to me: “There must be more matter in the universe than we think. Else the distances are horrible. I’m nauseated.” Einsteinian to the end, Bujak was an Oscillationist, claiming that the Big Bang will forever alternate with the Big Crunch, that the universe would expand only until unanimous gravity called it back to start again. At that moment, with the cosmos turning on its hinges, light would begin to travel backward, received by the stars and pouring from our human eyes. If, and I can’t believe it, time would also be reversed, as Bujak maintained (will we move backward too? Will we have any say in things?), then this moment as I shake his hand shall be the start of my story, his story, our story, and we will slip downtime of each other’s lives, to meet four years from now, when, out of the fiercest grief, Bujak’s lost women will reappear, born in blood (and we will have our conversations, too, backing away from the same conclusion), until Boguslawa folds into Leokadia, and Leokadia folds into Monika, and Monika is there to be enfolded by Bujak until it is her turn to recede, kissing her fingertips, backing away over the fields to the distant girl with no time for him (will that be any easier to bear than the other way around?), and then big Bujak shrinks, becoming the weakest thing there is, helpless, indefensible, naked, weeping, blind and tiny, and folding into Roza.
INSIGHT AT
FLAME LAKE
Ned’s Diary
July 16. Well it certainly is a pleasure to have Dan come and summer with us up here at Flame Lake. I’m glad to do it. We have him till mid-August. There’ll be problems—Fran and I agree on this—but right now he seems manageable enough, though heavily haunted. Fran’s a little upset too, of course, but we talked it through, the night before Dan came, and straightened the whole thing out. I spoke on the phone with Dr. Slizard, who warned me that the extra medication that Dan’s taking would make him sullen and unresponsive for the first three or four days. And he is grieving. Poor Dan—I feel for the kid. So brilliant, and so troubled, like his father, God rest his soul. I am grieving too. Even though we weren’t that close (he was old enough to be my father), still, when your brother goes, it’s like a little death. It’s a hell of a thing. Dan hides from the heat. He keeps to his room. Dr. Slizard told me to expect this. I’m hoping the baby will amuse and distract him. Fran is nervous about that also, however. All right. It won’t be the carefree summer we were planning on. But we’ll work it out. And surely the light and space of Flame Lake will be useful therapy for Dan and may even help to ease his problem.
Dan’s Notebook
The lake is like an explosion.…
Dr. Slizard, in our long discussion after Dad’s death, assured me that I have insight into my condition. I have insight: I know I’m sick. In a sense this was news to me—but then, how could you feel like I feel and not know something was up? Yet there are people with my condition who do not have insight. They feel like I feel and they think it’s cool. Dad had no insight.
For the time being, with the extra medication and everything, I keep to my room. Calmly I note the usual side reactions: sudden tightening of the tongue, unprompted blushing, drags of nausea, beaked headaches. All food tastes the same. It tastes of nothing, of dryness and nothing. There is the expected loss of affect —though I can see, with my insight , that it is more pronounced than ever before. Not yet ready for the heat, I sit in my room and listen to the helpless weeping of the baby. The baby seems cute enough. All babies are cute enough: they have to be, evolutionarily speaking. Her name, they tell me, is Harriet, or Hattie.
I’m grateful to Uncle Ned and, I guess, to his new wife Francesca. She is young, plump, and deeply dark. I know it’s ninety degrees out there but she really ought to wear more clothes. In certain lights she has a soft
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