

I lay there, rattled. People were moaning and crying, some were screaming. I heard it all through wads of cotton cranked into my ears. And of course the bells. I could still feel the cold, moisture-filmed glass on my fingertips. I concentrated on that and on the moments preceding as my hand reached for the glass of copper-tinted beer, but this time I cut off the explosion and let my hand grip the pint glass and raise it to my lips, tasted the cold Red Hook slide over my tongue. For several moments I existed in two realities, it seemed. In the first I'd just been blown out of my chair, in the second my consciousness meandered forward uninterrupted by horror.
I'd been thinking about that beer for quite a while as I wandered the Pike Place Market Fair. It was a warm May afternoon in Seattle, around eighty degrees. When I came upon a large grouping of tables under white umbrellas and enclosed by a low fence, I turned in and looked for a seat. The beer garden was crowded. There was a street musician in a straw hat playing pretty good acoustic guitar on a stage a dozen yards from the fenced-in area. I spotted a table with an empty seat. A young woman with short dark hair and lavender sunglasses sat by herself. I asked if I could take the empty seat, and she nodded with one of those neutral smiles you give strangers whom you don't wish to encourage. I took the chair and hitched it back to let her know that I wasn't there to hit on her. Then I ordered my Red Hook, it arrived, I reached for it . . . and ka BOOM! My illusion of duel realities collapsed.
The young woman was sitting on the ground holding her head, her sunglasses crooked on her nose. Her eyes looked frightened but rational. They were big brown Audrey Hepburn eyes occupying a plain face, and she turned them to me and we held each other's gaze. I shoved the table off, stood up and went to her.
"Are you all right?" I asked, my voice muffled in my ringing ears. She nodded. I extended my hand, she grasped it, and I pulled her to her feet. That's when the second explosion went off. The concussion shuddered through my body, staggering me sideways. It did something worse to the young woman with the brown eyes. It sent a hunk of white metal spinning into her waist, almost ripping her in half. I saw it in slow motion as the world tilted drunkenly and I fell, a hot, violent odor blowing over me, and then I saw red flames devour the blue, blue sky.
A mild concussion, two cracked ribs, a wicked abrasion on my right cheek (this is what felt "scorched" immediately after the first explosion), a fractured middle toe. Sundry cuts, scrapes, contusions, etc. Two days in a Group Health hospital. I walked out of there with Frankenstein stitches and a limp, glad to be alive but with a depressed feeling clinging to me like a low-grade fever.
My best friend picked me up in his sixty's era Volkswagen Beetle. I liked to think of Sean as a practical poet. He was twenty-three years old, sported a soul patch on his chin and round steel frame glasses. He had found the frames in a Wallingford antique store and had his prescription fitted to them. He liked to write poems in coffee houses on The Ave, scratching them out with the nib of a black ink fountain pen, filling small notebooks. All of which should have added up to capital A affectation. But somehow with Sean it didn't. He was a good guy, a good listening ear. He was also one of those perpetual students who manipulate majors and minors with the finesse of a concert pianist. That was his practical side. I was already a year out of University and coping, after a fashion, with real life. In other words I was under employed as a record store clerk and spent my evenings trying to tweak my resume into something irresistible.
"You've got the look," Sean said as we pulled away from the hospital with a lawn mower whine of the VW's engine.
"Which look is that?"
"The look of someone who's been blown up. The look of bells ringing in your ears. Well, buddy, they didn't toll for thee, so come back to planet earth and I'll buy you a beer.
"Bells I could live with."
"What can't you live with?"
"Forget it."
"I would," Sean said, "But forgetting things isn't so easy nowadays. You want to go to Dante's? I'm buying"
I stared out the window, feeling a bit unreal. "Thanks, but I really just want to go home."
"If you're turning down free beer then the center really will not hold," Sean said. And then, with uncharacteristic bitterness: "Fuck Jihad."
In my apartment I made coffee and sat out on the postage stamp-sized sun porch with my feet on the rail and Details Of A Sunset And Other Stories tented open, unread, on my lap. Three floors down some guy was washing his car and he had the radio up loud tuned to an alternative rock station. My ribs hurt every time I breathed. My toe hurt whether I breathed or not. I began playing a game we've all played, the game of WHAT IF, the game of IF ONLY.
The young woman's name had been Janice Burnley. Her image haunted me. The girl with the Audrey Hepburn eyes, her goofy lavender glasses crooked on her face, her hand reaching out. I took it back a couple of minutes to her reserved smile and nod when I asked if I could share her table. I ran through it to the point at which I reached for my Red Hook Ale, but before my fingertips touched the cold glass I hesitated, and at that intersection in my reality re-wind I seemed caught in a double suspended moment. The car radio below me swelled, faded, swelled again, faded out altogether, and there was guitar music coming from the street musician standing outside the beer garden.
I was there.
My table companion was watching the guitar player, her fingers tapping along. I stared at the line of her jaw, the way her hair spiked over the delicate shell of her ear, which looked fiercely pink in a cunning bar of sunlight that had penetrated the umbrella cover. Then the first bomb went off.
I shoved the table off me and bolted up, the blood and screaming all around, and I couldn't shut it out. Again the girl sat on the ground with no apparent injuries, even looking a little comical with her glasses cockeyed. I knew what was coming and I didn't wait for it to happen. I threw myself over Janice Burnley, knocking her flat just as the second explosion tore through.
"How are we doing today?" my morning nurse asked me.
"Okay. A little dreamy."
"Still dreamy?"
"Yeah."
The doctor came by and frowned at my chart for a while. He couldn't figure out the "dreamy" aspect of my recovery. Everything else looked good.
"I suppose it's just plain disorienting to get blown up," I said.
"It is definitely that," he said.
Dreamy. Not a big deal. On the first day of my second convalescence I had lain in my hospital bed and stared at the television set. All the colors sort of ran together, like one of those light boxes from the summer of love that was supposed to simulate an acid trip. The guy in the next bed held the remote. I said, "Why don't you change the channel?"
"You don't like Katie Couric?" He was in his fifties, with an equine face and a beach ball belly lifting the bed sheet.
"I like her fine."
"So?"
"So that isn't Katie Couric."
He squinted at the TV. "Yes, it is."
Gooey colors oozed over the screen. "Look at the picture," I said.
"I am looking at the picture."
"And you see Katie Couric?"
"No."
"Ha."
"I see Matt Whatshisface. Katie's not on right now."
"You don't see a bunch of weird colors?"
He shook his head, his lips pressed into a skeptical line. I let it drop. And I stopped looking at the set, because after a while the colors had a nauseating effect. It wasn't just the picture, either. The sound issuing from the speaker was nothing more articulate than a fly buzz that rose and fell with inflective randomness. When the nurse wandered in I asked her what was on the TV. My roommate gave me a sour look, and the nurse glanced up and said, "A dog food commercial."
"A dog food commercial," the man in the next bed said flatly.
I told the doctor about the TV. Soon enough we discovered it wasn't only the TV. Computer screens presented incomprehensible jigsaws patterns. My senses now scrambled everything that came filtered through electronic media. Even a voice modulated through the phone came to my ear drum like a mosquito whine.
I guess they gave me every test they could think of but it got them nowhere. I departed the hospital with little more than a fond hope that it would all "clear up."
It didn't.
"How do you explain that?" Sean asked me, looking every bit as skeptical as my former roommate with the beach ball belly. We were sitting at a window table in Bean There, a java joint on Forty-Fifth, a couple of miles from the UW.
"I think I got to rewind an event and play it different," I said, kind of making it up as I went.
"Yeah?"
"Yeah. Only in this new version I'm one half step removed. You know how when you see a computer screen or a TV screen in the background of a news shot or whatever? You know how you see this black bar scroll up the image?"
Sean nodded.
"Well, that's what I mean. I guess."
"Oh, now I understand perfectly."
"You're not trying."
"Give me some help."
"I'm like a second tier observer now," I said. "When I'm pointed at first tier reality, I can absorb it mostly okay, but second tier reality--electronic media, for instance--gets scrambled because I'm already a step away."
"I thought you said you were a half step away."
I sipped my latte and looked out the window at slow traffic. Sean tapped his pen on the table. "All right, all right," he said. "Sorry. It's just pretty far fetched."
"I know."
"Anyway, why do you get to rewind the event thing? No offense, but what makes you so special?"
"I don't know. Maybe I'm not the only one. Maybe there are others and we just don't know about it."
"It's never happened to me."
"A lot of things have never happened to you. That doesn't mean they don't happen to other people. And maybe after a while, the rewinder forgets that he ever did rewind."
"Perhaps."
"Yeah, perhaps."
Then Sean said, "Hey, I just remembered what makes you so special."
"Yeah?"
"You got blown up last month."
"True."
"But that's not all that happened. You also got to save somebody's life."
"On the rewind."
"Right, that's what I mean. You got to make a deliberate moral decision. You think it's bs, but I believe in the moral Universe, the moral God-consciousness. Maybe you're right about people, maybe a lot of people are getting to rewind. Maybe that's how God increases moral consciousness in the world, which equals love, which equals higher consciousness. God consciousness." Sean gripped his pen, looking pleased with himself.
"That's nice," I said, but your theory falls apart, because I didn't make a moral decision. All I did was react, unaware of any personal consequences."
"So you wouldn't have saved her if you'd known you couldn't watch TV anymore?"
"Or hear a voice on a telephone, or work a computer, or lately even an electronic cash register? If I knew it would get worse, like it is getting worse? If I thought it would make me incapable of functioning in modern society? If I thought this mild background buzz might get louder and more insistent until I thought I would go out of my mind? I don't know, man. But I guess at that point it certainly would become a decision instead of a reaction."
"You're right," Sean said. "The theory doesn't hold water. But it's still cool, and I'm going to write a poem about it. I'm going to call it The Jihad Bomb Theory Of Moral God-Consciousness."
"Do that," I said.
So I had to find out. Naturally I had to find out. There was a constant buzzing in my ears. I couldn't hear it much during the day, but in the stillness of the night it was insistent and distracting, robbing me of sleep. I thought maybe it had something to do with all the broadcast and microwave signals in the air. I sat on my sofa and began thinking about the beer garden, Janice Burnley, and the bombs.
Sean removed his little round poet's glasses and wiped the lenses on his T-shirt. Sunlight slanted though the window of Dante's, shining up the amber pints on the table before us. I was now living in a Universe where The Jihad Bomb Theory Of Moral God-Consciousness did not as yet exist. Looking over Sean's shoulder I could see the Mariner's game on ESPN. I hadn't touched my beer yet. Sean listened to everything I told him. He's a good listener, but I can tell when he thinks I'm full of it. That didn't really matter, though. I just wanted to say it all out loud, as a way of organizing and understanding my thoughts, such as they were.
"So you went back to your apartment and rewound everything again?" he said. "Rewind is the right word?"
"Yeah. I found out I could do that."
"And this time you let things go back to the way they were originally?"
"Yes."
"The girl died. But you say she lived in your other version?"
"I let her die."
He frowned at me. "Cut it out."
"It's true."
"If you say so."
"I do say so. I watched it all again. I looked into her eyes, and then I hesitated long enough for the second bomb to go off and cut her in half."
"Okay, okay. Then what?"
"Then nothing. I'm here, all my senses intact, and the future looks promising."
"Except?"
"Except I let the girl die."
"So you said."
"It's a hell of a thing," I said. "For quite a while, during my latest convalescence, I ragged on myself for not checking her out last time, finding out all I could about her when I had the chance. Talk to her, at least."
"The girl with the Hepburn eyes."
"Yeah, Janice. Janice Burnley Anyway, I wished I'd found out what kind of a person she was, whether she was--"
"A good person?"
"I don't know."
"Whether she kicks her dog, runs red lights, cheats on her boyfriend? Or volunteers at some retirement home and adopts stray cats?"
I shrugged. "Something like that, I guess. But then I figured it didn't matter. Because that's not part of the decision. It's whether or not I can do the right thing, and whether or not I even know what the right thing is. The point being, now I have a decision to make. A real decision."
"To rewind or not to rewind, that is the question."
I shaped my lips into a smile and nodded. "Yeah."
Throngs moved outside the window of this bar on the Ave. Normal people on their way through life. Maybe a certain percentage of them had rewound. Who knows? A scraggly man sat on the sidewalk across the street with a hand-lettered sign and a mangy dog curled beside him. He looked like one of those guys who hears things nobody else hears, maybe, who knows, a constant mosquito whine that has drilled into his brain until his thoughts have broken up and can never quite come together again.
"So if I play along," Sean said, "and assume all this wild shit is true, then what's next? What are you going to do?"
"That's a good question," I said, but I wasn't really there anymore. I could hear acoustic guitar music, and there was a young woman looking away from me, one young woman out of millions I would never know, and my hand reached out until my finger tips touched the cold, moisture-filmed glass of beer, and it all started again for the last time. |