Gore Vidal - Messiah

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Gore Vidal's satirical fantasy, with a new introduction by the author. From his long-time hiding-place in provincial Egypt, Eugene Luther tells the story of John Cave, a former Californian undertaker, his rise to power and the subsequent global impact of his new religion.

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Yet the creature was aborning that day: one seed had touched another and a monster began to live.

"The first day? The first time?" The smile faded. "Sure, I remember it. I'd just finished painting the face of a big dead fellow killed in an automobile accident. I didn't usually do make-up but I like to help out and I used to do odd jobs when somebody had too much to do and asked me to help; the painting isn't hard either and I always like it, though the faces are cold like… like…" He thought of no simile; he went on: "Anyway I looked at this guy's face and I remembered I'd seen him play basketball in high school. He was in a class or two behind me. Big athlete. Ringer, we called them… full of life… and here he was, with me powdering his face and combing his eyebrows. Usually you don't think much about the stiff (that's our professional word) one way or the other: it's just a job. But I thought about this one suddenly. I started to feel sorry for him, dead like that, so sudden, so young, so good-looking with all sorts of prospects; then I felt it." The voice grew low and precise. Iris and I listened intently, even the sun froze in the wild sky above the sea; the young night stumbled in the darkening east. His eyes on the sun, he described his sudden knowledge that it was the dead man who was right, who was a part of the whole, that the living were the sufferers from whom, temporarily, the beautiful darkness and non-being had been withdrawn and, in his crude way, Cave struck chord after chord of meaning and, though the notes were not in themselves new, the effect was all its own… and not entirely because of the voice, the cogency of this magician. No, the effect was achieved only in part through his ability to make one experience with him an occasion of light, of absolute knowing.

"And I knew it was the dying which was the better part," he finished. The sun, released, drowned in the Pacific.

In the darkness I asked, "But you, you still live?"

"Not because I want to," came the voice, soft as the night. "I must tell the others first. There'll be time for myself."

I shuddered in the warmth of the patio. My companions were only dim presences in the failing light. "Who told you to tell this to everyone?"

The answer came back, strong and unexpected: "I told myself. The responsibility is mine."

That was the sign for me. He had broken with his predecessors. He was on his own. He knew… and so did we.

2

I have lingered over that first meeting for, in it, was finally all that there was to come. Later details were the work of others, the exotic periphery to a simple but powerful center. Not until late that night did I leave the house near the beach. When I left, Cave stayed on and I wondered again, idly, if perhaps he was living there with Iris, if perhaps her interest in him might not be more complex than I had suspected. We parted casually and Iris walked me to the door while Cave remained inside, gazing in his intent way at nothing at all: daydreaming, doubtless, of what was to come.

"You'll help?" Iris stood by the car's open door, her features indistinct in the moonless night.

"I think so. I'm not sure, though, about the scale."

"What do you mean?"

"Must everyone know? Can't it just be kept to ourselves? for the few who do know him?"

"No. We must let them all hear him. Everyone." And her voice assumed that zealous tone which I was to hear so often again and again upon her lips and on those of others.

I made my first and last objection: "I don't see that quantity has much to do with it. If this thing spreads it will become organized. If it becomes organized, secondary considerations will obscure the point. The truth is no truer because only a few have experienced it."

"You're wrong. Even for purely selfish reasons, ruling out all altruistic considerations, there's an excellent reason for allowing this to spread: a society which knows what we know, which believes in Cave and what he says, will be a pleasanter place in which to live, less anxious, more tolerant." And she spoke of the new Jerusalem in our sallow land and I was nearly convinced.

The next day I went to Hastings' house for lunch. He was there alone; his wife apparently had a life of her own which required his company only occasionally. Clarissa, sensible in tweed and dark glasses, was the only other guest. We lunched on an iron-wrought table beside the gloomy pool in which, among the occasional leaves, I saw, quite clearly, a cigarette butt delicately unfolding like an ocean flower.

"Good to, ah, have you, Eugene. Just a bit of potluck. Clarissa's going back to civilization today and wanted to see you… I did too, of course. The bride's gone out. Told me to convey her…"

Clarissa turned her bright eyes on me and, without acknowledging the presence of our host, said right off: "You've met him at last."

I nodded. The plot was finally clear to me: the main design at least. "We had dinner together last night."

"I know. Iris told me. You're going to help out of course."

"I'd like to but I don't know what there is I might do. I don't think I'd be much use with a tambourine on street corners, preaching the word."

"Don't be silly!" Clarissa chuckled. "We're going to handle this quite, quite differently."

"We?"

"Oh, I've been involved for over a year now. It's going to be the greatest fun… you wait and see."

"But…"

" I was the one who got Iris herself involved. I thought she looked a little peaked, a little bored. I had no idea of course she'd get in so deep, but it will probably turn out all right. I think she's in love with him."

"Don't be such a gossip," said Hastings sharply. "You always reduce everything to… to biology. Cave isn't that sort of man."

"You know him too?" How fast it was growing, I thought.

"Certainly. Biggest thing I've done since…"

"Since you married that brassy blonde," said Clarissa with her irrepressible rudeness. "Anyway, my dear, Iris took to the whole thing like a born proselyte, if that's the word I mean… the other's a little boy, isn't it? and it seems, from what she's told me, that you have too."

"I wouldn't say that." I was a little put out at both Iris and Clarissa taking me so much for granted.

"Say anything you like. It's still the best thing that's ever happened to you. Oh God, not avocado again!" The offending salad was waved away while Hastings muttered apologies. "Nasty, pointless things, all texture and no taste." She made a face. "But I suppose that we must live off the fruits of the country and this is the only thing which will grow in California." She moved without pause from Western flora to the problem of John Cave. "As for your own contribution, Eugene, it will depend largely upon what you choose to do. As I said, I never suspected that Iris would get in so deep and you may prove to be quite as surprising. This is the ground floor of course… wonderful expression, isn't it? the spirit of America: the slogan which broke the plains… in any case, the way is clear. Cave liked you. You can write things for them, rather solid articles based on your inimitable misreadings of history. You can educate Cave, though this might be unwise since so much of his force derives from his eloquent ignorance; or you might become a part of the organization which is getting under way. I suppose Iris will explain that to you: it's rather her department at the moment. All those years in the Junior League gave her a touching faith in the power of committees, which is just as well when handling Americans. As for the tambourines and cries of 'Come and Be Saved', you are some twenty years behind the times. We… or to be exact I ought to say 'they'… have more up-to-date plans."

"Committees? What committees?"

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