I took a moment to steady myself. The experience had been appropriately cultish so far, which pleased me on some adolescent level. The air in the corridor seemed to hum very slightly, and I could feel the floor vibrating through the soles of my sneakers, although this might have been a trick of my nerves. The walls were smooth and bare and starkly lit. No one else was in sight. I took off my shoes for some reason — decorum, perhaps — and began creeping forward. The length of the hallway proved tricky to gauge in the flat, bloodless light. I expected to catch sight of the woman when I turned the first corner, but I found only a second length of hallway, as bare as the first, ending in another left-hand turn. It reminded me of something.
It reminded me of the corridor in Enzie and Genny’s apartment.
I pulled back around the corner and rested my head against the wall, breathing in stuttering sucks. All my false courage left me. I wanted to get out of there, Mrs. Haven. I’d made a terrible mistake. The floor was vibrating — I was sure of it now. It occurred to me then — how could I have overlooked it? — that there were no doors or windows in sight. The wall was shuddering behind me: I could feel it in my shoulders and my spine. I tried to recall what I’d just glimpsed around the corner. There might have been a sort of door — a small one, maybe six feet past the turning. But I was too unnerved to take another look.
It meant something — it had to — that the interior of the Iterants’ headquarters was laid out like the Archive, but what it meant was beyond me. I knew no more than this: that the arrangement of Enzie and Genny’s rooms was connected to something secret, or was possibly the expression of that secret; and that this secret was a vital and ominous one, at least in relation to me. If Haven had discovered what that secret was — or had access to someone who did, such as Orson — but I stopped myself there. It was better not to attempt to guess what that might mean.
When I forced myself to round the corner a second time, still shaken and woozy, the white lady was waiting. There had been a door — narrow and knobless and low — and we passed through it, into a kind of winter garden. Its ceiling was of glass, like the roof of a greenhouse, and the space itself was small and shadowless. There were couches arranged in a ring — she led me to one of them, and sat down beside me — but I took in almost nothing, in those first dazed moments, but the mural covering the room’s eight walls.
“Well, Mr. Tolliver? How do you like the decor?”
I opened my mouth and gave a sort of peep. The mural was done in thin washes of paint — so thin that the plaster’s imperfections showed through — with the most delicate of brushes. Running counterclockwise, it depicted all the great theorists of time, from Herodotus to Newton to Stephen J. Hawking. The entire hall of fame and infamy stood assembled on those walls: everyone I’d ever heard Orson disparage or praise. The figures were rendered in one-to-one scale, precise as Audubon engravings, their hands and faces more alive than any photo could have been. They looked so human, in fact, that it took me a moment to see what was wrong about them.
Each figure had the head and the limbs of a man — or a woman, in a handful of cases — and the glossy, reddish body of an insect.
“What is this place?”
“This is the Listening Room. Mr. Haven’s personal retreat.”
“Oh.”
We gazed up at the mural for a time.
“Quite a feast for the eyes, isn’t it? Most people who see it — not that there are many of them, mind you — tend to be rather impressed.” She parted her pale lips and stared at my own, as if in expectation of a kiss. “Are you impressed, Mr. Tolliver?”
“Can I see my father now?”
“Let me ask you a question. Why do you want to see him?”
“I’m his son.”
She patted my knee. “Sons like to visit their fathers now and again. That’s perfectly in order.” She turned back to the mural. “I should tell you, however, that the Prime Mover hasn’t received any visitors in quite some time.”
“If you’re trying to stop me—”
“I have no intention of trying to stop you, Mr. Tolliver.”
She led me back out of the room, moving with a dreamlike lack of effort, and I seemed to follow her in the same way. There were people in the corridor now: young men and women in tweeds and pastels, carrying clipboards and padded manila envelopes and sheaves of yellow paper. We went up a steep flight of stairs, then another, then another, and arrived at a low attic room. The man I found there, reclining in a La-Z-Boy beside a dormer window, bore a remarkable resemblance to my father. He waited for the woman to go, then smiled at me and asked me how I was. I said I was doing okay.
“I knew you’d be coming, Waldy. And now here you are!”
He placed a sly sort of emphasis on the word knew, I remember, as if he’d been informed of my approach by a network of spies, or predicted it by means of calculus, or seen it reflected in a mystic pool.
“My name isn’t Waldy,” I heard myself answer. “I changed it after you ditched us.” I racked my brain for a moment. “It’s Jack.”
His only response was a shrug. He had my father’s blunt features, he smelled like my father, and he was wearing a shirt I must have seen a thousand times — but something was off. He wasn’t as Orson-ish, for want of a better word, as he ought to have been. He sat there so passively, utterly sapped of authority, like a codger in some cut-rate nursing home. He looked a decade older than he was.
“What do you do in this place all day long?”
“Glad you asked, Jack! The answer is simple. Whatever I want.”
I nodded, taking in the dank, untidy room. “What did you do today?”
“That’s easy! I’ve been looking out this window at the trees.”
“At the trees. Okay.”
He heaved a drawn-out sigh and rubbed his belly.
“Okay,” I repeated. “I’m glad that you have — that you’re happy, I mean.” I hesitated. “I wanted to ask—”
“I had a thought!” he announced. “It hit while I was looking at the trees. I’d like to lay it on you, Jack. I’d like to hear your take.”
I said nothing to that. My father cleared his throat and pointed out the window.
“In contemplating the natural world, Jack, we tend to distinguish between objects in motion — squirrels, let’s say, or sparrows — and things that are fixed: flower beds and ginkgo trees and such. It’s simpler that way, and it seems to make sense.” He belched gently into his fist. “But that’s just one way, among many, of perceiving the world. Outside this window right now, the grass is extending itself upward, and the ginkgos and dogwoods are doing the same. The flowers in that bed there — right there, along the patio — are revolving to follow the path of the sun. You get what I’m saying? All this stuff is in motion. Our senses are cued to a rate set at random — one speed out of an infinitude — and we mistake it for the only speed there is.”
I said nothing to this, either. I never should have come. I realized that now.
Orson squinted at me. “Why’d you come here, Jack? Is there something you want?”
“I’m not sure.”
“Don’t shit a shitter.”
“I’m not—” I stopped myself. “To be honest, I need your advice.”
“I suspected as much.” He grabbed a lever on his armrest and winched himself upright. He seemed like Orson to me now, or close enough. “What’s the nature of the problem? Is it money? Is it girls?”