Authors: Georges Perec
micron by micron, angstrom by angstrom,
start to grow.
Ignorant
of what his son was up to, Augustus was still playing and would
go on doing so till nightfall; but not for an instant did Haig
abandon his scrutiny of that fascinating dust-cloth, staring at it,
or at a portion of it, as if in a condition of hypnosis; and noting,
as soon as Augustus, running out of inspiration at last, brought
his Dvorakiana to a conclusion with a jarringly atonal chord, that
it now had, not 25, but 26 blank points, an additional point
having burst forth, first as an aura, not so much a point as a hint
of a point, and finally as a rash of whitish grains.
"Papa!" says Haig in a cry of anguish.
"Why, what is it, my boy?" asks Augustus, staring at him.
"Look! Look at that, will you! A Blank inscription on a Billiard
Board!"
"What?" Augustus jumps off his stool. "A Blank on a
Billboard?"
"No, no! A billiard board, on its rim - look, that inscription!"
Crouching to focus on it, his brow knotting, Augustus mur-
murs, softly, dully, "Again! Again! Again!"
"What's wrong?" asks Haig, starting to worry at how livid his
papa is turning.
"You and I must fly, my boy, both of us, right now, straight-
away - pronto!"
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10
In which you will find a carp scornfully turning down
a halva fit for a king
Augustus finally thought to acquaint his son of his curious situ-
ation. I was on hand during this discussion.
"Till now I said nothing at all to you about a puzzling con-
undrum accompanying your apparition at Azincourt. Today, if
only I could, I would inform you of just what kind of a Dam-
nation it is that has both of us now in its claws. But a Law (a Law,
my boy, unfamiliar to you) would punish any such injudicious
admission on my part. Nobody, not I, not anybody, would wish
to broadcast that flimsy truth, that X, that minimal unknown
quantity, that total taboo, that is transforming - ab ovo, so to
say — all our talk into poppycock and driving all our actions to
distraction. All of us know of this anonymous abomination that
acts upon us without any of us knowing just how it acts upon
us, all of us know, alas, that, by continually barring our path,
continually obliging us to adopt unidiomatic circumlocutions,
roundabout ways of saying things and dubiously woolly abstrac-
tions, continually damning us to a bogus philosophy and its just
as bogus spiritual comfort, a 'comfort' stifling all our crying and
sighing, sobbing and blubbing - all of us know, as I say, that a
wall far too high for any of us to surmount is now imprisoning
us for good and a malignant wrath is thwarting all our approxima-
tions of that missing sign - quixotic approximations born out of
a natural wish to grasp such an amorphous immaculation in our
hands. So, Haig, my boy, you must know that, from this day
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on, as in a not too distant past, Thanatos is in our midst, prowling
all around Azincourt.
' T o start with," said Augustus, "I was optimistic about saving
you from that inhuman fatality to which I was bound hand and
foot. But I know now that I can do nothing for you, nothing.
Thus you must go - for what a miscalculation you would commit,
and I would commit, if, risking your all, you had a notion of
staying on in Azincourt. No, my boy, go you must, and by
nightfall!"
Instandy dismissing this proposition as absurd, and unworthy
of a Clifford, Haig said that his "motivation" was unconvincing
and most probably phony and that Augustus was simply trying
to do away with his son!
Oh, poor Douglas was in a sorry condition, almost touchingly
so. "What! You, too, my own blood! Don't think I don't know
what you want - you want to find my body in a ditch, don't
you? God, I was so trusting, I put my faith in you, I would look
up to you with a truly filial admiration - and now I find you
hatching a plot against your own son — a plot as brutal as it's
stupid! And so goddamn obvious it wouldn't fool a child! Don't
you know what candour is? If you truly want to abandon your
own offspring, cry, shout, pull his hair out if you must, but don't
try to justify your cowardly act with such an idiotic alibi!"
"My boy," said Augustus with a groan, profoundly hurt by
such an insulting slight on his honour and probity. But his words
got lost in an uncontrollably loud burst of sobbing.
That night I found out from him that it was his wish to blurt it
all out - that Augustus, in short, if only for an instant, was willing
to inform Haig of his status as a bastard, inform him of Zahir,
of Othon Lippmann, and of Tryphiodorus in his grubby smock,
and of his lustral baths, and so on, and on. But that took guts,
and his valour would finally fail him.
Without saying a word, Haig took a long, last look at his papa;
and, making an abrupt U-turn, ran off out of his sight.
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I had to know if Augustus, who stood stock still through all
of this, was going to call him back - or if I should.
"No." It was almost his last word on this unusual family drama.
"Drop it, Squaw. Haig
must
go - thus Haig
will
go."
"And if Haig won't go?"
"Too bad - it's curtains for all of us!"
All that night Haig would go pacing upstairs and downstairs,
along this corridor and that, into this room and out of that,
through library and study, attic and pantry. Till, finally, at dawn,
Augustus and I (spying on him, I admit) saw him go out, sporting
a woolly cardigan and a thick parka and carrying a small bag in
his hand.
First strolling around Azincourt's grounds, Haig found his way
at last to Jonah's pond, stood thoughtfully for an instant on its
rim and got down on all fours, whisding as follows
which was obviously a signal, as Jonah instandy swam up to join
him. Haig had a long talk with his carp, if I may put it that way,
whilst flipping an occasional pudding crumb at it - crumbs idly
ground up in his hand just as you might grind flour.
And at that point, noisily slamming Azincourt's wrought-iron
portals, and without so much as a last backward look at his papa,
or at yours truly, Haig slowly shrank out of sight. . .
Not out of mind, though. Not knowing his son's location or
situation was driving Augustus crazy. Nor did Haig's carp swim
up if any of us thought to approach its pool, murmuring, "Jonah
. . . Jonah . . ." Augustus and I had hit rock bottom.
Until, that August (this was in March), a postman, knocking
at our door, brought us a most curious communication. Slicing
its top with a pair of scissors, Augustus's initial instinct was to
find out who it was from.
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"Hmm. Anton Vowl? Do you know of any such individual?"
"No . . . I can't say as I do."
"Nor I. But this Vowl claims to know all about us. Look at
this."
My Lord,
In April I ran into Douglas Haig Clifford on about six
occasions. Having found out, fortuitously, about his taking flight
from Azincourt, giving you no hint as to his comings and
goings, I thought it my duty to furnish you with a handful of
indications which - such, anyway, is my wish - may aid in
mitigating your all too natural anguish.
On his initial arrival in Paris, Douglas's conduct wasn't
at all, I'm afraid, what you would call morally uplifting:
crawling from bar to bar, from clip joint to clip joint, usually
hanging out with a trio of individuals from a notoriously
slummy, insalubrious part of town - infamous blackguards,
outlaws as unafraid of man as of God, with a long and bloody
history of criminal activity. As if finding an almost diabolic
fascination, a sort of kinky charm, in corruption, your son
took part in hold-ups from which all profits would go to his
unscrupulous pals. It almost brought about his downfall: caught
with his hand rummaging in a lady's bag, Douglas's boss, his
Fagin, if you wish, was run in and would languish for many
months in prison.
A poltroon if not a coward, anyway a bit of a milksop,
your son saw a distinct possibility of his also rotting in jail, a
possibility that wasn't at all to his liking. So, moving out of
that casbah of corrupt cops and cutthroat crooks, Douglas took
a maid's room on Boul'Mich. It didn't boast all mod. cons, but
it had a kind of comfort that was, shall I say, succinct. I don't
know what his bank account was at this point or just how such
a capital had grown. Douglas didn't own a car, but ran up
a colossal bill at his tailor's. His famous sports shirt - which
had, as its "mascot", not an alligator but a tiny portrait of
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Djougachvili - was, as soon as worn, familiar and
ultra-familiar from Parish Quai Conti to its Club 13, from
Pont Sully to Lipp. In addition, Douglas would follow fashions
maniacally, going to talks by McLuhan on sociology, Lacan on
psychoanalysis and Foucault on philosophy, going to films by
Godard, Truffaut and Chabrol, plays by Anouilh, Giraudoux
and Duras.
All this was to last a month at most, until Douglas,
without a sou, saw that things had got out of hand, that his
riotous high-living was taking its toll, that his physical
constitution was going to pot and that his companions thought
of him as a promiscuous good-for-nothing.
It was at that point that, with his customary brio, your
son took as a political goal - a goal just as transitory as it was
radical - that of transforming his country's social status quo
by abolishing Capital and outlawing Profit. Douglas was a
militant in an "ultra-Albanian" (sic) party which, drawing
practically all of its inspiration from a talk by Hoxha in
Shkodra (or, traditionally, Scutari) about four months ago,
would attack, without discrimination, official Communist
policy and unofficial Maoist ravings. This ultra-Albanian
party, though, didn't last too long. To his chagrin, it took
only six days for it to split up.
At that junction it would dawn on him that, in his
childhood, his papa - you, in short - had casually said to him,
"You know, Albinoni's adagio was so comforting to us at cousin
Gaston's burial", and that a basic motivation for having sown
so many wild oats was to damp down what you might call his
subliminal ambition, his truly instinctual goal, in this world -
singing!
And, my, did your son work hard at music from that
point on! It took him just a month to sign up for a class at
Paris's famous Schola Cantorum, which, I must say, was
mightily struck by his gifts.
Today Douglas is living, if you can call it living, in a
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tiny, spartan studio flat, six rond-point du Commandant
Nobody.
Thus, straying but an instant from a straight-and-
narrow path, your son is now assiduously pursuing his
vocation.
This information will aid, I trust, in taking a load off
your mind, a load which, from that day on which Douglas took
to flight, has lain so painfully hard upon you.
Tours truly,
Anton Vowl
Without waiting, Augustus thought to forward to his son a sub-
stantial cash sum, dispatching with it a long communication - a
saga of sorts - that would amply justify his conduct. But nobody
would pick up his cash; and, wishing to find out why, both
anxious and suspicious, Augustus paid a visit not only to Paris's
main postal administration, which told him that no Douglas Haig
Clifford was living at six, rond-point du Commandant Nobody,
but also, naturally, to that Schola Cantorum at which Anton