ARC D’X

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by Steve Erickson


  But by the late Eighties the abyss wasn’t liberating anymore, with the end of his marriage and, after that, the most important love affair of his life, in which he invested every dream he still had left. In the midst of this he turned forty. A month later his father died. By 1991 the affair had collapsed and by 1993, with the final failure of his career as a novelist, the ruins around him smoldered close enough to spring him loose in one direction or the other: west, off the edge of a cliff in the Palisades, or east, where the geography offered more potential for emptiness. He gave the west some thought. Being a coward, he went east.

  He assumed it was only a matter of time. Over those last two or three years in Los Angeles he kept peering around for the doom that was hounding him. Standing at the corner of an intersection waiting to cross the street, he kept his eyes peeled with passing interest for the stray car that—its driver seized by sudden cardiac arrest—would leap the curb and give Erickson one good bump into eternity. He felt for the throb in his body of this cancer or that virus. Never having been practiced at living in the present, nonetheless he’d been silently shocked by the prospect that his father might not have spent enough of his life being happy, and that the son was doing the same. He wasn’t certain happiness was in his genes. When his love affair had ended, his heart had broken in time to the crumbling of history. He came to understand that while in youth it was quite true that time healed the heart, now the revelation of time’s passage was that the point finally comes when the heart isn’t going to heal again after all. There wasn’t much to do but pursue the purely sensual moment. He might have been better at this if he’d only been without conscience.

  With his lover he had glimpsed the possibility of a life that included all of him, the dark interwoven with the light, the bad with the good, the weak with the strong, until he was complete and of a piece. After it was over and he knew this completion wasn’t going to be possible anymore, he accepted and came to terms with the way in which his literary life, his public life, his private life and his secret life lined up like four rooms, with guests, tourists or temporary residents occasionally straying into one room or the other, none of them necessarily knowing there were other rooms with other guests. There was a door between the literary life and the public one, through which someone might slip back and forth, and a similar door between the private life and the secret, and a hidden passage that ran directly from the secret to the literary. But the only one who ever went in all the rooms was Erickson. The only one who even knew there were other rooms was Erickson. No one else was allowed access to all of him again; and when he did things with people in the secret life that remained unknown to those in the private, he understood this arrangement might just be a moral expediency, to justify to himself infidelities and spiritual disarray, even as he also persuaded himself—and sometimes actually believed—that it was the only arrangement keeping him sane.

  The rooms became strewn with furious women. Once it would have meant everything to him if even one of them had loved him. Now they all loved him, when he was either too old for it or too unworthy. A friend argued that there was something about him that almost naturally raised these women’s expectations, something that persuaded them he was incapable of hurting them and was bound to submit, sooner or later, to their tenacity or patience. But in the wake of everything he finally couldn’t convince himself he’d acted in anything other than bad faith, whether he misled them himself or allowed them to mislead themselves, permitting hope to grow into expectation without yanking hope up by the roots, in one room after another repeating the same scene with only a variation of details, the slammed door of a woman’s angry exit or his own dreadful walk out that door with the sound of her crying behind him. “Your love was a lie,” one of them said on his phone machine, a woman he had loved passionately years before and about whom he’d even written his first novel. “I guess it’s the surprise of my life,” said another bitterly, on yet another phone message, “to find out you’re just a bastard like all the rest.” She’d been in some novel or other too, though he couldn’t remember exactly which one, or what character she was.

  “You’re just a real fake,” said the last, who had once called him “mythic.”

  After the Cataclysm he headed on to Iowa and spent some time there with a friend, and then south to Austin and east to New Orleans and north to New York, as purposefully as aimlessness could be. With the crash the next year he sold the car and headed for Europe, settling first in Amsterdam and then Paris, which was no more or less practical than anyplace else until, a year and a half before his fiftieth birthday, he read about Day X on page seventeen of the International Herald Tribune. The writer figured they had to have known about it for a while. He had to figure the scientists didn’t all just wake up one morning and look at their wrists and tap their watches wondering when, during the night, the small inner coil of infinity missed a beat. Even if he didn’t accept the conspiracy theories—conspiracy, after all, to what end?—he figured there had to have been at least a lurking suspicion, quantum whispers of the slowing cosmic timepiece, out of which seeped into the millennium the lost seconds and then minutes and then hours. On maps of outer space, after all, there are the vague shadows that hint at black holes for years before scientists confirm the discovery. In such a way they must have seen in the present the vague shadows of the future.

  On the other hand the American writer never believed, as others argued, that the scientists knew something they weren’t telling everyone. People said that more in hope than cynicism. Erickson didn’t believe the scientists knew much of anything at all. He suspected they knew less than everyone, having finally bumped up squarely against the limits of their vision. Whatever would emerge on the other side of the temporal wormhole fell as much in the imaginational sovereignty of philosophers and fantasists, theologians and crackpots, witches and pornographers and tunnelers: it would be the most purely democratic and totalitarian event ever, having rendered everyone equally subject to its mysteries and revelations. That, of course, was why Erickson had come to Berlin. Because Berlin was the psychitecture of the Twentieth Century, and if he or anyone should emerge on the other side of Day X in the new millennium as anything more than a grease skid on the driveway of oblivion, they were bound to all come out on the Unter den Linden, the only boulevard haunted enough to hold all of it: dictators and democrats, authoritarians and anarchists, accountants and artists, businessmen and bohemians, decadents and the devout each contradicting their lives with their hearts, SS troops with blood running from their fingers wearing the wreaths an American president laid around their necks and GDR soldiers, wrenched from the vantage point of their towers pulling huge blocks of the Wall behind them, led past the Unter den Linden’s grand edifices of delirium and death through the Brandenburg into the Tiergarten by an Aframerican runner with a gold medal around his neck who sprinted all the way from Berlin 1936 into the Berlin games of the year 2000, followed at the rear by a mute army of six million men and women and children utterly white of life but for the black-blue of the numbers their bodies wore, and at the rear the Great Relativist himself doing his clown act, juggling a clock, a globe and a light bulb, tangled in a möbius strip and with a smile on his face that said he for sure knew about Day X anyway, a conspiracy of one.

  Erickson received her last phone call the night of the summer solstice. It was around the same time she always called, except as the days had gotten later the night had not yet fallen outside his window, where instead there was the haze of twilight on a street that ran perpendicular to the sun, and therefore never saw either its rise or fall. “Hello,” she greeted him.

  “Hello,” he answered.

  “Do you want me?” she asked, and it seemed appropriate that she would betray her accent most on the word want.

  “Not on the phone anymore.”

  There was silence. “It’s so much safer,” she said.

  “No more on the phone.”

  He knew from what she said now th
at she’d been thinking about it too. “It was so random like this,” she explained. “I called several numbers that first time. Sometimes I got a woman, sometimes I got a man who sounded… wrong, and I hung up. Then I called your number, and when they answered they said it was a hotel and they asked what room, and I just said a room number, and they put the call through and it was, by chance, you. I could have dialed any other number instead. A digit higher or lower, or when I got your hotel I could have hung up, as I almost did, or I could have given a different room number, or the number for a room that didn’t exist, or they might have asked for the guest’s name, and I wouldn’t have been able to give them a name. And it seems quite perfect like this, so perfectly random, so perfectly by chance.”

  “I see.”

  “But you don’t want to do it on the phone anymore.”

  “No.”

  “Tomorrow night I’ll go to a hotel not far from yours and take a room. I’ll take a room hidden away from the street that’s very private. I’ll call you from there and tell you the number. I’ll let the hotel manager know I’m expecting a guest and for you to come straight up. I’ll leave the door of the room unlocked. The room will be completely dark. The blinds will be completely closed, and the lights will all be off. I’ll be there. Once inside the door you’ll wait in the dark for me to come to you. I’ll be naked. You can undress, or I’ll help you. We won’t speak at all or turn on the light. We won’t say anything.” She paused. “Do you have a tag?”

  “Yes.”

  “I’ll wear mine too.” She said, “You’ll fuck me then. We won’t say anything. It will be like the phone, where we see nothing and have only our words, except we will say nothing and have only our bodies. When we’re finished I’ll find my clothes and dress and leave you in the dark. We’ll never turn on the light.”

  “OK.”

  “It will be dark the whole time.”

  “The sun sets later now.”

  “I’ll call later, after the sun sets.” She hung up. Erickson put the phone back in the cradle. He was up for several hours, with that humming insistence his body couldn’t contain, and when he woke the next morning after a bad night’s sleep, on X-191, the day was slightly more than itself, a fraction of X-190 floating freely and haphazardly across the calendar. Erickson opened the window of his hotel room as he usually did and stood back from the light and peered around him. The room was blurred around the edges, and the light outside had an unfamiliar shimmer and he thought some half life of the night’s dream was lingering in his eyes. But he kept looking around and the blur was still there, around the furniture and the doorway, and the shimmer was still there in the light and he knew time had escalated almost indiscernibly, that everything was now caught in the pull of X and just beginning the inexorable rush to the event horizon at millennium’s end. At the bottom of the stairs, what was left of the hotel’s pet cat lay at his feet, torn to shreds during the night. Erickson looked around for some other sign of the Berlin veldt that had invaded the lobby, a rhinoceros perhaps, a python, the beasts of the zoo having begun the final displacement of furry domestic companions. The manager was nowhere to be seen.

  By the human logic of time one should always walk, Erickson told himself, from east to west in Berlin. From east to west one walked from Old Berlin through the Brandenburg Gate into glassy synth-Berlin, which had been built expressly for the purpose of rejecting the claims and biases, the suppositions and ghosts of history, the Berlin that in the glare of the nuclear mirror had created itself anew from the ground up and freed itself from history once and for all. But the last time anyone walked from east to west was ten years ago, when everyone on the one side fled to the other, when everyone abandoned the history of Berlin which, in the fashion of the Twentieth Century, had become one more commodity of ideology. In the 1990s the seduction of Berlin was that one always walked from west to east, against the sun and in the face of memory, and then took the U-Bahn back. Now in the new blur of the day the American took the same walk, west to east, maybe on the theory that the city would lose its blur in the process. In Berlin all the small necessary things had broken down while the larger, more ludicrous enterprises carried on: the trains had stopped running at Zoo Station since the last arrival of refugees from the Russian-Slav civil wars, but in the windows of the top floor of the KaDeWe the lights of the government still burned at night, and in the distance to the south of the city construction continued for the 2000 Olympics, an obsession since the beginning of the Nineties that Berlin refused to relinquish regardless of whatever New Year’s party eternity had planned.

  So on this day Erickson walked from west to east, and with the fall of dusk went to take the U-Bahn back. He ducked into the Kochstrasse station and descended underground; he was waiting on the platform for the train when he noticed a familiar figure at the other end.

  Georgie was slumped on the bench staring straight ahead. Ten-year-old newspapers blew past his feet, and he was so still he might have been dead. Across the tunnel from where Georgie stared, Erickson saw the small hole in the U-Bahn wall that the Frankfurt banker had pointed out; it was as though Georgie were waiting for a father’s face to appear in the hole at any moment. A little voice in Erickson’s head said to leave him there, but he walked over. He didn’t speak to Georgie but waited for him to look up. Georgie didn’t turn to look until the American sat down next to him.

  He turned to look at Erickson and there was no sweetness in Georgie’s face at all. There was nothing in his face of childlike serenity; it was like the night after the two of them had left Georgie’s flat when the sight of the Neuwall in the street had transformed the young Berliner’s perverse earnest innocence to the malevolent fury that tried to kick the wall down. Except that at this moment, as he sat waiting for a face to appear in the hole of the U-Bahn tunnel, Georgie’s transformation had already gone several degrees further. His face was dark like a swarm rising from the other side of a hill, the shadow of having stared too many nights into that hole in the side of the U-Bahn tunnel and having waited too long for a dreamed-of reconciliation that was only met minute after minute and hour after hour and night after night by nothing but the hole’s void. Now the sockets of Georgie’s eyes were so hollow that all Erickson could see in them was something so black it would frighten even the night, a feeling so lightless it would startle even hate. If Georgie recognized the American at all, he showed no sign. In his face there wasn’t the slightest chance a father’s face would appear, there wasn’t the slightest sign of a Tunneler in the catacombs of memory, not a human sight or sound flickered even in the scurrying of someone’s retreat into his own recesses.

  Erickson got up. He got up right away. He turned and started walking the other direction, toward the exit of the U-Bahn, where he ascended back to the street and walked, for a change, east to west, which was what he should have done in the first place. For some reason he felt in his coat pocket for the small piece of the Wall he’d bought at the Brandenburg, uncertain whether it reassured or frightened him to realize he’d left it back at the hotel. For a while he thought it was his imagination, for a while he dismissed it as paranoia, but in the last dark block before Checkpoint Charlie he knew the footsteps he heard right behind him were real, and that they were Georgie Valis’. By the time he reached the end of the block the footsteps were all around him, and then he was surrounded in the street by six, then eight, then ten of them, members of the Pale Flame with their heads shaved and their shirts off and their chests bare and each of them with the same tattooed design, a creature with the body of a naked woman and the head of what appeared to Erickson to be a strange bird, rising from a sea of fire against a backdrop of lightning. On all their shoulders they wore tattooed wings. It was as though all of them had been summoned with the snap of fingers, a muttered command, and Erickson turned to Georgie in time to take the first blow, and the last that he would ever count or understand.

  And memory broke free once and for all, floating above him like the b
alloon a child lets go. In that moment the writer was neither quick enough for escape nor afraid enough for panic. He shouted out only once and then succumbed to the only hope left him, that the storm of the assault would blow over him and move on.

  Five minutes later Georgie said to the others, “All right.”

  They stopped with the kicking and beating. They shone in the twilight, six eight ten fiery birdwomen glistening in righteous satisfaction. One of them pushed the body over and they stood examining it. Georgie tapped the writer’s face with his shoe to see if there was a reaction, and when there was nothing he started going through the dead man’s pockets. He found a wallet and a hotel key, but not what he was looking for. “Shit!” he yelled in frustration, slapping the body alongside its head. For a while he sat slumped in the street pouting at the dead American while his troops stood by waiting. Georgie looked at the address on the hotel key. “Know where this is?” he said to one of the others.

  “Savignyplatz.”

  “I’m going,” Georgie said.

  “Not real smart, man,” one of them advised timidly, after a pause. “Someone will see you.” He pointed at the body. “If the cops ask questions they’ll wind up at that hotel sooner or later and someone will be able to tell them he saw you.”

 

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