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Doc wanted desperately to go back to his old
life-the hopeless wish of a man wanting to be a little boy, forgetting
the pain of little boys. Doc dropped to his knees and dug a hole
in the damp sand with a scooped hand. He watched the sea-water
seep in and crumble the sides of the hole. A sand-crab scuttled
away from his digging fingers.
From behind him a voice said, "What are you
digging for?"
"Nothing," said Doc, without looking round.
"There are no clams here."
"I know it," said Doc. And his top voice
sang, "I just want to be alone. I don't want to talk or
explain or argue or even to listen. Now he'll tell me a theory
he's got on oceanography. I won't look round."
The voice behind him said, "There's so much
metal in the sea. Why, there's enough magnesium in a cubic mile
of seawater to pave the whole country."
I always get them, Doc thought. If there's a bug-houser
within miles he's drawn to me.
"I'm a seer," said the voice.
Doc rocked angrily back on his heels. "Okay,"
he said. "It's just my business but you tell me about it."
He didn't remember ever having been discourteous to a stranger
before.
This one was a big, bearded stranger with the lively,
innocent eyes of a healthy baby. He wore ragged overalls and
a blue shirt washed nearly white, and he was barefooted. The
straw hat on his head had two large holes cut in the brim, proof
that it had once been the property of a horse.
Doc found his interest rising.
"It is my custom to invite a stranger to dinner,"
said the seer. "Not original, of course. Harun al-Rashid
did the same. Please follow me."
Doc stood up from his squatting position. The tendons
behind his knees creaked with pain. The seer towered above him,
and on closer inspection it was true that his blue eyes had the
merry light of a wise baby. But his face was granite - chiselled
out of the material of prophets and patriarchs. Doc found himself
wondering if some of the saints had not looked like this. From
the ragged sleeves of the blue shirt wrists like big grapevines
protruded, and hands sheathed in brown calluses criss-crossed
with barnacle cuts. The seer carried a pair of ancient basketball
shoes in his left hand, and, seeing Doc look at them, he said,
"I only wear them in the sea. My feet aren't proof against
urchins and barnacles."
In spite of himself Doc felt surrounded by the man.
"Harun" said Doc "was visited by djinni and the
spirits of earth fire and water. Do the djinni visit you?"
Doc thought, Oh Lord! Am I going to play along with this nonsense?
Why can't I cross my fingers and spit and walk away? I can still
walk away.
The seer looked downward at an angle into Doc's
face. "I live alone" he said simply. "I live in
the open. I hear the waves at night and see the black patterns
of the pine boughs against the sky. With sound and silence and
colour and solitude of course I see visions. Anyone would."
"But you don't believe in them?" Doc asked
hopefully.
"I don't find it a matter for belief or disbelief,"
the seer said. "You've seen the sun flatten and take strange
shapes just before it sinks in the ocean. Do you have to tell
yourself every time that it's an illusion caused by atmospheric
dust and light distorted by the sea, or do you simply enjoy the
beauty of it? Don't you see Visions?"
"No," said Doc.
"From music, don't forms of wishes and forms
of memory take shape?"
"That's different," said Doc.
"I don't see any difference," said the
seer. "Come along - dinner's ready."
In the dunes there are deep little creases where
the wind-crouching pines have made a stand against the moving
sand, and in one of these, only a hundred yards back from the
beach, the seer had his home. The little valley was protected
from the wind. The pine boughs covered it, and the sand was deeply
carpeted with sweet pine-needles. Once down in the little cup
you could hear the wind sweeping the pine tips overhead, and
a perpetual dusk hung under the warped trees. The pines survived
only by following the suggestions of the stronger forces-crouching
low and growing their limbs in the direction of the wind, nourishing
the little trailing plants which slow up the pace of the walking
dunes. Under the trees a fire was burning, and on a hearth of
flat stones blackened tin cans steamed.
"This is my home," the seer said. "You
are welcome here. I have a wonderful dinner." He brought
a tin box from the fork of a tree, took out a loaf of French
bread, and sliced off two thick slices. Then he brought sea urchins
from a dripping sack, cracked them on a rock, and spread the
gonads on the bread. "The males are sweet and the females
sour," he said. "I like to mix the two."
"I've tasted them," said Doc. "The
Italians eat them. It's about as strong a protein as you can
get. Some people think it's aphrodisiac."
There was an iron simplicity in the seer. He was
like a monolith of logic standing against waves of angry nonsense.
"Next we'll have steamed limpets," said
the seer. "I have a pin here to eat them with. Do you like
sea-lettuce? It's an acquired taste. And then I have a stew -
kind of universal bouillabaisse - I won't tell you what's in
it. You'll see."
"Do you take all your food from the sea?"
The seer smiled at him. "No, not all. I wish
I could. It would be simpler. I take all the protein I need,
and more, but my human stomach still craves starch. I want a
little bread and some potatoes. I love acid with the protein.
See - I have a bottle of vinegar and some lemons. And last, I
indulge myself with herbs: rosemary and thyme and sage and marjoram."
"How about sugars?" Doc asked. "You
won't find sugars in a tide pool."
The seer dropped his eyes and watched a black ant
try to climb an avalanche of sand, losing ground all the way.
When he spoke his voice was shy and ashamed. "I steal candy
bars," he said. "I can't seem to help it."
"The flesh is weak," said Doc.
"Oh, I don't mind that," the seer cried.
"Appetites are good things. The more appetites a man has,
the richer he is, but I was taught not to steal. I don't believe
in stealing. It hurts my feelings when I do, and I don't enjoy
the candy bars as much as I would if I didn't steal them, but
I love Baby Ruths and Mounds."
They picked the limpets from their shells with pins
and dipped them in lemon juice. The stew contained mussels and
clams and crabs and little fish, seasoned with garlic and rosemary.
"Some people don't like it," said the
seer.
After they had finished Doc lay back in the pine
needles, and a fine peacefulness settled on him. The air, the
softness of the needles, the odours of kelp and pine and yerba
buena, the music of surf against wind-plucking pine-needles,
the fullness of belly, made a little room of contentment around
him.
He said, "I'm surprised they don't lock you
up - a reasonable man. It's one of the symptoms of our time to
find danger in men like you who don't worry and rush about. Particularly
dangerous are men who don't think the world's coming to an end."
"It's coming to an end all right," the
seer said. "That started the moment it was born."
"I don't know why they don't put you in jail.
It's a crime to be happy without equipment."
"Oh, they do," said the seer, "and
they put me under observation every once in a while."
"I forgot," said Doc. "You are crazy,
aren't you?"
"I guess so," said the seer, "but
not dangerous. And they've never caught me stealing candy bars.
I'm very clever at that, and I steal only one at a time."
"Don't ever gather disciples," said Doc.
"They'd have you on a cross in no time."
"There's not much danger of that. I don't teach
anybody anything."
"I'm not so sure," said Doc. "The
doctrine of our time is that man can't get along without a whole
hell of a lot of stuff. You may not be preaching it, but you're
living treason."
"I'm lazy," said the seer. "Did you
ever drink yerba buena tea?"
"It's strong and aromatic and a mild physic.
Can you drink it out of a beer bottle?"
"I don't know why not."
"Lookout! The bottle's hot! Here, wrap a twig
around it."
After a while the seer asked, "What's aching
you, or don't you want to talk about it?"
"I'd just as soon talk about it if I knew what
it was," said Doc. "As a matter of fact, it's gone
away for the moment."
"Ah, one of those," said the seer. "Do
you have a wife or children?"
"No."
"Do you want wife or children?"
"I don't think so."
The seer said, "I saw a mermaid last night.
You remember, there was a half-moon and a thin drifting-mist.
There was colour in the night, not like the black and grey and
white of an ordinary night. Down at the end of the beach a shelf
of rock reaches out, and the tide was low so that there was a
smooth bed of kelp. She swam to the edge and then churned her
tail, like a salmon leaping a rapid. And then she lay on the
kelp bed and made dancing figures with her white arms and hands.
She didn't go away until the rising tide covered the kelp bed."
"Was she a dream? Did you imagine her?"
"I don't know. But if I did I'm proud that
I could imagine anything so beautiful. What is it you want?"
"I've tried to think," said Doc. "I
want to take everything I've seen and thought and learned and
reduce them and relate them and refine them until I have something
of meaning, something of use. And I can't seem to do it."
"Maybe you aren't ready. And maybe you need
help."
"What kind of help?"
"There are some things a man can't do alone.
I wouldn't think of trying anything so big without----"
He stopped. The heavy waves beat the hard beach, and the yellow
light of the setting sun illuminated a cloud to the eastward,
a clot of gold.
"Without what?" Doc asked.
"Without love," said the seer. "I
have to go to the sunset now. I've come to the point where I
don't think it can go down without me. That makes me seem needed."
He stood up and brushed the pine needles from his threadbare
overalls.
"I'll come to see you again," said Doc.
"I might be gone," the seer replied. "I've
got a restlessness in me. I'll probably be gone."
Doc watched him trudge over the brim of the dune
and saw the wind flip up the brim of his straw hat and the yellow
sun light up his face and glisten in his beard.
Chapter 10 of "Sweet Thursday"
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