The
Intoxication of Thought
by Brian
Panhuyzen
"What did you do in the
summer?" asked the Ant.
"I played and sang," groaned the Grasshopper.
Aesop's Fables, "The Grasshopper and the Ant" |
Brady winces each time Helen uses the microwave oven.
She is precise about it, knows the times well, fifty seconds to warm a
coffee, a minute forty for hot chocolate, three twenty for a bowl of
pasta. Brady thinks that she may be using it more often than usual, then
retracts the thought guiltily. He is being oversensitive because of the
contest. He and Henry are competing to achieve the lowest electric bill.
Helen reheats a coffee she doesn't want because it
annoys Brady. She can see him from the corner of her eye, sees his vexed
stare as she takes the coffee out of the oven and sniffs it, frowning.
Brady's head follows her around the kitchen. She sits
down at the table, letting her eyes fall on the newspaper's front page.
It's a local paper, full of gossip and outrage at events that would be
trivial in the city. A convenience store is going to offer adult videos;
the bridge is to be painted green. Brady stands paralyzed, trapped in an
equilibrium of desires. He wants to avoid conflict with Helen; he wants
to go back to the hockey game; he wants to win the contest. For a moment
he can feel these forces distinctly, like wires, suspending him at the
kitchen door. Then one force overcomes the others and he reels forward
barking, Make a new one! Make a new one! The candles cast shadows on his
unshaven face, deepen the craters of his eyes. He turns fast and stomps
into the livingroom where he has been listening to the game on a tiny
pocket radio. In the light of a single candle he clamps his eyes shut
and escapes into the battery-powered hiss.
Helen boils the kettle, smiling. The steam rolls up,
homemade clouds, fiery gold in the candlelight, and she inhales, feeling
them glaze her dry throat. The wood stove is a desert sun, roasting the
air so that it crackles when she moves. They should run the Bionaire.
She pours water through the coffee basket, her face in the steam and
fragrance, and is overwhelmed by a deep euphoria, like a helium balloon
suddenly liberated.
This is Helen's ESP. She cannot predict the future but
she can sense, over a great distance, one aspect of the present: she
knows when someone dear to her is dying. The knowledge affects her as a
contradiction, a period of intense euphoria, a wave of well-being and
elation.
Three summers ago Brady's grandmother died. She was an
ancient, thin-boned woman, and a great fan of science fiction. She had
read nothing outside the genre in thirty years, and passed away the day
she began reading The Grapes of Wrath.
Helen and Brady were at the cottage. Helen was sitting
on the dock, legs dangling in the lake, the sun near zenith and Brady
thirty metres out in the rowboat, gazing at the end of his fishing rod
as if at a sophisticated machine that had ceased to function. A sense of
exaltation filled her belly like warm liquor. She gasped at first,
surprised at its intensity, then slipped into the water until her feet
touched the sand and the surface was just beneath her nose. The aromatic
water pressed against her, accepting her slow dance, limbs untangling
like the tendrils of an aquatic plant.
That night the phone's ring cut through the evening
murmur, silencing the cricket hidden in the magazine rack. Brady
answered, and Helen could hear the frantic chipmunk chatter of his
sister, broken by his chirped replies: Yep. Nope. Yep.
Last year Helen's brother died of a massive heart
attack while performing a coronary bypass. Helen was on the highway, and
when the ecstasy overcame her she had to pull onto the shoulder and rest
her head on the steering wheel while trucks thundered past, shaking the
car with their giant breath.
This clairvoyant rapture accompanied the death of her
father an ocean away. After that another episode sent her to the
obituaries, where she learned of the passing of a favourite professor.
She finally experienced it directly as the veterinarian withdrew the
needle and Lupo sighed beneath her palms.
Was it their spirits, suddenly liberated, passing
through her, reassuring her?
Now, as she runs her hand through the kettle's steam,
the feeling billows through her like a cloud, inflating her with
euphoria. For several seconds she savours the drunkenness, this warm
glow, while dread throbs in the background, until in a sudden fit of
desperation she throws open the kitchen door and pitches herself into
the snow.
It is thirty-one degrees below zero Celsius. Helen
lies face down, cold stabbing at her skin but evaded by the delight in
her gut. She rolls onto her back, the air stinging her face, and gazes
up at the little cottage, the curve of a snowdrift as elegant as a
swan's neck against the log wall. There is no wind, and fat snowflakes
fall in slow motion through the rectangle of light cast by the open
door. The air is silent, gagged by the cold.
Brady appears at the open door, draws back.
-Helen? he calls, then, Jesus! and hauls her limp body
up the steps and into the livingroom. He coils her onto the sofa and
rushes back to shut the kitchen door. Helen is panting, feeling the snow
in her hair becoming pearls of water.
-What were you . . . I mean why did you . . . ? Brady
was once very articulate.
Helen lies on her side and doesn't look up, knows that
she looks possessed, staring unblinking at the coasters on the coffee
table. The radio is hissing. It is in the kitchen where Brady dropped
it. He strains to hear it, takes a step towards the kitchen door. Helen
watches him. She notes his sense of duty wrestling with his desire to
investigate the excitement, and decides to release him. -I think I'll go
to bed, she whispers, then rises unsteadily and heads upstairs.
-You're okay? Helen, you're okay, right? I'll be up
pretty soon. He follows her to the bottom of the stairs, watches her
climb a few steps before retreating to the kitchen.
Helen lights the candle at the top of the stairs,
tucks it beneath the glass shade. She moves to the bathroom, her shadow
rippling across black-and-white photographs of Brady's family, 1922,
1936, 1943, a chronology of summer vacations and Christmas visits, of
the cottage's changing facade, of the generations of his family that
have vacationed here. The silence outside permeates the walls, mingles
with the dry air. The wooden floors creak under he feet, muffled here
and there by a throw rug.
She closes the bathroom door and splashes her face
with hot water. Her skin stings and she wonders about frostbite.
The bedroom is cozy, antique wood, the brass bed
arching like a fat loaf of bread beneath its down quilt. Helen undresses
slowly and moves naked through the room, enjoying the view of her
candlelit body in the mirror. The euphoric feeling is there but muted;
she touches her belly and breasts, the mane of red hair, her bottom lip,
then backs towards the bed, reaches behind her and clutches the white
quilt with each hand, makes a little dance of pulling it back,
continuing to face her reflection.
A tiny blade of cold air cuts across her shoulder and
she recoils, pressing her skin there. The cottage shudders as a gust of
wind flings off the frozen lake. Helen blows out the candle and buries
herself in the quilt. There is a leak in the room, a split in the window
frame through which the wind sometimes trespasses.
Lying in a fetal curl she listens for more wind, but
it is gone; the cold has resumed its grip. Intoxication coils around her
like a vapour, spreads her flat on the bed. She feels the texture of the
linen pressing against her skin, on her shoulders and nipples and hips;
she pushes her hands into her hair and squirms to feel the sheets'
caress.
Sometime in the night Brady arrives, groggy and
grumpy, and climbs under the covers, his feet like cold steel. Helen
rolls out of bed and goes to the bathroom, finding the route through
touch. It is utterly silent beyond the stream of urine and the toilet's
flush. She goes downstairs to sit at the kitchen table. Her breathing is
deep and even. She puts on trackpants and a sweater, climbs into her
snowmobile suit, collects her helmet, and slips outside.
It is moonless and overcast, but snow blue-bright, the
trees a jagged cage in every direction but one: on the east spreads the
lake, an enormous plain of blue fenced in by pine. Helen brushes off the
snowmobile's vinyl cover and peels it back, watches the flakes as they
salt the black seat. She mounts the machine and glances once at the
bedroom window before starting the engine. It is like a great voice, the
man of the land clearing his throat, but she knows that Brady has been
drinking beer and his sleep is as thick as the night. She twists the
throttle and the machine lurches forward. A wedge of light cuts before
her and as she accelerates onto the lake's white surface she imagines
the sound as heard in the cottage, a burst fading rapidly into a distant
drone, smothered by the falling snow.
The snowflakes are stars, illuminated by the halogen
beam, the snowmobile a spacecraft carrying her away from this world. The
throttle twists under her palm; she knows the danger of buckled ice and
phantom ridges but cannot resist. The wind coils under her chin and
bites through her scarf.
She must circle the island, now just an outcropping of
rock and vegetation in an otherwise flat land, to get to the level area
on its north side. A black crater in the snow, the rolling waves of
snowmobile prints muted by the fresh fall, three rough logs, two metres
long each, arranged around the meeting pit. Embers, still warm from the
party, extinguish the falling flakes and burn a gaping wound in the
snow. A little steam still rises in the headlamp.
Helen steps off the machine and shuts it down. The
headlamp fades with the engine but the expected silence and darkness
don't come. Helen, her senses vivified by the night, hears the whisper
of falling snow and sees the gentle radiation glow of the landscape. She
sits on one of the logs with her ankles crossed, as she sat here with
the others just seven hours ago. . . .
***
Across the fire Gail and Beck, who have been married
thirteen years, are separated by centimetres, by thoughts, as they stare
into the flames. There is a telepathic link there, and Helen imagines it
as a crisscross of light between them, shafts connecting their brains
and bodies. Henry is there, talking as usual.
-The Red Delicious is the weakest apple of all. There
are the Spartans, the Ida Reds, the McIntoshes. All much stronger,
tastier. But marketing has made the Red Delicious a big seller. Red
Delicious are red, yes, that's obvious from their appearance. Well,
people think, "delicious" is also in their name, so they must
be.
-But why make such a fuss? Brady asks, leaning
forward, his breath an orange fog around his face. -If people want to
buy Red Delicious, let 'em.
-Think of all the other apples that could be grown.
The good ones. The Empires, Henry replies. -Think! He touches his temple
with the mouth of the mickey, drinks.
Henry's rants irritate Helen. He tries to catch her
eye during them; she looks away, sees the fire, her mitten, a snowflake.
He wants to gauge her reaction but she gives him none. She has examined
her expressions in the mirror, knows how each feels, has exquisite
control over them. She gives him nothing.
He watches the flames and is inspired by a new topic.
-Earth has always been saturated with background radiation, whether
cosmic or domestic in nature. When the Earth was young everything exuded
a lethal glow of radioactivity. This had to subside before life could
evolve, before primordial organisms would hold together. That radiation
has been dropping ever since, but it's important to note its positive
effects. Ionizing radiation causes mutation, which is the cornerstone of
evolution. Without it we would never have evolved.
-Creativity is like evolution. It is caused by
mutation, by imperfections in the thought process. Neuroses of various
kinds are the source of this mutation, whether they are generated by
chemical or emotional imbalance. Why are so many artists crazy? Van Gogh
and Mozart? It's the background radiation. What makes them nuts makes
them creative. The artist's brain is like a young Earth, gamma rays
saturating its surface, bringing new organisms into being. . . .
This theory excites Helen, reminds her of the kinds of
things Brady used to say, the way he once was: cerebral, contemplative.
Now she looks at Henry, but he has his head tilted
back, the mouth of the bottle at his chin, and is studying the waves and
contours of the overcast sky. Brady is usually silent after these
diatribes. Helen wonders, wants to ask him if he still has such
thoughts, but she knows his answer to such things. A snicker, then, Why?
Do you? Always turning it back to her. He hasn't answered a question in
years.
-Has either of yous guys looked at your hydro meters
lately? Beck asks. -I got some cash riding on you, Henry.
-Mmm. I haven't looked yet.
-Brady checks every hour, Helen reports. -He would
drag a deck chair up to it and sit there with a beer if it were warmer.
-I'd never let Beck play along. I love my electric
blanket, Gail says. -Well, Brady gets mad if I get a bright idea! Helen
cries. Everyone laughs, including Brady. It reminds Helen of the trio of
them at university: Henry the Geographer, Brady the Anthropologist,
Helen the Psychologist. None pursued their interest after graduation.
Brady became a schoolteacher. Helen took a job as a veterinarian's
assistant. Helen and Brady married. Henry moved two hours north to the
rickety cabin he still occupies.
On the ice there in the middle of a lake, with her
friends packed into the warmth of snowsuits and Scotch, Helen stares
into the fire's heart and tries to trace the path of her life. It was
once a thread that banked around obstacles, bent and twisted where
necessary, the lifeline of Theseus after slaying the Minotaur, the way
to freedom. Now it is fragments, useless bits of string, unrelated
instances split by tiny disasters, insignificant occurrences that
conspire to ravage the path, leave it unnavigable.
She wonders why Brady changed, then considers the
possibility that it wasn't him at all. She has always been self-critical
to a fault. She knows this, has read about it in the psychology texts,
has decided it is the best way to be.
Two years ago there was an opportunity to change
paths. . . .
***
She was driving him to town. Late August, autumn a
tiny kindling of fire in the tips of the trees. Henry was and always
would be poor.
-This year I will have a warm winter, he said. -I'm
going to seal every wall with plastic. Then I'm going to put up some
fibreglass insulation. Then inside walls. If you yuppies ever give up on
woodburning stoves I might be able to afford one myself. Instead of the
exorbitant cost of electric heat. But first, the walls. It'll be a huge
improvement.
-Over what?
-Over what I have now. I will be a warmer person.
-I thought you liked being cold.
-Being cold or feeling cold?
-Yes.
He was silent, watching the highway roll under the
car. He twisted and sat sideways in his seat to face Helen and said, Do
you remember in university, you used to insist that you never lie. Is
that still true?
-Yes. I don't lie. Why should I?
-I have a theory. Now, don't roll your eyes. Just
listen. Let the thought intoxicate you for once. There's this depth. The
depth of lies.
-Look, Henry, you won't be able to impress me with any
of your tall tales. I have worked with emotionally disturbed people,
some who haven't told the truth in a decade. They lie about everything.
Their name. Age. The time of day.
-Truth is the opposite of lies. Truth is what is. But
think about what isn't. Your car is blue, but what isn't it? Red. Green.
Brown. Purple. There is a dimension to lies. The truth is planar, a
featureless two-dimensional landscape. But untruth. That is everywhere
else. How can you limit yourself to such a tiny range of experience?
-So you're saying lies will enrich my life? Make me a
better person?
-Better person. Why does everyone want to be a better
person? It's not like the pay goes up. He pulled a tape from his breast
pocket, slid it into the tape machine. -Voodoo drums, he said, adjusting
the volume, sending the thundering rhythm through the car, beating away
at the wind from the windows. -Turn here.
She signalled the left, still a kilometre from the
exit to town. They entered the provincial park; she drove dangerously
fast on the winding road cut between birch and aspen. At the park office
she bought a day pass; it was midweek and the park was empty. She drove
deep into the park, past the open sites, into one on a secluded roadway.
When she pulled the car in she turned off the engine. The drums cut out
briefly and her eyelids fluttered, the spell subsiding. His hand was on
hers, turning the key backwards. The drums exploded again, then his
hands were on her shoulders, she gripped his head, pulled his mouth
towards hers, and they fell into a struggle to possess the other's body,
the kiss and lick and bite of flesh, the flutter of sunlight on skin.
On the drive home he insisted on preserving the drums,
flipped the tape. They reached his cabin; with its sinking roof and sad
windows it looked as if it were melting in the afternoon sun. After a
kiss, after a squeeze of her breast, the music was the last thing he
took.
As she was heading back along the gravel road to her
own cottage, left with a distant country music station bitten by static,
a fox darted out from the foliage leaning in from the shoulder of the
single-lane road. There was a thump and she stomped on the brake. She
got out and stood, listening to the mumbling of the engine and the hiss
of the wind through the tall trees, then walked around the vehicle,
looked cautiously underneath, and finally tried to peer into the thick
underbrush. Nothing. Satisfied that the noise had come from a bump on
the rough road, she climbed back in the car and drove on, but couldn't
help the nagging thought that the animal may have been mortally injured
and crawled off to die somewhere in the forest.
By the time she returned to the cottage the guilt of
her liaison had obscured the incident.
-Did Henry get his insulation? Brady asked.
-No, he forgot his wallet, she responded.
The world expanded and for a week it held new
dimensions. In Brady's universe she was the sullen thinker, setting out
each dawn in the canoe for a secluded bay across the lake. In her own
she became the ecstatic lover who filled Henry's cabin with the creak of
the door, the floorboards, the bed.
***
Motion startles her. Silhouettes of dogs scamper
around her, maintaining a radius of curiosity. Long legs, thick coats,
they trot past, turn, pass again. Wolves. Helen watches them, doesn't
move. How many are there? She takes two swift steps, straddles the
snowmobile, and guns the engine. The sound slams across the lake and the
headlight casts a beam on a grey wolf that is standing directly in front
of the machine. The wolf's eyes turn into the light and its retinas
erupt in gold. Helen looks into the animal's eyes and they stare at each
other for several seconds before the wolf swings a great jaw skyward and
howls. The other wolves cease their pacing and join in. As a chorus of
voices ignites the air Helen wrenches the throttle and swerves around
the lead wolf, heading for home.
Suddenly they are all around her, seven or eight of
them, running beside the snowmobile. They cut in front of her so she has
to bank away. She thinks she will run one down if necessary, but cannot,
continues to turn the machine as they race before her, until she is on a
new bearing that will take her directly across the lake. Towards Henry's
cabin. Once she is aligned, once she recognizes the hill on which his
cabin hunches, the animals dissolve into the night.
The snowmobile bites its way up the slope towards the
cottage, and as she pulls in beside Henry's own rusting machine and
turns off the engine, the silence, undamaged by the scream of her
journey, flows in like water. She can see slits of light between the
cabin's cracks. He must be reading.
The creak of her snowsuit, her boots through the
drifts. There is a telephone pole with a blue mercury lamp, white-blue
like actinic snow. Her eyes follow the conduit from the pole to the side
of the cabin. She veers away from the door, walks to where the power
line and the cabin meet, at the hydro meter. The disk that spins to
reflect power consumption is still. There must be candles or a hurricane
lamp inside.
She stands before the frozen meter, knows that Henry
has won the contest. Brady, unscrewing lightbulbs and shutting down the
water heater at night, never stood a chance. Henry has turned off his
electricity.
Helen knows that Henry would appreciate the two worlds
that exist for her in this moment.
In the first he is alive.
A silence deeper than the air and snow, deeper than
this night, seeps out through the cracks of his cabin.
Brian
Panhuyzen is a writer of fiction and avant garde poetry. His book
The Death of the Moon was published in the Spring of 1999 by Cormorant
Books. He also designs books and flies airplanes. |