- Douglas Adams
- HHGTTG 4 - So Long, And Thanks For All the Fish
- So_Long_and_Thanks_for_All_the__split_012.html
Chapter 7
is house was still there.
How or why, he had no idea, but he
had decided to go and have a look while he was waiting for the pub
to empty so that he could go and ask the landlord for a bed for the
night when everyone else had gone, and there it was.
He let himself in with a key he kept
under a stone frog in the garden, hurriedly because, astoundingly,
the phone was ringing.
He had heard it faintly all the way
up the lane and had started to run as soon as he realized where the
sound was coming from.
The door had to be forced open
because of the astonishing accumulation of junk mail on the
doormat. It jammed itself stuck on what he would later discover
were fourteen identical, personally addressed invitations to apply
for a credit card he already had, seventeen identical threatening
letters for nonpayment of bills on a credit card he didn’t have,
thirty-three identical letters saying that he personally had been
specially selected as a man of taste and discrimination who knew
what he wanted and where he was going in today’s sophisticated
jet-setting world and would he therefore like to buy some grotty
wallet, and also a dead tabby kitten.
He rammed himself through the
relatively narrow opening afforded by all this, stumbled through a
pile of wine offers that no discriminating connoisseur would want
to miss, slithered over a heap of beach villa holidays, blundered
up the dark stairs to his bedroom, and got to the phone just as it
stopped ringing.
He collapsed, panting, onto his cold,
musty-smelling bed and for a few minutes stopped trying to prevent
the world from spinning round his head in the way it obviously
wanted to.
When it had enjoyed its little spin
and had calmed down a bit, Arthur reached out for the bedside
light, not expecting it to come on. To his surprise it did. This
appealed to Arthur’s sense of logic. Since the Electricity Board
had cut him off without fail every time he paid his bill, it seemed
only reasonable that they should leave him connected when he
hadn’t. Sending them money obviously only drew attention to
himself.
The room was much as he had left it,
festeringly untidy, though the effect was muted a little by a thick
layer of dust. Half-read books and magazines nestled among piles of
half-used towels. Half-pairs of socks reclined in half-drunk cups
of coffee. What once had been a half-eaten sandwich had now
half-turned into something that Arthur didn’t entirely want to know
about. Bung a fork of lightning through this lot, he thought to
himself, and you’d start the evolution of life off all over
again.
There was only one thing in the room
that was different.
For a moment or so he couldn’t see
what the one thing that was different was, because it was too
covered in a film of disgusting dust. Then his eyes caught it and
stopped.
It was next to a battered old
television on which it was only possible to watch Open University
study courses, because if it tried to show anything more exciting
it would break down.
It was a box.
Arthur pushed himself up on his
elbows and peered at it.
It was a gray box, with a kind of
dull luster to it. It was a cubical gray box, just over a foot on
one side. It was tied with a single gray ribbon, knotted into a
neat bow on the top.
He got up, walked over, and touched
it in surprise. Whatever it was was clearly gift-wrapped, neatly
and beautifully, and was waiting for him to open it.
Cautiously, he picked it up and
carried it back to the bed. He brushed the dust off the top and
loosened the ribbon. The top of the box was a lid, with a flap
tucked into the body of the box.
He untucked it and looked into the
box. In it was a glass globe, nestling in fine gray tissue paper.
He drew it out, carefully. It wasn’t a proper globe because it was
open at the bottom, or, as Arthur realized, turning it over, at the
top, with a thick rim. It was a bowl. A fishbowl.
It was made of the most wonderful
glass, perfectly transparent, yet with an extraordinary silver-gray
quality as if crystal and slate had gone into its
making.
Arthur slowly turned it over and over
in his hands. It was one of the most beautiful objects he had ever
seen, but he was entirely perplexed by it. He looked into the box,
but other than the tissue paper there was nothing. On the outside
of the box there was nothing.
He turned the bowl round again. It
was wonderful. It was exquisite. But it was a
fishbowl.
He tapped it with his thumbnail and
it rang with a deep and glorious chime which was sustained for
longer than seemed possible and when at last it faded seemed not to
die away but to drift off into other worlds, as into a deep sea
dream.
Entranced, Arthur turned it round yet
again, and this time the light from the dusty little bedside lamp
caught it at a different angle and glittered on some fine abrasions
on the fishbowl’s surface. He held it up, adjusting the angle to
the light, and suddenly saw clearly the finely engraved shapes of
words shadowed on the glass.
“So Long,” they said, “and Thanks
…”
And that was all. He blinked, and
understood nothing.
For fully five more minutes he turned
the object around and around, held it to the light at different
angles, tapped it for its mesmerizing chime, and pondered on the
meaning of the shadowy letters but could find none. Finally he
stood up, filled the bowl with water from the tap, and put it back
on the table next to the television. He shook the little Babel fish
from his ear and dropped it, wriggling, into the bowl. He wouldn’t
be needing it anymore, except for watching foreign
movies.
He returned to lie on his bed, and
turned out the light.
He lay still and quiet. He absorbed
the enveloping darkness, slowly relaxed his limbs from end to end,
eased and regulated his breathing, gradually cleared his mind of
all thought, closed his eyes, and was completely incapable of
getting to sleep.
The night was uneasy with rain. The
rain clouds themselves had now moved on and were currently
concentrating their attention on a small café just outside
Bournemouth, but the sky through which they had passed had been
disturbed by them and now wore a damply ruffled air, as if it
didn’t know what else it might not do if further
provoked.
The moon was out in a watery way. It
looked like a ball of paper from the back pocket of jeans that have
just come out of the washing machine, which only time and ironing
would tell if it was an old shopping list or a five-pound
note.
The wind flicked about a little, like
the tail of a horse that’s trying to decide what sort of mood it’s
in tonight, and a bell somewhere chimed midnight.
A skylight creaked open.
It was stiff and had to be jiggled
and persuaded a little because the frame was slightly rotten and
the hinge had at some time in its life been rather sensibly painted
over, but eventually it was open.
A strut was found to prop it and a
figure struggled out into the narrow gully between the opposing
pitches of the roof.
The figure stood and watched the sky
in silence.
The figure was completely
unrecognizable as the wild-looking creature who had burst crazily
into the cottage a little over an hour ago. Gone was the ragged
threadbare dressing gown, smeared with the mud of a hundred worlds,
stained with junk food condiment from a hundred grimy spaceports,
gone was the tangled mane of hair, gone the long and knotted beard,
flourishing ecostructure and all.
Instead, there was Arthur Dent,
smooth and casual in corduroys and a bulky sweater. His hair was
cropped and washed, his chin clean-shaven. Only the eyes still said
that whatever it was the Universe thought it was doing to him, he
would still like it please to stop.
They were not the same eyes with
which he had last looked out at this particular scene, and the
brain which interpreted the images the eyes resolved was not the
same brain. There had been no surgery involved, just the continual
wrenching of experience.
The night seemed like an alive thing
to him at this moment, the dark Earth around him a being in which
he was rooted.
He could feel like a tingle on
distant nerve ends the flood of a far river, the roll of invisible
hills, the knot of heavy rain clouds parked somewhere away to the
south.
He could sense, too, the thrill of
being a tree, which was something he hadn’t expected. He knew that
it felt good to curl your toes in the earth, but he’d never
realized it could feel quite as good as that. He could sense an
almost unseemly wave of pleasure reaching at him all the way from
the New Forest. He must try this summer, he thought, to see what
having leaves felt like.
From another direction he felt the
sensation of being a sheep startled by a flying saucer, but it was
virtually indistinguishable from the feeling of being a sheep
startled by anything else it ever encountered, for they were
creatures who learned very little on their journey through life,
and would be startled to see the sun rising in the morning, and
astonished by all the green stuff in the fields.
He was surprised to find he could
feel the sheep being startled by the sun that morning, and the
morning before, and being startled by a clump of trees the day
before that. He could go further and further back, but it got dull
because all it consisted of was sheep being startled by things
they’d been startled by the day before.
He left the sheep and let his mind
drift outward sleepily in developing ripples. It felt the presence
of other minds, hundreds of them, thousands in a web, some sleepy,
some sleeping, some terribly excited, one fractured.
One fractured.
He passed it fleetingly and tried to
feel for it again, but it eluded him like the other card with an
apple on it in a memory course. He felt a spasm of excitement
because he knew instinctively who it was, or at least knew who it
was he wanted it to be, and once you know what it is you want to be
true, instinct is a very useful device for enabling you to know
that it is.
He instinctively knew that it was
Fenny and that he wanted to find her; but he could not. By
straining too much for it, he could feel he was losing this strange
new faculty, so he relaxed the search and let his mind wander
easily once more.
And again, he felt the
fracture.
Again he couldn’t find it. This time,
whatever his instincts were busy telling him it was all right to
believe, he wasn’t certain that it was Fenny—or perhaps it was a
different fracture this time. It had the same disjointed quality
but it seemed a more general feeling of fracture, deeper, not a
single mind, maybe not a mind at all. It was
different.
He let his mind sink slowly and
widely into the Earth, rippling, seeping, sinking.
He was following the Earth through
its days, drifting with the rhythms of its myriad pulses, seeping
through the webs of its life, swelling with its tides, turning with
its weight. Always the fracture kept returning, a dull disjointed
distant ache.
And now he was flying through a land
of light; the light was time, the tides of it were days receding.
The fracture he had sensed, the second fracture, lay in the
distance before him across the land, the thickness of a single hair
across the dreaming landscape of the days of Earth.
And suddenly he was upon
it.
He danced dizzily over the edge as
the dreamland dropped sheer away beneath him, a stupefying
precipice into nothing, him wildly twisting, clawing at nothing,
flailing in horrifying space, spinning, falling.
Across the jagged chasm had been
another land, another time, an older world, not fractured from, but
hardly joined: two Earths. He woke.
A cold breeze brushed the feverish
sweat standing on his forehead. The nightmare was spent and so, he
felt, was he. His shoulders drooped, he gently rubbed his eyes with
the tips of his fingers. At last he was sleepy as well as very
tired. As to what it meant, if it meant anything at all, he would
think about in the morning; for now he would go to bed and sleep.
His own bed, his own sleep.
He could see his house in the
distance and wondered why this was. It was silhouetted against the
moonlight and he recognized its rather dull blockish shape. He
looked about him and noticed that he was about eighteen inches
above the rosebushes of one of his neighbors, John Ainsworth. His
rosebushes were carefully tended, pruned back for the winter,
strapped to canes and labeled, and Arthur wondered what he was
doing above them. He wondered what was holding him there, and when
he discovered that nothing was holding him there he crashed
awkwardly to the ground.
He picked himself up, brushed himself
down, and hobbled back to his house on a sprained ankle. He
undressed and toppled into bed.
While he was asleep the phone rang
again. It rang for fully fifteen minutes and caused him to turn
over twice. It never, however, stood a chance of waking him
up.