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A Bridge of Years
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Текст книги "A Bridge of Years"


Автор книги: Robert Charles Wilson



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Текущая страница: 19 (всего у книги 19 страниц)

PART THREE – Time

Twenty-four

When he woke there was nothing left of his wound but pink, new skin and an occasional phantom pain. The cybernetics had healed him, Ben explained. He’d been asleep for three and a half weeks.

The house had been healed, too. No trace remained of the smoke and fire damage. The windows had been replaced and reputtied. The house was immaculate—spotless.

The way I found it, Tom thought. New and old. A half step out of time.

“There’s someone you need to meet,” Ben said.

She was waiting for him in the kitchen.

Dazed with his recovery and events that seemed too recent, he didn’t recognize her at first; felt only this powerful sense of familiarity, a sort of deja vu. Then he said, “You were in the car … driving the car that hit him.” He remembered this face framed in those lights.

She nodded. “That’s right.”

She was gray-haired, fiftyish, a little wide at the hips. She was dressed in jeans and a blue cotton blouse and thick corrective lenses that made her eyes seem big.

He looked again, and the world seemed to slip sideways. “Oh my god,” he said. “Joyce.”

Her smile was large and genuine. “We do meet under the most peculiar circumstances.”

He spent a few days at the house undergoing what Doug called “emotional decompression,” but he couldn’t stay. In effect, the building had been repossessed. The time terminus was repaired; Tom didn’t have a place here anymore.

He was homeless but not poor. A sum equivalent to the purchase price of the house had appeared in a Bank of America account in his name. Tom asked Ben how this happy event had occurred—not certain he wanted to know—and Ben said, “Oh, money isn’t hard to create. The right electronics and the right algorithms can work wonders. It can be done by telephone, amazingly enough.”

“Like computer hacking,” Tom said.

“More sophisticated. But yes.”

“Isn’t that unethical?”

“Do you own this house? Did you really take possession of the chattel goods to which you’re entitled under the contract? If not, would it be fair to leave you penniless?”

“You can’t just invent money. It has to come from somewhere.”

Ben gave him a pitying look.

The tunnel was repaired and the time travelers came through it from their unimaginable future: Tom was allowed a glimpse of them. He stood at the foot of the basement stairs as they emerged from the tunnel, a man and a woman, or apparently so—Ben said they changed themselves to seem more human than they really were. Their eyes, Tom thought, were very striking. Gray eyes, frankly curious. They looked at him a long time. Looked at him, Tom supposed, the way he might look at a living specimen of Australopithecus—with the peculiar affection we feel for our dim-witted ancestors.

Then they turned to Ben and spoke too softly for Tom to understand; he took this as his cue to leave.

Archer and Catherine made room for him in the Simmons house at the top of the hill. The bed was comfortable but he planned to leave; he felt too much like an intruder here. They made allowances for his disorientation, tiptoed around his isolation. It wasn’t a role he wanted to play.

The Simmons house was for sale, in any case. Archer had left his job with Belltower Realty but refused to employ another agent; the property was “for sale by owner.”

“It’s full of important memories,” Catherine said, “but without Gram Peggy this place would be a mausoleum. Better to let it go.” She gave him a curious half-sad little smile. “I guess we all came out of this with new ideas about past and future. What we can cling to and what we can’t.”

Archer said they were moving up to Seattle, where Catherine had a market for her painting. He could find some kind of work there—maybe even audit some college courses. Tom said, “Leaving Belltower after all these years?”

“Cutting that knot, yeah. It’s easier now.”

“It rained morning glories,” Tom said.

“All up and down the Post Road. Morning glories a foot deep.”

“Nobody knows it but us.”

“Nope. But we know it.”

August had ended. It was September now, still hot, but a little bit of winter in the air, colder these nights.

He took his car out of the garage and drove it down to Brack’s Auto Body for a tune-up. The mechanic changed the oil, cleaned the plugs, adjusted the choke, charged too much. He ran Tom’s Visa card through the slider and said, “Planning a trip?” Tom nodded.

“Where you headed?”

“Don’t know. Maybe back east. Thought I’d just drive.”

“No shit?”

“No shit.”

“That’s wild,” the mechanic said. “Hey, freedom, right?”

“Freedom. Right.”

He made a couple of phone calls from the booth outside.

He called Tony. It was Saturday; Tony was home and the TV was playing in the background. He heard Tricia crying, Loreen soothing her.

“I was passing through town,” Tom said. “Thought I’d call.”

“Holy shit,” Tony said. “I thought you were dead, I really did. Are you all right? What do you mean, passing through town?”

“I can’t stay, Tony. You were right about the house. Not a good investment.”

“Passing through on the way to where?”

He repeated what he’d told the mechanic: someplace east.

“This is extremely adolescent behavior. Immature, Tom. This is life, not ‘Route 66.’ ”

“I’ll keep that in mind. Listen, is Loreen around?”

“You want to talk to her?” He seemed surprised.

“Just to say hi.”

“Well. Take care of yourself, anyhow. Stay in touch this time. If you need anything, if you need money—”

“Thanks, Tony. I appreciate that.”

Muffled silence, then Loreen got on the line. “Just checking in on my way through town,” Tom said. “Wanted to thank you folks.”

They chatted a while. Barry had been down with chicken pox, home from school for two weeks. Tricia was cutting a tooth. Tom said he’d been traveling and that he’d be traveling awhile longer.

“You sound different,” Loreen said.

“Do I?”

“You do. I don’t know how to describe it. Like you’re making peace with something.” He couldn’t formulate an answer. She added, “It’s been a long time since that accident. Since your mama and daddy died. Life goes on, Tom. Days and years. But I guess you know that.”

A last call, long distance to Seattle; he charged it to his credit card. A male voice answered. Tom said, “Is Barbara there?”

“Just a second.” Clatter and mumble. Then her voice.

She said she was glad to hear from him. She’d been worried. It was a relief to know he was all right. He thanked her for coming to see him back in the spring. It was good that she cared.

“I don’t think a person stops caring. We didn’t work too well together but we weren’t the Borgias, either.”

“It was good when it was good,” Tom said. “Yes.”

“You’re still hooked up with Rafe?”

“We’re working things out. I think it’s solid, yeah.”

“There were times I wanted you back so bad I tried to pretend you didn’t exist. Can you understand that?”

“Perfectly,” she said. “But those were real years.”

“Yes.”

“Good and bad.”

“Yes.”

“Thank you for those years,” he said. She said, “You’re going away again?”

“I’m not sure where. I’ll call.”

“Please do that,” she said.

He drove out of town along the coast highway until he came to the narrow switchback where his parents had died. He turned off the road at a scenic overlook some yards up the highway, stepped out of his car and sat awhile at the stone barricade where the hillside sloped away into scrub pine and down to the ocean. He had passed this place a dozen times since the accident but had never stopped, never allowed himself to contemplate the event. The knock on the door, the inconceivable announcement of their death—he had considered and reconsidered those things, but never this place. The mythology but never the fact. He reminded himself that the tumbling of their vehicle down this embankment had happened on a rainy day, that the car had crushed itself against the rocks, the ambulance had arrived and departed, the wreckage had been lifted by crane and towed away, night fell, the clouds parted, stars wheeled overhead, the sun rose. Two people died; but their dying was an event among all the other events of their lives, no more or less significant than marriage, childbirth, ambition, disappointment, love. Maybe Loreen was right. Time to take this bone of bereavement and inter it with all the other bones. Not bury it but put it in its place, in the vault of time, the irretrievable past, where memory lived.

He climbed into the car and drove back toward Belltower.

To the hollow central mystery of his life now: Joyce.

He found her on the Post Road, hiking to the little grocery up by the highway.

He stopped the car and opened the passenger door for her. She climbed inside.

By Tom’s calculation she had turned fifty in February of this year. She’d gained some weight, gained some lines, gained some gray. She wore a pair of faded jeans a little too tight around her thighs; a plain yellow sweatshirt; sneakers for the long hike up the road. The marks of time, Tom thought. Her voice was throaty and pitched lower than he remembered it; maybe time or maybe some hard living had done that. Her eyes suggested the latter.

She looked at him cautiously. “I wasn’t sure you’d be back.”

“Neither was I.”

“Still planning on leaving town?”

He nodded.

“I was hoping we could talk.”

“We can talk,” Tom said.

“You haven’t been around much. Well, hell. It must be a shock, seeing me like this.”

It was true, but it sounded terrible. He told her she looked fine. She said, “I look my age, for better or worse. Tom, I lived those twenty-seven years. I know what to expect when I look in the mirror. You woke up expecting something else.”

“You left,” he said. “Left before I had a chance to say goodbye.”

“I left as soon as I knew you’d be all right. You want to know how it went?” She settled into the upholstery and stared into the blue September sky. “I left because I didn’t trust the connection between us. I left because I didn’t want to be a freak of nature, here—or make you into one, there. I left because I was scared and I wanted to go home.

“I left because Ben told me the tunnel would be fixed and the choice I made would have to be the final choice. So– back to Manhattan, back to 1962. You always think you can start again, but it turns out you can’t. Lawrence was dead. That changed things. And I’d been here, I’d had a look at the future. Even just a tiny look, it leaves you different. For instance, you remember Jerry Soderman? Wrote books nobody would publish? He did okay as a trade editor, actually got into print in the seventies—literary novels hardly anybody read, but he was real proud of them. Couple of months after I got back, Jerry tells me he’s gay, he might as well be frank about it. Fine, but the only thought I had was, Hey, Jerry, come 1976 or so you better be careful what you do. I actually phoned him around then, hadn’t talked to him for years. I said, Jerry, there’s a disease going around, here’s how to protect yourself. He said no there’s not and how would you know? Anyhow … Jerry died a couple of years back.” I m sorry, Tom said.

“It’s not your fault, not his fault, not my fault. The point is, I couldn’t leave behind what happened with you and me and this place. I tried! I really did. I tried all the good ways of forgetting. And I lived a life. I was married for five years. Nice guy, bad marriage. I did some professional backup vocals, but that was a bad time …I drank for a while, which kind of screwed up my voice. And, you know, I marched for civil rights and I marched against the war and I marched for clean air. When things leveled out I took a secretarial job at a law firm downtown. Nine to five, steady paycheck, annual vacation, and I’d be there today if I hadn’t quit and bought a ticket west. It’s amazing: for the longest time I promised myself I wouldn’t do it. What was done here was finished. I’d left; I’d made my decision. But I remembered the date on the newspaper I read in your back yard. Every August, I marked the anniversary, if you can call it that. Then, for the last couple of years, I started watching calendars the way you might watch a clock. Watching that date crawl closer. On New Year’s Eve last winter I sat home by myself, one lonely lady approaching the half-century mark. I broke open a bottle of champagne and at midnight I said fuck it, I’m going.

“Bought plane tickets six months in advance. Gave notice. I don’t know what I hoped or expected to find, but I wanted it real bad. Well, the flight was delayed. I missed a connection at O’Hare and had to wait overnight in the airport. When I got to Seattle it was already morning; the newspaper, the one I remembered, was sitting in the boxes staring at me. I rented a car and drove too fast down the coast. Blew out a tire and took a long time changing it. Then I got to Belltower and couldn’t find the house. Couldn’t remember the name of the road. I guess I thought there’d be signs posted: THIS WAY TO THE TIME MACHINE. I asked at a couple of gas stations, looked at a map until I thought my eyes would pop out of my head. Finally I stopped at a little all-night restaurant for coffee and when the waitress came I asked her if she knew anybody named Tom Winter or Cathy Simmons and she said no but there was a Peggy Simmons out along the Post Road and didn’t she have a granddaughter named Cathy? I gave her a twenty and came roaring out here. Caught the bad guy in my headlights and I couldn’t help myself, Tom: after all those years he still looked like death. I remembered Lawrence lying in a cheap coffin in some funeral parlor in Brooklyn, where his parents lived, and it still hurt, all these years later. So I turned the wheel. I was crying when I hit him.”

“Saved my life,” Tom said.

“Saved your life and drove on down the road and checked into a hotel room and sat on the bed shaking until noon the next day. By which time my younger self had gone home.”

“Then you came back,” Tom said.

“Scared hell out of Doug and Cathy. Ben didn’t seem too surprised, though.”

“You still wanted something.”

“I don’t know what I wanted. I think I wanted to look at you. Just look. Does that make any sense? For most of thirty years I’d been thinking about you. What we were. What we might have been. Whether I should love you or hate you for all this.”

He heard the weariness in her voice. “Any conclusions?”

“No conclusions. Just memory in the flesh. I’m sorry if I freaked you out.”

“I’m the one who should apologize.”

He pulled into the lot in back of the grocery store and parked where a patch of sun came shining through a stand of tall pines. Tom decided this woman was Joyce, unmistakably Joyce despite all the changes; that he had walked into one more miracle, as pitiless and strange as the others.

She squinted at him through a bar of sunlight, smiling. “Catherine said there’s a sale on seed packets here. It’s too late for a garden, obviously, but the seeds stay good if you keep them in a refrigerator.”

“Seeds for Ben to plant? He talked about a garden.”

“For me to plant. I might be staying here. Ben offered me a job.” She paused. “His job.”

Tom turned off the engine, looked at her blankly. “I don’t get it.”

“He’s going home. I think he deserves it, don’t you? He offered me as a replacement. His employers agreed.”

He considered it a moment. “You want this?”

“I think I do. Ben says it’s lonely work. Maybe I need some lonely work for a while.”

“How long a while?”

“Eight years. Then the terminal’s closed for good. There won’t be anything in the basement but Gyproc walls. Weird thought, isn’t it?”

Eight years, Tom thought. 1997. Just shy of the millennium.

“I can do eight years,” she said. “I can hack that.”

“What then? They pension you off?”

“They rebuild me. They make me young.” She shook her head: “No, not young. That’s the wrong word. They make my body young. But I’ll be nearly sixty, no matter what I look like. That might be hard to deal with. My theory is that it shouldn’t matter. On the inside you’re not old or young, you’re just yourself, right? I won’t be a callow youth but I won’t be something monstrous, either. At least that’s what I believe.”

She had been Joyce, would be Joyce, was Joyce now. “I don’t think you have anything to worry about.”

“It’s funny,” she said. “We were together for what—ten weeks, eleven weeks? It’s funny how a couple of months can put such a spin on a whole life. Now I’m old, you’re young. In a few years it’ll be the other way around.”

He took her hand. He pictured himself coming back here in seven years’ time, knocking on the door, Joyce answering—

She put a finger on his lips. “Don’t talk about it. Live your life. See what happens.”

So he helped her with the shopping and he drove her home.

During the ride she asked Tom what he meant to do now and he told her more or less what he’d told Tony and Barbara: head east, live on the house money for a while, sort himself out.

He added, “I keep thinking about what Barbara’s doing. I can’t see myself carrying a picket sign around some toxic waste dump. But maybe I should, I don’t know. I think about what Ben said, that the future is always unpredictable. Maybe we don’t have to end up with the kind of world that created, you know, him—”

“Billy,” Joyce said. “Ben said his name was Billy.”

“Maybe we tan uncreate Billy.” Tom pulled into the gravel driveway of this plain house, ugly but well maintained, this lonely house up along the Post Road. “But that’s a paradox, isn’t it? If Billy doesn’t exist, where did he come from?”

“Wherever ghosts come from,” Joyce said.

“Hard to believe a ghost could be that dangerous.”

“Ghosts are always dangerous. You should have figured that out.”

She touched his cheek with her hand, then opened the door and stepped outside. Tom made himself smile. He wanted her to remember him smiling.

Driving east, he discovered a package of seeds in the passenger seat where it must have fallen from her shopping: morning glories, Heavenly Blue.

Epilogue

Billy remembered a sense of upward motion, of expansion, as if he were being drawn into a vacuum. The motion surrounded him, became a place, incomprehensibly large, a blue vastness like the sky. And then it was the sky.

A blue sky generous over a dry landscape, powder-white hills in the far distance and in the foreground a farm. Water arced up from a thousand sprinkler-heads, made rainbows over miles of kale and new green wheat and luxurious arbors of grapes.

Ohio!

Billy was astonished.

He stood on a dusty road in civilian clothes. His body wasn’t broken. No more pain, no more fear.

A road in Ohio inside a monster inside a tunnel inside time.

He couldn’t make sense of this hierarchy of impossibilities. He had been carried here by wish or accident, perhaps by some being altogether timeless, human or not human or human in one of its aspects or all humanity collated together at the end of duration—he didn’t know; it didn’t matter. He wondered what he would do without his armor, but the thought was less terrifying than it should have been. Maybe he didn’t need the armor. He reached under his rough-woven cotton shirt and touched the place where the lancet had entered his skin; but the hole was seamlessly healed.

Billy walked toward the farm until the common buildings loomed ahead of him and he distinguished two figures at the main gate. Now he hurried forward, recognizing the bearded man: Nathan, his father; and the woman beside him was Maria, his mother, who had died of cancer a month after Billy was born; he recognized her from her photographs.

He stood before Nathan, who was as tall as Billy remembered him. Billy said, “What is this place?” And Nathan answered, “This is where we begin again.” Then he opened his arms and Billy ran forward.

Nathan and Maria took him home. Their touch pulled memory out of him like a throbbing tooth until there was only the fact of the sky, the water, the heat.

“Saw an Infantry patrol this morning,” Nathan remarked, “but it passed well to the south.”

“That’s good,” Billy’s mother said.

Billy took her hand and tugged her toward home.

“I’m tired,” he said. The sun was hot and made him tired and he felt like he’d walked a very long way.


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