Wednesday, December 10, 2008

606. Orbit



In orbit. Planet in view. Kyra and Von standing, both with hands behind their backs, speaking without looking at each other.

Kyra: I've been giving your situation some thought.

Von: Thought.

Kyra: No need to share--

Von: No, no, thought is good. For the subject is thought, is it not?

Kyra: Yes.

Von: I mean, what is the difference between memory and thought.

Kyra: Are you asking me?

Von: Yes.

Kyra: About the difference between the sight before our eyes, us experiencing the sight before our eyes and us talking about the sight before our eyes.

Von: Mmmmm. Explain.

Kyra: Everything moves, yes?

Von: Yes.

Kyra: Nothing does not move, right?

Von: Right.

Kyra: And if something were to not move, it would not exist.

Von: To the extent of my pea brain, I would agree.

Kyra: If something is moving, and we agree everything that is, is; then how do we account for memory.

Von: Are you asking me?

Kyra: Yes.

Von: I don't know.

Kyra: (still, neither has looked at the other) I don't know either.

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

605. Indaba



Rog and Von over a few glasses of snoot. Artwork is a picture in the bar:

Rog: Why did you do it?

Von: Do what?

Rog: Why did you pretend you still knew something?

Von: I don't know.

Rog: I mean, what did you have to gain?

Von: I said I don't know.

Rog: Seven times?

Von: Yeah.

Rog: For Hyneria?

Von: What?

Rog: Did you do it for Hyneria?

Von: Janus no.

Rog: Really?

Von: Really.

Rog: For the Tao then?

Von: No.

Rog: Damn Von. You gave up your son. Not for Hyneria. Not for the Tao.

Von: What's your point?

Rog: I just don't understand it.

Von: Then shut the frail up.

Rog: (after a slight pause) I'm sorry Von.

Von: Apology accepted.

Rog: (fills both their glasses)

Von: You know what?

Rog: What?

Von: I think you should frail Yul.

Rog: You do. (laughter)

Von: Yeah.

Rog: You wanna watch?

Von: Frail no. I want my boy to have somebody to play with. Janus.

Rog: (smiles)

Von: And I want you to understand what it is like to have a child.

604. Pridian



Von: If you were in my shoes, what would you do?

Kyra: I have no child, so you are asking the impossible.

Von: Reverse the situation then.

Kyra: What do you mean?

Von: I mean, what if you were faced with the same situation but from the point of view of a child.

Kyra: You mean if (she pauses)

Von: If the choice was the memory of your father.

Kyra: As in I had no memory of my father but--

Von: Yes.

Kyra: No.

603. Outtake #8: High Key



On the walk to the sound of the baby crying:


Kyra: Do you want me to join you?

Von: When that door opens a supernova would be but a flash I thought to notice later.


The door to Zoe's quarters opens. Zoe is sitting up in bed with a baby in her arms.

Von: (to no one in particular) The image before my mind was an imagine such as I had never seen before and I speak not of mother and child but of perception. She seemed to glow, again, not the glowing of a mother holding child, but glow in the sense of solid or gas, of real or apparition. Wherever my eyes focused, the image was sharp, clear, almost hyper clear. Yet, the edges, which is to say everything else outside the point of focus, the hair for example if I were looking at her face, would be out of focus, not fading into black but haloed in high key. It were as if I were looking through a cylinder, only there was none.

On what occurred in the room:

Von: We rejoiced. We laughed. We talked. I held the baby as one holds a life preserver. And my cheeks ached from smiling. But all of that, all of it, is but as dreams are in my memory. When she pulled out the letter and told me from whence it came, to what it addressed, and when she placed it in my hand and there was that touch of flesh on paper, a touching of the present to the past, of the quotidian to the eternal, it is as if everything else fell away, as if when one expected no more, another gift was offered, a gift wished for but never imagined would come to be. In my hand was such a gift. Or so I thought.

Q. (is not seen on stage--Von speaks across a table into the darkness)

Von: I could think of nothing else. I am ashamed to admit from the moment the letter was placed in my hand and I understood what it was, my only thoughts were toward myself, not the child, not the mother, but to me. I felt the warmness of guilt flood my cavity and if I had pissed myself in the moment, my self-centeredness was so great, I would have cared no more than a groom with lipstick on his face. I was drunk with myself, with the letter and to say otherwise would be to lie by omission.

Q.

Von: Your generosity is noted and appreciated. But you didn't come here as confessor, to wallow in my self crimination. You came because you want something, just as I wanted something, to know what you don't know, to scratch the itch of curiosity as you must imagine I did. Is that true?

Q.

Von: Good. Then we shall talk and you shall know what I know but I must warn you, knowledge is not free. What you are asking has a price for what I have to offer is not hospitality but a burden, a weight, for when you know what I know, you too will be complicit in the decision, in the choice and you too will, must, share your thoughts and in the sharing of thought we will hold hands and in the holding of hands together the burden becomes our burden and not just mine. So I ask again. What say you? (Von smiles at the obvious play on the phrase)

Q.

Von: Very well. I took the letter, returned to my quarters. One would think I would have ripped it open immediately. Why I didn't is still not clear in my mind. Instead, I held it, smelled it, caressed it, held it up to the light, wanting the moment to last, to mean something, to have time to soak into my addled memory, to give the moment its proper dignity of space and time, as one does with the sacred. You understand what I'm saying?

Q.

Von: Of course. Inside the envelope, to get to the point, was not just a letter from Cerulean, although it was that, a letter such to eclipse any and all within the Book of Letters. But it was more than that. Inside that simple pocket were a key, more of a clue I would say and, as I have given to you, a warning, or perhaps, a bit of wisdom in the use of the key. You see, I had a choice. I could have my memories back, with a little luck and a lot of work I might note and no real guarantee, but, there is always a but isn't there, but I needed to know, to accept that recovery could be a mixed blessing; I needed to reflect on whether to exhume the body or let be what was so to speak. The choice would be mine. The path before me forked. So I ask of you what has been asked of me. What say you?

Q.

Von: The question speaks to many things but in my mind, above all else, creation, or one could almost say, recreation. I have been given the power to recreate my son, to replace the idea I have of him now with other ideas that may or may not be any more true or accurate than now. Imagine that. Imagine if I were to unlock these demons in my mind and what I conjure up is not the fulfillment of a dream but the unleashing of a nightmare. And would that nightmare, which is not absolute, for we can never know another absolutely, you see, we know them only in pieces, in parts, through the warped prism of our own filters, a few tiles in the greater mosaic. That is the choice. Do I add a few more tiles? What if the tiles I add create a monster in their incompleteness. Is that monster more real than the images I have now? You see, I've been warned. I've been told, presumedly by one who knows, knows more of what I seek than I do, to weigh my decision carefully.

Q.

Von: Think of it this way. How well did your father know you? How many events in your life, the very events that define who you are in your mind, how many of those did your father share? And if he did share them, would his view of those events be the same as yours? So ask yourself, how well, how complete, did your father really know you? Now imagine this. Lets say your father had an overall positive view of you and the things he did not know, the events in your life he had neither witnessed nor been told, that these events would change his view. Would you want him to have access to those tiles, so to speak? Knowing, of course, that any one tile, any one event, even if we could know that tile or that event in an absolute complete way, which we can't, but even if we could, would you want to put those tools, those choices, incomplete as you know them to be, in his hands? Or do you let the dogs sleep?

Monday, December 08, 2008

602. Cheerleaders and Sailors



After the firefight on Polaris, as Rog is carrying Yul out of the steaming rubble, this exchange was rumored to have occurred:

Yul: (gazing into his eyes, voice weak) What are you thinking?

Rog: I'm thinking if you don't make it, and neither do Kyra, Em, Mairi or Zoe, that Bravo is gonna be . . .

Yul: Gonna be what?

Rog: Like a locker room without cheerleaders, like sailors without a port, like--

Yul: Rog.

Rog: What?

Yul: I get it.

Rog: Then again . . .

Yul: Yes?

Rog: That John's not half bad. 

Yul: You know what?

Rog: What?

Yul: I'd pummel your arse if I could.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

601. Seven Times



Von excused himself. Looking into the bathroom mirror he noticed one wiry gray beard hair out of place. Carefully taking a small pair of scissors, he clipped the hair. With a tiny comb, he raked his face back into perfect zen garden rows of gray and black. Placing scissors and comb back in their respective places, he gently closed the mirror, checked his face one more time and, satisfied everything was in order, returned.

Kyra reached across the table putting her hand on top of Von’s. “I didn’t know. Von, I’m so sorry. I can’t begin to imagine.”

Von smiled, the kind of smile beget in pain, of a path now revealed, that in the revealing, must now be walked. “There is more.”

“Von, you don’t--”

“No. If I don’t speak now, I may never speak of it again and, quite frankly, my shoulders are old and tired and the thought of sharing my burden is a comfort I hope, perhaps, you will indulge. Be my confessor Kyra. I need redemption in living eyes, not the cold dark of night, the taunting silence of one way conversations. I’ve had my share. I find them lacking.”

Kyra’s grip tightened on Von’s veined hand. It felt cold. “Yes. By all means. Please. Continue.” Her head tilted in the feminine way, the mane of her pitch black hair as curtain, her face as no face and every face.

“What I’m about to tell you I know in part from my own memory and in part from the records released with my freedom. The Javalinas were nothing if not thorough in their documentation.” Von paused. “Please don’t judge me for what I’m about to say.”

“One day," replied Kyra, "I will ask the same. Please. You have me, my heart and my ears. Say what you need to say. We'll leave judgement to Janus.”

“Okay. Once I had refused to divulge more information, information that I remind you I didn’t have, they called my bluff. You with me so far?”

“Got it.”

“Fair enough. Now this is where I need you. They didn’t just erase all memory of Cerulean in one fell swoop. I mean, what would have been the sense of that other than just pure hatred. Not to say the Javalinas were not capable of senseless hatred, but interrogators were a different breed, a higher order, so to speak. So, what they did was erase a few memories, starting with his birth. They took his birth from my memory.” Von’s cheeks trembled, quaked in little quakes, quivered as the dim light caught the creases like moonlight catches a shimmering ocean. “Without an ounce of compassion, the bastards took his birth. You with me?”

“Yes.”

Von straightened his spine and leaned his head back. Light caught the glossy lower rims of his bloodshot eyes. “So, then, they bring me back. Start asking me questions about the day Cerulean was born. I can’t answer. My mind raced. I felt like one feels when something is on the tip of the tongue. I could smell the memory, but, the memory itself was gone. Still, I thought, this is some sort of trick, that I am somehow being deceived, that maybe, just perhaps, my interrogator is my superior. At least these are the games I play in my own mind, some sort of self preservation reflex otherwise known as denial. Well, the questions come again. I deny I know anything. The threat is leveled, again. If I don’t give them the information they want, they will take his childhood. What say you.” Von pulled his hand away from Kyra’s and with balled fist, pounded the table, “What. Say. You.”

Von paused as his eyes stared into Kyra’s. She covered his fist with her hand and in gentle strokes massaged his hand open. “Keep going.”

“I can’t.”

“Yes you can.”

“No.”

“Damn you. Do it!”

“I told them Damn you to hell. And I added a couple Frail You's for good measure. Do you understand? We weren’t talking a gamble. We weren’t talking about bluffing or a game or anything else. I knew they could do it. Mental gymnastics aside. I knew. I frailing knew. I knew they could take his childhood as surely as they had taken his birth. I knew it.” His voice faded into the blackness of the room, “I knew it as surely as if they were taking my finger, one knuckle at a time.”

“But you said you had nothing else to give them?”

“I had nothing they wanted. But I could have given them something. I could have made something up. I could have lied. I could have thrown myself on their mercy. Prostrated myself. Anything. Do you understand? Anything. But I did nothing.”

Kyra sighed.

“I know from the official records this scene was repeated seven times. They divided his life into seven. That’s what he was to them, his life. And seven times I denied them. And seven times I denied my son.”

Standing, Kyra opened her arms and pulled Von tight. She said nothing. Just holding.

“What do you say when your son says he understands but you know he doesn’t know. He doesn’t know that I was given the choice. Doesn’t know I was given the choice seven times. What do you say to that.”

Kyra squeezed tight, her leather squeaking in the stillness of tremulous breath. “I hope you’re not expecting words from me?”

“No, but you know what is funny?”

“What?”

“I’m only here because I was meant to protect you.”

“I’m not so sure it’s that simple.”

Von started to respond but stopped. “Do you hear that?”

Kyra pulled from the embrace, “What?”

“That sound, do you not hear it?” said Von, his voice rising. “How could you not hear it?”

“Hear what?”

“Someone is crying.”

“What? Who?”

“A baby.”

Kyra looked at Von, their faces frozen in the strobe of recognition.

________

“Zeke, transmission incoming.”

Von was coming home. But there were "complications."

“Get Ceru here. Now.”

“Sir, he is out of the region.”

“I don’t care where he is.”

“Yes sir.”

“And by Janus, don’t say a damn word about his father.”

“Yes sir.”

“One more thing.”

“Sir?”

“I want no one else there.”

“Protocol?”

“Protocol is a tool. One we don’t need in this circumstance. Understood?”

“Yes sir.”

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

600. What Say You



"Von, you've told me about what happened at the hands of the Javalinas," said Kyra.

"I did?"

"Yep."

"The isolation?"

"Yes."

"The neural trace?"

"Yes."

"That I gambled with what I loved most?" added Von, dropping the thought as one drops a pebble in a placid pond, straight down, watching it fall, the words moving in slow motion or perhaps the images in his mind were moving so fast the words couldn't keep up.

Kyra inhaled. Her heart rippling, expanding.

"You know, the neural trace could do more than just extract information."

With both hands, without letting go, Kyra put her glass down.

"It could also erase it." Von let the thought have its space. Unsatisfied, he added, "Erase is too kind a word. Eradicate. Expunge. Excise. Inside your mind, they take; you can't stop them; and when it is over, you are less than you were before. They know it. They know what they have taken, only you don't. Imagine if every memory you had of Papa was gone, but not just gone, taken, taken by someone with the intent to take, to do you harm and imagine if that harm was senseless, served no purpose. How would you feel?"

Kyra stared into space, her mind trying to imagine the unimaginable. In the dim light, her sapphire eyes looked as black as coal, bottomless, lost.

"I still don't know why they did it," Von continued. "Perhaps the information they gathered was not enough; perhaps they thought I was holding something back, that my Tao training was blurring their data somehow. But they wanted more." Von sipped from his glass without breaking eye contact. "So they gave me a choice; and I didn't believe them, not that they didn't have the technology, which was somewhat common on the black market, but that they could succeed, with me." Von looked away. "At least that is what I've tried to convince myself. Pride, however, is a deception unto itself. And one can never completely deceive one's self, not completely. I've had to live with knowing, knowing that when confronted with the choice . . . ." The room fell church quiet, then Von spoke again. "And you know what is ironic? I had nothing else to give them. They already had it all. Their trace had worked. But instead, I let my own arrogance and pride get in the way. Do you see what I'm saying?"

"Von, no offense, and maybe I missed it, but what choice?"

"Ah, you know, I've lived with this so much, so intensely, I feel it so clearly, I've come to believe it exists, is known, whether I say it or not. Sorry about that. They told me if I didn't tell them what they wanted to know, they would erase every last memory I had of my son. They said I would never know he ever existed. And here is what is interesting, if I can call it that; they said that although they could erase the memories from my brain, they could not erase the emotional connections; that I would feel a loss and a pain without ever being able to understand its origin. They said this alone would drive me insane, the itch that can't be found and won't go away. An itch of the heart they called it. Emotional orphans for the child I no longer knew existed. And then, they said the choice was mine. I could keep my son if I so chose.
What say you? What say you? Three words. These three words haunt the canyon of my mind, forever in echo, What-say-you."

"Von, I don't know what to say."

"Nothing to be said. Nothing that can be said. I made the choice. I gambled with the memory of my only child as if he were a chip and I was calling their bluff as if it were all a game. To think of your child as a chip, everything you know about him as a game."

"But you know Ceru, so it didn't work. You were right. His memory was never on the line. You did what all soldiers are taught to do."

Von smiled. "Duty? Honor? More important than your only child? I wish I was a sentimental old fool, lamenting an old academic choice. They called my bluff; and what I once knew, was taken from me; and it was I who opened the door."