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iancaldwell&dustinthomason.theruleoffour-第86章

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 About you going to Chicago?
 About us going to Chicago。
  
 Where we were taken that night; what questions were asked of us; I don't remember。 The fire kept burning in front of me; and Paul's voice hummed in my ears; as though he might still rise from the flames。 I saw a thousand faces before that sunrise; bearing messages of hope: friends roused from their rooms by the fire; professors awakened in their beds by the sound of sirens; the chapel service itself stopped in mid…reading by the spectacle of it all。 And they gathered around us like a traveling treasury; each face a coin; as if it had been declared on high that we ought to suffer our losses by counting what remained。 Maybe I knew then that it was a rich; rich poverty we were entering。 What dark edy the gods favored; who made this。 My brother Paul; sacrificed on Easter。 The tortoise shell of irony; dropped heavy on our heads。
 That night the three of us survived; together; out of necessity。 We met in the hospital; Gil and Charlie and I; bedfellows again。 None of us spoke。 Charlie fingered the crucifix around his neck; Gil slept; and I stared at the walls。 Without news about Paul; we all invested ourselves in the myth of his survival; the myth of his resurrection。 I should have known better than to believe there was anything indivisible about a friendship; any more than there was about a family。 And yet the myth of it sustained me then。 Then; and ever after。
 Myth; I say。 And never hope。
 For the box of hope lay empty。
 
 Chapter 29
 
 Time; like a doctor; washed its hands of us。 Before Charlie was even out of the hospital; we had bee old news。 Classmates stared at us as if we were out of context; fugitive memories with an aura of former significance。
 Within a week; the cloud of violence over Princeton had burned off。 Students began to walk across campus after dark again; first in groups; then alone。 Unable to sleep; I would wander off to the WaWa in the middle of the night; only to find it full of people。 Richard Curry lived on in their conversations。 So did Paul。 But gradually the names I knew disappeared; replaced by exams and varsity lacrosse games and the yearly spring talk; a senior who'd slept with her thesis advisor; the final episode of a favorite television show。 Even the headlines I read while waiting in line at the register; the ones that kept my mind off being alone when everyone else seemed to be with friends; suggested that the world had moved forward without us。 On the seventeenth day after Easter; the front page of the Princeton Packet announced that a plan for an underground parking lot in town had been nixed。 Only at the bottom of page two was it reported that a wealthy alumnus had donated two million dollars toward the rebuilding of Ivy。
 Charlie was out of his hospital bed in five days; but spent another two weeks in rehab。 Doctors suggested cosmetic surgery on his chest; where patches of his skin had bee thick and gristly; but Charlie refused。 I visited him at the medical center every day but one。 Charlie wanted me to bring him potato chips from the WaWa; books for his classes; scores from every Sixers game。 He always gave me a reason to e back。
 More than once he made a point of showing me his burns。 At first I thought it was to prove something to himself; that he didn't feel disfigured; that he was much stronger than what had happened to him。 Later I sensed that the opposite was true。 He wanted to make sure I knew he had been changed by this。 He seemed to fear that he'd stopped being a part of my life and Gil's at the moment he ran into the steam tunnels after Paul。 We were getting along without him; mending our losses alone。 He knew we'd begun to feel like strangers in our own skins; and he wanted us to know that he was in the same position; that we were all still in this together。
 It surprised me that Gil visited him as much as he did。 I was there for a few of the visits; and there was the same awkwardness every time。 Both of them felt guilty in a way that was intensified by seeing the other。 However irrational; Charlie felt that he'd abandoned us by not being at Ivy。 At times; he even saw Paul's blood on his own hands; weighing Paul's death as the price of his own weakness。 Gil seemed to feel that he himself had abandoned us long ago; in a way that was harder to express。 That Charlie could feel so guilty; having done so much; only made Gil feel worse。
 One night before he went to bed; Gil apologized to me。 He said he wished he'd done things differently。 We deserved better。 From that night on; I never found him watching old movies。 He took his meals at restaurants that seemed farther and farther from campus。 Every time I invited him to lunch at my club; he found a reason not to e。 It took four or five rejections for me to understand that it wasn't the pany he objected to; it was the thought of seeing Ivy on the way there。 When Charlie got out of the hospital; he and I were together breakfast; lunch; and dinner。 More and more; Gil ate and drank alone。
 Slowly our lives fell out of scrutiny。 If we felt like pariahs at first; when everyone grew tired of hearing about us; then we felt like ghosts afterward; when everyone began to forget。 The university's memorial service for Paul was held in the chapel; but could've fit in a small classroom for the tiny crowd it drew; hardly as many students as professors; and most of those just members of the EMT squad or of Ivy; showing up out of passion for Charlie or Gil。 The only faculty member who approached me after the service was Professor LaRoque; the woman who first sent Paul to see Taft…and even she seemed interested only in the Hypnerotomachia; in Paul's discovery rather than in Paul himself。 I told her nothing; and made a point of doing the same every time the Hypnerotomachia came up after that。 I thought it was the least I could do; not giving away to strangers the secret Paul had worked so hard to keep between friends。
 What briefly caused a resurgence of interest was the discovery; a week after the headline about the underground parking lot; that Richard Curry had liquidated his assets just before leaving New York for Princeton。 He had placed the money in a private trust; along with the residual properties of his auction house。 When banks refused to reveal the terms of the trust; Ivy asserted a right to the money; as pensation for its damages。 Only when the club's board decided that not a stone of the new building would be bought with Curry's money did the flap subside。 Meanwhile; papers flocked to the news that Richard Curry had left all of his money to an unnamed trustee; and a few even suggested what I already believed…that the money was meant for Paul。
 Knowing nothing of Paul's thesis; though; the greater public could make little sense of Curry's intentions; so they dug into his friendship with Taft until the two men became a farce; an explanation for all evil that was no explanation at all。 Taft's home at the Institute became a ghost house。 New Institute Fellows refused to live there; and townie teenagers dared each other to break in。
 The only benefit of the new climate; the one of fantastic theories and sensational headlines; was that it soon became impo
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