Giles Goat Boy (37 page)

Read Giles Goat Boy Online

Authors: John Barth

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary

BOOK: Giles Goat Boy
5.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Olé!”
they cried behind.

As if responding to my note the horns of the orchestra began a grand chorale, its measured chords resounding in all my nerves. Anastasia was before me, led onto the dais by the Sears; we regarded each other with brimming eyes. Mrs. Sear hugged my arm and declared, “Well, I believe in him.” Her tone was petulant, as if to scold Anastasia. “I think he’s cute.”

“We’ve almost got you a convert,” Dr. Sear said lightly. “I told her that belief has to come before believability, but it must not sound convincing when
I
say it.”

I shook off their hands. The horns took up my pain and gave it back in gold sonorities. Imperious, austere, nobly suffering, they spoke both to and for me. Even as I slipped the shophar’s lanyard over my head, a red bulb lighted in the tassel of the pull-cord.

“Ready!” cried one of the guards.

But now the floodlights dimmed and the waiting party murmured as on the far wall a great screen glowed, blinked hugely, and focused into a picture: a single shaft, like a stark stone finger, pointed against a pale gray sky; winding towards it up a dark slope in the foreground was a procession of flickering lights, and from the column-top itself a larger flame
roared. A new sound burst into the room, as it seemed from all directions, blending with and mounting over the splendid brass.

“That’s the dawn-service upstairs on the Hill,” Dr. Sear remarked for my benefit. “Big ceremony for the new spring registrants. They run the organ on natural steam from down here and use the tunnels for resonance. Superb bass response.”

Anastasia moved to me in the dim light, stirred no doubt as I was by the sound and spectacle. “Your poor friend,” she said.

I could not find my voice. Mrs. Sear drew us closer.

“That’s the place where Enos Enoch passed on,” Anastasia said, referring to the hilltop. “For all studentdom.”

I shook my head. “Only for the kids who believed in Him.”

“Come on,” Mrs. Sear insisted, reaching as if to unbelt Anastasia’s robe. The girl pressed against me to forestall her, and we found ourselves kissing—stiffly, then not so. Abruptly she turned her face away.


I want
to believe you!” she said, much distressèd. “I almost
can!

From behind me somewhere Stoker instructed me that the whistle was ready when I was, and bade me not delay. “Take her to the couch, Heddy,” he said.

“I’m trying,”
Mrs. Sear fretted. “Come on, dears!”

“You must
make
yourself believe,” Dr. Sear said pleasantly to Anastasia. “Matter of will, actually.”

But she shook her head. “It’s not
right
. Especially at a funeral service.”

Before I could inquire what exactly was afoot, Stoker himself came up on the dais and firmly ordered his wife to go with Dr. and Mrs. Sear. She hesitated, her face distraught, and then permitted herself to be led to the bier. There were a few
olés
and some scattered applause—whether for her, or a newly roused Croaker, or something on the screen, I was too grieved to care.

“Now,” Stoker said briskly. “You know what
service
means, George; I’ve heard you use the word yourself. Well, that’s the Spring Sunrise Service going on on the Hill—you can’t see the actual servicing because it’s too dark. And when somebody important dies we have a Memorial Service in his honor. Life over Death, all that sort of thing. Usually private, you know, between married relatives, but since you’re the Grand Tutor … Blow the whistle as soon as you’re done.”

With a clap on the shoulder he took me to the couch, beside which Anastasia stood and would not let Mrs. Sear unbelt her.

“It’s not so, George!” she said. “There’s no such custom at all, except at these parties. Believe me!”

But the swelling organ bore my doubts away. “You believe
me
,” I said. “Nothing else matters.” With my free hand I gave her sash the needed jerk; Mrs. Sear moved quickly to open the robe.


Look
, Ken!” she cried. “Oh, you little
darling!
I wish
I
were a Grand Tutor!”

As evenly as I could before the revelation I said to Anastasia, “Do you believe?”

“Hind to,” Stoker directed the Sears, who having loosed her half-reluctant grip upon the robe and removed the garment entirely, to the pleasure of the assemblage, were gently pressing her upon the bier. “He’s a goat-boy, remember.” They turned her about—lightly, with constant caresses—until, pliant and full of doubt, she knelt on the bier’s end, facing away. Only as they drew down to the cushion her head and shoulders, stroking her all the while, she wondered, “George …”

A light fell on us; the music rose, could not imaginably soar higher. Upon the screen glowed a larger image of the column, its base ringed now by torches. The crowd took the hymn up, mighty, mighty, as I leaned my stick against the bier, raised my wrap, and steadied myself with a hand upon the perfect rump that swam in my tears.

“In the name of the Founder,”
I declared,
“and of the sun—”

“Olé!”
they cried behind me.

“—and of the Grand Tutor so be it!”

Incredibly, as I mounted home, the music swelled and rose to bursting. As ever in goatdom, the service was instant: swiftly as the sunflash smiting now the Founder’s Shaft I drove and was done. Anastasia squealed into the cushion, “I
do
believe!” and fell flat. Unmuscled at once like Brickett Ranunculus, like him overbalanced by my thrust, I tumbled back and would have fallen had I not been hoist amid a chorus of
olés
by Croaker, who caught me from behind and hiked me up on his shoulders. The guards sprang from the dais into the crowd; Dr. and Mrs. Sear, alarm in their faces, pulled Anastasia to her feet and then, as she could not support herself, shrank away and left her leaning against the bier, her face in her hands. I had just had time, as I pitched from the service, to snatch up my stick. Gripping Croaker with my legs I raised it to strike now—at him, perhaps, or at Stoker, the sight of whom (with my serviced Anastasia limp in his arms) suddenly enraged me—at anyone, for I was transport with grief and the aftermath of passion. But when I made to bring the weapon down it tangled in the cord, and a howling whistle—the loudest shriek I’d ever heard—drowned out organ, crowd, and orchestra. Again and again it blasted as I tried to free the stick and keep my perch on lurching Croaker.
It was the same wild summons which had opened that dreadful day, and after the first few screams of it pandemonium broke out in the hall. Whether out of fear of my bellowing mount and his frantic rider, or because in their liquor they believed that an EAT-wave truly was upon them, the carousers yelled and sprang, mobbing the doorways, tripping and trampling, climbing one another in their haste. The musicians fled the bandstand and joined them, swinging their golden horns like clubs. On the Telerama, too, all was disorder: the celebrants flung away their torches and ran, sprinting down footpaths and through shrubbery, diving behind rocks, flinging themselves flat upon the ground or into bushes. The organ-music turned wild and broken, then ceased altogether, and the crowd-din grew berserker.

At last I freed my stick, and the EAT-whistle stopped. But it had blown from my head all liquor and delusion and left me stricken by my folly, aghast at how far and lightly I’d strayed from Grand-Tutorhood. Had that been, as Max had suggested, Stoker’s purpose? He stood now on the loveseat-bier itself, soiling the cushions with his boots, and surveyed with a grin the general panic. Hands on his hips, he laughed at the scrambling worshipers, at the frenzied party-guests, and at me—virtually in my face, for on our separate perches we were of a height.

“Couldn’t do better myself!” he cried. “Why not go to work for me?”

I might have attacked him, but Croaker was too excited by the chaos in the room to heed my orders. Stinging with self-reproach I dug my heels in, and we charged into the crowd, who now that the whistling had stopped were beginning to recover their senses. I looked with mixed feelings for Anastasia, but she and the Sears were gone; Madge however I observed belly-down on a nearby table, laid out across several platters of cold-cuts: an apple was in her unbandaged mouth, her eyes were closed, and the guards from the dais were spreading mustard on her hams. I spurred Croaker on lest he too catch sight of her. We bounded to the exit-door, which opened at our approach, and as we entered the corridor beyond, Stoker’s merry voice roared out from loudspeakers on every side:

“Think it over, Goat-Boy! I’ll see you again!”

And his laugh preceded and pursued us as we went, unopposed, unaccompanied, from hallway to hallway, chamber to chamber. Guards stood back with a grin; levers were pulled, lights flashed, all doors opened before us and closed behind—even the last, that great iron portal of the entrance-chamber through which we issued now as we had entered hours before, not knowing how we’d got there. The watchdogs snarled, but were held in check; Croaker snarled back, but I steered him on. We crossed the graveled
apron, floodlit still and chilly in the early light, and plunged down a wooded slope, through groves of oak and dew-soaked laurel. At the foot, in a bright-misted clearing near the road, a kilometer at least from the Powerhouse, we came to ground—collapsed in fact together into the leaves, from an exhaustion I’d not guessed he shared. And though rage, remorse, and doubt burned in me like Stoker’s awful fires, which no amount of tears could quench, yet weariness banked and dampered them: careless of comfort, of health, of safety (but Croaker seemed no longer a menace, having come to the dais, now I reflected on it, more probably to aid than to assault me; and as for Stoker, I saw little cause why he might pursue us, and less hope of eluding him if he should), I glanced over at my companion, already snoring, then closed my eyes and, just as I had fallen, pitched asleep.

Third Reel
1
.

From ill dreams of among other things peanut butter I woke to the sound of what I took for squirrels, a scratchy gnaw against a scolding chitter, and for one sweet second couldn’t place myself. Then I saw Croaker hunkered near in a patch of forenoon light, biting on my stick while gray squirrels fussed overhead in the oaks, and recollection like a morning muscle ached along me.

It wasn’t memory alone and bone-joints pained, but head and belly, the one a-crack, the other heaving. I sat up, reeled, and retched, too ill at once for more remorse about G. Herrold, Max, Anastasia. Croaker came to me and banished any doubts of his fidelity by grunting gently at my state and offering me nourishment. He had been up betimes and made a little fire somehow; in its coals he’d roasted a quantity of migratory songbirds and small mammals—shrews, perhaps, or infant possums—a double handful of whose charred carcasses he now dumped proudly in my lap. When I had done gagging and flapping them off me, he proffered fare more to my taste: a store of chestnuts, not all of them wormy, which too he’d roasted in his fire and which suggested, considering the season, that the burnt animals were offspring of those haranguing squirrels, their provender gone the way of their progeny. But the warm hulls were welcome in my hands, the light meats easy in my stomach. More welcome yet, for I had a cruel thirst, he’d stoppered the shophar-tip with elderberry pith and filled the whole horn with springwater, which worked miracles of bracing and clearing
when I rinsed me inside and out with it. Last, most marvelously, he’d found and plundered us a bee-tree! No better redress than honey for gastric abuse: so sweet to my innards was that amber balm, redolent of last year’s clover, I suffered my provider to eat roast rodent in my sight while I breakfasted on chestnuts and honey, and vomited no more. Uncertain how much he could understand—of my language and generally—I thanked him with a whole heart for the meal, and was gratified to see him smile and offer me more. I accepted a mouthful of honeycomb-cappings to chew as we traveled, and was further delighted a moment later, upon standing to urinate on the coals, when he gave me my stick before I could ask for it.

“What’s this, now?” I marveled.

Along the ashen shaft, with no other instrument than his teeth so far as I could discover, he had incised a number of humanish figures, recognizable though much stylized, and not unattractive. Their torsos were squat, sometimes nonexistent except for the apparatus of generation; their faces were squared, their eyes, ears, noses, and mouths very large, their teeth pointed. They rode one another’s shoulders or stood upon one another’s heads, two columns of them up the stick, and on each level the figure in this was engaged with its counterpart in that, in one or several ways: they clapped and coupled, buggered and bit; also sniffed and fiddled and fingered and shat, thrust out their tongues and forth their pudenda—a rare interclutchment it was of appetites. Again I thanked him, pointing to the design to make my message clear; he frowned and shook his head. I was puzzled until with invitation in his eyes he fetched up his gown and took his own mighty organ in one hand while with the other he indicated a pair of figures on the stick: two blocky chaps more neatly scissored than ever G. Herrold and I in wrestling-days. I understood then that the artwork was functional as well as a decorative—that to point to any pair of Croaker’s figures was to give a particular command—and that my own finger had rested inadvertently on a full-faced
shelah-na-gig
, which being female had nonplussed him. I was to learn later of further significances in the arrangement of figures from bottom to top—a kind of hierarchic psychronology of lust whereof the ingenuity, combined with the art of the composition, suggested that Croaker was working in some tradition more sophisticated than himself. I declined his invitation; signaled my desire to mount his shoulders instead and be off for Great Mall in search of Max. Though I had no claim on Croaker, he seemed a willing and most valuable servant as well as a formidable ally; I could make better time on
his legs than on my own, and be reasonably sure besides that he’d commit no further mayhem while under my governance.

Other books

Women and Children First by Francine Prose
The Blue Girl by Laurie Foos
Don't Look Back by S. B. Hayes
Shotgun Justice by Angi Morgan
Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay
After the Storm by M. Stratton
Driving Her Crazy by Kira Archer