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Black Pockets: And Other Dark Thoughts
Black Pockets: And Other Dark Thoughts
Black Pockets: And Other Dark Thoughts
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Black Pockets: And Other Dark Thoughts

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In this masterful collection of horror stories, George Zebrowski divides these nineteen tales into personal, political, and metaphysical terrors—stories to scare you individually, stories to frighten you as a social animal, and stories that should terrify the entire human race.

In “I Walked with Fidel,” a young man encounters a once politically powerful zombie; “Jumper” focuses on a young woman with a dark and troubled past, while in “The Coming of Christ the Joker,” the lighthearted banter of a celebrity TV talk show becomes something far more serious. “A Piano Full of Dead Spiders” is an eerie story of genius, its demands, and its delusions; in “Passing Nights,” the truth behind a recurring nightmare is revealed; “The Soft Terrible Music” depicts a man who must hide his past even from himself. And in the title story, the novella “Black Pockets,” Zebrowski asks: What happens to a man when his desire for revenge becomes all-consuming?

With an introduction by Howard Waldrop and an afterword by the author, George Zebrowski reveals himself in Black Pockets and Other Dark Thoughts as a writer who can play on our more disturbing emotions even as he impels us to deeper thoughts.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 1, 2014
ISBN9781480494824
Black Pockets: And Other Dark Thoughts
Author

George Zebrowski

George Zebrowski is an award-winning science fiction author and editor who has written and edited a number of books, including Brute Orbits and the Star Trek tie-in novel Across the Universe, which he co-wrote with Pamela Sargent.

Read more from George Zebrowski

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    Book preview

    Black Pockets - George Zebrowski

    Black Pockets:

    And Other Dark Thoughts

    George Zebrowski

    Open Road logo

    For Pam dearest, who brightens my darkness

    Foreword

    FOR THIRTY YEARS NOW, HE’S BEEN AN enthusiastic voice on the phone, a bunch of nice letters, and the occasional check, in his fairly frequent guise as editor. Surprisingly, in all that time, we have never managed to meet face-to-face, like real normal people. Which is truly a shame.

    When I introduced his SF collection The Monadic Universe twenty years ago, I tried to convince readers George was a funny (at times, bitterly so) writer who went straight back to the Aristophanic roots (though on a somewhat more cosmic stage).

    Zebrowski? people would say. Isn’t he the guy who writes galaxy-spanning sagas—

    —of Stapledonian magnitude? I would complete their question. Yes, I would then say, but like me, he also thinks that just because it’s serious doesn’t mean it has to be long, dull, boring, and humorless.

    Really? they would say. I thought it had to be.

    What you hold in your hands is George Zebrowski’s first collection of horror stories, culled from throughout his career, with an emphasis on the more recent things, and one brand-new-writtenjust-last-Thursday (well, all the last Thursdays from the past two years) novella, the titular Black Pockets.

    What George has done, sitting there in Upstate New York, a place as unknown to me as the Great Rill Valley on Mars, is to divide these stories into Personal, Political, and Metaphysical horrors, i.e.: stories that should scare you individually, stories that should terrify you as a social animal, and stories that should scare the whole goddamn human race, in the collective.

    Part of the—if we may so speak—beauty of this book is that George can write about people who are not like him (or you, or me). Many are not as intelligent, nice, thoughtful, or as sensitive as their author. (Writing about morons is easy—limited vocabulary, concrete nouns, declarative partial sentences, no conceptualization —although Faulkner and Steinbeck were way ahead of everybody else—and writing about geniuses is easier than you think—abstract modifiers, conceptualization, complex sentence structures—although here, too, Bester (in The Pi Man), Daniel Keyes, and Don De Lillo did it better than anyone else). What is really hard is writing about someone just a little less, or a little more intelligent, sensitive, caring etc. than you (and most people) are. Zebrowski pulls this off many times in these stories. One of the most chilling, The Wish in the Fear, is so good at what it does that you forget what the story is about until the next-to-last line, and then you remember, with a vengeance. (This is also one of those stories that is going to finish after you’re read the last line—he’s made it so you finish the story after he’s through. I guarantee it.) A couple of the earlier stories in here needed a little more room to breathe—good though they are—but not this one.

    His deft use of character is such that (even reading them in this collection) you forget that most horror stories just fill time before the protag is eaten or impaled or gets their comeuppance somehow. That’s other writers.

    Not in these. George has set himself the writerly goal of having the horror come out of the situations and character flaws of his people, not from some ancient evil trespassed, or Cthulvian terror, nor now what has become that cliché —the serial killer. (What did non-supernatural horror writers do before Ed Gein was caught?)

    What I’m going to propose here is that George Zebrowski is writing a new kind of dark fantasy story—as new as, say, Fritz Leiber’s Smoke Ghost was in its time—the kind that led to Unknown Worlds (1939–1943). Especially in the stories he puts into the Political Horrors and Metaphysical Fears sections.

    There has never been a zombie story like I Walked With Fidel—true not only to a dead Cold-War world that has passed with its polarized ideologies (as surely as that passed Colonial World—which led to voodoo—has gone from this earth): the story manages to be true to both post-Superpowers times and to Castro, whose ideals were as betrayed by the nature of revolutions and the Soviet Union as by the warmongering antagonism of the United States. Read it and say it ain’t so, José.

    George is not afraid of the Big Frightening Ideas either. The two newer centerpieces of the collection, Black Pockets and A Piano Full of Dead Spiders deal with truly existential problems, like in the latter—if you’re a composer, and your tunes come from spiders playing them in your piano, what happens when they die? Are there spiders in your piano? In the first place? Which died first, the spiders or your talent? Is there redemption in this cold world?

    In Black Pockets, the questions keep coming: you’re given a great, heretofore unknown power by the nemesis of your existence as he is dying; for he has some unfinished business he needs done before you can use the power for revenge yourself. The protag finds, like Wells’s Invisible Man, that power, in and of itself, instead of avenging the Great Wrongs of Your Life, becomes a convenience, and otherwise innocent bystanders (wrong time, wrong place) get it used on them. At the core of the story is the truly frightening question: at what point does revenge become so all-consuming it clouds your judgment? Oh yeah? and how do you know?

    Be warned: this isn’t just another standard horror-trope collection (they never are, from Golden Gryphon). There’s only one old castle in the book. The settings range from the apartments next door to the hollowed-out asteroid worlds beyond the orbit of Pluto; the social strata from impoverished students to the people who live in the big houses on the hill in Yourtown USA.

    I’ve had the privilege to read this collection hot-off-thecopier. You’ll have the joy of reading it in some beautifully designed package from the publishers. Whatever the format, whatever the circumstances under which you read it: It’s one powerful, varied, and wonderful batch of tales you have before you.

    —Howard Waldrop

    Vernal equinox 2005

    Personal Terrors

    are the first ones we know...

    Jumper

    I GO TO SLEEP AND WAKE UP SOMEWHERE ELSE.

    She looked directly at him as she spoke, and it seemed clear that he was dealing with an unusually controlled personality. She wore an impeccably tailored tweed business suit, white blouse, blue tie, and black shoes. Her brown hair was professionally permed; her make-up was light, with almost no lipstick. He gazed at her without comment, hoping to catch a moment of weakness in her facade, but there was nothing.

    Well, Doctor, what do you think?

    He smiled. Oh, I doubt very much that you’re traveling in any way. You’re already there, where you wake up, but you’ve dreamed that you started somewhere else. Naturally, it seems surprising to find yourself where you actually are.

    That is not the case, Doctor, she replied determinedly.

    Miss Melita, you’re simply mistaking where you go to bed, nothing more.

    She grimaced, as if she’d caught him at something. "You avoid calling me by my first name, or Ms. Melita. I once went to an idiot in your profession who insisted that I use his first name. Do I intimidate you, Doctor?"

    Not at all. I’m not hung up on the authority of formal address. Some of my colleagues like it. Others simply want the patient to feel informal and relaxed.

    Yes, they call patients by first names but introduce themselves as Dr. so-and-so.

    I’ll go by your preferences.

    She stared at him without blinking, and he knew that it would be Miss Melita and Dr. Cheney. An old-fashioned female who might need rescuing from herself. The immaturity of the thought startled him, and he realized that she was having a strong, unconscious effect on him.

    He looked at her file on his desk. I see that your physical checks out well, and you have no reported history of sleep disturbances.

    Doctor, I have no memory of going to the places where I wake up. I waken there and have to come home. Yesterday I woke up in my ex-lover’s house. It was empty and for sale. I’m certain I was home when I fell asleep.

    These kinds of things can be very convincing, he said. Were you wearing pajamas?

    Of course not. I go to bed wearing clothes, just in case. I’ve jumped more than a dozen times in the past few months.

    What do you think it is? he asked in his best neutral tone.

    I don’t know. Movement from one place to another without covering the distance between, she replied glibly.

    A kind of quantum leap?

    What do you mean?

    It’s a term from physics, he said. Patients sometimes like to give, or hear rational-sounding explanations. Imaginative plausibility could be a sign of delusion.

    Who cares, she said. It happens. I know it does. The first few times were pretty embarrassing. Her tone was insistent, but she kept her composure.

    What do you think it means?

    I sometimes feel as if I’m searching for the right place to be, she said, but it keeps eluding me. I wake up in the wrong places.

    Is there a right place? he asked.

    I don’t know. I can’t think where it might be, but I feel strongly that it exists.

    Doesn’t that give you a clue? he asked, setting in motion his usual probing rigmarole.

    What could it tell me?

    You may be hiding it from yourself, he said.

    I’ve thought of that. It may be a place I only know about, but have never visited.

    And you may not really want to go there, while at another level you do. Anyone can be of two minds, Miss Melita. I can see, whatever is going on, that this search is important to you. My job will be to keep you from deluding yourself.

    You’re confident I’ll take you on, she said.

    Shall we set up a schedule? I charge by the hour, five hours paid in advance.

    She looked at him with skepticism. I know you’re expensive, Doctor. I’d like to set a deferred-payment plan.

    He smiled at the first hint of insecurity in her voice. Ah, but payments are part of the treatment, Miss Melita. They sow an attitude of responsibility in your unconscious, making it a partner in your recovery. You’ll get better sooner.

    There was a blush in her pale cheeks, suggesting that she was responding to his authority, even accepting that she might have a problem.

    She stood up, as if to leave. What a crock, Doctor. I simply don’t want them to know at work that I’m seeing you, so I can’t use my medical coverage. I can start paying next month, when I can draw on my savings. Anyway, you don’t believe me.

    She was beautiful, he noticed, slim yet womanly, standing on low heels in a dancer’s graceful pose, her back slightly arched, toes out a little.

    Are you successful, Doctor? she demanded.

    I’d like to think I am, he replied calmly.

    How long do you sleep?

    Oh, I’d say about eight hours.

    Really successful people sleep less than five or six, she said.

    She begrudges herself sleep, he noted, drives herself and others hard. Her lapses of memory were not surprising.

    I’d say your business has leveled off, she continued, and may even be on the way down. You’re heavy into investments as a hedge against a practice that won’t grow. You’re doing well at them, but they have to be fed. You could go either way in the next few years.

    He leaned back and smiled, trying not to think of what tax reform had done to his portfolio, determined not to show her she’d hit home.

    We’re off the point, Miss Melita.

    She sat down and crossed her legs. Yes, of course. My only interest is in your competence.

    Competitive chatter was a habit with her, he realized.

    I can prove to you that I jump, she said, with a tremor in her voice.

    You’re welcome to try, he said, but only if I’m to be your doctor, and I’m not sure I want to take you on.

    She swallowed, and he watched the muscles working in her pale throat. Doctor, I apologize for my remarks about your business and character. She leaned forward slightly. I don’t know why this is happening to me, Doctor, but you could easily check my story. I have videotapes of me disappearing from my bed.

    Look, he said firmly, it’s just not possible for you to move yourself while you’re asleep, unless you get up and convey yourself there. I know you believe you’ve disappeared from one location and appeared in another, but, take my word for it, it’s not a true experience, not at all, never. Videotapes can be faked.

    Okay, come home with me, lock me in my bedroom, and wait. When I call you from somewhere else the next morning you’ll know it’s true.

    He knew then that he should not take her case. Simple neurotics made the best patients; they asked for help with life’s problems and only thought they were sick. They could be made to feel helped. If this woman could imagine that she teleported from her bedroom every night, it would be nothing for her to imagine worse things. To go to her home at night would be asking for a sexual-harassment suit.

    I’ll pay you six months in advance, she said, next month.

    Can you afford it? he asked, wondering if in fact she wanted him to come on to her.

    No, I told you it’ll be my savings, but I must prove that what happens to me is real. Then I’ll need you to find out why it happens. Okay, I can’t be completely sure it happens unless someone like you documents it.

    He sighed, unable to decide.

    This could make your name, Doctor. You’ll witness a disorder that exhibits itself in a unique way. You’ll write about it, go on talk shows, bring in more patients. Hell, you might not need patients after that.

    He shook his head and smiled. I shouldn’t take your money. What do you do, Miss Melita? Your entry on my form is vague.

    I’m an executive at a telecommunications company.

    Here in New York?

    Yes. I’ve taken a leave of absence for six weeks.

    Are you lesbian? he asked.

    That’s not your business unless you take my case.

    He leaned forward. Do you really want help, Miss Melita?

    She sat back in her chair, uncrossed her legs, and folded her hands in her lap. Yes, I’m lesbian, but I’ve had male lovers. It never works out, even though I’m attracted to some men and try hard. Not because they find out, but for other reasons. I can’t be orgasmic with men. They’re too threatening.

    Were you raised by both parents?

    No, by my father. My mother died when I was small, just after we arrived in this country. My brother ran away when I was ten, and I’ve not seen him since.

    Is your father living?

    Yes, she said softly.

    Okay, I’ll take you on, he said. Her story had made him curious. How could a person of her obvious intelligence and good sense, who gave no sign of illness, tell such a flaky tale? Make an appointment, he added, for the day after you’ve had this experience of yours again.

    You don’t want to check my story? she asked.

    Not by sitting up all night at your place, he said, imagining the softness of her skin under her blouse.

    It’s the only sure way to find out.

    Miss Melita, I’d have to ask a colleague to come with me, or hire a nurse of unquestioned integrity to serve as a witness. Maybe I’d need them both to prove that my presence was purely professional.

    She bit her lower lip. Oh, I see. But you already know I wouldn’t be interested in you, Doctor.

    Do call and make an appointment, Miss Melita.

    As she got up and left, he realized that there would be no more to it. She’d see him a few times and then stop coming. He felt a bit lost and disappointed for the rest of the day.

    When she arrived for her first appointment on the following Monday, dressed in jogging clothes, his insides leaped with naive joy at the sight of her. Gone was the executive bitch facade. The big kid who showed up in her place was much more appealing and clearly in need of his help.

    Oh, the clothes, she said, noticing his stare. I slept in them, so I could get home.

    He looked down at his desk to hide his sudden rush of attraction for her. Her change from cool executive to willowy athlete both excited and annoyed him; he had never become this vulnerable with a patient.

    There’s been a change, she said, dropping into the chair.

    What kind of change? he asked uneasily.

    I was dreaming about dying before I woke up in a park somewhere in Brooklyn.

    A park? he asked stupidly, watching her lips and the movement of her neck muscles. Her sweaty youthfulness was overpowering.

    I think it was a park. It was still dark when I left, so I wasn’t paying much attention. Doctor, I think I’m going to die. She looked directly at him. The dismay in her eyes was crushing, but in a perverse way it only made her more beautiful.

    Nonsense, he managed to say reassuringly, but the word only seemed to reproach his own impulses. You’re just escaping from overwork. That’s what these jumping dreams mean. How are things at your job? You have taken your leave, haven’t you?

    I can’t take off just yet, she said pitiably. Maybe next week.

    When was the first time you had this jumping dream? he asked, making a mental note to check a few facts in her file.

    She swallowed hard. They’re not dreams, she said softly, staring at the carpet.

    Please go on.

    First time was when I was a girl. My father came to my room and began touching me. I was terrified. Later that night I woke up and found myself in a neighbor’s house.

    She did not look at him, and he knew that she was still her father’s prisoner. The need to escape him had set a pattern of wish fulfillment. Any kind of pressure, even that of the workplace, still triggered the abused child’s dreams of escape. Slowly, he would make her understand.

    I can help you, he said. In time you won’t have these dreams, and you’ll know that’s all they were. It may seem hard for you to accept that now, but you’ll learn it for yourself.

    A look of anger came into her face as she looked up at him. She bit her lower lip, as if confronting something within herself. I hated him for touching me, and I hated him even more later, when I understood.

    Did you ever say anything to him?

    She shook her head, unable to speak for a moment. He died before I could. I don’t know why I lied to you about his still being alive. I’m sorry.

    That’s okay, you’ve repaired it.

    She smiled desolately. He got away from me, didn’t he?

    You’re getting better, he said during their fifth session. No dreams for weeks now.

    She shrugged. It’s happened before. Doctor, you must come to my place and wake me before I jump again, tonight. There was no doubt in her voice. It worried him that she still refused to accept the fact that she was only dreaming of jumping.

    You don’t expect me to sit at your bedside, do you?

    I’ll pay you extra, but it must be tonight.

    I can’t get a nurse on such short notice.

    Then give me a release to sign, anything. I can’t be alone tonight. I can feel it coming on. She took a deep breath, and her right hand shook slightly.

    Perhaps you’re right, he heard himself saying. If I can wake you up, then you’ll be sure it’s just a dream.

    If you can do so in time.

    What time should I arrive? he asked.

    No later than eleven.

    They sat quietly for a few moments. She stared past him, out the window. He tried to ignore his feelings for her, think of her only as a patient, but he couldn’t shake her attraction. He wanted to hold her, kiss her gently, free her from her past. Warnings crowded into him, but he ignored them.

    Her East Side apartment building was bright with lights when his cab pulled up. The architecture reminded him of egg boxes. Soft creatures called people lived in the private chambers. He felt a bit useless and infantile as he paid the driver and walked toward the glass entrance. Doubts slipped through him. How could he presume to know another’s mind? They were all ever-changing labyrinths, his own included. His professional knowledge permitted nothing more than a form of organized insisting, a sublime version of parental scolding. His training was a weak imposition on a beast that was ancient and sure in its ways, always ready to overcome its displacement. It lay coiled and waiting for everyone. He was no exception.

    The doorman’s scrutiny made him uneasy, but finally he was in the elevator, on his way to the thirtieth floor. She was waiting for him at the door of her apartment, dressed in jogging clothes, newly laundered, by their smell.

    I’m really beat, she said, as she locked the door and led him through the living room into the bedroom. All my keys are in the safe. Here’s the spare. Check the front door again, so you’ll know I can’t get out. Is that scientific enough for you? The sarcasm in her voice wounded him.

    You’d have to fly to get out of here, he said, looking through the window at the East River.

    There are books by the desk, she said, getting into bed. The light won’t bother me.

    She closed her eyes. He stood over her, watching her face, waiting for it to relax, but there was no change. It remained composed, oblivious to his eyes. He felt lost, on guard over a plundered fortress.

    There seemed to be a lump in bed with her. He waited, then lifted the blanket slightly. She did not react. He peered under and saw that she was holding a small fluorescent light, the kind mechanics used when they worked under cars. He put back the blanket and went over to the desk.

    He sat down and went through the motions of selecting a book from the small bookcase at his left. There was nothing of immediate interest. He sat still, listening to her gentle breathing and began to grapple again with his feelings for her. Tenderness struggled with simple desires. It seemed that she was everything he had missed, making him feel deprived and alone. It was an old pattern with him, going back to his college days. He had considered it broken by the time he had entered medical school, yet here he was again, all but alone in a room on a Friday night, fantasizing as he had done in his freshman days.

    There were some papers on her desk blotter, and he found himself looking through them to distract himself from self-pity and the thought of her in the bed behind him, warm and soft under the covers. There was an old clipping, a death notice giving the date of birth and the date of death, including the man’s profession and the name of the cemetery where he was buried. The yellowing paper dropped from his fingers as he realized that he could no longer hear her breathing.

    He turned around, but the desk light had affected his eyes, making the room black. He waited, then got up and went to the bed.

    It was empty.

    He looked around, wondering if she could have crept past him in the dark, but then he saw that the covers had not been disturbed.

    He pulled them down. She was gone, and she had taken the light with her.

    He rushed out into the living room and checked the front door. It was locked, and the key was still in his pocket. By all rational evidence she was still in the apartment with him—unless she had fixed the covers quietly and used another key to get out. He would have heard her.

    Katya! he shouted, using her name for the first time.

    There was no answer.

    He searched the kitchen and bathroom, all the closets and under all the furniture. She was here, he told himself, wondering if he couldn’t see her because he’d gone insane. She was hiding from him, attempting to convince him that her delusion was true.

    Katya come out! he shouted.

    Finally, in the silence, he remembered the clipping and knew what he had to do.

    The cab let him off in Brooklyn at 3:00 A.M. He found the cemetery park, but it took him over an hour to find the grave and start digging. His flashlight kept fading, but he finally uncovered the coffin. He stared at it, breathing heavily, nearly convinced that he was mad. A breeze swirled a few fall leaves around him, then subsided. He looked around to see if anyone had noticed him. He was probably too far inside the park to be seen from the street.

    He drew a deep breath and started to pry open the casket with his spade. The lid wouldn’t come up, then flew open with a jarring creak. Bright fluorescence shot up from inside like daylight, dazzling him.

    As his eyes adjusted, he saw her. She was grasping her father’s skull with both hands. The skeleton was disordered. Her eyes were wide open, staring up at him from the prison of her dead body.

    She had awakened in total darkness. He saw her turning on her light and screaming in its lurid, white glare as she struggled with the dead, realizing with terror that no one could help her before the air in the casket ran out. She had known where her father was buried from the old clipping, and she had jumped to this same park recently; but her conscious mind had not suspected that she would jump into the coffin, even though something had prompted her to bring the light. She had expected to find herself in another dark, empty house somewhere.

    Why didn’t you tell me? he asked uselessly, his voice breaking. She had told him that she was going to die. I could have been waiting here to dig you out, he said, reaching down to touch her cheek for the first time. It was cold. Gently, he closed her eyes.

    If only he could have believed her. The girl had jumped to escape molestation. The woman had cast about, seeking to confront her father, only to learn that he had died. Cheated, her unconscious had found a way to invade his final resting place and tear apart his bones. Her deepest self had also wanted to die, he realized as he imagined her screaming and choking in the earth.

    Come on, get up out of there, he said, childishly wishing that this could be only an odd rebirth ritual, of the kind prescribed by some of his wilder colleagues. His body shuddered in the cool, damp air.

    Moths and insects were zeroing in on the column of light standing out from the grave. He picked up the fluorescent pack and tossed it away. What could he do? She was gone, and there was no way to prove what had happened. The police would conclude that she had been asphyxiated and brought here. If he called them now, he would be the only suspect, telling an utterly fantastic and unbelievable story. It would mean a trial and the end of his practice. His life would be over if he went to prison. If he left the grave open, she would be found, and sooner or later he would be questioned.

    He closed the coffin, telling himself that he had committed no real crime; better if she were never found. The fluorescent light flickered on the damp grass as he climbed out and began to fill in the grave.

    When he was finished, he looked around at the dark cemetery. How many sons and daughters slept with their fathers’ corpses, clutched at their mothers’ dry breasts, or tore at their siblings’ throats? A study of case histories from the missing-persons divisions might reveal where other jumpers could be found.

    She would be missed eventually, and they might come to question him; something at her office or at her apartment might tell the police that she had been his patient; but there was no reasonable chain of criminal motives or actions that would lead them to her body. She would become just another missing person.

    He brushed himself clean as best he could, disposed of the two lights and spade in different waste cans, and wandered off in search of a taxi, as far from the park as possible.

    The cab’s radio played love songs all the way home.

    The Wish in the Fear

    FRANK’S LEFT UPPER TOOTH HAD BEEN CAPPED in 1970, after he had cracked it by falling flat on his face during a racquetball game. Earlier that year he had seen a man with a broken front tooth on the bus, and had wondered what it would be like to have a broken tooth. It was as if his future were casting a shadow into the past.

    At least once a year since then he had dreamed that his cap had come off, because it seemed to him that every year beyond the first ten seemed too many for such a thing to stick to his filed-down tooth. Losing his cap was the one nightmare that continued to convince him of its truth, and he was always grateful to wake up to its unreality.

    But this was only one of many trivial fears he would develop. Another involved sharp objects and the hidden nature of accidents. Were they fixed, waiting to happen at the appointed time? he asked himself as he idly imagined putting out his right eye with a pencil. Whether he could muster the courage to do so deliberately interested him, but the more frightening possibility was that a series of ordinary, even logical steps might lead to it surreptitiously, remaining concealed until it was too late. He suspected that there was some train of events that might make it happen, some arcane dovetailing of circumstances that would make it come out that way, or even worse, convince him that it was the necessary thing to do.

    As a boy he had gone up to the cliffs that faced the apartment houses in the South Bronx just below the Grand Concourse, and had stood there on the edge of the loose slate piles with his back to the sheer drop, glancing over his shoulder at the empty windows to see if anyone was watching. He did not slip and did not want to, but it was hypnotic to imagine himself lying in one of the backyards below, his broken body motionless in a pool of bright blood on the paving stones. He could still see himself there, balancing on the balls of his feet.

    Over the years he became adept at imagining that what he saw happening to other people might also happen to him. He was both attracted to and repelled by most of these reveries, but was unable to shake the foreboding that sooner or later some, if not all, would become realities for him. When he saw any kind of accident overtake someone, it was always a possible harbinger of his own fate.

    But he lived a life remarkably free of mishaps. Instead he became a collector of other people’s fears and phobias; and however terrifying they might be while he was in their thrall, nothing ever happened to him. He came to accept this as the way things were with him, and looked forward to the next one as people do to a concert, play,

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