Page 1 of The Devil Tree




  Praise for The Devil Tree:

  “Flawless . . . A strong, meaningful voice, adding something vital to the riches of the modern novel.”

  —The Times (London)

  “One of our finest and most important writers . . . masterful.”

  —The Oregonian (Portland)

  “Kosinski is, one is sure, related in some crazy way to Hesse. . . . An unusual writer—so consistently faithful to his own peculiar talent.”

  —Cincinnati Enquirer

  “Jerzy Kosinski’s prose is in itself so remarkable—terse and hardedged but still supple and fluid—that it seems impossible he could ever fail or bore his readers. . . . Kosinski is one of our most valuable and exciting writers, and The Devil Tree will undoubtedly find a wide and appreciative audience.”

  —Saturday Review

  “Stunning . . . powerful and affecting.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  THE DEVIL TREE

  BOOKS BY JERZY KOSINSKI

  NOVELS

  The Painted Bird

  Steps

  Being There

  The Devil Tree

  Cockpit

  Blind Date

  Passion Play

  Pinball

  The Hermit of 69th Street

  ESSAYS

  Passing By

  Notes of the Author

  The Art of the Self

  NONFICTION

  (Under the pen name Joseph Novak)

  The Future Is Ours, Comrade

  No Third Path

  THE DEVIL TREE

  Jerzy Kosinski

  A NOVEL

  REVISED AND EXPANDED

  Copyright© 1973, 1981 by Jerzy Kosinski

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Any members of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or publishers who would like to obtain permission to include the work in an anthology, should send their inquiries to Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 841 Broadway, New York, NY 10003.

  First published in hardcover by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc., in 1973. Revised and expanded edition first published in hardcover by St. Martin’s Press in 1981. This Grove Press edition is printed in special arrangement with Henry Holt and Company, New York.

  This book is fiction. Any similarity to any actual event or character,

  whether past or present, is gratuitous and not intended.

  Printed in Canada

  Published simultaneously in Canada

  Acknowledgements: The quotation used as an epigraph preceding the text is taken from Abraham Joshua Heschel’s Who Is Man? Copyright © 1965 by Abraham Joshua Heschel. Reprinted with the permission of Stanford University Press, www.sup.org. // Lines from “Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop” by W. B. Yeats that appear on page 121 quoted by the narrator are reprinted with the permission of Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group, from The Collected Works of W. B. Yeats, Volume 1: The Poems, Revised, edited by Richard J. Finneran. Copyright © 1933 by The Macmillan Company; copyright renewed © 1961 by Bertha Georgia Yeats. // Lines from “Shine, Perishing Republic” by Robinson Jeffers appearing on page 151 are taken from The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers. Copyright © 1934 by Robinson Jeffers; copyright renewed © 1962 by Donnan Jeffers and Garth Jeffers. Reprinted by permission of Random House, Inc. // Lines from “Dear Judas” by Robinson Jeffers appearing on page 151 are taken from Dear Judas and Other Poems. They are reprinted by permission of Liveright Publishing Corporation. Copyright © 1929 by R. Jeffers. Copyright © 1957 by Robinson Jeffers. Copyright © 1977 by Liveright Publishing Corporation. // Lines from “To His Father” by Robinson Jeffers appearing on pages 151 and 152 are taken from The Collected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers, Poetry 1902-1920, Prose and Unpublished Writings, Volume 4, edited by Tim Hunt. Poem copyright © 1924, 1952 by Robinson Jeffers; editorial matter copyright © 2000 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Jr. University. Reprinted with the permission of Stanford University Press, www.sup.org.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Kosinski, Jerzy N. 1933-1991.

  The devil tree : a novel / Jerzy Kosinski—Rev. and expanded,

  p. cm.

  eBook ISBN-13: 978-0-8021-9951-5

  1. Inheritance and succession—Fiction. 2. Self-destructive behavior—Fiction. 3. Children of the rich—Fiction. 4. Americans—Africa—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3561.O8 D4 2003

  813′54—dc21 2002033860

  Grove Press

  841 Broadway

  New York, NY 10003

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  When I wrote this novel initially, I felt restricted by the proximity of its story to the environment and events of my recent past decade. This might account for the cryptic tone of the novel’s first version.

  Now, years later, in this revised and expanded edition, I have felt free to reinstate all the additional links that bound Jonathan James Whalen to those whom he loved.

  JERZY KOSINSKI

  To Katherina

  and to the memory of my mother

  Beyond all agony and anxiety lies the most important ingredient of self-reflection: the preciousness of my own existence. To my own heart my existence is unique, unprecedented, priceless, exceedingly precious, and I resist the thought of gambling away its meaning.

  ABRAHAM JOSHUA HESCHEL,

  Who Is Man?

  The native calls the baobab “the devil tree” because he claims that the devil once got tangled in its branches and punished the tree by reversing it. To the native, the roots are branches now, and the branches are roots. To ensure that there would be no more baobabs, the devil destroyed all the young ones. And that’s why, the native says, there are only full-grown baobab trees left.

  JERZY KOSINSKI,

  The Devil Tree

  THE DEVIL TREE

  Looking down at the river shimmering in the bright sun, Jonathan Whalen leaned against the steel balustrade at the end of the street. The skyline of New York that he remembered did not seem altered by the recent skyscrapers. Far across the river, jets took off from La Guardia, leaving behind them thin lines of exhaust. On the near side, a helicopter lifted into the sky, hovered over the water, then veered off, casting its shadow on the river. Another helicopter descended and touched down, quivering to a stop on the landing pad.

  Whalen walked toward the heliport, where a freshly painted copter sat on a platform. A large sign proclaimed: EXECUTIVE HELIWAYS, INC. SEE MANHATTAN FROM THE AIR. LOW-RATE EXCURSIONS. Whalen went into the ticket office, and the clerk looked him up and down.

  “I’d like to see Manhattan,” said Whalen.

  “Why don’t you take a subway?” said the clerk, focusing on Whalen’s old shirt, worn pants, and scuffed boots.

  “Manhattan can’t be seen from the subway.”

  “How about the bus?”

  “Too slow. How about the sight-seeing flight?”

  The clerk leaned across the counter. “Look, this is Executive Heliways, not freeload ways. Understand?”

  “I do,” said Whalen. He held out several crisp bills, the exact amount listed on the wall board as the price for the half-hour flight. “Will this do?”

  Shuffling uneasily, the clerk stared at the money. “I’ll check with the pilot,” he mumbled as he disappeared into the back room, and a moment later he returned, accompanied by a man in a gray uniform.

  “This is the fella who wants to take the ride,” said the clerk.

  The pilot glanced at Whalen. “Look, son—”

>   “I’m not your son,” said Whalen, and he pushed the money toward the clerk.

  The pilot hesitated. “I’m going to have to sort of frisk you before takeoff.”

  “You frisk everyone who flies with you?”

  “Well—at my discretion.”

  “Then use it,” said Whalen.

  “It’s easier if you put your hands up,” said the pilot, approaching him slowly, and as Whalen complied, the man rapidly patted his shirt and pants. “Take off your boots,” he directed. Again Whalen obeyed, then put them back on after the inspection. Reassured, the pilot snapped, “Let’s board,” and the two of them marched toward the landing platform.

  Inside the helicopter the pilot turned to Whalen. “We’ll fly all over the place,” he said; “over the Harlem black, the Gramercy Park white, and the Chinatown yellow; over the Bowery poor and the Park Avenue rich; the East Side, the West Side, midtown, downtown.” He pulled the throttle. The machine coughed, vibrated, and arched off the ground.

  “A helicopter makes me feel free,” said Whalen as he glanced at the tourists watching them through binoculars from the roof of the Empire State Building. “Still, each time I fly in one, I feel like a toy, guided by remote control by someone on the ground.”

  They passed over the town houses of Greenwich Village. “Now I’ll show you where all the big money is,” said the pilot, spinning the helicopter toward the Stock Exchange.

  “Could you slow down over that building for a second?” asked Whalen. He pointed to an archaic skyscraper on Wall Street. “My father’s office was on the top floor there. When I visited him as a kid, I used to stand there and look down at the other buildings. But it’s a strange feeling to be above it, looking down.”

  The pilot glanced quizzically at Whalen but said nothing as he guided the helicopter around the building and, flying over Battery Park, went all the way to the Statue of Liberty. There, trailing the wake of an oil tanker, he turned again toward Manhattan. “Okay, son,” he announced, “we’re going back home now.”

  At the heliport a police car stood next to the landing pad, and as Whalen stepped out of the machine a policeman moved toward him. The Heliways clerk stood nearby.

  “Put your hands up!” ordered the policeman. Whalen obeyed. The policeman frisked him, found Whalen’s wallet, and counted the money in it. “Look at this,” he muttered. “This guy’s carrying over two grand.” He turned back to Whalen. “Where’d the money come from?”

  “A bank,” Whalen answered. “One we just flew over.”

  The policeman stared at him. “What are you talking about?”

  “I got this money from my bank,” answered Whalen.

  “For what?”

  “For killing—”

  The policeman stiffened. “Killing what?”

  “Time,” said Whalen.

  The policeman was not amused. “Where do you live?” he asked.

  “Nowhere yet. I’ve just arrived.”

  “Where from?”

  “Abroad.”

  “Got any identification?”

  “Only money. Isn’t that enough? There’s no law that says I have to carry identification.”

  “Tell me more about the law and you’ll sleep in jail tonight. Where is your family?”

  “Dead.”

  The policeman nodded in disbelief. “You get one more chance,” he threatened. “Where’d you get this money?”

  Whalen shrugged. “From my bank, the National Midland, Wall Street branch.” He waited. “If you don’t believe me, call the bank’s president, Mr. George Burleigh. Tell him I’m back in town, and he will tell you where my money came from. My name is Jonathan James Whalen.”

  The officer went to the office to make the call. When he returned, he handed Whalen the wallet. “I’m sorry about this, Mr. Whalen.” He laughed uneasily. “You know, there are a lot of. . .” He stammered. “A lot of suspicious characters around.” He paused. “Can I give you a lift somewhere?”

  “I have no place to go to right now,” said Whalen, and he turned and walked into the heliport office, where the pilot was lounging in a metal chair and drinking a cup of coffee. “How many helicopters, would you guess, flew over New York at the same time we did?” Whalen asked him.

  “Five or so,” answered the pilot.

  “And how many people did they carry?”

  “Maybe fifteen.”

  “Fifteen people looking down at twelve million,” said Whalen. “That’s quite a ratio.”

  The pilot leaned forward. “Pardon my asking, but what do you do for a living? There must be a secret—”

  “There is,” answered Whalen. “Money is the secret. The bank we flew over keeps it in trust for me until I reach a certain age.”

  “No kidding,” said the pilot. “And when’s that?”

  “Tomorrow,” answered Whalen.

  • • •

  It was evening. Whalen walked through the bustling streets of the East Side, and wherever he looked he saw young men and women, sitting or standing in sidewalk cafés and bars; leaning against their motorcycles, scooters, or cars; talking, laughing, embracing. They all seemed to be at ease with themselves and each other. Eventually he would have to make his way in their midst; he would meet some of them, judge and be judged by them, befriend them and be befriended in return.

  He knew he must make a decision. Would he place himself among such people as their equal, and by doing so, remain slightly ashamed of everything about himself that would set him apart? Or would he enter their ranks as one whose position was of a different longitude and latitude from theirs—as a person who was his own event?

  A girl walked toward him, her skirt swaying, revealing the shape of her long, tanned legs. Aroused, looking at her, he became aware of the space that his desire had opened between her and him, a space that a simple act of his will could not span. Had she noticed him, smiled at him, he would have found the courage to follow her, even to arrange a meeting. But she did not return his look. Still, he thought, perhaps he should follow her. But he didn’t.

  He walked into a restaurant. Mirrors reflecting the light from a crystal chandelier shot glittering prisms into even the darkest corners of the crowded room. Alone, he thought of Karen.

  • • •

  I’ve bought the smallest tape recorder available. It looks exactly like a match box, and it can record anything from a one-minute memo to a four-hour conversation. It operates on its own rechargeable battery, is activated by voice or hand, and contains an invisible condenser microphone that self-adjusts for voice distances even in a large conference room. I keep it in my pocket.

  One day I might even want to leave it behind in Karen’s apartment, and then claiming I left it by accident, pick it up the following day.

  An American friend of mine once shared his apartment with his Argentinean girl friend for four months without letting her know that he was fluent in Spanish. By means of a miniature tape recorder that he concealed in his pocket when they were together or hid in the apartment when he went out, he would record her conversations, whether on the phone or face to face with her Spanish-speaking friends, many of whom did not speak English. In these conversations, his girl friend often talked about how much she loved him and what an unusually good and considerate man he was. But once in a while, on the phone with an intimate girl friend in Buenos Aires, she would candidly describe his lovemaking and bedside manners and speculate about his sexual preoccupations, fantasies, and fetishes, some of which she found peculiar and not to her taste. After listening to many tapes of conversations recorded in his absence, he became convinced that she was in love with him and felt reassured that there was no other man in her life. Nevertheless, unable to erase from his memory some of the poignant remarks she made about him, he began to feel embarrassment when making love to her and eventually became not only self-conscious but impotent. One night while caressing her, to end his misery he whispered to her in perfect Spanish how sorry he was that he had deceived he
r, and then he proceeded to tell her about the tape recorder. Shocked, the girl began to cry, and the next day told him that she felt betrayed. She said she could never forget that she had been spied on for months—and this by him, the only man she had ever loved and trusted. Soon after that, refusing to have anything more to do with him, she left for Buenos Aires.

  • • •

  “Look, man, I’m just trying to be friendly, that’s all. Just now, I was standing behind you in line at the bank, right? And I saw you writing ‘five thousand dollars’—not on a regular check or a bank form, but on a square little piece of paper—plain paper, nothing on it, right? Then you just signed this paper ‘J. J. Whalen’—wasn’t that your name? Whalen?—and you gave it to the cashier and he took that shitty scrap from you like it was pure gold. Then he comes back, all smiles, and just like that counts you out five grand all in that crispy cash! Now, man, I tell you, I been around banks, but I never saw a number like that: you sure got yourself some sonofabitch cash contact in that bank! Five grand for a shitty paper with ‘J. J. Whalen’ on it! Who are you, an underground numbers-game king?

  “But listen, Whalen, let me clue you in on a truth about these sonofabitch bank tellers so they won’t try to hit you with it one day. You know what the motherfuckers got going on the side, don’t you? Some of them—like that fat black bitch who just gave you a come-on look—they take down the name and address of every old lady and widower, every faggy loner or rich bastard who comes in with a fat account. Then they sell the creep’s name to certain guys who want to know where those kind of rich numbers live. Some of these guys pay up to a hundred bills for one good name and address!