Nine
Right then I was close to being
absolutely certain of something—that I was dreaming. Or … that I was completely
insane. Would the unsmiling men in white coats be arriving soon? With
straitjackets and a court order to transport me to … to … to wherever?
Here I was, gathered together in
Buffalo, New York, in a café with no electricity, with a custodian from my old
school in southern Ohio, with a woman who’d last been spotted being sucked up into
a tornado (and appearing to like it!), with a man who’d been dead for more than
150 years, and with a kid from my current school, a kid I hardly knew at all.
“You’re not dreaming,” said Aunt
Claire.
“And you’re not insane,” said Mr.
Leon.
I smiled but thought: Oh, yeah?
Then how are you able to read my mind right now?
But I decided to play along. Maybe
I’d wake up in my own bed—very soon—or in an insane asylum. Either one would be
far more comfortable than dealing with all this confusion swirling around me.
William Godwin looked at me and
smiled, then said, “I understand that we’re somewhat related.”
I looked. Is he serious?
“Well,” I said, “I’m related to a character in your daughter’s novel—though I
don’t know how such a thing is even possible.”
“All is possible in fiction,” he
said.
“Is this fiction?”
“Fiction is a story. Our lives are
stories.”
This was getting way too heavy for
me. “I see,” I said, though I felt totally blind. Then I added, “What are you
doing here?”
“I have no idea,” he said. “But
let’s see how the plot unfolds …”
Now that I could agree with.
Mr. Godwin looked around him—and surely
did not recognize anything at all—so totally different from his early
nineteenth-century world.
But he just shrugged and smiled—as if he
figured this was some kind of fantasy or dream and decided he might as well
just go with it.
“What’s our next move?” I asked the group.
We all looked at one another. And all of
them said (all of them but me): “Niagara Falls.”
***
I clearly saw I had no vote, so I
said nothing. We all headed out to the Karmann Ghia, where I said, “There is
absolutely no way we can all fit …”
But we did.
I looked around—we were not all there. “Where’s Aunt Claire?” I asked. “And John?”
Mr. Leon said, “She has … other ways
… of traveling. And John, as you well know, has a play to perform tonight.”
“But how will he …? And about our
motel rooms?”
Here came the fog again—in the
atmosphere, in my brain. And when I emerged from it, I could hear the surge of
the river, the Falls, and I knew I was once again at the site of my life’s
greatest horror.
We got out of the car in the lot
near the spot where I’d seen Gil go into the river and disappear. As we drew
closer, I felt someone squeeze my hand and say, “I’m with you.”
I looked. It was Harriet Eastbrook,
my best friend from middle school.
I nearly passed out and fell into
the river myself.
Which would have been appropriate: I
already felt as if I were being swept along in a torrent of events that I just
did not understand.
“I won’t even ask how you got here,”
I said to her. I didn’t really care how she got there, to tell the truth. She
was the best friend I’d ever have, and seeing her there—feeling her hand—erased
any true questions I had.
“I’m actually glad you don’t
understand,” she said. “Because I have no idea. I was back at our house,
practicing some cheerleading moves in the back yard, and—”
“Let me guess,” I said. “A fog
settled in, and when it cleared, you were here.”
“You always were the smart one,”
said Harriet.
“And you were always the one I loved
most.”
Mr. Leon interrupted us. “Vickie,”
he said, “this is where you saw—”
“Yes.”
“Did you see any sign of Harriet’s
father? Of Dr. Eastbrook?”
“I didn’t,” I started to say.
“But I did,” said Harriet. Everyone
looked at her. “Or thought I did, anyway.”[i]
“And we both saw you,” I said to Mr.
Leon.
“We’ve talked about that,” he said
softly. “I told you: I got here just moments after—too late to stop Gil.”
I looked at Harriet, who nodded at
me. I was about to share something only she and I had ever talked about—and, as
usual, Harriet knew what I was going to say before I said it.
“And, Mr. Leon, when you were here,
did you see … it?”
“I did.”
***
“It,” of course, was the creature.
The one that Mary Shelley had described in Frankenstein. Her creature—or
something very much like it—had actually rescued me—pulled me from the Niagara
River after Blue Boyle had pushed me in. Then … the creature disappeared over
the Falls.
William Godwin came over to stand
with us. “Niagara Falls,” he said in awe. “I’ve never seen it.” He looked at me.
“You probably know that Mary wrote a novel that has an important scene here.”
“Yes,” I said. “I’ve read Lodore.”[ii]
“Not one of her best novels,” said
William Godwin. He saw disappointment in my eyes. “But,” he added, “I was near
the end of my life—only about a year left, in fact.” He stepped away a little. “She’d never
actually seen the Falls …” And he wandered off.
“Who is that?” asked Harriet. “And why is he dressed like some guy in an old movie?”
“You won’t believe it,” I said.
“Try me.”
“That is William Godwin.”
Harriet just shrugged—she had no idea who that was.
So I told her. “Mary Shelley’s
father.”
***
We all headed down below the Falls to look
around for any sign of anything—anything that might give us some sort of clue
about where Dr. Eastbrook might be—where Blue Boyle might be—where Father might
be.
And while we were down there, William
Godwin gave us a hint of where we might look next.
He was talking about the Falls that roared
above us, and then he said, “There was my daughter’s use of the Falls in her
novel, but thinking about that has reminded me of another good novel
that has a falls in it.”
Everybody looked at him.
“Not this falls,” he said, “but
another one.”
“And the novel you mentioned?” I asked.
“The Last of the Mohicans,” he
said.
Mr. Leon was dismissive. “That’s nice,” he
said, “but what does that book have to do with anything?”
“Probably nothing,” he replied. “I was
just … musing, I guess.”
“Did you know James Fenimore Cooper?” I
asked.
He looked at me with surprise. “You’ve
heard of him?”
“Yes, and I’ve read that novel—as well as
those others in his Leatherstocking Tales.”[iii]
“Amazing,” he said. “I’d always heard that
young people in America were pretty much illiterate.”
“Well,” said Harriet, “you heard wrong.
Maybe in your day it was true, but no more. And Vickie, well, she’s read everything!”
“That’s a bit much,” I said.
I turned to Mr. Godwin. “Did you know
Cooper?” I asked. “I mean, you were alive for much of the same time.”
“I did know him,” Mr. Godwin said. “We met
and talked on three separate occasions in London in 1828 when he was in the
city for a visit.”[iv]
“1828,” I said. “He’d published The
Last of the Mohicans in 1826.”
“Absolutely right,” said Mr. Godwin. “We
talked about that book, too. Oh, and Mary also liked his books—she called him
‘Leather-Stockings.’”[v]
I was starting to get excited. “I think
I’m beginning to understand why you’re here,” I said to Mr. Godwin.
“I’m glad someone does,” he said.
“My father reads all the time, too—and he
loves those Cooper novels about Natty Bumppo—about ‘Leather-Stockings’.”
Mr. Leon said, “I’m starting to see where
you’re headed. You think your father has somehow left for you a subtle clue
about his whereabouts. A clue that exists only in your memory—and hopes?”
“Yes,” I said. “I think you’re absolutely
right.”
A fog descended on the river, and when it
lifted, moments later, William Godwin was gone.
I did not push you. Into the river. Not on
purpose. Somebody made me do it. I … I … I am not sure why?????
[i] Vickie mentions
this in Part 2 of her Papers.
[ii] Mary Shelley
published this novel in 1835.
[iii] In The
Pioneers, Cooper tells us what this means: “On his feet were deer-skin
moccasins, ornamented with porcupines' quills, after the manner of the Indians,
and his limbs were guarded with long leggings of the same material as the
moccasins, which, gartering over the knees of his tarnished buckskin breeches,
had obtained for him among the settlers the nickname of Leather-Stocking” (Library
of America edition, 21).
[iv] This is true.
[v] Again, this is
true—although Mary did not meet Cooper. In 1832 she did publish a book review
of his little-known novel The Bravo, and in it she praised the
Leatherstocking Tales; she liked The Last of the Mohicans.
No comments:
Post a Comment