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Chapter 36

Now and then I thought of the Zumwalt automatic hidden in the bedroom.

  The time of dangling insects arrived. White houses with caterpillars dangling from the eaves. White stones indriveways. You can walk at night down the middle of the street and hear women talking on the telephone. Wannerweather produces voices in the dark. They are talking about their adolescent sons. How big, how fast. The sons arealmost frightening. The quantities they eat. The way they loom in doorways. These are the days that are full ofwormy bugs. They are in the grass, stuck to the siding, hanging in the air, hanging from the trees and eaves, stuck tothe window screens. The women talk long-distance to the grandparents of the growing boys. They share the Trimlinephone, beamish old folks in hand-knit sweaters on fixed incomes.

  What happens to them when the commercial ends?

  I got a call myself one night. The operator said, 'There's a Mother Devi that wishes to talk collect to a Jack Gladney.

  Do you accept?""Hello, Janet. What do you want?""Just to say hello. To ask how you are. We haven't talked in ages.""Talked?""Swami wants to know if our son is coming to the ashram this summer.""Our son?""Yours, mine and his. Swami regards the children of his followers as his children.""I sent a daughter to Mexico last week. When she gets back, I'll be ready to talk about the son.""Swami says Montana will be good for the boy. He will grow out, fill out. These are his touchy years.""Why are you calling? Seriously.""Just to greet you, Jack. We greet each other here.""Is he one of those whimsical swamis with a snow-white beard? Sort of fun to look at?""We're serious people here. The cycle of history has but four ages. We happen to be in the last of these. There is littletime for whimsy."Her tiny piping voice bounced down to me from a hollow ball in geosynchronous orbit.

  "If Heinrich wants to visit you this summer, it's all right with me. Let him ride horses, fish for trout. But í don't wanthim getting involved in something personal and intense, like religion. There's already been some kidnap talk aroundhere. People are edgy.""The last age is the Age of Darkness.""Fine. Now tell me what you want.""Nothing. I have everything. Peace of mind, purpose, true fellowship. I only wish to greet you. I greet you, Jack. Imiss you. I miss your voice. I only wish to talk a while, pass a moment or two in friendly reminiscence."I hung up and went for a walk. The women were in their lighted homes, talking on the phone. Did swami havetwinkling eyes? Would he be able to answer the boy's questions where I had failed, provide assurances where I hadincited bickering and debate? How final is the Age of Darkness? Does it mean supreme destruction, a night thatswallows existence so completely that I am cured of my own lonely dying? I listened to the women talk. All sound,all souls.

  When I got home I found Babette in her sweatsuit by the bedroom window, staring into the night.

  Delegates to the Hitler conference began arriving. About ninety Hitler scholars would spend the three days of theconference attending lectures, appearing on panels, going to movies. They would wander the campus with theirnames lettered in gothic type on laminated tags pinned to their lapels. They would exchange Hitler gossip, spread theusual sensational rumors about the last days in the führerbunker.

  It was interesting to see how closely they resembled each other despite the wide diversity of national and regionalbackgrounds. They were cheerful and eager, given to spitting when they laughed, given to outdated dress,homeliness, punctuality. They seemed to have a taste for sweets.

  I welcomed them in the starkly modern chapel. I spoke in German, from notes, for five minutes. I talked mainlyabout Hitler's mother, brother and dog. His dog's name was Wolf. This word is the same in English and German.

  Most of the words I used in my address were the same or nearly the same in both languages. I'd spent days with thedictionary, compiling lists of such words. My remarks were necessarily disjointed and odd. I made many referencesto Wolf, many more to the mother and the brother, a few to shoes and socks, a few to jazz, beer and baseball. Ofcourse there was Hitler himself. I spoke the name often, hoping it would overpower my insecure sentence structure.

  The rest of the time I tried to avoid the Germans in the group. Even in my black gown and dark glasses, with myname in Nazi typeface over my heart, I felt feeble in their presence, death-prone, listening to them produce theirguttural sounds, their words, their heavy metal. They told Hitler jokes and played pinochle. All I could do was muttera random monosyllable, rock with empty laughter. I spent a lot of time in my office, hiding.

  Whenever I remembered the gun, lurking in a stack of undershirts like a tropical insect, I felt a small intensesensation pass through me. Whether pleasurable or fearful I wasn't sure. I knew it mainly as a childhood moment, theprofound stir of secret-keeping.

  What a sly device a handgun is. One so small in particular. An intimate and cunning thing, a secret history of the manwho owns it. I recalled how I'd felt some days earlier, trying to find the Dylar. Like someone spying on the familygarbage. Was I immersing myself, little by little, in a secret life? Did I think it was my last defense against the ruinworked out for me so casually by the force or nonforce, the principle or power or chaos that determines such things?

  Perhaps I was beginning to understand my ex-wives and their ties to intelligence.

  The Hitler scholars assembled, wandered, ate voraciously, laughed through oversized teeth. I sat at my desk in thedark, thinking of secrets. Are secrets a tunnel to a dreamworld where you control events?

  In the evening I sped out to the airport to meet my daughter's plane. She was excited and happy, wore Mexican things.

  She said the people who sent her mother books to review wouldn't leave her alone. Dana was getting big thick novelsevery day, writing reviews which she microfilmed and sent to a secret archive. She complained of jangled nerves,periods of deep spiritual fatigue. She told Steffie she was thinking of coming in from the cold.

  In the morning I sped out to Glassboro to take the further tests my doctor had advised, at Autumn Harvest Farms. Theseriousness of such an occasion is directly proportionate to the number of bodily emissions you are asked to cull foranalysis. I carried with me several specimen bottles, each containing some melancholy waste or secretion. Alone inthe glove compartment rode an ominous plastic locket, which I'd reverently enclosed in three interlocking Baggies,successively twist-tied. Here was a daub of the most solemn waste of all, certain to be looked upon by the technicianson duty with the mingled deference, awe and dread we have come to associate with exotic religions of the world.

  But first I had to find the place. It turned out to be a functional pale brick building, one story, with slab floors andbright lighting. Why would such a place be called Autumn Harvest Farms? Was this an attempt to balance theheartlessness of their gleaming precision equipment? Would a quaint name fool us into thinking we live inpre-cancerous times? What kind of condition might we expect to have diagnosed in a facility called Autumn HarvestFarms? Whooping cough, croup? A touch of the grippe? Familiar old farmhouse miseries calling for bed rest, a deepchest massage with soothing Vicks VapoRub. Would someone read to us from David Copperfield?

  I had misgivings. They took my samples away, sat me down at a computer console. In response to questions on thescreen I tapped out the story of my life and death, little by little, each response eliciting further questions in anunforgiving progression of sets and subsets. I lied three times. They gave me a loose-fitting garment and a wristbandID. They sent me down narrow corridors for measuring and weighing, for blood-testing, brain-graphing, therecording of currents traversing my heart. They scanned and probed in room after room, each cubicle appearingslightly smaller than the one before it, more harshly lighted, emptier of human furnishings. Always a new technician.

  Always faceless fellow patients in the mazelike halls, crossing from room to room, identically gowned. No one saidhello. They attached me to a seesaw device, turned me upside down and let me hang for sixty seconds. A printoutemerged from a device nearby. They put me on a treadmill and told me to run, run. Instruments were strapped to mythighs, electrodes planted on my chest. They inserted me in an imaging block, some kind of computerized scanner.

  Someone sat typing at a console, transmitting a message to the machine that would make my body transparent. Iheard magnetic winds, saw flashes of northern light. People crossed the hall like wandering souls, holding their urinealoft in pale beakers. I stood in a room the size of a closet. They told me to hold one finger in front of my face, closemy left eye. The panel slid shut, a white light flashed. They were trying to help me, to save me.

  Eventually, dressed again, I sat across a desk from a nervous young man in a white smock. He studied my file,mumbling something about being new at this. I was surpris............

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