back…” And these words she repeated sev-
   eral times, and sighed shiveringly.
   The rain
   drummed and
   she waited.
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 209
   VIII
   MICHAEL, LONG
   SINCE
   having abandoned his tears, was now
   uproariously drunk. He had overturned
   his table and the waiters were leading
   him to the door.
   “Revolt! Revolt!” he kept mumbling
   drunkenly, and even as they were push-
   ing him out into the rain, and the cus-
   tomers were laughing, he kept on
   repeating these words out loud. He had
   been forced to pay for the glasses he’d
   broken, and now, with the change in a
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 211
   crumpled heap in his hand, he waved it at
   the wind and rain. He started up the boule-
   vard, staggering, and once he almost fell in
   a puddle. Pedestrians hurrying by in the
   rain have him only briefly curious glances.
   Michael weaved along the boulevard,
   and then paused to rest on a bench dripping
   with rain. There, stuffing the money back
   into his pockets, he leaned his head in his
   hands and stared at a puddle at his feet.
   “I refuse!” he choked, and got up and
   walked on.
   By now he had reached the bridge and
   began walking along the concrete ramp.
   Below, the river, softly needled by the rain,
   flowed by slowly and in darkness. A tugboat
   hooted and blew up steam towards the
   bridge. Michael stopped midway across the
   bridge and leaned on the railing to look
   down. He was standing in the shadows, and
   the rain pattered down all around him.
   “It’s cold!” he cried, and a gust of wind
   blew by, driving rain against his face. “It’s
   cold!” he repeated with mounting disgust.
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 212
   The bridge, at this point, was completely
   deserted, except for one trolley car that
   clanged and rattled by. As it passed,
   Michael opened his mouth and screamed in
   the midst of the clamour. Then he began to
   moan and sway, shivering, and huddling up
   in his coat.
   ‘I’ve never approved of this method,’ he
   thought. ‘It’s much too inconvenient, and
   too cold— But I’ve made my pact; I’ve made
   my pact. I’ll show him—the poisoner!’ “God
   has poisoned me!” he suddenly cried out
   loud. “Do you hear me? God has poisoned
   me with his damned essence!” No one was
   around; the bridge was completely desert-
   ed, and a strong wing drove slivers of rain
   across the arc lights. A big ship bawled in
   the dark distance.
   ‘But before I do this,’ Michael thought, ‘I
   should really see him—Paul, Paul. Ha ha!
   I’ll hurl curses in his face, the ape. Making
   a fool of me, stealing my poetry and saying
   that he’ll burn it, laughing at me, abetting
   Marie’s damned teasing, taunting me—
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 213
   the insensi-
   tive, stupid,
   thick-headed
   ape! The great
   genius of love
   and life, yes,
   I’ll show the
   ape...’
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 214
   Michael had suddenly begun to walk
   back in the direction from which he had
   come. He was muttering to himself out
   loud. “Perhaps I’m mad now, stark raving
   mad as they say—” He looked around, eyes
   gleaming. “When he sees me, he’ll be terri-
   fied. A lunatic! I’ll bang on his window and
   tell him his hour’s up! I’ll smother the
   wretch to death with me! He’ll faint when he
   sees me! Ho Ho! That’ll be the topper of
   them all…”
   Laughing feverishly, Michael hurried on.
   Suddenly he stopped and leaned again on
   the railing. ‘It’s a waste of time,’ he thought.
   ‘I shouldn’t even warn him. Yes, that’s what
   this is, this running to see him, it’s a sort of
   warning: he doesn’t deserve any sympathy
   of mine. I’ve none for him or anyone else.
   Calls me a failure! A failure!’ Michael looked
   down at the waters below, and carefully
   considered them.
   ‘They’ll think it’s a dishonor,’ he thought,
   ‘but little they’ll know—it’s not dishonor to
   be defeated by God. He’s put this idea in my
   head; he wants me out of the way—because
   I was seeking his impulse: and don’t think
   that I wouldn’t have found it, if I had had the
   fortitude to live on. No doubt about that, I
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 215
   know my powers! But the struggle isn’t
   worth it. Struggle is not happiness. I
   thought I would find happiness there, curi-
   ously enough— It’s a good thing I’ve been
   warning Arthur. I should really go and see
   Arthur before I do this, and warn him again,
   specifically this time. The consequences
   are what he craves, hey? I’ll bet—when the
   time comes, he won’t be so sophomorically
   secure behind his artistic philosophies, oh
   no! But maybe he’s shrewder than me,
   that’s possible… Well, this is all a pretty
   waste of time.’
   Michael suddenly leaned far over the
   railing until his feet were off the pavement
   and he was holding himself only by the
   force of his hands, which were knotted
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 216
   around the bars. “Say something, death,”
   he called to the waters below. “Smug
   silent death, omniscient death, sottish
   death. They tell me corpses dragged out of
   rivers are bloated, blue, and black, like
   puffed up bullfrogs, that they glisten with
   scum, and that the eyes are eaten out by
   rats…” Michael opened and closed his
   eyes. “That’s about to happen to me!” He
   was so drunk now, that he almost lost his
   balance; but he only laughed. The dark-
   ness below him was swirling dizzily, and
   he began to feel sick from the pernod.
   “Now!” he muttered. “This is how it will
   feel when I am plunging into the gouffre!
   Just like this! A note, should have written a
   note! Still time! Oh, it’s cold, cold, cold!…”
   LiveREADS
   ORPHEUS EMERGED 217
   IX
   PAUL, ASLEEP IN
   HELEN’S ARMS,
   was suddenly awake and shivering all
   over very violently. Helen’s hand, which
   had been stroking his hair, paused over
   his head. Paul opened his eyes.
   “I’m cold!” he pronounced hoarsely.
   Then, recognizing Helen, he plunged his
   face into her bosom and shivered violent-
   ly again, as though he had a chill. “I’m
    
					     					 			cold, Helen. Is it so cold in the room?”
   LiveREADS
   ORPHEUS EMERGED 219
   Helen frowned and placed tender finger-
   tips on his brow.
   “No, darling, it’s not so cold… I don’t feel
   it. But your brow is all wet. You have a
   fever!”
   Paul was shaking in her arms. Helen
   underwent a spasm of anxiety: “Paul,” she
   cried, “you’re sick!” She started to get up.
   Paul detained her with his hand. “No
   wait,” he said. “Now, I feel all right. I’m not
   cold any more, and look, I’m not shaking
   any more…”
   “I don’t know—your face is all wet.”
   “I must have been dreaming,” Paul
   assured her. “What have you been doing,
   sleeping?”
   “I’ve been watching you, and waiting.”
   “Do you trust me?”
   “I love you and I trust you.”
   “That’s all that counts, then,” Paul said,
   and brought his head back to her bosom.
   “Oh, it’s still raining. What a terrible, terri-
   ble night. And all we do is wait and wait…
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 220
   Helen, can’t I go out and look for him? He’s
   in the bar, Leo told us…”
   “No,” Helen said firmly.
   “But I tell you—”
   “No. We can’t go to him. Don’t you know
   that he has to come to us?”
   Paul was silent. “That’s nonsense,” he
   finally said.
   “Not so much as you think,” Helen
   affirmed. “Let him come to us.”
   “I can’t sleep any more,” Paul said. “I
   think I’ll get up and prepare two cups of cof-
   fee, and I have some cookies in a bag.”
   “Let me do it.”
   “No, no!” cried Paul, jumping up and
   laughing. “Let me do it. You’re my guest.
   You’ve just arrived from a long journey, and
   I’m serving you in my role as a host.”
   Helen smiled. “Paul, you can be so silly
   sometimes…”
   “Now stay right there,” Paul cried, running
   to his cupboard—for that was what he called
   it, his cupboard—and beginning to rummage
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 221
   around. “I’ll bring you the whole meal on a
   tray, as though you were a queen. And that—”
   he said, turning triumphantly to Helen — “that
   is what you are, a queen! My queen!” He ran
   over and kissed Helen; then he dashed back to
   his cupboard. “The Queen of the Golden Age.
   Did you hear that? The Queen of the Golden
   Age! That’s what Michael would call you now,
   you know. He has all kinds of fancy terms for
   simple beauty. He would call you a symbol of
   beauty, perhaps the symbol of beauty, in the
   manner of all the poets and artists! They’re all
   crazy…”
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 222
   Suddenly, a
   violent knock-
   ing came on
   the window
   from outside,
   accompanied by
   a thick cry.
   “What’s that?” Paul asked, going towards
   the window.
   Helen didn’t answer.
   Paul hastened out into the hall and went
   up to open the outside door. A cold gust of
   rain blew in. Michael was standing in a
   puddle, with the rain dripping down his
   face, glaring madly at Paul.
   “Do I look mad?” he cried eagerly.
   “Good Lord! You’re soaking wet!” cried
   Paul. “Come on in and dry up.”
   “No!” thundered Michael. “I asked you,
   do I look mad?”
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 223
   “Yes, quite!”
   Michael smiled with satisfaction and
   shook his head to clear it of rain. “Now will
   you come in?” Paul yelled, for the wind was
   blowing hard and the rain was making a
   great splattering noise.
   Michael was smiling strangely in the
   darkness. “I’ve come to tell you,” he said,
   barely audible in the rainfall, “that this is
   your last night on earth. It’s going to be
   awful cold, my friend, where you and I are
   going, the water, and the earth.”
   A flurry of wind drove by them and Paul
   cried, “Come on in, you fool!”
   “Did you hear what I said? Your last night
   on earth?”
   “I don’t care,” yelled Paul impatiently,
   still standing in the doorway.
   “I’ll bet you’re wondering why I’m going
   to do it,” Michael went on, shouting against
   the rain, even though now he stood right in
   front of Paul and had his face right next to
   his. “Don’t you want to know the details?
   The motive, you ape?”
   Paul shook his head bewilderedly.
   “Oh,” Michael said, “so you think that
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 224
   there aren’t any specific details to this, hey,
   no motives? A man commits suicide just
   because the idea appeals to him, is that it?
   Well, you’re lucky. I wasn’t going to come,
   because I have no sympathy for you, Paul—
   but something drove me here, some idea.
   Well, now you’re going to listen to me—”
   “You’re not going to commit suicide,”
   Paul interrupted. He began to smile angeli-
   cally and blush.
   “And why not?” Michael demanded sus-
   piciously.
   “Come in and I’ll show you why,” Paul
   replied, still smiling.
   “No!” yelled Michael again. “Good-bye!”
   He had moved off towards the stone steps,
   and Paul had suddenly run out after him and
   was clutching at his coat.
   “Wait a minute!” They were both stand-
   ing in the rain now, and Paul was soon
   drenched with rain.
   “I wept,” said Michael simply, turning his
   face to Paul’s. “Paul!” he suddenly cried,
   taking the other’s hand and squeezing it.
   “Paul, a man was killed. All today, after
   what happened… Did you see how Marie
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 225
   treated me? I don’t care about her, but I tell
   you she’s an impostor that one, she revels in
   evil, she’s not a human being!”
   “You’re being childish.”
   “Oh no, I don’t think so. There are rea-
   sons. I wish I could see Arthur before I do
   this, and warn him. I was thinking about
   him on the bridge—it will be on the bridge.
   Well, Paul—” He began to pull away. But
   suddenly he went on: “And I was sick in the
   bar, and they threw me out. Do you know
   where I’m going to sleep tonight? I’m going
   to sleep in the river, alone! And you!” he
   added with savage triumph, “you are going
   to just expire in your mean little hovel…”
   “Michael—”
   “Do you want some money, Paul? Ha ha
   ha. Want some money? Here!? 
					     					 			?? Michael
   drew out a wad of bills from his coat pock-
   et and scattered them like seed, with a
   broad sweep of his arm, at Paul’s feet.
   “Stoop! And pick them up. They’re all
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 226
   yours. Spend them within the next ten min-
   utes, for that’s how long you have to live. Ha
   ha ha!”
   Paul was now holding Michael firmly by
   the arm, and rain poured down both their
   backs.
   “Good-bye,” said Michael, straining away
   from the other’s grip. “This is the way the
   world ends, you know. Come with me and
   I’ll recite you all the death lyrics in litera-
   ture, and the love lyrics too, just to prove to
   you how far they fall off the mark. I had the
   mark!—but it was poisoned; it was the for-
   bidden fruit with poison in it! I have a fever,
   now, I think I’m sick—that’s where I’m get-
   ting all the courage to do this…”
   Paul hung on to his arm and said nothing.
   “Remember the time I tried to hit you
   with the floor lamp?” Michael shouted. “Oh,
   I’m remembering everything now, and all
   the things I wrote that don’t mean anything,
   and the things I wrote that meant too much.
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 227
   On human terms, you see, that’s how life is.
   On human terms. I don’t want those terms.
   They’re ugly; there’s no more beauty. I
   revolt! I refuse! I’m finished! God’s defeated
   me…”
   Paul smiled grimly.
   “You smile? Do you think it’s a dishonor
   to be defeated by God?”
   “No,” Paul said simply.
   “Do you know what it’s like?” Michael
   asked, his eyes gleaming at Paul. “It’s like
   being a fish trying to live on land. One suf-
   focates. I’m suffocating in the ether; God’s
   air is choking me. I went to it in all inno-
   cence, I didn’t know it would choke me.
   Now, am I supposed to return to human
   conditions? Hey? Well, I damned well
   refuse, that’s all. Let me go, damn you, let
   me go!” And with this, Michael wrenched
   away violently. But, no sooner having done
   this, he himself grasped Paul’s arm. “Now,”
   he said, “Prometheus—that’s a funny one,
   Prometheus: Arthur called me that this