Easter time

Stanislaw Barszczak, Easter time,
You have no reason to listen to me, but may sigh and turn the page. But yet I have every reason to speak out. If this public confession of my innocent guilt lifts my spirits to the slightest degree, it will be well worth the loss of your esteem. You see, I am one of those who had done wrong while seeking to do good. There are millions like me in that, and most acknowledge no smallest trace of guilt. “My intentions were good!” Soon, one hopes, a great, blood-colored hand whose fingers are tipped with claws will close about them and drag them down to Hell. So it may drag me; and mine were good, though I scorn to offer that in my defense. It is results that matter in this world and in every other. My good intentions brought innocent hearts pain that will not end. Each night, once, twice, sometimes three times in a night, I rise and dress and go out to see if they are there. They are not, but would be if they could—poor simple little beings whose torment I began. Do you understand? Of course not. How could you? I will explain everything in order, starting with Wladimir.
I once paused in my daily walk and sat down on the park bench. The cool green of the park around me seemed too good to enjoy merely in passing, so I sat, pausing a moment first to thank the Creator for this rest in the midst of an Easter Sunday’s tasks. I momentarily forgot Mrs. Zofia K., who acted so superior and left a dime in the collection plate, the worries of the coming Sunday School picnic; I meditated on the glory of God and the miracle of the resurrection. I was a religious man with no hint of fear in my love of God. My meditations were not to continue long, as it chanced. The interruption was the sight of a man walking toward me. The stranger was strikingly tall; his figure gave the impression of both nobility and sadness. Here, however, all resemblance to Lincoln ceased. The stranger’s nobility was not that of the common man, but that of the superior one. He had a high forehead, flashing black eyes, wide mouth, and thin hawk nose. His clothes had a vaguely foreign cut, and he walked with a slight limp. It was, I thought, such a limp as might have been acquired in some battle encounter. Then I decided I had never seen a man who suggested so plainly the idea of exiled aristocracy.The stranger seated himself on the bench beside me and leaned forward, his head in his hands, and his hands on a worn but well cared-for walking stick. I was a shy man by nature, but the stranger looked such an interesting person that I could not resist the temptation: “I, er, I just love Easter Sunday. Don’t you?” I finally blurted. The stranger looked up as if cold water had been dashed in his face. “No.” A decisive answer. “No I don’t. It reminds me of my forced exile.” I noted I spoke with only the slightest trace of an accent. “A revolution?” I ventured myself. “Yes. But I was a revolutionist, not an autocrat.” His eyes flamed and met me squarely, and his voice continued: “My country was a dictatorship. He calls it a kingdom now, and plans on his son following him, but you must understand that there is no established line preceding him. The leader, or as he calls himself, the Master, started well enough. They all do, you know. Then he worked himself into a position that would be fantastic if it were not real. The peasants are taught that to doubt him is the most hideous crime. In fact, in the last analysis, it is the only crime. He pardons whatever a man may do if only the man will apologize for it, and, of course, affirm that he is willing to die for the Master.”The Stranger turned his head, a look of despair on his face. I felt I could hardly blame him. “Tell me about the religious life in your nation,” he asked, anxious to get hack on familiar ground.”There is little to tell,” said the stranger. “They worship the Master. So you see my crime wasn’t only treason, but blasphemy also. I knew I had little chance at the start, but my friends and I could stand it no longer. We revolted, a pitiful handful of us. Now we are exiles. The people of my homeland have been taught to think of us as depraved monsters. I shall never see the green fertile fields of my homeland again.” “Well, I wouldn’t be too sad, sir. No doubt your home is beautiful, but there are lovely sights over here too.” “You would not say that if you had seen my homeland,” snapped the stranger.
“Tell me, sir, are you a Trotskite?” asked the minister. “You don’t look much like a Russian.” “No, my home is more distant than Russia, and my rebellion greatly predates Trotski’s.” A half-smile played about the stranger’s lips. The conversation was interrupted by the sound of Easter bells from my church. The stranger arose with a start and hastily departed. A moment later I left also, reflecting on the stranger’s limp and concluding it was due to an artificial limb. His left foot, I had noted, clattered almost like a hoof when it struck the pavement. I was disappointed to hear he was not coming the next Day. Then it’s began to sully, tarnish his reputation again. And I heard he was named Wladimir and we expect to see you soon.
Now there is another story. Each year at about Easter time, I make the same resolution; but for you to understand, I must first tell you of my old friend Adam. I intend to employ that first name since it was his. There are so many Adams, and each person is apt to guess the Adam I mean, the first from the Garden of Eden. Certain members of Adam’s family are yet living however (a mother, a sister, an uncle, an aunt, and several cousins, I believe), so I shall assign to him the surname of Floating kidney. Its signification will become clear to you. Adam and I were (as I have said) old friends. I might as truthfully have called us boyhood friends, and we lived on the same street of the city. We were of an age. We were alike in being roaming, wandering into the city, hiking in the mountains, and without brother. We met at school, and after one, though we never quite abandoned each other. The truth is that each of us found the other useful. It was the custom in those days to require a boy to name his best friend. And then, cruelly, to investigate the matter with the boy named. Thus I specified Adam Floating kidney. I do it not maliciously. And he named me, however, timidly;; and neither of us lost face. In part in support of our own testimony, we met regularly once or twice a day to wander and for other game in each other’s company. For the city was not so large in those days that a determined boy could not ride his bicycle twice across it in a single evening, and the distance between our homes was considerably less than the half kilometre. Soon, indeed, I boasted my bike; and in what now seems a short time, we both owned ones. I said we met to talk, but I might better have said we met to fling my arms around Adam’s neck. I began it, I believe. He was always exceedingly proud of whatever he possessed: his geese were every one a swan, as the saying goes.
A marginal note here. I have the friend who is living now. His name John. His complacency and boasting were objectionable to me, I might have mentioned the matter to them or for that reason even ceased to visit him. But we meet at half-yearly intervals, most of ten near his Home and our church. He is correct. The fact was that earlier I did not find it objectionable, though possibly I should have. His latest possessions were often of interest — for he was something of a collector even then — and he took so much innocent pleasure in producing each and recounting to me the way in which it had come into his hands that I enjoyed his crowing nearly as much as he did himself. How well I recall the dubiously ivory chess set — the magnifying glass whose ebony handle bore S.M. in faded gilt, whose chipped and foggy lens John employed to burn his own J.G. into the birch grip of an old Finnish knife.
The years rolled by. With the triumphs and disappointments they brought to me, this brief tale has nothing to do; as for my boyhood friend, he became an astronomer — a discipline admirably suited to his largely nocturnal style of life — and an acquirer of a TV. Scientific conferences of one sort or another took him to distant cities, where he rarely missed the opportunity of rummaging through such shops as they afforded. I have heard that he sometimes bought whole stacks of volumes as you or I might a single book, paying a trifle more to have them mailed home; the boxes in which his acquisitions arrived might be stacked in his foyer, unopened, for years. Not in our city, but in the big cities of a world, he haunted sales and would buy any number of astronomical instruments, and toss them into his rusty van. As far as I am aware, that van was emptied only when it became too full to hold more. He had inherited his parents’ Victorian house, and it seemed to be his ambition to choke its room with birds and old instruments, papers of his own, and the dusty instruments of science. At the time of which I speak, he had nearly succeeded, On my increasingly rare visits, we had to clear a chair so that I might sit; and on the last, he grudgingly yielded his own to me and stood. That was three years past, and I never came again.
Thus I was astounded to find him at my apartment door so very early on the morning he died. His long sallow face seemed unchanged, as did his threadbare brown suit; but he carried a narrow carton embellished with golden foil, surely the kind that distillers of the best class provide at Christmas, I was with my mum, and his eyes held such a light as I had not seen there since they had first met mine across a shabby chessboard. His knock roused me from sleep; but I opened the door, and he handed me the carton, announcing that we must toast the dawn. I filled our glasses and said I was happy to see him, as quite suddenly I was.
“Good, good! Then you won’t flinch when I tell you I’ve fulfilled my life’s ambition — that I’m — hah! Potentially the master of the world”; he was stunned by my mother’s beauty.
“Hah. Right,” I admitted. He gulped half his drink and grew serious. “Know what I’ve been after? Do you? All my life?” I did not, yet I could see that he had found it.
“The heaven. Lord, the heaven. Hah! What a heaven! The one no one buys. Know what I mean?” I shook my head.”Oh,” I said weakly. “That heaven,” I showed a wide open window with a sky.
“Right! Didn’t know I was looking till I found it. Eight hundred and sixty-five thousand miles across, but I’ve reduced it to a little thing, so big.” “Blue cover on the astronomical observatory in India. “Certainly,” I told him. “Fabulous beasts with the head, wings, and legs of an eagle, and the hindquarters of a lion on the skies.” “Wrong! Not fabulous a bit. Spirits. Haven’t you visited Sumer? Hah! Or Akkad? What about Ur?” I shook my head. “No, Adam, and neither have you.” All over the walls. There is a big sun there — civilization — nuclear fusion, too. Hah! Tells everything you’ve wanted to know all your life. Remember the one-eyed men? Tried to steal the gold, half-blinded by the sun. Disturb the solar spectrum, in code. Lasted eighteen months once — long chapter. Chaldean, not English. Somebody left it there to get us started. Hah! I ran it through a computer.” God forgive me, I thought it was a joke, a game. I asked, “But this vision tells you the secrets of life?” He nodded solemnly. “Teaches you to read — thought I knew, hah! Didn’t. Music in your head, after you read that. How to tie shoes, write a check. How old before you learned?””Seventeen, I suppose.” “Liar! Twenty-five a least. How to get the girl, easy as snapping fingers — all the ways. Make friends, influence people. Sports — quarterback — Olympics. Coordination and balance, that’s all — anything your body can do. Hah! Meditation and exercises. Easy, really.”I think my look must have pierced his soul; he was proud, like all lonely men. Lonely men must be proud or die. “Show you. Have to go anyhow. She’s waiting.” He stood, swaying a trifle. “Dave…”
“Don’t fret.” He opened my door, then he went back home, I would have thought.
I live in a little city as I said. I rushed to look out. A red Jaguar idled at the curb. The lovely woman standing beside it appeared to be waving to me. “Like it? Hah! Snap.” Adam’s voice was at my ear. He was standing beside my window, upon nothing. “Got to go. Take care.”
Elas. Adam went at a brisk pace in a direction of a rail station. I cannot to give a detailed account of what happened. I wasn’t there. A train runs on rails. How slow the train goes! Suddenly it was an accident. A comission wasn’t called into being to investigate the cause of the accident. He descended on steps of air that only he could see; he had reached the third floor when dawn touched the sky and he fell. His house went to his sister, but she left his “library” to me, “my best friend”. Was it merely a notebook, written by hand? Did he pay someone to set type, as he surely paid someone else to bind or rebind it? Or did he create his book himself by what is called desk-top publishing? He seems to have owned equipment of that kind. His astronomical instruments are in storage now, for I lack the space for a tenth of them. Sometimes I go to the warehouse to open the crates and poke about; yes, still, especially at this time of year. And in my dreams I see him falling, and gniffins bent upon vengeance, bearing the treasures of the sun.
(based on the texts of Wolfe Gene)

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