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a make…up assignment that could possibly have made Associate Professor Gary Jones feel unhappy?
Unhappy or not; he had been humming something; humming and then scatting the words; which were close to nonsense: Yes we can; yes we can…can; great gosh a'mighty yes we can…can。 There were a few little shreds after that … wishing Colleen; the Department secretary; a nice St Paddy's Day; grabbing a Boston Phoenix from the newspaper box outside the building; dropping a quarter into the saxophone case of a skinhead just over the bridge on the Cambridge side; feeling sorry for the guy because he was wearing a light sweater and the wind ing off the Charles was sharp … but mostly what he remembered after making that stack of giveaway books was darkness。 Consciousness had returned in the hospital; with that droning voice from a nearby room: Please stop; I can't stand it; give me a shot; where's Marcy; I want Marcy。 Or maybe it had been where's Jonesy; I want Jonesy。 Old creeping death。 Death pretending to be a patient。 Death had lost track of him … sure; it was possible; it was a big hospital stuffed full of pain; sweating agony out its very seams … and now old creeping death was trying to find him again。 Trying to trick him。 Trying to make him give himself away。
This time around; though; all that merciful darkness in the middle is gone。 This time around he not only wishes Colleen a happy St。 Paddy's Day; he tells her a joke: What do you call a Jamaican proctologist? A Pokémon。 He goes out; his future self … his November self … riding in his March head like a stowaway。 His future self hears his March self think foat a beautiful day it turned out to be as he starts walking towards his appointment with destiny in Cambridge。 He tries to tell his March self that this is a bad idea; a grotesquely bad idea; that he can save himself months of agony just by hailing a Red Top or taking the T; but he can't get through。 Perhaps all the science…fiction stories he read about time when he was a teenager had it right: you can't change the past; no matter how you try。
He walks across the bridge; and although the wind is a little cold; he still enjoys the sun on his face and the way it breaks into a million bright splinters on the Charles。 He sings a snatch of 'Here es the Sun;' then reverts to the Pointer Sisters: Yes we cancan; great gosh a'mighty。 Swinging his briefcase in rhythm。 His sandwich is inside。 Egg salad。 Mmm…mmmm; Henry said。 SSDD; Henry said。
Here is the saxophonist; and surprise: he's not on the end of the Mass Ave Bridge but farther up; by the MIT campus; outside one of those funky little Indian restaurants。 He's shivering in the cold; bald; with nicks on his scalp suggesting he wasn't cut out to be a barber。 The way he's playing 'These Foolish Things' suggests he wasn't cut out to be a horn…player; either; and Jonesy wants to tell him to be a carpenter; an actor; a terrorist; anything but a musician。 Instead; Jonesy actually encourages him; not dropping the quarter he previously remembered into the guy's case (it's lined with scuffed purple velvet); but a whole fistful of change … these foolish things; indeed。 He blames it on the first warm sun after a long cold winter; he blames it on how well things turned out with Defuniak。
The sax…man rolls his eyes to Jonesy; thanking him but still blowing; Jonesy thinks of another joke: What do you call a sax…player with a credit card? An optimist。
He walks on; swinging his case; not listening to the Jonesy inside; the one who has swum upstream from November like some time…travelling salmon。 'Hey Jonesy; stop。 Just a few seconds should be enough。 Tie your shoe or something。 (No good; he's wearing loafers。 Soon he will be wearing a cast; as well。) That intersection up there is where it happens; the one where the Red Line stops; Mass Ave and Prospect。 There's an old guy ing; a wonked…out history professor in a dark blue Lincoln Town Car and he's going to clean you like a house。'
But it's no good。 No matter how hard he yells; it's no good。 The phone lines are down。 You can't go back; can't kill your own grandfather; can't shoot Lee Harvey Oswald as he kneels at a sixth…floor window of the Texas School Book Depository; congealing fried chicken on a paper plate beside him and his mail…order rifle aimed; can't stop yourself walking across the intersection of Mass Ave and Prospect Street with your briefcase in your hand and your copy of the Boston Phoenix … which you will never read … under your arm。 Sorry; sir; the lines are down somewhere in the Jefferson Tract; it's a real fuckarow up there; your call cannot go through…
And then; oh God; this is new … the message does go through! As he reaches the corner; as he stands there on the curb; just about to step down into the crosswalk; it does go through!
'What?' he says; and the man who was stopped beside him; the first one to bend over him in a past which now may be blessedly canceled; looks at him suspiciously and says 'I didn't say anything;' as though there might be a third with them。 Jonesy barely hears him because there is a third; there is a voice inside him; one which sounds suspiciously like his own; and it's screaming at him to stay on the curb; to stay out of the street…
Then he hears someone crying。 He looks across to the far side of Prospect and oh God; Duddits is there; Duddits Cavell naked except for his Underoos; and there is brown stuff smeared all around his mouth。 It looks like chocolate; but Jonesy knows better。 It's dogshit; that bastard Richie made him eat it after all; and people over there are walking back and forth regardless; ignoring him; as if Duddits wasn't there。
'Duddits!' Jonesy calls。 'Duddits; hang on; man; I'm ing!'
And he plunges into the street without looking; the passenger inside helpless to do anything but ride along; understanding at last that this was exactly how and why the accident happened … the old man; yes; the old man with early…stage Alzheimer's who had no business behind the wheel of a car in the first place; but that had only been part of it。 The other part; concealed in the blackness surrounding the crash until now; was this: he had seen Duddits and had simply bolted; forgetting to look。
He glimpses something more; as well: some huge pattern; something like a dreamcatcher that binds all the years since they first met Duddits Cavell in 1978; something that binds the future as well。
Sunlight twinkles on a windshield; he sees this in the er of his left eye。 A car ing; and too fast。 The man who was beside him on the curb; old Mr I…Didn't…Say…Anything; cries out: 'Watch it; guy; watch it!' but Jonesy barely hears him。 Because there is a deer on the sidewalk behind Duddits; a fine big buck; almost as big as a man。 Then; just before the Town Car strikes him; Jonesy sees the deer is a man; a man in an orange cap and an orange flagman's vest。 On his shoulder; like a hideous mascot; is a legless weasel…thing with enormous black eyes。 Its tail … or maybe it's a tentacle … is curled around the man's neck。 How in God's name could I have thought he was a deer? Jonesy thinks; and then the Lincoln strikes him and he is knocked into the street。 He hears a bi