To Be Horst The man stood in the cafe’s
doorway staring openly and with no expectation of recompense at a girl who
sat three paces away from him. His monochrome, leonine face, bracketed between
curly hair and beard of that shade called red only because it is not what is
usually called brown, was covered so contiguously with freckles that the
places where flesh tones broke through were the real freckles. It was a face
puzzled, stymied, suddenly decisive, wrongly decisive: a face full of error,
of error simple and compound, error seen and missed, error mourned and error
dreaded, error unerased. A single heavy Cyclopean eyebrow bore down on his
eyes like a frown. He wore a collection of baggy, bulbous, but untorn plaids;
he had a regular table in the window of the café where he would sit for
hours, never reading. Nobody who worked there had ever seen him with anybody. The girl, about twenty,
raised to him a well-arranged and blank white face. The man pointed to his
sternum and lofted that bar over his eyes as high as it would go. Pushing
against the thick brunt of shock, he began toward her in small slow steps,
anxious not to disturb whatever delicate balance in the atmosphere made
pretty girls look back at him today. "Are you Horst?"
she asked him. "Horst?" He
squeezed out the word on a long exhalation, an exhaustion: his chest caved,
his shoulders folded in around it, and his clothes seemed to loosen as he
shrank inside them. "No, I’m not Horst," he said, almost inaudibly.
"But I’d like to be." His hand fell away from his
chest, as if it could no longer resist the pull of gravity; he broke at the
waist and sagged into a chair. From there, ten feet away, he watched the girl
steadily, his fingers spreading and contracting on the marble tabletop.
Presently a man came in, introduced himself to the girl, and sat down with
her. Horst was a striking young
man with dark brown hair, tanned olive skin and blue eyes. In or around the
eyes was a weary ease that did not change when he saw the girl: he knew — approached
her with the knowledge — that he could have her if he cared to. The eyes said
Hello, I am tired, Try to wake me up, I may be awakening, No, I am sorry,
You tried, It is me, I cannot feel, I am a wanderer, Hello, I am tired, Try
to wake me up. The red-haired man’s eyes
moved from the girl to Horst, and did not move from Horst. He was imagining
what it might be like to be Horst. He could taste the drink that Horst drank,
could see what Horst saw, breathe the air Horst breathed. He had forgotten
entirely about the girl: she was merely a Horst-induced mirage; a
manifestation, a byproduct, a proof of Horstness in a universe of
Horstlessness; she was just one of many things that would happen to him in a
life, the life ahead of him, of being Horst. Horst was the answer; the girl
had been only the question. He stared inquisitively, to penetrate the mystery
of being Horst; acquisitively, to wrench from Horst all of the Horstian
secrets; he stared as if receiving an encrypted radio signal, as if this
stare, so close by, could not possibly intrude upon the privacy of Horst, as
if Horst, returning the stare, would look only into a mirror. Horst into Horst equals
Horst: something seemed to take hold of his nose, jerk it Horstward;
something gently pinched the skin around his eyes into small weary crinkles.
He held himself absolutely still as a sort of carbonation foamed up along the
surface of the table and etched new whorls and eddies into his fingerprints.
As his eyes changed, a smile stole into them. Soon now, very soon, the
admirers would begin to come. |