woods: "He'd say, Let's go out in the woods and see what we can see. And he'd pack up his camera, sometimes he'd take a little one, and some- times the big one, the wood and brass one with legs. And we'd pack a lunch. Lots of times we'd come here.
To See What He Could See
"We only came out on days that were hot and sunny so we could take off all our clothes—Sophie and me would—and run around and say Look and Look and sometimes Oh it's gone when you weren't really sure you'd seen anything anyway. . . ."
"Take off your clothes? How old were you?"
"I don't remember. Eight. Till I was maybe twelve."
"Was that necessary? To do the looking?"
She laughed, a low sound for she was lying down, full length, letting whatever breeze that came by have its way with her—naked now too. "It wasn't necessary," she said. "Just fun. Didn't you like to take your clothes off when you were a kid?"
He remembered the feeling, a kind of mad elation, a freedom, some restraint discarded with the garments: not a feeling quite like grown-up sexual feelings, but as intense. "Never around grownups though."
"Oh, Auberon didn't count. He wasn't . . . well, one of them, I guess. In fact I suppose we were doing it all for him. He got just as crazy."
"I bet," Smoky said darkly.
Daily Alice was quiet for a time. Then she said: "He never hurt us. Never, never made us do anything. We suggested things! He wouldn't. We were all sworn to secrecy—and we swore him to secrecy. He was—like a spirit, like Pan or something. His excitement made us excited. We'd run around and shriek and roll on the ground. Or just stand stock still with a big buzz just filling you up till you thought you'd burst with it. It was magic."
"And you never told."
"No! Not that it mattered. Everybody knew anyway, except oh Mom and Dad and Cloud, anyway they never said anything; but I've talked to lots of people, later on, and they say Oh you too? Auberon took you to the woods to see what he could see?" She laughed again. "I guess he'd been at it for years. I don't know anybody who resented it, though. He picked them well, I guess."
"Psychological scars."
"Oh, don't be stupid."
He stroked his own nakedness, pearly in the moonlight, drying in the licking breeze. "Did he ever see anything? I mean, besides . . ."
"No. Never."
"Did you?"
"We thought we did." She was of course sure they had: on brave luminous mornings walking expectant and watchful, waiting to be led and feeling (at once, at the same moment) the turning they must take that would lead to a place they had never been but which was intensely familiar, a place that took your hand and said We're here. And you must look away, and so would see them.
And they would hear Auberon behind them somewhere and be unable to answer him or show him, though it was he who had brought them here, he who had spun them like tops, tops that then walked away from him, walked their own way.
Sophie? he would call. Alice?
But There It Is
The Summer House was all blue within except where the lamp glowed, with less authority now. Auberon, dusting his fingers rapidly against his thumbs, went around the little place peering into boxes and corners. He found what he wanted then, a large envelope of marbled paper, last one of many he had had once, in which French platinum printing-papers had long ago been mailed to him.
A fierce pain no worse than longing stitched up his torso, but went away again, more quickly than longing used to when he felt longing. He took the album of buckram and slipped it into the marbled envelope. He undid his ancient Waterman's (he'd never allowed his students to write with ball points or any of that) and wrote in his schoolmarm hand—shuddery now as though seen under water—For Daily Alice and Sophie. A great pressure seemed to enlarge his heart. He added: And for no one else. He thought of adding an exclamation, but didn't; only sealed it tightly. The black portfolio he put no name on. It was—all the rest of it was—for no living person anyway.
He went out into his yard. Still the birds for some reason had not begun. He tried to urinate at the lawn's edge but could not, gave up, went to sit on