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Authors: Robert Stone

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A Flag for Sunrise (55 page)

BOOK: A Flag for Sunrise
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Weitling bent his great head as far backward as his neck allowed and uttered another cry.

“Oooh, he says the wine is blood! Eat flesh meat, he says this. He will make blood run out until fields are covered and he will bowl the sun to dry it. He has not mercy for Weitling. Nor for children. They are in depravity, he says. He is free. He takes them up, their bones, their gut bags. He makes rain out of them. The rain, this is him laughing at Weitling. His laughing is rain. He makes the rain of parts of children. The fish are fed with blood. When they see his face their eyes are opened, they eat their teeth. He says Weitling go down. And I go down and do it. We are shit upon the ground to him. This he tells me.”

“Lamb of God who takest away the sins of the world, have mercy on us,” Father Egan said softly, and struck his breast. Pablo could not take his eyes from Weitling’s enraptured face.

The priest reached out with an unsteady hand to touch Farmer Weitling’s shoulder.

“Weitling, the necessary sacrifice was made long ago. No one asks anything of you except that you get yourself healed.”

Weitling rocked to his drummer god; Egan’s hand fell away.

“He is king and I, his bad monkey. I am the bad monkey in the trees. They tell the children run from the bad monkey and the children run. But whose monkey I am, they don’t know. He calls. He screams like a hungry monkey. He must make the rain. In his horrible voice he screams at Weitling.”

“Stop it,” Egan said in a dull voice. “Stop it now, son.”

Weitling kept rocking.

“They don’t know what I, Weitling, know. I make the sun to come up. I hear it come up. Without me there is no rain. When the sun is bowled and the blood is dry things so beautiful will be.
Ja
, it’s so. No hungering. No wondering. Everything we must have will be.”

Egan watched him for a moment, in silence.

“Well now,” the priest said, “I’ve heard that one before.”

“But if there is not blood everything is destroyed. Darkness and the sun falls and the stars and moon. The ground opens and it is all crushed like Weitling.”

“But you’re deluded, Weitling. It all takes care of itself. That’s the beauty of it—so they say.” He put his hand around the bottle of rum as though he were about to drink but after a second he took the hand away. “Don’t you see that it’s better that the world endures its own destruction than that you make yourself work such cruelties? Or that an innocent child is made to suffer and die?”

Weitling stopped rocking and began to stand up. The mask of celebration dissolved and his broad stolid face relaxed.

“I am small,” he told Egan, looking down on him, “but I’m too big for you. He’s with me and I’m strong.”

“Well, you’re too strong for me but that’s no trick. Go, Weitling. Go back to your people, find your bishop or your elder and let them help to cure you.”

“Where I go,” Weitling said, “They don’t find me.”

He looked about him and then turned on Pablo.

“You,” he told Tabor, “you’re not a good boy.”

Pablo snarled. “Oh yeah?” he said.

The Farmer took a step backward, turned and went his way rejoicing.

“Some big creep,” Pablo said. “You ought to put a fence around this place.”

“You should know,” the priest explained, “that he’s a killer of children. We’re not sure how many he’s done in. He hears voices.”

“He really does that? He kills little kids?”

Egan, looking into the fire, nodded.

“If he does that, man, you got no business letting him run around.”

“What should I do?”

“Well, shit, you oughta tell someone. Or just take him out—bingo.”

“If I told anyone around here, Weitling would be strung up the same day.”

“What’s the matter with that? Then he couldn’t hurt no more kids.”

“Yes. But I’m not sure he’s beyond help.”

“Are you kidding me? You just don’t have any kids, that’s why you can talk like that.”

“Ah,” Egan said. “Maybe you’re right.” He was thoughtful for a while. “You know, I’ve always valued children above everything else—even though I haven’t any. It’s always bothered me that the world hurts them. That they got lost in the bush, wandered into traps, all those terrible things. The thought of those things could always spoil the most beautiful day for me.”

“Fucking-A, man. Kids are the only clean thing in this rotten fucked world. You can’t give a shit about people, they bring their trouble on themselves. But kids, that’s different.”

“But Weitling—he’s a kind of a child himself, isn’t he?”

“A fucking killer ape is what he is. There’s only one cure for him.”

“He’s very sick and his head is full of dreams and stories that went bad on him. He’s not alone in that condition.”

Pablo sighed and turned over to lean on his elbow. “I don’t know, bro,” he said wearily. “I got troubles of my own, you know.”

“I’ve tried to get to the Mennonites about him—I’ve had my friends up-country get in touch. But they don’t have telephones, they live in inaccessible places and some of them don’t talk to strangers.” Egan reached for the bottle again and this time he took a drink. “You’re right, of course. I’ll have to see that he’s picked up. I’m as deluded as he is.”

Talk of being picked up was troubling to Pablo. As he watched the old man’s vacant face, cadaverous even in the firelight, his leg began to hurt and he felt cold. Things were wrong, he thought. Things were wiggy.

Egan was drinking now; he sat with his head lowered, talking softly to himself.

“Again I couldn’t see,” Pablo heard him say. “Could it be that because there was no concupiscence I was …” The priest’s thin voice trailed off.

Pablo sat up.

“Hey, man, you said you could help me out. You said you’d give me a place to crash. You said you had medicine. Now I’m sick, you understand me?”

“The boat,” the old man said, “you fought on the boat. That’s why you’re here.”

“Never mind the fuckin’ boat,” Pablo said. The fear that had been hovering in the surrounding darkness touched him with its feathers. The place was wiggy. There were killers and the old man was stoned mad. He was one of those people—whatever you wanted they had it, but jack shit was what they had. It was a turned-around place, a bad place. Maybe not a true place at all.

“Something’s going on, Pablo,” the priest said. “Something to do with the place we’re in.”

Pablo’s throat was dry as sand; he opened his mouth to breathe.

“What do you mean?” He knew that the pills had started to poison him at last. And people had better beware then and they had better not try to turn him around.

“Did you look at the stones?”

Pablo realized he meant the inscribed upright slabs in the center of the clearing.

“Yeah. Sort of.”

“Did you examine them? Did you read them?”

“It was dark. Anyway, how’m I gonna read that craziness?”

“The stones tell about human sacrifice. All the glyphs and all the figures here are about that and nothing else.”

“Human sacrifice,” Pablo said.

“A man came here once from the national museum. They took rubbings of those stones and they picked up everything that could be
moved. They said it was for the museum’s collection but of course it was for the President’s family to sell. They picked up bone carvings and shards with graffiti on them. The man said he thought the graffiti might tell him something about everyday life here long ago, about how people went about life. But it turned out that he was wrong, it turned out that every single stroke represented human sacrifice—even the graffiti. It was as though there was no everyday life. Only sacrifice.”

Tabor looked at him blankly.

“You understand, Pablo? There’s a charge on the place. It draws people like Weitling and people like you. The field of blood. The place of the skull. They played the ball game here, you know.” The old priest frowned and shook his head. “Can that be? A temple? A temple of the demiurge?”

Pablo felt as though the short hairs on the back of his neck were on end. He opened his mouth to breathe. “The ball game,” he repeated.

“But why not?” Egan asked. “Whatever life is, it isn’t rational. Signs and wonders, eh?”

“Now look,” Pablo said, “you’re tryin’ to turn me around.” Something like the taste of an old bad dream stirred under Pablo’s memory. Place of the skull. “What happened on that boat, man, that was the purest case of self-defense you could want. Those people were bad, man, they were wanting to kill me. I’m just lucky I’m alive.”

The old man’s eyes had come to life. He pursed his lips and thumped Pablo on the chest.

“Something’s going on, Pablo. Always. Something taking its course.”

“I don’t …” Pablo began. “I don’t …”

“A process.” Egan took a deep breath, held it and released it in a hoarse whisper. “Measureless.”

I’m in such trouble now, Pablo thought, I might as well be dead. He thought of mornings in the piney woods, of going for quail. But he had shot his dogs.

“Imagine it,” Egan said. “This colossal immanent force and it’s a gleam in the muck. Layer upon layer of intention, consciousness. Measureless will. Unseen and encompassing everything.”

“Could I have some of your rum, bro?” Pablo asked. “See, I don’t feel good.” When Egan did not respond, he reached over and took it.

“It’s woven in,” Egan said. “Hiding in the universe. Everywhere and yet never anywhere. Always present and never available.” Father Egan’s bright gaze fell upon Tabor. He appeared not to recognize him. Yet he called him by name. “Pablo,” he said, “what a mystery, eh?”

“No,” Pablo said, “no, I don’t feel so good and that’s the truth. I don’t like the way I feel.”

“It’s here after all, marking a passage, setting traps. Like insect traps among the leaves. For butterflies. We never find it. Does it ever find us?”

“It’s my leg that’s hurting,” Pablo said. “I think it might be pretty bad.” He reached with difficulty into the pockets of his jeans. “See, all I got is these pain pills and I gotta have more.” He held up the little glass bottle for Egan’s inspection. “And even aspirin, if I had that, see.”

“Telling the dancer from dance, Pablo. That’s what the poem’s about, you know. That’s the problem.”

“You don’t even give a shit,” Pablo said bitterly.

“But I do,” Egan said cheerfully, not looking at Pablo. “Now, listen. A friend of mine, a Maryknoll chap, lived fifty years in Africa. He told me they had a moth there that lived in colonies. The colonies lived in the branches of a certain kind of tree, they would settle on a branch and there they would form a leaf and flower pattern unknown to nature. It was totally their own. Now that’s marvelous, isn’t it? But that’s not the half. If you shook the branch, the moths would fly away. Then in minutes they’d settle down again and form the same leaf and flower. Hundreds, maybe thousands of moths, every one in its exact place. Each moth an exact part of the whole.” He turned toward Pablo. “A jigsaw.”

Desperate, Tabor rolled his eyes and ground his teeth.

“I don’t even know what the fuck you’re talking about, you crazy old bastard. You said you’d help me out.”

Egan patted Tabor’s forearm.

“Inconceivable,” he said. “
Credo quia absurdum
.”

Pablo was tired of anger. His anxiety was dissolving into a gloom like that of the grave. He would have to take more speed and suffer
the loss of rest, risk the terrors at the bottom of the pill bottle. There was rum and that might help. He felt as though he were cringing behind his own eyes.

“Shining,” Egan said. “Shook foil.”

Pablo put the pill in his mouth and tried to swallow it. His mouth seemed to be stuffed with dry straw; the stalks hurt his throat. When he closed his eyes there were small whirling lights. The Place of the Skull. I am the drug, he thought.

“Why are You so unavailable?” Egan sang to the forest. “Why must it be so?”

“Who you talking to?” Pablo demanded.

Egan gave him a sad, reassuring smile. Both of them waited, as though for an answer.

“Pity the Weitlings of the world, Pablo. They’re victims of things as they are. Some chemical in the blood, a shortage of sugar in the brain cells and they get the process whole. What they see is real enough, it’s so overwhelming it must seem like God to them. You can’t look on what they see and not run mad.” He turned in the direction Weitling had gone, watched for a moment and then faced the fire again. “They’ve been elected. Priests, because they’ve seen it, poor bastards. That’s what Satan is, Pablo. Satan is the way things are. Remember Mephistopheles, eh? ‘Why this is hell nor are we out of it.’ ”

Pablo closed his eyes and shivered.

“We say they’re deluded but reality’s their problem. Unlike you and me, they see it plain—no breakdown, no story material to go with it, so they have to make up their own story. It burns out their minds and they have to call it revelation. Primitive association, sympathetic magic—whatever comes to hand. You know how it is, boy, everybody has to make suffering mean something. The other guy’s firstborn, paschal lambs, sacrifice. But that’s not revelation—not by a long shot. Revelation is something else.” Egan was silent for a moment, then he opened his mouth as though he were about to speak.

Pablo was at the point of screaming. “What is it, for Christ’s sake?”

“It’s all right, Pablo, do you see? That’s what it comes to. Everything is all right. In spite of appearances. There’s no other conclusion.”

“I don’t know who you people are,” Pablo said despairingly, “but
you all are crazy. I thought you could help me out. I got no business in this freak show.”

“Pablo, listen, it’s all right. It’s all right for you too. We’ll take care of you. You’re among friends.”

The old man’s eyes gave him no peace. He searched the field of vision for escape, a token of reason, a clue, the light of dawn. Things overcame him.

“Hey,” he asked the priest, “what did you say this was a temple of?”

Egan looked blank for a moment.

“Oh. Oh, the demiurge. A kind of metaphor. At least I think so but who knows, eh? Another theological system.” He laughed to himself.

Pablo felt the hairs on his neck rise.

BOOK: A Flag for Sunrise
2.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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