Most of all, Otto Rabun Bowles is thinking about justice.
He knows now the documentary will never be aired, and that he will be forever misunderstood, blamed, and convicted for Tim’s and Sarah’s deaths. The Rabuns have always been misunderstood, blamed, convicted for things they did not do.
The computer screens on the laps of the monks finally show what I have been unable to accept from the moment of my arrival in Shemaya. Ott Bowles raises the gun and fires three silent shots into my chest. I slump over on top of Sarah. Moments later, police officers storm the mushroom house. They had been able to trace his e-mails after all.
40
The giant fist of the storm pounds the roof of the monastery of Cudi Dagh, demanding that the guilty appear for sentencing. When the storm is not appeased, the mountain itself begins to quake, and the sea overtakes the summit, bursting through the door of the monastery. The one-armed Savior on the menorah breaks free from his nails and tumbles head over heels into the water, but none of the monks dare to retrieve him—and it might be that none of them care—for he alone would spare the condemned, and there is no room left in the monastery of Cudi Dagh for forgiveness.
“Find him!” I scream, but I am not searching for the fallen Savior. I am hunting for the sinner, Otto Rabun Bowles, and I burn with the desire to become the instrument of his torture and be within earshot of his shrieks. The thunderclap of electricity that too gently ended his life is only the beginning of what I have planned for him.
Harlan Hurley leaps from his stool in a blind panic, believing it is his soul the storm hounds; and perhaps it is, for when he reaches the door of the monastery he is vaporized instantly by a bolt of lightning, leaving behind only the shape of his silhouette burned into the wood. Barratte Rabun, Albrecht Bosch, and Katerine Schrieberg-Wolfson look after him in horror but decide to follow him through the same door, believing that the storm is now satisfied. They too are disintegrated immediately by three more bolts of lightning.
The water is now up to my knees, and, for the first time, I see Bo and my Grandpa Cuttler sitting in a corner of the monastery, oblivious to the waters rising around them, staring at a single computer held between them. Grandpa Cuttler doesn’t understand computers and is perplexed by what is now a blank screen. Together they press the keys, trying desperately to restart the machine.
—
AFTER PHOTOGRAPHING THE crime scene at the mushroom house, the coroner took Sarah and me to the morgue. Bo called Karen and asked her to be there with him when he identified our bodies. She was the logical choice. Even though Bo was Jewish, Karen had baptized Sarah just six months earlier over the beautiful silver font at Old Swedes’ Church. Confident that beautiful morning that Christ himself had claimed Sarah as his own, Karen lifted her high for the congregation to witness the blessed miracle of faith and water, and beaming with a mother’s own pride—because Bo and I had asked Karen to be Sarah’s godmother—she carried her new goddaughter up into the pulpit with her to deliver the sermon. Sarah listened without a sound, as if she yearned to understand.
Karen prayed hard for Christ to be with Bo and her in the morgue that day when the coroner pulled back the sheets. She prayed for him to reclaim the child he had accepted so recently and the woman, wife, mother, and friend who had been taken away. She anointed our heads with holy oil and pleaded for our souls.
But Christ did not come, at least not in a form Karen could recognize. She howled in anguish: “Where are you? Damn you, where are you?”
—
A RAGING TORRENT of water fills the monastery. Cudi Dagh is being swallowed whole by the flood. Bo, my grandfather, and my parents flee in terror, but Bo sees the one-armed Christ figurine bobbing in the water and looks back at Karen.
“There’s your Savior, Priest!” he laughs maniacally. “Justice nailed him to the cross, and now justice is setting him free!”
Karen splashes after the broken Christ in the same way we chased after crayfish in the Little Juniata River. She lunges, but he escapes through her fingers, disappearing beneath the water.
“I can’t find him!” she cries. “I can’t find him!” Twice more she sees him, and twice more he slips through her fingers as the waters rise, carrying him out into the storm.
Karen is the last monk to leave the monastery. On her way out she pulls off both the white stole I gave her and her winged Air Force insignia. She throws them into the fire on top of the charred remains of Barratte Rabun’s computer, which is still burning.
Karen does not look back to see the rising waters quench the flames and carry the stole and the insignia out of the hearth unharmed. They float freely together for a moment, like a dove and a raven in search of dry land. The stole spots the long branches of the menorah first, then the insignia comes, and together they cling to the branches until the waters engulf the menorah too. At the last second, as the menorah disappears beneath a whirlpool of water, the stole and the insignia take flight again, searching the waters for a sign of compassion.
The water is chest deep now. Elymas grabs my hand.
“We must reach the ark,” he shouts, “before it is too late!”
—
SUDDENLY, ELYMAS AND I are standing on the deck of a great wooden ark in near-total darkness. The storm lashes the boat, and we are being tossed about on high waves. But Elymas insists we must stay on deck and not seek shelter below.
I hear the anxious sounds of animals beneath my feet—the cacophony of an entire zoo assembled under one roof. Each time the ark pitches, the cries of the animals grow louder, but I begin to hear other cries too: awful, relentless shrieks and moans come from outside the ship, rising above the wind and thunder, overcoming the sounds of the animals. These are the most chilling, terrifying sounds I have ever heard.
“What is it?” I ask.
Elymas points a gnarled finger overboard, and the clouds lift just enough for the sun’s weak rays to illuminate the churning sea all the way to the horizon. Across all that distance, as far as I can see in every direction, the waters are covered with a slick of bloated bodies, human and animal. Each wave brings them crashing and grinding into the hull of the ark. Those humans still alive on this sea of horror are using the dead as rafts, clinging to the cadavers of their mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, calling out for mercy and forgiveness in languages I have never heard. The stench of decaying flesh is overwhelming, causing me to retch.
A deck hatch opens, and up through it climbs an old man, weathered, gray-bearded, and harried, followed by a young man and his wife. They look out upon the carnage spread across the sea and are horrified.
“Hurry! Hurry!” the young man yells. “We must rescue them, as many as we can! We cannot allow them to drown!”
The young man and woman begin running around the deck gathering ropes, but the old man orders them to stop.
“No!” he commands. “They have chosen, and for their choices they have been sentenced. Only we have been found righteous. Only we shall be saved.”
The young man’s wife falls to her knees at the old man’s feet.
“Oh, please, Father, please, let us help them!” she begs. “We cannot bear their suffering. Surely they are people born as you and I, who have done wrong and right as you and I. Surely you see that. You alone, Father, were chosen as righteous, and the righteous, Father, must take pity upon the wretched. Our ship is large and we could save hundreds, thousands. Please, Father, we must try!”
“Take her away from me!” the old man orders. “Take her out of my sight at once or I will throw her over with the others. I do not hear their cries. The time for weeping is past.”
The son glares at his father with hatred but immediately obeys and leads his wife back down into the bowels of the ship. The old man looks out again upon the sea and then up at the heavens. Rain lashes his face so that it appears as if he might be weeping. But then he too turns back down through the hatch, sealing it tight behind him. Like a linen shroud soaked with sweet oils and spi
ces, the clouds descend onto the sea, compressing the putrid air into the waves and muffling the groans and screams.
The grinding of flesh and bone against the hull of the ark continued for one hundred fifty days.
And then the waters receded.
Elymas and I were there when Noah sent forth the raven and the dove, and we were there when the dove returned with an olive branch. Noah and his family were the only people to board the ark, and they were the only people to disembark when it ran aground on Ararat. No one from the sea was saved.
Noah built an altar and made a sacrifice to Yahweh that day, and on that day Yahweh was well pleased. Yahweh blessed Noah and his sons, telling them to repopulate the earth. When Yahweh smelled the burning flesh of Noah’s sacrifice, he promised never to flood the earth again. As a reminder of that covenant, rainbows appeared in the clouds.
After seeing all this, Elymas turned to me and said:
“Luas accused Noah of being a coward, but now you know the truth, Brek Cuttler. When lesser men would have faltered, Noah made no excuses for humanity. The story is not about love, it is about justice.”
—
AND THEN, all at once, I was back in the woods behind Nana’s house, on my way to Shemaya Station. Elymas was gone. I was a young woman again, dressed in my black silk suit covered with baby-formula stains that turn to blood. I was on my way to the Courtroom to present the case of No. 44371.
41
No. 44371 sits on the same bench where I found myself when I first arrived at Shemaya Station. It is as if no time has passed. My blood is still tacky on the floor, turning red the bottoms of No. 44371’s white-soled prison sneakers.
He looks just as I imagined he would after the executioner sent 4,000 volts of electricity crashing through his body. His scalp is bald and raw where it has not been charred into black flake and ash by the electrode. His skin and face are the color of stale milk. Abrasions cover his wrists and ankles. His eyes bulge from their sockets, and his trousers are soiled. He holds an object in his hands, but when he sees me, he hides it and looks down at the floor, hoping it will open up and devour him. No. 44371 knows that today is the day he will face his eternity.
Next to No. 44371, at the opposite end of the bench, sits a young girl who also stares at the floor. She looks familiar, like a young Amina Rabun playing with her brother in the sandbox, or a young Katerine Schrieberg walking with her father to the café in Dresden, or a young Sheila Bowles playing with a doll on her bed at the sanatorium. This girl is like all little girls—innocent, preoccupied, dreaming—but she sits naked on the bench, pale and emaciated like death.
What could she have done to be brought to this place?
As if in reply to my thought, she looks up at me and says: “God punishes children for the sins of their parents.”
A low rumbling sound echoes through the great hall, a sound like a train entering the station. I turn from the little girl to see Gautama, the sculptor of the sphere from the cocktail party. He is dressed in the same rainbow-colored dhoti wrapped around his waist and legs, and he is rolling his magical stone sphere among the postulants. He smiles at them like a peddler trying to sell his wares, but they pay him no attention even as the sphere nears them and flashes the patterns of their lives across its surface, mapping their journeys to now.
Gautama stops his sphere in front of No. 44371. It sands itself smooth before erupting into the grotesque rash of Otto Bowles’s life, crisscrossing the sphere like a ball of yarn—here a young boy embarrassed and enraged, unable to forgive his father for striking his grandfather at the football game, there a man firing three bullets into my chest and demanding death by electric chair. In his arrogance, sitting here on the bench beneath the dome of rusted girders and trusses, which from far above Shemaya Station might appear to be a manhole cover in some forsaken back alley of the universe, No. 44371 does not notice his life carved into the sphere, or think about the necessity of sewers to carry off the effluent of Creation. He stares stubbornly into the floor, daring it to rise up and seize him. I do not hear the cry of his soul as I did during the naive moment of compassion in my office before facing him. I hear nothing at all. I make a note to include his insolence in my presentation.
“Greetings, my daughter,” Gautama says to me.
The surface of the sphere changes as I approach it, reproducing the pattern of my own life’s choices. I had seen only glimpses of them at the cocktail party, between the pairs of doors, but now they are displayed in great detail, like a road map on a globe. The trail begins with my birth at the top of the sphere and the earliest injustice of being forced from my mother’s womb, separated forever from her shelter and protection. The doors open next onto Nana’s funeral and the injustice of being slapped by my mother—the mother who had created and loved me—for crying when I was forced to kiss Nana’s corpse. The sphere shows the nights when my mother was too drunk or depressed to care for me, and her vicious fights with my father, who was too selfish and preoccupied to notice. Through another set of doors, I am thrusting my right hand into the conveyor chain, offering myself as a sacrifice to my parents. And there, through yet another pair, I am an amputee, crying amidst a group of children who have tucked their arms inside their jackets and circled me with their sleeves flapping in the wind. Father O’Brien tells me justice is for God later, but Bill Gwynne tells me it is for us now, and I testify that the chain guard was in place but failed when I stumbled into it. Boys torture crayfish in buckets, and I put them on trial, deciding that day to become a lawyer because justice is the only salvation.
The sphere rotates. Here I am, worrying with my grandfather about fuel prices and recession during the 1970s, and reading from my other grandfather’s treatises about equity and law. My father announces he is remarrying, and my mother celebrates this, and another anniversary of my uncle Anthony’s death in Vietnam, with a bottle of gin. I am not asked to the school prom—the boys are too afraid of me, and I of them.
The sphere rotates again, and I am in law school now, meeting my first client on an internship at the welfare clinic, promising that I will find justice for her and her eight children who have not eaten in three days. I overwhelm the bureaucrats with legal papers and easily win the case. There I am later, an intern at the Philadelphia district attorney’s office, meeting my first victims of crime and promising justice for them too. I outprepare the overworked public defender and easily win the conviction. During the summers, I work at large corporate law firms with granite conference tables and expensive artwork on the walls. We promise the president of a chemical company we’ll do everything possible to defeat the class-action lawsuit brought by the heirs of those who died after being exposed to his company’s pesticides. My legal research for the case is thorough and creative, and the partners of the firm are so impressed that they offer me a full-time position, but I turn it down.
The sphere rotates again. Bo is in my bed asking me to marry him. I say yes, filled with joy and love. Our wedding is beautiful, a fantasy come true.
We move to Huntingdon. I convince my mother-in-law to sue Amina and Barratte Rabun for her inheritance. I know now how to acquire and control justice, to make it do my bidding and to savor its many pleasures.
The sphere rotates a final time. An average day of life together with my husband. I am scolding Bo because he has left his clothes all over the floor again. He does this all the time, even though I’ve reminded him. I attack him like a hostile witness on the stand. He has no defense. He just sits there in his shorts and T-shirt, looking confused. When he fails to apologize or concede the seriousness of his crime, I bring him to justice too. I am unwilling to allow even errant socks and underwear to pass unpunished for fear that injustice will tighten its grip around my life and my world. I bare my teeth and clench my fists. I throw things around the room, seething with irrational and unjustifiable rage. Then the sphere inches forward and shows me in my law office, writing a brief to help Alan Fleming escape repaying his debts on a legal
technicality.
The sphere has come almost full circle now, displaying the final two choices of my life. The first is my decision not to shoot Ott Bowles in the mushroom house, choosing the door on the right. The second is my change of heart, my decision to shoot him as he steps toward me, choosing the door on the left. With that decision, the circle is closed and the sphere has returned to the place of my beginning, to the place of unconditional love before I was separated from my mother’s womb.
Gautama rolls the sphere slightly toward No. 44371, and it superimposes his choices over mine. Somehow we have taken similar paths.Our ending in the mushroom house seems almost mathematically certain, the inevitable result of a series of parallel equations and geometric principles. We spent our lives protecting ourselves from the unbearable pain of injustice. We spent our lives renouncing the inconceivable possibility of forgiveness.
The girl on the bench stirs. She is interested in the sphere and reaches out with her right hand to touch it but cannot because there is only a stump ending at the elbow. I remember her now: I had seen her in the great hall during the cocktail party, when Luas showed me the postulants among the shadows. I was unable to see inside her soul then, and, for some reason, the surface of the sphere reveals nothing more of her now.
The sphere erases itself again. Two pairs of doors appear. They look like miniatures of the doors to the Courtroom. Above one pair is the word “Justice” and above the other the word “Forgiveness.”
The Trial of Fallen Angels Page 30