Authors: Robert Zimmerman
“No, I'm leaving on the next train. I don't even really have time to take you to the cabin but I will. If I have to sit around and wait to go⦠There's no way I could explain my lateness to my boss.”
“And who's your boss whose work is so important that you can't be a day late?”
I stand up after slipping on my shoes and I start loading my pockets back up with everything I'd emptied out onto the bed table. “General Anselmo,” she tells me.
I pause for an instant, though I'm sure it's long enough of a jerk for her to have seen it, then I continue placing my change, my wallet, in my pocket, start wrapping the band of my watch to my wrist.
“You work for the General.”
“The General's my father.”
I take in a deep breath and consider my options only to realize I have none. Had I told her that I was here to kill him? Did I explicitly use the word âkill'? I am pretty certain that I did. “An hour north, you said? I should be able to find it myself. Annie, you said, right? Thank you.”
I walk past her and out into the hall. She calls after me as I begin stepping down the stairs, “I won't say anything. I'll be there when you come. I'll be waiting.”
* * *
The town has always been a peaceful thing at twilight. An animal curling into its own tail to find a few hours of serenity before the heat and dryness of the day send it wandering again. I think of what Annie the General's daughter told me, that she had found Asam Cifezzo here in the woods. I have to laugh at the simplicity with which she has done something that I have spent twenty years trying to do. After reading Father's farewell letter, I sit on our bed and cry for hours until the sheet of parchment is nothing but a pool of fibers and pulp at my feet. When I am able to compose myself I return to the elder and ask him if he knows where Father might have gone. He of course says that he has no idea, and I have no reason not to believe him. I inform him as respectfully as I can that I will be leaving the village and thank him for all of his service and help over the past dozen years. Later that afternoon, I pack what little I have back at my hut and begin hiking through the jungle toward the closest major city. From there I take a flight to Buenos Aires where I board a flight that takes me to Italy.
It is there that I spend half a dozen years hunting down the most well respected professors and scholars of Italian history, philosophy, and metaphysics in search of any insight there might be into the teachings of Asam Cifezzo. It is only toward the second half of the sixth year that a professor from the University of Turin, a man whom I had seen many times over the years for advice, translation, or simply a morsel of wisdom on where to search next, calls me and says that he has recently caught wind of a small, private symposium that was held earlier that year in Hamburg. I thank him profusely and take the first train there, though the professor hadn't been able to give me a more precise location, nor the name of the host of the symposium or any other information other than that he believed he had heard that one had been held.
It takes me three more years to track down the secretary of the man who held the symposium, a gorgeous Swede (the secretary, not the man who held the symposium) who sleeps with me rather eagerly after informing me that her boss, who had passed away just weeks before I find his office, had held the symposium with an open invitation to any other interested academics on the topic of solar flares and the physical and metaphysical effect the sun and moon have on the earth and its inhabitants. The name Asam Cifezzo, she believes, had been mentioned by her boss over the phone once in her presence. Only one man had attended the symposium, an American scholar who lives in New York. She has his information on file and she gives it to me while she strips herself of her lederhosen and tosses them across her desk. I continue seeing the Swedish girl while trying to get in touch with the American, and so in the meantime I am able to ask for her boss's phone records that, as with everything else, she gives to me eagerly. Later, when I am able to get through to the man in New York, he tells me that yes, while he did attend the symposium, the name Asam Cifezzo had never come up, and he had, in fact, never heard the name before.
I spend another year going through the Swede's employer's phone records in what seems from the beginning like a futile attempt at finding whomever he had spoken to about Cifezzo, while sleeping with her whenever my mind or body sent word to the other that it needed a distraction. Though neither of us believes I will ever find the man and that I will spend the rest of my life in Hamburg sleeping with the Swedish secretary, the fates smile and after a year I find him. He is living here in Germany, a professor at a nearby university, a scientist who specializes in solar flares but who'd had prior obligations the week of the symposium and could not attend. He tells me that no, he knows nothing about Asam Cifezzo, but his friend, the Swedish girl's boss, did mention the name on several occasions. All he can tell me is that his friend had frequently expressed an interest in the philosophy of this man Cifezzo, and that he had spent the last three years of his life trying to track down a man in the Dominican Republic who was said to be the one and only expert on him. I thank him, and then I kiss my Swede goodbye.
After another two years of searching the Caribbean islands for some news of this expert, I manage to set up a meeting with a man named Gustav, who is living in a cloistered villa estate on the outskirts of a dusty farming village on the island of San Marco di Paolo. He is a black market arms dealer as well as a scholar whose interests remain in philosophies concerning the sun, particularly those of a man named Asam Cifezzo. I approach his bamboo-thatched building eagerly, sidestepping around a group of sun-darkened children playing some variation of soccer with a ball of guava rinds stitched to the skull of a wild cat. I knock and enter upon the muffled entreaty to let myself in. The room is dark but for a single window uncurtained at the back that spills the hot tropical sun onto Gustav, who is sitting at a thin table built from ocean flotsam, bent over a wide leather-bound text. He waves at a seat across from him after taking a quick peek through the upper halves of his bifocals. I come and join him at the table and I inspect his book. The dry, yellowed pages of parchment loosely strung to the spine of the chipping leather hide. The ink is in a script I can't recognize, and mostly faded into ghostly ciphers.
He explains to me that he sells weapons merely as a financial venture, to earn money to keep his estate and to continue researching those things with which he keeps himself truly occupied. He explains that he is a brother in a fraternal order of conjurors, of wizardly magicians. Not the glittered petty prestidigitators, the entertainers who use sleight of hand and suggestion to mock their audience and mimic magic. But one of the few tuned to understand and manipulate the rarified forces of the universe, forces that bind atoms and spin electrons. I ask him to tell me about Asam Cifezzo and he laughs, he shuts his book and sends up a plume of dust. He says, “I am in a dangerous line of work. I cannot survive by trusting everyone who comes to me asking for a favor. Work for me, three years, and I will tell you what I know about Asam Cifezzo.”
I agree, and I spend three years trafficking weapons and cocaine to Chinese businessmen and Arab terrorists and a small conglomerate of elitist French survivalists who believe themselves to be the chosen few who will survive the coming apocalypse. At the end of those three years, I go back to Gustav and I ask him again, “Tell me what you know about Asam Cifezzo.”
From his briefcase he pulls a small folder containing a glossy photograph, which he places on the table and slides to me. After fifteen years, I find myself sitting in a shithole that stinks of goats and staring at a picture of Father wearing a military uniform and standing in front of a towering twist of steel that stands on the edge of a cliff overlooking a great sea. “General Anselmo is an American general currently operating a Cannery in southern California. He uses the alias of Signor Asam Cifezzo in select circles, though the purpose for that, I do not know and don't particularly care. Under the name Anselmo, he purchases a rather large quantity from me every few years of assault rifles and explosives. And that is all I know about Asam Cifezzo.”
I tell him, “I didn't come to you looking for information on the alias of one of your clients. I came looking for information on Asam Cifezzo, the thirteenth century Italian philosopher who believed that he had gained all the knowledge of the universe by trading eyes with the sun for an afternoon, who believed that the world will be coming to an end soon and when it does, it will twist the laws of physics like a scared animal fighting for its life.”
Gustav only looks at me slyly. “If that's why you came to me, you must know that I specialize in cult religions and philosophies of the dark ages. I am sorry to tell you, no Italian philosopher has ever gone by that name. There is little that I do not know. Knowledge is not a matter of discovery or invention. It's a matter of knowing where to look and how to bind the tatters of a secret hidden amongst dozens of books into a unified whole. And as far as I know, there never has been a man by the name of Asam Cifezzo, except forâ” He taps the photograph with one long, yellow fingernail, and then he leans back in his chair.
* * *
From the island of San Marco di Paolo, I take a plane to southern California, and from there a train back to the town in which I had been born. I stop briefly at that twisting steel spire on the edge of a great coast, graced with the mercy of Gustav who, pleased by my years of service, sends me in his place to discuss the General's demands for the upcoming year. I study the man as I speak to him. At his tired eyes, his fattened cheeks, and the crackle of ivory dice in the cup of his withered fingers and splintered joints. And no, I decide, this is not Father after all. A shard, perhaps, split from the same soul as Father. But twisted by a different life, by more unfortunate decisions, and with more perverse intentions.
And now I stand with the moon rising off beyond the slopes of the dunes, watching Father Benjamin Johns sitting on his sofa in a dark living room picking at his dinner. I remember an old story Father used to tell me, after he had taken me to South America, a story about how he was once presented with a decision so difficult that the only way for him to make it was to simultaneously choose both options. And by doing so, he had split himself physically in two. It happens once more after the first time, though one of those is murdered shortly after as a result of the decision that produces them; a crime of passion, a murder of lovers. I had always dismissed it as a parable of sorts, a lesson that you can't have everything you want without giving up something great. But staring at him now through his window, I know that he is not the man Gustav showed me in that photograph. He is not the man I had spoken with just the day before. Close enough to be twins, but I had spent a dozen years living with him and I know my Father from an imposter.
I walk around to the back door, which I remember he never keeps locked.
Locked doors
, he would say,
are a sign of a guilty conscience. They're for people with something to hide, if you want people to think you've got nothing to hide, let them know they can come and go as they please
. I open the door slowly and make sure not to have it make a sound. I walk around the moonlit kitchen table, down the short hall, pausing briefly at the basement door where I put my ear and listen. I can hear the scurry of quick claws on concrete down there. Then I continue until I am standing at the back of his living room. I am just off to his side but he doesn't see me there, he is picking at the remains of a cheap frozen dinner. The glow of the television casts a blue pall over the room. I watch him for a short time before I take another step forward so that he can sense my motion. He drops the plastic fork and gasps, and he pushes himself to the side of the sofa, knocking over the folding table and his dinner in the process.
“Who are you?” He pushes himself to his feet and squints, leaning forward so that he can get a better view of me.
“You know who I am, Father,” I say. I begin to cross the room.
He squints harder but doesn't say anything. As I approach him he backs himself away until he is pressed against his wall. He tries to recognize me but can't quite do it, not until I am standing in the center of the room with the brightest rays of the cathode tubes glowing at my side. He gasps again now that he sees me. “Nickolas? Is it really you?”
“You're a worthless son of a bitch, do you know that?” I continue walking toward him. And when I am close enough, I punch him in the mouth. The force knocks him over but I catch him and pull him into the middle of the room and toss him back onto the sofa.
“Nickolas, IâIs that really you?”
“Of course it's me. You're about to spend the next decade of your life with me. You should know what I look like.”
“I've been expecting you,” he says. He ignores the chipped tooth I just gave him and the little trail of blood that's falling out of the corner of his lip and he takes my hands lovingly in his and holds the huddled collection up to his chest.
I pull mine back to myself and I sit on the sofa next to him. I hold my head and try to think of what I'm going to say but nothing quite comes to me. It seems the past twenty years have been full of harsh words and cynical appraisals only to be snatched from me at some point during the last twenty seconds. We're quiet like that for a long time, with him staring at me and me staring at my feet.
Finally, because I need to say it to him, I need to say it aloud, I say, “Do you know what you did to me? You made the world think that my father kidnapped me. You made
my mother
think that my father kidnapped me. You locked us in your basement for a
month
. You called us your rats, you bastard. Your rats! You fed us dirty scraps of food. And Kyra, do you know what you did to her?”