Do you mind if I tell you about the day I had an idea for a novel?
But before I tell you that, I need to tell you a story about the
Shroud of Turin.
In the 15th century, as it happens, a scrap of molten silver landed
on the Shroud of Turin and ignited. A host of nuns dowsed it in water,
rushing to put it out, but even though most of the Shroud was saved,
the fire charred the edges, and because the shroud was folded, the
flames burned symmetrical patterns around the image of Jesus.
A few years ago, the artist Jeffrey Valance flew to Italy to study
the Shroud of Turin. The Catholic Church granted Mr. Valance six
months to study it.
He couldn’t stop looking at the fire-damaged areas. The patterns
entranced him. He saw faces–clown faces. (Look online at the Shroud
yourself. Those faces really do leer from the charcoaled, Rorschach
edges.) After his six months were up, he flew back to L.A. and painted
the Clowns of the Shroud of Turin and showed them. The Catholic
Church was outraged. Since medieval times, the Church considered
clowns to be demonic. Evil. How could Mr. Valance put clowns on
the fabric that cradled the body of their lord and savior? So they put
him on the Catholic watch list, a kind of enemies list.
Mr. Valance wrote them. He said: I did not put the clowns on the
Shroud of Turin. Think about this logically. Who, in the whole of creation,
would most like to burn an artifact of Jesus? The Devil. So the
Devil must have sent his hellfire to destroy the Shroud in the 15th century.
When the nuns thwarted him, the Devil scorched his image into
the Shroud as a final effort to deface it. I did not put clowns on the
Shroud of Turin, the Devil did. I only found them.
The Catholic Church was contrite. Of course, they said, that makes
complete sense, and took Mr. Valance off their list.
I was walking one morning, sweating in the sun, when I had an
idea: I should write a novel about the Shroud of Turin’s caretaker in
the 15th century, an Italian monk. In my novel, the clowns will talk
to him, tempt him, drive him crazy and make him doubt. Whether
the Devil really speaks through the clowns, or if the whole thing is in
the monk’s imagination I’ll leave unclear. The philosophy of Kierkegaard
will drive the monk’s actions, motivate him. The decision to join
a monastery, after all, is an intensely religious choice, a commitment
to a life devoted to God and his teachings. The clowns will tempt the
monk with the philosophy of Nietzsche, with his claim that religion
is fascist, with his attack on God. Nietzsche was an isolated person, so
the clowns will isolate the monk–and make him strange. The clowns
should be alluring and intelligent.
I thought these things–and I tell you about this day because no
one else will listen. Walking my neighborhood street, I thought these
things, when a screaming came around the corner.
A truck zeroed in on me, its dented body flitting up and down
on thick coils of suspension –a butterfly trapped in a jar fluttering for
oxygen or a breeze. The body found its center, adjusted to the abrupt
switch of momentum and squatted back on its hind wheels. It kicked
forward –the butterfly squeezing against the cold wall of the jar and
darting for the glass across, either to pierce through or pulp its head
into crunchy exoskeleton and juices.
I kept walking forward. I did not step aside.
The truck blipped its horn. As it zoomed closer the blips came rabid,
filled out, and merged into one solid blare which dopplered high in
pitch.
My head sagged.
On these morning walks, I usually begin in vigor, head held up,
back straight, arms swinging one two, full of purpose, like a chubby
kid looking to lose his belly fat. This morning I ambled. My chin bobbled
to my chest and I noticed the intricate shadows cast in the leaves,
twigs and branches that blocked the sun overhead. The shadows lifted
off the asphalt. Thick and slender, they stuck to my eyes, and the light
shafted through a few bright openings framed by black negatives of
leaves and branches.
I heard a T.V. through an open window, a woodpecker pecking at a
telephone pole, kids splashing in a pool, steady steps. Swallowed into
the background heat, they grayed away: the T.V. and kids, the static of
drumsticks on a high hat, the woodpecking a hollow tom and my feet
the resonate pluck of a twisted cord of a base.
I was itching.
I was hungry.
I was lonely.
No matter, I told myself. Keep my boxers riding up my thighs,
keep the chafing, keep the sweat, keep the itching. Body, you can have
them.
Draped on my eyes, the twig and branch shadows tilted. They penetrated
my skull. Humming in my brain, like squid-ink in ocean, the
shadows bloomed into twisting shrubs. Electric impulses no longer
shot through my muscles and fibers, but scampered along the leafy
twists and tangles, the hairpin turns of the mental shadows. They
zipped to dark clusters; the shocks burst ideas: a silversmith pounding
a candelabrum with a hammer, the fire in the furnace behind rushing
the high vaulted cellar, a pill of silver sailing away from the collision of
hammer and anvil into the dark, nestling in a fold of a shroud. It smoldered
and ignited.
Another illuminated clowns on a cloth: sentinels mocking the
layered hands and modest frame of Jesus Christ. Another illuminated
thoughts of research: the history of the Catholic Church, Italian
churches during the 15th century, Kierkegaard and Nietzsche.
Another bloomed breakfast: oatmeal and dates.
The truck shone heat. It looked massive. Done scampering in the
shadows, the electric impulses coalesced into a thick paste, sparks
dampened. They were trapped, so how could I step aside? But the
truck swerved leftwise, tilting and sinking low on its suspension. It
skidded. Thrash Metal, and the door opened.
Pale arms slung out, flexed and stretched; their hands popped into
fists. A leg hooked out of the door, and onto the side of the seat the
other leg swung. The Thrash Metal blew away. Hands fingered jeans.
The limbs tensed (a final jolt to clear away a dream) and bounced out
the red door, stringing a body behind them.
“You goddamn [something or other]!” he said.
The words drifted like soot sloughed on the air.
“Do you want to get some breakfast?” I said.
He walked and flung his arms around his head in sweeps. His chin
waggled, and his feet slipped over the asphalt.
“What in hell [blah blah blah blah blah]!” he said.
“I’ve got a great idea for a novel. I really want to talk to you about it.
But first, let’s get a bear claw or something.”
He said, “Fuck you [gobbledygook or something of the kind]!”
We could be sitting in a cafe sharing an apricot tart, I thought.
I told him, “Kierkegaard and Nietzsche go great with coffee and
breakfast.”
His nose was close, his skin grey and suggestive. He palmed my
ears and blasted my head with a pop. Under water jackhammers
pounded. My eyes watered as his eyes bulged with the barbed wire
fence enclosing Dachau, thin plowed dirt, gravel ringing brick and
wood warehouses, stinking with bodies, thin as matches on the floor,
as grey and white as the soot on the walls and the fire burning their
heads, ribs, eye-sockets, and hips. It crackled down my leg and tensed.
My underwear chevroned apart my thighs. Rocks, stuck firm, pressed
my belly. The wind rustled leaves. A kid screamed and splashed in a
pool. A woodpecker pecked. A butterfly fluttered. A clown laughed.
With a sleeve I wiped the red crisscrosses from my eyes, curled a knee,
rolled sideways away from the pain in my rib, shook my head, bent
slow at my hip, and stood to see the truck screaming red around the
corner.
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