Everything Beautiful Began After

Chapter Twenty-Eight.

The small fist of anger in George"s throat loosened.

"I"m just sad, is all," George said. "I really-"

"I know," Henry said. "But let"s try and work it out."

For the rest of the morning, the professor made continual remarks about what a coincidence it was that George and Rebecca knew each other.

Then over lunch he went on about the various coincidences he"d encountered in his life, and how he"d experienced several especially complex ones in the Sinai Desert in 1974-which to this day, he had no explanation for but which continued to plague him.



George laughed out of courtesy.

Rebecca spent part of the morning with Henry in his pit, watching him sc.r.a.pe away the dirt with patient hope. Then she went to visit George in the tent.

"h.e.l.lo," she said.

"h.e.l.lo," George said without looking up from his dictionary.

"Are you okay?"

"Not really," George said. "But it"s clear why you like him." Then he looked up at Rebecca. "I"d break up with me for him too."

"Oh, George, I never broke up with you."

"I know," George sighed. "Even though we slept together, we were never together."

Rebecca wanted to touch his hand, but was too afraid of what he might say next.

"And I"m not ready to give up drinking," he said.

She stood over him for a few moments and then went back outside.

George worked on various shards and plates for the rest of the day. Every so often he would consult his books, holding open the pages with washed stones. The professor brought hot cups of tea and digestive biscuits every half hour, and then read the translations over George"s shoulder.

Over tea, Professor Peterson complimented George on the sensitivity of his work. And then, at exactly 3:00 p.m., the professor gave them all a little wine and they stopped working. George gulped his wine mercilessly. The professor poured him another and said, "Steady on, George."

Rebecca and Henry watched.

Outside the tent, the sky was getting dark.

"I haven"t seen clouds like that in a long time," Professor Peterson remarked, looking out through a raised tent flap. "There"s going to be one blighter of a storm."

"Will it be soggy in the pit tomorrow if it rains?" Rebecca asked.

"Probably not," Professor Peterson replied. "The sun dries everything up rather quickly. Still, it"s not ideal for various reasons I won"t go into-but which in actual fact are the very reasons I"m ordering the three of you to go island hopping."

"Island hopping?" Henry asked.

"But what about the trays?" George asked. "There"s still so much to do."

"Those artifacts have been here for approximately twenty-seven hundred years, George. I don"t think another day will make any difference to them-though the fact that it does make a difference to you makes a difference to me, if that makes sense."

"Are you really giving us the day off?" Henry asked.

"Yes. I"m even going to pay you-all of you."

"Even me?" Rebecca said. The professor nodded.

"What"s the catch?" Henry said.

"No catch," replied the professor with a wink. "But I have to leave Athens for a day, so get to know each other even better and then come back ready to find the rest of that Lydian woman"s bones."

By the time they finished talking, clouds had swallowed up the tent.

Athens was no longer a nest of lights in the distance, but a place that had to be conjured by memory.

As they were tying up the tent flaps, a few drops fell with soft, heavy thuds against the fabric.

"To the Renault!" shouted Professor Peterson. "We"re evacuating."

"I"ll ride my scooter if you take these two," Henry suggested.

"Leave it here, and I"ll pick you up the day after tomorrow-you"ll get killed in this weather."

They all squeezed into the Renault 16, and then opened the two umbrellas Professor Peterson kept in the backseat to ward off anything falling through the sunroof, whether it be rain or snow or volcanic ash.

The engine spluttered and then died. Professor Peterson turned the key again, and with several small explosions, he put the car in gear.

"We"ll coast down the hill and hope it starts properly as we roll onto the motorway."

Driving back to Athens was easy. Most cars had pulled to the sides of the road. The windshield was so steamed up, however, that the professor had to requisition one of George"s socks to wipe the condensation.

As they neared Henry"s apartment, the professor asked George where he wanted to be dropped.

"Drop him off with us," Henry said.

"But I really should catch up on my reading," George protested. "I should go home."

Rebecca"s mouth flickered.

"We"re all in this together now," Henry said, looking at Rebecca. "I suppose you could call it fate or something."

George looked out into a drowning world. In the reflection of the gla.s.s he could see the outline of a man, a few lines, a specter suspended by light and dark, by falling rain. A life that was yet to be decided, despite everything that had already happened, every moment is yet to be decided and connected to the one before it by illusions.

Chapter Twenty-Eight.

As the professor pulled up to the curb, the rain was falling fast in hard drops.

"See you boys day after tomorrow at six sharp," he shouted.

"Six?" Henry protested.

"Of course. We have to make up for lost time. As for you, my dear," he said, extending his hand to Rebecca, "it was a genuine pleasure."

Rebecca kissed him on the cheek. They all rushed from the car into Henry"s building. The professor chugged away in such a low gear that a taxi behind him swerved and almost hit a telephone booth where a man and his dog were sheltering.

Once inside, they toweled their hair dry at the kitchen table while Henry made Greek coffee. Rebecca switched on the radio. The only station Henry received with the least crackle played cla.s.sical music.

"It"s one of the French Suites," George said as music filled the apartment.

"What?" Henry asked.

"It"s Bach"s French Suites."

"Turn it up then," Henry said.

They listened with towels on their heads.

"Very beautiful," Rebecca said. "It makes your hot, humid apartment seem like a grand palace in Vienna."

"What do you think, George?" Henry said, giving Rebecca a cigarette. "Is she full of it or what?"

George shrugged. "I think I might go home."

Rebecca nodded.

"No," Henry said. "Please don"t go home."

George looked at the floor and moved his feet around. "You two have each other-and it"s clear why, so what do you need me around for? You don"t owe me anything."

He stood, but Henry blocked his path. "No," he said. "I want both of you here."

George picked up his bag.

"I"m f.u.c.king serious," Henry shouted, standing in front of George. "I really, really want you to stay. I know it"s selfish, George, but please let"s just try and work this out-don"t discard me because of a weird coincidence."

"It"s hard," George said. "I just didn"t expect it to turn out like this."

Then Rebecca spoke. "You haven"t lost anything, George. Think about it-you have my friendship and now you have Henry"s."

"I don"t know-I feel like I"ve lost something."

"You have," Henry said. "You"ve lost the excuse to be alone."

"Then why do I feel more alone?"

Henry shook his head. "But you have us."

George finally sat back down.

"Just imagine how happy we can all be if somehow this ends up being okay," Henry pleaded.

George nodded, but seemed unconvinced.

"You said I was like your long-lost brother," Henry said. "Was that just bulls.h.i.t?"

"No," George said.

Henry put his hands on George"s shoulders.

"So let me take care of you-let"s share a hundred afternoons looking through old books," Henry said. Then he turned to Rebecca. "I want to take care of both of you."

George looked down at his hands.

They all sat listening to the rain.

"Why don"t you start taking care of us by taking George and me out for dinner?" Rebecca said finally.

Water dripped from the balconies and gushed in small rivers to iron grates. Any oranges that had lain in gutters now bobbed against the drains. The only way to tell if the rain had stopped was to watch pa.s.sing cars for the swish of wipers.

George"s shirt was still too wet to wear, and so Henry went to his room to find another one. A few minutes later, he came back holding a white cotton shirt with French cuffs.

"This was a gift from someone special, and I just got it back from the dry cleaners. I think you should wear it."

"Okay," George said, inspecting it. "And it"s my favorite brand."

"Then it should fit you perfectly."

George squeezed into the shirt.

Rebecca watched.

After drinking two bottles of Greek wine, they descended in the slow elevator. Henry argued they should all stay at his apartment on account of the weather and how it would be better if they were going to catch an early boat to one of the islands.

"Are we really going?" George asked.

"Of course we are," Henry laughed. "We"re young and free, and all this is fine."

"Strange that we are all together like this," Rebecca said. "Like we"re the only three people left in the world."

George stopped at a kiosk to buy a large can of beer. The others waited. Then Rebecca walked ahead slowly.

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