Stillness & Shadows John Gardner (nice books to read .txt) š
- Author: John Gardner
Book online Ā«Stillness & Shadows John Gardner (nice books to read .txt) šĀ». Author John Gardner
The doctor was rambling on, oblivious, urgently concerned with his own speculations, objective as a philosopher, but quietly insistentāeven desperate, a disinterested observer might have saidāthe doctorās head tipped and thrown forward still more, as if to see more deeply into the queerness of things. āShe doesnāt seem to look at the strangers she meets, but all the time a part of her mind is, you might say, āscanningāāwatching for signs of, let us say, let us say, danger. Scanning like a computer, I mean. I donāt suppose you work with computers much?ā He saw that Craine did not, and nodded, apologetic. He hurried on, āShe judges our eyes, our clothes, our walk, all without consciously knowing sheās doing it, and the first little sign that somethingās wrongāāhe made a quick jab with the magnifying glassāāsheās suddenly all attention.ā Craine leaned, startled, in the direction of the jab. He was thinking again of the murdered women. Did they know, right from the first instant, what was coming?
Dr. Tummelty bent closer and lowered his voice to show that he was serious, dead serious in all this, though of course it was all just a theory, he might be mistaken. His snow-white hair was blow-dried but nevertheless perfect, every hair in place. He wore a wedding ring. āWe add and subtract, make up sentences, and so on, with the slowest, most trivial of our facultiesāthe part of our minds weāre normally most aware of, the part we most value in our ā¦ value in our, so to speak ā¦everyday affairs. But all the while, these more ancient faculties, things closer to the brain stem, are scanning the world for us, quicker than instinct, or one with it perhaps, though for the most part weāre scarcely aware of them. We block them, doubt themāthatās partly what makes us civilized, so to speakābut theyāre always there, ready to assert themselves, too simple and pure to lie to usātoo primitive. By some accidentāsome severing of a nerve, some altered synapse, conceivably even some conscious choiceāa man like Carnac there, a man who occasionally connects with the timeless, or so he believesāthe ābioplasmic universe ā¦ā whatever ā¦ You follow what Iām saying?ā He moved the reading glass slowly toward Craineās arm. The movement struck Craine as obscurely ominous, like a catās paw slowly reaching.
Craine smiled in panic, scanning for faint sounds of life behind him, his eyes narrowed, sharp as needles. His head was drawn back, cheeks twitching, as if prepared to jab out and bite. āInteresting,ā he said. Now they drifted again toward Tullyās desk, slowly falling toward it on their flesh and bone stilts, gauging and subtly controlling the fall with the swollen cells in their skull holes.
āThereās no greater mystery than the human mind,ā the doctor said softly, his head tipped, trying to see into Craineās eyes. āSome fascinating things came out of Viet Namāsevered lobes are the least of it. I wrote a book on the subject.ā He blushed. āI donāt mean to bore you. If Iām talking too muchāā
Absentmindedly, Craine nodded. He could feel the unseen strangerās eyes on him again, drilling into his back. Was it possible, that theory the ancients had, vision as a stream of particles? Physics, heād read, knows of no one-way events. Then could looking at an object disturb the object?āprovoke some infinitely subtle response, a prickling of the thumbs? Could the atoms of his bodyāthat was the pointācould his atoms, just perceptibly molested by particles beamed from an observerās eyes ā¦ He must try to remember to think about that, he told himself. Heād write himself a noteāhe had pockets full of notes, and back at the hotel whole drawers full of themābut it was impossible just now, he had the book in one hand, the unlit pipe in the other, and moreover the doctor had his hand on his forearm, or rather the brass rim of his reading glass, pinning him where he was ā¦
The doctor was still speaking, a curious scent like mint, maybe catnip, on his breath, one more brute obstacle in the way of concentration. āYouāve read about severed lobes?ā the doctor was asking. Then, giving his head a little lift to get the lenses of his bifocals right, he smiled and corrected himself: āYes of course. Iād forgotten. You read everything. Ha ha!ā He tapped Craine good-humoredlyāa fellow culpritāwith the magnifying glass. āSo where was I? Ah yes, Carnac! Fascinating mind. Youāre good friends, I take it? Iāve noticed the way he keeps an eye on you.ā
āCarnac?ā Craine said, starting awake, indignant.
āA man canāt have too many friends,ā the doctor said, and smiled again, more warmly than ever, as if to comfort him. For all the smile, he was watching Craine shrewdly. Judging his health, perhaps. Yes; he would have heard about Craineās operation.
The bell above the door clanged and a fat young man in an oversized red sweater came in, opening the door just enough to slip through it, more timid than furtive, or so it seemed to Craine on reflection. A college student. Small, neat features in the middle of an oversized head. Large hands and feet. He affected a bored look, as if his coming to the bookstore was someone elseās idea, not his. Closet intellectual? Pervert in pursuit of dirty books? Poor devil wouldnāt find them at Tullyāsānot a chance! Tully was a Baptist. Maniac on the subject of perversion, or such was Craineās suspicion. He knew the look. The squeezed-shut face, the anger that drove Tullyās everlasting grinding of nothing between filed-down teeth. Tullyās dog opened
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