Writers Note:
Please read Invisible Threads--Prologue and Chapters One through
Three before reading this.
CHAPTER FOUR
To Gary, the idea of
living with a woman who was not his mother was both exhilarating and
terrifying - mostly terrifying. For the week after he returned, he
didn't have time to think about that as his days included large
quantities of Diet Coke, Red Bull, and Pop Tarts in order to put in
the hours needed to catch up with his teaching assistant
responsibilities after taking the three days off.
But now, it was
Saturday, and he was looking down at the text that he had just
received. Meet
me in front of Loomis Hall at 4pm.
He checked the time
on the wall clock - 9am. He still had plenty of time to clean his
apartment. He would keep working to a stopping point but would stop
no later than 10am.
At 10:00, there was
still plenty of time, so he would stop at 11:00. No excuses. He
forgot to set his alarm.
At 1:30pm, his phone
rang. "Hello."
"Gary, this is
Cherie. I'm running a little late and I probably won't be there
until about 4:30."
"Oh. Okay."
"See you then."
She hung up. He was
out of time. His work area was a mess of scribbled notes and
calculations. It would take him hours to return to this point in his
thought process if he stopped now. He needed to organize his notes
into an Excel file. It would just take a few minutes.
He got to his
apartment at 3:30 PM.
He didn't smell
good but his apartment smelled worse. Loomis Hall was a ten-minute
bike ride from the apartment which gave him fifty minutes. He picked
up as much as he could carry and ran through the door, down the two
flights of breezeway stairs, and out to the dumpster in the back
parking lot where he found a dirty cardboard box. Running back up the
stairs to his apartment, he began filling the box with drink cans,
pizza boxes, and three well-used porno DVDs.
He opened the
refrigerator and added to the box old ketchup and mustard packets and
some antiquated compost from a health kick he had started some months
before. There were no dishes in the sink since he owned none. The box
was now full and very heavy. He wrestled it out the door and down the
stairs.
Out of breath from
his run back up the stairs, he stepped into the bathroom and surveyed
it. The mold in the shower had gone from green to black, the lower
third of the mirror was blocked by toothpaste spatter, and
spaghetti-like strands of used dental floss were stuck to the floor.
First up was the
toothpaste spatter. Grabbing his razor, he began to shave the mirror.
The toothpaste spatter crud flaked off in front of the razor as it
screeched along the surface of the glass. He scraped the flakes into
the sink and turned the water up as hot as possible in the hopes of
dissolving the flakes.
He scraped up the
dental floss with his fingernails from the floor until he had a wad
in his hand the size of a ping pong ball. There was no garbage can.
He knew little about women, but he did know that garbage cans in the
bathroom were important to them. He dropped the floss wad into the
bottom of the two drawers in the vanity. He turned his attention to
the black mold around the bottom of the shower. He was out of time.
The mold would live another day.
The mirror now
looked like a chess board where he had scraped his razor side-to-side
and then top-to-bottom. That was what it was.
He stepped into the
shower and turned the hot water full up. He had shampoo and soap. He
was, after all, civilized. He brushed his teeth and applied
deodorant. After dressing, he looked at his phone, 4:25 PM.
He mentally declared
the apartment adequate, grabbed his coat, and headed out the door
arriving in front of the Loomis Building at 4:40 PM. Cherie arrived
at 5:45.
After waiting for
over an hour in sub-freezing temperatures, Gary was irascible when
she finally arrived: "You're late."
"I called and said
I would be late."
"You said 4:30.
It's 5:45"
"I got hungry, so
I stopped off and took a break."
Gary swallowed the
words he wanted to really say. "Okay, go down this street and take
the next right. After three blocks, you'll see a sign that says
'Arborwood Apartments'. Turn in there and park."
She drove slowly and
he arrived in the parking lot right behind her. Two suitcases and a
travel bag were in the back seat. He carried the suitcases up the
breezeway steps and put them down as he opened the door. She stepped
into the apartment while he turned back to pick up her luggage.
She stopped three
feet inside the door blocking his way. "Oh my God!"
"What?"
"You live like
this? This is disgusting."
"You can see that
from here?"
"I can smell it
from outside. Do you have a vacuum?"
"I think so."
"Find it now."
He put her luggage
down, "I'll get it."
"Just tell me
where it is."
"If you don't
like the living room, I'd rather you not see the closet."
Her eyes rolled.
He disappeared into
the storage/mechanical room. She heard the not unexpected sound of
falling debris after which he stepped back out into the living room
using his hands to rub dust from the side of a small vacuum. The
clear plastic window in the side of the dust tank showed it to be
filled to the point of compressed. She sighed, "Garbage can?"
"I don't have
one."
"I see. What are
your plans for this evening?"
He had not thought
about it. "I kind of thought you would tell me."
"Do you have a
place that you could go?"
"My lab. I was
sort of in the middle..."
"Good. Go there.
Leave me alone here to do what I must do."
"Are you going to
clean my apartment?"
"Yes. Now go
away."
This was a pleasant
surprise. "Okay." His mind was fully immersed in his work before
he made it to the bottom of the stairs.
Cherie was not
particularly tidy, but the apartment was gross, and it gave her the
opportunity to get settled in without him hovering. Before going to
the store for supplies, she needed a quick bio-break. She opened the
door to the bathroom and knew that she would be going elsewhere. And
why was there a checkerboard on the mirror?
***
Gary got back to the
lab, settled into his desk, and turned on his laptop to find his
notes from earlier in the day. He had been stopped by needing to take
the square root of a variable that could be positive or negative. He
either needed to make major changes or use an imaginary number.
"Imaginary numbers
suck." He mumbled as he stared at the offending variable.
After the dread 'i',
he added the line:
???t
=
(??1a
+ ??1b
+ ??1c
+ ?(((-1^.5)*(?^.5))1d)?t
So now the math was
going to work but he was going to have to deal with that 'i' when
trying to apply the model to empirical real-world data. But how real
world
was this data? To the untrained eye, his empirical evidence was
magic. What he was seeing defied explanation within the existing
models of physical reality.
***
At 1:00 AM, Cherie
was exhausted. The apartment was now fit for human habitation and
Gary was nowhere to be seen. He had neither returned nor called. What
she had encountered in the bathroom could never happen again. The
bottom drawers of the refrigerator were no better. The sofa was old
and probably purchased in a yard sale - or worse! God forbid that it
could have been taken from the street? On the upside, there didn't
seem to be any active infestations. New sheets and a Green Bay
Packers blanket had been used to make the sofa into her bed.
She looked at her
phone and wondered again about Gary. Well, she was his theatrical
manager and temporary roommate, not his mother. Maybe he had a
girlfriend and was staying the night there? Exhausted, she slid
fully-clothed under the blanket on the couch, turned off the lights,
and went to sleep. Her last thought before going to sleep was, "I
hope he's not a pervert or something."
***
Gary's head was
down on his desk, but he was not asleep. He was dealing with the
frustration of his entire train of thought for the evening running
into a complete dead end. It just didn't work unless something
moved faster than the speed of light. A transition can be made from
slower-than-light to faster-than-light. All you need is infinite
energy. That was fine for theoretical physics but his had to be
practical.
He had moved three
white boards into a line. Two boards were full, and he had started on
the third when the door to his lab opened.
Duong Phang was
another physics graduate student who shared his office/lab. While
both he and Gary were social outcasts, Gary was quiet and thoroughly
introverted while Phang was loud, frequently rude, and wholly
unapologetic. After they had known each other about a week, Phang had
waxed philosophic, "Dude, you and I both got beat up by bullies
when we were kids. The difference was that I deserved it."
He was as close as
Gary had to a best friend.
Phang noticed Gary
with his head down on his desk. "Hey Gary. Sun's up, dude."
Gary looked outside.
"What time is it?"
"A little after
seven. What've you been working on?"
"Personal stuff."
"Working on your
magic stuff again, huh? Lecki will have a fit if he catches you
still putting time into that." Dr. Lecki was their doctorate
advisor.
Phang was right,
Lecki would have a cow. "He's not here yet, is he?"
"No, dude, its
Sunday. When was the last time you saw him here on a week-end?"
Phang said dude
a lot. It seemed odd for a twenty-five-year-old second-generation
Vietnamese guy who was raised in Ohio. But he loved the Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles.
"Oh, right, it's
Sunday. Then I am on my own time and Lecki can stick it." Gary
suddenly froze. "Oh crap."
"What?"
"I've got
someone staying at my apartment. I forgot all about her."
"Her?"
Gary did not
respond.
"You would have
specified if it was your mother. So... cousin?"
"No, she's my
theatrical manager. She's staying with me to get me ready for the
next round of the show. They're sending a crew to interview me next
week."
"What's she...
like 40 or 50?"
"No, I saw her get
a drink at the bar in Nashville so I guess she's 21."
"A 21-year-old
girl is staying with you in your apartment? Dude, you're my hero."
"She's not
really pretty or anything."
"Is she
breathing?"
There was no way to
constructively move the conversation forward from that, so Gary took
pictures of the white boards with his phone and erased them.
"Boards are all
yours. I better get back."
Phang didn't look
up from his screen. "I would if I were you. And try and get some
sleep. You don't want to be crashing out all day again tomorrow."
Gary sprinted down
the corridor, through the stairwell and exited outside. He rode back
to his apartment through empty early Sunday morning streets. Arriving
at the apartment building, he ran up the stairs and caught his breath
a moment before opening the door as quietly as possible. Cherie
snored.
Closing the door, he
wondered if she needed one of those breathing machines like his
grandmother used. The latching of the door lock was louder than he
anticipated and she awoke. Not immediately recognizing him, she took
a pre-scream breath until her eyes came into focus and she slowly let
the breath out. "Where the hell have you been?"
"I was working."
"All night?"
"I work when I
work. I had an idea I wanted to flesh out."
"This happens a
lot?"
"Yes."
"Okay. Good to
know. Well, what do you think?"
He looked around.
"The apartment is very clean."
"It was a lot of
work. You owe me big time."
He did not
completely understand why he owed her for making his apartment
suitable to her standards but kept that to himself. "Thank you."
"You can repay me
by taking me out for breakfast. Y'all have a Waffle House around
here?"
"No. No Waffle
House."
She glowered.
"Illinois sucks. How about an IHOP?"
"No IHOP. There's
a place called Sam's about three blocks from here. It's okay."
"I'm sold. Let
me brush my teeth and tidy up my make-up."
"Okay. Do you mind
if I use the restroom first?"
"Can you aim?"
Awkward. "Uh...
yes?"
"Okay, make sure
you do. It took an hour to get the urine smell out of the floors and
walls around the toilet."
Awkward was not a
strong enough word. He went into the bathroom and aimed carefully.
While she was
putting on her make-up, he began opening doors and looking around the
apartment. He probably did owe her breakfast. When she came out of
the bathroom, she had not only fixed her make-up but brushed her hair
and changed clothes. It made him quickly check the mirror to make
sure that he was also suitable for public. He looked adequate.
The dining room of
the diner was about half full as they took a small table against the
wall. Even half full, the room was loud.
A middle-aged
waitress with a nametag that read 'Babs' walked up. "Can I get
you two some coffee while you look at the menu?"
Gary answered first:
"I would like a Diet Coke, please."
Cherie was immersed
in the menu. "I'll take some coffee."
"Cream and sugar?"
"Just black."
The waitress poured
coffee into the cup on the table and said "I'll be right back
with that soda and to take your order."
The service was
quick and, within minutes, Cherie had a plateful of pancakes and hash
browns while Gary, still full from eating a box of Pop Tarts
overnight, ordered scrambled eggs and toast.
Between bites,
Cherie put on a serious expression. "Do you remember Rule 1?"
"I remember that
you have lots of rules."
"Rule 1 - there
will be no sex. This is business."
Gary thought he hid
his disappointment. He was wrong. "Okay."
She ignored his
disappointment and pulled a crinkled piece of paper from her pocket.
"This is a Non-Disclosure Agreement. It says that I am not allowed
to disclose to anyone anything I learn from you regarding how you do
your tricks."
"But I want you
to. That's the whole point."
"You don't get
this at all. The secret of your tricks is your bread and butter.
Right now, you can do things that no one else can. If other magicians
learn your secrets, then your value goes down."
"No. My bread and
butter is research grants. I have to get as many people as possible
to know exactly how I do this in order to get enough interest to get
grant funding to study it further."
Cherie spoke with
her mouth full. "What kind of grant can you get for magic tricks?"
She really did not
understand yet. "Pick up your spoon and hold it tightly in your
fist."
"Okay," She
unrolled the napkin, freed the spoon, and held it in her right fist.
"Now hold your
other fist next to it."
"Okay." Her two
fists were side by side. One held the spoon and the other was empty.
"Concentrate on
the spoon."
He checked her eyes
to make sure that she was looking directly and intently at the spoon.
He then focused his mind. The noise of the room faded, and only he
saw the room fill with greyish-pink threads.
He located a thread that passed through both of her hands including
the spoon. It continued forever in both directions in a true straight
line, away from the curvature of the earth and into space.
He then compressed
the universe along the thread until everything in the universe that
touched that line co-existed at a point in front of her at the same
time. Within this incredibly dense - but massless - jumble existed
both of her hands and the spoon. The spoon was being held by both of
her hands at the same time. He associated the spoon now with her left
hand rather than her right and released his perception to return to
normal. The spoon was in her left hand.
She was, at first,
befuddled. The spoon was gone. But then she saw it in the wrong hand.
Without warning, she felt a wave of terror run like a tsunami through
her nervous system. It seemed almost to originate outside of herself
rather than from within. She dropped the spoon, making a loud clatter
as it bounced off the table and onto the floor. Several diners turned
to look.
She leaned across
the table and whispered harshly, "How the fuck did you do that?"
He leaned forward so
that only she could hear, "Like I've been telling you all along,
this is not a trick. It's something that I need to figure it out. I
need grants. Big, long-term ones. It will take years and that is
assuming that my basic theories are correct."
She leaned back. "I
need to ask you a serious question."
"What's that?"
"Are you under a
doctor's care? I mean a psychiatrist-type doctor?"
"If I'm crazy,
explain the spoon."
"It's a trick. A
goddam trick. Quit fucking with me."
Gary looked around
the room. Other people were noticing and he was beginning to blush.
"Do you always use that language?"
"I will use
whatever language I fucking please. I didn't like the spoon thing.
I don't like your sense of humor and you are freaking me out."
Gary looked up. The
number of people that were pointedly not watching their conversation
was growing. "Please finish eating and we can talk about this back
at the apartment."
"I am not going
anywhere with you until you tell me that was a goddam trick!"
Although whispering, her voice carried.
He tried to return
to a normal speaking voice. "I can't. It's not. I don't know
what you want from me."
She was staring at
him now as if he was an animal in the zoo. He knew it was important
to hold her gaze, but he was not accustomed to prolonged eye contact.
Finally, she stood up, "Fuck you. I'm not hungry anymore."
And, with that, she
left. He assumed that he would be walking back to the apartment.
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