The Philosopher's Apprentice (47 page)

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Shuffling into my vicinity, our visitor set the bassinet on the table. Thanks to the auxiliary plastic hood and an abundance of blankets, the infant had been spared the wretched weather. Indeed, it was sleeping peacefully, eyes closed, nostrils emitting a pianissimo snore, a tiny sphere of saliva poised atop its delicate lips.

“The hospital insisted that I put something on the birth certificate, so for now her name is Jane,” our visitor told me. “That won't do, of course. I'll leave the christening to you.”

I surveyed Edwina 0004. Evidently Londa and the Valkyries had assembled her so hastily that they'd introduced a flaw into her genotype. Her skin was as yellow as an ancient newspaper, her eyes had receded into her balding skull, and she had fewer teeth than fingers. The world at large would never recognize this broken crone as the late Dame Quixote's doppelgänger.

“The delivery occurred two months ago at Mass General.” From the lining of her poncho Edwina 0004 retrieved a glass baby bottle, pressing it into my hands. “My milk has dried up. I use Similac instead. You make it from powder and water. Her pediatrician is Dr. Ankers in Brighton. The sooner you assume your proper role, the better. If she remains in my care any longer, she'll languish.”

I thought of the newborn Sinuhe, cast adrift in a reed boat—“Thus the city of Thebes was accustomed to dispose of its unwanted children”—coursing down the Nile before being rescued by the good-hearted couple who then adopt him. And now this unexpected infant had likewise floated into my life.

“Languish?” I tried returning the Similac to Edwina 0004, but she refused me with raised palms. “No, you're doing a splendid job,” I told her. “It's raining cats and dogs, but you kept her dry as a bone.”

“I'm a vatling,” she replied. “No conscience. Receive your daughter, Mr. Ambrose, before I harm her.”

“Harm her? She's your
child.

“So was Londa. Name the baby as you will. Good-bye.”

With an agility that belied her decrepitude, Edwina 0004 spun on her heel and hurried out the door. My impulse was to chase her down and beg her to relieve me of this burden, but just then the baby woke up and started crying.

“Mason, I don't understand,” Leslie said, bending over the bassinet. “Are you the father?”

“That appears to be the case.”

An astonishing circumstance, but not without its foreshadow. Here at Pieces of Mind, my netherson had first made himself known to me, and now on these same premises another such annunciation had occurred.

Gently Leslie unwrapped the woolen blanket and, inserting her hands under the baby's armpits, lifted the squalling bundle free of the bassinet. The Wild Woman had dressed her in a fluffy pink jumper. Her eyes, like mine, were a dark shade of brown.

“Give me the bottle,” Leslie said, snugging the infant into the crook of her arm.

“Do you know what you're doing?” I asked.

“I have a black belt in baby-sitting. Give me the goddamn bottle.”

I presented Leslie with the Similac. Edwina 0004's return, her terminal condition, the abandoned infant, my newfound fatherhood: it was all so abrupt, so absurdly sudden, like Ceres appearing before Giuseppe Piazzi. But beyond my confusion, I felt exhilarated, and when my daughter stopped fussing and started feeding, thus prompting the crowd to break into spontaneous applause, my happiness grew greater still. My ignorance was endless—did they sell Similac at the Whole Foods Market? diapers, too? did a baby need shots, like a puppy?—and yet I felt equal to the challenge. She was a regular person after all, of conventional genesis. Ovulation, oocyte, orgasm, obstetrics. We humans had been tackling parenthood, often with impressive results, ever since
Homo erectus
had emerged from
Homo habilis.
When it came to the catastrophe in the bassinet, history was on my side.

 

THIS BEGAN WITH A BUTTERFLY
,
and it ends with one, too. We were a party of five that mellow April afternoon, eager patrons of the Hawthorne University Great Insect Carnival, organized annually by the zoology department. Besides myself, our fellowship included Leslie, with whom I'd been exchanging romantic protestations and sharing a Back Bay apartment for the past three months, plus Donya, Donya's charming boyfriend Raúl, and of course little Sofie Ambrose.

Now fifteen months old, my daughter could walk after a fashion. She could also sort her stuffed animals from her alphabet blocks, babble eloquently in a language of her own devising, play level-five peekaboo, and derive considerable amusement from the daily Nickelodeon broadcasts of
Uncle Rumpus's Magic Island,
starring Henry Cushing as every preschooler's favorite bodhisattva. What Sofie didn't do was talk. Not a single word of recognizable English so far. The situation had me worried, but Dr. Ankers was confident that the child would utter a “Da-da” or a “bye-bye” any day now.

Clinging to the southern face of the Environmental Sciences
Building like a piece of avant-garde scaffolding, the Von Humboldt Butterfly Conservatory was a spindly marvel of glass and steel, a kind of secular cathedral dedicated to the adoration of the most exquisite invertebrates Mr. Darwin's algorithms had ever brought forth. Several additions to the permanent collection had arrived in time for the Great Insect Carnival, including a colony of Nabokov's South American Blues, so named because the author of
Lolita,
a first-rate lepidopterist as well as a literary genius, had bestowed on Lycaenidae an innovative and valuable classification system. As our group wandered awestruck among the Nabokov's Blues, Donya and Raúl described their efforts to protect those unique Mexican forests where most of the planet's monarch butterflies passed their winters. It was largely a matter of gauging one's audience. Sometimes Donya and Raúl would attempt to rehabilitate a given land speculator or industrial developer by appealing to his personal moral code, more often by enlarging his private bank account, but regardless of the tactic they usually managed to turn the clueless entrepreneur into a staunch butterfly advocate.

As you might imagine, habitat restoration was just one of the endeavors into which Donya had channeled her trust fund. Beyond her dedication to the welfare of beasts and butterflies, her munificence extended to the human realm; the call of the wild moved her, but so did the cries of the bewildered. I think especially of her invention called the Urban Igloo, an inflatable shelter for homeless people constructed from heavy-duty garbage bags and packing tape. Cheap and portable, every Urban Igloo boasted an ingenious feature—a heating device consisting of a plastic tube terminating in a simple gasket. After installing his igloo on the sidewalk outside an apartment complex, retail store, or corporate headquarters, the occupant would fit the gasket over the exhaust vent of the building's heating system. Thus was an otherwise wasted resource, the liters of warm air expelled by HVAC ducts, put to a sensible use. So far Donya had distributed four hundred Urban Igloos up and down
the eastern seaboard, and she hoped to give away a thousand more before the year was out.

There was a mystery here. How did Donya manage to keep subverting the Phyllistines while eschewing the thorny forest of grandiosity into which her elder sisters had wandered? Why would she never even imagine initiating a project like Themisopolis or Operation Pineal Gland or Edwina 0004? Perhaps Henry and Brock had been more circumspect mentors than Jordan and I. Or perhaps Donya's sanity traced simply to her having enjoyed something resembling a childhood. Whatever the answer, one fact seemed clear. The last of the Sabacthanis was also the wisest.

If I am to believe my dear Leslie, your narrator has himself attained a certain sagacity. She claims that Mason Ambrose is “no longer his skull's only tenant” but pays attention to his daughter and even his girlfriend “with touching regularity.” And here's something else, ladies and gentlemen. Make of it what you will. In recent months I have shed my reflexive dislike of
The Faerie Queene.
There are passages in Spenser that now move me to tears, and I've come to regard that hidebound dogmatist as some sort of great poet.

Lovely though they were, the Nabokov's Blues did not captivate Leslie and myself for long, and we wandered off in search of gaudier lepidoptera. Our quest took us to the cathedral's core, dense with ferns and blossoms, little Sofie waddling between us like a penguin. Eventually a Central Asian peacock butterfly caught our attention, a magnificent
Nymphalis io
perched on a yellow orchid, each wing stamped with an image suggesting a mask of comedy. I scooped up Sofie and brought her within view of the improbably marked creature.

“See, sweetheart?” I said. “See the beautiful butterfly?”

The child selected that very moment to acquire the gift of language. No baby talk for Sophie. She didn't say, “Bootiful.” She said, “Beautiful.”

Joy rushed through my veins. My cup overflowed.

“Did you hear that? She said, ‘Beautiful.'”

“Mazel tov,” Leslie told Sofie. “No doubt about it”—she flashed me a wry smile—“the kid'll grow up to become a philosopher, with a special interest in aesthetics.”

Beau-ti-ful. If Sofie's late mother Edwina 0004 could have heard her little girl articulate those syllables, she would have been immensely pleased. Sofie's departed mother the primal Edwina would have been equally delighted. But her deceased mother Londa would have been the proudest of all. And so it was that, conjuring up the face and form of my impossible vatling, I bent low and inhaled the orchid's scent, happy in my knowledge that sometime tomorrow, or perhaps even later today, our daughter would move her tongue and part her lips and say her second word.

About the Author

J
AMES
M
ORROW
is the author of nine previous novels, including
The Last Witchfinder.
He lives in State College, Pennsylvania.

WWW.JAMESMORROW.NET

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

A
LSO BY
J
AMES
M
ORROW

N
OVELS

The Wine of Violence

The Continent of Lies

This Is the Way the World Ends

Only Begotten Daughter

City of Truth

The Last Witchfinder

T
HE
G
ODHEAD
T
RILOGY

Towing Jehovah

Blameless in Abaddon

The Eternal Footman

C
OLLECTIONS

Bible Stories for Adults

The Cat's Pajamas and Other Stories

Jacket design by Roberto de Vicq de Cumptich

Jacket painting of Pygmalion and Galatea (oil on canvas) by Jean Leon Gerome (1824–1904) Private Collection/Bridgeman Art Library

This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

THE PHILOSOPHER'S APPRENTICE
. Copyright © 2008 by James Morrow. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub Edition © FEBRUARY 2008 ISBN: 9780061851940

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