Part 10 (1/2)
”What do they say?”
”That a man who dies while on jihad will be able to have s.e.xual intercourse with seventy perpetual virgins in heaven?”
Samira smiled. ”Well, it's based on a verse from the Hadith, but it's a literal translation that's not ... you know, embraced by many people-”
”Arabs,” said Norval, shaking his head, ”were once in the vanguard of civilisation. What the h.e.l.l happened?”
”You French were too,” Samira countered. ”What the h.e.l.l happened?”
”I knew a Greek girl in school,” said JJ, who seemed not to have heard this exchange. ”You're as beautiful as her, I met her at summer camp when I was thirteen, she had hairy legs. I was in love with her, we were never apart as teenagers, in fact I'm still in love with her. She was the thief of my virginity. I learned how to be a hippy from her. She was a bona fide hippy, even though her parents were rich. She ran away from home and grew cabbages in a farmer's field ...”
Calm down, Samira wanted to say, you're like my mother's neurotic Chihuahua. Calm down little guy, Norval wanted to say, you've had way too many chocolate bars. Noel had no wish to say anything: like faulty reception across the stormiest of airwaves, JJ's chatter was not coming in; the blunt and boxy shapes, which gave him little trouble in the lab, were now a train wreck of tangled, dirty-white cracks, pops, bangs.
”So it didn't work out?” said Samira. ”With the Greek girl?”
”No, her parents took her to Switzerland for six months in the hope she'd meet someone else.”
”And did she?”
”No. But when she got back to Quebec she did. A member of Les Beaux Gars.”
”A rock band?”
”Biker gang. But I have a feeling she'll come back to me. I saw her at a summer-camp reunion. She ignored me. But I'll wait as long as it takes- forever, if necessary, till the stars turn cold. I have a feeling we'll end our days together, that it'll all twist together, her fate and mine. If not, perhaps there'll be a reunion in eternity, where love stays unchanged. Be back in a jiff, I got to change out of these clothes. You can watch TV while I'm gone. The Olympics! We're kicking a.s.s, eh? It's believer-fever, it's fandemonium!”
After JJ disappeared into his bedroom, the three guests stared at each other, slack-jawed. Norval s.h.i.+fted his gaze to the room's walls, papered for the third or fourth time decades before, with outlined patterns coloured in here and there with wax crayon. Noel examined oddly positioned paintings-covering cracks or holes, he a.s.sumed-which depicted the innocence of children, the benevolence of the old, the purity of lovers, the cohesion of families. Samira was drawn to the room's centrepiece: the large, weather-beaten cigar-store Indian, with a stuffed cat at its feet. The Indian, JJ revealed later, was his grandfather's and the cat his grandmother's. And the paintings were creations of his youth, he further explained, adding that he had been guided by numbers.
”This place is ... amazing!” said Samira, struggling to find the right words. ”It ... smokes!”
Noel, glancing from object to object, was struggling to take it all in. There was a feeling in the house of everything coming apart at once. Norval thought he had entered a home for the crazed.
”It's ... it's like a museum!” Samira exclaimed. ”Look at this!” She pointed to an old clock with a golden face showing the phases of the moon and conjunctions of the planets. ”And this!” Beside the clock was an antique spygla.s.s of tarnished bra.s.s. ”And this!” Everyone looked up at a chandelier above her, originally a gasolier that had been converted to electric light in the twenties. There were still gas jets and fittings all over the house, as if JJ planned to return to gas lighting if electricity didn't catch on.
”Are we looking at a neurological deficit here?” asked Norval. ”Is JJ crazed, permanently or periodically?”22 ”Shh,” Samira whispered. ”He's a sweetheart. If you say one single word against him, one single sarcasm ... well, I don't know what I'll do. Or not do. I think this place is fabulous.”
Norval screwed his heel into the floorboard, causing the wood to powder away. ”It's seen better days,” he said.
”So have you.”
Norval sniffed left and right. ”What is that mephitic odour?” His nose led him to the defeated carpet and sagging sofa. ”Bordello perfume and ...”
”Dog p.i.s.s?” Noel suggested.
”Formula?”
”K9P.”
”Shh,” whispered Samira again. ”Come on, you guys, behave. He might hear you. What's your problem anyway? Cleanliness is as bad as G.o.dliness. Hey, look at this.” Samira nodded towards a ceiling-high bookcase made of red bricks and particle board, with uneven rows of files and books. Large green albarellos served as bookends.
Norval and Samira began examining the spines. The top rows included Natural Alchemy, Medical Underground, Fringe Medicine, Metaphysical Medicine, Renegade Medicine, Clandestine Laboratories Natural Alchemy, Medical Underground, Fringe Medicine, Metaphysical Medicine, Renegade Medicine, Clandestine Laboratories, Granddad's Wonderful Book of Chemistry Granddad's Wonderful Book of Chemistry, Holistic Approach in Ancient Medicine Holistic Approach in Ancient Medicine, Necromancy for Dumbies, Acupuncture for Dumbies Necromancy for Dumbies, Acupuncture for Dumbies, Hypnosis for Salesmen Hypnosis for Salesmen, Colour Healing Colour Healing, Secrets of the Chinese Herbalists Secrets of the Chinese Herbalists and and Laughter Therapy Is No Joke Laughter Therapy Is No Joke. On the sagging middle shelves were volumes of Frontier Science Frontier Science and and Psychology Tomorrow Psychology Tomorrow, piled corkscrew-wise, as well as joke anthologies, a s...o...b..x of letters with a heart on top, a half-dozen books by emile Vorta, and a sc.r.a.pbook with the doctor's name on the cover.
”G.o.d, no spine-faking here,” said Norval. ”It's all s.h.i.+t.”
”No, it's not.” Samira pointed to the bottom shelf, which included works by Saint-Exupery, Jules Verne, Alexandre Dumas, Antoine Galland, Ulrich b.o.n.e.r23 and John Creasey. and John Creasey.
At the opposite end of the room, where Noel was now foraging, were higgledy-piggledy mounds of computer and electronic equipment of modest manufacture: not IBM or Mac or Tos.h.i.+ba, but Capital, Cicero, Apex; not Sony, Panasonic or JVD, but Yorx, Citizen, Claretone. Two no-brand televisions, connected to automotive stereo speakers, showed two different Winter Olympic events in two different languages. One had a story about some French figure-skating judge, the other an interview with a Canadian athlete, which Noel turned up: ”So how do you feel? You must be disappointed.”
”Not everyone can medal, eh? I'm happy just to be here.”
”Right. But you came sixty-eighth.”
”I'm here for the experience. To meet the other athletes. Watch their events now that mine's over. Just relax for the rest of the week.”
”You don't feel disappointed?”
”I'm happy just to be here.”
”So this is like a junket for you, a joyride?”
”I'm here for the experience. I hope to build on this for the next Olympics.”
”But you're forty-three.”
”I'm happy just to be here.”
”Anybody else show up while I was changing?” asked JJ as he emerged from his bedroom wearing a T-s.h.i.+rt that said THE RIGHT CHEMISTRY.
, filthier than the one it replaced. ”I've invited some mega-watt scientists, including Dr. Ravenscroft and Dr. Rheaume-and of course Dr. Vorta. I'm his number-one fan, eh? I keep a sc.r.a.pbook on him. And you know what? He's the one responsible for us meeting in the first place!”
”Think we could have a gla.s.s of that red?” Norval nodded towards the table.
”I haven't done the dishes for a while.”
”I'll drink it out of the bottle.”
”Will a paper cup do?”
”Fine.”
”Or plastic?”
”Goatskin, anything.”
”Would you like some wine, Samira? How about you, Noel?”
”Noel is a temperance expert,” said Norval. ”I'll have his gla.s.s. Didn't you mention something about absinthe and/or laudanum in your invitation?”
”I'm saving that for later. I'll just pour Noel a taste. Here you go, Noel, Sam. I'd like to propose a toast to the world's greatest scientist, Dr. emile Vorta!”
They clinked plastic cups, with the exception of Norval, who was already pouring himself another.