McGrath told him. Everything.
At some point the blackened creature entered the room, but McGrath was unaware of its presence till he had completed his story. Then, from behind him, he heard it say, "You are a remarkable person. Not one living person in a million has ever seen the Thanatos mouth. Not one in a hundred million has felt the pa.s.sage of the soul. Not one in the memory of the human race has been so tormented that he thought it was real, and not a dream."
McGrath stared at the creature. It came lumbering across the room and stood just behind the old man"s chair, not touching him. The old man sighed, and closed his eyes.
The creature said, "This was Josef Le Braz, who lived and worked and cared for his fellow man, and woman. He saved lives, and he married out of love, and he pledged himself to leave the world slightly better for his pa.s.sage. And his wife died, and he fell into a well of melancholy such as no man had ever suffered. And one night he woke, feeling a chill, but he did not see the Thanatos mouth. All he knew was that he missed his wife so terribly that he wanted to end his life."
McGrath sat silently. He had no idea what this meant, this history of the desolate figure under the lap robe. But he waited, because if no help lay here in this house, of all houses secret and open in the world, then he knew that the next step for him was to buy a gun and to disperse the gray mist under which he lived.
Le Braz looked up. He drew in a deep breath and turned his eyes to McGrath. "I went to the machine," he said. "I sought the aid of the circuit and the chip. I was cold, and could never stop crying. I missed her so, it was unbearable."
The creature came around the wingback and stood over McGrath. "He brought her back from the Other Side."
McGrath"s eyes widened. He understood.
The room was silent, building to a crescendo. He tried to get off the low stool, but he couldn"t move. The creature stared down at him with its one gorgeous blue eye and its one unseeing milky marble. "He deprived her of peace. Now she must live on, in this half-life.
"This is Josef Le Braz, and he cannot support his guilt."
The old man was crying now. McGrath thought if one more tear was shed in the world he would say to h.e.l.l with it and go for the gun. "Do you understand?" the old man said softly.
"Do you take the point?" the creature said.
McGrath"s hands came up, open and empty. "The mouth ... the wind..."
"The function of dream sleep," the creature said, "is to permit us to live. To flense the mind of that which dismays us. Otherwise, how could we bear the sorrow? The memories are their legacy, the parts of themselves left with us when they depart. But they are not whole, they are joys crying to be reunited with the one to whom they belong. You have seen the Thanatos mouth, you have felt a loved one departing. It should have freed you."
McGrath shook his head slowly, slowly. No, it didn"t free me, it enslaved me, it torments me. No, slowly, no. I cannot bear it.
"Then you do not yet take the point, do you?"
The creature touched the old man"s sunken cheek with a charred twig that had been a hand. The old man tried to look up with affection, but his head would not come around. "You must let it go, all of it," Le Braz said. "There is no other answer. Let it go ... let _them_ go. Give them back the parts they need to be whole on the Other Side, and let them in the name of kindness have the peace to which they are ent.i.tled."
"Let the mouth open," the creature said. "We cannot abide here. Let the wind of the soul pa.s.s through, and take the emptiness as release." And she said, "Let me tell you what it"s like on the Other Side. Perhaps it will help."
McGrath laid a hand on his side. It hurt terribly, as of legions battering for release on a locked door.
He retraced his steps. He went back through previous days as if he were sleepwalking. _I don"t see it here anywhere._ He stayed at the ranch-style house in Hidden Hills, and helped Anna Picket as best he could. She drove him back to the city, and he picked up his car from the street in front of the office building on Pico. He put the three parking tickets in the glove compartment. That was work for the living. He went back to his apartment, and he took off his clothes, and he bathed. He lay naked on the bed where it had all started, and he tried to sleep. There were dreams. Dreams of smiling faces, and dreams of children he had known. Dreams of kindness, and dreams of hands that had held him.
And sometime during the long night a breeze blew.
But he never felt it.
And when he awoke, it was cooler in the world than it had been for a very long time; and when he cried for them, he was, at last, able to say goodbye.
*A man is what he does with his attention.*
_John Ciardi_