iancaldwell&dustinthomason.theruleoffour-第42部分
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Floorboards creak above us; movement in another world。
〃Why didn't you tell me?〃
〃I didn't know how you'd feel;〃 he says。
〃You'd be doing the same program he did。〃
〃As much as I could。〃
I'm not sure I could take it; being dogged by my father for five more years。 I would see him in Paul's shadow even more than I do now。
〃Is that your first choice?〃
It's a long time before he responds。
〃Taft and Melotti are the only two left。〃
Hypnerotomachia scholars; I realize he means。
〃I could always work with a nonspecialist on campus here;〃 he says。 〃Batali or Todesco。〃
But writing a Hypnerotomachia dissertation for a nonspecialist would be like writing music for the deaf。
〃You should go to Chicago;〃 I say; trying to sound like my heart's in it。 And maybe it is。
〃Does that mean you're going to Texas?〃
〃I haven't made up my mind。〃
〃You know; it doesn't always have to be about him。〃
〃It's not。〃
〃Well;〃 Paul says; deciding not to press; 〃I guess we've got the same deadline。〃
The two envelopes are lying where I left them; side by side on his desk。 The desk; it occurs to me; where Paul began to unlock the Hypnerotomachia。 For a second I imagine my father hovering over it; a guardian angel; guiding Paul toward the truth every night since the beginning。 Strange to think I was right here; just a few feet away; asleep almost the whole time。
〃Get some rest;〃 Paul says; and I can hear him roll over in his bunk with a long; labored breath。 The force of what's happened is returning。
〃What are you going to do in the morning?〃 I ask; wondering if he wants to talk about it。
〃I have to ask Richard about those letters;〃 he says。
〃Do you want me to e with you?〃
〃I should go alone。〃
We don't speak again that night。
Paul falls asleep quickly; to judge from his breathing。 I wish I could do the same; but my mind is too crowded for that。 I wonder what my father would've thought; knowing we'd found the portmaster's diary after all these years。 It might've lightened the loneliness I always supposed he felt; working so long at something that meant so little to so few。 I think it would've changed things for him; knowing his son had finally e around。
〃Why'd you e late?〃 I'd asked him one night; after he showed up at halftime during the last basketball game I ever played。
〃I'm sorry;〃 he said。 〃It took me longer than I expected。〃
He was walking in front of me back to the car; preparing to drive us home。 I fixed my eyes on the patch of hair he always forgot to b; the one he couldn't see in the mirror。 It was mid…November; but he'd e to the game in a spring jacket; so absorbed at the office that he'd picked the wrong one from the coatrack。
〃What did?〃 I prodded。 〃Work?〃
Work was the euphemism I used; avoiding the title that was such an embarrassment to me around my friends。
〃Not work;〃 he said quietly。 〃Traffic。〃
On the way back; he kept the speedometer just two or three miles per hour above the speed limit; the way he always did。 The tiny disobedience of it; the way he refused to be bound by rules; but could never really break them; grated on me more and more after getting my driver's permit。
〃You played well; I thought;〃 he said; looking over at me in the passenger's seat。 〃You made both of the foul shots I saw。〃
〃I was oh…for…five in the first half。 I told Coach Ames I didn't want to play anymore。〃
That he didn't pause told me he'd seen it ing。
〃You quit? Why?〃
〃The smart take from the strong;〃 I said; knowing it would be the next thing out of his mouth。 〃But the tall take from the short。〃
He seemed to blame himself after that; as if basketball had been the final straw between us。 Two weeks later; when I returned from school; the hoop and backboard in our driveway had been taken down and given to a local charity。 My mother said she wasn't sure why he'd done it。 Because he thought it would make things better; was all she could say。
With that in mind; I try to imagine the greatest gift I could've given my father。 And as sleep descends on me; the answer seems strangely clear: my faith in his idols。 That was what he wanted all along…to feel that we were united by something permanent; to know that as long as he and I believed in the same things; we would never be apart。 What a job I did; making sure that never happened。 The Hypnerotomachia was no different from piano lessons and basketball and the way he parted his hair: his mistake。 Then; just as he must've known would happen; the moment I lost faith in that book; we were more and more apart; even sitting around the same dinner table。 He'd done his best to tie a knot that would never slip; and I managed to untie it。
Hope; Paul said to me once; which whispered from Pandora's box only after all the other plagues and sorrows had escaped; is the best and last of all things。 Without it; there is only time。 And time pushes at our backs like a centrifuge; forcing us outward and away; until it nudges us into oblivion。 That; I think; is the only explanation for what happened to my father and me; just as it happened to Taft and Curry; the same way it will happen to the four of us here in Dod; inseparable as we seem。 It's a law of motion; a fact of physics that Charlie could name; no different from the stages of white dwarfs and red giants。 Like all things in the universe; we are destined from birth to diverge。 Time is simply the yardstick of our separation。 If we are particles in a sea of distance; exploded from an original whole; then there is a science to our solitude。 We are lonely in proportion to our years。
Chapter 16
The summer after sixth grade; my father sent me to camp; a two…week affair for wayward ex…Boy Scouts; the purpose of which; I realize now; was to get me reinstated among my merit…badge peers。 I'd been de…kerchiefed the year before for lighting bottle rockets in Willy Carlson's tent; and more specifically for saying I still thought it was funny even after Willy's weak constitution and excitable bladder were explained to me。 Time had passed; and; my parents hoped; indiscretions had been forgotten。 In the hubbub surrounding twelve…year…old Jake Ferguson; whose pornographic ic book business had turned the morally constipating experience of Scout camp into a lucrative and horizon…broadening enterprise; I was demoted to lesser…evil status。 Fourteen days on the south shore of Lake Erie; my parents seemed to think; would bring me back into the fold。
It took less than ninety…six hours to prove them wrong。 Halfway through the first week; a scoutmaster dropped me back at home and drove off in a wordless huff。 I'd been dishonorably discharged; this time for teaching campmates an immoral song。 A three…page letter from the camp director; heavy with correctional; parole…style adjectives; ranked me among the worst Boy Scout recidivists of greater central Ohio。 Unsure what a recidivist was; I told my parents what I'd done。
A troop of Girl Scouts had met us for a day of canoeing; singing a song I knew from my sisters' own dark days of camps and badges: Make new friends; but keep the old; one is silver; the other is gold。 Having inherited a set of alternative lyrics; I shared them with my fellow men。
Make no friends; and kick the old。
All I want is silver and gold。
Those lines alone were hardly grounds for expulsion; but Willy Carlson; in a brilliant stroke of retribution; gave the oldest camp counselor a kick as he bent over to light a campfire; then blamed the act on my influence; the new lyrics having conjured his foot into the old man's ass。 Within hours; the full machinery of Boy Scout justice was in motion; and both of us were packing our bags。
Only two things came out of that experience; other than my permanent retirement from scouting。 First; I became good friends with Willy Carlson; whose excitable bladder; it turned out; was nothing but another lie he'd told the scoutmasters to get me kicked out the first time around。 You had to like the guy。 And second; I got a stern lecture from my mother; the motivation for which I never understood until my Princeton years were almost over。 It wasn't the first line of the revised lyrics she objected to; despite the fact that; tec