain shared memory of Miss Traynor.
   roger bevins iii
   Christmas last, paying a holiday visit, we found that, under the peculiar strain of that blessed holiday, she had gone beyond the fallen bridge, the vulture, the large dog, the terrible hag gorging on black cake, the stand of flood-ravaged corn, the umbrella ripped open by a wind we could not feel—
   hans vollman
   And was manifesting as an ancient convent, containing fifteen bitter quarreling nuns, about to burn to the ground.
   roger bevins iii
   A girl-sized convent in the style of Agreda, the little nuns inside her just embarking on morning vespers.
   hans vollman
					     					 			r />
   Suddenly, the place (the girl) is ablaze: screams, shrieks, grunts, vows renounced if only one might be saved.
   roger bevins iii
   But none are saved, all are lost.
   hans vollman
   We willed ourselves to see it again, smell it again, hear it again: the incense; the fragrant wall-lining sage-bushes; the rose-scented breeze wafting down from the hill; the shrill nun-screams; the padding of the tiny nun-feet against the packed red clay of the town-bound trail—
   roger bevins iii
   Nothing.
   hans vollman
   He just sat.
   roger bevins iii
   Now, together, we became aware of something.
   hans vollman
   In his left trouser pocket.
   roger bevins iii
   A lock.
   hans vollman
   The lock. From the white stone home.
   roger bevins iii
   Heavy and cold.
   Key still in it.
   hans vollman
   He had forgotten to rehang it.
   roger bevins iii
   An opportunity to simplify our argument.
   hans vollman
   We focused our attention upon the lock.
   roger bevins iii
   Upon the perils of an unlocked door.
   hans vollman
   I called to mind Fred Downs, raging in frustration as those drunken Anatomy students tossed his bagged sick-form on to their cart, horses rearing with alarm at the smell.
   roger bevins iii
   I pictured the wolf-rended torso of Mrs. Scoville, tilted against her doorframe, one arm torn away, little veil fluttering in what remained of her white hair.
   Imagined the wolves massing in the woods even now, sniffing the breeze—
   Making for the white stone home.
   Snarling, drooling.
   Bursting in.
   Etc.
   hans vollman
   The gentleman put his hand into that pocket.
   roger bevins iii
   Closed it upon the lock.
   hans vollman
   Shook his head unhappily:
   How could I have forgotten such a simple—
   roger bevins iii
   Got to his feet.
   hans vollman
   And walked off.
   roger bevins iii
   In the direction of the white stone home.
   hans vollman
   Leaving Mr. Vollman and me there behind him on the ground.
   roger bevins iii
   LIV.
   Had we—had we done it?
   hans vollman
   It seemed that perhaps we had.
   roger bevins iii
   LV.
   Because we were as yet intermingled with one another, traces of Mr. Vollman naturally began arising in my mind and traces of me naturally began arising in his.
   roger bevins iii
   Never having found ourselves in that configuration before—
   hans vollman
   This effect was an astonishment.
   roger bevins iii
   I saw, as if for the first time, the great beauty of the things of this world: waterdrops in the woods around us plopped from leaf to ground; the stars were low, blue-white, tentative; the wind-scent bore traces of fire, dryweed, rivermuck; the tssking drybush rattles swelled with a peaking breeze, as some distant cross-creek sleigh-nag tossed its neckbells.
   hans vollman
   I saw his Anna’s face, and understood his reluctance to leave her behind.
   roger bevins iii
   I desired the man-smell and the strong hold of a man.
   hans vollman
   I knew the printing press, loved operating it. (Knew platen, roller-hook, gripper-bar, chase-bed.) Recalled my disbelief, as the familiar center-beam came down. That fading final panicked instant! I have crashed through my desk with my chin; someone (Mr. Pitts) screams from the ante-room, my bust of Washington lies about me, shattered.
   roger bevins iii
   The stove ticks. In my thrashing panic I have upended a chair. The blood, channeled within the floorboard interstices, pools against the margins of the next-room rug. I may yet be revived. Who has not made a mistake? The world is kind, it forgives, it is full of second chances. When I broke Mother’s vase, I was allowed to sweep the fruit cellar. When I spoke unkindly to Sophia, our maid, I wrote her a letter, and all was well.
   hans vollman
   As soon as tomorrow, if I can only recover, I will have her. I will sell the shop. We will travel. In many new cities, I will see her in dresses of many colors. Which will drop to many floors. Friends already, we will become much more: will work, every day, to “expand the frontiers of our happiness” (as she once so beautifully put it). And—there may be children yet: I am not so old, only forty-six, and she is in the prime of her—
   roger bevins iii
   Why had we not done this before?
   hans vollman
   So many years I had known this fellow and yet had never really known him at all.
   roger bevins iii
   It was intensely pleasurable.
   hans vollman
   But was not helping.
   roger bevins iii
   The gentleman was gone.
   Headed back to the white stone home.
   hans vollman
   Impelled by us!
   roger bevins iii
   O wonderful night!
   hans vollman
   I exited Mr. Vollman.
   roger bevins iii
   Upon Mr. Bevins’s exit, I was immediately filled with longing for him and his associated phenomena, a longing that rivaled the longing I had felt for my parents when I first left their home for my apprenticeship in Baltimore—a considerable longing indeed.
   Such had been the intensity of our co-habitation.
   I would never fail to fully see him again: dear Mr. Bevins!
   hans vollman
   Dear Mr. Vollman!
   I looked at him; he looked at me.
   roger bevins iii
   We would be infused with some trace of one another forevermore.
   hans vollman
   But that was not all.
   roger bevins iii
   We seemed, now, to know the gentleman as well.
   hans vollman
   Removed from both Vollman and the gentleman, I felt arising within me a body of startling new knowledge. The gentleman? Was Mr. Lincoln. Mr. Lincoln was President. How could it be? How could it not be? And yet I knew with all my heart that Mr. Taylor was President.
   roger bevins iii
   That Mr. Polk occupied that esteemed office.
   hans vollman
   And yet I knew with all my heart that Mr. Lincoln was President. We were at war. We were not at war. All was chaos. All was calm. A device had been invented for distant communication. No such device existed. Nor ever could. The notion was mad. And yet I had seen it, had used it; could hear, in my mind, the sound it made as it functioned.
   It was: telegraph.
   My God!
   roger bevins iii
   On the day of the beam, Polk had been President. But now, I knew (with a dazzling clarity) that Polk had been succeeded by Taylor, and Taylor by Fillmore, and Fillmore by Pierce—
   hans vollman
   After which, Pierce had been succeded by Buchanan, and Buchanan by—
   roger bevins iii
   Lincoln!
   hans vollman
   President Lincoln!
   roger bevins iii
   The rail line ran beyond Buffalo now—
   hans vollman
   Far beyond!
   roger bevins iii
   The Duke of York nightcap is no longer worn. There is something called the “slashed Pamela sleeve.”
   hans vollman
   The theaters are lit now with gaslight. Striplights and groundrows being employed in this process.
   roger bevins iii
   The resulting spectacle is a wonder.
					     					 			>   hans vollman
   Has revolutionized the theater.
   roger bevins iii
   The facial expressions of the actors are seen most clearly.
   hans vollman
   Allowing for an entirely new level of realism in the performance.
   roger bevins iii
   It would be difficult to express the perplexity these revelations thrust upon us.
   hans vollman
   We turned and ran-skimmed back toward the white stone home, talking most excitedly.
   roger bevins iii
   Mr. Bevins’s hair and numerous eyes, hands, and noses velocity-streaming behind him.
   hans vollman
   Mr. Vollman bearing his tremendous member in his hands, so as not to trip himself on it.
   roger bevins iii
   Soon we were in Mr. Lincoln’s lee, so close we could smell him.
   hans vollman
   Soap, pomade, pork, coffee, smoke.