"lamb" - читать интересную книгу автора (Moore Christopher)![]() LambThe Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal CHRISTOPHER MOOREIf you are here to be offended, may your ire rise and your blood boil. If you seek an adventure, may this story sing you away to blissful escape. If you need to test or confirm your beliefs, may you reach comfortable conclusions. All books reveal perfection, by what they are or what they are not. May you find that which you seek, in these pages or outside them. May you find perfection, and know it by name. Contents PROLOGUE The angel was cleaning out his closets when the call… PART I The Boy ONE You think you know how this story is going to… TWO The angel wants me to convey more of Joshua's grace. THREE The angel will tell me nothing of what happened to… FOUR Yet another reason that I loathe the heavenly scum with… FIVE Well, it worked, I finally got the angel to leave… SIX When we got back to Nazareth we expected to find… SEVEN And the angel said, “What prophet has this written? For… EIGHT I've managed to sneak into the bathroom long enough to… PART II Change PrologueThe angel was cleaning out his closets when the call came. Halos and moonbeams were sorted into piles according to brightness, satchels of wrath and scabbards of lightning hung on hooks waiting to be dusted. A wineskin of glory had leaked in the corner and the angel blotted it with a wad of fabric. Each time he turned the cloth a muted chorus rang from the closet, as if he'd clamped the lid down on a pickle jar full of Hallelujah Chorus."Raziel, what in heaven's name are you doing?" The archangel Stephan was standing over him, brandishing a scroll like a rolled-up magazine over a piddling puppy. "Orders?" the angel asked. "Dirt-side." "I was just there." "Two millennia ago." "Really?" Raziel checked his watch, then tapped the crystal. "Are you sure?" "What do you think?" Stephan held out the scroll so Raziel could see the Burning Bush seal. "When do I leave? I was almost finished here." "Now. Pack the gift of tongues and some minor miracles. No weapons, it's not a wrath job. You'll be undercover. Very low profile, but important. It's all in the orders." Stephan handed him the scroll. "Why me?" "I asked that too." "And?" "I was reminded why angels are cast out." "Whoa! That big?" Stephan coughed, clearly an affectation, since angels didn't breathe. "I'm not sure I'm supposed to know, but the rumor is that it's a new book." "You're kidding. A sequel? Revelations 2, just when you thought it was safe to sin?" "It's a Gospel." "A Gospel, after all this time? Who?" "Levi who is called Biff." Raziel dropped his rag and stood. "This has to be a mistake." "It comes directly from the Son." "There's a reason Biff isn't mentioned in the other books, you know? He's a total—" "Don't say it." "But he's such an asshole." "You talk like that and you wonder why you get dirt-duty." "Why now, after so long, the four Gospels have been fine so far, and why him?" "Because it's some kind of anniversary in dirt-dweller time of the Son's birth, and he feels it's time the whole story is told." Raziel hung his head. "I'd better pack." "Gift of tongues," Stephan reminded. "Of course, so I can take crap in a thousand languages." "Go get the good news, Raziel. Bring me back some chocolate." "Chocolate?" "It's a dirt-dweller snack. You'll like it. Satan invented it." "Devil's food?" "You can only eat so much white cake, my friend." Midnight. The angel stood on a barren hillside on the outskirts of the holy city of Jerusalem. He raised his arms aloft and a dry wind whipped his white robe around him. "Arise, Levi who is called Biff." A whirlwind formed before him, pulling dust from the hillside into a column that took the shape of a man. "Arise, Biff. Your time has come." The wind whipped into a fury and the angel pulled the sleeve of his robe across his face. "Arise, Biff, and walk again among the living." The whirlwind began to subside, leaving the man-shaped column of dust standing on the hillside. In a moment, the hillside was calm again. The angel pulled a gold vessel from his satchel and poured it over the column. The dust washed away, leaving a muddy, naked man sputtering in the starlight. "Welcome back to the living," the angel said. The man blinked, then held his hand before his eyes as if he expected to see through it. "I'm alive," he said in a language he had never heard before. "Yes," the angel said. "What are these sounds, these words?" "You have been given the gift of tongues." "I've always had the gift of tongues, ask any girl I've known. What are these words?" "Languages. You've been given the gift of languages, as were all the apostles." "Then the kingdom has come." "Yes." "How long?" "Two thousand years ago." "You worthless bag of dog shit," said Levi who was called Biff, as he punched the angel in the mouth. "You're late." The angel picked himself up and gingerly touched his lip. "Nice talk to a messenger of the Lord." "It's a gift," Biff said. Part IThe BoyGod is a comedian playing to an audience that is afraid to laugh.VOLTAIRE Chapter 1You think you know how this story is going to end, but you don't. Trust me, I was there. I know.The first time I saw the man who would save the world he was sitting near the central well in Nazareth with a lizard hanging out of his mouth. Just the tail end and the hind legs were visible on the outside; the head and forelegs were halfway down the hatch. He was six, like me, and his beard had not come in fully, so he didn't look much like the pictures you've seen of him. His eyes were like dark honey, and they smiled at me out of a mop of blue-black curls that framed his face. There was a light older than Moses in those eyes. "Unclean! Unclean!" I screamed, pointing at the boy, so my mother would see that I knew the Law, but she ignored me, as did all the other mothers who were filling their jars at the well. The boy took the lizard from his mouth and handed it to his younger brother, who sat beside him in the sand. The younger boy played with the lizard for a while, teasing it until it reared its little head as if to bite, then he picked up a rock and mashed the creature's head. Bewildered, he pushed the dead lizard around in the sand, and once assured that it wasn't going anywhere on its own, he picked it up and handed it back to his older brother. Into his mouth went the lizard, and before I could accuse, out it came again, squirming and alive and ready to bite once again. He handed it back to his younger brother, who smote it mightily with the rock, starting or ending the whole process again. I watched the lizard die three more times before I said, "I want to do that too." The Savior removed the lizard from his mouth and said, "Which part?" By the way, his name was Joshua. Jesus is the Greek translation of the Hebrew Yeshua, which is Joshua. Christ is not a last name. It's the Greek for messiah, a Hebrew word meaning anointed. I have no idea what the "H" in Jesus H. Christ stood for. It's one of the things I should have asked him. Me? I am Levi who is called Biff. No middle initial. Joshua was my best friend.
The angel says I'm supposed to just sit down and write my story, forget about what I've seen in this world, but how am I to do that? In the last three days I have seen more people, more images, more wonders, than in all my thirty-three years of living, and the angel asks me to ignore them. Yes, I have been given the gift of tongues, so I see nothing without knowing the word for it, but what good does that do? Did it help in Jerusalem to know that it was a Mercedes that terrified me and sent me diving into a Dumpster? Moreover, after Raziel pulled me out and ripped my fingernails back as I struggled to stay hidden, did it help to know that it was a Boeing 747 that made me cower in a ball trying to rock away my own tears and shut out the noise and fire? Am I a little child, afraid of its own shadow, or did I spend twenty-seven years at the side of the Son of God? On the hill where he pulled me from the dust, the angel said, "You will see many strange things. Do not be afraid. You have a holy mission and I will protect you." Smug bastard. Had I known what he would do to me I would have hit him again. Even now he lies on the bed across the room, watching pictures move on a screen, eating the sticky sweet called Snickers, while I scratch out my tale on this soft-as-silk paper that reads Hyatt Regency, St. Louis at the top. Words, words, words, a million million words circle in my head like hawks, waiting to dive onto the page to rend and tear the only two words I want to write. Why me? What hero could touch these children anyway, with their machines and medicine and distances made invisible? (Raziel: not here a week and he would trade the Sword of God to be a web slinger.) In my time, our heroes were few, but they were real—some of us could even trace our kinship to them. Joshua always played the heroes—David, Joshua, Moses—while I played the evil ones: Pharaoh, Ahab, and Nebuchadnezzar. If I had a shekel for every time I was slain as a Philistine, well, I'd not be riding a camel through the eye of a needle anytime soon, I'll tell you that. As I think back, I see that Joshua was practicing for what he would become. He never sleeps. He just watches me, watches the television, and eats. He never leaves the room. Today, while searching for extra towels, I opened one of the drawers and there, beneath a plastic bag meant for laundry, I found a book: Holy Bible, it said on the cover. Thank the Lord I did not take the book from the drawer, but opened it with my back to the angel. There are chapters there that were in no Bible I know. I saw the names of Matthew and John, I saw Romans and Galatians—this is a book of my time. "What are you doing?" the angel asked. I covered the Bible and closed the drawer. "Looking for towels. I need to bathe." "You bathed yesterday." "Cleanliness is important to my people." "I know that. What, you think I don't know that?" "You're not exactly the brightest halo in the bunch." "Then bathe. And stand away from the television." "Why don't you go get me some towels?" "I'll call down to the desk." And he did. If I am to get a look at that book, I must get the angel to leave the room. I glared at the angel, who, as usual, was lying on the bed watching television, and for the first time I realized that he did not understand Jesus' language. He did not possess the gift of tongues he had bestowed on me. He spoke Aramaic to me, and he seemed to know Hebrew and enough English to understand television, but of Spanish he understood not a word. I apologized to Jesus and sent him on his way with a promise that I would make it up to him, then I wheeled on the angel. "You fool, these coins, these dimes, are nearly worthless in this country." "What do you mean, they look like the silver dinars we dug up in Jerusalem, they are worth a fortune." He was right, in a way. After he called me up from the dead I led him to a cemetery in the valley of Ben Hiddon, and there, hidden behind a stone where Judas had put it two thousand years ago, was the blood money—thirty silver dinars. But for a little tarnish, they looked just as they did on the day I had taken them, and they were almost identical to the coin this country calls the dime (except for the image of Tiberius on the dinars, and some other Caesar on the dime). We had taken the dinars to an antiquities dealer in the old city (which looked nearly the same as it did when I'd last walked there, except that the Temple was gone and in its place two great mosques). The merchant gave us twenty thousand dollars in American money for them. It was this money that we had traveled on, and deposited at the hotel desk for our expenses. The angel told me the dimes must have the same worth as the dinars, and I, like a fool, believed him. "You should have told me," I said to the angel. "If I could leave this room I would know myself." "You have work to do," the angel said. Then he leapt to his feet and shouted at the television, "The wrath of the Lord shall fall upon ye, Stephanos!" "What in the hell are you shouting at?" The angel wagged a finger at the screen, "He has exchanged Catherine's baby for its evil twin, which he fathered with her sister while she was in a coma, yet Catherine does not realize his evil deed, as he has had his face changed to impersonate the bank manager who is foreclosing on Catherine's husband's business. If I was not trapped here I would personally drag the fiend straight to hell." For days now the angel had been watching serial dramas on television, alternately shouting at the screen or bursting into tears. He had stopped reading over my shoulder, so I had just tried to ignore him, but now I realized what was going on. "It's not real, Raziel." "What do you mean?" "It's drama, like the Greeks used to do. They are actors in a play." "No, no one could pretend to such evil." "That's not all. Spider-Man and Doctor Octopus? Not real. Characters in a play." "You lying dog!" "If you'd ever leave the room and look at how real people talk you'd know that, you yellow-haired cretin. But no, you stay here perched on my shoulder like a trained bird. I am dead two thousand years and even I know better." (I still need to get a look at that book in the dresser. I thought maybe, just maybe, I could goad the angel into giving me five minutes privacy.) "You know nothing," said Raziel. "I have destroyed whole cities in my time." "Sort of makes me wonder if you destroyed the right ones. That'd be embarrassing, huh?" Then an advertisement came on the screen for a magazine that promised to "fill in all the blanks" and give the real inside story to all of soap operas: Soap Opera Digest. I watched the angel's eyes widen. He grabbed the phone and rang the front desk. "What are you doing?" "I need that book." "Have them send up Jesus," I said. "He'll help you get it." Raziel called down to the front desk and asked him to send Jesus up. A few minutes later our Latin pal stood at attention at the foot of the angel's bed. Raziel said, "Tell him I need a Soap Opera Digest." In Spanish, I said, "Good afternoon, Jesus. How are you today?" "I am well, sir, and you?" "As good as can be expected, considering this man is holding me prisoner." "Tell him to hurry," said Raziel. "He doesn't understand Spanish?" Jesus asked. "Not a word of it, but don't start speaking Hebrew or I'm sunk." "Are you really a prisoner? I wondered why you two never left the room. Should I call the police?" "No, that won't be necessary, but please shake your head and look apologetic." "What is taking so long?" Raziel said. "Give him the money and tell him to go." "He said he is not allowed to buy publications for you, but he can direct you to a place where you can purchase them yourself." "That's ridiculous, he's a servant, isn't he? He will do as I ask." "Oh my, Jesus, he has asked if you would like to feel the power of his manly nakedness." "Is he crazy? I have a wife and two children." "Sadly, yes. Please show him that you are offended by his offer by spitting on him and storming out of the room." "I don't know, sir, spitting on a guest…" I handed him a handful of the bills that he'd taught me were appropriate gratuities. "Please, it will be good for him." "Very well, Mister Biff." He produced an impressive loogie and launched it at the front of the angel's robe, where it splatted and ran. Raziel leapt to his feet. "Well done, Jesus, now curse." "You fuckstick!" "In Spanish." "Sorry, I was showing off my English. I know many swear words." "Well done. Spanish please."
"Pendejo!"
"Splendid, now storm out." Jesus turned on his heel and left the room, slamming the door behind him. "He spit on me?" Raziel said, still not believing it. "An angel of the Lord, and he spit on me." "Yes, you offended him." "He called me a fuckstick. I heard him." "In his culture, it is an affront to ask another man to buy a Soap Opera Digest for you. We'll be lucky if he ever brings us a pizza again." "But I want a Soap Opera Digest." "He said you can buy one just down the street, I will be happy to go get one for you." "Not so fast, Apostle, none of your tricks. I'll get it myself, you stay here." "You'll need money." I handed him some bills. "If you leave the room I will find you in an instant, you know that?" "Absolutely." "You cannot hide from me." "Wouldn't dream of it. Hurry now." He sort of shuffled sideways toward the door. "Don't try to lock me out, I'm taking a key with me. Not that I need it or anything, being an angel of the Lord." "Not to mention a fuckstick." "I don't even know what that means." "Go, go, go." I shooed him through the door. "Godspeed, Raziel." "Work on your Gospel while I'm gone." "Right." I slammed the door in his face and threw the safety lock. Raziel has now watched hundreds of hours of American television, you'd think he would have noticed that people wear shoes when they go outside. The book is exactly as I suspected, a Bible, but written in a flowery version of this English I've been writing in. The translation of the Torah and the prophets from the Hebrew is muddled sometimes, but the first part seems to be our Bible. This language is amazing—so many words. In my time we had very few words, perhaps a hundred that we used all the time, and thirty of them were synonyms for guilt. In this language you can curse for an hour and never use the same word twice. Flocks and schools and herds of words, that's why I'm supposed to use this language to tell Joshua's story. I've hidden the book in the bathroom, so I can sneak in and read it while the angel is in the room. I didn't have time to actually read much of the part of the book they call the New Testament, but it's obvious that it is the story of Joshua's life. Or parts of it, anyway. I'll study it later, but now I should go on with the real story. When we got back to Nazareth we expected to find Joshua's mother hysterical with worry, but on the contrary, she had gathered Joshua's brothers and sisters outside of their house, lined them up, and was washing their faces and hands as if preparing them for the Sabbath meal. "Joshua, help me get the little ones ready, we are all going to Sepphoris." Joshua was shocked. "We are?" "The whole village is going to ask the Romans to release Joseph." James was the only one of the children who seemed to understand what had happened to their father. There were tear tracks on his cheeks. I put my arm around his shoulders. "He'll be fine," I said, trying to sound cheerful. "Your father is strong, they'll have to torture him for days before he gives up the ghost." I smiled encouragingly. James broke out of my embrace and ran into the house crying. Mary turned and glared at me. "Shouldn't you be with your family, Biff?" Oh my breaking heart, my bruised ego. Even though Mary had taken position as my emergency backup wife, I was crestfallen at her disapproval. And to my credit, not once during that time of trouble did I wish harm to come to Joseph. Not once. After all, I was still too young to take a wife, and some creepy elder would swoop Mary up before I had a chance to rescue her if Joseph died before I was fourteen. "Why don't you go get Maggie," Joshua suggested, taking only a second from his mission of scrubbing the skin off his brother Judah's face. "Her family will want to go with us." "Sure," I said, and I scampered off to the blacksmith's shop in search of approval from my primary wife-to-be. And I said to the angel, "You fabulously feebleminded bundle of feathers, there's no prophet involved. They know what is going to happen because they write it all down in advance for the actors to perform." "So it is written, so it shall be done," said the angel. I crossed the room and sat on the edge of the bed next to Raziel. His gaze never wavered from his Soap Opera Digest. I pushed the magazine down so the angel had to look me in the face. "Raziel, do you remember the time before mankind, the time when there were only the heavenly host and the Lord?" "Yes, those were the best of times. Except for the war, of course. But other than that, yes, wonderful times." "And you angels were as strong and beautiful as divine imagination, your voices sang praise for the Lord and his glory to the ends of the universe, and yet the Lord saw fit to create us, mankind, weak, twisted, and profane, right?" "That's when it all started to go downhill, if you ask me," Raziel said. "Well, do you know why the Lord decided to create us?" "No. Ours is not to question the Will." "Because you are all dumbfucks, that's why. You're as mindless as the machinery of the stars. Angels are just pretty insects. Days of Our Lives is a show, Raziel, a play. It's not real, get it?" "No." And he didn't. I've learned that there's a tradition in this time of telling funny stories about the stupidity of people with yellow hair. Guess where that started. "You are spending a lot of time in there. You don't need to spend so much time in there." "I told you, cleanliness is very important to my people." "You weren't bathing. I would have heard the water running." I decided that I needed to go on the offensive if I was going to keep the angel from finding the Bible. I ran across the room, leapt onto his bed, and fastened my hands around his throat—choking him as I chanted: "I haven't been laid in two thousand years. I haven't been laid in two thousand years. I haven't been laid in two thousand years." It felt good, there was a rhythm to it, I sort of squoze his throat a bit with every syllable. I paused for a moment in choking the heavenly host to backhand him across his alabaster cheek. It was a mistake. He caught my hand. Then grabbed me by the hair with his other hand and calmly climbed to his feet, lifting me into the air by my hair. "Ow, ow, ow, ow, ow," I said. "So, you have not been laid in two thousand years? What does that mean?" "Ow, ow, ow, ow," I replied. The angel set me on my feet, but kept his grasp on my hair. "So?" "It means that I haven't had a woman in two millennia, aren't you picking up any of the vocabulary from the television?" He glanced at the TV, which, of course, was on. "I don't have your gift of tongues. What does that have to do with choking me?" "I was choking you because you, once again, are as dense as dirt. I haven't had sex in two thousand years. Men have needs. What the hell do you think I'm doing in the bathroom all of that time?" "Oh," the angel said, releasing my hair. "So you are…You have been…There is a…" "Get me a woman and maybe I won't spend so much time in the bathroom, if you get my meaning." Brilliant misdirection, I thought. "A woman? No, I cannot do that. Not yet." "Yet? Does that mean…" "Oh look," the angel said, turning from me as if I was no more than vapor, "General Hospital is starting." And with that, my secret Bible was safe. What did he mean by "yet"? At least this Matthew mentions the Magi. One sentence, but that's one more than I've gotten in his Gospel so far. Well, it is now, Josh. It's written now. (It's strange, the word "wuss" is the same in my ancient Aramaic tongue as it is in this language. Like the word waited for me these two thousand years so I could write it down here. Strange.) If I do manage to escape the angel, I'm not going to be able to make my living as a professional mourner, not if you people don't have the courtesy to die. Just as well, I suppose, I'd have to learn all new dirges. I've tried to get the angel to watch MTV so I can learn the vocabulary of your music, but even with the gift of tongues, I'm having trouble learning to speak hip-hop. Why is it that one can busta rhyme or busta move anywhere but you must busta cap in someone's ass? Is "ho" always feminine, and "muthafucka" always masculine, while "bitch" can be either? How many peeps in a posse, how much booty before baby got back, do you have to be all that to get all up in that, and do I need to be dope and phat to be da bomb or can I just be "stupid"? I'll not be singing over any dead mothers until I understand. "Did Moses look like that?" I asked Raziel, who was worrying the crust off of a goat cheese pizza in between spitting vitriol at the screen. "No," said Raziel, "but that other fellow looks like Pharaoh." "Really?" "Yep," said Raziel. He slurped the last of a Coke through a straw making a rude noise, then tossed the paper cup across the room into the wastebasket. "So you were there, during the Exodus?" "Right before. I was in charge of locusts." "How was that?" "Didn't care for it. I wanted the plague of frogs. I like frogs." "I like frogs too." "You wouldn't have liked the plague of frogs. Stephan was in charge. A seraphim." He shook his head as if I should know some sad inside fact about seraphim. "We lost a lot of frogs. "I suppose it's for the best, though," Raziel said with a sigh. "You can't have a someone who likes frogs bring a plague of frogs. If I'd done it, it would have been more of a friendly gathering of frogs." "That wouldn't have worked," I said. "Well, it didn't work anyway, did it? I mean, Moses, a Jew, thought it up. Frogs were unclean to the Jews. To the Jews it was a plague. To the Egyptians it was like having a big feast of frog legs drop from the sky. Moses missed it on that one. I'm just glad we didn't listen to him on the plague of pork." "Really, he wanted to bring down a plague of pork? Pigs falling from the sky?" "Pig pieces. Ribs, hams, feet. He wanted everything bloody. You know, unclean pork and unclean blood. The Egyptians would have eaten the pork. We talked him into just the blood." "Are you saying that Moses was a dimwit?" I wasn't being ironic when I asked this, I was aware that I was asking the eternal dimwit of them all. Still… "No, he just wasn't concerned with results," said the angel. "The Lord had hardened Pharaoh's heart against letting the Jews go. We could have dropped oxen from the sky and he wouldn't have changed his mind." "That would have been something to see," I said. "I suggested that it rain fire," the angel said. "How'd that go?" "It was pretty. We only had it rain on the stone palaces and monuments. Burning up all of the Jews would sort of defeated the purpose." "Good thinking," I said. "Well, I'm good with weather," said the angel. "Yeah, I know," I said. Then I thought about it a second, about how Raziel nearly wore out our poor room service waiter Jesus delivering orders of ribs the day they were the special. "You didn't suggest fire, initially, did you? You just suggested that it rain barbecued pork, didn't you?" "That guy doesn't look anything like Moses," the angel said. "Because no one is going to know the places I'm writing about, that's why," I told him. "You want me to write in this idiom so people will understand what I'm saying, then why use the names of places that have been gone for thousands of years? I need a map." "No," said the angel. "When I say the journey was two months by camel, what will that mean to these people who can cross an ocean in hours? I need to know modern distances." "No," said the angel. (Did you know that in a hotel they bolt the bedside lamp to the table, thereby making it an ineffective instrument of persuasion when trying to bring an obdurate angel around to your way of thinking? Thought you should know that. Pity too, it's such a substantial lamp.) "But how will I recount the heroic acts of the archangel Raziel if I can't tell the locations of his deeds? What, you want me to write, 'Oh, then somewhere generally to the left of the Great Wall that rat-bastard Raziel showed up looking like hell considering he may have traveled a long distance or not?' Is that what you want? Or should it read, 'Then, only a mile out of the port of Ptolemais, we were once again graced with the shining magnificence of the archangel Raziel? Huh, which way do you want it?" (I know what you're thinking, that the angel saved my life when Titus threw me off the ship and that I should be more forgiving toward him, right? That I shouldn't try to manipulate a poor creature who was given an ego but no free will or capacity for creative thought, right? Okay, good point. But do please remember that the angel only intervened on my behalf because Joshua was praying for my rescue. And do please remember that he could have saved us a lot of difficulty over the years if he had helped us out more often. And please don't forget that—despite the fact that he is perhaps the most handsome creature I've ever laid eyes on—Raziel is a stone doofus. Nevertheless, the ego stroke worked.) "I'll get you a map." And he did. Unfortunately the concierge was only able to find a map of the world provided by an airline that partners with the hotel. So who knows how accurate it is. On this map the next leg of our journey is six inches long and would cost thirty thousand Friendly Flyer Miles. I hope that clears things up. Anyway, now I know why I was brought back from the dead to write this Gospel. If the rest of this "New Testament" is anything like the book of Matthew, they need someone to write about Joshua's life who was actually there: me. I can't believe I wasn't even mentioned once. It's all I can do to keep from asking Raziel what in the hell happened. He probably showed up a hundred years too late to correct this Matthew fellow. Oh my, there's a frightening thought, edited by the moron angel. I can't let that happen. And the ending? Where did he get that? I'll see what this next guy, this Mark, has to say, but I'm not getting my hopes up.
Tiny Feet of the Divine Dance of Joyous Orgasm,
Beautiful Gate of Heavenly Moisture Number Six,
Temptress of the Golden Light of the Harvest Moon,
Delicate Personage of Two Fu Dogs Wrestling Under a Blanket,
Feminine Keeper of the Three Tunnels of Excessive Friendliness,
Silken Pillows of the Heavenly Softness of Clouds,
Pea Pods in Duck Sauce with Crispy Noodle,
and Sue.
Joy,
Number Six,
Two Fu Dogs,
Moon,
Tunnels,
Pillows,
Pea Pods,
and, of course,
Sue,
"Raziel," I said, "you are an angel of the Lord, he is a professional wrestler, I think it's understood that you could kick his punk ass." This has gone on for a couple of days now. The angel has found a new passion. The front desk has called a dozen times and sent a bellman up twice to tell the angel to quiet down. "Besides, it's just pretend." Raziel looked at me as if I had slapped him. "Don't start with that again, these are not actors." The angel back flipped on the bed. "Ooo, ooo, you see that? Ho popped him with a chair. Thaz right, you go girl. She nasty." It's like that now. Talk shows featuring the screaming ignorant, soap operas, and wrestling. And the angel guards the remote control like it's the Ark of the Covenant. "This," I told him, "is why the angels were never given free will. This right here. Because you would spend your time watching this." "Really?" Raziel said, and he muted the TV for what seemed like the first time in days. "Then tell me, Levi who is called Biff, if by watching this I am abusing the little freedom I've been given while carrying out this task, then what would you say of your people?" "By my people you mean human beings?" I was stalling. I didn't remember the angel ever making a valid point before and I wasn't prepared for it. "Hey, don't blame me, I've been dead for two thousand years. I wouldn't have let this sort of thing happen." "Uh-huh," said the angel, crossing his arms and striking a pose of incredulity that he had learned from a gangster rapper on MTV. If there was anything I learned from John the Baptist, it was that the sooner you confess a mistake, the quicker you can get on to making new and better mistakes. Oh, that and don't piss off Salome, that was a big one too. "Okay, we've fucked up," I said. "Thaz whut I'm talkin' about," said the angel, entirely too satisfied with himself. Yeah? Where was he when we needed him and his sword of justice at Balthasar's fortress? Probably in Greece, watching wrestling. I thought Matthew was bad, skipping right from Joshua's birth to his baptism, but Mark doesn't even bother with the birth. It's as if Joshua springs forth full grown from the head of Zeus. (Okay, bad metaphor, but you know what I mean.) Mark begins with the baptism, at thirty! Where did these guys get these stories? "I once met a guy in a bar who knew a guy who's sister's best friend was at the baptism of Joshua bar Joseph of Nazareth, and here's the story as best as he could remember it." Well, at least Mark mentions me, once. And then it's totally out of context, as if I was just sitting around doing nothing and Joshua happened by and asked me to tag along. And Mark tells of the demon named Legion. Yeah, I remember Legion. Compared to what Balthasar called up, Legion was a wuss. Joshua and Balthasar rode into Kabul at a time of night when only cutthroats and whores were about (the whores offering the "cutthroat discount" after midnight to promote business). The old wizard had fallen asleep to the rhythm of his camel's loping gait, an act that nearly baffled Joshua as much as the whole demon business, as he spent most of his time on camelback trying not to upchuck—seasickness of the desert, they call it. Joshua flicked the old man's leg with the loose end of his camel's bridle, and the magus came awake snorting. "What is it? Are we there?" "Can you control the demon, old man? Are we close enough for you to regain control?" Balthasar closed his eyes and Joshua thought that he might be going to sleep again, except his hands began to tremble with some unseen effort. After a few seconds he opened his eyes again. "I can't tell." "Well, you could tell that he was out." "That was like a wave of pain in my soul. I'm not in intimate contact with the demon at all times. We are probably too far away still." "Horses," Joshua said. "They'll be faster. Let's go wake up the stable master." Joshua led them through the streets to the stable where we had boarded our camels when we came to town to heal the blinded bandit. There were no lamps burning inside, but a half-naked whore posed seductively in the doorway. "Special for cutthroats," she said in Latin. "Two for one, but no refunds if the old man can't do the business." It had been so long since he'd heard the language that it took Joshua a second to respond. "Thank you, but we're not cutthroats," Joshua said. He stepped past her and pounded on the door. She ran a fingernail down his back as he waited. "What are you? Maybe there's another special." Joshua didn't even look back. "He's a two-hundred-and-sixty-year-old wizard and I'm either the Messiah or a hopeless faker." "Uh, yeah, I think there is a special rate for fakers, but the wizard has to pay full price." Joshua could hear stirring inside of the stable master's house and a voice calling for him to hold his horses, which is what stable masters always say when they make you wait. Joshua turned to the whore and touched her gently on the forehead. "Go, and sin no more," he said in Latin. "Right, and what do I do for a living then, shovel shit?" Just then the stable master threw open the door. He was short and bowlegged and wore a long mustache that made him look like a dried-up catfish. "What is so important that my wife couldn't handle it?" "Your wife?" The whore ran her nail across the back of Joshua's neck as she passed him and stepped into the house. "Missed your chance," she said. "Woman, what are you doing out here anyway?" asked the stable master. We were twelve days into our journey, following Balthasar's meticulously drawn map, when we came to the wall. "So," I said, "what do you think of the wall?" "It's great," said Joshua. "It's not that great," I said. There was a long line waiting to get through the giant gate, where scores of bureaucrats collected taxes from caravan masters as they passed through. The gatehouses alone were each as big as one of Herod's palaces, and soldiers rode horses atop the wall, patrolling far into the distance. We were a good league back from the gate and the line didn't seem to be moving. "This is going to take all day," I said. "Why would they build such a thing? If you can build a wall like this then you ought to be able to raise an army large enough to defeat any invaders." "Lao-tzu built this wall," Joshua said. "The old master who wrote the Tao? I don't think so." "What does the Tao value above all else?" "Compassion? Those other two jewel things?" "No, inaction. Contemplation. Steadiness. Conservatism. A wall is the defense of a country that values inaction. But a wall imprisons the people of a country as much as it protects them. That's why Balthasar had us go this way. He wanted me to see the error in the Tao. One can't be free without action." "So he spent all that time teaching us the Tao so we could see that it was wrong." "No, not wrong. Not all of it. The compassion, humility, and moderation of the Tao, these are the qualities of a righteous man, but not inaction. These people are slaves to inaction."
Oh, I would while away the hours,
Wanking in the flowers, my heart all full of song,
I'd be gilding all the lilies as I waved about my willie
If I only had a schlong.
And suddenly it occurred to me, as I composed the above opus, that although Raziel had always seemed to have the aspect of a male, I had no idea if there were even genders among the angels. After all, Raziel was the only one I'd ever seen. I leapt from my chair and confronted him in the midst of an afternoon Looney Tunes festival. "Raziel, do you have equipment?" "Equipment?" "A package, a taliwacker, a unit, a dick—do you have one?" "No," said the angel, perplexed that I would be asking. "Why would I need one?" "For sex. Don't angels have sex?" "Well, yes, but we don't use those." "So there are female angels and male angels?" "Yes." "And you have sex with female angels." "Correct." "With what do you have sex?" "Female angels. I just told you." "No, do you have a sex organ?" "Yes." "Show me?" "I don't have it with me." "Oh." I realized that there are some things I'd really rather not know about. Anyway, he didn't write in the sky, and, in fact, we didn't see Raziel again, but the monks did let us into the monastery after three days. They said that they made everybody wait three days. It weeded out the insincere. "Nightmare?" the angel asked. "Memory," I said. Had I been asleep? I remember that same red blinking light, ever so dim, playing on the cheekbone and the bridge of the nose of the woman in my nightmare. (It was all I could see of her face.) And those elegant contours fit into the recesses of my memory like a key in the tumblers of a lock, releasing cinnamon and sandalwood and a laugh sweeter than the best day of childhood. "Put these on. I'm taking you out for a walk," said Raziel. "As if I were a dog," I said. "Exactly as if you were a dog." The angel was also wearing modern American garb, and although he was still strikingly handsome, he looked so uncomfortable that the clothes might have been held to his body with flaming spikes. "Where are we going?" "I told you, out." "Where did you get the clothes?" "I called down and Jesus brought them up. There is a clothing store in the hotel. Come now." Raziel closed the door behind us and put the room key in his jeans pocket with the money. I wondered if he'd ever had pockets before. I wouldn't have thought to use them. I didn't say a word as we rode the elevator down to the lobby and made our way out the front doors. I didn't want to ruin it, to say something that would bring the angel to his senses. The noise in the street was glorious: the cars, the jackhammers, the insane people babbling to themselves. The light! The smells! I felt as if I must have been in shock when we first traveled here from Jerusalem. I didn't remember it being so vivid. I started to skip down the street and the angel caught me by the shoulder; his fingers dug into my muscles like talons. "You know that you can't get away, that if you run I can catch you and snap your legs so you will never run again. You know that if you should escape even for a few minutes, you cannot hide from me. You know that I can find you, as I once found everyone of your kind? You know these things?" "Yes, let go of me. Let's walk." "I hate walking. Have you ever seen an eagle look at a pigeon? That's how I feel about you and your walking." I should point out, I suppose, what Raziel was talking about when he said that he once found everyone of my kind. It seems that he did a stint, centuries ago, as the Angel of Death, but was relieved of his duties because he was not particularly good at them. He admits that he's a sucker for a hard-luck story (perhaps that explains his fascination with soap operas). Anyway, when you read in the Torah about Noah living to be nine hundred and Moses living to be a hundred and forty, well, guess who led the chorus line in the "Off This Mortal Coil" shuffle? That's where he got the black-winged aspect that I've talked about before. Even though they fired him, they let him keep the outfit. (Can you believe that Noah was able to postpone death for eight hundred years by telling the angel that he was behind in his paperwork? Would that Raziel could be that incompetent at his current task.) "Look, Raziel! Pizza!" I pointed to a sign. "Buy us pizza!" He took some money out of his pocket and handed it to me. "You do it. You can do it, right?" "Yes, we had commerce in my time," I said sarcastically. "We didn't have pizza, but we had commerce." "Good, can you use that machine?" He pointed to a box that held newspapers behind glass. "If it doesn't open with that little handle, then no." The angel looked perturbed. "How is it that you can receive the gift of tongues and suddenly understand all languages, and there is no gift that can tell you how things work in this time? Tell me that." "Look, maybe if you didn't hog the remote all the time I would learn how to use these things." I meant that I could have learned more about the outside world from television, but Raziel thought I meant that I needed more practice pushing the channel buttons. "Knowing how to use the television isn't enough. You have to know how everything in this world works." And with that the angel turned and stared through the window of the pizza place at the men tossing disks of dough into the air. "Why, Raziel? Why do I need to know about how this world works? If anything, you've tried to keep me from learning anything." "Not anymore. Let's go eat pizza." "Raziel?" He wouldn't explain any further, but for the rest of the day we wandered the city, spending money, talking to people, learning. In the late afternoon Raziel inquired of a bus driver as to where we might go to meet Spider-Man. I could have gone another two thousand years without seeing the kind of disappointment I saw on Raziel's face when the bus driver gave his answer. We returned here to the room where Raziel said, "I miss destroying cities full of humans." "I know what you mean," I said, even though it was my best friend who had caused that sort of thing to go out of fashion, and not a moment too soon. But the angel needed to hear it. There's a difference between bearing false witness and saving someone's feelings. Even Joshua knew that. Last night I dreamed that the angel was talking to someone in the room while I slept. In the dream I heard him say, "Maybe it would be best just to kill him when he finishes. Snap his neck, shove him into a storm sewer." Strange, though, there wasn't the least bit of malice in the angel's voice. On the contrary, he sounded very forlorn. That's how I know it was a dream. The road was just wide enough for the two of us to walk side by side. The grass on either side was as high as an elephant's eye. We could see blue sky above us, and exactly as far along the path as the next curve, which could have been any distance away, because there's no perspective in an unbroken green trench. We'd been traveling on this road most of the day, and passed only one old man and a couple of cows, but now we could hear what sounded like a large party approaching us, not far off, perhaps two hundred yards away. There were men's voices, a lot of them, footsteps, some dissonant metal drums, and most disturbing, the continuous screams of a woman either in pain, or terrified, or both. "Young masters!" came a voice from somewhere near us. I jumped in the air and came down in a defensive stance, my black glass knife drawn and ready. Josh looked around for the source of the voice. The screaming was getting closer. There was a rustling in the grass a few feet away from the road, then again the voice, "Young masters, you must hide." An impossibly thin male face with eyes that seemed a size and a half too large for his skull popped out of the wall of grass beside us. "You must come. Kali comes to choose her victims! Come now or die." The face disappeared, replaced by a craggy brown hand that motioned for us to follow into the grass. The woman's scream hit crescendo and failed, as if the voice had broken like an overtightened lute string. "Go," said Joshua, pushing me into the grass. "You make a very attractive woman," Rumi said from the comfort of his pit. "Did I tell you that my wife has passed on to her next incarnation and that I am alone?" "Yeah, you mentioned that." He seemed to have given up on us getting his daughter back. "What happened to the rest of your family, anyway?" "They drowned." "I'm sorry. In the Ganges?" "No, at home. It was the monsoon season. Little Vitra and I had gone to the market to buy some swill, and there was a sudden downpour. When we returned…" He shrugged. "I don't mean to sound insensitive, Rumi, but there is a chance that your loss could have been caused by—oh, I don't know—perhaps the fact that you LIVE IN A FUCKING PIT!" "That's not helping, Biff," Joshua said. "You said you had a plan?" "Right. Rumi, am I correct in assuming that these pits, when someone is not living in them, are used for tanning hides?" "Yes, it is work that only Untouchables may do." "That would account for the lovely smell. I assume you use urine in the tanning process, right?" "Yes, urine, mashed brains, and tea are the main ingredients." "Show me the pit where the urine is condensed." "The Rajneesh family is living there." "That's okay, we'll bring them a present. Josh, do you have any lint in the bottom of your satchel?" "What are you up to?" Tamil, as it turned out, was not a small town in southern India, but the whole southern peninsula, an area about five times the size of Israel, so looking for Melchior was akin to walking into Jerusalem on any given day and saying, "Hey, I'm looking for a Jewish guy, anyone seen him?" What we had going for us was that we knew Melchior's occupation, he was an ascetic holy man who lived a nearly solitary life somewhere along the coast and that he, like his brother Gaspar, had been the son of a prince. We found hundreds of different holy men, or yogis, most of them living in complete austerity in the forest or in caves, and usually they had twisted their bodies into some impossible posture. The first of these I saw was a yogi who lived in a lean-to on the side of a hill overlooking a small fishing village. He had his feet tucked behind his shoulders and his head seemed to be coming from the wrong end of his torso. "Josh, look! That guy is trying to lick his own balls! Just like Bartholomew, the village idiot. These are my people, Josh. These are my people. I have found home." Well, I hadn't really found home. The guy was just performing some sort of spiritual discipline (that's what "yoga" means in Sanskrit: discipline) and he wouldn't teach me because my intentions weren't pure or some claptrap. And he wasn't Melchior. It took six months and the last of our money and we both saw our twenty-fifth birthdays before we found Melchior reclining in a shallow stone nook in a cliff over the ocean. Seagulls were nesting at his feet. He was a hairier version of his brother, which is to say he was slight, about sixty years old, and he wore a caste mark on his forehead. His hair and beard were long and white, shot with only a few stripes of black, and he had intense dark eyes that seemed to show no white at all. He wore only a loincloth and he was as thin as any of the Untouchables we had met in Kalighat. When a woman winds her small toes into the armpit hair of the man, and the man hops upon one foot, while supporting the woman on his lingam and a butter churn, then the achieved position is called "Rhinoceros Balancing a Jelly Donut." Beyond the senses are the objects, and beyond the objects is the mind. Beyond the mind is pure reason, and beyond reason is the Spirit in man. When a man applies wax from the carnuba bean to a woman's yoni and buffs it with a lint-free cloth or a papyrus towel until a mirror shine is achieved, then it is called Readying the Mongoose for Trade-in." I am impartial to all creatures, and no one is hateful or dear to me, but men devoted to me are in me, and I am in them. When a woman props herself up on the table and inhales the steam of the eucalyptus tea, while gargling a mixture of lemon, water, and honey, and the man takes the woman by the ears, and enters her from behind, while looking out the window at the girl across the street hanging out her laundry to dry, then the position is called "Distracted Tiger Hacking Up a Fur Ball." Just as the wide-moving wind is constantly present in space, so all creatures exist in me. Understand it to be so! The position of "Rampant Monkey Collecting Coconuts" is achieved when a woman hooks her fingers into the man's nostrils and performs a hokey-pokey motion with her hips and the man, while firmly stroking the woman's uvula with his thumbs, swings his lingam around her yoni in a direction counter to that in which water swirls down a drain. (Water has been observed swirling down the drain in different directions in different places. This is a mystery, but a good rule of thumb for achieving Rampant Monkey is to just go in the direction counter to which your own personal drain swirls.) For a man who has known him, the light of truth shines. For one who has not known, there is darkness. The wise who have seen him in every being on leaving this life, attain life immortal. |