-
Delmore Schwartz
"Calmly
We Walk Through This April's Day"
„Yuuto
was very different from Philip“, Mr Tuniak told me today.
„Throughout his whole life, Philip has always tried to stay in the
background and not be noticed. Yuuto didn't care about that. He was
completely indifferent to the fact that people might notice that he
didn't age or die.“
„Do
you know how old he is?“, I asked.
„Not
exactly“, Mr Tuniak replied. „But he has made remarks from time
to time that suggest he is about two thousand years old.“
„He
never mentioned the mammoths of his youth?“
Mr
Tuniak laughed. „Even if he was born during the Stone Age, I'm not
sure there were any mammoths in Japan.“ He became more serious.
„There is another difference between Philip and Yuuto. Philip has
always looked for other immortals and thus built his own kind of
family. People, who wouldn't die within eighty or ninety years. Yuuto
has never made any close friends. At least that's what he is
claiming. And apart from his room in the Hoshi
Ryokan
he never had a place he could his home. He travelled the world and
did this, whenever possible, by walking. He has learned to ride and
probably also how to drive a car, but he seldom does it.“
„Even
if he is going to another country?“
„Even
then“, Mr Tuniak emphasised. „He says that he has all the time in
world, so why should he hurry? He has hurried a lot in his youth, but
when he turned three hundred he realised that he would never have to
again. Even he couldn't visit some place in one year, he would go
there the next.“
„What
about the Oceans? Did he swim from Japan to the mainland?“
„Of
course not, he travelled on ships and, rarely, planes.“
„I
was wondering about another thing last week“, I said. „The way
Yuuto talked to you in the mountains... Did he know you before that?
I know that you didn't, but was the same true for him?“
„You
are starting to think like a time traveller“, Mr Tuniak said. „But
yes, he had seen me before.“
„In
the eight century when you were visiting his hotel?“
„No,
I only saw him there, I didn't talk to him or anyone. He didn't see
me“, Mr Tuniak said. „No, we had... a little adventure in the 80s
together.“
„How
did that happen?“
„By...
a slip of the tongue“, Mr Tuniak explained. „Although I think
Yuuto did it on purpose. As we were climbing through the National
Park in Madagascar, Mowgli and I were talking about how dangerous it
all was and he interrupted us and said that at least this time the
air was breathable. I asked him what he had meant when he had said
this time. He said that it wasn't like in Centralia, but I told him
that I didn't know any city with that name. I could see in his face
that he wasn't believing me.“
„All
right, so you knew where you would meet him. But not when. Did you
ask him?“
Alexander
took Mowgli back to India with his time machine and then returned to
Madagascar. For Yuuto, who had stayed behind, five minutes had
passed.
“You
were quick”, he said with a smile.
“And
I'm pretty sure that you know why”, Alexander replied. “We have
met before, haven't we?”
“Why
do you say that?”
“Honestly?
I got suspicious the first time you talked to me in the mountains”,
Alexander told him. “And now this remark about the better air
quality. Where have we met before? During the Great Fire of London?”
Yuuto
looked at him for some time without answering. Then: “So you really
are a time traveller? No, don't answer, I know everything I want to
know. Centralia in Pennsylvania, on October the 22nd,
1988. That's where I saw you for the first time.”
“I've
never heard of that city.”
“It's
the gate to Hell.”
“Do
you have to be that cryptic?”
“Why?
Do you want me to speak plain and take away all surprise? I am
immortal and I have seen so very many things, nothing can really
surprise me any more. You are a time traveller, you know what is
going to happen tomorrow, so I think it's the same for you. But at
the same time you look old enough to value a good surprise.”
Alexander
looked at him critically.
“I'll
tell you what you'll do. You'll go to San Francisco in 1987, the
exact date doesn't matter. You will write a letter to this address
here, the contents of which I will dictate to you in a moment. Then
you will go to the access road to Centralia on the morning of October
22nd,
1988. To find out where the city is located, only use a map, nothing
else. Do not look it up in books, because... well, that would spoil
the surprise.”
“Did
you do it?”, I asked. “Did you follow his instructions?”
“After
some deliberation, yes, I did”, Mr Tuniak answered. “Because he
was right with one thing: It was difficult to surprise me.”
It
was the morning of October 22nd
and Alexander was standing at the side of the road that led to
Centralia. He had waited for over an hour already, when finally he
saw a car approaching in the distance. He looked over his shoulder.
The time machine was hidden a few hundred metres away and although he
knew where to look, it was only with the greatest difficulty that he
could make out its shape. So far, so good. He went to the middle of
the road and waited.
The
car stopped several metres in front of him and Yuuto exited. He was
holding a letter in his hand and looked at Alexander, as if he was an
extinct animal.
“Did
you send me this letter?”, Yuuto asked.
“Yes”,
Alexander confirmed. “I'm Alexander.”
“Yuuto,
but you already know that”, Yuuto said and they shook hands. “How
did you know about the graffiti?”
“You
will find out in five years”, Alexander said.
A
smile spread across Yuuto's face. “I like surprises.” The he
pointed down the road. “Do you know what we will find over there?”
Alexander
looked where he was pointing at. He had spent the whole morning
wondering what made Centralia so special. From this distance he
couldn't tell much, other than the fact that the town was mostly
hidden by fog. “The gate to Hell?”, he said.
“You
could call it that. Get in.”
They
drove a few more kilometres, before stopping and parking the car at
the side of the road. Alexander saw immediately why that was
necessary. In front of him, the street had been torn apart, as if two
giants had each taken hold of one side and pulled with all their
might.
Yuuto
opened the trunk of his car. “I hope you didn't lie about your
height and weight”, he said.
Alexander
went to him to see what he had brought. In the trunk there were two
safety glasses, two oxygen masks and two oxygen tanks. He also took a
backpack.
“They
are not yet necessary”, Yuuto said, as he saw that Alexander had
put on the safety glasses. “I'll tell you, when you should put them
on.”
Even
now, when they had nearly entered Centralia, Alexander couldn't tell
what made it so interesting to Yuuto. Maybe it was the fact, that
there seemed to be no inhabitants. But maybe they were all in their
homes and didn't want to go out into the thick fog.
And
then he smelled it. He wasn't surrounded just by fog. It was smoke
Something really big had to be burning close by.
“Do
you now know what makes this town different?”, Yuuto asked as he
saw the look on Alexander's face. “Put your hand on the street.”
Alexander
carefully knelt down and laid his hand on the ground. The street was
warm, far warmer than it had any right to be.
“I
think we should put on our masks now”, Yuuto suggested.
“It
was in the 1960s that an accident happened in the mines of
Centralia”, Mr Tuniak explained. “A fire was started, a fire that
couldn't be extinguished. At first the people and authorities tried
to play the accident down. They continued to live there. But when
Yuuto and I visited there, it had practically become a ghost town.”
“And
the fire is burning right under the city?”
“More
or less. You can watch smoke rising up out of several manhole covers.
You don't have to wear a mask if you are there, but in the long term
it isn't healthy.”
“What
did Yuuto want with this town?”
They
had walked through the whole town and out the other side. They were
closing in on the old entrance to the mine shaft. Yuuto had long
branch with which he tested the ground in front of him before he put
down a foot. Alexander was walking closely behind him.
They
found a whole in the ground. The heat streaming out of it was so
intense that neither of them could get close and look down.
“Did
you know that scientist estimate that the fire will continue to burn
for the next thousand years?”, Yuuto asked.
“No”,
Alexander admitted. “What are we doing here?”
“I
don't know what you are doing here, but as for me...” Yuuto put
down his backpack, opened it and took a white box out of it. The box
was not big, he could hold it in one hand, and Alexander was unable
to tell what kind of material she was made out of. “Do you know
what a time capsule is?”, Yuuto asked.
Alexander
nodded. Time capsules were storage boxes where people put in photos,
texts and other small things. The boxes were safely closed and buried
in the ground. Only after a long time – usually at least fifty
years or more – those capsules were dug out again and offered the
people of the future a unique look into their past.
“I'm
sure that in a thousand years, when the fire has gone out, people
will be send down there”, Yuuto told Alexander. “And if they go
down there, I want them to find my time capsule. Can you imagine what
that will mean? It would be as if we found a time capsule form the
Medieval Ages!”
“You'll
probably be there too, then”, Alexander said.
“If
I don't forget about it again”, Yuuto said. Then he dropped the box
into the hole where it quickly disappeared.
“Again?
Have you done this before?”
“Several
times. Knowledge is so easily lost. I am very old, but I can't
remember everything I have done and see in my life. I have forgotten
a lot. And I think the same is true for humanity as a whole. My time
capsules, if they are found, are supposed to be... cheat sheet. A
memory of things, we once have known.” Yuuto turned around and
started to go back the way they had come. “On the other hand: Maybe
this is just one last foolery of an old man who has lived so very
long and has so very little to show for it. There is nothing I can
point to and say: I caused this.”
“I
know what you mean”, Alexander added privately.
NEXT
WEEK
Бери́сь
дру́жно, не бу́дет гру́зно.
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