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"The last doctor they made me see, he told me why I turned out so screwed up," said Daniel, deadpan behind his gla.s.ses. "He said I'd been molesting my inner child."
Ellie frowned for a few moments, unsure whether or not to take him seriously, finally laughing when she saw him break his veil and grin crookedly toward the floor.
"Are you ever going to take those d.a.m.ned gla.s.ses off?" she asked. "Patrick, make him take those things off."
Daniel took care of it himself, drawing them slowly away from his face, as if performing an amputation.
"Okay," Ellie said, "okay. I just wanted to be sure you had eyes. You didn't really seem quite human."
Daniel shrugged. "The jury's still out."
Shaking her head, Ellie narrowed her eyes, smiled the aloof and vicious smile that came to her in odd moments, moments that to Valentine felt to stretch much longer, somehow, for in them she seemed older than he, and far more mysterious than he had ever suspected.
"The jury can be bought," Ellie said, pointing at Valentine. Pointing at his heart. "Just ask him."
He wasn't used to the phone ringing before he woke in the morning. When it came to a.s.sociates he generally initiated the calls, and wrong numbers were rare.
Valentine dragged the receiver to his ear and croaked out a simple "What."
"I have a number but I don't know a name," came a voice, the voice of a stranger, "so I don't know if you're the one I need to talk to or not."
"About what?"
From the other end came a slow breath. If he didn't like the answer, this conversation was terminated. Feds - he wouldn't put it past them to bug his phone, call him up when they knew he'd be groggy. Call it entrapment.
"Chromosome twelve."
Valentine sat up, scooting back against the headboard while scrubbing the sleep from his face. This was long-distance; he could hear the miles of humming lines between. Could it be...?
"How did you get this number?"
"You mailed it to Denver. Does that narrow it down?"
Valentine broke into a broad smile, a morning rarity, as the heavy burden of sleep began to flush from his system in a surge of excitement. This would be how Magellan had felt upon sailing past the known boundaries demarked by the maps of his day.
"Clay Palmer," he said with genuine pleasure. "It's good to speak to you, finally."
"Are you going to tell me your name?" Clay asked.
"It's still too early for that. You understand. I have to protect myself. Nothing personal."
"I'm coming your way," said Clay Palmer, with all the inborn inevitability that Valentine knew had made them what they were, had made them cogs in a greater machine that would one day finally get around to mes.h.i.+ng. "I'm coming because all I have left is to see if what I have ahead of me is even worth trying to get to, and I don't know if you can tell me, but I don't know anyone else who could even try. So maybe you'll tell me who you are when you know I'm calling from a local phone."
Sitting in bed, his first impulse was to say no, bad timing. He had a new houseguest, after all, and eugenics on the mind. But reconsideration was swift, as soon as he remembered an evolutionary given that did not escape the human species: Sperm production was boosted higher in competing males.
"I'll look forward to it," he said, and let it be all the invitation that Clay Palmer was likely to need.
PART THREE/AND DARWIN LAUGHED.
Hunters for gold or pursuers of fame, they all had gone out on that stream, bearing the sword, and often the torch, messengers of the might within the land, bearers of a spark from the sacred fire. What greatness had not floated on the ebb of that river into the mystery of an unknown earth! ... The dreams of men, the seed of commonwealths, the germs of empires.
- Joseph Conrad.
Heart of Darkness.
Twenty-Eight.
Late December should have made a terrible time to travel cross-country by car, although Sarah found it perfect. The three of them s.h.i.+elded from hostile winds and ice in their steel coc.o.o.n, skimming over snowy plains, a scarred white earth as far as the eye could see and the imagination reach.
This is right, she thought. It shouldn't end in a condo with him walking out one last time. It should finish out here, or wherever this road ends up taking us.
There had been no talking Clay out of this once he'd made up his mind. He was going to Boston, by way of Indianapolis, and that was final. He would drive and drive, and if his car fell to pieces along the way, he would walk, and if he froze, he would die where he fell.
There had been no talking Clay out of it, but Sarah didn't think Adrienne had really tried. Perhaps because she recognized its futility and was now past doing things for the sake of obligation. Or perhaps because, by insisting she accompany him as he went to confront his mysterious mentor, she might wring a few extra final days out of their allotted time before bureaucracy slammed the door on them for good. She would thwart inst.i.tutional callousness with one last act of defiance.
"You've really gone rogue now, haven't you?" Sarah asked her, barely an hour out of Denver but already they were crossing chilly white plains, the mountains forgotten. Adrienne behind the wheel of her own car, no less - it was newer and more reliable than Sarah's, and certainly Clay's.
"I guess I have," said Adrienne. "Do you think I'm wrong?"
"Well of course not, it's not like you've kidnapped a minor, now, is it?"
"No, but ... I'm not sure exactly what it is I've done."
At the moment Clay lay sleeping across the backseat. He had looked very tired when they'd left; had looked that way each time Sarah had seen him during the past few days, as if he were slowly wearing away from some effort within that she could only imagine. Sleeping, he looked worse; fragile, even.
They weren't so tough, men weren't. She had met several women who had problems with men on the basis of gender alone, as if that XY chromosome pattern was in itself deserving of hatred. But Sarah had often caught wind of a strange underlying resentment in such att.i.tudes, resentment of men's heavier bodies, their denser bones, thicker muscles. She had always found it a shortsighted view: as if brute strength really equated with inner power, and precluded sensitivity entirely. It wasn't necessarily so.
She had been intimate with a man only once in her life. Her sole heteros.e.xual fling, it was memorable not only for its singularity, but for just how truly wrenching the experience had been ... though not for the expected reasons.
It had come late in high school, before she had been certain who she really was. In this cliquish world, cla.s.smates were already talking about her behind her back, although she was finding that she cared less and less. She accepted a rare date, and when he later wanted to park she didn't try to talk him out of it. This was something she should experience, just to know, even if she felt no genuine desire beyond curiosity, certainly not the more incendiary desires that sometimes arose when she talked with other girls or glimpsed their bodies in the showers after gym cla.s.s. This was something about which she should be informed.
The night had been autumn cool, the backseat of her date's car roomy. She would always remember the way his hands trembled as he touched her while pus.h.i.+ng into her. She would always remember the endearing hesitancy of his kisses, and the pounding of his heart that she could feel against her own chest. He had wanted so much for everything to be perfect - this was obvious in retrospect - yet even before they were done, she lay there knowing it wasn't for her. No repulsion, and while it would have been hard to deny that at least a few of the sensations were pleasurable, neither was there any real gratification. It was simply wrong; this was not her, not who she was, nor the person she was growing into. It was like trying to align two puzzle pieces with a hammer instead of relying on a natural fit.
Maybe she shouldn't have been so honest afterward. She could have lied to spare his feelings. But likely he would have known anyway, sensed her remoteness. He was young and he was eager, but he was also shy enough to be terrified and considerate enough to ask how she felt rather than presume to tell her.
So Sarah hit him with the truth, and just as clearly as she would remember his hands and heart, so too would she remember the crushed expression he wore. And the way he cried, silently, turning away from her to face the nearest window as the gla.s.s fogged from his breath. She would always remember the immensity of the power she felt: a simple rejection could devastate, could shake people to their foundations and make them wonder if everything they had always believed about themselves hadn't been wrong all along.
Never again, she had thought. I know now, and I never want to have to do this to anyone else ever again.
It's not your fault, this is just the way I am, she tried to convince him, her hand on his bare shoulder until he pulled away. While eventually it seemed to sink in, how sad he looked all the same, when finally he could face her. Trying to smile, half-sick, through wet eyes, and only then did she realize it wasn't just s.e.x - the wound cut deeper. Maybe he loved her, or thought he had, or had attached hopes to her that she'd never antic.i.p.ated. He was not an especially popular young man; few noticed him; he blended well into backgrounds. Maybe he had been thrilled just to be with her.
She could see it all in his eyes, those hopes. Only he seemed clearly unable to speak of them.
"I won't tell anybody if you don't want me to," he said at last. "About you, I mean."
How naive this was. Surely he had heard rumors of her by now, but if not, then he had to know that rumors were sure to spread whether or not he contributed. Bless his aching heart. If he could not share with her any of his misbegotten hopes, at least he could grant her what he saw as one final gift: a vow of silence.
It was something men excelled at ... even when it ate them alive.
So men weren't so tough, no. But they could try to be n.o.ble. n.o.ble was better by far.
As she turned toward the backseat, to watch over Clay's sleeping form, disturbed only by the small twitches, she knew that the n.o.blest endeavor of all was to attempt to conquer everything that was worst in yourself.
"I think you're doing the right thing," she finally said to Adrienne.
"Then why do I feel guilty of something?"
"Because the situation, and the people who led you into it, forced you to make decisions you never had to make before. If you'd been a team player all the way, their way, you wouldn't be feeling any better. Different, but no better. You'd be feeling dirty, Adrienne. So how would you rather feel: like a fugitive, or dirty?"
Hands clenching on the wheel, she watched plains of filthy white wash past the car. "I'd rather not feel either way."
"You couldn't abandon him in two more days just because they cut your money. You couldn't let him make this trip alone." Sarah doodled in the film misted on her side window. "Maybe when we get back to Denver, he'll feel like it's time to close out what you've been doing - did you ever think of that? Look at it like cultures where the people don't segregate their spiritual values from everyday life. Pilgrimages often mark the end of one phase of a person's life and the beginning of the next. Maybe it'll be that way with Clay. Maybe this is his way of putting the last few months behind him, so he can get on with the rest of his life."
"Oh, my optimist." Adrienne smiled at her, her lean face too thin, cheekbones sharper than before. She wore the recent strains as well, and made them her own. But she was so plaintively hopeful in that smile that all was softened. "I hope you're right."
They both turned to look once more at the slumbering Clay when he voiced some low and inarticulate cry from the heart of a nightmare at midmorning. One fist brushed spastically at the side of his face, fell still, curled open. Sarah reached over to drape him with a small blanket they had taken along, and it seemed to calm him. For the moment, at least.
"To dream," she said, "perchance to sleep."
The day ground onward and they lost it to driving, lost an hour in western Kansas when crossing time zones. Kansas would best be driven by night, they decided, when the darkness would conceal the fact that nothing was out there but barrenness, and let you imagine there was something more. Darkness was kind that way.
Six hundred miles brought them to Kansas City, where they stopped to pa.s.s the night. Tomorrow, five hundred more and another time zone would put them in Indianapolis, where Clay would have the next day to take care of business that belonged to him alone.
Adrienne used a credit card to get them motel rooms on the outskirts of Kansas City, in that urban perimeter all interstate cities seemed to possess, having evolved for the sole purpose of catering to wayfarers. The same chain motels and the same fast food emporiums, cars fueling up at the same gas stations staffed by the same bored attendants. The great national h.o.m.ogenization, as Sarah saw it - there was something blandly hideous about the trend. After checking in they motored off in search of someplace nearby to eat, but the pickings were merely functional. It would fill a belly and that was all. They should have been too tired and too hungry to care, yet still it seemed an affront.
"Remember I told you I didn't touch an interstate when I went from Denver to Tempe?" Clay asked Adrienne, and she said she did. "This is why."
Sarah looked in dismay at the neon, the plastic, the refuse that choked gutters and asphalt and could have blown from any trashcan within two thousand miles. "We're cutting down every bit of diversity like weeds in a field."
Clay nodded. "This whole country's becoming one big putrid mall. Graham used to say that." She watched him smile at the memory. Missing Graham, for all his spite, or maybe because of it. "I want African food," he then said. "I want millet and beans and fried plantains. I want to eat it with my fingers. And what is there to choose from? Burger King and Taco Bell. I think I'd have a better meal if I could burn them to the f.u.c.king ground instead."
"Clay," said Adrienne. "Let's be reasonable."
"Okay," he said. "Give me some matches."
He was harmless at the moment, Sarah decided, but he had a point. He nearly always had a point. If somewhere deep within Clay really was touched with madness, it was a madness p.r.o.ne to blunt truth. And as they cruised along some boulevard whose name she did not know, colored by splashes of ugly lights, she wondered if Clay might not feel this descent into urban sameness even more acutely than she. To her it was sad, like the erosion of pure and isolated cultures when the world at last penetrates like a rapist to wreak its change ... through disease, through missionaries, through the nouveau conceit of This is mine, I will no longer share it, I will hurt you if you touch it again.
But to Clay, seeing city after city, suburb after suburb, each wearing much the same face ... wouldn't that grind at him on a more fundamental level? For when it came to that most unique facet of anyone - the face - Clay would know that his was not his alone. It belonged first to a dozen others. And now hundreds.
How would it feel? That they had been born as standardized ent.i.ties to fill interchangeable cities? In the light of that horrible meltdown, their visceral rage could be understandable, necessary even - a final straining by their human spirits to break free and reject the shackles of conformity.
Then again, maybe they were merely flukes and anomalies, with no futures.
This time of year, with this weather, interstate travel was safer, swifter, but how much more heartening it might have been to travel the lesser highways, as Clay had done months before, if only to prove to themselves that all was not surrendered out here. She wanted to walk roads peopled by those whose worlds ended two horizons over; to eat in shacks whose menus were painted on sheets of whitewashed plywood. She wanted the time to hang around gas stations owned by bony old men who knew engines better than their wives, to sniff the fumes and prowl the rest rooms when no one was looking, and stare at cigarette b.u.t.ts in the urinals as if they were runes of divination, thrown just so and full of meaning.
She would remain out in the hinterlands until she could read those omens, and know if the future they spoke of was hopeful, or barely worth the bother. Weave those threads into her thesis when she got back, maybe, explore the linkage between anthropology and prophesy.
It was a dream, anyway.
And then they gave up looking, and went for burgers.
Twenty-Nine.
Outside of Minnesota's twin cities, Clay had never been east of the Mississippi. It had been a great river of adventurous unknown in another era. Pa.s.sing over it the day before, as it churned frigid and gray with slabs of ice, he wondered how Mark Twain had seen it in his time. How its primal pull had felt surging up through the deck of a steamboat; if its ancient muddy allure was anything like the one now compelling him to the East Coast.
The river was behind him now, a state and a half back, but its chilly currents lingered in imagination. It was how he may have traveled a century or more ago, poling himself along atop a raft, antic.i.p.ating change around every bend. He would have known nothing of chromosomes then; genetics would have provided no scapegoat. Ignorance might really have been bliss.
No more, though. A little knowledge was a dangerous thing, it had been said, and Clay supposed that was true. It could leave you with an addict's craving for more.
Here he was, living proof: Indianapolis, midday on New Year's Eve, alone with the car for the first time since they had left Denver. He thought it was an encouraging vote in his favor that Adrienne had let him take her car.
Timothy Van der Leun lived in a tiny house on the southwest side, where I-70 slashed through a flatland of warehouses and grim smokestacks. Clay had phoned from last night's motel, after consulting his illicit files for the number. He got a confused sort of h.e.l.lo, then hung up after a moment of listening to Van der Leun listening to him breathe. He knew of nothing to say. Better to just go.
He found the street on a local map, then in the car. The block was filled with houses just like one another, small and cramped, creeping toward decrepitude, as if they held dour secrets and were exhausted from the strain. No trees at all to speak of, just scrawny head-high twigs of things. Poisoned by the air, maybe, or by the snow whose last dregs stuck to the lawn like gray sc.u.m.
The narrow porch sagged beneath his weight, and Clay knocked. He did not trust the bell to function.
He had to knock again before the door opened, as slowly as if the person behind it were crippled, arthritic. An ever-widening slice of the house greeted him, dim as a cave, all the blinds and curtains drawn.
And then the master of the house.
The face was familiar.
He clung to the door with more weight than should have been borne by his gaunt frame; lost inside his clothes, long, loose sleeves flapping at his k.n.o.bby wrists. He peered out with eyes that seemed to need moments to s.h.i.+ft focus from wherever they had been before, and when they did, his gaze locked on with the fierce melancholy of someone staring at a shattered mirror while waiting for the pieces to meld again.
Yet still Clay could say nothing. What possible words would not be trivialized by their shared countenance? Mutation, huh? and then a lost grin. What a b.i.t.c.h.
"Are you a real one?" Timothy Van der Leun asked. Clay did not know what he meant. "Real. With scars. Let me see your scars if you're real."