Chapters 1 and 2.
They were sitting on a bench in a large plaza adjacent to the
platforms.
'Did you work out the route last night?' Giacomo asked Eddie. Eddie
looked sheepish. 'I thought it was your turn.' Giacomo growled.
'Every time, every single time!' They took out notepads and started
scribbling furiously, their eyes darting from the platform sign to
the route display. He looked at the platform sign and noticed
something peculiar: the number seemed to be changing at a regular
interval.
'What's going on?' he asked.
Eddie looked up from his notepad. 'The system is....a little
complicated. The number of the platform changes every twenty
seconds. So, platform 1 changes to platform 2, and so on, and the
whole system of stops moves like a wave, back and forth throughout
the day. Now, the problem is that the number of the trains also
change, every thirty seconds. So the train you get on will be a
completely different train, with different stops, by the time you get
to your destination.'
'And your destination will have a completely different name by the
time you get there,' Giacomo interjected.
'So you have to run two different sets of calculations, to insure
that the train you get on will stop at the platform that your
destination has become by the time you get there.'
They returned to their scribbling and bickering.
'Platform 4b will be platform 2b at 4.15p.m., right?' Eddie was
saying. 'If we take the 25C train at 4.15, we should get to Central
Command at 6.30. So at 6.30, the 25C will be the 48A, and Central
Command will be Terminal 123B, right? Does the 48A stop at 123B?'
Who could have composed such a tortuously bewildering and
perverse method of organising rail schedules? And to what
end? It made him nauseous just to look at the security guards with
their furrowed brows, poring over endlessly revised diagrams that
floated in a sea of scribbled computation. Was this how Intermundia
Airport controlled its workers? By insulating them from the rest of
world, and brow-beating them with a system of absurdities that made
the simplest thing an ordeal? Did they really pass their entire
existences here, in this hub of ceaseless motion, still points fixed
in a sea of transience? He felt almost sorry for them, if that were
the case. They seemed like rodents, or some other poor beasts, that
eked out their living on the interstices of a teeming motorway. No
scavenging rat or fox could comprehend the meaning of cars and
trucks, or fathom who had built them and what function they served.
Yet the system of the motorway enclosed their entire being,
imprinting itself in the seat of their instincts and reflexes. They
lived off the scraps of this system, which never ceased its motion,
and was as inscrutable to them as nature is to us.
'We've got it!' Eddie said with a bright smile. 'And a few minutes
to spare as well. Are you hungry?' He went off to a little kiosk to
buy coffee, pastries and a newspaper. The Moroccan in the kiosk
seemed to know him well. They made jokes about their wives, and the
general dissatisfactions of existence. 'Yesterday it finally
happened,' the Moroccan said, 'I am fatter than my wife. That was
the only thing I ever had over her!' Giocomo passed the time by
glancing at women with a lazy, non-committal gleam of lust. He had
trained his facial muscles to hover on the periphery of a smile that
never quite appeared, a sly apparition haunting his eyes and the edge
of his mouth.
Eddie came back with breakfast. He refused a pastry but excepted a
Styrofoam cup of coffee. The cup was branded with an image of two
crudely anthropomorphized coffee beans, a male and female. The male,
with large, bulging eyeballs, was accosting the female: “I'VE GOT A
CRUSH ON YOU”, he was saying. 'We better get moving,' Giacomo
announced, and they took off briskly through the plaza, weaving
around its maze of stalls, kiosks and terraces. The people who
staffed the kiosks were from all over the world: Europeans, Asians,
Africans, South Americans. The majority, he noted, carried out their
work with quiet, disengaged patience, and seemed to glance at
intervals to the left of their peripheral vision, as though something
hidden were progressing behind the ordinariness of their lives, and
the routinised bustle of the station.
As they got closer to the platforms, the roar of the trains drowned
out every other sound, and the whole scene assumed a distant quality,
as though it were underwater. The vendors and their costumers
communicated adroitly with hand signals. He had gulped back his
coffee greedily, and the caffeine and sugar hit him in a sudden,
ecstatic rush. For the briefest instant, he felt rapturously happy
and alive. In that moment, the lack of a past was a blessing that
rooted him firmly in the present instant like a virgin seed.
Similarly, the absurdity of his situation felt like a kind of
liberation: in a world without reason, he was free to exist fully in
each instant, without hopes or expectations of any kind, only the
neutral purity of his sensations. The world was alive with the
power, the speed and the sound of the trains, hurtling off in
unimaginable directions.
That wondrous sensation evaporated in a flash, leaving him only with
a image: he saw himself, lead by Eddie and Giacomo through the crowd,
suddenly become incandescent, as though some ray of the sun had
pierced through the vast fortress of steel and concrete overhead, and
turned his body into a brief avatar of the stellar heavens. Then he
was returned to the jittery awareness of a living nightmare. Eddie
motioned towards a train. Sleek, gunmetal grey, the design of its
front carriage resembled the snout of a bloodhound or shark, some
metallic predator that strained against the brief stasis imposed by
the stop. They embarked, and the doors snapped after them as though
to nip at their heels.
They took their seats at a table. In contrast to the train's
gleaming and vigorous outer shell, the interior reminded him of the
mournful decrepitude of the Intermundia Overnight. The materials of
the seating, the fabric and designs of the carpet and cushions all
shared that sad quality of a thing which had never been new, a place
prematurely soiled by cigarette smoke and the intestinal anxiety of
endless bad dinners and portentous appointments. It had the ambience
of a hospital cafeteria, of the blanched aesthetics of a failed
bureaucratic regime whose utopian dreams lingered on only as an
ancestral spirit that whispered hollowly in the bite of the wind. He
was lost for a moment in a reverie of such a world: a wintry city of
concrete geometry and faded furniture, where the people had, over
generations of perpetual paranoid vigilance, evolved into silent,
industrious and inscrutable masks, working and eating and bearing
their children like automatons. Inside each of them there must have
been fugitive dreams and fantasies, imaginative worlds vast and
discontinuous as their public lives were solid and circumscribed,
luxurious desires that far outstripped the cold formalism of their
marriages, heresies, hymns and obscenities sung beneath the
affectless composure of their visible lives. And yet none could ever
know for sure if they alone possessed these riotous inner kingdoms,
and all others were precisely as they appeared on the outside, such
were they all subject to the perpetual fear of a vigilant bureaucracy
which might, for all they knew, have ceased to exist many generations
ago, for there was no outwardly discernible difference between the
total success of the regime, and its complete absence.
Eddie looked relived. 'Well, we're on the right train anyway, look
- ' he said, pointing in the direction of a table towards the rear of
the carriage. The table seated four individuals – two men and two
women – who were clearly distinguishable from the rest of the crowd
by virtue of their dress and bearing. The women and one of the men
were Caucasian, with the fourth having an African appearance. They
were all tall and lean, with beautifully symmetrical features and a
kind of coltish quality that suggested superior breeding. They wore
sober, finely tailored business clothes, the women with blouses of a
lustrous, delicate silk, and the men with crisp suits that looked
fresh from the rack. The group weren't speaking, and the two that
faced him had lazy, slight grins fixed on their faces, as though
savouring a private joke.
There was something unnerving about this group which was difficult
to pin-point. As he watched, it occurred to him that they didn't
seem to make the slightest movement – they were as still as a
photograph against the rushing terrain of the window. It was as
though they had fallen asleep with their eyes open and alert. Their
detached, patrician bearing suggested beings who inhabited their
bodies with the evanescent casualness of tourists.
'They're technocrats,' Eddie explained, 'on their way to Central, no
doubt.'
'Are they case officers?' he asked.
'No, the case officers tend to be a little older. I would imagine
that they are traffic controllers, or some lower functionaries of the
technocrat class.'
He was thinking again that it was surely all a dream. It didn't
feel like a dream, but was that not after all the nature of
dreams? It was supremely comforting to entertain the fantasy that he
would soon be waking up in his own bed, luxuriating in that keen
sense of relief that often comes in the wake of a disagreeable dream.
Would he be married? Rich or poor? Happy or miserable? Perhaps in
his real life he knew Eddie and Giacomo, or some or other of the
technocrats, in an altered guise. It was almost blissful, for a
moment, to imagine the whole situation vanish abruptly like a swollen
soap bubble, and become no more than a fragmentary riddle he would
carry around for a day or so.
The train passed through a monotonous expanse of concrete tunnel
illuminated by large yellow and orange sodium lamps. Occasionally,
they passed an embankment where crews of workers toiled on
construction sites, welding large iron girders and wheeling concrete
blocks about. After longer intervals, they arrived at various stops,
and the personnel of the carriage morphed rapidly, with the exception
of the technocrats, who remained poised in their seats with their
strange half-smiles. Each of the stops had its own distinct
architectural style, as though belonging to a different country or
temporal period. The passage of time and distance became difficult
to gauge. He felt that they were going deeper underground.
'How long have you guys been working together?' he asked, to break
the silence.
'Well,' Eddie replied, 'that's a difficult one to answer. How long
is a piece of string?'
This seemed to set Giacomo off again.
'I hate that one!,' he growled.
'What one?'
'That expression “How long is a piece of string.”'
'What's wrong with it?'
'Well, show me the piece of string!'
'What?'
'Show me the piece of string, and I'll tell you how long it is.'
'That's not the point. There is no piece of string.'
'Then why ask how long it is?'
'It's a figure of speech. It's not a specific piece of string, it's
a notional piece of string. It's any piece of string. How
long is any piece of string? Who knows?'
They were both getting red-faced.
'There is no such thing as any piece of string, there are
only specific pieces of string. And if there is a specific
piece of string, it can be measured. It's the easiest thing
in the world to measure.'
Eddie looked away from Giacomo with resignation:
'You want to know how long we've been working together? An
eternity. That's how long we've been working together. An
eternity!'
Giacomo shrugged. Eddie, perhaps aware that he was becoming weary
of their endless bickering, passed him the newspaper. 'You can read
this if you like,' he said, 'to pass the time. It's always good to
stay informed.”
The paper was called the Intermundia Chronicle. The masthead
featured an image of an airplane ascending diagonally in a circle,
and the slogan: “BEASTS ASK FOR MERE FOOD AND SHELTER; MEN ASK
“WHAT NEWS?” In lieu of a date, the paper was simply designated
TODAY'S EDITION. He read the lead article:
Mankind's Moment of Triumph Turns to Eerie Tragedy: Returning
Astronauts Replaced by Lifeless Mannequins.
Drake Space Centre, Cape Canaveral, Florida – We all
watched in awe and suspense as the American astronauts Mike Summers
and Budd 'Slingshot' McGinty became the first men to walk on the
surface of the moon. On the day that the world was due to welcome
back the heroic Mithras 5 crew – Summers, McGinty and Command
Module pilot Frank Logan – the assembled world press discovered
only grief, confusion and macabre horror. We knew that 3 days ago
(July 23) the command module Mercury splashed down near the
Utirik Atoll in the Pacific Ocean, where it was met by the recovery
vessel USS Philadelphia.
Then came the silence – and the rumours. For two successive
days, the press men who had gathered on Florida's Space Coast were
kept in the dark about the circumstances of the Mercury's
re-entry and splashdown. During today's sombre press conference,
chaired by USAF General Tyrone McClinton and Mithras 5 CAPCOM Duke
Toynbee, the world finally learned the truth.
As journalists assembled in the Drake auditorium, audible gasps
were heard. The seats reserved for the heroic astronauts were
occupied by an eerie trio of store-front mannequins. General
McClinton explained that Mission Control had lost radio contact with
the Mercury Module some 14 minutes before the scheduled
splashdown. “We weren't too alarmed, and felt that things would go
according to plan without further communication at that point,”
Toynbee added. However, when divers from the Philadelphia
investigated the floating capsule in the early hours of July
23rd, they noted that Summers, McGinty and Logan had been
replaced by the mannequins present at the conference. According to
McClinton: “The men who made this grim discovery are still in a
distraught condition. Whether or not they will return to active
duty, it is unlikely that they will ever be able to pass a department
store without experiencing extreme distress.”
Next, Florida state pathologist and noted ethnomusicologist Lonnie
Vargas spoke briefly about his examination of the mannequins carried
out with the assistance of a Sears and Roebuck window dresser. “The
figurines themselves are quite unremarkable. They are constructed of
a terrestrial wax and plaster composite which is standard for the
industry. As you can see, no attempt has been made to mimic the
actual appearances of Summers, McGinty and Logan. Rather, they have
the unnerving, doll-like quality common to the mannequin – I would
call it the suggestion of a distant, anaesthetized happiness. In
lieu of genitals, they have the smooth, rounded protuberance common
to the dummy.”
Investigation of the phenomenon is advancing on two principal
lines of enquiry: scientific explanation, or possible sabotage by the
Russian Comrades. Toynbee explained: “At the present time, we know
of no conceivable naturalistic mechanism as to how the flight to the
moon and subsequent re-entry might cause the transformation of living
human tissue into plaster-based lifeless simulacra.” General
McClinton suggested that the uncanny mystery bore the imprimatur of
the Kremlin: “This is precisely the kind of transformation the
Comrades would gladly enforce on the entire planet – turning free
men into standardized dummies!” He added, however, that there was
at present no plausible scenario for how the Comrades could have made
the switch in the available timeline.
The mannequins were dressed in checkered wool flannel shirts and
half wool cashmere slacks, a sneak preview of the Sears and Roebuck
autumn catalogue. Pipes had been provided to complete the rugged,
rustic look. Despite the intensely sombre and portentous nature of
the occasion, all agreed that the ensembles were quite becoming.
General McClinton praised the versatility of the new line, noting
that “everybody would feel comfortable in these, from college
Johnny to retiree Joe!”
Puzzled by how such a
blatant flight of fancy could be presented as an item of factual
journalism, he scanned some of the other headlines:
Department of Health Warning: Physical Acts of Intimacy May Be
Catalyst for Invasion of Little People – Home Office: “First they
take Your Identity – Eventually they will Bury You” -
Conservative MP: “The Little People are Inculcating the Ethos of
the Welfare State in Every Home.”
'But this is nonsense,' he finally blurted, pushing the newspaper
away.
Giacomo sneered. 'Sorry, Einstein.'
Eddie seemed upset. 'The Chronicle has a superb reputation,
I can assure you.'
'This paper has a reputation - '
'Yes, yes, the Chronicle is really above reproach. Their
diligence is outstanding.'
'Their diligence - '
'I wouldn't mislead you, sir. They have excellent fact checkers,
really tireless.'
'Fact checkers?'
'Absolutely. If they discover that any factual content has crept
into a story, sir, they immediately issue a retraction. That happens
very, very rarely – but whenever it does, I can assure you, the
offending content is retracted immediately.'
'But – newspapers are supposed to be factual!'
Eddie and Giacomo regarded him as though he were drunk.
'Where did you get that idea from?'
'Well – I don't know – I can't remember – you mean that
they're pure fantasy?'
'What else would they be?'
'But – don't people want to know what's happening - what's going
on around them?'
Eddie look at him incredulously, and then sighed: 'Well, why would
they want to? Nothing happens here, nothing at all really. People
arrive, and then they go away' – he moved his hand from side to
side – 'arrive, then away. What kind of news would
that be? It would be the same paper, every single edition:
“Yesterday, Some People Arrived in Intermundia Airport, and Some
Others Departed from It.” Not very simulating news, is it?
Not very edifying work, either for the journalist or the reader. But
delusions and flights of fantasy – well, sir, they need not be so
static and predictable.'
A look of mournful longing came over Eddie's face as he continued:
'Well, for most people, I suppose they would. They say, sir, that
the average chimpanzee who is taken from the wilderness to the zoo
soon forgets the forest, and dreams only of the bars of his cage.
And that's the way it is for most of us. But the journalist is an
exceptional creature – he has somehow cultivated the temperature of
his imagination, so that it is a hothouse where strange, luxuriant
things blossom.'
Giacomo nodded at Eddie with a look of sardonic cruelty:
'He wanted to be a journalist when he was younger!'
'I did – I still do. But – oh, it's too late now. Too late. I
wouldn't even get a job as a stenographer in one of the papers now.
But what a life – what a wonderful life! The journalist doesn't
sleep much at night. What does he do? Well, I imagine he wanders
about, talking to the people who work the night-shift, looking at the
planes in the night sky, having adventures in a world that the rest
of us don't see. The journalist, you see, must be awake and active
while most of us are dreaming. This allows him to dream while while
the rest of us toil away in the workaday world. The busy news office
is a work environment like no other. It is make up of rows of
hammocks, which serve as the journalists' desks. And when the
reporter clocks in to work in the morning, he lays himself out on his
hammock. It is considered professional to wear pyjamas or perhaps a
dressing gown, but the occasional maverick arrives to work fully
clothed. There are hookahs positioned by the hammocks, and some of
the journalists consume narcotics to insure a greater accuracy in
their work. Imagine it! Everywhere else, there is noise and bustle
and busyness. But in the newspaper office, a blissful silence, a
languor, a porous, dreamy atmosphere, plumes of smoke swirling into
evanescent patterns above the recumbent workers, the Sandman lulling
softly to sleep those strenuous, invisible weavers who knit our
thoughts together into rational and coherent sentences. The
journalist, you see, in order to file his stories, must drift into a
trance-like state, neither fully conscious or asleep. A place
between the two states – an airport, if you like, which is
not really one country or another, where the point of departure and
the destination are blurred together. And when he becomes thus
inspired, the journalist begins to speak in a low whisper. Crouched
at a little desk beneath the hammock, his head aslant so that his ear
is close to the whispering mouth, the stenographer records each
journalist's dream, editing factual and biographical material out as
he goes. What a strange place – a gaggle of hushed voices, distant
and unfamiliar, and keys clacking to catch them in ink before they
vanish forever – the place where the daily news is made!'
Eddie had an awestruck, faraway expression as he contemplated the
life of the journalist. Giacomo continued to goad him:
'But you tried, didn't you? You tried to be a journalist - '
'Oh, shut up Giacomo - '
'But when you lay down on the hammock, and drifted off into your
trance - '
'SHUT UP!'
'The only news stories you could come up were events from your own
life - '
In low voice: 'Only the bars of my cage...'
'Trivial little episodes – broken hearts and roast dinners - '
'Only the bars.....'
' - that the stenographers instantly edited away into nothing.'
The pair fell silent, Giacomo apparently satisfied at having
humiliated Eddie. Nothing happened for a long time, and he felt an
unbearable tension, as though one of them would soon have to become
hysterical or violent. Then Eddie's face brightened.
'I think we're here at long last!' he said.
The train was stopping. Eddie and Giacomo got up briskly from their
seats and headed in the direction of the doors. He followed then
reluctantly, becoming aware that his nerves were mounting again now
that the journey was completed. Stepping out on the platform was the
most awesome shock he had yet experienced in Intermundia Airport.
The station was a vast cyclopean enclosure, more redolent of an
ancient temple or mausoleum than a train stop. The structure's
brooding air of antiquity and scale, so incongruently juxtaposed with
the poised, illuminated train, took his breathe away. He had that
quiet, eerie perturbation of soul that a person experiences when they
cast a rock into a dim abyss, and only a prolonged silence follows.
The technocrats glided away, the clack of the women's heels echoing
through the vast space like tumbling pebbles. Then the train took
off again, departing into a tunnel so small and dim that it seemed to
simply pass through the stone wall. Its sound died away slowly and a
profound silence filled the cavern, like a vigilant animal resuming
its habitual watchfulness having just swallowed the last morsel of a
meal.
Eddie and Giacomo remained immobile, leaving him a moment to take in
his surroundings. The outer walls were constructed with huge,
misshapen limestone boulders, fitted together in a haphazard fashion
which made him recall – for some obscure reason – Eddie's earlier
discussion of a putative asymmetry in the human mouth which implied
senility or malice on the part of the creator. Nearer the tracks, a
series of pillars, terminating in cornices at the roof of the cavern,
suggested a later, more sophisticated addition. The pillars were
carved with abstract decorative figures of a sensibility so obscure
that it felt almost impious to contemplate them in the harsh light of
the orange sodium lamps.
Finally, Eddie nudged him gently.
'Your case officer is over there.'
He turned and followed Eddie's pointing finger. High up above the
tunnels where the train had just departed, a massive, brooding face
was carved into the limestone where the wall met the roof of the
cavern. Indistinct in terms both of race and sex, the features were
austere and expressionless with the exception of the eyes, which were
fixed with fierce concentration on the platform floor. It was, he
thought, the perfect epitome of a primitive ruler of infinite power
and eternal, implacable judgement, a ruler whose silence and
immobility contained the clap and the rent of thunder. He became
conscious of Eddie and Giacomo's bodies shaking behind him. Turning,
he found that they were laughing silently.
'Sorry,' Eddie said, red-faced, 'sorry – I can never resist that
one. Parts of this underground are very old. Who knows who that
fella is up yonder? He wouldn't make much of a case officer though.'
Giacomo was sniggering. 'We're going this way,' Eddie said, having
composed himself, and they made off away from the platform. As they
neared the far wall, he noticed that there was a single kiosk in the
gloom. The kiosk sold pretzels, pastries, coffee and newspapers. A
wizened, heavily made-up woman with a sullen expression sat inside
smoking a cigarette. A good half of the cigarette was untipped ash
that seemed always on the point of falling away.
'Busy today Maria?' Eddie enquired as they passed. The woman in the
kiosk extracted the cigarette from the side of her mouth in a
distasteful manner, as though it were a thermometer. She grunted,
rolled her eyes slightly, and returned the cigarette. Her bulging
eyes and rhythmic inhalations reminded him of a fish in a tank.
'She's one of those women who can smoke an entire cigarette without
tipping it once,' Eddie said, 'it's a skill that the older generation
have. I used to watch my grandmother doing it.'
'I had an uncle,' Giacomo interjected, 'who could smoke an entire
cigarette without exhaling any smoke! I was fascinated by this as a
child, and I asked my father where the smoke went. He told me that
my uncle farted all the smoke out of his asshole like a chimney
before he went to bed. To this day, I still want to know where all
that smoke went!'
They reached the far wall. The lichen-mottled stone had been
excavated, and a modern structure built into the wall. Eddie opened
the glass door, and they entered what appeared to be an abandoned
work station of some kind. It was a dingy complex that branched off
into offices, store-rooms and a canteen where a fluorescent lamp
flickered and buzzed. Tools, hard-hats, Styrofoam cups and old
newspapers were scattered on the floor, and a thick smell of kerosene
and disinfectant hung in the hair.
'This place,' Giacomo said sourly. They walked through dimly lit
corridors for what seemed like an age. Occasionally, they
encountered other security guards escorting New Arrivals back through
the complex from Central Command. The New Arrivals had haunted,
perplexed expressions, and appeared dissociated from their
surroundings. He was troubled by the awareness that this situation
would be reversed in a short time – he would be returning, and
encountering others on-route. Finally, they arrived in the main
electrical distribution room, and Eddie typed a code into a steel
door behind a row of switchboards. He was smiling. 'I hope you're
ready for some exercise.' The three men entered a narrow, dark
metallic shaft. Giacomo shone a pen-sized torch, revealing a steel
ladder fixed to the wall. 'We have to climb,' Eddie said, 'I'll go
first, and you can go in the middle. That way, if you fall,
Giacomo's thick skull should cushion you.' Giacomo grunted.
He looked up, but it was impossible to determine the extent of the
shaft in the darkness. 'Is it high?' he whispered. 'It's not too
bad', Eddie said, 'just take it one step at a time.' Eddie started
climbing, and when his feet were a few rungs above his head, Giacomo
nudged him to begin. He felt strangely powerless and fixed his hands
on the railing. Soon all three were ascending the ladder at a
deliberate pace. The darkness of the shaft became nearly complete,
and he orientated himself by means of Eddie's heavy panting above,
and the sound of Giacomo's feet below. His arms became fatigued, but
whenever his pace slackened, Giacomo's head butted brusquely against
his feet. His hands were slick with perspiration. He wanted to tell
them to stop, to turn back, but his mouth was dry, and he seemed to
have lost all volition in the arduousness of the climb.
'We should sing a song,' Eddie said above, 'Giacomo, would you like
to sing a few bars of something?' Giacomo grunted. 'Well, I suppose
I better sing one.' They continued climbing. Eddie started to sing
a lullaby in a strange, affected lilt which was completely unlike his
speaking voice:
Train whistle blowin',
Makes a sleepy noise,
Underneath their blankets
Go all the girls and boys.
Rockin', rollin', ridin',
Out along the bay,
All bound for Morningtown
Many miles away.
Eddie paused, and his breaths came in thick, wheezing gasps. 'Come
on gang, join in', he said finally, and continued:
Driver at the engine,
Fireman rings a bell,
Sandman swings the lantern
To show that all is well.
Giacomo joined in the second chorus, and the combination of their
discordant and poorly synchronized voices was eerie and terrifying:
Rockin', rollin', ridin',
Out along the bay,
All bound for Morningtown,
Many miles away.
He was getting more exhausted and faint-headed, and his mind
entertained grimly elaborate conceits. Perhaps the stern stone
visage had really been his case officer after all. Perhaps it had,
in that instant, judged him for sins that he would never remember,
and consigned him to this punishment: to climb the darkened shaft for
all eternity, trapped between two madmen, perpetually on the brink of
total exhaustion. Above, Eddie continued to sing:
Somewhere there is sunshine,
Somewhere there is day,
Somewhere there is Morningtown,
Many miles away.
After another bout of choked spluttering, Eddie stopped climbing.
'Slow down a bit there!', he shouted. He struggled for a moment with
a latch, then lifted himself up. There was a heavy clang, and then
white daylight coursed through the shaft, like water through a
sluice. With the light came brisk, revivifying fresh air, and a
gentle sound that stirred something in his memories. Eddie had
clambered out of the shaft, and he followed with a sudden burst of
energy, lifting himself over the edge of a steel trap-door, and
rolling over soft ground to lie on his back.
He was looking up at the blue sky through a dense canopy of coiling
branches and fluttering leaves. They were in a forest. His senses
were ravished by this first encounter with nature since arriving in
Intermundia. He inhaled deeply the scent of soil, grass and bark.
He knew them so intimately that they were like a childhood memory, or
the memory of childhood itself, come back to him. He stood up, and
his eyes delighted in the colours and forms of the forest, so vivid
and alive after his journey through the steel and concrete landscape
of the terminals, runways and underground.
Giacomo was emerging nonchalantly from the shaft. Eddie sat against
a tree stump, wiping sweat from his brow and smiling boyishly. 'It's
easier going back down,' he said.
"Morningtown Ride", lyrics by Malvina Reynolds. Continued shortly.