Christopher could not stay in the house. It was too uncomfortable, too jarringly wrong, to be in his father’s space and not feel his father’s presence.
Even the characteristic smell of the house—part aromatic cedar from the closets, a hint of sesame oil from the kitchen, his father’s soaps from the bath, the char of burnt wood from the fireplace—had been upset by the cleaning. It smelled now of alcohol and cleanser, and another faint chemical scent—the strongest in the kitchen—which he could not define.
Heedless of the temperature outside, Christopher went through the rooms opening all the movable windows and both doors, changing the blowers at the top of each dome to exhaust. Then he left the house behind and walked into the forest, his fists buried deep in the pockets of a jacket borrowed from his father’s closet.
For a time, he ordered himself not to think, allowing the mountain to wrap itself around him. The air was damp and cool, the ground soggy underfoot. There was a steady patter as drops of water fell from the tree crowns high overhead to the carpet of trillium and humus. A few birds called lonely sounds from the branches far above him. Now and again, his approach flushed a nimble-quick chipmunk from a tangle of ferns and brush.
The farther he went into the forest, the more his steps slowed. His purposeful passage, tramping a line through the wildness, became a quieter communion. He threaded his way between the gray-white trunks almost as a ghost.
Where did they take you, Father?
He had no thought of searching for the grave, no hope that even a forensic expert would find it. Dryke had undoubtedly been too thorough for that. Christopher’s sense of futility was such that he had not even called the police. What could they do with no body, no witness, no evidence?
Even Lila had been silenced, as Christopher had learned when he finally tore himself away from the window.
“Lila? Do you know where they put my father’s body?”
“Would the speaker please identify himself?”
“This is Christopher. Christopher McCutcheon.”
“Thank you, Christopher. To use verbal command mode, I will need a sample of your normal speech. Would you please talk to me about your day?”
Vainly hoping that some part of Lila’s customization had been missed by Dryke’s wormers, Christopher had invented for Lila a more pleasant morning than he had lived.
“Thank you. I have a sufficient sample now. Will you be the primary user of this AIP?”
“No,” he said. “The primary user is my father.”
“Thank you,” Lila said, and then stole even that faint hope away. “What is your father’s name?”
No, involving the police was pointless or worse. What did he need them to do? He already knew enough of what had happened, exactly who had done it, perhaps even a piece of why. But his testimony was valueless. He knew nothing firsthand. It was only a story.
A wild story. What would a thoughtful prosecutor make of such a tale from a distraught young man whose life had been disintegrating around him? If that prosecutor talked to Meyfarth—and, of course, he would—he might quite reasonably decide that the most likely suspect was Christopher himself.
The best he could hope for was that they would believe him enough to declare his father missing. But what was the value in that? Only his father’s attorneys and accountants would care, and nothing seemed less important at the moment than matters of business and family finance.
Justice? Punishment? Revenge? Words of primal myth and melodrama, the classic passions of the wronged, and yet they, too, seemed not to matter much to Christopher. Perhaps it was too soon, the shock too fresh, the loss too new. He had not even cried.
Or perhaps the passions and tears both were knotted in the confusion of unsettled issues. He had been cheated of his own confrontation with William McCutcheon, robbed of a reckoning over the lies which lay between them. Lies which now appeared to be only the lesser part of the deception his father had worked.
A fat drop of water falling from above hit the back of Christopher’s neck and made a cold trail under his collar to the vicinity of his shoulder blades. Christopher shivered, suddenly realized that he was hunchbacked against the chill, the jacket nearly soaked through. He turned back, guessing at the direction. When he crossed paths with old Johnson Road a few minutes later, he allowed it to lead him back the long, easy way.
The truth was that he did not understand well enough who his father had been—whether William McCutcheon had, in fact, been murdered, or had fallen in what amounted to a duel. Christopher did not know if it was right to love and mourn him, or to hate and curse him. He still did not know how to feel.
“Hello, Christopher,” Lila said as Christopher entered.
The house was barely warmer than the woods, and Christopher hastened to close the windows. “Hello, Lila.”
“I am glad to see you again, Christopher. Can you tell me if something has happened to Mr. McCutcheon?”
That froze Christopher in midstep. “Mr. McCutcheon?”
“William McCutcheon, your father. The owner of this house.”
Christopher took several uncertain steps toward the office. “What’s going on here, Lila? When I left, you were as dumb as a toaster.”
“While you were gone, I appear to have received a message from Mr. McCutcheon,” said Lila.
His breath caught. “What? Is he alive?”
“I don’t know, Christopher.”
“What other possibility is there?”
“The message may have been composed earlier and stored until after a trigger event or a specified time. It’s even possible that I sent the message to myself.”
Sliding into the chair at the comsole, Christopher said, “Let me see it.”
“I’m sorry. I do not have a copy of it. I would not be able to show it to you if I did.”
“Damn it, who’s in charge here? Do I have primary user status or not?”
“You have visitor status, Christopher. Mr. McCutcheon is the primary user.”
Which meant that the initialization Christopher had completed before leaving the house had been erased and replaced. “Then tell me what you do know. What the message was and where it came from.”
“I only know that several of my directories are restored, and the time stamp on my command files is only a few minutes old. That’s what I would expect to find if I had received a self-executing command file.”
“Do you remember Mikhail Dryke being here?”
“No.”
“Do you know who he is?”
“Yes, Christopher. If he was here, that is a reason for concern.”
“What are you doing now besides talking to me?”
“My first instruction is to try to locate Mr. McCutcheon.”
Christopher frowned. “What if you can’t find him?”
“I have contingent instructions. Do you know where Mr. McCutcheon is?”
“My father is dead.” It was easier than it should have been to say.
“His death has not been recorded, and his skylink address is still active and pointed here. How do you know that he’s dead?”
“Because you told me, two hours ago. And Dryke confirmed it. What else did my father tell you to do?”
“I’m sorry, Christopher. I am not allowed to tell you.”
Christopher felt a quick flash of impatience. “Look, Lila, Dryke already knows, unless the message came in by parachute—I can’t imagine that they’re not still monitoring this house. What good does it do for him to know and me to be in the dark? And if you’re going to be carrying on with Homeworld business, I want to know.”
“I’m aware of the monitoring, Christopher. I’ve been instructed not to place you at risk.”
“Maybe I want to be put at risk,” Christopher said, the thought springing new into his mind as he spoke it. “Maybe I’m going to want to draw Dryke back here. Lila, was my father Jeremiah?”
“Yes, Christopher. Your father used that name.”
“Why that name?”
“I don’t know the significance. But your father’s grandfather was named William Jeremiah McCutcheon.”
“I never knew that,” Christopher said. “I never knew him. The face and voice—that was you?”
“I coordinated the simulations.”
Christopher was silent for a long moment. “What if I said I wanted to take over my father’s work? All of it.”
“A successor has already been selected.”
The words stung, even though his offer had been more an arguing point than any serious intention. “Selected by who? You?”
“Mr. McCutcheon made the selection.”
Not good enough. Still not good enough to earn his respect. Was that the real message of the secrets? He had spent his whole life trying to be the best. I never would have guessed how little being good at what I do would matter—
“Lila, why didn’t my father tell me what he was doing?”
“I’m sorry, Christopher. I don’t know.”
No easy answers. He had allowed himself to hope someone from Homeworld would appear to offer kindly explanations and refuge, to acknowledge a debt and pledge a bond of kinship. But he saw now that it was not going to happen. He was not going to be embraced by his father’s friends—by Jeremiah’s friends. If his father had not welcomed him, had not trusted him, how could he expect that anyone else would? He would have to find answers to his other questions on his own.
“Lila, what’s the status of the house library?”
“The house library is empty.”
“Hidden files? Protected files?”
“I’m sorry, Christopher.”
“Is there anything left? Anything from my father? Anything about my father? About my family?”
“Mr. McCutcheon kept personal files in off-line storage, not as part of the house library,” said Lila.
Reason to hope, however feeble. “Then Dryke may have taken them. Where were they? What medium?”
“Books,” Lila said.
Christopher did not have to be told where to look. He went directly to his father’s bedroom, to the long shelf below the west-facing window and the long row of hardcover books atop it. He had noticed them during his imprisonment, even picked one up and glanced briefly through it.
He had noted them as curiosities, both because books in general were rare and because the particular form of these books was unusual. For, with one or two exceptions, the books were all Portables—traditional print volumes with their contents duplicated electronically in the binding for access by a computer. The Portables were designed to be shelved on special bookcases, “plugged in” to smart ports, although the shelf in his father’s room was not one such.
It was a transitional technology, predicated on the notion that traditional readers would resist surrendering their words-in-boards for slates, but might welcome having the contents of their libraries on-line for quick reference. Never more than a modest success, the Portables had all but vanished from the marketplace before Christopher was born. They survived only as collectibles, and he had not known his father was a collector.
Scanning the titles, Christopher found historicals, art books, Locke, Eiseley, Kant, a biography of John Muir, and one fiction best-seller, Wolf’s Lord of Sipán. And that was all. “Nothing personal here. Dryke must have taken them,” Christopher said. His voice was heavy with disappointment.
“Did you find any books?”
“Yes—”
“Would you count them, please?”
Christopher’s eyes skipped down the line. “Thirty-one.”
“Then none are missing. They are all there.”
“But I don’t see any journals, any diaries, any albums—”
“There are none to find, Christopher. The bindings are standardized. The texts vary in length. So there is always unused space in a Portable’s chipdisk. Each of those books contains more than its cover admits to,” said Lila. “As much as several hundred kilobytes per book.”
“That isn’t very much.”
“It is when you are only storing words, Christopher.”
Shaking his head, Christopher said, “I didn’t know this was possible, and cultural media are supposed to be my specialty.”
“If you had known, then probably Mikhail Dryke would also have known, and the books would be gone.”
Christopher’s face screwed up into a mystified frown. “Lila, how did you know about this? It had to be in the restored files.”
“Yes, Christopher.”
Tentatively, he reached out and pulled Clark’s Indian Legends of the Pacific Northwest from the ranks. “But only some of your files were restored.”
“Yes, Christopher.”
He looked up from the book in the direction of Lila’s voice. “Then this was important. He wanted me to know they were here. He wanted me to read them.”
“Yes, Christopher,” said Lila. “After he was dead, and only if you asked about them.”
“Who else?”
“I am not allowed to show them to anyone else.”
“Not even Lynn-Anne?”
“No.”
He pulled more volumes from the shelf, carefully making a stack in his arms. “I want to see them now.”
“There is one condition. Mr. McCutcheon asked that you read them all, or not at all.”
That brought him up short. “Why?”
“I’m sorry, Christopher. I don’t know.”
Though the archive had been opened to Christopher, he saw very quickly that it had not been created for him. Save for a few decades-old “letters” from a father to his new son, it was not even addressed to him.
And instead of the systematically organized, theatrically perfect deathbed soliloquy Christopher had expected, the archive was a fragmented and incomplete potpourri, a scattering of the thoughts and reflections and memories of a man of complexity. It was his attic, the bottom drawer of his rolltop desk, the notes scribbled in the margins of his days.
Together, they said, “This was my private world, which I never shared with you in life. This is who I was.”
Christopher rooted himself in the seat for two hours, reading his way through the first six volumes of archiviana. Then, as dusk was settling over the ridge, he pushed back from the desk and retreated to the kitchen to fortify his body with its first food since breakfast.
He also needed the break to fortify his determination. Reading William’s private archives was akin to raking a mine field in search of a lost treasure. Dangerous forces were concealed beneath the surface. Inevitably, he would stumble on them. There was no way to predict when, no way to prevent the intersection, no way to protect himself. Not if he wanted to reclaim the treasure. Not if he was to honor his father’s final request.
So far, there had been more wonder than pain. He had found nothing about Sharron, nothing about Deryn. He did find a self-conscious episodic letter which began “Dear Christopher” and spanned more than four years. The contents of the letter explained little and illuminated little more. But it was fascinating all the same, for it was filled with details of a sort that he would not have thought his father would take the trouble to notice.
But he had taken the trouble, not only to notice, but to record.
The letter began two years after Christopher was born, and the tone was both self-conscious and oddly apologetic, as though his father felt he had been caught procrastinating. It was written in simple language, as though his father was speaking to the child he was, not the adult he would be.
But it offered a snapshot, all the same: a portrait of a cheerful, self-amusing two-year-old who knew the alphabet and could count to thirty, and who liked to “play a game”—saying words and seeing them appear on the screen—on the old computer in Lynn-Anne’s room.
Because such things were important to his father, Christopher expected the catalog of the hundred and one landmark achievements of childhood—the ever-changing answers to a parent’s “Do you know what my boy can do now?” But he was surprised to hear about the soft-stuffed gray mouse that went everywhere with him until it disappeared on a family trip to Long Beach— and about Traveler Pup, the bow-tied hound who succeeded Friend Mouse.
Friend Mouse was beyond remembering. But Christopher remembered Traveler Pup with a twinge and a tug. He could see it, worn and worried, its bow tie gone, its golden fur gone gray with handling, lying in the basket of toys in the corner of his room on B Street. But he could not remember what had become of it. Surrendered without a thought during a housecleaning, most likely, the emotion imbued in it leached away by time.
The letter’s entries were spotty, tantalizing, maddening. Snapshots. An imaginary friend named Birdy, who flew away in the winter and then came back to live in a ground nest Christopher built for him beside the house. Christopher forming letters on the white brick of the backyard patio from twigs collected in the yard and broken to size. Even his own words, unremembered but resonant:
“Do you know what, Dad? It takes a long time trying to grow up. It goes age to age, and I want to skip some ages.”
That was the one that drove him away to regroup, that threatened to upset his precarious balance. The dirty little secret of growing up, Meyfarth had said. And Christopher had been in such a hurry to learn it.
Presently, he returned to the comsole and read through the last of the letter. It ended without explanation or closure in the middle of Christopher’s sixth year, its last anecdotes—of his trials with an older and more aggressive neighbor child—offering no clue as to why the project was abandoned. The next item Lila presented was date-stamped a full three years later.
“Wait—what’s going on here?” Christopher said in surprise. “Isn’t there anything between this and the last?”
“No, Christopher. I’m proceeding in strict chronological order, as Mr. McCutcheon directed.”
“Show me a file directory.”
“I’m sorry, Christopher. I don’t have a directory available.”
Lila’s mechanical politeness was becoming an annoyance. “I can take these somewhere else, you know.”
“Yes, Christopher. But you would not be able to read the files without my assistance.”
“Then I’ll take a can opener to you first and see how you do it,” Christopher said irritably, coming up out of the chair and then kicking it out of his way.
He walked to the window and stood looking out through his own reflection, his hands tucked into his back pockets. House rules, he thought. Still his father’s house, still his father’s rules.
“All right,” he said finally. “He wants you holding my hand, I guess that’s the way it has to be. Tell me this. Is there more like what I was reading coming up? More addressed to me? If so, I want to skip ahead to it.”
“Christopher, there are very specific restrictions on how I may access this material. I may not look ahead, skip ahead, or redisplay already viewed sections. I may not store, mail, or copy any part of it, or allow it to be filmed off the display.”
He sighed and made a reluctant pilgrimage back to the chair. “Do you have any idea why there’s such a gap?”
“I’m sorry, Christopher. I don’t. Is it important?”
“You tell me,” he said. “Continue, please.”
Before long, Christopher was convinced that it was important. For, in everything that followed, he found himself discussed in the third person, rather than addressed in the first. It seemed that—for some reason—any thought of him ever seeing his father’s words had vanished in the interim.
But, curiously, Christopher discovered his father spoke most clearly when he was not speaking to Christopher directly. His father’s voice became a more familiar one, his language liberated from the prison of childspeak. And though there were as many gaps and mysteries as before, the thoughts he did record seemed less guarded, closer to the heart.
I can see Sharron in his eyes and hear Deryn in his words. They are both inside him, pulling at him to follow, his father had written just weeks after Deryn broke her contract and left for Sanctuary. Christopher thought he read both fury and fear in his father’s words, the latter an unexpected complexity. His father afraid. It was nearly an oxymoron, as bewildering as burning water.
Infuriatingly, that brief entry was the only allusion to Deryn’s departure. It was, in fact, one of the few times either woman was named, and—to that point at least—the only time they were spoken of together. For all their presence in the archives, it was almost as if Christopher’s mothers had never existed.
He had waited in vain for the kind of reminiscence of Sharron that he had sought from Lynn-Anne, for the kind of reassurance that would erase his sister’s bitterness—and his own ambivalence—from his mind. Through the long hours leading up to midnight, he had kept wondering when something would touch his still-untapped pain and break loose the logjam of anger and grief he could sense but not reach.
But before that happened, he was ambushed by a simple, self-knowing confession:
I have loved one cat, one woman, one child. They’ve all left my life, but they haven’t left my heart. And the cats and the children and the women who hover on the edge of my world can’t get in. That space is already taken.
The cat was Dorian, the big gray who had owned the B Street house until the day he simply failed to return from a winter walk. The woman could only be Sharron, for Christopher could give damning witness to the way his father had kept Deryn at arms length.
And though he tried desperately to find a reason to believe otherwise, Christopher knew in the first moment the words fell under his gaze that the child his father spoke of was Lynn-Anne.
In that moment, hurt and alone, he hated both his father and his sister more than he had known possible.
This time, the kitchen was not far enough away. Christopher retreated outside, to the wooden deck which squared off the curves of the twin domes at the back of the house. Overhead, thin high clouds were making a ghost of the gibbous moon.
It was not that Lynn-Anne was first in her father’s heart which cut so deeply He granted her that as right of precedence. It was the thought that she had won from their father something that Christopher never could, that she had stood in the way of his having any standing at all. It was the realization that his father had knowingly imprisoned him in a losing game.
There was no comfort in knowing that Lynn-Anne’s jealousy had blinded her to her real status, costing her exactly what she blamed Christopher for stealing. There was no joy in the contemplation of how much her defection had cost William McCutcheon. That they, too, had been cheated only made the whole muddle more tragically foolish.
His father had changed after Lynn-Anne left, though at the time Christopher had not seen it. There was proof of the change even in the spotty record of his father’s notebooks. It explained the end of the long letter. It explained the three-year silence, coinciding with the trips east, now seen as attempts to win his aaugnter back. It explained the emotional distance when the entries resumed.
The picture was clear. For his first five or six years, Christopher had been an intimate part of his father’s life. But after that time he was never more than an important part. And he had spent the succeeding years trying to earn back something he had once had, without ever grasping exactly what was missing—or why it had been taken away.
So much of Christopher’s history with his father finally made sense. His own eternal sense of inadequacy. The paradox of his father’s studied indifference and his obsession for control—the endless auditions for an approval he would never give. Even his father’s curious relationship with Deryn, by his choice alone less than it could have been, an arrangement rather than a marriage.
Numbly, he wondered—was this the whole point of the exercise, for him to learn that his father did not love him? If so, then it was a cowardly act, and a cruel legacy. And there was no reason to mourn such a man.
The high clouds were blowing off, and scattered windows of star-dotted sky were starting to open. Christopher sat on the railing, back resting against the wall, his arms crossed tightly across his chest, looking up into the fragmented sky for pieces of a pattern he could recognize.
It struck him then that his father had left him neither a gift nor a message, but a final test. See what you can do with these, his father was saying. He had bequeathed Christopher the task of assembling into a picture the thoughts and moments captured in the archives, and the harder task of drawing out the meaning. What more fitting legacy could there be, considering his profession? Christopher had performed the same synthesis a hundred times on the lives of strangers.
There was something of love in the challenge, as there had always been. Never the unconditional embrace, never the final security, but always something of love, nonetheless. His father had tried to love him without ever making himself vulnerable. And because his father did not trust him, he had tried to control him.
Was still trying. Read it all or not at all. Why? Because his father had feared that Christopher would stop before seeing everything of importance, would draw the wrong conclusion or be led to too harsh a judgment. The same manipulation as always, coming from an even colder, safer distance.
The temptation to answer with rebellion was strong. But such a rebellion now would be an empty, self-defeating gesture. William McCutcheon was gone, immunized by death against Christopher’s venom. And there were seventeen volumes left.
There has to be something more, he thought as he went back inside the house, something meant for him. There has to be some reason for the exercise beyond destroying the last illusions of a twenty-seven-year-old child.
These fissured cliffs, grading from brown to white to red, appear to me as a great wound carved across her face, as the wrinkled features of the crone. How could such feeble rivers cut such canyons? The wind is a ghost, water a chimera. The element that escapes our eyes is time—time in such measure that only the earth herself is witness.
Who remembers these tablelands rising from a dying sea? Only Gaea. Who recalls the march of life preserved in these canyon walls? Only those to whom the gift has been passed, whose substance preserves the fragile past in a precarious present. We have left our mark here as surely as have wind and water. My heart beats in rhythm with the land. I am its eyes, shaped from the clay and touched with the spark.
There were dozens more like it, and a yawning, eye-weary Christopher hardly knew what to make of them. Prayerful poetic reveries to the experience of nature seemed hardly to belong to his picture of William McCutcheon.
Christopher knew that his father had treasured the privacy that the forest estate assured him, that he had a speculator’s eye for land. But these essays went far beyond that. Embodied in them was a whole world of thought into which Christopher had only had rare glimpses. And, though it was not easy to accept, there was as much emotion in such passages as there had been in his father’s letter. Perhaps more.
The only way he could make sense of them was to think of them as coming from Jeremiah. But even that was an imperfect answer, because it merely confirmed the fact without explaining it. The man who had written, “These switchback mountain streams tumble through crazy folded hills growing ever wider, ever calmer, as though milked of the energy needed to sustain the conquering fecundity of the forest,” could have written any of Jeremiah’s speeches on the price of the Diaspora.
Indeed, there were any number of entries that read like sketches for such a speech, echoing the metaphor of desiccation:
In whose eyes is the butterfly more beautiful than the chrysalis, a glittering jade jewel flecked with gold? The price of the transformation is destruction, the transaction final and absolute. The beauty that was vanishes, consumed as the fuel for flight and freedom. In just this way, an unchecked hunger to expand will drain the life from the Earth, sacrificing this jade and azure jewel for that poor prize.
But was there a way to marry Dryke’s Jeremiah to Christopher’s father, and make the two merge into a single image?
He sat back in the chair, hands folded in his lap. “All right, Lila. I give up. What’s the secret?”
“Excuse me, Christopher?”
“Five down, a nine-letter word meaning ‘mercy.’ I want a peek at the answers in the back of the book.”
“I know no such word.”
“ ‘It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven upon the place beneath. Tis mightiest in the mightiest: it becomes the throned monarch better than his crown—’ ” His voice trailed away as his memory failed him. “Must be the way you were raised.”
“I don’t understand, Christopher.”
“You’re helping him tell this joke. What’s the punch line?”
“I don’t believe these records constitute a joke, Christopher.”
“Never mind,” he said with a sigh. “Keep it coming.”
Fighting fatigue and frustration, Christopher stubbornly persisted in his task as the wee hours of morning slipped by. His eyes burned and blinked, his focus wandered. The words on the display blurred into an extended non sequitur.
The same world that seems crowded to some seems empty to others… What drives them? The ignorance of men empowered by the arrogance of gods... There is a bloodline of expansionism which can be traced through history, and they are its youngest, most vigorous branch… The return of sexual liberty will blunt the rush and restore the balance. Repression is the engine of ambition… Hysteresis is the enemy. We are forever responding to conditions that no longer obtain… If I can make fear a stronger force than the fantasy of freedom…
And finally he fell asleep in his father’s chair in his father’s office in his father’s house, leaving one last essay unread on the comsole display.
They pass by the windows as ghosts in a silted fog: chi-nook, silver, sockeye, steelhead. Their struggle seems to defy all reason. Once a lifetime, they fight their way upstream with a single-minded fervor we would find frightening in our own kind. They suffer the most grievous injuries, but though they may weaken, they do not falter.
Torn and bleeding, they attack the obstacle again and again, until one or the other is bested. Those which survive fight on, taking no note of those which fail—there is nothing that can be done, and still something yet to do. The next obstacle is just ahead.
And when they reach the quiet pools and spawn, the fire goes out. The fight has exhausted them. The spirit has passed from them to the eggs. Once the task is accomplished, they are content to swim in aimless circles until they die. Never, ever, do they ask, must it end this way? Such a question is beyond their capacity to conceive. This dimly apprehended call rules their being.
But I ask the question, because I have no wish to join them—or to live in the world that they will leave behind.