5
Mary was so hopelessly exhausted by the time she returned to the hotel that night that the lobby appeared to her as a well-lit vacuum. Her only thought was of crawling back up to her room, flopping onto her bed and sleeping for a year. The past few days of manic travel, the heartsickness she felt for Whitley, the fear she felt for Damon; it was all finally taking its toll.
The afternoon she’d spent at the police station had been pointless. They took her story down, gave her cards with phone numbers, drawn a sketch of Damon, but Mary knew that all their rote attempts would yield nothing.
She’d tried phoning home three different times, hoping to speak to Whitley, for just hearing his voice would be a balm to her, but there was no answer. At suppertime she sat in a restaurant and picked at her salad and drank white wine before becoming resigned to the fact that tonight she could do no more.
During her walk Mary saw crowds gathering, people making their way to the beach. Kites of Quetzalcoatl billowed in the darkened sky. In the distance a few fireworks popped. Music was beginning to billow out from open windows. In a few hours, it seemed a new age would be upon the world.
Crossing the hotel foyer, Mary went to the elevator and to her room. When she closed and bolted the door she noticed the red light flashing on the desk. She went to the phone and collected the three voicemails Jo had left her. Her sister sounded increasingly crushed in each successive message.
Mary sat down in the still-unlit room and pressed the buttons of her home number.
“Jo? It’s Mary. What’s going on?”
“Did you find him?”
For a second Mary was almost offended that her sister seemed to be avoiding whatever issue had caused her to be so distraught in her messages. Mary vaguely recalled hearing Jo saying something about a hospice, about a turn for the worse.
“No,” Mary replied, “not yet. What’s happening?” From the other end there came a sniffle or a burst of static, Mary could not discern which.
Jo then fed her sister two steel-bleak words:
“He’s gone.”
A cold silent sheen washed over the world at that moment. Mary’s fingers forfeited the receiver. It was still swinging from the cord like a hanged man when she shuffled away from her desk and out of her room. She did not even notice the lobby doors parting automatically as she passed through them, nor did she hear the elated shouts of the revellers on the beach. She simply walked through them on her way to the night-opaque waters.
The ocean could have been scalding or frigid against her skin, Mary neither felt nor cared. When she began to swim, she did so instinctually, as infants do when they are tossed into a pool by wide-eyed, New Age parents who labour under the folly that nature does not err, that the Earth Mother tends to her own. None of the New Year’s revellers seemed to notice her escape.
She kicked and reached until it seemed as if her arms were being pulled from their sockets. The moon was full and seemed to spotlight her eastward journey.
The island, with its grand, sickly-architected temple and its cumuli of brittle vines, finally came into sight. At night it looked like something Böcklin might have painted had Mexico been his muse instead of Corfu. It was not a sad place, but certainly a sombre one. Images of ascetics fleeing the world for this place passed through Mary’s mind like a fog. She liked to think that Damon had found solace here, some fount of epiphany the likes of which she, in her stubbornly commonsense way, had no hope of ever experiencing.
And all at once her fanciful visions of her only child wandering a garden path with a prophet’s beard and the warm demeanour of one who’d managed to hew his soul with the divine were burned away. Now she saw Damon as a limp abomination, twitching upon the filthy floor of the great black temple; his arms as fine as glass noodles and his belly plump with ascites. His lips a thin sneer, exposing the shrivelled gums, the chalky tongue, the teeth that were all too eager to tear . . .
But even if this was the case, even if Damon had been transformed into some kind of mad monk, he was now all she had left. She had to see him. She had promised Whitley. Her husband. Her
late
husband.
Mary swam.
She noticed immediately that something was vastly different once she neared the shore.
The temple was gone. A great damp cavity had been left in its place.
As the fireworks erupted and streaked the night with glowing colours, Mary pulled herself onto the muddy shore.
The countdown to midnight on the shore must have been approaching its finale; she could sense it. December 21, 2012 was now here, if the distant eruption of fireworks from the mainland was any indication. Did the great winged serpent loop those glittering constellations of artificial stars? Were the people on the mainland undergoing a rebirth?
If so, Mary wondered what would happen to her out here.
It all happened simultaneously.
All at once the shape rose from the deep and emerged from the jungle and grew from the earth.
The temple was no longer still. Perhaps at this auspicious moment in Aztec time, it had merged with enough living things to rise, to walk. More than just a congealment of matter, the temple was Becoming. It was metal and it was jungle vinery and it was flesh and it was precious stone. The great gaping entrance was now a mouth from which a thunderous cry bellowed and rumbled. It shook the island to its core. Human beings were part of it too; legs and teeth, faces, millions of eyes, genitals shorn from their trunks but still copulating madly. A few bones or bits of pipe or tree boughs were shat out through crevices here and there, there and here. And the whole Thing just kept bellowing. By now the moon was blotted by the ever-growing Shape that shambled nearer, nearer.
Fish and plankton and other deep ones must have sensed the great Shape’s passing, for they leapt above the surface to splatter against It, to become a part of It.
Unity. Mary saw it at its purest, at its most hideous, at its holiest.
Not knowing what else to do, Mary fell to her knees, pressed her head against the earth.
Mary wondered: Was Damon up there, some splayed artery of the All?
She wondered if she was hiding her head out of terror or sheer reverence for this new-age god.
But as the thunderous thing lowered Itself to awaken her, Mary came to understand that, in the end, distinctions do not matter.