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The
Incident at Wolf Cove
By Richard Thieme
I will always remember the way we said good-bye to the Taylors
that night because everything, everything from the gin-and-tonic
through the rest of the evening, was italicized by the incident
afterward at the lake.
What would have otherwise been a normal farewell was protracted
as if we did not want to let go of the world we had come to love
so much. That world was predictable, bounded by parameters that
made sense. It was a good world. It was comfortable. It was exactly
what we wanted.
We talked at the door
for a long time, then talked more on the lawn. I don’t
remember what we talked about because it was nothing, really,
nothing important. It was well past midnight and we were aware
that our voices carried over the lawn in the warm humid air.
They sounded amplified. Or do I remember it that way only afterward?
And how would I know?
The leaves above our
heads barely moved. We kept slapping mosquitoes, and it wasn’t
as if we needed to talk. All we had done all night was talk and
have a few drinks and laugh. We wanted the feeling of being with
good friends we had known for years to go on and on and never
end. We did not want the parentheses around that long period
of our lives ever to close.
The houses around us
were mostly dark except for gas-lamps here and there. We had
no streetlights in Wolf Cove – nor parking
on the street, nor sidewalks – and it amused me that so many
people put in their own gas-lamps. Afraid of the dark, I guess.
Still, we kept it as much like a village as we could. There were
a number of small lakes among the houses and some of the homes
had two or three or five acres of trees around them. Jan and I
lived next to Hidden Lake, a few miles away from the Taylors. The
lake was just across the road from our home.
We had been married
for twenty-seven years. Like all marriages, there were times
we didn’t know what would happen next and
times we were glad for what we had. This was one of the good times.
We had good health, enough money in the bank to feel reasonably
secure, and three grown children who could dress themselves and
remember their own names. That’s my definition of an A+ time
of life.
At last we said good
bye. Kate and Larry stood in the circle of porch light and waved
as we drove away. I hit the CD on-button and Sinatra sang “In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning” straight
from the top.
“You didn’t
have too much to drink, did you?”
“No, I’m OK,” I said. “You
want air or windows down?”
“Let’s open
the windows. Even that humid air feels nice.”
“We get nostalgic for summer before it’s
even half over.”
“It is half over,” Jan said, “actually.
I was thinking that when I saw the blue paper flowers in the
ditches.”
Sinatra sang us all
the way home. I pulled into the driveway and opened the garage
door with a remote. “Want to get out here
before I pull in?”
“No, that’s OK. There’s
room.”
I parked and we waited until the song finished. Then silence and
night sounds, locusts, whatever they were, loud locusts.
I put my arm around my wife as we walked down the driveway. She
was warm and perspiring in her summer dress.
“We forgot to turn on the light,” Jan
said.
We walked past the side
door to the road. We could see the dark circle of Hidden Lake
across the road surrounded by darker shadows of dense trees.
I looked up at the sky which despite the heat and humidity was
about as good as you get in the summer. I didn’t
know summer stars as well as I knew Orion and the Pleiades but
I recognized patterns, even if I didn‘t know their names.
We didn’t say
anything. We just stood there, my arm around her warm shoulders,
listening to locusts, looking up at the stars.
“What’s that?” Jan
said.
“What’s
what?”
“That.” She
pointed toward the sky.
I followed her point and saw a star, brighter than most.
“It looks like a star,” I said. “Isn’t
it?”
The star was wavering,
but pollution will do that too. Smog makes sunsets red, makes
the stars flicker. This star, however, was super bright, even
brighter than Sirius. Must be a planet. But too late for Venus. ” Jupiter,
maybe? Saturn?”
“I don’t
know.”
“Let’s pull
up a star chart on the Internet when we go inside.”
“Why are you whispering?” she
said.
“I don’t know.” The star looked larger now. “What
happened to the locusts?”
The night was perfectly still.
“I don’t
know.”
There was no mistaking
it now, the star was growing larger as if it were coming down.
Maybe it was a plane banking as it turned toward the airport
or maybe a helicopter except there was no noise. Now it looked
the size of a nickel held out at arm’s length
except it was so white. The whiteness glowed all definition from
the object, if object it was.
“What is it?” Jan
whispered.
It was growing larger faster now. The point turned into a distinct
disc and before we knew it was over the trees across the road,
hovering over the lake. A reflection of the bright disc glowed
in the water. It was a vehicle, a self-luminous vehicle almost
too bright to look at directly. I believe I squinted or maybe I
looked away. The trees around the lake were illuminated distinctly
in the bright light. It was as if during daylight the leaves and
branches and trees were illuminated by sun.
There was no sound. I think I even held my breath as I watched
it tilt on end to an angle of thirty degrees or so before it edged
slowly into the water and entered the lake. I watched it slide
through the surface of the water without a sound and disappear
into the depths.
“Mark, where are
you going?”
Her harsh whisper made me start.
“I want to see,” I walked across the road toward the
water. She didn’t want to go but didn’t want to stay.
She hurried to catch up as I walked through the grass.
“What are you doing?” she
demanded in a frightened whisper.
“Just stay here
if you want.”
“I’m not
going to just stand there while you.”
I stopped at the water’s
edge. The water very gently very slowly stirred against the reeds
at my feet. In the otherwise dark lake a luminous oval shone
in the depths. It was as if the lake glowed with its own light. Something under the water glowed
with its own light.
“What is it?” she
whispered.
“I don’t
know.”
I don’t know how long we stood there. But suddenly the diffused
glowing in the lake started to quiver and the water was disturbed
as a luminous edge emerged and very slowly left the water at the
same steep angle at which it entered. I remember thinking it should
be forty five degrees or more. The angle was more like thirty degrees
and water cascaded from the sides as if not touching whatever it
was. The water flowed off the object until the disc was no longer
touching the surface. Then there was a pause and one minute it
was hovering over the lake and the next it was gone high into the
sky. I looked up and watched it get so high so fast it looked again
like a star in seconds. Then it was a dim star among the other
stars and then I couldn’t tell anymore if it was there or
not.
The locusts were loud again, sawing away at the night. The surface
of the lake was quiet. The water at my feet slowly gently moved
against the reeds. There was no breeze. There was nothing anymore.
I turned to see Jan staring up at the sky.
“Did you see that?”
“What?”
“I don’t know. But you did see it, didn’t
you?”
“I saw something.
Stars, the wind on the lake, the water. Something.”
“Jan, that wasn’t a star. Stars don’t
fly down and go under water.”
I waited for something
more but didn’t get it. We crossed
the road to our home and went in the front door.
“Honey! Wait!”
She was already climbing the stairs.
“I’m tired,” she said. “I
want to get ready for bed.”
The bedroom light illuminated the hall at the top of the stairs.
I hurried upstairs after her.
“I had no idea it was so late,” she said. She was
putting her shoes in the closet and undressing. “Did you
realize it was two o’clock?”
“I’m going
back outside.”
She came out of the
closet. “At this hour?”
I went downstairs and crossed the road to the edge of the lake.
The water was dark; whatever stars had been visible were hidden
by mist. I heard a mosquito and slapped it. Dim stars appeared
and disappeared in the haze or high clouds. I looked over the lake
and could not see anything at all. I turned around. A few houselights
burned through the trees, familiar sentries keeping watch. There
were the Nelsons, the Adams, the Lloyds. Trees and houses and lights.
Then I looked up at the sky again.
Nothing happened. There was nothing to wait for, nothing to do.
Jan was asleep when I returned, the bedroom dark. I sat up as
long as I could, wanting to think, wanting to understand, but fell
asleep against the headboard, waking up stiff. Then I lay down
beside my wife who was snoring gently and fell asleep.
She was dressed and making breakfast when I came downstairs.
“You leaving early?”
“I’m meeting with the Junior League committee about
our luncheon. We’re meeting at eight because Betty has to
be somewhere.”
“Oh,” I said. “You
look nice.”
“Thank you,” she perked a little. Blue was her color,
with her complexion and blue eyes. “I might not be here when
you come home. I have a late appointment with the trainer at the
Club.”
“OK,” I said. I waited, then said, “Do
you want to talk about it now?”
She looked at me, tilting her face quizzically as if I spoke a
foreign language, then went to get her purse. Then she left.
So that was that. She left and I ate my three slices of wheat
toast and a banana. I was unusually aware of the morning light
through the kitchen window and the way it illuminated the breakfast
nook. The strawberry cookie jar looked like a work of art. The
crumbs on the counter near the toaster looked like abstract art
too, a pattern too perfect not to have been arranged. Everything
seemed as if it had gone up a notch in contrast or brightness as
if someone fiddled with the controls while I was sleeping.
When I left, the noise of someone cutting wood with a loud saw,
the smell of cut grass made me pause in the driveway and look all
around. Everything was askew as if I had never seen my neighborhood
before. The sun blazed on leaves and grass which dazzled with intensity
and splendor.
I don’t recall
the ride to work but I do remember parking in my usual space
and saying hello to the guard at the door and taking the elevator
upstairs to my office.
Business had not been good. When times are good and the tide is
rising, everybody gets wet. But lowering tides bring all the same
ships down, and the tide was low and going lower. We served manufacturing
companies mostly and they had all cut back. The last thing most
of them thought they needed right now was a consultant who billed
at our level.
I had a long term relationship
with two clients that kept me personally afloat. Billable hours
are life in our business. But I didn’t
know how long that would last. One was coming up with numbers that
concerned me. The other wasn’t interested in my services
at the moment.
The view from the thirtieth floor included the lake and the warehouse
district south of downtown. Most had been turned into lofts and
condos and there were at last some good restaurants. The traffic
in the downtown streets below could be seen but not heard. A glint
of light out over the lake caught my attention. I watched it shift
into a sliver of bright sunlight then become a disc as it turned
and finished a maneuver by becoming the familiar shape of a plane.
It was coming in over the lake for a landing, that was all.
“What’s up?” John
Kaster asked, leaning through the door and knocking at the same
time.
I turned. “Oh,” I said. “John. I’m
reviewing the audit for Jensen and Harper.”
“Good,” he said. “Nothing
out of the ordinary, I assume?”
“Well –“ I pulled out my chair and sat at my
desk. I looked at the papers in front of me, aware that I was making
him wait. “John,” I said, “have you ever seen
a ghost?”
John’s face changed
and he looked closely to see if I was joking.
“Well no,” he said. “Why?
Have you?”
I shook my head. “No.
But I was wondering.”
“What?”
“People say they sometimes see crazy things, ghosts, objects
flying across the room, UFOs …”
John laughed. “My sister-in-law in Des Moines, Dorothy,
the one married to the pork tenderloin restaurant tycoon, swears
there’s some kind of sasquatch that lives in the woods up
in Minnesota where they have a cabin. She said last weekend she
was fixing dinner and something moved in the trees out behind the
house, so she went to the window and swears there was this huge
thing she says eight feet tall or taller covered with hair in the
trees out back and when it saw she was looking it took off, snapping
all these branches. Hal came in then, she’s hollering and
yelling and pointing, and Hal said, yeah, the branches were broken
off all right, but Hal, I said, that doesn’t mean they were
broken off by a sasquatch, does it?”
“What if something
unusual did show up? A ghost I mean. Or a UFO. What would it
mean? What would it say about how we think about things? Would
there be any connection?”
“Connection? Between
what?”
I thought for a minute. “Between … well,
anything. Would it make any difference to anything at all?”
He shrugged. “Hell
if I know, Mark, first thing in the morning.”
I tried to shrug as
if I was half-kidding. “I’m just
rambling,” I said. “Forget I asked. I do have work
to do, this audit …”
“Yes, about that. I did in fact hear you might be seeing
some ghosts over there, now that you mention it. Be very careful,” he
said. “We’ve done business with them for many many
years. George Jensen and my father went to school together. They
fought over the same girl in high school.”
“I know. Harriet
Turner. George won.”
“They’re
one of our best clients, Mark.”
“I understand.”
I began leafing through papers and John closed the door after
him.
A careful methodical
thinker as I think I am and as anyone who has worked with me
would tell you I am is used to following the dots and connecting
them, seeing the links, picking up patterns of things as they
start to emerge. That’s what an audit is,
after all, it’s not just numbers and following rules, it’s
knowing the numbers indicate patterns of activity on the part of
real people. The numbers are like a graph of their activity or
even their personalities and studying the numbers you get to know
the soul as it were of your clients, you know how they think and
what they think is important. You learn to see warning signs long
before anyone else the way a good weather forecaster can look at
the sky or a computer screen and say, I smell rain, when everyone
else insists there isn’t a cloud in the sky. It’s like
tracking I guess, I read about trackers who connect things like
the call of a jay that says there’s a fox in the woods with
a print in the dirt and can tell you where the fox is and whether
it’s likely to be back.
The world is not inscrutable,
after all. It can be known. We can know things about it and we
can see the patterns of things. That’s
what a good audit does, it follows the tracks. I can tell if something
is wrong through indicators, things that don’t fit. Oh, you
do have your incredibly smart criminal from time to time, although
most criminals are pretty stupid, but you do have the ones who
cook the books so there isn’t a hair out of place. But boy
you’ve got to be good to do that. Most don’t know how.
Something gives it away, there’s always a clue, something
doesn’t fit right and you use the anomaly to backtrack to
where things went wrong, Pretty soon the whole thing is laid out
before you like a map of the world.
So I sat there most
of the morning with the door closed and the papers spread all
over my desk and worktable going over details of the audit when
I could, when I could focus on the numbers, not liking what I
was finding, but mostly I looked into the vast interior space
of my own mind which looked like a cavern full of darkness and
flickering lights. I was looking for clues, don’t you
see, something that would tell me what had really happened. I needed
a point of reference from which to begin connecting the dots.
I recalled isolated
events of the night before. I had helped Jan put on her necklace
and then when she didn’t like the way
it felt, thinking how hot it was outside, I undid the clasp and
stuck her accidentally next to her mole.
“Ow!” she
cried.
“Oh, sorry!” I said. “Sorry.”
I recalled how she sat
in front of the mirror at her dressing table using the comb with
one hand and somehow using the other hand to smooth whatever
the comb couldn’t get. The two small
lamps on either side of her lighted her flushed face. The perfume
was a little strong at first as it often is but settled down once
we had left the house.
As we drove toward the
Taylors, she lowered her window and looked out at the midsummer
flowers and trees and grass and houses. “We
live in such a pretty place.”
“We do,” I said. “We’ve
been very fortunate.”
One of my Jewish colleagues,
Herb at the office, an accountant, would say it was a mistake
to speak aloud of good fortune. I don’t
know who is supposed to hear you but some spirit always does and
it isn’t pretty. They write it down and when you’re
not looking, when you turn to get something in the closet for example
and reach up with both hands to the top shelf, they let you have
it, one stands atop the other’s shoulders and punches you
right in the balls.
So I made a yellow mark in my mind on that conversation. Maybe
that conversation had been a mistake. Maybe we should have just
enjoyed the summer night and not said anything.
Larry was out back getting
the coals ready. Larry had on one of those aprons that say something
silly like the chef stops here and was squirting the lighter
into the mound of coals. Then he tossed in a match and showed
a pyromaniac’s pleasure as the
flames leaped out of the grill.
Larry was an investment
manager. The second quarter’s results
were not good. His funds had slipped into the second quartile which
was a major negative at a firm that insisted on the best record.
But Larry never betrayed worry or concern in all the years I knew
him. He always sounded confident, he knew there were other companies
if Dirk turned him over as was his habit when things were not going
well, and he knew he would land on his feet.
“Oh, we’re fine,” he
always said when I asked about work or the family or his life.
He raked the coals into
a mound and we watched as the flames died and the coals whitened.
We chatted but I don’t even remember
about what. Dinner was on the patio with bug-zappers and mosquito-repellant
things all around. I drank a gin-and-tonic before dinner and with
the burgers I had one glass of wine, a merlot, and coffee after
dinner without anything in it. Then we stayed so late, it couldn’t
have been the liquor.
After dinner I was in the kitchen drying dishes and Kate was getting
desert ready. She was spooning strawberry ice cream onto homemade
shortcake. Fresh mashed berries were in a yellow bowl on the counter.
She dropped a spatter of ice cream and it landed on her foot. I
remember thinking how delicious it looked, that smear of ice cream
on her bare instep, her strawberry polish matching. She wore a
silver chain on her ankle with a little heart that hung down. When
I looked up she was watching me and laughed.
“Want to get me a paper towel?” she said. “They’re
over there.”
I tore off a towel and leaned to wipe the ice cream off her foot.
She flexed her toes and laughed again.
“Thanks, Galahad.”
“Mister Williams?”
“What?”
I looked up. Cathy was leaning through the open door.
“Didn’t you see your telephone, Mister Williams? I’ve
been buzzing.”
I looked at the lighted
button blinking. “I was thinking,
Cathy. Sorry.”
The call was from a
prospective client and we made an appointment for later that
week. When I hung up, the cavern of my mind was all shadows,
a few barely illuminated flickers – Kate Taylor
in the kitchen adding sugar to the berries or Larry standing at
the grill, drink in hand, poking the coals and talking away about
nothing. I didn’t know where to begin. I neither heard nor
saw a single significant event that could account for the fact
that after we went home, we watched a star fall and turn into a
luminous object that went under the water of Hidden Lake and then
came out and became a star again in seconds.
During lunch at the
Club with Lloyd Morgan from Morgan Morgan and Hastings and Merribeth
Lisower, the new executive director of Forward Look! we talked
about the house she had found and neighborhood schools, the economy
and the latest political scandals, the image of the city. Merribeth
was bright and I guess the current word is perky and apparently
suited for a cheerleader’s job. She
was eager to tell the world about our underrated city. Like all
provincial cities, we frequently tell the world why we are not
provincial, and I suggested that as a slogan – “We
are not provincial!” – for the Forward Look! Black
and White Ball but Merribeth hadn’t been here long enough
to realize I was joking. She wrote it down.
It felt good to order one of the three or four lunches I have
been eating at the Club for more than two decades. The chef never
varies the way he puts the lunch menu together. The wrinkled chips
and pickle slice and traditional toothpicks with red furly paper
were exactly the same. For whatever reason the sandwich brought
momentary relief from the free-floating anxiety that had plagued
me all day.
Lloyd mentioned going up to the Air Show, He went every few years
to see veterans he knew and the newest planes.
“This year they
have some UAVs on display and they have a model of an old flying
disc.”
“A flying saucer!” Merribeth said. “How
cool.”
“I don’t think it has hyper drive though,” Lloyd
said with a smile. “They never really got it to fly.”
“Have you ever seen a flying saucer?” I
asked generally, picking up my thick sandwich and squeezing it
to keep everything in.
Lloyd laughed. “Only after the fourth martini. Usually it’s
one that Winifred is throwing at my head.”
Merribeth laughed. “I
saw an interesting program about them on cable.”
“That one about things people confuse for UFOs?” Lloyd
said. “It’s true. We’ll take a witness and match
their story with what forensics tells us, you’d be amazed
how people get the simplest things wrong. They fill in the blanks,
blend events, add details they hear afterward, all kinds of things. ‘Eye-witness
testimony’ is bogus. Memory is deceptive. Yet they swear
they’re telling the truth and they’d pass a lie detector
too, they’re that sincere.”
“Are forensics
ever wrong, Lloyd?”
Lloyd put his glass
down. “Can be. But most of the time
they get it right.”
“Perception is everything,” Merribeth said, “and
perception is key to changing how people see this city, too.” So
off we went in that direction, galloping away. She was brimful
of ideas, plans, hopes and dreams. She was ready to enroll an army
of volunteers in her cause.
After lunch, as we rose to go, Lloyd saw a golfing buddy across
the room and Merribeth and I walked down the large carpeted dark
wood stairway together.
“I’ll be glad to do what I can for the ball,” I
told her. “Jan will help too if she can.”
“Oh, thanks,” she said. But on the landing she stopped
me with her fingertips gently on my arm and said in a whisper, “I
saw a flying saucer once.”
I turned. “You
did? What was it like?”
“It was twenty-five years ago,” she said. She looked
around, hearing voices on the stairs, and we resumed our descent
in silence and turned into a hallway where no one was listening. “We
were on a country road in North Carolina,” she whispered. “My
husband was driving. It was late afternoon. We were just driving
along and passed one of those power stations, what do you call
them? Dynamos? at an intersection. And there was this thing hovering
over the power station, tilted toward it like it was feeding on
the energy. I know,” she said with a forced laugh. “I
couldn’t have seen it. But I did.”
“What did it look
like?”
“Like … well, if you asked a kid to draw a flying
saucer, that’s what it looked like. There were lights all
around it going real real fast like lights on a marquee.”
“What did you
do?”
“You know, that’s the funniest thing. I didn’t
do anything. I didn’t say anything for five or ten minutes
and then I told David, my husband. He said, what? Why didn’t
you say so? and we turned around and raced back but when we got
there it was gone.”
Her eyes clouded with points of anxiety.
“I don’t know why I told you this. Please don’t
mention it.”
“No, no, I won’t. You do have to be careful,” I
said. “You’re new to the city. People won’t say
anything to your face, but behind your back, they’ll write
you off in a minute. You’ll never even know.”
“There aren’t
any clues? I mean when you make that kind of mistake?“
I smiled at the concern
on her pretty little face. “It’s
like that Native American torture they have in movies. Wrap you
in rawhide and wet it. At first you’re comfortable. Then
it’s tight. Then it’s suffocating.
“That’s how it feels. Just pay attention. You’ll
know if you can’t breathe.”
Later than night when she came home from working out at the Club,
I told Jan about our conversation.
“Why in the world
would you bring that up? What did Lloyd Morgan think?”
I sipped the gin-and-tonic
and squeezed the slice of lime to add its juice to the drink. “Lloyd wasn’t
even there, then.”
“You have to work
in this city, Mark. You know how people are.”
Jan sat in her easy chair and sipped a glass of Chardonnay.
“I wasn’t thinking of that part,” I said. “I
was thinking of last night.”
She watched me, waiting.
Then said, “Well?
What about last night?”
“You know,” I said. “That
thing we saw when we came home.”
This time she looked for a long time. Her eyes had something in
them I had never seen before. If eyes are really the windows to
our souls, then hers needed Windex.
“Mark, I don’t know what you’re
talking about.”
“When we came home from the Taylors,” I said. “We
went across the road. That thing came down and went into the lake.”
“Mark, we walked
across the road, looked at the stars and came home and went to
bed. What are you talking about?”
Now it was my turn to
stare. “Jan, I’m talking about
that thing, call it what you like, whatever the hell it was, that
thing that came down out of the sky and went into the lake. We
watched it, Jan, we stood there together and watched it.”
“Maybe you were dreaming,” she said. “Maybe
you had a vivid dream and during the day somehow got it confused
with an actual event.”
“Jan, that’s – “
“No, no,” she said, getting up and going into the
kitchen where the tossed salad was waiting for the sliced chicken
to be added. She kept talking through the door. “No, that’s
nuts. It’s absolutely crazy. Things like that don’t
happen. And if they do they certainly don’t happen in Wolf
Cove. That’s the kind of thing you hear on talk shows. Maybe
that’s it, we watched one the other night, maybe that’s
what you’re thinking. Don’t you remember? There was
this weird skinny guy with glasses talking about being abducted
by aliens. He said his wife remembered under hypnosis that she
was abducted from her bed by Army troops and bound in duct tape
and handcuffed and drugged and they took her to an abandoned movie
theater. The United States Army and the aliens, working together.
Every single night they did a D&C, scraping her uterus in search
of an implanted alien embryo. Don’t you remember? We laughed
and went on to CNN.”
“Yes, I remember, but that isn’t what I’m talking
about. I’m talking about the incident last night, the thing
that really happened.”
Jan came back into the doorway. Her face was obscured by the bright
windowlight behind.
“Mark,” she said. “Now, please listen to me.
I am very concerned. This isn’t the first time. Do you know
what I heard at the Club? Your clients are talking, Mark. I heard
it in the bathroom, I was in the stall so no one knew I was there.
Helen Morgan was talking to BeeBee and said she had heard you were
losing clients. Larry said something too last night at dinner,
don’t you remember? He asked how you had been feeling lately.
Kate too looked so concerned. She said, yes, Mark, how have things
been?”
I felt a sinking feeling.
I felt like I couldn’t breathe. “What
are you telling me Jan?”
“Something isn’t right. Something’s
wrong. Something has been wrong. And now you say that
some vehicle flew into the lake last night and I was there! Mark,
all I ever saw were stars, big bright stars twinkling in the
sky.”
The silence between us swelled until it filled the room and then
the entire universe. I looked for something to say or a point of
reference from which to relate what she said to what I had said
but came up empty. The silence turned dark like a storm cloud except
there was no lightning, just thunder. Thunder filled the void so
loud we could no longer hear one another.
Then my wife of twenty-seven years burst into tears and ran from
the room. As near as I can tell, she is still running.
A careful methodical
thinker as I am is used to connecting dots, seeing links, picking
up patterns as they emerge. That’s
what I do for a living, after all. That’s what auditors do.
I look for warnings and indicators. Auditing is not just numbers
and following rules, it’s knowing what numbers tell you about
people and their activities. You notice things long before anyone
else. The world is not inscrutable, after all. It can be known.
We can know things about the world and we can see patterns. This
is my work. Some have even said it’s my genius.
When something happens
that does not connect to anything else, usually you don’t even see it. You don’t
allow yourself to see it. Seeing it is too disturbing. You can
live in a marriage, a neighborhood, a community, even on a planet
for years and if everyone is committed to not seeing the same
things, then no one sees them. Someone brings them up, then that
someone has got to be shunned or punished.
The audit was threatening not only to the second largest law firm
in our city but to several partners in our company. It affected
the entire community. There were too many consequences if I said
what I saw. We discussed the implications behind closed doors.
Then they brought up my dwindling billable hours. I had lost a
few clients, yes, I admitted, but the only clients I lost were
lost long ago.
“You’re not a team player, Mark,” John Kaster
said after the meeting, his hand on my shoulder. “You never
were.”
Follow the breadcrumbs through the forest and you wind up being
cooked for dinner by the wicked witch.
I received a comfortable
severance and pension. They arranged for us financially – it was in everyone’s interest,
after all – but they could not arrange for Jan not to be
devastated when the world in which she had always lived disintegrated
to its outer limits. One thread, one thread was all it took, and
everything unraveled. Everything came tumbling down. She asked
for a separation and then a divorce. With the help of a therapist,
she rearranged everything in a new way of seeing and told me that
things had been building for years, beginning with her miscarriage.
This was merely the last straw.
We put up the house
for sale and I made arrangements to move out of the city. The
children called and our little princess came to visit and try
to fix everything but of course she couldn’t.
The kids had conference calls about what to do about the situation,
about us, about me, and realized there was nothing to do.
The day the movers took
away everything we had collected for twenty-seven years I waited
to be certain that everything had been marked correctly for her
place or mine. I do like to dot the i’s and cross
all the t’s. Then I walked through the empty rooms of the
empty house. There was nothing there, only ghosts, and at last
I left and locked up the house for the last time and stood on the
lawn until the sky grew dark.
It was October and a chill wind was blowing off the lake. I crossed
the road for the last time and walked to the edge of the water.
There were dry leaves underfoot but plenty of red and yellow leaves
on the maples too, their colors made more vivid by the dark and
cloudy sky.
I looked up at the low
moving clouds and waited for something to happen. I waited for
a light, I waited for a portal. Nothing did. There was nothing
to wait for, nothing to do. No dots to connect, no numbers to
pretend made sense of anything. That’s why
I missed it coming. You can’t see what you don’t believe
is real. It just doesn’t show up. Until it does.
Ants don’t get
that dogs exist.
Wolf Cove is a refuge in which I no longer find comfort or solace,
the people I worked with for years are not who I thought they were
nor are any of our friends. Nothing is what I thought it was. At
my age, I feel like a beginner at real life.
But the sky is real. The sky is real. It is not a ceiling as I
believed, sheltering the earth. It is a transparent eyelid that
looks both ways. Whoever wants to see us can see us and everything
happening on our little provincial planet.
The universe is teeming
with life, I know that now, that wherever life can happen life
will happen. Life is larger than anything I had ever understood.
Life on a million planets in the habitable zones of stars is
extending itself throughout the universe. Before I knew that – really knew it – I
lived according to different assumptions.
Now everything is different.
The incident at Wolf
Cove made the difference. Everything turned inside out and the
dots I had carefully connected were scattered into the sky like
jacks flung from the hand of an angry child. Maybe he was called
home too early through the twilight, maybe he didn’t want
to go home at all and live a life within such suffocating constraints.
Maybe he wanted to breathe. Maybe a spirit heard us and thought
we were too happy or thought we thought we were. Maybe the imperative
of not knowing is a limit that must always be tested. Maybe maybe
maybe. Maybe this and maybe that. Or just maybe, nothing.
# # # # #
copyright Richard Thieme 2004, 2005. All rights reserved.
Incident at Wolf Cove was published in the Summer/Fall 2004 issue
(xxiii,i) of The Puckerbrush Review, Gossamer Press, Old Town, Maine. |