13
Because it no longer mattered to him what
happened, Quinn was not surprised that the front door at 69th
Street opened without a key. Nor was he surprised when he reached
the ninth floor and walked down the corridor to the Stillmans’
apartment that that door should be open as well. Least of all did
it surprise him to find the apartment empty. The place had been
stripped bare, and the rooms now held nothing. Each one was
identical to every other: a wooden floor and four white walls. This
made no particular impression on Quinn. He was exhausted, and the
only thing he could think of was closing his eyes.
He went to one of the rooms at the back of the
apartment, a small space that measured no more than ten feet by six
feet. It had one wire-mesh window that gave on to a view of the
airshaft, and of all the rooms it seemed to be the darkest. Within
this room there was a second door, which led to a windowless
cubicle that contained a toilet and a sink. Quinn put the red
notebook on the floor, removed the deaf mute’s pen from his pocket,
and tossed it onto the red notebook. Then he took off his watch and
put it in his pocket. After that he took off all his clothes,
opened the window, and one by one dropped each thing down the
airshaft: first his right shoe, then his left shoe; one sock, then
the other sock; his shirt, his jacket, his underpants, his pants.
He did not look out to watch them fall, nor did he check to see
where they landed. Then he closed the window, lay down in the
center of the floor, and went to sleep.
It was dark in the room when he woke up. Quinn
could not be sure how much time had passed—whether it was the night
of that day or the night of the next. It was even possible,
he thought, that it was not night at all. Perhaps it was
merely dark inside the room, and outside, beyond the window, the
sun was shining. For several moments he considered getting up and
going to the window to see, but then he decided it did not matter.
If it was not night now, he thought, then night would come later.
That was certain, and whether he looked out the window or not, the
answer would be the same. On the other hand, if it was in fact
night here in New York, then surely the sun was shining somewhere
else. In China, for example, it was no doubt mid-afternoon, and the
rice farmers were mopping sweat from their brows. Night and day
were no more than relative terms; they did not refer to an absolute
condition. At any given moment, it was always both. The only reason
we did not know it was because we could not be in two places at the
same time.
Quinn also considered getting up and going to
another room, but then he realized that he was quite happy where he
was. It was comfortable here in the spot he had chosen, and he
found that he enjoyed lying on his back with his eyes open, looking
up at the ceiling—or what would have been the ceiling, had he been
able to see it. Only one thing was lacking for him, and that was
the sky. He realized that he missed having it overhead, after so
many days and nights spent in the open. But he was inside now, and
no matter what room he chose to camp in, the sky would remain
hidden, inaccessible even at the farthest limit of sight.
He thought he would stay there until he no longer
could. There would be water from the sink to quench his thirst, and
that would buy him some time. Eventually, he would get hungry and
have to eat. But he had been working for so long now at wanting so
little that he knew this moment was still several days off. He
decided not to think about it until he had to. There was no sense
in worrying, he thought, no sense in troubling himself with things
that did not matter.
He tried to think about the life he had lived
before the story began. This caused many difficulties, for it
seemed so remote to him now. He remembered the books he had written
under the name of William Wilson. It was strange, he thought, that
he had done that, and he wondered now why he had. In his
heart, he realized that Max Work was dead. He had died
somewhere on the way to his next case, and Quinn could not bring
himself to feel sorry. It all seemed so unimportant now. He thought
back to his desk and the thousands of words he had written there.
He thought back to the man who had been his agent and realized he
could not remember his name. So many things were disappearing now,
it was difficult to keep track of them. Quinn tried to work his way
through the Mets’ lineup, position by position, but his mind was
beginning to wander. The centerfielder, he remembered, was Mookie
Wilson, a promising young player whose real name was William
Wilson. Surely there was something interesting in that. Quinn
pursued the idea for a few moments but then abandoned it. The two
William Wilsons cancelled each other out, and that was all. Quinn
waved good-bye to them in his mind. The Mets would finish in last
place again, and no one would suffer.
The next time he woke up, the sun was shining in
the room. There was a tray of food beside him on the floor, the
dishes steaming with what looked like a roast beef dinner. Quinn
accepted this fact without protest. He was neither surprised nor
disturbed by it. Yes, he said to himself, it is perfectly possible
that food should have been left here for me. He was not curious to
know how or why this had taken place. It did not even occur to him
to leave the room to look through the rest of the apartment for an
answer. Rather, he examined the food on the tray more closely and
saw that in addition to two large slices of roast beef there were
seven little roast potatoes, a plate of asparagus, a fresh roll, a
salad, a carafe of red wine, and wedges of cheese and a pear for
dessert. There was a white linen napkin, and the silverware was of
the finest quality. Quinn ate the food—or half of it, which was as
much as he could manage.
After his meal, he began to write in the red
notebook. He continued writing until darkness returned to the room.
There was a small light fixture in the middle of the ceiling and a
switch for it by the door, but the thought of using it did not
appeal to Quinn. Not long after that he fell asleep again. When he
woke up, there was sunlight in the room and another tray
of food beside him on the floor. He ate what he could of the
food and then went back to writing in the red notebook.
For the most part his entries from this period
consisted of marginal questions concerning the Stillman case. Quinn
wondered, for example, why he had not bothered to look up the
newspaper reports of Stillman’s arrest in 1969. He examined the
problem of whether the moon landing of that same year had been
connected in any way with what had happened. He asked himself why
he had taken Auster’s word for it that Stillman was dead. He tried
to think about eggs and wrote out such phrases as “a good egg,”
“egg on his face,” “to lay an egg,” “to be as like as two eggs.” He
wondered what would have happened if he had followed the second
Stillman instead of the first. He asked himself why Christopher,
the patron saint of travel, had been decanonized by the Pope in
1969, just at the time of the trip to the moon. He thought through
the question of why Don Quixote had not simply wanted to write
books like the ones he loved— instead of living out their
adventures. He wondered why he had the same initials as Don
Quixote. He considered whether the girl who had moved into his
apartment was the same girl he had seen in Grand Central Station
reading his book. He wondered if Virginia Stillman had hired
another detective after he failed to get in touch with her. He
asked himself why he had taken Auster’s word for it that the check
had bounced. He thought about Peter Stillman and wondered if he had
ever slept in the room he was in now. He wondered if the case was
really over or if he was not somehow still working on it. He
wondered what the map would look like of all the steps he had taken
in his life and what word it would spell.
When it was dark, Quinn slept, and when it was
light he ate the food and wrote in the red notebook. He could never
be sure how much time passed during each interval, for he did not
concern himself with counting the days or the hours. It seemed to
him, however, that little by little the darkness had begun to win
out over the light, that whereas in the beginning there had been a
predominance of sunshine, the light had gradually become fainter
and more fleeting. At first, he attributed this to a change of
season. The equinox had surely passed already, and perhaps the
solstice was approaching. But even after winter had come and the
process should theoretically have started to reverse itself, Quinn
observed that the periods of dark nevertheless kept gaining on the
periods of light. It seemed to him that he had less and less time
to eat his food and write in the red notebook. Eventually, it
seemed to him that these periods had been reduced to a matter of
minutes. Once, for example, he finished his food and discovered
that there was only enough time to write three sentences in the red
notebook. The next time there was light, he could only manage two
sentences. He began to skip his meals in order to devote himself to
the red notebook, eating only when he felt he could no longer hold
out. But the time continued to diminish, and soon he was able to
eat no more than a bite or two before the darkness came back. He
did not think of turning on the electric light, for he had long ago
forgotten it was there.
This period of growing darkness coincided with
the dwindling of pages in the red notebook. Little by little, Quinn
was coming to the end. At a certain point, he realized that the
more he wrote, the sooner the time would come when he could no
longer write anything. He began to weigh his words with great care,
struggling to express himself as economically and clearly as
possible. He regretted having wasted so many pages at the beginning
of the red notebook, and in fact felt sorry that he had bothered to
write about the Stillman case at all. For the case was far behind
him now, and he no longer bothered to think about it. It had been a
bridge to another place in his life, and now that he had crossed
it, its meaning had been lost. Quinn no longer had any interest in
himself. He wrote about the stars, the earth, his hopes for
mankind. He felt that his words had been severed from him, that now
they were a part of the world at large, as real and specific as a
stone, or a lake, or a flower. They no longer had anything to do
with him. He remembered the moment of his birth and how he had been
pulled gently from his mother’s womb. He remembered the infinite
kindnesses of the world and all the people he had ever loved.
Nothing mattered now but the beauty of all this. He wanted to go on
writing about it, and it pained him to know that this would not
be possible. Nevertheless, he tried to face the end of the red
notebook with courage. He wondered if he had it in him to write
without a pen, if he could learn to speak instead, filling the
darkness with his voice, speaking the words into the air, into the
walls, into the city, even if the light never came back
again.
The last sentence of the red notebook reads:
“What will happen when there are no more pages in the red
notebook?”
At this point the story grows obscure. The
information has run out, and the events that follow this last
sentence will never be known. It would be foolish even to hazard a
guess.
I returned home from my trip to Africa in
February, just hours before a snowstorm began to fall on New York.
I called my friend Auster that evening, and he urged me to come
over to see him as soon as I could. There was something so
insistent in his voice that I dared not refuse, even though I was
exhausted.
At his apartment, Auster explained to me what
little he knew about Quinn, and then he went on to describe the
strange case he had accidentally become involved in. He had become
obsessed by it, he said, and he wanted my advice about what he
should do. Having heard him out, I began to feel angry that he had
treated Quinn with such indifference. I scolded him for not having
taken a greater part in events, for not having done something to
help a man who was so obviously in trouble.
Auster seemed to take my words to heart. In fact,
he said, that was why he had asked me over. He had been feeling
guilty and needed to unburden himself. He said that I was the only
person he could trust.
He had spent the last several months trying to
track down Quinn, but with no success. Quinn was no longer living
in his apartment, and all attempts to reach Virginia Stillman had
failed. It was then that I suggested that we take a look at the
Stillman apartment. Somehow, I had an intuition that this was where
Quinn had wound up.
We put on our coats, went outside, and took a cab
to East 69th Street. The snow had been falling for an hour, and
already the roads were treacherous. We had little trouble getting
into the building—slipping through the door with one of the
tenants who was just coming home. We went upstairs and found
the door to what had once been the Stillmans’ apartment. It was
unlocked. We stepped in cautiously and discovered a series of bare,
empty rooms. In a small room at the back, impeccably clean as all
the other rooms were, the red notebook was lying on the floor.
Auster picked it up, looked through it briefly, and said that it
was Quinn’s. Then he handed it to me and said that I should keep
it. The whole business had upset him so much that he was afraid to
keep it himself. I said that I would hold on to it until he was
ready to read it, but he shook his head and told me that he never
wanted to see it again. Then we left and walked out into the snow.
The city was entirely white now, and the snow kept falling, as
though it would never end.
As for Quinn, it is impossible for me to say
where he is now. I have followed the red notebook as closely as I
could, and any inaccuracies in the story should be blamed on me.
There were moments when the text was difficult to decipher, but I
have done my best with it and have refrained from any
interpretation. The red notebook, of course, is only half the
story, as any sensitive reader will understand. As for Auster, I am
convinced that he behaved badly throughout. If our friendship has
ended, he has only himself to blame. As for me, my thoughts remain
with Quinn. He will be with me always. And wherever he may have
disappeared to, I wish him luck.
(1981–1982)