
eBook - ePub
Tomorrow
A captivating and provocative novel from an Arthur C. Clarke award-winning author
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Tomorrow
A captivating and provocative novel from an Arthur C. Clarke award-winning author
About this book
The fascinating new novel f rom Chris Beckett, the Arthur C. Clarke award-winning author. 'Tomorrow I'm going to begin my novel... ' A would-be author has taken time out from life in the city to live in a cabin by a river and write a novel. And not just any novel. A novel that will avoid all the pitfalls and limitations of other novels, a novel that will include everything. At first these new surroundings are so idyllic that it's hard to find the motivation to get started. And then, in all its brutality, the outside world intervenes... Ranging constantly backwards and forwards in time and space, Tomorrow becomes a restless search for meaning in a precarious and elusive world.
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Yes, you can access Tomorrow by Chris Beckett in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literature General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
1 THE RIVER
Tomorrow Iām going to begin my novel. Thatās what I came here for. Thatās why I gave up my job and my apartment in the city. I was going to make up a story. There were going to be lots of imaginary people in it, and a beautiful wide green river ā this river thatās in front of me now, with its soft, cool, almost oily skin ā and people would come in boats, like new cards dealt from a pack. It was going to be . . . But why am I saying āwasā? It is going to be like life, a microcosm of life, but more alive than actual life, so that people can read it and think to themselves, āOf course, this is what life really is, and how wonderful this author must be to be able to see all that and communicate it to us.ā
Tomorrow, then. Or if not tomorrow, then next week or, at the very latest, before the end of the month. I ought to get on with it, if only to avoid looking foolish when I return to the city empty-handed, but I have to admit that right now I find it hard to care about the opinion of my family and friends. Thatās for another me to deal with. (The barriers we build between our present and future selves are important, I feel, just like the barriers we build between ourselves and others. Infinite empathy would be as bleak as no empathy at all.) And as to those imagined readers who are going to admire me . . . well . . . the truth is, isnāt it, that Iām a fraud? What do I know about what life really is? What purpose is served by seeking the endorsement of people who donāt know me, for an idea of myself that I know to be unreal?
But still. Tomorrow. Or next week, or certainly the week after, Iāll make a start.
As the afternoon begins to cool and the swallows start to hunt over the water, I like to take a dip. It invigorates me. On my second day here I swam across to the opposite bank but the river is nearly half a kilometre wide, the current is challenging out in the middle and there were a few minutes there on the way back where I felt Iād lost control. So this evening I swim upriver. I watch the swallows on the way out and the bats in the dusk as the current carries me back. I turn round at a spot where a side channel flows in from a hot spring and thereās a warm and steamy patch in the water.
When I return, I haul myself out by the big tree that grows right next to the cabin. Its leaves are the size of dinner plates, and its roots divide and divide again until they become strands as fine as human hair, bright red in colour, and spread out in the water to feed. I take a bottle of beer from the plastic crate I keep suspended in the river and sit on my veranda to watch the yellow moon as it rises from behind the trees on the far bank.
I have spent many hours on that veranda with its pleasant smell of river and sun-warmed wood. In fact, Iāve sometimes passed entire days there, just watching the water go by, the little dents and gradations on its surface, the bits of branch that drift down, the birds that cross from one side to the other, carrying nest materials or food. A few times a day, local people pass in their small boats, staring in at me, waiting for me to greet them before allowing themselves to wave or smile. Sometimes I smoke some weed ā thereās a plentiful supply in the overgrown plot behind my cabin ā and from time to time I drink a beer, but most of the time Iām happy just to sit.
Because I do feel alive. This is what life is really like. This is what I so badly wanted to experience, even just in that extraordinarily remote, vicarious and fetishistic kind of way that consists of evoking it in my novel and then being told by others that I have created a vivid world for them. So why would I want to turn away from experiencing it directly, in order to stare at a white page and try to cover it with heavy, clumsy words? I imagine some gaunt starving man ā why a man, though, and not a woman? ā I imagine some gaunt starving woman laboriously writing out a fantasy for other people about a feast that would satisfy her hunger and theirs, while ignoring the large and delicious meal thatās been laid out right in front of her.
That image makes me laugh.
There is no road to my wooden cabin. In these parts the river is the road. Today, Friday, as I do every Friday, I start up the outboard motor on my little boat and set off on the twelve-kilometre trip downriver to the modest-sized provincial seat. Thereās a kind of beach there where you can drag your boat out of the water. A tough-looking woman called Dido presides over the place with her three sons. She has one blind eye like a boiled egg. The other eye darts about, ensuring that nothing, however small, happens on her beach without her consent. She and her boys will watch over your boat for you for a small fee. I bought mine from her when I first arrived, fresh off the plane, unloading my cases and my box of provisions from the taxi, looking forward to seeing, for the very first time, my writing retreat up the river.
The townās main business is the onward shipment of products from the surrounding forest: latex, timber and certain minerals. Just downstream from Didoās beach the river turns sharply right to head east towards the sea, and there are docks with cranes to load and unload the barges that come up from the coast. The town has four banks, a produce market, a supermarket of sorts and (surprisingly) a fine, if modest-sized, cathedral in the Manueline style that would grace a much larger and more important city, and which makes me think, when I go inside, of a kind of coral, as if all of these elaborate columns and arches were the secretions of some sort of highly specialized polyp whose particular characteristic is that it quite naturally forms representations of . . . well . . . of something I vaguely feel I remember, as if from another life, or from that early period of childhood that everyone says they canāt recall. (I think myself the truth is quite the opposite: we remember our experience of that time so well and so thoroughly that we just donāt recognize it as a memory at all, but rather as the surface on to which all our subsequent experience is projected.)
A few streets from the cathedral there is a rather pleasant colonnaded promenade built more than two centuries later in the same pinkish, coral-like stone. Arranged in an elongated circuit like a Roman hippodrome, around a row of five fountains, the promenade was bequeathed to the city by a rubber millionaire who, having made himself rich by forcing indentured labourers to harvest latex for him for almost no pay at all, wished in his later years to be thought of as a good man, and so, along with a hospital and an orphanage, built this central meeting place that brings the whole town together. Some are inclined to sneer at the motives of a man like that. I am more cautious. Weāre all hypocrites. A common way of dealing with that is to loudly denounce the hypocrisy of others to distract attention from oneās own, but isnāt that hypocrisy squared?
In the middle of the central fountain stands a twice life-sized statue, not of the rubber millionaire, but of his friend, hunting partner and hero, the novelist Mago Barca, wearing what purports to be āCarthaginianā armour, and staring boldly into the distance. The inscription below it comes from his novel, Atlantis Rises:
The Upper River is our nationās heart.
Master it, and we will master the world.
Large numbers of townspeople like to parade around this promenade in the cool of the evening wearing their best clothes. Others sit outside cafĆ©s watching them while small bats swoop and dive around the streetlamps. I have a friend called Amanda I sometimes meet here ā we have a drink together, spend the night in her small apartment just up the road and return to the promenade in the morning to have breakfast in our favourite cafĆ© ā but today I buy what I need and, stopping only for a coffee and a pastry, return upriver at the end of the afternoon.
Itās dark by the time I get back, but I keep a small blue light on the veranda to guide me to my mooring, its battery charged by sunlight during the day. When, after travelling for some while among dark, silent trees, I see it on the right-hand bank in the distance, a kind of happiness rises inside my heart that I feel I never experienced before I came here. This is what it feels like to come home.
Itās only in the middle of the night that I worry about the precarity of my situation. Sometimes ā and this was particularly the case in the first week or two ā the thought that haunts me is that Iām all alone, and that at any point robbers, or guerrillas from any one of the dozen ragtag armies of the insurrection, or just impoverished locals with every reason to resent someone who has enough spare cash to take six months away from work, could arrive and do what they wanted with me. I lie and listen to the creaks and groans of my wooden cabin and the sound of the water, imagining small changes and odd silences, and piecing these together into very precise and specific images of enemies creeping towards me.
These days what haunts me more often when I wake at 2 a.m. is the thought that soon Iāll have spent all my money, and then my time by the river will be over, and Iāll have to return to the city and my old life, having not only failed to do anything constructive about building a new one, but having blown all the savings that I set aside for that purpose ā and all of this will just be a small and shrinking memory, which, after a time, I will have to stop talking about to avoid boring people, but which I will idealize and fetishize for the rest of my life until nothing of the real experience is left, only a sense of a door, now beyond my reach, that I could have opened once but didnāt. Iām already thirty-four, after all.
I can sometimes lie awake like this for several hours, appalled by my own lack of responsibility, yet in the morning I shrug it all off without the slightest effort. For surely the matter is quite straightforward. If you have a choice between writing a novel and being a character in a novel, youāve got to choose the latter, havent you?
A character in a novel. Thatās exactly what I feel like. Smiling to myself, I make a pot of coffee and carry it out to the veranda.
When she brings me my slops in the morning, Guinevere squats down beside my cage, her machine gun across her knees, and clears her throat. āSo, are you keeping well?ā she asks gruffly.
It strikes me that, in spite of herself, she likes me, or at least finds my company more diverting than the very limited alternatives. (The truth is that my captors are almost as much prisoners as I am, forced to hide away underground in order to avoid detection by government helicopters. The only difference is, I am confined to a cage, and they have the slightly larger area of the cave floor in which to move.)
Yes, Guinevere likes me. She wouldnāt admit it, even to herself, but she finds my company more congenial than that of her comrades. We certainly have more in common than either of us has with any of them. She talks, as I do, with the unmistakable accent of the educated professional classes of the capital. The rest of them are unschooled peasants, fighting not for a principle but for themselves.
āSo you came upriver to find yourself and write a novel.ā
āThat was the plan.ā
āHow very middle class.ā
āWhat do you mean by that?ā
āThis whole āfind yourselfā thing, this idea that there is something virtuous about expending surplus wealth on something so self-centred and indulgent. And then writing a book, no doubt celebrating that same self-indulgence for the benefit of others, while secretly hoping it will be a bestseller ā youāll deny this, but I bet you were ā so you can get rich and be famous and live even more comfortably on the back of a book about giving up comfort and wealth for the āauthentic lifeā.ā She offered those last two words as if with tweezers. āThatās the middle classes all over. You not only have to be more comfortable than ninety-five per cent of the people on Earth, you have to be self-righteous about it, too.ā
I shrug. āWhatever you say. Iām the one in the cage. Youāre the one with the gun.ā
The cage is lined with chicken wire, nailed to a wooden frame. I can just stand up in it, though my head touches the wire above me, and I can just lie down. Theyāve given me an old mattress, a blanket, a plastic bucket and a tin mug. Once or twice a day, they let me out to walk up and down the cave under supervision. Thereās no daylight, obviously. Weāre deep underground, and the only light comes from the gas lamp they keep burning all the time about ten metres away from me in the direction of the cave mouth, surrounded by their sleeping bags and cooking things. But I can tell when itās evening because the bats wake up further down the cave and come rustling by a few metres above my head as they set off for the world outside. A few hours later they return. About then my captors settle down and fall silent, except for the periodic changing of the guard at the cave mouth.
āYou can say what you like to me,ā Guinevere says. āYou know that perfectly well.ā
āOkay, I will. I think youāre every bit as middle class and self-indulgent as I am.ā
As I intended, this riles her ā itās the one bit of power I still have ā but she doesnāt want to show it. In the gaslight that comes from further up the cave, I can see the struggle in her face.
āOh?ā she says, with careful indifference. āSo how do you work that out? Iāve given up my family, my career, my rights as a free citizen, all for the struggle.ā
āIt must feel amazing to know that you are completely free of responsibility for any of the evils of the world.ā
She studies my face through the chicken wire and, after several seconds ā I can see the moment when it happens ā she makes a decision to ignore my sarcasm. āIt feels good to be fighting for a better tomorrow, yes. You should try it sometime.ā
āBut canāt you see that āfighting for a better tomorrowā is a performance for your own benefit, no more and no less than my āfinding myselfā? Your little group wonāt change the world. Come on, you know that. You must know that! Name me one guerrilla group like yours that didnāt in the long run either disappear or become a criminal gang, or, in very rare cases, make itself into the government and sink into tyranny and corruption, like every other government.ā
āTry saying that to Carlo.ā
Carlo was the leader of their little group.
āOf course I wouldnāt say it to Carlo. Heād get angry, and he might have me taken out and beaten.ā
āCarlo has every reason to be angry. ...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- 1 The River
- 2 The City
- 3 The Tower
- Acknowledgments