Authors: Robert Stone
"He'll get burned like Molkho."
"He might. And this stuff doesn't come from Raziel. The Sufis always knew it. And the Jews, in a certain way, always knew it, because that's what Torah is. It's a formula for making things one. For bringing us back where we belong. A lot is concealed in it."
"How is it that suddenly Raziel and the Rev are party to the big picture?"
"The way we all know the important things we know," Sonia said. "The old Jews used to say a wise person had a
maggid,
a spiritual counselor from another world. But a
maggid
is just something from your subconscious, from collective memory. Telling you something you already know.
"So poor old De Kuff's learned to recognize the souls inside him. And Raziel recognized
him.
Adam, the poor lamb, he fought it as hard as he could. It's a terrible fate to stand between the worlds. It's like madness."
"Don't you think," Lucas asked, "it
is
madness? No more than that?"
"No, I don't," she said. "Because I've seen this before. I've studied it half my life. Berger, before he died, recognized him. I recognize him too."
"All right, all right," Lucas said with a shrug. "So what's up? What's going to happen?"
Sonia laughed. "I don't know, man. Any more than you. Change. And me, I think it's gonna be beautiful."
Lucas walked across the room to inspect her collection of Third World photographs. Happy, hopeful faces among the wretched of the earth. On one table she had propped some photographer's proof sheets against a lamp. There were scores of images, hundreds, each one a child, dark, emaciated.
"Who do you have to be to get your picture in the house of a
maggid?
"
"Well," she said, "if you're one of those kids, you have to be dead. Because they all are. During the famine in Baidoa."
Lucas picked up one of the proof sheets and looked at the long, huge-eyed faces. The lines of a poem came to him, and he said them for her:
Â
"Go smiling souls, your new built cages break,
In Heaven you'll learn to sing ere here to speak,
Nor let the milky fonts that bathe your thirst
        Be your delay;
The place that calls you hence, is at the worst
        Milk all the way."
Â
"Milk all the way," she repeated. "How about that?"
"It's an old poem. By an old dead white guy. Richard Crashaw. 'To the Infant Martyrs.' About yet another Middle Eastern misunderstanding."
"I wish I'd known it in Somalia."
"No you don't, Sonia. Then you'd be like me. And instead of doing things and believing in things, you'd just know poems about them. Well," he said, "I have to go. I have a meet later with the doc."
"Wait, Chris. Sit down. Go ahead," she insisted when he only stood and looked at her. She spoke to him with the mock sternness of an old-fashioned southern schoolmarm and sat across the room from him, arms around her knees.
"Why do you hate yourself so much? What do you feel so bad over?"
"I don't know," he told her. "Maybe I'm dragged because it's a shitty world. As you just pointed out. Want to tell me my
tikkun?
"
"It's gonna be changed," she said. "We'll be free. Because where the spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty."
"I like it," he said.
"Do you?"
"Yes," Lucas said. "Of course. I was always religious. I was always feeling sorry for myself, and not even just for myself. So I really like it. I'm weak. I'm sentimental. Gotta have a Santa Claus. Yeah, I could be one psalm-singing fool." He stood up and turned away from her. "Yes, sure, I like it. I really do. And I like you. I like you very much."
"Yes, I know you do," she said, "because I know your
tikkun.
I like you too. Will you come back?"
"Yes, I will," Lucas said. "And I'll taunt and abuse you until I've made sure you've lost your faith."
"Because misery loves company?"
"Because you're too hip and beautiful and smart to believe this garbage. It's dangerous. And because misery loves company, and if I can't have all these pretty dreams and illusions, I'm going to take them from you."
"But, Chris," she said, laughing, "they're my joy. They make me happy."
"Well, I don't want you happy. You're too good a singer. I want you like me."
I
N THE AFTERNOON
he went over to the Atara to see Dr. Pinchas Obermann. There the tables along Ben Yehuda Street were all full, and people had pulled out chairs from the inside parlor to sit in the faint breeze. Obermann was at his usual cramped inside table. Lucas gave him a report on Reverend Ericksen and the returning serpent.
"Gnostic," Obermann said. "Yahweh is the demiurge who controls the world. The serpent is wisdom. Jesus came to free the world from Yahweh. Basically Greek anti-Semitism."
"He's not just bitter," Lucas said. "He's lost his mind."
"Working too close to the light," said Obermann.
"That," Lucas agreed, "and having his old lady fucked seven ways from sundown."
Dr. Obermann was not offended. He looked thoughtful. He, after all, was the cuckold now.
"Apparently," he said, "there really is such a thing as the missionary position."
"I guess it's how they teach you to fuck in Bible college."
"Do you mean," Obermann asked, "that American evangelicals are instructed in unrewarding sex techniques?"
"Just kidding," Lucas said. "But who knows?"
"Well," said Dr. Obermann, "Linda's learned her way around it. By the way," he told Lucas, "I read your book on Grenada." Lucas saw that he was holding in his hand the book that he, Lucas, had thought was long out of print. "Don't be surprised. I looked you up on Nexus. And I use a book service."
Like the Ministry of Defense? Lucas wondered. Or Mossad? He had spent three months turning out a book of reportage on the United States' invasion of Grenada, Operation Urgent Fury, which event he had covered for the
Baltimore Sun.
The book had done him little good and attracted scant notice, but he had worked on it honestly and well.
As a writer, Lucas suffered from a combination of indolence and perfectionism, so it had taken altogether too long to write. By publication time, its revelations of ineptitude and petty corruption among some of the military's special-operations elites had been mainly obviated.
Lucas was a good listener, a man of his word to whom talkers liked to talk. Unfortunately, within a few months of Urgent Fury the derelictions to which his sources had led him had been either successfully covered up or piously disclosed. For public consumption there had been a few autos-da-fé: designated fall guys had quaveringly owned up to obscure oversights couched in deep military diction. A few manly sobs had been swallowed before sympathetic congressional committees. There had been some undesirable transfers and early retirements. A number of Lucas's sources had been hunted down and covertly punished.
Moreover, his publishers had felt the book dwelt a shade too heavily on the role of Afro-Caribbean religion in the island's contemporary history. But Lucas had done his best. His life had been largely promise, subverted by false starts, underconfidence and incompleteness. The book was the only thing he had ever really finished. He was quite proud of it.
"It was just a paperback," he told Dr. Obermann. "Trading on the headlines. Sort of a quickie."
"It was a smart book," Obermann said. "A wise one. I don't know much about the Caribbean or the American army, but I believed what I read in it."
Hearing this greatly pleased Lucas.
"So I'm encouraged," Obermann said. "I picked a good one. And are you ... still enthusiastic about our story?"
"The people who really interest me are Raziel and De Kuff."
"And Sonia," Obermann added. "You like the girl." He poured a little
schlag
in his coffee.
"Yes," Lucas said, "I do." The summer's parade of young tourists and students wandered past the Atara. The adepts of the café ignored them, except to gaze on the more outstanding of the young women. "I'm inclined to focus on De Kuff and his group to the exclusion of some of the others. They're more interesting."
"We might do that," Obermann said.
"But," Lucas said, "you naturally prefer a story that goes somewhere. Something like this ... people drift in and drift out. It trails off into nothing."
"Where are they?" Obermann asked. "These followers of Raziel and De Kuff."
"In a hospice at Ein Kerem. De Kuff's paying. He's quite wealthy apparently."
"Are they still wearing the ouroboros amulets?"
"Yes, they are. Sonia too. Do you think it relates to what Ericksen's on about?"
"Yes," Obermann said between bites of coffee cake. "In a way. They're heretics, very radical heretics by the standards of normative Judaism. But of course the ouroboros appears in the
Zohar.
"
"I'm unclear about their theology. It's obviously messianic. I gather they revere Sabbatai Zevi and Jacob Frank and Jesus."
"Yes, it follows. They probably see all those figures as a single recurring soul. Reincarnated now in De Kuff."
"How did that serpent business get in the picture?" Lucas asked. "It's haunting."
"When the Almighty is rendered ineffable," Obermann said, "and lost to us, some emanating force remains latent. But it can only be quickened by a congruous forceâthis is basic chemistry."
"In which Iâ"
"In which you did so badly at school. Never mind. To the Hindus, the serpent Kundalini represents Shakti, the consort of Shiva. Through Shakti, the immanent Shiva becomes the life force. Some people worshiped the serpent in Adam's Garden."
"Not Jews."
"Certain Jews," Obermann said. "Heretics.
Minim.
The Gnostic Elisha ben Abouya. But remember this: in Kabbala also the serpent stands for the force that quickens the First Power of God. It brings time around to its conclusion in eternity. A holy serpent signifies the God of Faith. An eternal, eternally renewing serpent that changes the immanent into Primal Will. Like it?"
"It's neat," said Lucas.
"In Gematria, the term 'holy serpent' has the same numerical value as '
moshiach
.' De Kuff's wearing itâRaziel got him wearing it, maybe not just for himself but for every
moshiach
past and present. An eternal salvific force. Not just one Jesus. Not one soul. Many."
"I must have studied this stuff," Lucas said.
"I don't think so. Maybe you should meditate. Or maybe not. Anyway, that's what you're dealing with here."
"It doesn't sound like it's going to go away."
"Not until Jews go away. Or God goes even further away and ignores their schemes and antics to bring him back. So," Obermann said, "even if it trails into nothing, it'll be something."
"It sounds like a disaster waiting to happen."
"The universe moves from disaster to disaster. An insight the Marxists owed to Wagner, who owed it to physics."
"So tell me," Lucas said, "where does all this stuff come from?"
"What is above? What is below? What was aforetimes? What is to come?" He fixed Lucas with a sidewise interrogative stare. "He who asks those questionsâbetter for him not to have been born. So said the great sages."
"How do we see it?"
"Man is formed in a likeness," Obermann said. "He perceives what he resembles. The shapes he sees are determined by his nature." Obermann stared at Lucas. "You're not having second thoughts? You're still committed to the book?"
"Yes," Lucas said, "I'm still committed."
Lucas paid, as he had become accustomed to doing, and they walked toward Jaffa Road.
"Did you know," Lucas asked, "that De Kuff preaches every Sunday in the Muslim Quarter?"
"In front of St. Anne's? At the Bethesda Pool?"
"I guess so. We found him right next door."
Obermann seemed complacent. "It's a hangout. The temple of Aesculapius. More snakes. Also the Pool of Israel."
He put a hand on Lucas's shoulder, lurching off in the direction of Jaffa Road and his bus home to Kfar Heschel, a new suburb over the Green Line. "Listen, we'll do something good together. Something worthy. By the way, I sent you some books you probably can't get at Steimatzsky's or the university. Oblige me and take care."
Lucas felt excited going home. It would be something worthy, that would be the thing. Obermann's books were waiting for him at the disagreeable concierge's office.
"Christ!" the concierge said, as though he had had to carry anything anywhere, which was most unlikely. "What you got here?"
"Diamonds," Lucas told him.
All through the afternoon and into evening he sat on the narrow terrace off his kitchen and chewed some of Nuala's khat and read the material Obermann had given him. In it, Jerusalem sounded like a crazed congress of wonders. There were Gentiles like Willie Ludlum, a religious incendiary whose passionately inane musings on the universe filled a police file longer than the Gospels of Mark and Matthew combined. There were the Guardians of the Beauteous Gate, who planned on rebuilding the Temple by selling off memorial wings to prosperous Americans, and the Bearers of the Mark of Cain, a cult of German hippies bent on atonement, who sounded like the Nazis' revenge on themselves. There were the keepers of the House of the Galilean, with whom Lucas was already acquainted, and the Lost-Found Black Oriental Children of Zion, most of whom came from Bakersfield.
Some took the Great Pyramid as their inspiration, others the True Sepulchre or the Lance. All seemed to rejoice in colorful nomenclature. There were Pyramid cultists from Oregon called the Silent Seekers of the Oak and Vine, and a covey of Panamanians identified as the Most Chaste Athletes of the Holy Grail.
There were also numerous solos, male and female, who had mistaken themselves for Francis of Assisi or Teresa of ûvila or Peter the Hermit. But among the Jews, who were on the whole conventional, there was no one like De Kuff or Raziel.
The material was solid. Early the next morning, he called an old girlfriend at a publishing house in New York and talked up the book.