Jim smiled at the irony of Cory's song mentioning a St. Bernard.
Bernice was the first McGuire dog of that particular breed; she was born
decades after Cory's demise. If his memory served him correctly, the
family owned a little Cardiganshire Corgi named Rufus back then. Rufus was
hit by a car and died a few years later, when Jim was eight.
He needed to get away from all of this for a while. If only it were
poker night! How nice it would be to have the guys over, swapping stories,
smoking cheap cigars and teasing each other.
Maybe he could go to Kelly's. Kevin might be there. But, then again,
so might Frank Ward and some of the other local yokels. And Jim was tired
of hearing people he hadn't seen since the funeral come up and offer their
sympathies. Grandpa had been dead and buried for a year now. Wasn't it
time to move on?
Jim got another idea. He checked his phone directory and began
dialing. Eleven numbers and three rings later someone answered.
"Hello?"
"Margaret? Is that you?"
"Yes," the little girl answered shyly. It was obvious that Margaret
did not recognize her father's voice. Had it been that long since he'd
talked to her? Maybe it was just a bad connection, Jim thought.
"It's me, darling. Your daddy."
"Daddy?"
"Yes, Mag. Your daddy. And how is daddy's little--"
Margaret wasn't listening. Jim could hear his daughter put the phone
down and call for her mother.
"Mommy! Mommy! It's Daddy. Daddy's on the phone."
There was a long pause. Then Jim could hear footsteps on a hardwood
floor. The phone gave a crunching sound as it was being picked up.
"Jim?" It was Sarah. She seemed out of breath and more than a little
surprised to hear from him.
"I'm sorry. Did I call at an awkward time?"
"Uh, well, no, no. I guess not. I just...wasn't expecting to hear
from you. Is there anything wrong?"
"Wrong? No, no. I was just phoning to see...uh...if you two are
still planning to come by next weekend."
"Yes, yes, of course. We should be at the airport around--let me
check our tickets here...yeah, six P.M. your time."
"Good. I'll pick you up then."
"Listen, Jim, if this is an awkward time for you we could reschedule
things--"
"Awkward? No, no. Not at all. I'll just tell one of my mistresses
to move out to make room for you."
Sarah giggled.
"It's good to hear from you, Jim. Good to hear your sense of humour's
come back. And, Jim?"
"Yes?"
"I'm really sorry I couldn't make it to your grandpa's funeral. No,
really. I'm very sorry. I wish we could have been there."
"I know, I know," Jim said dismissively. "No problem. I know you and
Grandpa were very close."
"Jim? Remember what you used to call him? What was that word again?"
The question caught him off guard. He hadn't thought of the word in
years.
"Taspika," he replied. It translated to "guide of my passing".
Sarah had never asked what the word meant.
"Taspika," Sarah repeated. "You must miss him a lot."
"Yeah. Yeah, I miss a lot of people."
The conversation stopped, as if Jim had thrown a spanner into the
works.
"Well," Sarah finally sighed, breaking the tension, "I have to go.
It's time to fix dinner."
Jim had forgotten that it was earlier on the coast.
"Tell Margaret I love her," Jim added weakly.
"I will. Bye-bye, Jim."
"Good-bye, Sarah."
He exhaled sharply and put the phone back onto its holder. Looking
around for something to take his mind off things, he settled on making
another attempt at reading the manuscripts from Stork. Having already
tested their effects on his consciousness, he took the precaution of
getting into bed first. The pyjamas had not shown up yet, but sleeping in
the raw would prove no hardship. Five minutes after opening the book-to-be
he was doing exactly that.
This place was completely different. No well lit hallways. No
conference rooms. No rooms full of people engaging in sex, research,
debate or contemplation. There was nothing but fog; a thick, ethereal fog
that snaked around his legs as he tried to walk through it. Where was
this? England, perhaps? A cheap rock video, maybe?
But unlike any mist he'd ever seen, this earth-bound cloud lacked
moisture or coldness. If it had had a smell Jim would have taken it for
smoke.
Another realization struck him. His footsteps came to rest on
nothingness. While it made no sense, it seemed that he was walking on
solid air. It was only this mysterious support that it gave which made the
air apparent. No, this wasn't England. And special effects like
levitation didn't come cheap.
"I am told your name is Kolry," echoed a voice to his left. Jim
turned but saw no one. As he walked tentatively toward the sound an eerie
white light shone through the obscurity. Closer and closer he crept,
measuring each step, his eyes transfixed by the source of this strange
illumination.
To his surprise, the light did not get stronger as he approached.
It glowed with a constant intensity, highlighting the fog instead of
dissipating its effects. He squinted and moved nearer to the source.
After a few more paces he could make out the outline of a bearded man,
dressed in a blue toga. Even as he stood a few inches from the man,
however, Jim could not discern any facial features.
"Are you the one I've come to see?" Jim inquired.
Only by narrowing his eyes until they were almost shut could Jim see
the man shake his head.
"No. I am Briel. I am only serving as a sign post," the figure
explained, pointing to his right. "The one you seek is over there, ant
farming."
"Ant farming?" Had Jim heard him right?
"That is what we call it here. You will understand."
Jim shuffled off in the direction indicated. After a few steps he
turned around and asked: "What should I call him?"
But there was no one there. Only haze.
He trudged onward, parting the murk by swinging his arms in front of
him. The air became thicker, giving him the feeling that he was wading
through it.
Laughter! The sound was shrill and far off, but it was clearly
laughter. Jim corrected his tack slightly, veering a little to his left,
and proceeded towards the source of this noise. He did not see its point
of origin until he was all but standing over it.
There, rolling around beneath him, was another figure in a blue sheet.
This one emitted no light. Jim leaned forward for a better look, but could
make out no features. The voice, still giggling hysterically, did not
reveal the person's gender. The figure clutched its stomach with its left
hand and pointed at a view port with its right. Jim peered through this
screen to see a mundane scene of city life; commuters in a subway station
at rush hour travelling to or from work. There was certainly nothing there
that Jim could see that would inspire such gaiety. Jim asked the obvious
question: "What's so funny?"
The entity tried unsuccessfully to stop howling long enough to answer.
Jim considered reposing the query, but realized that the problem was a lack
of breath, not a lack of hearing. He waited until the character on the
"ground" could respond.
"Don't you see it?" was all the person managed to say.
"Well, quite frankly, no," Jim replied.
This served only to send the figure into greater heights of hilarity.
"Hee-Hee-HEEEEE!"
Jim was growing impatient. He had come here to make an appeal for
help, not witness someone deteriorate into madness.
"What's so funny?" he reiterated.
"Haa-Haa-HAAAAAH!"
Jim was about to leave in disgust when he saw the figure motioning
once again through the portal. He remained, waiting for his host/hostess
to gather enough composure to answer him.
"I warned the wicked..." started the figure, pausing to collapse
into gleeful chortling once again.
"...that I would send them..."
More chuckling. Jim rolled his eyes at this foolishness.
"...to a land of torture and torment."
The figure broke down once more. Jim was beginning to doubt that he
would ever hear the end of this explanation. Nevertheless, the figure
continued.
"And I promised I'd send the righteous..."
Mirth overcame the figure for another minute or so before it could
press on.
"...to a land of milk and honey."
Jim waited for a punch line, but none was forthcoming. He realized
that more prodding was in order.
"I still don't get it," he confessed. The figure seemed surprised
that Jim would actually need more clarification. It took the person five
minutes to gather up enough self-control to complete the explanation.
"I sent them both to the same place," the figure shouted in a rush
of breath, "and neither was the wiser!"
With this the figure lapsed into uncontrollable roaring.
Jim had seen enough. He had learned nothing here, other than the
notion that even dreams could waste his time. He retraced his steps,
groping through the veil of swirling fog. A familiar light appeared in the
distance. Jim stumbled toward it. As he approached it Jim discerned that
it was the "sign post" character again. Briel.
"Don't tell, let me guess," Jim surmised, "he's been like that
since the Mets won the World Series."
"Pardon?"
"Never mind," Jim said. "Listen, I'd like to go now. Can you take
me home?"
"Home?" wondered Briel.
"Yeah, home. Where I live. You know."
"Home is where you live?"
Jim flashed the gentleman an are-you-for-real look.
"Yes," he said slowly, as if talking to someone with poor cognitive
skills, "home...is...where...I...live."
"Are you sure?"
"Of course I'm sure!"
"Has it always been thus?"
"Of course it has! Now--"
"I am told that you once went to university," Briel observed.
"Yeah, back East. So what?"
"And where did you live then?"
"I lived in a dorm. So?"
"Did you consider that dorm your home then?"
"Well, no. Home was Gopher Brook--"
"So your home isn't always where you happen to be living, then?"
"Yeah, okay, whatever."
"Are you sure you know where your home is? Are you sure you even
know what a home is?"
"Of course I do! Now, if you could just call me a taxi or
something--"
"I will take you home. I promise. As soon as you direct me there."
"Okay, no problem. Take me to Gladen Drive, just outside of Gopher
Brook."
Briel shook his head in frustration. Clearly, he was not getting
through to Jim.
"Perhaps," he started, "you could start by telling me which
galaxy?"
"Which galaxy?"
"Yes, which galaxy? That might help us narrow it down a little."
"Oh, right, quite right. The Milky Way. Planet Earth. Just hang a
right at Venus and we're there."
"Which Milky Way?"
"I told you, the galaxy. Not the chocolate bar. The galaxy. You
know, the Milky Way."
Both men were feeling the strain caused by their inability to
communicate easily. It seemed that neither had ever encountered anyone as
obtuse as the other. The old man cleared his throat and rubbed his chin.
He looked around for heavenly guidance before making another attempt.
"Which Milky Way galaxy?" Briel asked again, posing the question as
precisely as he could.
Jim wrinkled up his nose and bit his lip.
"You mean there's more than one?"
The "sign post" put his hand to his forehead and paused for a moment
to collect his thoughts and patience. Finally, he settled on a way to
explain things to his guest. The old man reached into the folds of his
garment, brought out a dice and handed it to Jim.
"Roll this, please."
"Listen, I like to shoot craps as much as anyone, but I'd rather be
getting back home now."
"Please," begged the old one, "indulge me for a moment."
"Okay," Jim obliged, taking the dice and throwing it onto the
"ground". Unfortunately, the cube rolled out of sight. Jim chased it
into the mist.
"Have you found it?" the guide asked.
"Got it!"
"And what number did you roll?"
"A five."
"And if I asked you to roll it an infinite number of times," the
man wondered, "how many fives would you get?"
Jim's high school mathematics came to the fore. Infinity times any
number is infinity.
"An infinite number of fives," Jim replied.
"Exactly. Very good. Now here's the part that you have to
understand, Kolry. Existence proves possibility. The chances of anything
coming into being is finite, like a many-sided dice. Space is infinite.
Even if the odds of your galaxy coming into being were one in a billion,
one in a trillion, somewhere it will happen again. Travel far enough and
you'll find a third recurrence. Travel infinitely and you will find--"
"An infinite number of Milky Ways," Jim inferred.
"Exactly! Now, our problem here is finding out which of the infinite
number of Milky Ways, which of the infinite number of Earths, which of the
infinite number of Gopher Brooks, and which of the infinite number of
Gladen Drives is your home!"
Jim had a sinking feeling that this was going to involve more than
simply calling a cab.
"So tell me," Briel demanded, "which one is your home?"
"I-I-I don't know!" Jim stammered.
"Can't you tell me where your home is?" the guide persisted. Jim
began to get the feeling that the old man was taunting him, embarrassing
Jim with his own ignorance.
"Could you at least define your home?"
Jim ignored the man. He was lost in thought. If what he had heard
was correct, he would never be able to get back.
"Just my luck!" he thought, "Marooned in heaven!"
It was an insoluble problem. After all, Jim conceded, there was
nothing unique about James Kolry McGuire. There was little enough to
distinguish him from his beer-drinking, poker-playing buddies. There would
be absolutely nothing to delineate him from the "parallel" James Kolry
McGuires on all of those other planet Earths.
He began to panic.
"My God," he figured, "I'm never going to get home!"
His mind raced, searching for one mark that he had made in his life
which would be his own, which would separate himself from his "cosmic
clones". He could find no such signature. In all of his forty-three years
he had done nothing that could not have been duplicated across the infinite
number of universes.
Panic gave way to despair. Slowly, painfully, he was forced to give
up on the prospect of returning to Gopher Brook. Had he made out a will?
No, that was one of those tasks he'd promised to get around to and never
did.
Perhaps, he calculated, this was not such a tragedy. Certainly there
are worse places than heaven. As for the people back on Earth, they would
go on without any great inconvenience. Certainly Sarah and Margaret didn't
need him. The guys would find someone else to fill in at the poker table.
Maybe Bruce Jacobson, the pharmacist in town. He had made some overtures a
few times, trying to elbow his way into the game.
Stork would have no difficulty finding another reader to edit and
evaluate their manuscripts. Brother Robert would undoubtedly conclude that
Jim had got cold feet and stood him up. After all, Jim McGuire was no
Jason McGuire.
Life would go on.
Suddenly Jim's spirits took another nose dive. One life might not go
on. Bernice. There would be no one to feed her. Jim tried to reassure
himself that, when hungry enough, Bernice would know to scratch at the
neighbours' doors until someone fed her. Bernice would survive. No
worries there.
Bernice. For everyone else Jim's disappearance would be nothing more
than a mystery soon forgotten. But Bernice would miss her master. Even if
no one else did.
Wait a minute! That was it! He had it! Jim's pulse quickened. He
waved his finger in the air, like Archimedes shouting "Eureka!"
"I've got it!" he shouted aloud.
"Oh? Please, do tell."
"Listen, all of those places have their Jim McGuires in place. But
only one of them is missing a Jim McGuire. So, take me to the place that
is missing me."
The old man beamed proudly, like a teacher on graduation day.
"Now you know what home is," he announced. "Home is the place that
misses you."
Jim did not have time to let these words sink in. Jim would be going
back to Earth, condemned to life. Suddenly a trap door opened beneath his
feet. The atmosphere no longer supported his weight. Like a baby tossed
above its father's head, Jim had reached the apex of his flight. With
blood rushing to his brain he began a rapidly accelerating descent. But
whoever had thrown him into the air had walked away. That was the catch:
there would be no catch. He was free-falling. He had no parachute, no
wings, not so much as a cocktail umbrella to slow his drop. The plunge
continued, unabated, as he was sucked by a vortex of gravity towards
terra firma. Towards the inescapable. Towards death.
The next thing Jim knew he was waking up in his bed. This time the
sheets were dripping with perspiration. His heart pounded in his chest.
His skin was clammy. Tears salted his cheeks. His forehead burned with
fever while his body shivered from the cold.
But, hot damn! It felt great to be alive!
Jim dashed naked from his room. He flung open the side door of the
house and exposed himself to the dawn's weak light. Oblivious to the near
freezing temperature and the possibility of stares from the neighbours, he
ran outside, hunted down his favourite furry friend like the dog she was
and hugged her tight to his chest.
"Thanks, Bern. Thanks. That's twice you've brought me home."
On to Chapter 17
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