The "O" in "NOW"
The
“O” in “Now”
Time
present and time past
Are
both perhaps present in time future,
And
time future contained in time past.
If
all time is eternally present
All
time is unredeemable.
(From
T.S. Eliot, Burnt Norton)
Were there no
dog doing odd gyrations in the street in front of the post office,
Sol would spend less time on the balcony and the unbelievable
coincidence would not happen. The purpose behind the canine’s
pirouetting is of no particular interest to Sol; it's the spectacle
that rivets him. Over the tips of the spruce trees backgrounding the
post office, sun dogs form tall pillars as if framing the red brick
of that ancient structure—with the date of its nativity, 1902,
above the shiny aluminum-and-glass doors. So anachronistic, it seems
to Sol, and so not in keeping with the stateliness of the Victorian
flounces and curlicues, the arched windows.
Sol lights a
second cigarette; the dog—a nervous rat terrier—stops his dance
long enough to raise a leg to the mailbox beside the long ramp to the
post office’s porch. A distant thud, as of a tire being thrown into
the box of a pickup truck freezes the terrier, then sends him dashing
down Spurgeon Street to the south. Sol stubs his half-smoked
cigarette in the ash tray on the wicker table and prepares to leave
the balcony.
(In a
parallel universe, perhaps, the dog is a white and brown collie, and
Sol is spelled ѼѫӘ1
and ѼѫӘ stubs out a
purple cigar before . . ..)
Halfway
through the balcony door, Sol and (possibly, ѼѫӘ) stop
momentarily as the glint of sunlight reflecting off a piece of glass
or metal or polished zircon lying in the street strikes them
precisely in the eye, as if God, or (ĦǮ,
perhaps) is winking.
Sol
believes that he knows there is no God; (maybe ѼѫӘ stopped
believing in ĦǮ2
a millennium or two ago.) Neither interprets the shaft of light to
have any particular meaning. Both would have to know, though, that
the incident of the perfectly-timed sunrise and the chance of the
piece of glass or metal or polished zircon in the street flashing
precisely into an almost-departed eye is of the magnitude of one in
many, many trillions. But if a thing can happen, then somewhere, at
some time, it will. And if it can happen once, it will happen
countless times.
Or
not. Sol is not sure. If there is one universe, then there must be
many; also, if there is one gyrating dog, then there are too many to
comprehend and it follows further that at any given instant, millions
of men are throwing millions of tires into the backs of millions of
pickup trucks while in earshot of gyrating dogs and smoking men on
balconies at sunrise.
Sandra
is never up early enough to witness sunrise except from October to
March, when earth’s sun makes but a cold, slow, five-minute meander
across the southern sky. Sandra expends no thought on parallel
universes, on staggering odds or even on the certainty that at 39,
she is half way between one oblivion and the next. Sandra sees her
life with Sol and her two grown sons as a nearly-never-ending
journey, the best of which is hopefully yet-to-come, or maybe not.
The existential is of no interest to Sandra. She tells Sol repeatedly
that he sits too much, doesn't eat properly, should quit smoking and
. . . and. Sandra is a breast cancer survivor, her recovery from
surgery and chemo is, to her, a miracle.
(It
was only few minutes ago, it seems, that Sandra reached up onto the
cool countertop in the kitchen and because she was so very hot and
the counter top so refreshingly cool, she push-dragged a chair over,
climbed up onto the counter and lay down, the chill on her cheek, on
her thighs and shins such bliss. Wasn’t that just yesterday. They
say it was at 3:05 pm, July 8, 1984. So why does it feel like this?
“At 3:17 I married Sol and the two boys were born seconds apart
between 4:00 and 4:11.”)
If
statistics meant anything—which to Sandra they don’t—she might
recognize that she may well sicken and die before 7:00 pm curfew.
Sandra would neither think or say this aloud; she would simply say to
her friend, Anne Drew next door, “My! How time flies!”)
She
leaves Sol’s eggs in the pan longer than hers; he hates them runny.
(It’s possible—but unlikely—that ѼѫӘ’s spouse in
some other universe fries eggs, but that they must consume food to
survive—possibly green matter of some kind—is a dead certainty.)
But then, who cares about the colour or the consistency of food . . .
other than Sol, that is?
Sol
fancies himself a thinker, possibly someday even a writer. He’s
read and re-read volumes of short stories by O’Henry, Maupassant,
Oates, his favourite being “A Matter of Chance,” by Vladimir
Nabokov, in which lovers separated already for years by war and
ethnic turmoil end up on the same train by sheer coincidence, she as
a passenger and he as a dining car waiter. By the margin of a step
delayed for part of a second, they don’t meet. The building sorrow
and sense of futility in the man climaxes minutes after the train
stops; he walks out in front of a moving locomotive. (He possibly
walks out in front of a moving locomotive: Nabokov has a tendency
toward ambiguous denouement.)
Sol
has attempted a short story or two, or three, but in the rereading
they always sound stilted and self-conscious, as if he were trying to
copy Nabokov’s style, then O. Henry’s, then Maupassant’s
.
. . and failing utterly at all of them. Also, he can’t explain how
it happens that his clumsy narratives switch from past to present
tense repeatedly, and his narrator keeps shifting from third to first
person—and back again.
What
is left of Nabokov, of course, is a bit of ash and dust in a decaying
box buried in Cimitiére
de Clarens near Montreux, Switzerland.
The dining-car waiter, though, seems to keep on walking out in front
of the locomotive, and if that’s true, Sol thinks, then he most
certainly will be killing himself forever and ever, however long that
might be. (Perhaps—in another universe—the waiter and his lover
meet on the train and are reunited . . . for ever and always. That
story, too, would be eternal, it's denouement equally ambiguous.)
He
once said words to this effect to Sandra; she’d replied that this
would only be true as long as copies of it existed. Sol puzzled over
that in a wakeful night and concluded that the reading of it had
imprinted it on his brain, so the existence of a paper copy would be
redundant to its survival as a story.
In
his mind, Sol retains the video of Sandra whipping egg whites into a
meringue for a lemon pie even while she is saying that “this would
only be true as long as copies of it existed.” Sandra will be
whipping egg whites into a meringue forever.
Sol’s
philosophy prof said that “eternal goes both ways, you know; if
time never ends, then it also never wasn’t.” Sandra has always
been whipping egg whites into meringue—in Sol's universe, at least.
And
Sol thought: The Big Bang is not at the beginning of a line; it must
be at an uncertain and indifferent place on a circle.
He
said this to his roommate in college, Jeffrey Bonorski, who
understood none of it and tried to cover up his ignorance by saying,
“That makes no sense, Solomon.”
And
then there’s the dog, gyrating in front of the post office. Why?
Why there? Why then?
Why
not?
Their
“boys” are James and Matthew, AKA Matt. Matt is the younger of
the two, currently known to be 21; one day Sol changed Matt’s
pungent-smelling diaper and put him to bed, and when they all woke up
on the following day, Sol could smell the suffocating aroma of
marijuana and the even-sharper stench of Matt’s insolence. Matt
went to live with his brother in his apartment just off the
university campus sometime before he was known to be 21; James is an
assistant prof in the education faculty.
Matt
works as a landscaper, mostly laying sod in the summer time and
clearing snow in winter. He talks about civil engineering some day
when he's saved the money to go back to university, not to his father
(talk, that is) but to his mother and his brother, both of whom know
that whatever he earns, he dissipates in bars and gadgets, like
drones and guns. James won't allow either of Matt's collections in
the apartment. The prohibition on anything smoked or snorted means
Matt is “out” a lot, which suits James completely.
On
Matt's birthday—said to be his 12—Sol carried the birthday cake
with burning candles into the dining room where the family was
gathered to celebrate—officially—but more urgently to set up for
a photo op since the grandparents on Sandra's side were holidaying in
Panama City. Sol tripped on the dog. The cake landed candles-down on
the floor.
Things
go wrong but can be remedied. Others can't. A cake, upside-down in
the carpet is the equivalent of a nuclear bomb . . . if those present
feel as they did—on the one hand—that the destroyed cake was
purposeful, that it was a statement father to son. Sandra sees it to
this day as a turning point in the trajectory of Matt's “maturation;”
for Sol that event continues to play on and on, like a looping video;
for as long as there is Matt-consciousness, as long as there is
Sol-consciousness (and the nagging inability to ask for
forgiveness—or to forgive) the cake will continually fall upside
down on the carpet.
And
that will explain everything. Except time . . . and how things are
before and after, or if there is a before and after.
Sol
remembers that once—when in response to his procrastination
regarding a school assignment—Sol told James to “get at it,”
and then, “Now is always the best time,” he'd said.
And
James said, “There is no now, Dad, because by the time you
say the W, the N is already in the past.”
And
Sol, impressed with the answer said, “The immediate future
is always the best time, then.”
“There
is no possibility of doing anything in the future, because the
moment you begin . . . to, well, do something, it becomes now,
and as we just decided, there is no now.”
Now
. . . or in the immediate future . . . Sol thinks: How can a dropped
cake be both past and immediate . . . or distant . . . future at the
same time as being in the past?
On
the morning after the gyrating dog, Sol goes out onto the balcony
with his coffee and cigarettes, but there is no dog to be seen
anywhere. The hum of the city, however, is identical to every other
morning: past, present and future.
He
smokes only one cigarette. As he stubs it in the ashtray, he decides
not to go to work. “How could one day of my tax auditing possibly
be meaningful in a universal sense?” he thinks. Does one sand grain
stolen really cost the seashore anything? The nation? The globe?
He
will not go to work.
But
if he hasn't left the house by 8:15, Sandra will say, “Why are you
still here? You'll be late for the office.” He will leave the house
at the usual time, with briefcase, hat and umbrella and return only
when Sandra has safely begun her workday at the library. What purpose
could possibly be served by his explaining why he hasn't gone to
work?
Compact
cars are backing out of garages, small poodle-cross dogs are being
walked by women without makeup as Sol makes his way north up Spurgeon
Street, past the bus stop where he ordinarily takes the 17 downtown,
and on past the Tim Hortons. “I'll have a coffee here on my way
back,” he thinks, “and a daughter or two.” And then, “Did I
think daughter?” “I meant doughnut.”
He
decides to take a left turn onto Blair Saunders Crescent, not for any
other reason than that he can. Blair Saunders, he's been told, was a
WWII war hero who saved an allied passenger ship full of children
from being torpedoed by crashing his Sea Hurricane into a German
submarine, Kamikaze style. Sol does a quick calculation: if Saunders
was 25 in 1940, he'd be 93 now, so probably dead of natural causes if
he survived the war. “Tis a consummation devoutly to be wished”
runs uninvited through Sol's mind. He can't remember where it's from,
but thinks it's probably Shakespeare. He tries, but can't remember
what it means.
There
will never be a Solomon Crane Street.
At
Blair Saunders Crescent and 98th St. a police cordon
arrests Sol's progress. An ambulance is idling in the street and two
police cars with garish, alternately-blinking red and blue lights are
parked illegally. Sol joins a knot of the curious and picks up that
the blanket on the lawn is covering the victim of a drive-by
shooting. A policeman shuts off the idling engine of a riding lawn
mower. “Is a successful drive-by shooting like hitting a moving
moon from a moving earth with a rocket?” Sol wonders. Surely the
bullet would continue to move in the direction and with the speed of
the car; inertia of motion and all that. So wouldn't you have to aim
your shot at a point other than the target?
Sol
cannot bring himself to contemplate the humanity of the mass under
the blanket, nor of the woman he saw briefly silhouetted in the
living room window of this house that is like every other house on
Blair Saunders Crescent, except blue. Surely it's all a bit like a
dog gyrating for no reason in front of a regional post office early
on any given morning. Time will erase the event as surely as the
police will clean up the ribbons, as the ambulance will clear away
the remains. Won't it?
The
briefcase is a dead weight and as Sol begins to retrace his steps
back toward home, he drops it into a garbage bin waiting for pickup
on the curb. In the interest of fairness, perhaps, he throws his
umbrella into the bin next door, then his hat and overcoat in
successive bins. He doesn't feel the cold although the wind on this
12 morning in what has come to be called October is
downright bone biting.
Somewhere
in Africa, maybe, a neonate dies after only a few breaths and the
mother is relieved; she can barely feed and clothe the six who are
always hungry, always too cold or too hot and always subject to
insect bites, snake bites, sibling bites. Had the neonate survived,
it would have been either Franklin or Francine because most African
names exist only in antiquity, buried with their owners in shallow
graves.
The
world will run tickety-boo without Franklin or Francine.
Statistically,
biologically—Sol thinks about this often—he and Sandra were
endowed with enough eggs and sperm to bring at least a dozen persons
into the world. So there would have to be at least 10 people denied
existence in the Sol and Sandra universe, and by the same token that
whatever is possible will happen, he wonders about their lives, lives
that must be happening right now in an alternate universe. Perhaps
they are acquainted with Franklin or Francine or the innumerable
persons that could have been but are not . . . at least not here.
Grains
of sand.
There
must be—in the vagaries of time—places, points, Sol thinks, that
are like the O in NOW. Points that might have caused homo sapiens to
invent the word itself. Like the point where a man walking in a
southerly direction on Spurgeon Street steps on a crack and breaks
his mother's back. A point, perhaps where the meaninglessness of
being or not being, of doing or not doing drops like a tear into a
pond of crystal clarity.
Because
it's possible—in a universe that is not Sol's universe—that he
doesn't skip work, but rides Conveyance 17 almost joyfully to the job
because Thanksgiving weekend is near and James and Matthew will be
coming home with that-other-Sol's four, beautiful grandchildren and
his two matronly, but pretty, daughters-in-law. And that-other-Sandra
will meet him at the door with a touch of flour on her nose and
wearing a floral apron, and she'll embrace and kiss him and say, “How
was your day, ѼѫӘ?”
And
in that far, far away universe, perhaps Sol doesn't step out in front
of speeding Bus 17 at the time known as 11 A.M., which is the time,
at least, on Spurgeon Street . . . and in some other places . . .
now.
1Pronounced
Ohyay
2Pronounced
Hadzh
Comments
Post a Comment