Naturally, the longer I stared at itâand I did keep staring at itâthe more morbid my thoughts grew. Not only was it undead, I realized, but it was Mazoch. His height, his shape, why not? Why couldn't Mazoch (who had called off the search under mysterious circumstances and who wasn't answering his phone and who it seemed less and less plausible was sitting in his room reading Milosz) have been bitten and killed, have reanimated and followed us here? Of course it was absurd, a paranoid fantasy. There was no way Mazoch could have died. Yet there were so
many ways in which Mazoch could have died! At least a hundred ways! Dead in the ditch he swerved into when, driving home late last night, he nodded off at the wheel: if he wasn't killed on impact, if he was simply knocked unconscious and trapped, then roadside infected could have come to inspect the wreck and fed with ease upon his flesh. Orâif he made it home safe last night after allâsay that he was bitten in bed in his sleep, having forgotten, from distraction or exhaustion or whatever else, to bolt the front door. Orâif in fact he slept soundly and without incidentâsay that, rather than read Milosz this morning, he decided to conduct one day's search without me, returning to Citiplace to inspect the empty theaters. Why not
this
morning, after months of daily exposure to the epidemic, for the probabilistically obvious to happen? Why not the one day that I wasn't there for a stray to catch him at his ankle and infect him?
Though what struck me as likelier stillâlikelier even than any of these scenariosâand likelier every minute that I compared the silhouette with Mazoch's likeness, was that Mazoch had infected himself. That he was sick, perverse, that finally he had snapped and that this was the hellish price he had to pay for devoting himself so crazily to the chase of his father. That âtaking the day off to read' was a euphemism for âkilling myself,' that what âreading Milosz' meant was that Mazoch would stir into a glass of water a single drop of contaminated blood (milked like venom from a nail some infected had stepped on) and drain it down as resolutely as he would a protein shake. All week, I realized, he'd been trying to get himself infected: with Highland Road Park, with the chicken breast, with every nail rusted and jutting from his dad's doorjamb. He'd been playing Russian roulette with the infection. But time after time he'd escaped unscathed, and so today, I realized, he had decided to finish the job himself.
Nothing seemed more lucid or inevitable to me than this. For what if
not
thisâprecisely to become infected and to
reanimateâhad Mazoch this whole time been planning? What better way to intercept an undead father than by carrying out an Orphic strategy, by descending into the underworld after him? Undead, Mazoch could exceed the limits that as a mortal he's been bringing himself to the edges of. He could shuffle from Denham to Louie's and back again
without stopping
, could actually keep pace with the father he was pursuing. What he would lose in speed (the undead can't drive) he would gain in stamina (the undead need not rest), such that his body would finally be equal to this monomaniacal task. The only trick would be to ensure that his reanimated body did indeed wander to Denham and Louie's and back, to
Mr. Mazoch's
haunts, rather than to Matt's idiosyncratic own. Hence this hopeless search, designed less as an actual manhunt for Mr. Mazoch than as a training module for Matt's undead corpse. So that his reanimated body would wander to his father's haunts, Mazoch wandered to his father's haunts. Daily he drove to them, investing each with all the associative energies necessary to compel his corpse to return to it. Yes, Mazoch knew exactly what he was doing. If those two officers hadn't arrived this afternoon to arrest it, his reanimated body, memory-possessed, would have visited Denham and Louie's no less diligently than Mazoch had, no less routinely and methodically and obsessively than Mazoch had, when, himself memory-possessed, he drove to these sites every morning like some pilgrim of remembering.
How clear to me it all was! Mazoch, self-consciously blazing a trail for his reanimated body, laying down a track for it to travel! Mazoch, engraining in himself muscle memories, habits, kernels of place, plotting for himself a mnemocartographic itinerary, all to guide his reanimated body! What else had I taken him to be doing? Obviously his final effort of will was to tighten this spring within himself (as if each day's repetition of the routineâthat mind-numbing drive out to Denham and backâwere just another twist of the dorsal key of his inner tin soldier) so
that his automatous corpse, like a wind-up toy whose âwinding up' Mazoch's last few weeks on Earth were, would wobble forward to exactly those places that Mazoch wanted it to. No wonder he had set the deadline at a month: that was probably how much time he thought the engraining would take. And no wonder he had been in such a rush to visit extra sites this week, then to search another week: he had to squeeze these sites into his itinerary. Highland Road Park. Citiplace. This lake that he stands right now on the southern shore of.
That
was
him, wasn't it, staring hungrily out over the water at us⦠thank God for that patrol car. It was only here, at the thought âthank God for the patrol car,' that I truly comprehended what mortal danger I'd been in, here that the scales fell from my eyes (and, with them, any compunctions I'd had about abandoning myself altogether to âbad thoughts'). For where else (it occurred to me) did Mazoch visit diligently every morning? Where besides Denham would his reanimated body, in inertial thrall to habit and reflex, have eventually been made to wander? Our very apartment! The home in which we slept! Oh, he would have headed straight there one morning, as if to pick me up for a day of work! This he didn't take into account, this he didn't plan for. He needed me to keep him company while for months he drilled a route into his body, he needed me to âhelp him not to think' and to be a pleasant phatic presence in his passenger seat. But what he didn't take into account was that my apartment, first stop every morning, would have been as much a component of âthe route' for his reanimated body as any other site. One morning he would have done what he did every morning: he would have gone to Mustard Castle, taken the stairs to our apartment, and knocked three times at our door. There would have come in the middle of some morning Mazoch's familiar hearty knock at the door! And this time he wouldn't quit until it splintered. They never quit until it splinters, not if they know you're inside. Mazoch would have brought all his huge strength to bear on
the battering down of our door, as if the only purpose he had ever had in mind, while working out, was splintering doors, as if for this and nothing else he exercised. To splinter my door and eat me alive he did his military pushups every morning! To keep himself well fed in the underworld he chinned himself on the pull-up bar in his threshold! To endow his corpse with what muscles it'd need to pry my life open like a crawfish shell, the better to suck my brains out, he curled his barbells before the mirror! That vain bastard would have eaten me aliveâstaring at his smug silhouette across the lake I felt sure of it!âif only those two officers hadn't been here to stop him.
So when Rachel asks me right now what I'm thinking, I'm thinking of the undead corpse across the water, imagining that it's Mazoch, and ideating its eating us alive in our sleep. But what I answer her is, âNothing in particular,' since this is, strictly speaking, true: I am thinking about ânothing'
in particular
, particularly the nothingness of undeath, which I'm worried that Mazoch in particular may have infected himself with. And I am thinking, too, about the somethingness of that nothing. Staring at the undead silhouette, I can't help wondering what's going on inside its body, or what Mazochâif indeed it is Mazochâmust be experiencing: no doubt an order of being inconceivable to me. Part of me yearns for a pair of binoculars right now, not only to confirm that the silhouette is his, but also to look him in the eye. For if he truly did infect himself, then he would be seeing everything he claimed they could not see. All the things that I (still on the mortal side of life) can barely understand. One of the living dead now, he would be living the very limit to my knowledge: he would
be
the nothing that can be known about undeath.
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So it is thisâthe nothings that must be massing in
Mazoch's mindâthat I myself have in mind, when I tell Rachel that I am thinking about nothing.
To forestall any follow-up questions, I ask her reciprocally, âBut what about you? What were
you
thinking, just a minute ago, before you thought to ask me?' And how my mood lightens when she begins! For it turns out that Rachel has, somehow, avoided thinking about undeath and the silhouette all day. She's succeeded brilliantly in distracting herself and has thankfully thought enough good things for the both of us. Gesturing to the water, she enumerates all the good things there that have been holding her interest since we got here: (1) because the freeway bridges the lake, all the cars overhead get reflected, and the eighteen-wheelers especially have been enjoyable to watch (that is, not the actual vehicles speeding along the overpass, but their reflections in the lake below, streaking rectangles of distortion that shudder through the muddy water: they look so monstrous, she says, these gray shapes skimming beneath the surface, that whenever one passes she can't help thinking, âA Leviathan! A Loch Ness!'); (2) when ducks kick off the shore and glide out across the water, their wakes ripple back in lunular trailsâlike this: )))âsuch that each duck seems to be opening up a string of parentheses, nesting digressions that manage to hold the entire lake (the reflected clouds and reflected eighteen-wheelers, and the floating litter, too) in their aside of water,
69
which can be
closed only when another duck drifts by in the opposite direction, unleashing a terminating series of brackish brackets;
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(3) she can't tell whether the white blob in the branches of that cypress, jutting out from the righthand bank, is a trash bag or an ibis, since the tree is far enough off that her eyes are unable to register any of the blob's smaller movementsâwhether the whipping of windblown plastic or the wing-shuffling of a bird readjustingâand she has waffled for so long regarding which it is (sure one moment that it enjoys a heartbeat, and a gullet and guts, full of all the thrumming life that living birds are stuffed with; then equally certain an instant later that it's just a pale plastic bag, puffed up and empty with air) that by now the white blob seems positively anamorphic, a smear of ambiguity that resolves from one angle into a bird and from another into a bag, as if Rachel, merely by tilting her head and following the spectrum along which these two images merged, could watch
the smooth plastic begin to feather, begin to grow a beak and black eyes, as the bag graded into the ibis.
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âWell,' she concludes, âI guess that's itâthat's pretty much what I've been thinking this whole time.'
That's it
. What pleasant things to be thinking! Reflections, ducks, ibis-bags, not one of them referring to the silhouette. I wish I could think such pleasant things. Maybe once the search is finally over, I'll be able to. Maybe next week we can walk back here, and I can make it a point to admire the eighteen-wheelers. For a moment I consider confessing to Rachel how badly I've betrayed the spirit of our day's goal. I consider telling her what's been weighing on my mind lately, every hitch in the search I've kept hidden from her, and then sharing all of my suspicions about the silhouette as well. I imagine the two of us laughing it off together: âIt looks nothing like Mazoch!' we would laugh. What made me think that that silhouette was Mazoch?
But just then my cell phone vibrates once against my thigh, and a nightmarish ice-water feeling floods my chest: I am certain that I am being notified of Mazoch's undeath. As I dig into my pocket and withdraw the phone, I brace myself for the sight of the display screen⦠only to see, however, that Mazoch himself has texted me. Same time tomorrow, he wants to know? There
on my cell phone is his name and his number, the message stamped at this very minute. But is it really possible? Mazoch, delivered like that from undeath? Suddenly becoming
not
that silhouetteâas irrevocably
not it
as the ibis that's just launched from the cypress branch is not a plastic bag?
I text backânot âThank God you're alive'âbut the letter âY.' And when Rachel asks me who it was, I simply say, âMazoch,' as if this weren't in itself a miracle to be savored.
FRIDAY
IT'S FIVE P.M., THE END OF A LONG DAY. AFTER waiting all morning in Denham, we've spent the past several hoursâas on other Fridaysâvisiting quarantines. Now we're at the last on our list: the levee.
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There is nowhere else to look. At
the base of the embankment, where the canted concrete yields to the yellow-grassed riverbank, Matt stands beside me with the binoculars, peering across the Mississippi. There are three barges moored on the opposite shore, each crammed to capacity with undead.
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The barges must be thirty yards away, but even from here I can distinguish the fence of chain-link that has been erected around each boat's perimeter, a barbwire barrier rising head-high and hazing the air with grayness. Standing behind the chain-link, boxed in on each bed, are what look to be two hundred undead silhouettes, packed shoulder to shoulder and wall to wall. Each barge resembles a little chunk of prison yard: the silver fence
and the tense inmates. Presiding over these prison ships is a single police officer at the top of the levee, stationed in a glass guard booth on the slope directly behind us. The sun is hovering high overhead, spangling the muddy river water densely. That clouded current, purling south, is broad and brown, and where the light flecks it it looks nebular somehow, but fetid, like a diarrheal Milky Way. Indeed, so massive and cosmic is the Mississippi that the boats on it seem toylike. And at the sight of them it hits meâviscerally, as if for the first timeâthat obviously these infected cannot stay here: they will need to disembark before hurricane season.