I turned and looked at the court, at the ball in the drain. The basketball hoops were bare, no nets or chains. My father’s eyes went blank again. I couldn’t look at his face when his eyes went blank. A rosy mist was dawning in the sky. But the question was a good one. I’d driven cross-country and seen things that won’t go away, like when Sarah and I stopped at Cadillac Ranch while driving through Texas. The cars half submerged out there in the desert ground like they’d been here a thousand American years. The headlights and front grilles buried in the sand, and I remember saying to her that the idea of an ostrich doing the same thing is ridiculous. If it were true at all, the ostrich would eventually die away and no longer exist as a species.
He said, “Where am I?”
“You’re here with me in California. On the beach.”
His eyes glazed dully and he looked at me like I was a stranger.
I said, “Once, we drove through the Redwood Empire coming back from Mendocino.”
He looked straight ahead at the water.
“I don’t know how many hundreds of feet, the sequoias. Green leaves up top like a beard. Three thousand years old. And all I could think was, Hey, I think this is actually their planet.”
The kids were at the water, and the pack leader was looking around.
“Sometimes Heaven’s like a house,” he said. “But always different.”
I tucked the blanket under his legs and said, “Tell me your favorite Heaven.”
He wouldn’t look my way. He said, “There’s a front porch. Upstairs, and downstairs. I saw the room where stars are made.”
The water was taking on the lighter colors of the sky.
I said, “I was driving I forget where and saw a mountain on the side of the road. A white mountain, I forget where. Out in the middle of nowhere, scrub brush, and there’s this shining mountain of bright white sand.”
“Heaven is all white with clouds,” he said.
“Like a miracle out there. The full bottom half of an hourglass. I had to cover my eyes, it was so bright. I climbed as high as I could and I swear the mountain was singing and humming right there under my feet.”
“Heaven sings.” He reached out a hand in the air. “Everywhere, and you can feel Him on your skin, and His throne is like a skyscraper.” He opened his hand in the air. “You can feel the light with your fingers.”
“And what else,” I said. “I’ve never seen a volcano. I want to go to Hawaii and see the lava pouring out and sizzling in the ocean, the world remaking itself. I saw something once in Death Valley, or just Death Valley, leave it at that. Rocks in the Racetrack desert. One was the size of a Volkswagen. This is way below sea level, no water at all. The rock has a long trail behind it, moves hundreds of feet, and nobody knows why. Like I’m staring at the tree in the riddle. A tree falls in the forest blah, blah and nobody’s there to hear it. I was staring right at the riddle.”
He said, “Heaven gets dark. It gets dark, and I keep getting smaller.”
I looked up, and that boy was coming right for us.
He waved, and his feet made slapping sounds on the concrete as he hurled himself at the ball waiting in the drain. He had trouble bouncing it with one hand, so he dribbled with both. He tossed it in the air, but he couldn’t reach the backboard. Dad looked at the water. I stood and said hello to the boy.
His uniform was looking a little shoddy, sand grit falling from every crease. His red tie was turned backward. I put up my hands and he tossed the ball my way. I dribbled and threw it right back to him.
I realized it was the first time I’d bounced a ball on the court. I didn’t think I could make a basket. This would be an embarrassing failure of adulthood and might ruin him, for all I knew.
The sun stepped over the foothills and over the houses, the pink terra-cotta tiles. There was a dreamy glow of light in the air; the morning mist was wavering and heading for the water. I wondered how many suns there were: a sun for seagulls, and for Amad’s Little Josie, even for the ticks on a stray dog’s ass. A dog isn’t so selfish as to think it shines for him alone. I watched the boy throw the ball and chase it, and throw it again. The boy didn’t know it, but he was me, and I was him, and maybe God didn’t know our names after all. If He did, He hardly said them aloud anymore because of the thousand ways we daily do our loved ones in. I figured that waiting for the End is the End. And I figured the End was already here, always had been, and was happening over and over and over again, every last one a blessing and revelation if we’d only take a good hard look.
The boys at the water started singing again: “This land is your land, / This land is my land, / From California to the New York island, / From the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters, / This land was made for you and me.…” Then for some reason I started to wish they’d stop singing the goddamn song already. I muttered this, and felt immediately bad about cursing in front of the boy, because then the boy started cursing as he bounced the ball. He kept saying “bastard,” which sort of cracked me up.
He said things like, “Our pack leader is a bastard,” and, “Today has been a real bastard.” He threw the ball and got it nowhere near the hoop.
I dribbled, and set myself at the three-point line. It was light out now and I saw the hoop clearly. I couldn’t use the dark for an excuse. I dribbled, bent my knees like you’re supposed to. I bobbed there with the ball in my hands, and tossed it up in a high sailing arc, when my father called out with a noise.
He was pointing out to the water.
I went over and knelt there in front of him, in the sand. His eyes were lit from the inside. I said, “It’s okay, Dad. What? I’m here.”
The waves rolled out like carpets plashing on the shore, and the air was heavy with moisture. I could feel it with my fingers. The water was deep and long; something forever about the water. How it lay there how many millions of years already before I ever came along, and it even let the otters stay until the last one got too old, and filled up with water, and fell through the water like a dark thick leaf dancing in air. The dawning light was on the Pacific like a yellow dust and the horizon had gone soft and disappeared. Dad was pointing and making that awful noise, trying to communicate to me what it was he was seeing.
I looked out again, and saw nothing — until I did.
Out there on the horizon where the morning light was going soft, I definitely saw something. There was this white and floating void quivering just above the water, and above it there was a dark and rising mass floating there in the air. I saw turrets and I saw towers. It was like the silhouette of an almost invisible city, and it hovered like a vision of the Heavenly Kingdom. It was there, right there, and I could see it. I bit my lip, hyperaware of how spooky all this was.
Then the boy came up beside us. “What are you looking at?”
Dad was still pointing.
The boy looked, and said, “What? Catalina?”
He started walking back to the group, and said back over his shoulder, “We take the ferry over and camp. Sometimes we stay the night in Avalon.” He ran back to the others by the water.
Of course it was Catalina. But Dad looked on without blinking, his face practically radioactive with joy. I saw now the trick of light on the Catalina Island mountains, and the clouds, and the vapor mist along the horizon, and already the mass was changing shape, becoming something altogether different, but no less radiant.
I said, “Dad.”
His eyes were blank.
I kissed my father’s head, and we rolled back over the sand to the walkway, and I started pushing him home. We took our time. The oil derricks pumped behind chain-link fences beside the Pacific Coast Highway, and by the time we reached my street the morning sky was simply bright and blue and beautiful. I pushed him up the front path to the courtyard. I rolled him alongside the building and parked the chair. I touched his face. I unlocked the front lock and propped the screen door open with a flowerpot. I lifted him from his chair, and he was light, his long hair covering his face. I decided it was time I cut it. I carried him, and we crossed the threshold together.
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