was, the great and terrible ten, slamming me again and again as I lay still and alone in my
bed staring at the ceiling, the waves tossing me against the rocks then pulling me back out
to sea so they could launch me again into the jagged face of the cliff, leaving me floating
faceup
on the water, undrowned.
Finally I did call him. His phone rang five times and then went to voice mail.
“You’ve reached the voice mail of Augustus Waters,” he said, the clarion voice I’d fallen
for. “Leave a message.” It beeped. The dead air on the line was so eerie. I just wanted to
go back to that secret post-terrestrial third space with him that we visited when we talked
on the phone. I waited for that feeling, but it never came: The dead air on the line was no
comfort, and finally I hung up.
I got my laptop out from under the bed and fired it up and went onto his wall page,
where already the condolences were flooding in. The most recent one said:
I love you, bro. See you on the other side.
. . . Written by someone I’d never heard of. In fact, almost all the wall posts, which arrived
nearly as fast as I could read them, were written by people I’d never met and whom he’d
never spoken about, people who were extolling his various
virtues now that he was dead,
even though I knew for a fact they hadn’t seen him in months and had made no effort to
visit him. I wondered if my wall would look like this if I died, or if I’d been out of school
and life long enough to escape widespread memorialization.
I kept reading.
I miss you already, bro.
I love you, Augustus. God bless and keep you.
You’ll live forever in our hearts, big man.
(That particularly galled me, because it implied the immortality of those left behind: You
will live forever in my memory, because I will live forever! I AM YOUR GOD NOW,
DEAD BOY! I OWN YOU! Thinking you won’t die is yet another side effect of dying.)
You were always such a great friend I’m sorry I didn’t see more of you after you left
school, bro. I bet you’re already playing ball in heaven.
I imagined the Augustus Waters analysis of that comment: If I am playing basketball in
heaven, does that imply a physical location of a heaven containing physical basketballs?
Who makes the basketballs in question? Are there less fortunate souls in heaven who work
in a celestial basketball factory so that I can play? Or did
an omnipotent God create the
basketballs out of the vacuum of space? Is this heaven in some kind of unobservable
universe where the laws of physics don’t apply, and if so, why in the hell would I be
playing basketball when I could be flying or reading or looking at beautiful people or
something else I actually enjoy? It’s almost as if the way you imagine my dead self says
more about you than it says about either the person I was or the whatever I am now.
His parents called around noon to say the funeral would be in five days, on Saturday. I
pictured a church packed with people who thought he liked basketball, and I wanted to
puke, but I knew I had to go, since I was speaking and everything. When I hung up, I went
back to reading his wall:
Just heard that Gus Waters died after a lengthy battle with cancer. Rest in peace,
buddy.
I knew these
people were genuinely sad, and that I wasn’t really mad at them. I was mad
at the universe. Even so, it infuriated me: You get all these friends just when you don’t
need friends anymore. I wrote a reply to his comment:
We live in a universe devoted to the creation, and eradication, of awareness.
Augustus Waters did not die after a lengthy battle with cancer. He died after a lengthy
battle with human consciousness, a victim—as you will be—of the universe’s need to
make and unmake all that is possible.
I posted it and waited for someone to reply, refreshing over and over again. Nothing. My
comment got lost in the blizzard of new posts. Everyone was going to miss him so much.
Everyone was praying for his family. I remembered Van Houten’s letter: Writing does not
resurrect. It buries.
* * *
After a while, I went out into the living room to sit with my parents and watch TV. I
couldn’t tell you what the show was, but at some point, my mom said, “Hazel, what can
we do for you?”
And I just shook my head. I started crying again.
“What can we do?” Mom asked again.
I shrugged.
But she kept asking, as if there were something she could do,
until finally I just kind
of crawled across the couch into her lap and my dad came over and held my legs really
tight and I wrapped my arms all the way around my mom’s middle and they held on to me