High courage in the stress of strife,
And peace when every task is through …”
The blue morning ahead of him danced with sunlight.
XI
The Dialogue
of
Houses
If, then, any one would enter into the secret life, real character,
and true condition of persons and things, so as to know the absolute
truth concerning them, he must first get mentally
still. …
—Dr. L. W. De Laurence, Lama, Yoghee, Adept
and Magician by Alchymy and Fire
1
The Sunlight Man could not afford to waste more than a few hours on sleep. It was four in the morning when he got in. Roosters were already beginning to crow, though the sky was black. His prisoners in the cellar were asleep upright, sagging in the ropes that tied them. The gray light falling on their necks and shoulders from the bare cellar bulbs, the blackness of earth and rock wall behind them, gave them the look of the closed-off, uncommunicating dead. Luke hung with his head fallen forward, shoulders drawn inward as if he’d passed out while in agony. In the darker shadows to his right, the Indian hung in the same position, but with his back to the stairs and his shoulders slumped, relaxed. Millie Hodge, on the other side of Luke, slept with her head fallen back and to one side, and at last she showed her age. The gag biting into her mouth and cheeks was wet with spittle, and at the edges of the gag her gray face was discolored by a dark bruise. Two lines of black, like rainwater stains on a white wall, ran down from the corners of her eyes. The roots of her hair were silver. The Sunlight Man smiled, unconsciously cringing a little, showing his teeth. “O blynde world, O blynde entencioun!” he murmured in the hollow dimness. He raised his hand in blessing, like the Pope.
“How often falleth al the efect contraire
Of surquidrie and foul presumpcioun,
For kaught is proud, and kaught is debonaire!
This Mrs. Hodge is clomben on the staire,
And litel weneth that she moot descenden;
But alday faileth thing that fooles wenden!”
He looked again at Luke, but for all his gleeful bitterness, he could not mock him. His arms and shoulders were thick as a man’s, the iron-toed shoes, rising out of the water on the cellar floor, enormous; but his face (the Sunlight Man observed, moving closer, stirring the sluggish lake) was like that of a suffering child, some ravished half-wit virgin. The Sunlight Man stood pigeon-toed, with bent knees, wringing his fingers. “I find no fault in him,” he said, and grotesquely rolled up his eyes.
He saw then that Nick Slater’s eyes were open, watching, shiny as a rat’s. After a moment the Sunlight Man went over to him and, without a word, untied him. The boy made no move either to resist or to help. His legs were unsteady, and he opened and closed his two hands slowly to get back his circulation. The Sunlight Man helped him through the water to the stairs, still without a word of explanation, and left the others as they were. He began the slow climb, supporting Nick as he would an invalid. Upstairs at last, he whispered with a leer, “You see why I had to do this to you, my boy.” He cocked his head, eyebrows lifted. Then he sat Nick down in the kitchen to put salve on the boy’s sore wrists and ankles, and to wash his feet—bluewhite from the dirty, cold seepage in the cellar—and wrap them in hot towels. “I suppose I can trust you to stand guard, now that I’m back?” he said. Nick Slater said nothing, merely stared, puzzled and full of hostility. “If anything happens,” the Sunlight Man said, “don’t stir, don’t even think; just wake me. If I find I can’t trust you—” He pointed to the cellar, smiling. Still Nick said nothing, but it was answer enough, at the moment, for the Sunlight Man. He had a great deal to do before afternoon if he was to meet again with Clumly. First, he must sleep.
As a rule he was a man who could snatch more sleep in an hour than most men could in three. He knew the art of what had been called in his father’s day “concentration.” But not this morning. He was of many minds, as excited, as tangled in his wits, and as full of daring schemes as a young man in love. Not even he could say why, nor did he ask. “A new lease on life,” the expression went. Why he should get a new lease on life from teasing, perplexing, confounding an old man who sat half-asleep, witless and innocent as an ancient bull with a ring through its nose—who could tell? Nevertheless, he felt like a man reborn. If his head was filled with images of fire, his heart, for all its churning excitement, was precariously serene. Somewhere even now Clumly would be sitting with his hands around his nose, his tiny bullet-eyes half-shut, listening with all his poor clumsy wits to the Sunlight Man’s grand tirade, or walking back and forth in a locked bedroom, puffing fiercely at his green cigar, going through in his mind all the subtle twists of the Tale of the Negro in the Cellar.
And so now, like a man on the verge of embarking on some shrewd course of action for the good of all humanity, the Sunlight Man lay huddled in his bed, still in his clothes, his hands pressed between his thighs, his knees drawn nearly to his chin, trying to concentrate on sleep but racing all the while from scheme to scheme, from one dazzling trick to another, plotting grand gestures and cadences, concocting metaphors and puzzling allusions, a splendid, unheard-of entertainment. Half-waking, half-sleeping, he would laugh sometimes at things he couldn’t make sense of a moment later. When at last he was more asleep than awake, the Indian sitting stock-still at the window, he had curious, frightening dreams.
He was in, perhaps, the Paxton Dairy. (Paxton had never owned a dairy.) All around him lay white perfection: clean walls, clean floors, huge snow-white trucks, a sound and smell of ice-cold water churning. There were stainless steel tubs and milkcans on clean concrete ramps, and corrugated stainless steel doors that rolled open and shut with a sound like far-away thunder. Kathleen, perhaps—perhaps someone else—was at the desk in the office, writing. He noticed with only a part of his mind, for someone was explaining, pointing into a vat which had no water in it, no visible bottom, that the enemy came from down there. Taggert knew who the enemy was, but he could not bring it to mind for a moment. Then, momentarily, everything was clear. The girl at the desk (her red hair falling forward softly, hiding her face and most of the summer-sky blue of her blouse) was named Prosperinga. She’d been captured by a man called Plato, a business rival of Paxton’s, who’d risen up out of the underworld when the girl was working there alone. He’d kept her prisoner all winter but had for some reason released her in the spring. The problem was to board up the hole, because fall was near. Taggert Hodge, called in to help, made a careful sketch of his plan while the man at his elbow admired the sketch and whispered of the awful difficulty.
When he looked up from the paper it was winter and all the windows were broken. Snow was blowing in, and the milkcans were cracked down the side like frozen eggs. He was alarmed at first, then remembered he was not the man they thought, but a secret agent. He smiled, crumpled the paper, and dropped it on the floor. Hurrying away, he took the wrong door and found himself in what appeared to be an old country kitchen converted into some kind of hospital room. On the kitchen table, under an operating light, the attendants had stretched her out naked and had given her ether. She was beautiful, skin as white as marble, and they could not resist passing their hands lightly over her breasts and belly and legs. “See here,” he said. They stopped at once and dropped their hands to their sides, looking sullen. “Have I got to be everywhere at once?” he said. But from under a small table on wheels, with bottles on it, and scissors and tubing, someone whispered to him and reached up his hand in dreadful supplication. Crossly, he turned to do what he could for the poor hopeless devil—there were wormholes in the arm—and he heard his attendants climbing up onto the operating table behind him. His younger son’s hand reached out to him from a basket of clothes by an aluminum ironing board. Suddenly he smelled smoke. He glanced around in alarm and saw cracks appearing in the walls, and small, quick tongues of flame. He shouted in rage at t
he attendants crawling over her body like spidermonkeys, and with the shout he awakened himself. The Indian boy stood over him, holding the pistol, and he could not tell—perhaps Nick Slater could not tell either—whether Nick was there to defend him or to kill him. Wide awake but confused and sick, Hodge met the boy’s eyes. At last Nick lowered the gun.
“You were shouting,” Nick said dully.
Taggert nodded and swallowed.
“Dream, I guess,” Nick said. He turned away and limped back to his watching without a sound. Hodge, after a moment, returned to his nightmares. He was thinking as he drifted off, I must try to explain to him. Nick had said nothing, had not even showed surprise, when Hodge had tied him up in the basement with the others. Perhaps he’d assumed it was simply more madness, and then again perhaps he’d understood. There was no sign whatever of what he thought, if anything, in his flat, dark face. The likelihood, perhaps, was that he showed nothing because he was still watching and waiting. One of these days—one of these hours—he would stop that watching and act. Then Taggert Hodge, too, must watch and wait. But he put it off now and slept. “Let me tell you why I had to tie you up,” he said reasonably and kindly in his dream. The explanation he gave was involved, incredibly subtle, and though it was thrillingly lucid at the time, he could not remember it later.
At eight-thirty, when Nick Slater touched his shoulder to wake him, he sat up on one elbow, blinking, licking the dryness from his mouth. The room around him was still sick with the atmosphere of his dreams. “All right, I’m up,” he said. “You can turn in.” The boy nodded, but he didn’t withdraw. Taggert brought him into focus. “Well?”
“We should get out,” Nick said accusingly. “We can’t stay here like this.”
“Soon,” Taggert said. “We’ll go when it’s right.”
The boy shook his head. His face was drawn with fear and lack of sleep. “It’s too dangerous. There was somebody here last night. Knocked for a long time. Scared me to shit.”
“You kill him?”
The eyes narrowed—Nick had been tied in the cellar at the time—but he said nothing.
Taggert sat up and swung his feet over the side. His head ached and the inside of his mouth was dry, as if he’d been drinking all night. There were bubbles of panic—only partly the aftertaste of his nightmares—stirring in his chest. He observed that Nick had cleaned and polished his shoes. Even in the deathhouse his shoes would be clean and polished.
“A curious pair, aren’t we,” Taggert said. “Rise up and follow me, and I will make you harpooners of men.” He leered.
The boy went on watching him, looking at the scar tissue, not his eyes.
Hodge said, “What will you do when I get you out of this?”
“I don’t know.”
“Turn on me, I suppose.” Hodge nodded, indifferent. “That would be natural.” He tried to think about it, knowing it was impossible; his mind was not yet willing. “Or turn on yourself. Yes. That’s more like it. Destroy your freedom by burning it up. I knew a young fellow that did that once. Name of Ike or something. He was locked on this island with his father, people say, and no escape. But the father was crafty, and he figured out a way to make eagle’s wings that a person could fly with.” He closed his eyes, faking a smile, raising his arms like wings. “Well, never mind. A story.”
Nick said, totally ignoring the act, “What you going to do?”
He shook his head. After a long time he said, “Watch you, I suppose. See where it leads.”
The boy took it in and, after a second, to Hodge’s surprise, nodded. Hodge was shocked, filled with pity. It had never occurred to him that sooner or later the boy might understand that they were caught in an experiment, and no one was in control.
Nick said, “I’d like to be out of here. Someplace else.”
“Not yet, love,” Hodge said. He thought again of Clumly, bent squinting over the tape, and then he was remembering Old Man Paxton, bent over the letter Kathleen had sent to the newspaper. It was a mad letter—she said she’d been captured by Communists—and Paxton could not make out how to deal with it. When his children went wrong it was his habit to slap them, bark out some brilliant cruelty, and return them to his image of what they were; but he had now no slap fierce enough, no cruelty that could reach her. In the wide, sunlit room with the enormous fieldstone fireplace that had never been lit for fear it would confound the heating system, he sat like a coiled snake uncertain where to strike. “I’ll get you for this,” he said. Hodge smiled, thrilled with hate, and said, “You’re as crazy as she is, then?” But afterward Clive Paxton walked in his garden, scrutinizing his lilacs and althea for minute flaws, giving orders, critically turning loose earth with his foot. And the precision in his madness filled Hodge with awe. Paxton did not say later, “I lost control when we talked this morning.” He was no more able to apologize than to complain or compliment. He stood—but this was long before—stood at the gate of his huge truckbarn as the diesels came out in a chalk-white fire of headlights, and would not stir from their path but forced them to swerve and creep like monstrous lions cowering past the whip. He ruled from terror, Hodge thought. Any psychiatrist would say so: the tyranny of the insecure. At the age of fifty-one he’d established a boys’ camp, had risked bankruptcy for it, stamping his troubled image into the Catskill Mountains: a huge stone lodge, a chapel, cabins, a long white dock and boathouses. And there he dealt out contests and awards, branding boys as successes or failures, stamping out hearts and souls in his own tigerish image. And now, meeting Nick Slater’s noncommittal, unblinking gaze, he thought: I’ve loosed another Paxton on the world.
Or was it that he himself was the dangerous beast? Who had triumphed, after all, old man or son-in-law?
“Better get some sleep, my boy,” he said.
The Indian lowered his head—not so much a nod, it seemed, as a gesture requesting blessing. Solemnly, Hodge made a sign of the cross in the air.
And they shall be afraid; pangs and sorrows shall take hold of them; they shall be in pain as a woman that travaileth; they shall be amazed at one another; their faces shall be as flames.
Hodge said, “Thy will be done.” But he thought of Clumly, servant of law, and anxiety flared through his chest. He had to hurry, he would be late and, worse, unprepared.
2
He worked furiously, forcing Luke to help, since Nick was still asleep. Luke said nothing for a long time, merely obeyed, cutting rope, painting, sawing. His wrists were red and sore from the tight bonds, and he breathed by a kind of heavy sighing, like a man sick to death with sorrow. The Sunlight Man struggled to ignore it. Out of odds and ends—bits of wood, rope, wire, an old tarpaulin—the Sunlight Man’s huge, absurd contraption took shape.
“What is it?” Luke said. His voice was full of pressure, the light, fast beating of his heart.
“Prop for a happening,” the Sunlight Man said. He went on with his work.
Luke said, “There are no happenings. When things seem to happen it’s illusion.”
“Prop for an illusion,” he said. “Hand me the pliers.”
Mechanically, fingers trembling, Luke obeyed.
“What’s it all for?” Luke said after a while. It was like a sob, yet he labored at making it mere talk. “You make all these doo-dads, you go out and hold up some stupid store—”
“Nonsense. I don’t hold up stores.”
“Well, whatever.” A whisper. “Just the same, what’s the point?”
“What’s the point of anything, you mean. Ah! That’s very philosophical.”
“Right, be a cynic.” Luke let it go, choked by emotion.
Taggert Hodge frowned, cross and threatened but tempted as well, and at last, because Luke had his father’s eyes, his father’s voice, something even of his father’s plodding goodness (however bent, dented by the batterings of his mother’s uncommon, unsensible wit and, worse yet, by experience too full of ambiguities for common sense to cope with)—because of all that but also
because he could not endure the sight of such pain—he put down the pliers and turned around to lean on the workbench, folding his arms and lowering his bearded chin onto his chest. He said, “As a matter of fact, I do have answers to certain questions. Small ones. What was yours?” He spoke as if with scorn, but by accident.
“Nothing.”
They looked together at the clutter filling the garage. Beyond the open back door there were burdocks, motionless in the sunlight, their white and blue flowers singing with honeybees. The leaves were unnaturally large and their shaded stems were thick, fed by the sewer and not cut back in years.
Luke said, “My question is, Why do sinners’ ways prosper?” A whisper of rage.
The Sunlight Man forced a smile. “Another illusion. Nothing prospers but the soul. The universe is a great machine gun, and all things physical are riddled sooner or later with bleeding holes. You’re bombarded by atoms, colors, smells, textures; torn apart by ancient ideas, appeals for compassion; you twist, writhe, try to make sense of things, you force your riddled world into order, but it collapses, riddled as fast as you build, and you build it all over again. You put up bird-houses and cities, for instance, but cats eat the birds and cyclones eat the cities, and nothing is left but the fruitless searching, which is otherwise called the soul.”
Luke stood silent, throat and temples swelling.
“I’m serious, my boy,” he said. “Don’t be fooled by rhetoric. Even a master of illusion must have his defenses. Witness our Saviour.”
“You just talk,” Luke whispered. “You duck out of everything with talk.”
“Well, yes, perhaps. But I’ve also acted, from time to time. There has to be a convenient opening for action.”
“Yes. Like finding Nick in jail, so you could turn him into a killer.”
“No, I freed him.”
“It was vicious and you know it. Or I hope you do. Maybe you really meant to free him, but you didn’t know him. That’s for sure. Anyone who knew him would have guessed. We tried—me, my father, Uncle Ben. You wouldn’t understand. It was no use, anyway. Jail was the only hope left; maybe it would show him.” He gulped for air. “But there you were, believing in nothing, grabbing whatever little kick came along, exactly like the rest—an ‘existentialist,’ as my mother calls herself. There is no past, only the present; no future either, only the future-present. You know what I’m saying. You didn’t know him from Adam, you had no idea what direction he’d been heading before you came, and you set him ‘free,’ you say, like some new Jesus, as if anything might be possible if you said it was—as if a falling rock could change its mind and go upward at your command.”