"I don't think so, Andy," he says at last, and can feel Andy's disappointment.
"Really, Jude? What didn't you like about him?" But he doesn't answer, and finally Andy sighs. "I'm sorry," he says. "I hoped you might feel comfortable enough around him to at least consider it. Will you think about it anyway? Maybe you'll give him another chance? And in the meantime, there's this other guy, Stephan Wu, who I think you should maybe meet. He's not an orthopod, but I actually think that might be better; he's certainly the best internist I've ever worked with. Or there's this guy named-"
"Jesus, Andy, stop," he says, and he can hear the anger in his voice, anger he hasn't known he had. "Stop." He looks up, sees Andy's stricken face. "Are you so eager to get rid of me? Can't you give me a break? Can't you let me take this in for a while? Don't you understand how hard this is for me?" He knows how selfish, how unreasonable, how self-absorbed he is being, and he is miserable but unable to stop himself, and he stands, bumping against the table. "Leave me alone," he tells Andy. "If you're not going to be here for me, then leave me alone."
"Jude," Andy says, but he has already pushed past the table, and as he does, the waitress arrives with the food, and he can hear Andy curse and see him reach for his wallet, and he stumbles out of the restaurant. Mr. Ahmed doesn't work on Fridays because he drives himself to Andy's, but now instead of returning to the car, which is parked in front of Andy's office, he hails a taxi and gets in quickly and leaves before Andy can catch him.
That night he turns off his phones, drugs himself, crawls into bed. He wakes the next day, texts both JB and Richard that he's not feeling well and has to cancel his dinners with them, and then re-drugs himself until it is Monday. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. He has ignored all of Andy's calls and texts and e-mails, all of his messages, but although he is no longer angry, only ashamed, he cannot bear to make one more apology, cannot bear his own meanness, his own weakness. "I'm frightened, Andy," he wants to say. "What will I do without you?"
Andy loves sweets, and on Thursday afternoon he has one of his secretaries place an order for an absurd, a stupid amount of chocolates from Andy's favorite candy shop. "Any note?" his secretary asks, and he shakes his head. "No," he says, "just my name." She nods and starts to leave and he calls her back, grabs a piece of notepaper from his desk, and scribbles Andy-I'm so embarrassed. Please forgive me. Jude, and hands it to her.
But the next night he doesn't go to see Andy; he goes home to make dinner for Harold, who is in town on one of his unannounced visits. The previous spring had been Harold's final semester, which he had failed to register until it was September. He and Willem had always spoken of throwing Harold a party when he finally retired, the way they had done for Julia when she had retired. But he had forgotten, and he had done nothing. And then he remembered and he still did nothing.
He is tired. He doesn't want to see Harold. But he makes dinner anyway, a dinner he knows he will not eat, and serves it to Harold and then sits down himself.
"Aren't you hungry?" Harold asks him, and he shakes his head. "I ate lunch at five today," he lies. "I'll eat later."
He watches Harold eat, and sees that he is old, that the skin on his hands has become as soft and satiny as a baby's. He is ever-more aware that he is one year older, two years older, and now, six years older than Harold was when they met. And yet for all these years, Harold has remained in his perceptions stubbornly forty-five; the only thing that has changed is his perception of how old, exactly, forty-five is. It is embarrassing to admit this to himself, but it is only recently that he has begun considering that there is a possibility, even a probability, that he will outlive Harold. He has already lived beyond his imaginings; isn't it likely he will live longer still?
He remembers a conversation they'd had when he turned thirty-five. "I'm middle-aged," he'd said, and Harold had laughed.
"You're young," he'd said. "You're so young, Jude. You're only middle-aged if you plan on dying at seventy. And you'd better not. I'm really not going to be in the mood to attend your funeral."
"You're going to be ninety-five," he said. "Are you really planning on still being alive then?"
"Alive, and frisky, and being attended to by an assortment of buxom young nurses, and not in any mood to go to some long-winded service."
He had finally smiled. "And who's paying for this fleet of buxom young nurses?"
"You, of course," said Harold. "You and your big-pharma spoils."
But now he worries that this won't happen after all. Don't leave me, Harold, he thinks, but it is a dull, spiritless request, one he doesn't expect will be answered, made more from rote than from real hope. Don't leave me.
"You're not saying anything," Harold says now, and he refocuses himself.
"I'm sorry, Harold," he says. "I was drifting a little."
"I can see that," Harold says. "I was saying: Julia and I were thinking of spending some more time here, in the city, of living uptown full-time."
He blinks. "You mean, moving here?"
"Well, we'll keep the place in Cambridge," Harold says, "but yes. I'm considering teaching a seminar at Columbia next fall, and we like spending time here." He looks at him. "We thought it'd be nice to be closer to you, too."
He isn't sure what he thinks about this. "But what about your lives up there?" he asks. He is discomfited by this news; Harold and Julia love Cambridge-he has never thought they would leave. "What about Laurence and Gillian?"
"Laurence and Gillian are always coming through the city; so is everyone else." Harold studies him again. "You don't seem very happy about this, Jude."
"I'm sorry," he says, looking down. "But I just hope you're not moving here because-because of me." There's a silence. "I don't mean to sound presumptuous," he says, finally. "But if it is because of me, then you shouldn't, Harold. I'm fine. I'm doing fine."
"Are you, Jude?" Harold asks, very quietly, and he suddenly stands, quickly, and goes to the bathroom near the kitchen, where he sits on the toilet seat and puts his face in his hands. He can hear Harold waiting on the other side of the door, but he says nothing, and neither does Harold. Finally, minutes later, when he's able to compose himself, he opens the door again, and the two of them look at each other.
"I'm fifty-one," he tells Harold.
"What's that supposed to mean?" Harold asks.
"It means I can take care of myself," he says. "It means I don't need anyone to help me."
Harold sighs. "Jude," he says, "there's not an expiration date on needing help, or needing people. You don't get to a certain age and it stops." They're quiet again. "You're so thin," Harold continues, and when he doesn't say anything, "What does Andy say?"
"I can't keep having this conversation," he says at last, his voice scraped and hoarse. "I can't, Harold. And you can't, either. I feel like all I do is disappoint you, and I'm sorry for that, I'm sorry for all of it. But I'm really trying. I'm doing the best I can. I'm sorry if it's not good enough." Harold tries to interject, but he talks over him. "This is who I am. This is it, Harold. I'm sorry I'm such a problem for you. I'm sorry I'm ruining your retirement. I'm sorry I'm not happier. I'm sorry I'm not over Willem. I'm sorry I have a job you don't respect. I'm sorry I'm such a nothing of a person." He no longer knows what he's saying; he no longer knows how he feels: he wants to cut himself, to disappear, to lie down and never get up again, to hurl himself into space. He hates himself; he pities himself; he hates himself for pitying himself. "I think you should go," he says. "I think you should leave."
"Jude," Harold says.
"Please go," he says. "Please. I'm tired. I need to be left alone. Please leave me alone." And he turns from Harold and stands, waiting, until he hears Harold walk away from him.
After Harold leaves, he takes the elevator to the roof. Here there is a stone wall, chest-high, that lines the perimeter of the building, and he leans against it, swallowing the cool air, placing his palms flat against the top of the wall to try to stop them from shaking. He thinks of Willem, of how he and Willem used to stand on this roof at night, not saying anything, just looking down into other people's apartments. From the southern end of the roof, they could almost see the roof of their old building on Lispenard Street, and sometimes they would pretend that they could see not just the building, but them within it, their former selves performing a theater of their daily lives.
"There must be a fold in the space-time continuum," Willem would say in his action-hero voice. "You're here beside me, and yet-I can see you moving around in that shithole apartment. My god, St. Francis: Do you realize what's going on here?!" Back then, he would always laugh, but remembering this now, he cannot. These days, his only pleasure is thoughts of Willem, and yet those same thoughts are also his greatest source of sorrow. He wishes he could forget as completely as Lucien has: that Willem ever existed, his life with him.
As he stands on the roof, he considers what he has done: He has been irrational. He has gotten angry at someone who has, once again, offered to help him, someone he is grateful for, someone he owes, someone he loves. Why am I acting like this, he thinks. But there's no answer.
Let me get better, he asks. Let me get better or let me end it. He feels that he is in a cold cement room, from which prong several exits, and one by one, he is shutting the doors, closing himself in the room, eliminating his chances for escape. But why is he doing this? Why is he trapping himself in this place he hates and fears when there are other places he could go? This, he thinks, is his punishment for depending on others: one by one, they will leave him, and he will be alone again, and this time it will be worse because he will remember it had once been better. He has the sense, once again, that his life is moving backward, that it is becoming smaller and smaller, the cement box shrinking around him until he is left with a space so cramped that he must fold himself into a crouch, because if he lies down, the ceiling will lower itself upon him and he will be smothered.
Before he goes to bed he writes Harold a note apologizing for his behavior. He works through Saturday; he sleeps through Sunday. And a new week begins. On Tuesday, he gets a message from Todd. The first of the lawsuits are being settled, for massive figures, but even Todd knows enough not to ask him to celebrate. His messages, by phone or by e-mail, are clipped and sober: the name of the company that is ready to settle, the proposed amount, a short "congratulations."
On Wednesday, he is meant to stop by the artists' nonprofit where he still does pro bono work, but he instead meets JB downtown at the Whitney, where his retrospective is being hung. This show is another souvenir from the ghosted past: it has been in the planning stages for almost two years. When JB had told them about it, the three of them had thrown a small party for him at Greene Street.
"Well, JB, you know what this means, right?" Willem had asked, gesturing toward the two paintings-Willem and the Girl and Willem and Jude, Lispenard Street, II, from JB's first show, which hung, side by side, in their living room. "As soon as the show comes down, all of these pieces are going straight to Christie's," and everyone had laughed, JB hardest of all, proud and delighted and relieved.
Those pieces, along with Willem, London, October 8, 9:08 a.m., from "Seconds, Minutes, Hours, Days," which he had bought, and Jude, New York, October 14, 7:02 a.m., which Willem had, along with the ones they owned from "Everyone I've Ever Known" and "The Narcissist's Guide to Self-Hatred" and "Frog and Toad," and all the drawings, the paintings, the sketches of JB's that the two of them had been given and had kept, some since college, will be in the Whitney exhibit, as well as previously unshown work.
There will also be a concurrent show of new paintings at JB's gallery, and three weekends before, he had gone to JB's studio in Greenpoint to see them. The series is called "The Golden Anniversary," and it is a chronicle of JB's parents' lives, both together, before he was born, and in an imagined future, the two of them living on and on, together, into old age. In reality, JB's mother is still alive, as are his aunts, but in these paintings, so too is JB's father, who had actually died at the age of thirty-six. The series is just sixteen paintings, many of them smaller in scale than JB's previous works, and as he walked through JB's studio, looking at these scenes of domestic fantasy-his sixty-year-old father coring an apple while his mother made a sandwich; his seventy-year-old father sitting on the sofa reading the paper, while in the background, his mother's legs can be seen descending a flight of stairs-he couldn't help but see what his life too was and might have been. It was precisely these scenes he missed the most from his own life with Willem, the forgettable, in-between moments in which nothing seemed to be happening but whose absence was singularly unfillable.
Interspersing the portraits were still lifes of the objects that had made JB's parents' lives together: two pillows on a bed, both slightly depressed as if someone had dragged the back of a spoon through a bowl of clotted cream; two coffee cups, one's edge faintly pinked with lipstick; a single picture frame containing a photograph of a teenaged JB with his father: the only appearance JB made in these paintings. And seeing these images, he once again marveled at how perfect JB's understanding was of a life together, of his life, of how everything in his apartment-Willem's sweatpants, still slung over the edge of the laundry hamper; Willem's toothbrush, still waiting in the glass on the bathroom sink; Willem's watch, its face splintered from the accident, still sitting untouched on his nightstand-had become totemic, a series of runes only he could read. The table next to Willem's side of the bed at Lantern House had become a sort of unintentional shrine to him: there was the mug he had last drunk from, and the black-framed glasses he'd recently started wearing, and the book he was reading, still splayed, facedown, in the position he'd left it.
"Oh, JB," he had sighed, and although he had wanted to say something else, he couldn't. But JB had thanked him anyway. They were quieter around each other now, and he didn't know if this was who JB had become or if this was who JB had become around him.
Now he knocks on the museum's doors and is let in by one of JB's studio assistants, who is waiting for him and who tells him that JB is overseeing the installation on the top floor, but says he should start on the sixth floor and work his way up to meet him, and so he does.
The galleries on this floor are dedicated to JB's early works, including juvenilia; there is a whole grid of framed drawings from JB's childhood, including a math test over which JB had drawn lovely little pencil portraits of, presumably, his classmates: eight- and nine-year-olds bent over their desks, eating candy bars, feeding birds. He had neglected to solve any of the problems, and at the top of the page was a bright red "F," along with a note: "Dear Mrs. Marion-you see what the problem is here. Please come see me. Sincerely, Jamie Greenberg. P.S. Your son is an immense talent." He smiles looking at this, the first time he can feel himself smiling in a long time. In a lucite cube on a stand in the middle of the room are a few objects from "The Kwotidien," including the hair-covered hairbrush that JB had never returned to him, and he smiles again, looking at them, thinking of their weekends devoted to searching for clippings.
The rest of the floor is given over to images from "The Boys," and he walks slowly through the rooms, looking at pictures of Malcolm, of him, of Willem. Here are the two of them in their bedroom at Lispenard Street, both of them sitting on their twin beds, staring straight into JB's camera, Willem with a small smile; here they are again at the card table, he working on a brief, Willem reading a book. Here they are at a party. Here they are at another party. Here he is with Phaedra; here Willem is with Richard. Here is Malcolm with his sister, Malcolm with his parents. Here is Jude with Cigarette, here is Jude, After Sickness. Here is a wall with pen-and-ink sketches of these images, sketches of them. Here are the photographs that inspired the paintings. Here is the photograph of him from which Jude with Cigarette was painted: here he is-that expression on his face, that hunch of his shoulders-a stranger to himself and yet instantly recognizable to himself as well.
The stairwells between the floors are densely hung with interstitial pieces, drawings and small paintings, studies and experimentations, that JB made between bodies of work. He sees the portrait JB made of him for Harold and Julia, for his adoption; he sees drawings of him in Truro, of him in Cambridge, of Harold and Julia. Here are the four of them; here are JB's aunts and mother and grandmother; here is the Chief and Mrs. Irvine; here is Flora; here is Richard, and Ali, and the Henry Youngs, and Phaedra.
The next floor: "Everyone I've Ever Known Everyone I've Ever Loved Everyone I've Ever Hated Everyone I've Ever Fucked"; "Seconds, Minutes, Hours, Days." Behind him, around him, installers mill, making small adjustments with their white-gloved hands, standing back and staring at the walls. Once again he enters the stairwell. Once again he looks up, and there he sees, again and again, drawings of him: of his face, of him standing, of him in his wheelchair, of him with Willem, of him alone. These are pieces that JB had made when they weren't speaking, when he had abandoned JB. There are drawings of other people as well, but they are mostly of him: him and Jackson. Again and again, Jackson and him, a checkerboard of the two of them. The images of him are wistful, faint, pencils and pen-and-inks and watercolors. The ones of Jackson are acrylics, thick-lined, looser and angrier. There is one drawing of him that is very small, on a postcard-size piece of paper, and when he examines it more closely, he sees that something had been written on it, and then erased: "Dear Jude," he makes out, "please"-but there is nothing more after that word. He turns away, his breathing quick, and sees the watercolor of a camellia bush that JB had sent him when he was in the hospital, after he had tried to kill himself.
The next floor: "The Narcissist's Guide to Self-Hatred." This had been JB's least commercially successful show, and he can understand why-to look at these works, their insistent anger and self-loathing, was to be both awed and made almost unbearably uncomfortable. The Coon, one painting was called; The Buffoon; The Bojangler; The Steppin Fetchit. In each, JB, his skin shined and dark, his eyes bulging and yellowed, dances or howls or cackles, his gums awful and huge and fish-flesh pink, while in the background, Jackson and his friends emerge half formed from a gloom of Goyan browns and grays, all crowing at him, clapping their hands and pointing and laughing. The last painting in this series was called Even Monkeys Get the Blues, and it was of JB wearing a pert red fez and a shrunken red epauletted jacket, pantsless, hopping on one leg in an empty warehouse. He lingers on this floor, staring at these paintings, blinking, his throat shutting, and then slowly moves to the stairs a final time.
Then he is on the top floor, and here there are more people, and for a while he stands to the side, watching JB talking to the curators and his gallerist, laughing and gesturing. These galleries are hung, mostly, with images from "Frog and Toad," and he moves from each to each, not really seeing them but rather remembering the experience of viewing them for the first time, in JB's studio, when he and Willem were new to each other, when he felt as if he was growing new body parts-a second heart, a second brain-to accommodate this excess of feeling, the wonder of his life.
He is staring at one of the paintings when JB finally sees him and comes over, and he hugs JB tightly and congratulates him. "JB," he says. "I'm so proud of you."
"Thanks, Judy," JB says, smiling. "I'm proud of me too, goddammit." And then he stops smiling. "I wish they were here," he says.
He shakes his head. "I do too," he manages to say.
For a while they are silent. Then, "Come here," JB says, and grabs his hand and pulls him to the far side of the floor, past JB's gallerist, who waves at him, past a final crate of framed drawings that are being unboxed, to a wall where a canvas is having its skin of bubble wrap carefully cut away from it. JB positions them before it, and when the plastic is unpeeled, he sees it is a painting of Willem.
The piece isn't large-just four feet by three feet-and is horizonally oriented. It is by far the most sharply photorealistic painting JB has produced in years, the colors rich and dense, the brushstrokes that made Willem's hair feathery-fine. The Willem in this painting looks like Willem did shortly before he died: he thinks he is seeing Willem in the months before or after shooting The Dancer and the Stage, for which his hair was longer and darker than it was in life. After Dancer, he decides, because the sweater he is wearing, a black-green the color of magnolia leaves, is one he remembers buying for Willem in Paris when he went to visit him there.
He steps back, still looking. In the painting, Willem's torso is directed toward the viewer, but his face is turned to the right so that he is almost in profile, and he is leaning toward something or someone and smiling. And because he knows Willem's smiles, he knows Willem has been captured looking at something he loves, he knows Willem in that instant was happy. Willem's face and neck dominate the canvas, and although the background is suggested rather than shown, he knows that Willem is at their table; he knows it from the way JB has drawn the light and shadows on Willem's face. He has the sense that if he says Willem's name, then the face in the painting will turn toward him and answer; he has the sense that if he stretches his hand out and strokes the canvas, he will feel beneath his fingertips Willem's hair, his fringe of eyelashes.
But he doesn't do this, of course, just looks up at last and sees JB smiling at him, sadly. "The title card's been mounted already," JB says, and he goes slowly to the wall behind the painting and sees its title-Willem Listening to Jude Tell a Story, Greene Street-and he feels his breath abandon him; it feels as if his heart is made of something oozing and cold, like ground meat, and it is being squeezed inside a fist so that chunks of it are falling, plopping to the ground near his feet.
He is abruptly dizzy. "I need to sit," he finally says, and JB takes him around the corner, to the other side of the wall where Willem will hang, where there's a small cul-de-sac. He half sits atop one of the crates that's been left here and hangs his head, resting his hands on his thighs. "I'm sorry," he manages to say. "I'm sorry, JB."
"It's for you," JB says, quietly. "When the show comes down, Jude. It's yours."
"Thank you, JB," he says. He makes himself stand upright, feels everything within him shift. I need to eat something, he thinks. When was the last time he ate? Breakfast, he thinks, but yesterday. He reaches his hand out toward the crate to center himself, to stop the rocking he feels within his head and spine; he feels this sensation more and more frequently, a floating away, a state close to ecstasy. Take me somewhere, he hears a voice inside him say, but he doesn't know to whom he is saying this, or where he wants to go. Take me, take me. He is thinking this, crossing his arms over himself, when JB suddenly grabs him by his shoulders and kisses him on the mouth.
He wrenches away. "What the hell are you doing?" he asks, and he fumbles backward, rubbing his mouth with the back of his hand.
"Jude, I'm sorry, I didn't mean anything," JB says. "You just look so-so sad."
"So this is what you do?" he spits at JB, who steps toward him. "Don't you dare touch me, JB." In the background, he can hear the chatter of the installers, JB's gallerist, the curators. He takes another step, this time toward the edge of the wall. I'm going to faint, he thinks, but he doesn't.
"Jude," JB says, and then, his face changing, "Jude?"
But he is moving away from him. "Get away from me," he says. "Don't touch me. Leave me alone."
"Jude," JB says in a low voice, following him, "you don't look good. Let me help you." But he keeps walking, trying to get away from JB. "I'm sorry, Jude," JB continues. "I'm sorry." He is aware of the pack of people moving as a clump to the other side of the floor, hardly noticing him leaving, JB next to him; it is as if they don't exist.
Twenty more steps to the elevators, he estimates; eighteen more steps; sixteen; fifteen; fourteen. Beneath him, the floor has become a loosely spinning top, wobbling on its axis. Ten; nine; eight. "Jude," says JB, who won't stop talking, "let me help you. Why won't you talk to me anymore?" He is at the elevator; he smacks the button with his palm; he leans against the wall, praying he'll be able to stay upright.
"Get away from me," he hisses at JB. "Leave me alone."
The elevator arrives; the doors open. He steps toward them. His walk now is different: he still leads with his left leg, always, and he still lifts it unnaturally high-that hasn't changed, that has been dictated by his injury. But he no longer drags his right leg, and because his prosthetic feet are so well-articulated-much more so than his own feet had been-he is able to feel the roll of his foot as it leaves the floor, the complicated, beautiful pat of it laying itself down on the ground again, section by section.
But when he is tired, when he is desperate, he finds himself unconsciously reverting to his old gait, with each foot landing flatly, slabbily, on the floor, with his right leg listing behind him. And as he steps into the elevator he forgets that his steel-and-fiberglass legs are made for more nuance than he is allowing them, and he trips and falls. "Jude!" he hears JB call out, and because he is so weak, for a moment everything is dark and empty, and when he regains his vision, he sees that the flock of people have heard JB cry out, that they are now walking in his direction. He sees as well JB's face above him, but he is too tired to interpret his expression. Willem Listening to Jude Tell a Story, he thinks, and before him appears the painting: Willem's face, Willem's smile, but Willem isn't looking at him, he is looking somewhere else. What if, he thinks, the Willem of the painting is in fact looking for him? He has a sudden urge to stand to the painting's right, to sit in a chair in what would be Willem's sightline, to never leave that painting by itself. There is Willem, imprisoned forever in a one-sided conversation. Here he is, in life, imprisoned as well. He thinks of Willem, alone in his painting, night after night in the empty museum, waiting and waiting for him to tell him a story.
Forgive me, Willem, he tells Willem in his head. Forgive me, but I have to leave you now. Forgive me, but I have to go.
"Jude," JB says. The elevator doors are closing, but JB reaches his arm out to him.
But he ignores it, works himself to his feet, leans into the corner of the elevator car. The people are very close now. Everyone moves so much faster than he does. "Stay away from me," he says to JB, but he is quiet. "Leave me alone. Please leave me alone."
"Jude," JB says again. "I'm sorry."
And he begins to say something else, but as he does, the elevator doors close-and he is left alone at last.
3.
HE DIDN'T BEGIN it consciously, he really didn't, and yet when he comprehends what he is doing, he doesn't stop it, either. It is the middle of November, and he is getting out of the pool after his morning swim, and as he's lifting himself up on the metal bars that Richard had had installed around the pool to help him get in and out of his wheelchair, the world disappears.
When he wakes again, it's only ten minutes later. One moment it was six forty-five a.m., and he was pulling himself up; the next it is six fifty-five a.m., and he is prone on the black rubber floor, his arms reaching forward for the chair, his torso leaving a wet splotch on the ground. He groans, moving into a sitting position, and waits until the room rights itself again, before attempting-and this time, succeeding-to hoist himself up.
The second time comes a few days later. He has just gotten home from the office, and it is late. Increasingly, he has begun to feel as if Rosen Pritchard supplies him with his very energy, and once he leaves its premises, so too does his strength: the moment Mr. Ahmed shuts the back door of the car, he is asleep, and he doesn't wake until he is delivered to Greene Street. But as he walks into the dark, quiet apartment that night, he is overcome by a sense of displacement, one so debilitating that for a moment he stops, blinking and confused, before he moves to the sofa in the living room and lies down. He means to just rest, just for a few minutes, just until he can stand again, but when he opens his eyes next it is day, and the living room is gray with light.
The third time is Monday morning. He wakes before his alarm, and although he is lying down, he feels everything around and within him roiling, as if he is a bottle half filled with water set adrift on an ocean of clouds. In recent weeks, he hasn't had to drug himself at all on Sundays: he gets home from dinner with JB on Saturday, and climbs into bed, and only wakes when Richard comes to find him the next day. When Richard doesn't come-as he hadn't this Sunday; he and India are visiting her parents in New Mexico-he sleeps through the entire day, through the entire night. He dreams of nothing, and nothing wakes him.
He knows what is happening, of course: he isn't eating enough. He hasn't been for months. Some days he eats very little-a piece of fruit; a piece of bread-and some days he eats nothing at all. It isn't as if he has decided to stop eating-it is simply that he is no longer interested, that he no longer can. He isn't hungry, so he doesn't eat.
That Monday, though, he does. He gets up, he totters downstairs. He swims, but poorly, slowly. And then he comes back upstairs, he makes himself breakfast. He sits and eats it, staring into the apartment, the newspapers folded on the table beside him. He opens his mouth, he inserts a forkful of food, he chews, he swallows. He keeps his movements mechanical, but suddenly he thinks of how grotesque a process it is, putting something into his mouth, moving it around with his tongue, swallowing down the saliva-clotted plug of it, and he stops. Still, he promises himself: I will eat, even if I don't want to, because I am alive and this is what I am to do. But he forgets, and forgets again.
And then, two days later, something happens. He has just come home, so exhausted that he feels soluble, as if he is evaporating into the air, so insubstantial that he feels made not of blood and bone but of vapor and fog, when he sees Willem standing before him. He opens his mouth to speak to him, but then he blinks and Willem is gone, and he is teetering, his arms stretched before him.
"Willem," he says aloud into the empty apartment. "Willem." He closes his eyes, as if he might conjure him that way, but Willem doesn't reappear.
The next day, however, he does. He is once again at home. It is once again night. He has once again not eaten anything. He is lying in bed, he is staring into the dark of the room. And there, abruptly, is Willem, shimmery as a hologram, the edges of him blurring with light, and although Willem isn't looking at him-he is looking elsewhere, looking toward the doorway, looking so intently that he wants to follow Willem's sightline, to see what Willem sees, but he knows he mustn't blink, he mustn't turn away, or Willem will leave him-it is enough to see him, to feel that he in some way still exists, that his disappearance might not be a permanent state after all. But finally, he has to blink, and Willem vanishes once more.
However, he isn't too upset, because now he knows: if he doesn't eat, if he can last to the point just before collapse, he will begin having hallucinations, and his hallucinations might be of Willem. That night he falls asleep contented, the first time he has felt contentment in nearly fifteen months, because now he knows how to recall Willem; now he knows his ability to summon Willem is within his control.
He cancels his appointment with Andy so he can stay home and experiment. This is the third consecutive Friday he hasn't seen Andy. Since that night at the restaurant, the two of them have been polite with each other, and Andy hasn't mentioned Linus, or any other doctor, again, although he has said he'll raise the subject anew in six months. "It's not a matter of wanting to get rid of you, Jude," he said. "And I'm sorry, I really am, if that's how it sounded. I'm just worried. I just want to make sure we find someone you like, someone I know you'll be comfortable with."
"I know, Andy," he said. "And I appreciate it; I do. I've been behaving badly, and I took it out on you." But he knows now that he has to be careful: he has tasted anger, and he knows he has to control it. He can feel it, waiting to burst from his mouth in a swarm of stinging black flies. Where has this rage been hiding? he wonders. How can he make it disappear? Lately his dreams have been of violence, of terrible things befalling the people he hates, the people he loves: he sees Brother Luke being stuffed into a sack full of squealing, starved rats; he sees JB's head being slammed against a wall, his brain splashing out in a gray slurry. In the dreams he is always there, dispassionate and watchful, and after witnessing their destruction, he turns and walks away. He wakes with his nose bleeding the way it had when he was a child and was suppressing a tantrum, with his hands shaking, with his face contorted into a snarl.
That Friday Willem doesn't come to him after all. But the next evening, as he is leaving the office to meet JB for dinner, he turns his head to the right and sees, sitting next to him in the car, Willem. This time, he fancies, Willem is a little harder-edged, a little more solid, and he stares and stares until he blinks and Willem once again dissolves.
After these episodes he is depleted, and the world around him dims as if all its power and electricity has gone toward creating Willem. He instructs Mr. Ahmed to take him home instead of to the restaurant; as he is driven south, he texts JB to tell him he's feeling sick and can't make it. He is doing this more and more: canceling plans with people, shoddily and usually unforgivably late-an hour before a hard-to-secure dinner reservation, minutes after a scheduled meeting time at a gallery, seconds before the curtain rises above a stage. Richard, JB, Andy, Harold and Julia: these are the final people who still contact him, persistently, week after week. He can't remember when he last heard from Citizen or Rhodes or the Henry Youngs or Elijah or Phaedra-it has been weeks, at least. And although he knows he should care, he doesn't. His hope, his energy are no longer replenishable resources; his reserves are limited, and he wants to spend them trying to find Willem, even if the hunt is elusive, even if he is likely to fail.
And so home he goes, and he waits and waits for Willem to appear to him. But he doesn't, and finally he sleeps.
The next day he waits in bed, trying to suspend himself between alertness and dazedness, for that (he thinks) is the state in which he is most likely to summon Willem.
On Monday he wakes, feeling foolish. This has got to stop, he tells himself. You have got to rejoin the living. You're acting like an insane person. Visions? Do you know what you sound like?
He thinks of the monastery, where Brother Pavel liked to tell him the story of an eleventh-century nun named Hildegard. Hildegard had visions; she closed her eyes and illuminated objects appeared before her; her days were aswim with light. But Brother Pavel was less interested in Hildegard than in Hildegard's instructor, Jutta, who had forsaken the material world to live as an ascetic in a small cell, dead to the concerns of the living, alive but not alive. "That's what will happen to you if you don't obey," Pavel would say, and he would be terrified. There was a small toolshed on the monastery's grounds, dark and chilly and jumbled with malevolent-looking iron objects, each of them ending in a spike, a spear, a scythe, and when the brother told him of Jutta, he imagined he would be forced into the toolshed, fed just enough to survive, and on and on and on he would live, almost forgotten but not completely, almost dead but not completely. But even Jutta had had Hildegard for company. He would have no one. How frightened he had been; how certain he was that this, someday, would come to pass.
Now, as he lies in bed, he hears the old lied murmur to him. "I have become lost to the world," he sings, quietly, "in which I otherwise wasted so much time."