After the last of Molyneaux has disappeared, I feel the pull of gravity myself, the Coriolis force grabbing my mind. The whole of everything as he saw it, the water-world, must drain away. The flood subsides. This is the death of one viewpoint, and its rebirth, like land rising above the waves, or sea foam running off a crowded deck: the odd totality of persons each of whom says “me.”
I have more than one body waiting in this luridly familiar place, a college full of rooms. I feel them cautiously intuiting their kindred selves as they read books, look up, and frown. (Divide one soul into a thousand and a thousand souls will wonder why.) The water’s galloping retreat is every bit as fearful as the inundation that preceded it. Around the arches of the library its ebb tides rush and funnel me toward an open door in Gibbs’. Unconscious gallons run into the ground.
One last look back before I enter the building. The sky is blue above and must be sunset red elsewhere because the gatehouse ornaments are pink. Out of the four-parterre rise hebe, foxgloves, elder, poppies, and dog rose. A flock of starlings makes its usual broadcast of whoops and clicks, as though some universal operator were dialing at sea, and every now and then the signal whine seems to resolve into a phrase.
The last cascade gargles its way down A staircase. I slap the basement door, a body of water against a slab of wood. The room, according to an inscription, belongs to someone called A. M. Pryor. There are no people here—no one that I would recognize—but there is urgency. Everything’s quick.
I seethe under the oak and into Pryor’s set.
I am the body in the bed. I’m what sees him. I am the room.
I have been wondering about the strangeness of a point of view on pain and fear, the physical distinctions in a rush of feeling or a train of thought.
But now I pass around the Pryor room, I see that I am made from it. Its windows are my eyes (dark now, or blind), the thin striped mattress and the shelves of books my diaphragm and ribs, the whole material space a mind arising from such things quite naturally, a geometry that shifts and is itself the act of observing.
I am alive in here, but it is night outside. What has happened? I hear a woman very distinctly, outside the door, the sound of difficult speaking.
“Do you?” she says, and then corrects herself. “How can we tell?”
I hear the oscillations and acoustics of another large and populated room, a corridor or ward. “Perhaps he knows that I am here—”
“The spectral content of the EEGs and MEGs is weak… there’s too much damage in the upper layers, and what that means, Mrs. Pryor, what—June—”
“I know. I know. Don’t use that voice. That voice you all adopt.” An almost laughing squeal. “You even sound like him.”
“I am so sorry. June. Just, take your time. Talk to your family, and him. Keep doing that. I wish I had some better news for you.”
“There isn’t any rush, is there?”
Her voice presses against the plaster of my tympanum. The wall flexes and sheds a flake or two of paint. I put aside the herringbone blanket, get up, and stand in front of the mirror, waiting for more. A patient, some distracted wanderer—that person whom the staff must endlessly retrieve—stares back.
“There isn’t any rush, no. Absolutely not, and we have not by any means abandoned hope. You take the time you need.”
Flat-soled shoes patter up the steps. I go back to my bed and listen to the sound of breathing at my door, the trembling of these old, original windows.
A gust rattles the glass. Some angry thought. Some rage.
I am the Red Lady of Paviland.
I was mistaken for a tribal Celt by my Victorian discoverers, but I am much older than that. I am the guardian of the cave, a time machine in ice.
Imagine that I woke, as you are waking now, one morning thirty thousand years ago. The golden droplet of the dawn between my eyelashes, the way out of the cave glimpsed from its chilly depths. I climb down to the plains with my clansmen.
We have been watching four mammoths—a bull, a cow, a youngling, and another older male—hazard the plains these past three days. Once they were drowsy midges on the horizon. Now they are horned beetles. The older male sings wearily. They come for water in the lee of the mountains, for shelter, and for scrub.
The mountains curve out to the left of our fastness, and on the other side of that far tusk of rock the grass thickens, and there are springs. Hyenas, too, and boar, though they are not a threat. They will avoid even a lumbering and starved giant. They do not want to be trampled or gored.
We wait until the parents and the calf are round the rock, then move swiftly to separate and kill the laggard bull, who is too weak to call for help. I am upon him and climbing his flanks, digging my pole-flint in behind his ears. He sags and falls, groaning, onto his knees. I stand and ride his back, aroused by all the blood, the sight of it like tar pits bubbling at the forest’s edge.
Time to dismount… but I have not retrieved my spear.
I think to pull it free as I jump down, whooping, but it is lodged fast by its fashioned teeth. My feet slide forward and I fall—too near to my conquest.
The mammoth rolls on top of me. My body’s contents flood my mouth.
My clansmen drag me out and I can dimly understand their conference. There is a ritual to observe, a truth that comprehends my loss. I must be buried with my prey. I know that I am crushed. They think that I am dead, but I am still alive. I lie on the savannah, listening to the sound of flints, watching the stars come out.
The sky and constellations form an insect eye in negative.
It takes all night to quarter him and drag us harrowingly far, in pieces, up the slope, over the treachery of path and fissure, to the cave. We will be taken deep into the cliff. The cave’s bone pit honors us both. Like chiefs, we wear its stones.
Now she is talking to me and I want to say I can’t remember who you are. I can’t remember, but I do notice the room acquiring light and shade. The gloss paint on the windowsill shines bright or else goes gray whenever her words touch the wall. The wooden desk is to the right of the window, tucked into a corner. The drawers have cupped handles of brass. Its surface is red leather, strewn with calculations, and an odd device sits in the middle, pupating. It shifts inside a sort of sac—cube, tile, tendril, and bead—sweetbreads, or food not dead. A meal come back life.
“They’re doing what you said, Alec,” she says. “It’s all about the ‘how’ they get you stable, how they know you’re done for, how I’ll manage, how it’s going to be. It’s like an interview.” She stops and makes the walls shiver. I see shoulders—I think I see shoulders moving. “‘How would you cope? How would you pay for that?’ Nothing about the who—the who is left. To deal with this. Who I am talking to. Who will be left. What will be left of you. I can’t just sit here… saying stuff.”
The shifting sac puts out a glistening mimetic limb. Some evolutionary leap from pseudopodium to flower takes place. It is a vascular crysanth in wet plastic.
“Fucking flowers. Not mine. I ought to say nice things.” She stops. “And all I want to do is tell you—”
Then I miss a crucial bit, because the flowers from the filling station have become a bonsai carboniferous forest, and died. A slimy jaw breaks through the gastrodermal shell on my work desk, a primitive eel. There! Watch it go! Madly familiar in its fast flick-flack agitations, knocking something to the floor—a mug.