The twins stopped talking and blinked at him.
"What?" said Charles.
"Around the back way. Listen."
We were quiet, looking at each other. A chilly breeze rustled through the woods and a gust of white dogwood petals blew into the clearing.
"I don't hear anything," Francis said.
Henry put a finger to his lips. The five of us stood poised, waiting, for a moment longer. I took a breath, and was about to speak when all of a sudden I did hear something.
Footsteps, the crackle of branches. We looked at one another. Henry bit his lip and glanced quickly around. The ravine was bare, no place to hide, no way for the rest of us to run across the clearing and into the woods without making a lot of noise. He was about to say something when all of a sudden there was a crash of bushes, very near, and he stepped out of the clearing between two trees, like someone ducking into a doorway on a city street.
The rest of us, stranded in the open, looked at each other and then at Henry-thirty feet away, safe at the shady margin of the wood. He waved at us impatiently. I heard the sudden crunch of footsteps on gravel and, hardly aware of what I was doing, turned away spasmodically and pretended to inspect the trunk of a nearby tree.
The footsteps approached. Prickles rising on the nape of my neck, I bent to scrutinize the tree trunk more closely: silvery bark, cool to the touch, ants marching out of a fissure in a glittering black thread.
Then-almost before I noticed it-they stopped, very near my back.
I glanced up and saw Charles. He was staring straight ahead with a ghastly expression on his face and I was on the verge of asking him what was the matter when, with a sick, incredulous rush of disbelief, I heard Bunny's voice directly behind me.
"Well, I'll be damned," he said briskly. "What's this? Meeting of the Nature Club?"
I turned. It was Bunny, all right, all six-foot-three of him, looming up behind me in a tremendous yellow rain slicker that came almost to his ankles.
There was an awful silence.
"Hi, Bun," said Camilla faintly.
"Hi yourself." He had a bottle of beer-a Rolling Rock, funny I remember that-and he turned it up and took a long, gurgling pull. "Phew," he said. "You people sure do a lot of sneaking around in the woods these days. You know," he said, poking me in the ribs, "I've been trying to get a hold of you."
The abrupt, booming immediacy of his presence was too much for me to take. I stared at him, dazed, as he drank again, as he lowered the bottle, as he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand; he was standing so close I could feel the heaviness of his rich, beery breaths.
"Aaah," he said, raking the hair back from his eyes, and belched. "So what's the story, deerslayers? You all just felt like coming out here to study the vegetation?"
There was a rustle and a slight, deprecating cough from the direction of the woods.
"Well, not exactly," said a cool voice.
Bunny turned, startled-I did, too-just in time to see Henry step out of the shadows.
He came forward and regarded Bunny pleasantly. He was holding a garden trowel and his hands were black with mud. "Hello," he said. "This is quite a surprise."
Bunny gave him a long, hard look. "Jesus," he said. "What you doing, burying the dead?"
Henry smiled. "Actually, it's very lucky you happened by."
"This some kind of convention?"
"Why, yes," said Henry agreeably, after a pause. "I suppose one might call it that."
"One might," said Bunny mockingly.
Henry bit his lower lip. "Yes," he said, in all seriousness. "One might. Though it's not the term I would use myself."
Everything was very still. From somewhere far away, in the woods, I heard the faint, inane laughter of a woodpecker.
"Tell me," Bunny said, and I thought I detected for the first time a note of suspicion. "Just what the Sam Hill are you guys doing out here anyway?"
The woods were silent, not a sound.
Henry smiled. "Why, looking for new ferns," he said, and took a step towards him.
BOOK II.
Dionysus [is] the Master of Illusions, who could make a vine grow out of a ship's plank, and in general enable his votaries to see the world as the world's not.
-E. R. DODDS,
The Greeks and the Irrational
CHAPTER.
6.
JUST FOR THE record, I do not consider myself an evil person (though how like a killer that makes me sound!). Whenever I read about murders in the news I am struck by the dogged, almost touching assurance with which interstate stranglers, needle-happy pediatricians, the depraved and guilty of all descriptions fail to recognize the evil in themselves; feel compelled, even, to assert a kind of spurious decency. "Basically I am a very good person." This from the latest serial killer-destined for the chair, they say-who, with incarnadine axe, recently dispatched half a dozen registered nurses in Texas. I have followed his case with interest in the papers.
But while I have never considered myself a very good person, neither can I bring myself to believe that I am a spectacularly bad one. Perhaps it's simply impossible to think of oneself in such a way, our Texan friend being a case in point. What we did was terrible, but still I don't think any of us were bad, exactly; chalk it up to weakness on my part, hubris on Henry's, too much Greek prose composition-whatever you like.
I don't know. I suppose I should have had a better idea of what I was letting myself in for. Still, the first murder-the farmer-seemed to have been so simple, a dropped stone falling to the lakebed with scarcely a ripple. The second one was also easy, at least at first, but I had no inkling how different it would be. What we took for a docile, ordinary weight (gentle plunk, swift rush to the bottom, dark waters closing over it without a trace) was in fact a depth charge, one that exploded quite without warning beneath the glassy surface, and the repercussions of which may not be entirely over, even now.
Towards the end of the sixteenth century, the Italian physicist Galileo Galilei did a variety of experiments on the nature of falling bodies, dropping objects (so they say) from the Tower of Pisa in order to measure the rate of acceleration as they fell. His findings were as follows: That falling bodies acquire speed as they fall. That the farther a body falls, the faster it moves. That the velocity of a falling body equals the acceleration due to gravity multiplied by the time of the fall in seconds. In short, that given the variables in our case, our particular falling body was traveling at a speed greater than thirty-two feet per second when it hit the rocks below.
You see, then, how quick it was. And it is impossible to slow down this film, to examine individual frames. I see now what I saw then, flashing by with the swift, deceptive ease of an accident: shower of gravel, windmilling arms, a hand that claws at a branch and misses. A barrage of frightened crows explodes from the underbrush, cawing and dark against the sky. Cut to Henry, stepping back from the edge. Then the film flaps up in the projector and the screen goes black. Consummatum est.
If, lying in my bed at night, I find myself unwilling audience to this objectionable little documentary (it goes away when I open my eyes but always, when I close them, it resumes tirelessly at the very beginning), I marvel at how detached it is in viewpoint, eccentric in detail, largely devoid of emotional power. In that way it mirrors the remembered experience more closely than one might imagine. Time, and repeated screenings, have endowed the memory with a menace the original did not possess. I watched it all happen quite calmly-without fear, without pity, without anything but a kind of stunned curiosity-so that the impression of the event is burned indelibly upon my optic nerves, but oddly absent from my heart.
It was many hours before I was cognizant of what we'd done; days (months? years?) before I began to comprehend the magnitude of it. I suppose we'd simply thought about it too much, talked of it too often, until the scheme ceased to be a thing of the imagination and took on a horrible life of its own.... Never once, in any immediate sense, did it occur to me that any of this was anything but a game. An air of unreality suffused even the most workaday details, as if we were plotting not the death of a friend but the itinerary of a fabulous trip that I, for one, never quite believed we'd ever really take.
What is unthinkable is undoable. That is something that Julian used to say in our Greek class, and while I believe he said it in order to encourage us to be more rigorous in our mental habits, it has a certain perverse bearing on the matter at hand. The idea of murdering Bunny was horrific, impossible; nonetheless we dwelt on it incessantly, convinced ourselves there was no alternative, devised plans which seemed slightly improbable and ridiculous but which actually worked quite well when put to the test.... I don't know. A month or two before, I would have been appalled at the idea of any murder at all. But that Sunday afternoon, as I actually stood watching one, it seemed the easiest thing in the world. How quickly he fell; how soon it was over.
This part, for some reason, is difficult for me to write, largely because the topic is inextricably associated with too many nights like this one (sour stomach, wretched nerves, clock inching tediously from four to five). It is also discouraging, because I recognize attempts at analysis are largely useless. I don't know why we did it. I'm not entirely sure that, circumstances demanding, we wouldn't do it again. And if I'm sorry, in a way, that probably doesn't make much difference.
I am sorry, as well, to present such a sketchy and disappointing exegesis of what is in fact the central part of my story. I have noticed that even the most garrulous and shameless of murderers are shy about recounting their crimes. A few months ago, in an airport bookstore, I picked up the autobiography of a notorious thrill killer and was disheartened to find it entirely bereft of lurid detail. At the points of greatest suspense (rainy night; deserted street; fingers closing around the lovely neck of Victim Number Four) it would suddenly, and not without some coyness, switch to some entirely unrelated matter. (Was the reader aware that an IQ test had been given him in prison? That his score had been gauged as being close to that of Jonas Salk?) By far the major portion of the book was devoted to spinsterish discourses on prison life-bad food, hijinks in the exercise yard, tedious little jailbird hobbies. It was a waste of five dollars.
In a certain way, though, I know how my colleague feels. Not that everything "went black," nothing of the sort; only that the event itself is cloudy because of some primitive, numbing effect that obscured it at the time; the same effect, I suppose, that enables panicked mothers to swim icy rivers, or rush into burning houses, for a child; the effect that occasionally allows a deeply bereaved person to make it through a funeral without a single tear. Some things are too terrible to grasp at once. Other things-naked, sputtering, indelible in their horror-are too terrible to really ever grasp at all. It is only later, in solitude, in memory, that the realization dawns: when the ashes are cold; when the mourners have departed; when one looks around and finds oneself-quite to one's surprise-in an entirely different world.
When we got back to the car it had not begun to snow, but already the woods shrank beneath the sky, hushed and waiting, as if they could sense the weight of the ice that would be on them by nightfall.
"Christ, look at this mud," said Francis as we bounced through yet another pothole, brown spray striking the window with a thick rataplan.
Henry shifted down into first.
Another pothole, one that rattled the teeth in my head. As we tried to come out of it the tires whined, kicking up fresh splatters of mud, and we fell back into it with a jolt. Henry swore, and put the car in reverse.
Francis rolled down his window and craned his head outside to see. "Oh, Jesus," I heard him say. "Stop the car. There's no way we're going to-"
"We're not stuck."
"Yes we are. You're making it worse. Christ, Henry. Stop the-"
"Shut up," Henry said.
The tires whined in the back. The twins, sitting on either side of me, turned to look out the rear window at the muddy spray. Abruptly, Henry shifted into first, and with a sudden leap that made my heart glad we were clear of the hole.
Francis slumped back in his seat. He was a cautious driver, and riding in the car with Henry, even in the most propitious of circumstances, made him nervous.
Once in town, we drove to Francis's apartment. The twins and I were to split up and walk home-me to campus, the twins to their apartment-while Henry and Francis took care of the car. Henry turned off the engine. The silence was eerie, jolting.
He looked at me in the rear-view mirror. "We need to talk a minute," he said.
"What is it?"
"When did you leave your room?"
"About a quarter of three."
"Did anyone see you?"
"Not really. Not that I know of."
Cooling down after its long drive, the car ticked and hissed and settled contentedly on its frame. Henry was silent for a moment, and he was about to speak when Francis suddenly pointed out the window. "Look," he said. "Is that snow?"
The twins leaned low to see. Henry, biting his lower lip, paid no attention. "The four of us," he said, at last, "were at a matinee at the Orpheum in town-a double feature that ran from one o'clock to four-fifty-five. Afterwards we went on a short drive, returning-" he checked his watch-"at five-fifteen. That accounts for us, all right. I'm not sure what to do about you."
"Why can't I say I was with you?"
"Because you weren't."
"Who'll know the difference?"
"The ticket girl at the Orpheum, that's who. We went down and bought tickets for the afternoon show, paid for them with a hundred-dollar bill. She remembers us, I can assure you of that. We sat in the balcony and slipped out the emergency exit about fifteen minutes into the first movie."
"Why couldn't I have met you there?"
"You could have, except you don't have a car. And you can't say you took a cab because that can be easily checked. Besides, you were out walking around. You say you were in Commons before you met us?"
"Yes."
"Then I suppose there's nothing you can say except that you went straight home. It's not an ideal story, but at this point you don't have any alternative to speak of. We'll have to imagine you met up with us at some point after the movie, in the quite likely event that someone has seen you. Say we called you at five o'clock and met you in the parking lot. You rode with us to Francis's-really, this doesn't follow very smoothly, but it'll have to do-and walked home again."
"All right."
"When you get home, check downstairs in case any phone messages were left for you between three-thirty and five. If there were, we'll have to think of some reason why you didn't take the calls."
"Look, you guys," Charles said. "It's really snowing."
Tiny flakes, just visible at the tops of the pines.
"One more thing," said Henry. "We don't want to behave as if we're waiting around to hear some momentous piece of news. Go home. Read a book. I don't think we ought to try to contact one another tonight-unless, of course, it's absolutely necessary."
"I've never seen it snow this late in the year." Francis was looking out the window. "Yesterday it was nearly seventy degrees."
"Were they predicting that?" Charles said.
"Not that I heard."
"Christ. Look at this. It's almost Easter."
"I don't see why you're so excited," Henry said crossly. He had a pragmatic, farmer-like knowledge of how weather conditions affected growth, germination, blooming times, et cetera. "It's just going to kill all the flowers."
I walked home fast, because I was cold. A November stillness was settling like a deadly oxymoron on the April landscape. Snow was falling in earnest now-big silent petals drifting through the springtime woods, white bouquets segueing into snowy dark: a nightmarish topsy-turvy land, something from a story book. My path took me beneath a row of apple trees, full-blown and luminous, shivering in the twilight like an avenue of pale umbrellas. The big white flakes wafted through them, dreamy and soft. I did not stop to look, however, only hurried beneath them even faster. My winter in Hampden had given me a horror of snow.
There were no messages for me downstairs. I went up to my room, changed my clothes, couldn't decide what to do with the ones I'd taken off, thought of washing them, wondered if it might look suspicious, finally stuffed them all at the very bottom of my laundry bag. Then I sat down on my bed and looked at the clock.
It was time for dinner and I hadn't eaten all day but I wasn't hungry. I went to the window and watched the snowflakes whirl in the high arcs of light above the tennis courts, then crossed over and sat upon my bed again.
Minutes ticked by. Whatever anesthesia had carried me through the event was starting to wear off and with each passing second the thought of sitting around all night, alone, was seeming more and more unbearable. I turned on the radio, switched it off, tried to read. When I found I couldn't hold my attention on one book I tried another. Scarcely ten minutes had passed. I picked up the first book and put it down again. Then, against my better judgment, I went downstairs to the pay phone and dialed Francis's number.