Small Group (17 February 1989)
One: Chaplin
Chaplin
was flying, high aloft. He was flying a plane, alone in a plane, and he was
doing it well. There was a whole city below him, but he didn't recognize it.
The sun was bright in the cold day. Strangely, he saw a map of his continent
overhead.
Chaplin
woke up, with a feeling of lightness through his entire body. It was odd to sense
how to fly an airplane, even a made-up one. He had been doing it. He'd been
flying a plane.
It felt
like a good omen for the day. It was a Friday, after all. He had the bar and
grill to look forward to.
He got
dressed, then he made himself some breakfast. His wife was still in bed and he
figured he'd let her sleep and call her later. He had a plan for the evening,
though he wouldn't reveal it to anyone.
The car had
gotten cold, out there on the driveway in the darkness. However, it warmed up
quickly enough, and off Chaplin went to work, with a heigh-ho and a second
heigh-ho.
It's
hard to suffer a freak accident, isn't it? I mean, it always seems somehow ... appropriate
and deserved. Some nasty fact always stays behind that makes people say to one
another: How ironic! or: Wasn't that just his luck?
He had
to park his car two blocks away from his office because all his usual spots
were taken. It wasn't the first time. Once he was standing on the sidewalk, he
oriented himself to know the quickest way to the coffee shop he went to every
single day. (They always had it almost ready for him.) The quickest way was
through a narrow alleyway that backed onto the ballet school. Traffic was loud,
as usual, and that was precisely the reason why he didn't hear the squeaking of
the pulleys high overhead; that was also why he didn't
hear the anchor of one of the pulleys give way, causing an upright rehearsal
piano to plummet, down and down, five storeys and land right on top of him.
And so,
Chaplin found himself re-incarnated.
Two: Scarlett
It was
already eleven-thirty in the morning, and Scarlett was determined to be dead by
noon.
The
dreadful dreams hadn't let up. Early that morning, she'd even dreamed about not
only being killed in an explosion but also about being the cause of the
explosion. Who could go on living like that? Being afraid to sleep? What had
she done to deserve this curse? Something from some past life? Scarlett wasn't
a firm believer in the transmigration of souls, but she didn't have any solid
evidence against the idea. It was either that, or she had a psychological
trauma from childhood blah blah blah.
She got
Ann to come up with her to the hospital roof to smoke a couple cigarettes. It
seemed to her to be a fine place to be, nine storeys up. She saw herself doing
it: Ann goes away, Scarlett runs and jumps. There wouldn't be anything more to
it than that. Gravity would take care of everything else. It would be messy,
but that would be someone else's problem.
Plans
for the weekend?
That was
Ann talking.
Scarlett
replied: No, not doing anything at all.
We're
going out to Henry's parents' place in the country. Except for two dinners,
we're more or less on our own. It's not really the country, you know; it's a
suburb, but they're right on the edge of it. Farmers' fields all to the east,
concession after concession. And it doesn't seem like the farmers are even
doing anything with their fields. I suppose they're going to be all houses in
ten years or so.
That's
the way it goes, I guess, said Scarlett.
Yes,
that's the way, said Ann.
They
scrunched out their cigarettes and looked at one another as if into mirrors.
Scarlett gave up on finding a way to remain on the rooftop. She had to get Ann
into the building and back to work. Noon would come and go without her suicide.
The timing wasn't right. She had all afternoon, really.
Thus, it
wasn't until two hours later that Scarlett was re-incarnated.
Three: Jair
The
engine got up and turned over once again. Jair got the car out onto the road
and headed down to where the major artery was, from one street to an avenue and
from thence onto a thoroughfare, joining the other corpuscles who all seemed to
have the same idea, except for the ones leaving the body (thus going in the
opposite direction) in order to get home and feed their oxygen-starved cells.
He was
happy on highways. It was all so extraordinarily orderly, miracles of
engineering, to use his own words. Who built these concrete overpasses? Who
bolted those signs onto those things overhead? Did they do it before putting it
up, or did some guy climb up there with a wrench? And the lines all over the
place, directing folks this way and that in order to ensure they have a
reasonable and logical journey, who did that? What kind of paint got supplied?
There were so many questions that passed through Jair's head as he zipped
along, counting the minutes in his head and watching the distance to his
destination diminish with every sign after each on-ramp.
He took
the exit that was posted as being three miles away and found himself on a
thoroughfare with four fewer lanes. Down through a valley he went, knowing
exactly what he was going to do when he got to his destination, and also what
that destination was going to do to him.
Miles
later, he drove onto an even smaller road. The time was nigh, and he had
covered his tracks well. He'd actually gone in a different direction; with a different
task; to meet different persons. It's a pretty ordinary scenario, which happens
all the time. People don't keep very good track of one another, unless it's a
parent-child relationship. Normal adults and normal peers leave one another
pretty much alone most of the time.
As he
waited at a stoplight, thinking about that morning's dream of falling down a
staircase, it hit him.
It was
some time before he found out it had been a stolen sports car involved in a
high-speed police chase. And so, Jair found himself re-incarnated.
Four: Kat
The
curtains got pulled open and the overhead lights got shut off. The overheads
were incandescent lights but they'd formerly been fluorescent lights, and the
change had happened after Kat's son Del had taken a snit first time he'd come
into the hospital room. Next day he came with a little ladder and some regular
bulbs, just ordinary vacuums with filaments inside, and he managed to take out
the ones and replace them with the others, so handy and thoughtful he was. Kat
looked up at the bulbs with a kind of wonder.
How
strange to have dreamed about having been shot!
The
nurse, who she knew well, had been the opener of the curtains. Kat said: Good
morning, there.
The
nurse turned and said: O, up already? I've got your breakfast.
I think
I should do without. Today's the day. Today's the miracle day. So, I think I
should do without, because I know I'll be making a mess if I do.
The
nurse arranged the tray anyway, saying: Maybe you'll think differently. French
toast with maple syrup.
Kat
nodded obediently. She had other matters on her mind. God was calling her. God
was saying she should come to him. Kat had only heard God once before, and he'd
meant business then, and, undoubtedly, he meant it now.
But it
was a good morning, all in all. The sunlight on the wall was hard-edged,
meaning it was a wonderfully cloudless day. A good day for flying.
I
suppose your daughter's coming later today. That was the nurse speaking.
O, yes,
I suppose so. Is it Friday already? Kat laughed.
All day,
said the nurse.
Kat
shrugged. I guess she'll be here in the afternoon.
The
toast is made differently today. Let someone know of you like it or not.
I'll get
to it, thanks.
They
changed something about the batter, either more syrup or less, I don't recall.
That's
just great, yes. Is there a newspaper?
The
nurse handed Kat her newspaper.
1989,
said Kat. Never thought I'd get this far. 1989.
She read
some of the front page, then fell asleep.
And so,
Kat found herself re-incarnated.
Five: Lair
Lair was
a strong guy. He knew it. He was twenty-eight years old, and constantly horny.
Fortunately for him, he had two girlfriends unaware of one another's existence,
and he was always ready for nights on the town, if you catch the drift. He was
moving up in the world, too, and he felt no need to choose just one single girl.
As his hero Duddy Kravitz said somewhere, who wants
to settle on just one when there's so much stuff around?
So
anyway, his appointed minder, girlfriend number one Maggie, went to the
hospital with him to make sure he got home okay after the operation. (Girlfriend
number two had no idea there was ever such a rôle as
'minder'.) After his three wisdom teeth were taken out, they'd go back to his
place and, depending on his condition, they'd do whatever they felt like doing.
Soon a
sexy nurse came by to invite him into the pre-operating room, and Maggie could
come along for that bit. They got him to lie down on a table covered with
plastic and they put his head in a sort of cradle. They gave him a shot of
something, and told him to relax.
Told me
to relax, baby, he said to Maggie, looked her up and down. He winked. Don't
worry, you'll have your fun soon.
He
relaxed, and Maggie was ushered out as he himself got wheeled into an operating
room. He was all fuzzy as they shoved a thick needle into his forearm. He felt
like he was sinking into the floor, which led him to recall a dream from last
night. He'd fallen into an icy crevice and he'd been stuck there. He didn't
recall anything more about it.
A warm
feeling in his arm spread to his shoulder and into his guts. This isn't bad at
all. Someone asked him to count down from one hundred. When he was halfway
through the eighties, a distant black dot became a giant black void.
And so,
Lair found himself re-incarnated.
Six: O'Keeffe
O'Keeffe
gently soothed the audience in the cramped hall: A terrible thing happened to
our city today, hard to know what to make of it, and we must keep it in mind,
but we have to carry on, one two three four!
She sang
and she played her guitar as her boyfriend the drummer laid into it loudly and
clumsily. She didn't have any good explanation for anything, let alone a terrorist
bombing committed by a guy who didn't like some book, and she didn't know why
they were singing that particular song. No-one in the audience knew anything
about what she was thinking, however; they were busy moving in time to the
sounds that were hitting them.
She
didn't feel there was a point to mentioning the bomb again, so she didn't.
It
hadn't been an extraordinarily long day; in fact, it had been rather a
middlingly long day. She'd awakened mid-afternoon to distant sirens. The news
came in slowly and ambiguously about an explosion in a bookstore ... and then
it was six o'clock, which was the time her day normally started, with a lunch,
and rehearsals. But now it was two in the morning, and they closed the show
with a rehash of two of their openers. Their work day was at an end, and now it
was time to get something to eat and drink and party before it was time to go
to bed at dawn.
The
clubman very generously offered them a meal made from stuff that was more or
less left-over, along with as much beer as they wanted (all in lieu of payment,
of course), so O'Keeffe and her boyfriend-drummer ate heartily, and drank merrily.
The clubman asked them to lock the door behind them, and away he went.
O'Keeffe
noticed a piano, and said: I dreamed something about a piano this morning.
Really?
She
grinned widely. It fell on my head.
They
laughed about it. Darn Warner Brothers cartoons!
They
staggered out eventually, and went their separate ways, because tonight wasn't
a night for shenanigans. Walking on by herself, she slipped; she fell into the
snow; it had become rather a cold night. She was comforted by the snow. It had
its own kind of warmth. It had been a long day. She'd get up soon, after a
couple minutes. And so, O'Keefe found herself re-incarnated.
Seven: Moby
It all
started the night before for Moby. He was looking around his room, which was crammed
floor-to-ceiling with years and years of items that would soon look like junk
to anyone who looked it over in his absence but which was to him his world and which
held so much meaning. He looked up high to the top of
one of his bookshelves, and there he saw a copy of Fowler's, and he recalled
he'd hardly given it a look at the time he'd purchased it, which much have been
some thirty years earlier. Moby slowly got up from his chair, and reached high,
to the book. It was under three other books: a French dictionary, something by
Tom Wolfe, and a Henry Adams Education, and Moby held these three put while he
tried to weasel out the Fowler's, but the Fowler's was stuck to the book it was
lying on top of, and so Moby pulled at the top and, well, as a result, not to
get into too many details, the whole bookshelf came crashing down on him, with
Moby trapped underneath with who knew how many broken bones. He called out
feebly, but it appeared none of his neighbours were around to hear him call,
and soon he was too weak to call out at all.
Next
day, he woke up in the morning, or gained consciousness, after dreaming about
falling or jumping off a building, and a feeble consciousness it was, of course
still trapped under all his useless books. Years earlier, his daughter had quite
reasonably told him to sell ninety percent of them, but he hadn't listened. I
don't know when I'll need one of them, he'd told her. Well, in any case, it was
Friday morning, so far as he could tell, and so, with a bit of luck, he'd still
be alive when the nurse came to check in at noon.... However, he could barely
move his arm, or keep his eyes open.... And he thought also: what an
embarrassment!
And
thus, Moby found himself re-incarnated.
Eight: Nance
It
started out a very ordinary day, at the bookstore, for Nance, although she'd
awakened from a rather disturbing dream ... about a car crash. She didn't know
who she'd been, there in the dream, or if she'd been herself driving, nor from
whom she'd *maybe* received a licence to drive....
Nonetheless,
she got herself together in no time, really, and went through all the morning
ablutions to which she was accustomed, as the memory of the dream faded away to
very little.
After
Nance's junky brother visited‑it so happened to be his birthday‑the
copies of 'The Satanic Verses' finally arrived. Most were already spoken for.
They had luckily been in transit when the fatwa had been announced. The UPS guy
had no idea what he was transporting! In any case, there were three unspoken
for, so Nance put them out on discreet display, not in the window but rather on
the second table in from the door. When she was in the back room someone had
bought one, and then after lunch, at about one, a familiar professor bought the
second, so there was only one left. At their store, that counted as a
best-seller.
At
around three-thirty, yes, it was around three-thirty, as she found out later, a
man came into the store. Nance kept noticing him because there was something
odd about him. He walked around the store, barely noticing, let alone touching,
the books. Not quite the intellectual, she figured. So, what was he about?
A couple
minutes later, she heard him ask Phyll: Do you have
the new Rushdie book?
Nance
moved closer as Phyll pointed to the second table.
When the
man got to the table, Nance was nearer. She told the man: It's our last copy.
The man
stared at it for quite some time. Nance pretended not to notice for a while,
then returned her attention to the man when he sighed deeply and reached into
his pocket to pull out a thing with a button on it. The man said something
weird, something in a foreign language probably, and then he blew himself up
along with everyone else nearby. It was the strangest thing.
And so,
Nance found herself re-incarnated.
Nine: Dee
Dee
early in the morning got out on the street, because there was opportunity
there. He wanted junk so his junk got to be paid. What he'd dreamed about being
some old lady in a hospital, who cared? It's crazy to be bothered with dreams
anyway, not those kinds of dreams anyway. He had plenty to think about without
worrying about some stupid dreams.
First,
he went over to Billy's house and he knocked and knocked and he even shouted up
at his window once but there was no answer. He had to be somewhere and up to
something. So, second, he went to where he thought Billy might be, probably
wasted since it seemed likely he was with Jones and that they'd been up, in a
sense, all night long. It was a couple blocks away so Dee fleet-footed himself
over to the apartment building. The front door was open so he took the stairs
two at a time thinking all the time about getting high as soon as he'd paid the
courtesies of which there were very few. He knocked on the door rapidly, and
Jones answered.
Jones
smiled: What's up, man?
Dee
bowed deeply. It's my birthday, man.
Say
what?
Feb 17
was the day I was borned.
Many
happy returns, many happy returns.
Dee
peeked into the apartment. Say, you got Billy hiding in there?
Yes, but
he's floatin' right now.
Dee went
in and they all sat down on a raggedy couch as Billy came to.
Billy
said: Hey, happy birthday, man. I heard it was your birthday.
Yes, it
is.
Well,
that's swell. Tell you what, I got a gift for you later.
Really?
Actually,
just by chance. I got a ship coming in about noon, s'posed
to be laden with a fine new blend from Peru.
Aw, man,
that's so sweet of you! Listen, I'll catch you later. Be at you place at two.
Want a
hit now?
No, I'll
wait. I got self-control.
Dee went
off to see his sister Nance at her bookstore. The visit was frosty, of course,
but she wished him well, shrugged, and went back to work. Later that day, Dee found
himself re-incarnated.
Ten: Earhart
The air
was so open to Earhart, she considered calling herself Airhart;
but, considering whom she'd been named after, it seemed to her that the gag was
self-evident. She was at a low altitude that afternoon, passing through the
cold air above her own town, swerving this way and that, feeling quite as if
she was not in her small plane at all. She'd twist side to side to see the
streets below and the little cars on the roads that looked like they weren't
moving at all, as if time had ceased to matter at all. It was Friday, she
remembered, so everyone down there in the afternoon was probably thinking about
their February weekends. Unlike her, they weren't thinking about having
dream-like wisdom teeth removed.
Even though
everything seemed still down there in the city streets, she noticed movement in
the long run. She saw police cars and a couple ambulances on one of the major
streets. It was obvious something nasty had happened, about which she'd be able
to read in the evening once she'd landed at the municipal airport. Or rather
she'd see it on the six o'clock news, which was hours away. In any case, she
knew it always took some time for the truth to come out.
She
flipped over and found herself looking up instead of down, and what she saw
there was almost impossible to describe: the entire sky had become like a
shimmered mirror reflecting the land below: yet not a mirror at a near
perspective, rather a mirror halfway to the moon, wherein you could see the
entire continent: and with a little effort of vision there they were: the great
lakes, the Mississippi river, the rocky mountains off to her right, and down
ahead the gulf of Mexico with its azure waters. It was all so detailed and
impossible but not an illusion. It was a giant Britannica page in the sky, and
Earhart wanted to see what south America looked like, so she flew south, over
the lake.
Eighteen
minutes later, Earhart was re-incarnated.
Eleven: Osama
It was a
bright and cheerful February afternoon when Osama left his apartment. He was
clean and ready for the day. He greeted his neighbour Mrs. Norris as warmly as
he always did, and made banter about waiting for all the birds to return in
Spring. Spring wasn't all that far away, after all. Three months? Is that all?
Tis but a moment in the larger plan of things.
Naturally,
he walked. He walked for three miles. He was wearing a heavy coat, all buttoned
up, so only his face was cold. Under the coat he was perspiring, and he hoped
that wasn't going to throw a wrench into his works. In any case, he'd taken all
the precautions outlined in the communique, so things were mostly out of his
own hands.
He
casually went into the bookstore. Mild music was playing from little speakers
overhead, and all the walls were just chock-full of colours and pictures. He
moseyed on over to the fiction section and checked out the R section, the end
of the Rs, but there wasn't anything of interest to him there.
He
wandered a bit, here and there. He checked out the Middle East history section,
and then by chance he stumbled upon the Theology section, but there wasn't
anything good there. The dream he'd had, in preparation to today: he was lying
in a snowbank, looking up, and strangely intoxicated. He understood what it
meant. The snow outside and all.
He
calmly went up to a woman, a worker obviously, who was wearing a short skirt.
He asked her: Do you have the new Rushdie book?
The
woman pointed to a table and said: Right there.
A second
woman, another clerk apparently, spoke. She said: It's our last copy.
Osama
stared at the book with its predominately red cover. What a sacred colour to
dare use for such a book. The second woman was still standing nearby, as if
expecting something. He sighed, and said, in the holy language: God is greater.
Then he pulled out the button.
And so,
Osama found himself re-incarnated.
Twelve: Smith
Smith
didn't ask any questions that morning. She didn't know why Phil wanted to go
upstairs to the empty apartment above to have sex. The apartment above was
empty because the whole building was going to be torn down, and almost everyone
had left already. Smith didn't know why Phil wanted to go upstairs. She was
willing to go anywhere with him. Maybe it was the idea of trespassing that
turned him on; but, even if it wasn't, it turned her on.
The
affair had been going on for quite some time; a long three years it had been
since the first time they'd kissed. They never talked about leaving their
respective spouses, probably because they were living in a la-la-land when they
were alone together, during which they had the hottest time either had ever
had. That's the way it goes sometimes.
The
building was rickety and doomed. In the room in which they did the deed (on a
blanket covering an abandoned foam mattress), the window glass was distorted
and the trees would hop left and right with each rhythmic pelvic thrust. The
spiders seemed to be the only occupants who felt like they had lease.
To
take a break, they walked around the apartment that almost exactly mirrored
his, Phil's, one below it. The were both naked as they wandered, and he almost
got her to step in front of a window. When she demurred, he said: The sun's the
other way, oh, never mind. He said: Oh, but there is something up here
that's quite different.
He
led her over to a door and opened it. It led onto a staircase, a steep and long
staircase the likes of which she'd never seen before. Phil said: It goes all
the way down to the basement. More than two flights, more or less.
She
was looking down and suddenly Phil blurted: Saved your life! and grabbed onto
her arm; however, she jumped away from him and he lost his grasp, and she lost
her footing, and down she tumbled, down two flights of stairs, breaking bones
along the way, and as she lay at the bottom she thought: How will he explain
this? And so, Smith found herself re-incarnated.
Thirteen: Tick
Strange
indeed that Tick had dreamed of getting blown up, on that day of all days. Of
course, it was just a coincidence when he heard about it on the news that
evening, about some people in a bookstore getting blown up. Still, he thought
it was curious to have dreamed such a thing, and he was still pondering the
whys and wherefores of experience as he put the leash on Sparks to take him out
for his eleven p.m. walkies to the park up the street.
As they
walked together through the park, Tick thought about his wild luck. How had he
gotten to a normal life, after all those lost years? (There'd not even been
two, but they seemed to have lasted a lot longer.) Then one day he'd gotten
bored of all the drugs, and he'd simply quit. And now, here he was, unleashing
Sparks so the dog could have a chance to chase silent shadows and dumb
squirrels.
Yes, he
felt pretty lucky, and not blown up at all.
Fifteen
minutes later, he called Sparks, and Sparks came. Tick leashed up Sparks, and
together they headed back the way they had come.
Tick
felt a curious pain in his chest: a sudden and sharp pain. He involuntarily and
automatically put his hand there: the area was damp. Perhaps one second later,
he heard an explosion from up the hill or thereabouts ahead of him. He fell to
his knees because he was dizzied. He didn't want the idea to register that he
had been shot in the chest. It could not have happened, because it was after
eleven o'clock at night, and the park was dark, and there was no way to see
anything. It was also impossible because he'd left that all behind, and his
enemies, why, how could they ever have found him? Why would they go through
such trouble? Over a lousy fifty thousand dollars? Nevertheless, sometimes,
your past comes back to haunt you.
Sparks
whimpered.
And so,
Tick found himself re-incarnated.
Fourteen: Agate
As Agate
and Stan were hiking in the hills overlooking the city on a clear winter's day,
the stopped to look down on it. They were too far away to see anyone, nor could
they see any automobiles. It was all so still, and yet they knew it was the
hive of activity it always was. Stan made the remark. So still and clear. Can
you see the mist on the other side?
Agate
looked past the city to see the mist coming off the lake. She nodded. It looks
a little like the drug-haze I was experiencing in my dream last night. Oddest
thing. Did I mention I was a guy? And a friend named Jones?
Stan
shrugged and said, Watch your step. These rocks are slippery.
Naw, I got these great boots. She
proceeded to slip away a little and seemed to stop just where she wanted to.
There's nothing they can't handle.
Five
minutes later, she had fallen down into a tight crevice and she was looking up
at about fifteen degrees of sky. Her pelvis was wedged against virgin granite, and
it felt to her she was bleeding down there. She scrabbled at the black wet
walls but found no place to get a grip. Stan had run off to find help or a rope
or something. Agate wasn't breathing right, she knew.
She
remembered the lie about her, or was it? She'd come across a crossword
competition in a classroom. She'd asked quietly when it had started, and the
referee said since Sunday. Agate was amazed, since it was a Thursday. Next day,
she found out people were making fun of her, because she got quoted as asking:
When did this starts? to the referee, which was something she most definitely
did not say. She never found out who had spread the lie, or why. She didn't
know anyone in that classroom competing in the crossword puzzle contest, so
why....
And so,
Agate found herself re-incarnated.
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