Читать книгу Wall of Fire - Pam Stavropoulos - Страница 7

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1. Dominic

I see something.

I crane forward to see it better. And feel the ligaments of my neck stretch and scream in protest. A pail of what appears to be red paint is flung at me.

Instinctively I raise my hand to protect my eyes. Before realising that I am shielded by glass, that I am in my car, and that it is the windscreen which has taken the onslaught.

Only it is not paint that has been thrown. It is blood. The streams and rivulets of which make of my windscreen an expressionist painting.

Along the roadside groups of people are congregated. They are busy driving five inch nails – which gleam like money – into makeshift crucifixes. Huddled under a tree is what appears to be a family (surely the small figure is that of a child!) And I know with paralysing shock what is soon to happen.

I can barely contain the horror which rises in me. Which causes me to tighten my grip on the steering wheel, to inadvertently accelerate. And to careen directly into what are now premature victims. My victims.

Oh my God.

The last thing I see is the crumpled figure of the child. And the slack arm of the mother from whose body it has been torn. Strangely, incredibly, I also see the contorted but smiling face of the man who is not yet dead.

At least, his sightless eyes seem to be saying, you cut short our suffering.

And the figures at the side of the road, as if relieved to be spared a task for which, after all, they felt no relish, turn to congratulate me.

Another image (there are more, always more).

This time I am with friends. This time all seems to be well.

We are having a picnic. We have selected a stately tree to sit beneath. Its richly clothed branches cast deep shade over the blanket on which we sit. The trunk of the tree is gnarled and tangled. It radiates solidity. And I enjoy a brief moment of serenity before something makes me glance up.

The inert body of a man hangs from a branch above. And there are other figures, swinging from other trees in ghostly parabolas.

The bile flows in my throat like a poison. I nudge my companion that he may witness and confirm what I am seeing. But he merely nods pleasantly. After the briefest of glances, he focuses again on the bread roll he is buttering. And on the wine he has just poured.

`Yes’, he says. `Aesthetically pleasing, isn’t it?’

As I gape in dumb incredulity, he gives me a look akin to complicity. And proffers a glass of wine which I am too stunned to reject.

They torch a church, and the flames rise like a benediction.

A wall of fire materialises before us; you expect the Holy Spirit to appear at its heart. There are no people in the church (what a pity, you can almost hear them thinking). The burning takes less than twenty minutes. Only the blackened edifice remains.

The phallic spire still intact.

The happy arsonists, murmuring quietly in deep contentment, pick the ruins delicately.

Fastidiously.

The worst are when people figure among the victims. The most excruciating are when they are people I know.

I wake in a cold sweat, my sheet soaked, my head pounding.

Once I woke to the sound of bullets. Or so I thought. Before realising that it was hail sounding on the roof. And that the particular horror from which I was emerging - both mirror and portent of actual horrors from which others do not emerge - was hallucinatory.

I am exhausted in the aftermath of these dreams. I am all day haunted by them. I leave in the morning with a saturated psyche. The macabre contents of which erupts without warning or catalyst.

Once I was mid-sentence in a lecture to ten students (we operate now – I can almost smile at this – on a `skeleton staff’). And a scythe took shape before me.

I yelled to the startled students to beware. Some of them were not even startled.

Sometimes I think it is my days that have become surreal, my nights a faithful reflection of reality.

But this spillage from my subconscious into the daylight hours is a new development.

And an increasingly disturbing one.

During prior periods of this war, the war which has stunned us in its savagery, I have managed to cordon off my days from my nights. To compartmentalise the daylight Apollonian realm from the dark Dionysian one.

It is important I do this for my students’ sake, if not my own. The decision to keep open the university was a deliberate act of hope and defiance. A sign that reason and learning could continue in the face of the madness. But except for a handful of students, the lecture theatres are empty. What would it do to the few who remain, against such odds, were their teachers to capitulate in front of them?

As I am perhaps starting to do now.

My psyche is flooding like a dam bursting its walls.

And yet some Finternal divisions remain. My reasoning faculty observes such lapses, which are increasingly the norm, with an almost clinical detachment.

I wonder what our few remaining students think. Some of them still take copious notes. Or at least appear to do so. But perhaps it is gibberish which trails from their pens. Perhaps it is less the desire for their education to continue than a clinging to ritual which accounts for their continued presence against such heavy odds.

I try to make it worth their while. I hear myself mouthing the words and phrases of a person in my position.

But it is making less and less sense to me. As perhaps to them. Maybe we are all clinging to the threads of normality. Until now I have felt it important to do so.

But I don’t know that anymore.

I dont know anything anymore.

Perhaps they would be relieved were I to abandon the pretence, leaving them free to do so as well. As I was tempted to do yesterday.

No, more than tempted. Almost compelled. It was only with the greatest effort and self-restraint that I managed to keep myself in check. One of my students - Dimitri, with the sad, serious eyes – came to me after class. I knew without a word being exchanged that he had come for personal advice.

Advice! When at this point I can scarcely put one foot in front of the other.

Which must not yet be apparent to others.

I did my best to reassure him that reason would prevail in the end. That it is still worth the effort to keep planning; that the miniature of individual effort still counts. But I don’t think I believe it myself anymore (did I ever?) The unbidden question further frightens me.

And today. Today I was as close as I’ve been to complete mental capitulation.

Despite (or perhaps because) my conscious resolve is still strong.

I felt I had become an automaton. That the words I was mouthing were empty slogans which had nothing to do with me. To the subject I was discussing. Or to anything else at all.

I felt that the concepts I was trying to explain had become detached from any relationship to anything. That they were abstractions of abstractions. And perhaps had always been so.

I felt that perhaps now, for the first time, I was seeing things as they are. And found myself thinking (I who could always discipline my thoughts!)

You are not an academic any more. If you ever really were.

You are an actor.

Wall of Fire

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