The Origin of Species (60 page)

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Authors: Nino Ricci

BOOK: The Origin of Species
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It was all in Darwin, the silliness of trying to separate bloodlines, of thinking of beings as discrete. It had come as a surprise to Alex—though
the title of his book ought to have been a clue—how much of Darwin turned on this question, namely the niggling one of species. Everything had followed from a simple insight that all life was connected, that no difference was absolute. Alex had never seen this suggested in so many words, but he thought it was those barnacles of Darwin’s that had really clinched things for him, more than the finches, those eight years he had spent on the most intimate terms with them in his little study. What he had found was this: that barnacles, by nature hermaphrodites, often carried within them little penis-like consorts, tiny fledgling males that served as a sort of insurance if their own parts gave out. They were a missing link, how creatures moved by slow degrees from vulvic all-in-ones to barnacle boy and barnacle girl. All forms were fluid, each contained part of the last and the next. Maybe the Unitarian organist could have taken heart from that: not a freak, but a link.

As blond as any Swede
. He had been blond himself as a child, well into his teens. It came to him, out of the murk of high school history, that before the Normans had been Normans they’d been Norsemen: Vikings. Wearing their horns and drinking their mead and sending their longboats out across the seas. He could smell the Swedish air again, could see the pellucid sky. As blond as his son. It was the merest whim, perhaps, but still his blood went quick. It was a link.

– 6 –

H
e checked his watch as he neared the Liberal Arts Building: past five. “Stop by my office,” Jiri had said, as if he merely had some new Baudrillard to show him, as if this wasn’t Alex’s life on the line. The word was another misconduct charge had come up against him, spurious, from the looks of it, but still. This wasn’t the old days. The more Jiri’s life skidded off the rails, however, the more inscrutably dangerous and calm he became.

Some hundred pages, Alex had given him, already formatted to
MLA
rules as if to make the proposal seem more a fait accompli. The whole framework was there, all his methodology, what he had struggled with for two years but then had miraculously taken shape over a matter of weeks. It had been like an out-of-body experience, as if he had become a mere conduit for some higher doctoral power. The real breakthrough, though, had come when he had finally braved an excursion into the natural sciences and stumbled upon the sociobiologists: here was a whole netherworld of unabashed trend-buckers, people who put the words
science
and
art
in the same sentence without fearing they would rend the very fabric of the cosmos. It was all total anathema to the literary purists, insofar as they even deigned to notice anything so reactionary—it was just biological determinism writ large, they said, the worst sort of regression, a heartbeat away from social Darwinism and eugenics—but that didn’t mean it wasn’t true.

By now he had thumbed through his own copy of the pages so often he could quote the first paragraphs of it almost verbatim. He opened with the Derrida quote about the road in the forest, his sop to the theorists—talk about logo-fucking-centrism, the way Derrida went on, and yet there
was something there, a real insight—and then went right to the heart of the matter:

In the Galápagos Islands, the masked booby performs an elaborate mating ritual. The male approaches the female and after a series of gestures aimed at attracting her attention—one of which, skypointing, involves a graceful arabesque of spread wings and stretched neck, the beak pointing skyward as if in plaintive lament—he pushes before her an assortment of offerings. A stick, perhaps. A blade of dried grass. A stone. These items, there is no other way to see them, are metaphors: of food, of home, of fecundity. With them, the booby is telling his prospective mate a story. “Come with me,” he is saying, “and we will have children and live in abundance.” This strange collocation of all the essential elements of narrative at the most basic level of nature suggests that this oldest of stories, the happily-ever-after of fairy tales, may be older even than we have ever imagined.

A road in the forest is also a form of writing. That seems the tenor of Derrida’s ruminations on the
via rupta
in
Of Grammatology
, tossed off in a parenthetical aside, in typical Derridean fashion, and yet going to the heart, really, of his radical revisioning of the idea of writing. We might even go further and say that the road is a narrative: it has a beginning, a middle, and an end; it tells another of the classic stories, the story of the journey, a journey we ourselves think to make in taking the road, though in fact we only re-create, as in a story, the journey already set out for us. Thus the road, too, is merely a metaphor, a trope, a trace of the journey already taken. Human roads, as it happens, often follow animal ones, like the ancient transhumance paths of Europe by which early shepherds, following the yearly migrations they saw in the wild, learned to move their domestic flocks between mountain and plain. Again, the narrative predates us. Like Derridean writing, it can be thought of not as belated, as an afterthought, but as originary, before speech, before language itself.

If narrative predates us, as its traces everywhere in nature suggest, if it is not the product of our self-knowing but perhaps only a means to it, then we must perforce begin to sever the sacred link we have always made between narrative and that seat of all our self-knowing, human consciousness. A booby woos his mate with a story of abundance; a bee dances out a story of food. Whatever line we draw between instinct and awareness does not change that the story is there from the outset, long before there are poets to recite it or scribes to record it. So it is that what we still think of as our unique heritage, the thing that sets us apart, what the gods have given us, the magic moment of “Let there be light,” is perhaps only a passage on a much longer journey, one that is primal beyond reckoning and that goes back to the very beginnings of life itself.

Alex still felt a thrill rolling the phrases off in his mind.
Primal beyond reckoning
. He liked that. He’d been especially pleased at working in the transhumance; that should have Jiri scrambling to his dictionary. The word had the arcane ring of something cutting edge but was actually right out of his own family history:
la transumanza
, the yearly moving of the sheep between
alto
and
basso
Molise. He owed this bit of lore, again, to his cousin, who had taken him to the very paths, remnants of which still stretched across the countryside for miles, part of a network that had crisscrossed the entire region. Wild animals—bison or deer or mastodons or whatever—had cut the first swaths of them back in the mists of time, and then
Homo aeserniensis
, Isernian Man, the local protohuman, had further beaten them down in the hunt. When the shepherds came they turned them into institutions, which they had remained until his own parents had left Italy thirty-odd years before. One of them passed behind his aunt Clotilda’s house, a good twenty yards across, just a stretch of grassy earth now, but with stone markers here and there along the edges that went back to Roman times. His aunt had told him about the flocks that had passed there when she was a young bride, for days on end, with bonfires every night and bagpipes playing and the constant bleating of sheep like the crying of souls at the end of the world.

After his opening he had toned down the lyricism to lay out his overall scheme, which was a kind of Frygian anatomy by way of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. Stories of Food. Stories of Home. Stories of Love. Stories of Death. Stories of Rebirth. Out of the sociobiologists he had gathered up all sorts of suitably rarefied cross-references to the natural sciences and the animal world; humans didn’t really come into things until the Great Depression, as Alex thought of it, that awful moment somewhere in prehistory when somebody wondered what was the point. The rest had been easy—he’d pulled in the Greeks, the Babylonians, he’d pulled in Jesus, Osiris, even Beowulf. For his primary texts, the next hurdle, he’d given the nod to the
Odyssey
and
Ulysses
, though the former he hadn’t read in ten years and the latter he had never quite finished. No matter; they would do. Joyce, in particular, was a real darling of the postmodernists, who loved all that sophomoric punning, though it was mostly Leopold Bloom whom Alex was interested in. What held the whole caboodle together, of course, was Mr. Darwin: narrative, like everything else, was a strategy. Get it right, and, like Scheherazade, you survived.

Who was it that said about Darwin—what was it?—I think it was something like, “How stupid of me not to have thought of that.”

(Self-deprecatingly) I think it was Thomas Huxley, actually, Peter. Not that I’d want to put myself at that level
.

It had not been easy with Jiri. It wasn’t the work, so much, though Alex had made the mistake of handing in another draft before he’d really hammered things out that Jiri had summarily ripped to shreds. The problem was Jiri, his life. Ever since Jiri had stayed with him, Alex had never really got free of him. It was like being the child of an alcoholic, shoring up his lout of a dad each time he came home drunk just so the man would be around the next day to give him a proper beating.

After Alex had evicted him Jiri had gone straight back to living in his office. The dean had issued an ultimatum, which Jiri had ignored, until it seemed that after surviving every form of discipline the university had been able to mete out he would be done in by the Board of Health. Alex, out of self-interest as much as anything, terrified that he’d be shunted off to some new advisor who would make him start his thesis over from scratch, intervened. Against his better instincts, he landed Jiri a sublet in his building with a guy named Dan, a gay Quebecois temporarily
decamping to Sherbrooke to look after his dying mother. Dan had been fighting his increases for years and was paying a ridiculously low rent. The arrangement was for Jiri to make his payments to him directly, to avoid having the landlords try to block an official sublet, but only a week after Jiri had moved in Alex got an angry phone call.

“His fucking check bounced. Didn’t you say he was a professor?”

That was just the beginning of a long series of abuses. There was another bounced check; there were cigarette burns on Dan’s furniture; there were complaints about noise and about garbage not put down the chute. Far from taking the clandestine nature of his rental as a reason for caution, Jiri seemed to take it as a license for abandon. Meanwhile the phone calls from Dan were coming almost weekly.

“They sent me a notice, for Christ’s sake. I don’t need this right now.”

“I’ll talk to him. He’s going through a bit of a rough time.”

“Him and me too.”

Alex didn’t mention that Jiri’s rough time included a skinhead son up on charges of beating a gay man to within an inch of his life. This was not something that Jiri ever brought up either—dark rumors made the rounds of the department, about steel pipes and broken bones, about lawyers’ bills, but Jiri himself went about with a kind of manic good cheer as if he’d just won the lottery. Alex feared for Jiri’s sanity, waiting for the moment when he stepped in front of a bus or took a rifle to the top of the Hall Building and started picking people off on the street below.

Jiri’s apartment—Dan’s apartment—had become a safe house for every questionable associate Jiri had, young female undergrads he’d lured there despite his probation, frowzy older women who seemed ready to spill from their clothes at any instant, a host of unsavory males straight out of central casting, thin, grizzled types in smelly overcoats, or overbearing ones who silenced every opposition and held court until the wee hours. One of these—John, he went by, though really Jana, potbellied and with a thinning mane of silver-white that he tended like an aging rock star—came by almost nightly, claiming the best chair and draining Jiri’s Scotch three fingers at a go. He was a blowhard, by any measure, full of pronouncements and easy cynicism, but Jiri sucked up to him as if he were Dubček himself.

“They’re innocents, in their little world there, signing their petitions and waiting for glasnost. Glasnost is a joke. Then they still churn out their
manifestos as if they’ve got some kind of new socialist paradise ready for us, but they’ll be the first ones selling McDonald’s the day the capitalists roll in. And they’ll be lucky for it.”

It was all the simplest sort of reactionism, straight out of Reagan 101. Alex couldn’t believe that Jiri sat still for it, yet he’d be right in there encouraging him.

“That’s the paradox, isn’t it? That’s the brilliance of capitalism—you can’t deconstruct it, because it deconstructs itself. It caters to the beast, but at least it admits it.”

Alex would gladly have forgone these sessions if not for the obligation he felt to keep Jiri under watch. He didn’t like to flatter himself, but his presence had a stabilizing effect—inevitably, when he made the mistake of bowing out early and leaving Jiri alone with John, there’d be a complaint the next day about John Cage playing at top volume until four in the morning or two drunk men in the hall singing “La Marseillaise.”

“This guy was there through the whole thing,” Jiri said, as if he owed him some sort of national debt. “The Russians, the tanks, the crackdown, the whole catastrophe. Then three years in prison—all that Amnesty crowd, the ones you see in the papers these days, he knew them all at the start.”

Alex was skeptical.

“So how did he get out?”

“That was the worst of it. They gave him a choice: get on a plane or let your children carry the stigma. They’re very clever that way. If you stay, your children end up in the salt mines; if you go, they think you’re a traitor and they turn into good socialists. Four of them, he left behind. He never laid eyes on them again—straight from his jail cell to the airport. The wife could never get them out, of course, not like mine. They watched her like hawks.”

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