The night got away from me, and I finally closed my eyes when the first light of dawn was hitting the curtains. I called Myra’s voice mail a couple hours later, letting her know I’d be late. Called again around nine to tell her I wouldn’t be in at all.
It wasn’t simply one more war novel. This one had that cliffhanging quality, yes. But it was vastly more. It owned the war. Through the eyes of its characters the reader saw how it had happened, came to grasp the inevitability of the conflict. He understood what it had meant to ride shotgun on the convoys or to go house to house in Fallujah. He experienced what it was to fight an enemy who wasn’t afraid to die. Who imagined killing to be a divine imperative.
I spent time with a group of insurgents, and came to understand what drove them. I carried stretchers through the burn wards of an Iraqi hospital when shattered bystanders were brought in. And finally I was with mothers in Ohio when the dread news came.
It had perspective, passion, fear, the determination of obviously flawed men and women in authority to get things right, the mounting frustration as those who had been liberated refused to throw roses.
I was holed up with it for six days. The outside world simply stopped until the last shots had been fired, and the fallout had begun to take its political toll.
It was a War and Peace for our time.
I had done better than find one more professional writer who could sell a few thousand copies of whatever. I had found a new Herman Wouk.
I finished late on a drizzly, cold evening, and sat staring out my apartment window at downtown Boston, thinking about Edward Patterson. On that night, only I, and Myra, knew who he was. Within a year, the whole world was going to know.
He lived in Laconia, at the foot of the White Mountains.
It was a quarter after ten. A bit late to be calling. On the other hand, this was a guy who, as far as I could determine, had never been published. I remembered my own reaction when the postcard had arrived from Guns and Ammo announcing my own first sale.
Myra, anticipating me, had gotten Patterson’s number from information and printed it neatly above the title. I made myself a scotch and soda and reached for the phone.
“Wonderful,” he said. “Mr. Becker, that’s great. You’re actually going to publish it?” He sounded younger than I’d expected.
“Yes, Mr. Patterson. Ed. Is it okay if I call you Ed?”
“Sure. Yes. Absolutely. Can you hold a second?”
“Okay.”
He must have covered the phone. But I knew what was happening. He was passing the good news to his wife. Or girlfriend. Or whomever.
“I’m back,” he said.
“Good.”
“Mr. Becker, you have no idea what this means to me.”
“I can guess,” I said. “Ed, are you by any chance free to come into Boston tomorrow?”
He made a sound deep in his throat. “I’m a teacher,” he said. “At the high school.”
“Okay. How about Saturday?” We don’t usually open the office Saturday but in this case I was willing to make an exception.
“I can do that,” he said.
“Fine. I’ll have a contract ready, and we’ll celebrate by going to lunch.” The truth was that I wanted him signed and delivered before he found out how good The Long War was. If he realized what he had, I’d wind up having to deal with an agent. Or possibly even get caught in a bidding war with MacMillan.
He was maybe twenty-five. Tall, with a nervous smile. Light brown hair already beginning to thin. Sallow cheeks, pale skin, watery gray eyes behind bifocals. He wore a fatigue jacket and hauled a laptop in a stitched bag over one shoulder. Didn’t look much like Hemingway.
He turned the pages of the contract with long, thin fingers, not examining it, I thought, so much as admiring it. When he got to the advance, he stopped. “Twenty thousand dollars?” he asked.
I was about to say I’d be willing to go higher because I liked the book. I’d expected to go higher. But it was always best to start out with a conservative figure. You can always move up. “Seems like a lot,” he added.
“Well,” I said, trying to conceal my surprise, “Tempus believes in being generous.” It didn’t really matter. The book was going to make a ton, so there was no risk.
“It’s certainly very kind of you.” He smiled again. He looked like the kind of guy the other kids had picked on in the schoolyard. And I would never have believed him capable of the kind of rugged prose that informed The Long War.
I showed him where to sign, explained what we expected, that we’d want to be able to use his bio and likeness in promoting the book, that we might ask him to make a few guest appearances. I didn’t mention that he was signing over all TV and movie rights, that he was giving Tempus a healthy share of any foreign sales, that we would also collect seventy-five percent of book club rights. And of course there was the option clause. “Normally, Ed,” I told him, “we’d want to retain the right of first refusal on your next novel.”
“But—?” he said, suddenly looking worried.
“I want to be up front with you, Ed. Is there going to be a sequel?”
“A sequel?” His eyes clouded. “There’ll be another book.”
“Okay. Good enough. Tempus is willing to forego the option. We’d like instead to sign you to a three-book deal. Beyond The Long War.”
His eyes slid shut, and I was looking at the most beatific smile I’d ever seen. Paradise had arrived.
“We’re offering a seventy-five thousand dollar advance for the three.”
He put the glass down and stared at me. “I don’t know what to say.”
“Don’t say anything,” I said. “Just sign on the line.” I showed him where.
I know what you’re thinking. But we do not try to take advantage of our authors. We were providing a major service for Ed Patterson. We were giving him a chance to launch a new career, to break away from his teaching job, to fulfill a lifelong dream. When you’ve been in this business for a while, you discover that it takes a lifelong dream to drive someone to write a novel. Especially a big one.
He signed the contract. Four books in all. In triplicate. I put one copy in a manila envelope and handed it to him. “All yours,” I said.
He was glowing.
“Now let’s go celebrate.”
We went across the street to Marco’s. It’s a quiet Italian restaurant just off the Common. It was still a little early for lunch, so hardly anyone was there. We ordered a decanter of red wine, and I filled both glasses. “To you, Ed,” I said. “And to The Long War.”
He wore a grin a mile wide. “Thanks, Jerry” He sipped the wine, made a face at it, put it down. “Strong stuff,” he said.
I finished my own and refilled the glass. “I have to tell you, Ed, The Long War is pretty good. How long have you been working on it? Four years? Five?”
“I guess you could say ten or eleven. Somewhere in there.”
“Ten years? You’ve been writing this since you were, what, fifteen? Do I have that right?”
“Oh, no, Jerry. I didn’t write the novel. Max did.”
“Max? Who’s Max?”
“Ah,” he said. “That’s the real accomplishment. That’s my surprise.”
I finished the second glass in a swallow. “You didn’t tell me there was going to be a surprise.”
The waiter arrived. We ordered. When he was gone we picked up where we’d left off. “What surprise?” I demanded. “Who wrote the book? Are you his agent?”
“Hell, Jerry, anybody can sit down and write a novel. All you have to do is be willing to stay with it for, what, a year or so? Or five, I guess. Sit down and be willing to write every day. That’s all it takes.”
“What are you trying to tell me, Ed? Who’s Max?”
He’d dropped the laptop onto the seat beside him. Now he set it on the table and opened it. Lights blinked on and the screen glowed cobalt blue. “This is Max,” he said.
I stared at the computer, then
at Ed. It was an ordinary HP model. Myra had one like it. Black case, the logo printed on the lid. “You said Max wrote the book.”
“He did.”
“Max is a computer.”
“Actually, he’s an artificial intelligence, Jerry.” He leaned forward, breathless. “A real one.”
“The computer wrote the book.”
“He’s an AI.” He looked at me as if waiting for me to cheer. When I didn’t a cloud crossed his face.
“I don’t care what you call him,” I said, “no machine could have written The Long War.”
The big grin came back. “But he did.”
“I don’t believe it.”
“A few years ago they were saying no computer would ever compete with a chess master. You look recently to see who’s world champ?”
We sat staring at each other. The door opened and people came in. A family with a little boy. The boy had a pull toy.
“It took four days,” he said.
“What took four days?”
“To write the novel.”
A chill settled into my bones. I drank down more of the wine. Two plates showed up. Pizza for Patterson. Spaghetti and meatballs for me. But my appetite had gone south. “Four days,” I said.
“Yes. Well, maybe a bit more. But not much.” He took a deep breath and smiled modestly. “It took me almost as long to tell him what kind of book I wanted.”
“It’s just not possible.”
“That doesn’t include printing time, though.”
“You’re signed to do three more novels.”
“Yes.”
“I was expecting world-class stuff.”
“They’ll be good. Max was years in the making and has spent a long time analyzing the great books.”
“How long?” I asked.
“How long what?” He was chewing on the pizza, obviously enjoying himself. But he looked as if he couldn’t understand why I was unhappy.
“How long will it take to deliver the other novels?”
“Probably two weeks. It takes a while to run them off.”
“Two weeks for another novel like The Long War?”
“Two weeks for all three. But they won’t be like The Long War, although they’ll be of comparable quality.” He pushed his chair back and tried to look upbeat. “We’ve already decided on the next book. It’ll be about the power and the downside of religious belief. Along the order of The Brothers Karamazov. But different, of course. Original.”
I sat frozen. Yep, no problem for Max. You want something to make people forget The Winds of War? Have it for you Tuesday.
“You all right, Jerry?”
“I need some fresh air.” Or maybe we’d get a new Huck Finn. This time around we’d take a hard look at anti-gay prejudice. I threw money on the table and headed for the door.
“Jerry wait.” He was right behind me.
Maybe a new Dreiser novel. By Max.
Or something in the mode of Scott Fitzgerald.
Traffic outside was heavy. Buses, delivery trucks, crowded sidewalks. “If Max wrote the book, why’s your name on it?”
“Legal reasons. He’s not a person. Can’t sign checks. Can’t really do anything.”
“Except write great novels.”
“You got it.”
He stood in front of me and flashed an enormous grin. He had no idea what he’d done. This child, who was obviously very good with electronics, had canceled William Faulkner, Melville, Cather: What would their work be worth in the shadow of this thing? I assumed if he could do Karamazov, he could produce a new symbolic masterpiece in the spirit of James Joyce. Call this one Achilles, in which a man’s life is driven by a search for control. Or maybe something to push Remembrance of Things Past off the charts. In eight volumes, delivered over the course of a month.
“I couldn’t be sure it had worked,” Patterson said. “I don’t read that much. Not fiction. I didn’t know whether it was any good or not. What Max wrote. You were the test. We’ll put his name on the cover though, if that’s okay”
“What’s Max’s last name?” I asked.
A bus was coming up behind him. It was a local, headed for Massachusetts Avenue. It had just picked up passengers at the corner, seen an opening, and was accelerating. It had broken loose from the traffic.
“Winterhaven. Max Winterhaven.”
“Sounds pretentious.”
“I thought it sounded literary.”
Max Winterhaven was slung over his shoulder. I looked up at the bus driver, and I swear he knew what I was going to do before I did. I saw it in his face the instant before I gave Patterson his quick shove. His eyes went wide and he toppled backward. People screamed, the brakes screeched, and I either said, or thought, “This one’s for Henry James.”
I got clean away. The descriptions that showed up on CNN a few hours later sounded nothing like me. They also reported that the dead man had been carrying a laptop, but it had been smashed. Police were trying to reconstruct it, but I never heard anything more.
There was no widow, I’m pleased to say. I don’t know who had been with him the night I called. The Long War, as we all know, has become an international best seller. We are sending the checks to the deceased’s mother.
Literary authorities are on the tube almost weekly, decrying the loss of Edward Patterson, a man of incredible talent, who would have become a towering literary figure, had he only been given time.
TIME TRAVELERS NEVER DIE
1.
Thursday, November 24. Shortly before noon.
We buried him on a cold, gray morning, threatening snow. The mourners were few, easily constraining their grief for a man who had traditionally kept his acquaintances at a distance. I watched the preacher, white-haired, feeble, himself near the end, and I wondered what he was thinking as the wind rattled the pages of his prayer book.
Ashes to ashes—
I stood with hands thrust into my coat pockets, near tears. Look: I’m not ashamed to admit it. Shel was odd, vindictive, unpredictable, selfish. He didn’t have a lot of friends. Didn’t deserve a lot of friends. But I loved him. I’ve never known anyone like him.
—In sure and certain hope—
I wasn’t all that confident about the resurrection, but I knew that Adrian Shelborne would indeed walk the earth again. Even if only briefly. I knew, for example, that he and I would stand on an Arizona hilltop on a fresh spring morning late in the twenty-first century, and watch silver vehicles rise into the sky on the first leg of the voyage to Centaurus. And we would be present at the assassination of Elaine Culpepper, a name unknown now, but which would in time be inextricably linked with the collapse of the North American Republic. Time travelers never really die, he was fond of saying. We’ve been too far downstream. You and I will live for a very long time.
The preacher finished, closed his book, and raised his hand to bless the polished orchid-colored coffin. The wind blew, and the air was heavy with the approaching storm. The mourners, anxious to be away, bent their heads and walked past, laying lilies on the coffin. When it was done, they lingered briefly, murmuring to each other. Helen Suchenko stood off to one side, looking lost. Lover with no formal standing. Known to the family but not particularly liked, mostly because they disapproved of Shel himself. She dabbed jerkily at her eyes and kept her gaze riveted on the gray stone which carried his name and dates.
She was fair-haired, with eyes the color of sea water, and a quiet, introspective manner that might easily have misled those who did not know her well.
“I can’t believe it,” she said.
I had introduced him to Helen, fool that I am. She and I had been members of the Devil’s Disciples, a group of George Bernard Shaw devotees. She was an MD, just out of medical school when she first showed up for a field trip to see Arms and the Man. It was love at first sight, but I was slow to show my feelings. And while I was debating how best to make my approach, Shel walked off with her. He even asked whether I was interested, and
I, sensing I had already lost, salvaged my pride and told him of course not. After that it was over.
He never knew. He used to talk about her a lot when we were upstream. How he was going to share the great secret with her and take her to Victorian London. Or St. Petersburg before the first war. But it never happened. It was always something he was going to do later.
She was trembling. He really was gone. And I now had a clear field with her. That indecent thought kept surfacing. I was reasonably sure she had always been drawn to me, too, just as she was to Shel, and I suspected that I might have carried the day with her had I pressed my case. But honor was mixed up in it somewhere, and I’d kept my distance.
Her cheeks were wet.
“I’ll miss him, too,” I said.
“I loved him, Dave.”
“I know.”
He had died when his townhouse burned down almost two weeks before. He’d been asleep upstairs and had never got out of bed. The explanation seemed to be that the fire had sucked the oxygen out of the house and suffocated him before he ever realized what was happening. Okay, I didn’t believe it either, but that was what we were hearing.
“It’ll be all right,” I said.
She tried to laugh, but the sound had an edge to it. “Our last conversation was so goofy. I wish I’d known—.” Tears leaked out of her eyes. She stopped, tried to catch her breath. “I would have liked,” she said, when she’d regained a degree of control, “to have been able to say goodbye.”
“I know.” I began to guide her toward my Porsche. “Why don’t you let me take you home?”
“Thank you,” she said, backing off. “I’ll be okay.” Her car was parked near a stone angel.
Cryptic - The Best Short Fiction of Jack McDevitt Page 59