Ray Bradbury Stories Volume 2
Page 45
‘Damn it, Steve, has THAT been here all this time!’
Something buzzed in a small arc somewhere, into silence. The four walls moved in around us in that silence, it seemed, the blank ceiling stared over us and Tinsley’s breath arched through his nostrils. I couldn’t see the infernal insect anywhere. Tinsley exploded. ‘Help me find it! Damn you, help me!’
‘Now, hold on—’ I retorted.
Somebody rapped on the door.
‘Stay out!’ Tinsley’s yell was high, afraid. ‘Get away from the door, and stay away!’ He flung himself headlong, bolted the door with a frantic gesture and lay against it, wildly searching the room. ‘Quickly now, Steve, systematically! Don’t sit there!’
Desk, chairs, chandelier, walls. Like an insane animal, Tinsley searched, found the buzzing, struck at it. A bit of insensate glitter fell to the floor where he crushed it with his foot in a queerly triumphant sort of action.
He started to dress me down, but I wouldn’t have it. ‘Look here,’ I came back at him. ‘I’m a secretary and right-hand stooge, not a spotter for highflying insects. I haven’t got eyes in the back of my head!’
‘Either have they!’ cried Tinsley. ‘So you know what They do?’
‘They? Who in hell are They?’
He shut up. He went to his desk and sat down, wearily, and finally said, ‘Never mind. Forget it. Don’t talk about this to anyone.’
I softened up. ‘Bill, you should go see a psychiatrist about—’
Tinsley laughed bitterly. ‘And the psychiatrist would tell his wife, and she’d tell others, and then They’d find out. They’re everywhere, They are. I don’t want to be stopped with my campaign.’
‘If you mean the one hundred thousand bucks you’ve sunk in your insect sprays and ant pastes in the last four weeks,’ I said. ‘Someone should stop you. You’ll break yourself, me, and the stockholders. Honest to God, Tinsley—’
‘Shut up!’ he said. ‘You don’t understand.’
I guess I didn’t, then. I went back to my office and all day long I heard that damned flyswatter hissing in the air.
I had supper with Susan Miller that evening. I told her about Tinsley and she lent a sympathetically professional ear. Then she tapped her cigarette and lit it and said, ‘Steve, I may be a psychiatrist, but I wouldn’t have a tinker’s chance in hell, unless Tinsley came to see me. I couldn’t help him unless he wanted help.’ She patted my arm. ‘I’ll look him over for you, if you insist, though, for old time’s sake. But half the fight’s lost if the patient won’t cooperate.’
‘You’ve got to help me, Susan,’ I said. ‘He’ll be stark raving in another month. I think he has delusions of persecution—’
We drove to Tinsley’s house.
The first date worked out well. We laughed, we danced we dined late at the Brown Derby, and Tinsley didn’t suspect for a moment that the slender, soft-voiced woman he held in his arms to a waltz was a psychiatrist picking his reactions apart. From the table, I watched them, together, and I shielded a small laugh with my hand, and heard Susan laughing at one of his jokes.
We drove along the road in a pleasant, relaxed silence, the silence that follows on the heels of a good, happy evening. The perfume of Susan was in the car, the radio played dimly, and the car wheels whirled with a slight whisper over the highway.
I looked at Susan and she at me, her brows going up to indicate that she’d found nothing so far this evening to show that Tinsley was in any way unbalanced. I shrugged.
At that very instant, a moth flew in the window, fluttering, flickering its velvety white wings upon the imprisoning glass.
Tinsley screamed, wrenched the car involuntarily, struck out a gloved hand at the moth, gabbling, his face pale. The tires wobbled. Susan seized the steering wheel firmly and held the car on the road until we slowed to a stop.
As we pulled up, Tinsley crushed the moth between tightened fingers and watched the odorous powder of it sift down upon Susan’s arm. We sat there, the three of us, breathing rapidly.
Susan looked at me, and this time there was comprehension in her eyes. I nodded.
Tinsley looked straight ahead, then. In a dream he said, ‘Ninety-nine percent of all life in the world is insect life—’
He rolled up the windows without another word, and drove us home.
Susan phoned me an hour later. ‘Steve, he’s built a terrific complex for himself. I’m having lunch with him tomorrow. He likes me, I might find out what we want to know. By the way, Steve, does he own any pets?’
Tinsley had never owned a cat or dog. He detested animals.
‘I might have expected that,’ said Susan. ‘Well, good-night, Steve, see you tomorrow.’
The flies were breeding thick and golden and buzzing like a million intricately fine electric machines in the pouring direct light of summer noon. In vortexes they whirled and curtained and fell upon refuse to inject their eggs, to mate, to flutter, to whirl again, as I watched them, and in their whirling my mind intermixed. I wondered why Tinsley should fear them so, should dread and kill them, and as I walked the streets, all about me, cutting arcs and spaces from the sky, omnipresent flies hummed and sizzled and beat their lucid wings. I counted darning needles, mud-daubers and hornets, yellow bees and brown ants. The world was suddenly much more alive to me than ever before, because Tinsley’s apprehensive awareness had set me aware.
Before I knew my actions, brushing a small red ant from my coat that had fallen from a lilac bush as I passed, I turned in at a familiar white house and knew it to be Lawyer Remington’s who had been Tinsley’s family representative for forty years, even before Tinsley was born. Remington was only a business acquaintance to me but there I was, touching his gate and ringing his bell and in a few minutes looking at him over a sparkling good glass of his sherry.
‘I remember,’ said Remington, remembering. ‘Poor Tinsley. He was only seventeen when it happened.’
I leaned forward intently. ‘It happened?’ The ant raced in wild frenzies upon the golden stubble on my fingers’ backs, becoming entangled in the bramble of my wrist, turning back, hopelessly clenching its mandibles. I watched the ant. ‘Some unfortunate accident?’
Lawyer Remington nodded grimly and the memory lay raw and naked in his old brown eyes. He spread the memory out on the table and pinned it down so I could look at it with a few accurate words:
‘Tinsley’s father took him hunting up in the Lake Arrowhead region in the autumn of the young lad’s seventeenth year. Beautiful country, a lovely clear cold autumn day: I remember it because I was hunting not seventy miles from there on that selfsame afternoon. Game was plentiful. You could hear the sound of guns passing over and back across the lakes through the scent of pine trees. Tinsley’s father leaned his gun against a bush to lace his shoe, when a flurry of quail arose, some of them, in their fright, straight at Tinsley senior and his son.’
Remington looked into his glass to see what he was telling. ‘A quail knocked the gun down, it fired off, and the charge struck the elder Tinsley full in the face!’
‘Good God!’
In my mind I saw the elder Tinsley stagger, grasp at his red mask of face, drop his hands now gloved with scarlet fabric, and fall, even as the young boy, struck numb and ashen, swayed and could not believe what he saw.
I drank my sherry hastily, and Remington continued:
‘But that wasn’t the least horrible of details. One might think it sufficient. But what followed later was something indescribable to the lad. He ran five miles for help, leaving his father behind, dead, but refusing to believe him dead. Screaming, panting, ripping his clothes from his body, young Tinsley made it to a road and back with a doctor and two other men in something like six hours. The sun was just going down when they hurried back through the pine forest to where the father lay.’ Remington paused and shook his head from side to side, eyes closed. ‘The entire body, the arms, the legs, and the shattered contour of what was once a strong, handsome face, was cluster
ed over and covered with scuttling, twitching insects, bugs, ants of every and all descriptions, drawn by the sweet odor of blood. It was impossible to see one square inch of the elder Tinsley’s body!’
Mentally, I created the pine trees, and the three men towering over the small boy who stood before a body upon which a tide of small, attentively hungry creatures ebbed and flowed, subsided and returned. Somewhere, a woodpecker knocked, a squirrel scampered, and the quail beat their small wings. And the three men held onto the small boy’s arms and turned him away from the sight.…
Some of the boy’s agony and terror must have escaped my lips, for when my mind returned to the library, I found Remington staring at me, and my sherry glass broken in half causing a bleeding cut which I did not feel.
‘So that’s why Tinsley has this fear of insects and animals,’ I breathed, several minutes later, settling back, my heart pounding. ‘And it’s grown like a yeast over the years, to obsess him.’
Remington expressed an interest in Tinsley’s problem, but I allayed him and inquired, ‘What was his father’s profession?’
‘I thought you knew!’ cried Remington in faint surprise. ‘Why the elder Tinsley was a very famous naturalist. Very famous indeed. Ironic, in a way, isn’t it, that he should be killed by the very creatures which he studied, eh?’
‘Yes.’ I rose up and shook Remington’s hand. ‘Thanks, Lawyer. You have helped me very much. I must get going now.’
‘Good-bye.’
I stood in the open air before Remington’s house and the ant still scrambled over my hand, wildly. I began to understand and sympathize deeply with Tinsley for the first time. I went to pick up Susan in my car.
Susan pushed the veil of her hat back from her eyes and looked off into the distance and said, ‘What you’ve told me pretty well puts the finger on Tinsley, all right. He’s been brooding.’ She waved a hand. ‘Look around. See how easy it would be to believe that insects are really the horrors he makes them out to be. There’s a Monarch butterfly pacing us.’ She flicked a fingernail. ‘Is it listening to our every word? Tinsley the elder was a naturalist. What happened? He interfered, busybodied where he wasn’t wanted, so They, They who control the animals and insects, killed him. Night and day for the last ten years that thought has been on Tinsley’s mind, and everywhere he looked he saw the numerous life of the world and the suspicions began to take shape, form and substance!’
‘I can’t say I blame him,’ I said. ‘If my father had been killed in a like fashion—’
‘He refuses to talk when there’s an insect in the room, isn’t that it, Steve?’
‘Yes, he’s afraid they’ll discover that he knows about them.’
‘You can see how silly that is, yourself, can’t you. He couldn’t possibly keep it a secret, granting that butterflies and ants and houseflies are evil, for you and I have talked about it, and others, too. But he persists in his delusion that as long as he himself says no word in Their presence … well, he’s still alive, isn’t he? They haven’t destroyed him, have They? And if They were evil and feared his knowledge, wouldn’t They have destroyed him long since?’
‘Maybe They’re playing with him?’ I wondered. ‘You know it is strange. The elder Tinsley was on the verge of some great discovery when he was killed. It sort of fits a pattern:’
‘I’d better get you out of this hot sun,’ laughed Susan, swerving the car into a shady lane.
The next Sunday morning, Bill Tinsley and Susan and I attended church and sat in the middle of the soft music and the vast muteness and quiet color. During the service, Bill began to laugh to himself until I shoved him in the ribs and asked him what was wrong.
‘Look at the Reverend up there,’ replied Tinsley, fascinated. ‘There’s a fly on his bald spot. A fly in church. They go everywhere, I tell you. Let the minister talk, it won’t do a bit of good. Oh, gentle, Lord.’
After the service we drove for a picnic lunch in the country under a warm blue sky. A few times, Susan tried to get Bill on the subject of his fear, but Bill only pointed at the train of ants swarming across the picnic linen and shook his head, angrily. Later, he apologized and with a certain tenseness, asked us to come up to his house that evening, he couldn’t go on much longer by himself, he was running low on funds, the business was liable to go on the rocks, and he needed us. Susan and I held onto his hands and understood. In a matter of forty minutes we were inside the locked study of his house, cocktails in our midst, with Tinsley pacing anxiously back and forth, dandling his familiar flyswatter, searching the room and killing two flies before he made his speech.
He tapped the wall. ‘Metal. No maggots, ticks, woodbeetles, termites. Metal chairs, metal everything. We’re alone; aren’t we?’
I looked around: ‘I think so.’
‘Good.’ Bill drew in a breath and exhaled. ‘Have you ever wondered about God and the Devil and the Universe, Susan, Steve? Have you ever realized how cruel the world is? How we try to get ahead, but are hit over the head every time we succeed a fraction?’ I nodded silently, and Tinsley went on. ‘You sometimes wonder where God is, or where the Forces of Evil are. You wonder how these forces get around, if they are invisible angels. Well, the solution is simple and clever and scientific. We are being watched constantly. Is there ever a minute in our lives that passes without a fly buzzing in our room with us, or an ant crossing our path, or a flea or a dog, or a cat itself, or a beetle or moth rushing through the dark, or a mosquito skirting around a netting?’
Susan said nothing, but looked at Tinsley easily and without making him self-conscious. Tinsley sipped his drink.
‘Small winged things we pay no heed to, that follow us every day of our lives, that listen to our prayers and our hopes and our desires and fears, that listen to us and then tell what there is to be told to Him or Her or It, or whatever Force sends them out into the world.’
‘Oh, come now,’ I said impulsively.
To my surprise, Susan hushed me. ‘Let him finish,’ she said. Then she looked at Tinsley. ‘Go on.’
Tinsley said, ‘It sounds silly, but I’ve gone about this in a fairly scientific manner. First, I’ve never been able to figure out a reason for so many insects, for their varied profusion. They seem to be nothing but irritants to we mortals, at the very least. Well, a very simple explanation is as follows: the government of Them is a small body, it may be one person alone, and It or They can’t be everywhere. Flies can be. So can ants and other insects. And since we mortals cannot tell one ant from another, all identity is impossible and one fly is as good as another, their set-up is perfect. There are so many of them and there have been so many for years, that we pay no attention to them. Like Hawthorne’s “Scarlet Letter,” they are right before our eyes and familiarity has blinded us to them.’
‘I don’t believe any of that,’ I said directly.
‘Let me finish!’ cried Tinsley, hurriedly. ‘Before you judge. There is a Force, and it must have a contractual system, a communicative set-up, so that life can be twisted and adjusted according to each individual. Think of it, billions of insects, checking, correlating and reporting on their special subjects, controlling humanity!’
‘Look here!’ I burst out. ‘You’ve grown worse ever since that accident back when you were a kid! You’ve let it feed on your mind! You can’t go on fooling yourself!’ I got up.
‘Steve!’ Susan rose, too, her cheeks reddening. ‘You won’t help with talk like that! Sit down.’ She pressed against my chest. Then she turned rapidly to Tinsley. ‘Bill, if what you say should be true, if all of your plans, your insect-proofing your house, your silence in the presence of Their small winged creatures, your campaign, your ant pastes and pitifully small insect sprays, should really mean something, why are you still alive?’
‘Why?’ shouted Tinsley. ‘Because I’ve worked alone.’
‘But if there is a They, Bill, They have known of you for a month now, because Steve and I have told them, haven’t we Steve and yet you live
. Isn’t that proof that you must be wrong.’
‘You told them? You fool!’ Tinsley’s eyes showed white and furious. ‘No, you didn’t, I made Steve promise!’
‘Listen to me.’ Susan’s voice shook him, as she might shake a small boy by the scruff of his neck. ‘Listen, before you scream. Will you agree to an experiment?’
‘What kind of experiment?’
‘From now on, all of your plans will be aboveboard, in the open. If nothing happens to you, in the next eight weeks, then you’ll have to agree that your fears are baseless.’
‘But they’ll kill me!’
‘Listen! Steve and I will stake our lives on it, Bill. If you die, Steve and I’ll die with you. I value my life greatly, Bill, and Steve values his. We don’t believe in your horrors, and we want to get you out of this.’
Tinsley hung his head and looked at the floor. ‘I don’t know. I don’t know.’
‘Eight weeks, Bill. You can go on the rest of your life, if you wish, manufacturing insecticides, but for God’s sake don’t have a nervous breakdown over it. The very fact of your living should be some sort of proof that They bear you no ill-will, and have left you intact?’
Tinsley had to admit to that. But he was reluctant to give in. He murmured almost to himself. ‘This is the beginning of the campaign. It might take a thousand years, but in the end we can liberate ourselves.’
‘You can be liberated in eight weeks, Bill, don’t you see? If we can prove that insects are blameless? For the next eight weeks, carry on your campaign, advertise it in weekly magazines and papers, thrust it to the hilt, tell everyone, so that if you should die, the world will be left behind. Then, when the eight weeks are up, you’ll be liberated and free, and won’t that feel good to you, Bill, after all these years?’
Something happened then that startled us. Buzzing over our heads, a fly came by. It had been in the room with us all the time, and yet I had sworn that, earlier, I had seen none. Tinsley began to shiver. I didn’t know what I was doing, I seemed to react mechanically to some inner drive. I grabbed at the air and caught the tight buzzing in a cupped hand. Then I crushed it hard, staring at Bill and Susan. Their faces were chalky.