Anton
Tillis, urban
designer, professor
of City and
Regional Planning,
conceived of The
Square while a
condemned corner
rooming house, four
blocks south of the
university, burned
down in the middle
of the night, a day
after the last of
its transients was
routed.
The rotting
shingles made a
dramatic leaping
fire, with tongues
of flame, thin as
slicing knives,
suddenly shooting
to astonishing
heights. The
message about the
fire was
transmitted by
means of various
known networks and
hidden nerve
endings, and
immediately
misshapen shadows
issued from
mist-veiled
buildings. These
materialized, under
the yellow
sodium-vapor street
lights, into quick
people on their
way, making a
giddied getaway
from dailiness.
The air was charged
with their
cheeriness and high
spirits. Some were
exhilarated because
they had been
handed an amended
agenda without
request; some
because they had
been sprung from
waking alone in the
merciless black of
the night when
there is no escape
from coming to
terms with
yourself; some
because they hoped
if they could even
once decode an
unpredicted shift
in the rhythm of an
ordinary day,
valuable directions
would emerge. A
number, as always,
were simply pleased
with fires.
At the destination,
the greenish-maize
fire engines filled
the streets. And
what with the great
coils of hoses
winding and
unwinding on the
sidewalks, the
swift, mysterious
activities of the
firemen in their
ponderous slickered
gear, the police
slipping backed
into driveways,
unloading cameras,
lights, tangles of
wire, and loud
gesturing crews,
the spectators came
upon a scene which,
shimmering with
heat and light and
motion, had taken
on the haze of a
dream-like,
dislocated universe
in which a world
full of flame spun
free of hazard.
The usual sense of
spurious community
sprang up among the
viewers. Crowded
and craning, they
felt instantly
incorporated into
the enactments
taking place on the
street, privileged
and enlivened, and
several made
excited-sounding
statements into
microphones thrust
at them by
invisible hands.
Periodically
cautioned to leave
by garbled voices
blaring from bull
horns, many left
and returned with
friends, relatives,
roommates, and dogs
on leashes. Some
came running with
small sleepy
children, heads
bobbing, sitting on
their shoulders,
the children's
quilted jackets
ballooned out with
air so that they
looked like small
soft bugs.
A longtime follower
of fires, Tillis
arrived early,
having heard a news
bulletin on his
bedside radio. He
noted, for future
mention, several
visual instances of
reversal in the
normal order of
things: The sky
seemed dense with
black seaweed, for
example, whereas
yellow and orange
rays, like the
sun's, flared
straight ahead,
providing a beacon.
When the occasion
arose, he thought,
he would not only
describe his
playfully observed
anomaly, but also
the deplorable
circusy atmosphere
created by the many
many irresponsibles
in the community.
There was always a
price to pay,
Tillis thought,
when there was an
inappropriate
response to a
natural
occurrence.
After a short
while, however, the
spectacle only
lapped around the
edges of Tillis's
attention, which
fixed itself wholly
on something else.
Watching from
across the street
from the burning
building, in his
full-length brown
leather coat over
beige silk pongee
pajamas, he had
seen that he was in
a neighborhood of
elderly frame
homes, several
housing small,
illegal, barely
discreet
operations—a
travel agency, a
furniture
refinishing shop, a
cold print press.
Already lapsed from
its strictly
residential
character, Tillis
foresaw the
under-financed,
doomed light
industry that would
insinuate itself
among these
life-battered
houses and
commercial bungles,
edging the whole
vicinity into the
decay of an
interstitial area,
a breeding and
staging ground for
garages,
experimental
delinquency, and
low crime.
The natural
deterrent to this
inexorable social
slide came to
Tillis in a flash.
The fire was raging
on an inevitable
site for a
superlative small
urban mall.
Tillis saw the
design for the mall
whole, almost
immediately—two
stories, redwood,
with a cobbled
courtyard, two
staircases, one on
each end, and a
beautifully eased
ramp for the
wheelchairs. A
latticed platform
would extend from
the landing on the
left, over perhaps
a fourth of the
area, and from
this, in this
temperate climate,
white blooming
wisteria could be
forced to drift
throughout most of
the year. The front
entrance, wide and
open to easy
access, would be
flanked by hedges,
dark, thick, and
squared off, solid
and impenetrable.
By the time Tillis
returned home, the
mall stood built in
his mind. He
tempered his
natural inclination
to develop a set
piece about it;
after all, it would
make a marvelous
story, that he had
gone to a fire and
been bestowed a
vision. But as he
had reminded
students over the
years, "The first
line comes as a
gift from the gods.
The second line we
make ourselves,
straining all our
resources." Tillis
felt he had clearly
been given a first
line, but that it
would be an absurd,
an amateurish
exercise to involve
himself, to strain.
A project like a
mall was a
remarkably
sprawling matter,
with its fate in
the hands and
pockets of numerous
unknowns and
sticky, balky
knowns.
In the morning,
Tillis told his
wife, "The site of
the last night's
fire happens to be
an ideal location
for a handsome set
of stores dealing
in arts, crafts,
and the more
important artistic
artifacts. A
cultural miniature
mall, if you will."
She turned from the
stove and looked at
him. The look
carried a great
deal of complicated
material in it,
embedded in which
were a number of
questions. They had
been married six
years, and had two
children, and she
had learned to
limit herself, in a
number of areas, to
unvoiced questions.
She had been one of
his students, and
it was from him
that she had
learned to ask: Who
owned the property?
Would the owners,
perhaps a
syndicate, want to
develop? If not,
would they sell?
Who would present
the case to the
Planning
Commission, the
Community
Development Agency,
the City Council,
to argue that this
was "the highest
and best use" of
the property?
"Premature
thinking, Sara," he
said firmly,
addressing her, as
he often did, as
though she were a
very small
committee.
Nevertheless, he
burnished his
vision with the
heat of his cranky
obsessiveness, and
revealed it in bits
to his students and
assorted
colleagues. It made
for excellent
impromptu corridor
lectures and
spontaneous
lunchtime sketches
on the faculty
club's paper
napkins. It also
provided useful
assignments, and he
fanned out the
students in his
zoning design
seminar to do a
feasibility study
for a small complex
of shops, a strip
mall, on a corner
property in a
transitional area
no more than six
blocks south and
west from one of
the borders of a
hypothetical state
university.
A short, bulky,
barrel-chested man
with a slight lisp
and a minor hip
swivel, Tillis had
been an active
homosexual up until
the night before
his marriage. The
hip movement was by
now competently
incorporated in a
brisk, rolling kind
of swagger. And
although he had
grown up in
Alhambra,
California, where
his transplanted
Chicago-born
parents managed a
franchised dry
cleaning
storefront, he had
early in his
freshman year, when
he changed his name
from Arnold to
Anton, developed
something Germanic
in his speech. This
melded
convincingly, with
a small amount of
moisture, into the
lisp, his long
pouting lower lip,
and a natural
talent for
pedantry, which he
cultivated.
Tillis re-shaped
his wide soft chin
by rimming it with
a short,
beautifully crafted
beard. He would
have preferred a
more assertive
style, but he
recognized that his
face was already
crowded, with round
heavy cheeks, full
pale lips, and a
fleshy nose.
Throughout his
youth and earlier
manhood, Tillis's
redeeming physical
feature and best
sexual bargaining
chip had been his
large, plum-brown
liquid eyes. But
these he gradually
drained of their
smoldering
ambiguity after he
decided to give up
men as lovers, and
in the course of
throwing himself
into marriage and a
life of
compensations, his
quenched and
emptied eyes had
become still as
stones. By now,
Tillis's look, in
public and private,
was an unblinking
signal of the
possibility of
sudden and powerful
verbal assault.
Tillis's classes
were enormously
popular. He had
come to planning
after degrees in
philosophy and
political science,
and the students
sensed that he
never came to them
empty. He had a
fount of energetic
opinions, glossed
with dogmatism,
that slid easily
into notebooks; a
stockpile of
information that
was wide-ranging,
anecdotal, and
useful; and
mannerisms that
lent themselves to
imitation and
mimicry. Among
themselves, the
students hooted at
his pomposities,
but they also
believed that he
deeply meant and
understood what he
said to them in
class.
After a
particularly
incisive
formulation, Tillis
sometimes splayed
the fingers of his
right hand and
rotated them,
flicking his wrist
and forming his
hand into a balled
cage to imprison
the rounded
thought. Once each
quarter he said, as
a closing
utterance, "'Trouve
avant de chercher.'
Finding before
seeking. That is a
thought from the
great French poet,
Valéry. This
finding requires a
permit; one applies
for it from
oneself, and it is
always received for
the asking. So it
is altogether a
beautiful
possibility. It is
also a necessity in
life. It will be
necessary, for
example, to the
conduct of your
future
careers—whatever
they may become
when you begin to
tinker with your
schooling. Finding
before seeking. A
phenomenon and a
cliché. One must,
however, make
oneself open to it.
I commend to you
such an opening."
At some point
Tillis said, to
each new class, "No
conception of civic
design is adequate,
is acceptable, that
does not envisage
the city, in its
ideal form, as a
work of art. It is
to learn how to
achieve this
sublime goal that
we are
investigating here
how to influence
the orderly, the
healthy, the
efficient
development of
communities and
their environs.
What we are
concerned with, at
base, as you all
already suspect, is
space—how to
arrange, rearrange,
fill, shape
it—how, in a
word, to control
it."
Tillis prepared and
rehearsed his
lectures, and then
presented them with
studied
spontaneity,
speaking with the
precision,
enthusiasm, and
occasional charming
awkwardness of
someone expressing
himself fluently in
an acquired
language.
Lecturing, Tillis
in his calculated
disguise could be
taken for a
seasoned character
actor in rehearsal.
Whether in a
lecture hall,
outside his office
addressing student
loiterers, or
hurrying with a few
of them through the
winding halls to a
class, Tillis's
manner rarely
altered. It
promised
accessibility, even
future intimacy,
but in fact his
obliviousness to
others achieved a
perfect distancing.
Year after year,
Tillis postured
for, taught,
indoctrinated, and
won over even the
more skeptical
graduate students,
whose work he
addressed equally
with serious
attention, and who
took for a noble
even-handedness
what was simply his
natural neglect to
distinguish between
them.
The shops in the
little complex,
Tillis said here
and there over the
months, would have
to fit into the
organicity of the
whole. The
applicant
shopkeepers would
be screened as to
their purposes and
the style of their
minds. He
envisioned a
tucked-away
horticultural
haven, for example,
that would entice
consumers of taste
who would shun any
flower-stall scheme
of a shop (because
flowers for the
house, of course,
they grew
themselves), but
who would be drawn
to the rarer
plants. Certainly
such plantspersons
could be developed
into serious
collectors of
unusual flora on at
least a national
scale. And could
furthermore be
encouraged to pay
for seminars on the
environmental and
soil conditions
related to their
specific floral
hobby. An
altogether paying
proposition, the
whole
arrangement…
He envisaged the
perfect coffee
store (more
accurately, a
coffee storehouse),
Tillis said, which
would without
question evolve
into the hub of the
entire little
complex. It would
make available the
incomparable beans
from worldwide
markets to grind at
home, which was, of
course, the single
wholly satisfactory
method for
producing a
drinkable coffee.
Perhaps a different
coffee each day
could be brewed on
the premises of the
store to be drunk
outside, where
there would be
small tables under
the indispensable
awning, such as
were found on the
Continent
everywhere, but too
infrequently in our
own home region.
His own wife, to
mention a highly
personal matter,
Tillis said to an
undergraduate
class—surely
it was at the very
least a minor
barbarity that she
had no wholly
acceptable public
place to sit
outdoors, to rest
from shopping or
after she came home
from one of her
exhausting docent
tours at the Asian
Museum, and drink a
coffee in congenial
surroundings, and
read. He would stop
short of mentioning
questions of
entitlement, of
perhaps a simple
civic amenity…
To colleagues and
graduate students,
singly or in
groups, and at
dinners and
cocktail parties,
Tillis gave what he
labeled verbal
glimpses into his
fondest dream for
the phantom complex:
"I conceive of a
store, a simple
stark repository,
actually, that
would stock first
of all instruments
intimately related
to the great music
written for them,"
Tillis said.
Being a realist, he
said, he would
forego active
consideration of
the instruments
that Bach and
Handel and Corelli
wrote for—the
Baroque,
unmodernized
violin, cello,
gamba, the flute,
the oboe, the
recorder, the rare,
rare Baroque horn,
and so on. These
instruments were,
with great effort,
even now available,
but he never wanted
to lose sight of
the fact that this
miniature mall,
after all was to be
a commercial
thrust, and would
modern ears adapt
to the harshness,
the jangle of those
early instruments
in ensemble? Would
today's listener be
patient enough with
the discordant
energy produced to
hear the rhythm in
the sound and the
clear musical line
of each instrument
as it had been
written? Unlikely,
was it not?
However, Tillis
also said, think of
the virginals, the
lyre, the dulcimer,
the sitar (our
lute, of
course)—all
much more easily
acquired. And along
with the muted
harpsichord, why
not its relative,
the assertive
celesta? And as for
relatives—do
not neglect the
heckelphone, only
an octave lower
than our venerable
oboe. All these
would do—have
done—excellent
justice to the
great composers, I
have been told,
even if a different
justice than they
had conceived of.
Gradually attuned,
would not
performers, serious
buffs, students,
become a paying
constituency?
A quick study and a
veteran researcher,
Tillis imparted
what he gleaned as
though he were
revealing secrets.
There were other
musical themes as
well, he took to
reminding
listeners. He would
leap over the
marvelous
mandolins, the
Milanese and
Neapolitan both, he
said, and recall
for them the
Japanese
silk-strung
zithers, for
example, the koto
and the shakuhachi.
It was perhaps an
irrelevant bit of
trivia, he chortled
to gratified
students, to dwell
for an instant on
the fact that these
were once
sex-related
instruments, the
former played
exclusively by
women, the latter
by husbands. Of
course the frantic
Westernization of
that part of the
world had put a
final kaput to all
that, so that by
now they were
played by whoever
could put a hand to
them.
These were not
really rarities,
Tillis said,
arguing, over
lunch, with a
colleague or two in
his office, during
coffee and dessert
at a faculty
dinner. Why did so
much provincialism
abound? Could not
the whole complex,
the entire
miniature mall, a
Square, if you
will, be a
celebration of a
conglomerate of
cultures? Riding a
newly acquired
hobbyhorse,
Tillis's subject
for a time became
kites. What of a
shop that would
sell only kites, he
challenged his
students. Two
obvious, practical
advantages spring
to mind, do they
not? Kites
themselves are an
unparalleled visual
treat, and the
materials—bamboo,
light papers,
crushed glass,
mylar, strings, and
so on, are easily
stored, do not
steal space. And
especially in this
still stratified
society of ours,
how else could one
secure so
affordable a symbol
of man's impulse to
overcome his earth
boundedness, his
given limits in the
social order?
Consider the
kite-flyer, Tillis
said: A person in
the act of
contriving to
channel the flow of
air to his own
uses; a lone
individual bent on
beating nature at
its own game, no
less—manipulating
its wind to
overcome its
gravity. What a
nerve. What a
noble, inspiring,
even
entrepreneurial
nerve. Surely this
effrontery has a
seductive appeal to
the emotional,
intellectual, human adventurer in us all, to our shared divine discontent…
There were too many
kite genres and
styles to approach
a surface sweep of
them, Tillis
regretted, but he
would direct
attention to the
glorious Indian
Tukkals and the
Japanese fighting
kites—among
them the Nagasaki,
for example, and
especially that
brilliant oddity,
the wan-wan, a
flight-worthy
twenty yards in
diameter, with a
480-foot tail, and
a 35-leg bridle,
that customarily
weighed in at no
more than a ton.
He did not conceive
of a store that
would handle any of
the exotica, of
course, but there
were many kites of
the more
conventional order
to attract the
fun-loving and
imaginative, as
well, the parents
of ever-demanding
children and their
endless school
projects. Certainly
all of this
predicted an
immense
profit-maker,
Tillis proclaimed;
it only needed
proper presentation
to a buying public.
There was no
reason, Tillis
said, that a
commercial
enterprise made to
glow with the
patinae of several
cultural traditions
could not also be a
financial success.
Spare him the
argument that for
the most part, only
nostalgia buffs
would be attracted.
No. Nostalgiacs do
not spend money for
treasures that
evoke the riches of
the past. Rather,
they are hoarders
and hoard their
boredom with the
present.
The ambiance of the
university, Tillis
said, would surely
drape itself
accordingly and
profitably over
that section of the
flatlands where a
small mall, a
Square, could be
made to rise.
Tillis's
recitations came to
be somewhat of a
vogue, and a good
deal of what he
said, playing and
preening with
notions, floated
outside his own
department and the
university and into
the outside world.
And then one
weekday afternoon
at a lakeside park,
something took
place which was
rich with
consequence for
Tillis and Sara.
Between quarters,
and after turning
in the course
grades to the
registrar, Tillis
came home
unexpectedly at
lunchtime. Sara and
the children were
leaving with a
picnic blanket, an
inflated purple and
yellow ball, an
orange frisbee, and
a long moss-green
mat over which the
symbols of the
zodiac pranced in
repeats and
assorted colors.
The somewhat thick
pad had been woven
by one of Sara's
three sisters and
sent for no special
occasion between
the births of the
Tillis's two girls.
It had come with a
note to Sara that
said, "Yours is the
last of this breed
of mat because now
all five of us have
one. By now the
sun, lots of
bottoms, and
etceteras, have
turned the figures
on my mat into
ghosts of their
former selves. And
Hollis's Annie left
theirs on the boat,
folded like an
offering to the
elements, and now
several of their
Leos, Tauruses, and
Aries look as
though they're on
their knees. For
heaven's sake,
don't be too
careful with yours.
Let's each of us
fade in our own
way, with pleasure."
Before he shortly
forgot about it
altogether, Tillis
was nettled by
almost everything
he read into the
note and the
gift—their
tone of careless
privilege, the ring
of easy sibling
affection that
reinforced his
lifelong conviction
that there were
certain emotions
only those born
rich could afford,
the surprising
evidence of verbal
agility and
accomplishment in a
woman so casual,
groomed, and secure
in her fortunate
place in life. That
all this largely
echoed qualities he
had first seen in
Sara, Tillis had
long ago forgotten.
Sara came to
Tillis's attention
when she brought an
assignment to his
office with a
brief, delicately
embroidered tale
about why it was a
day late. When she
gave him the paper,
Tillis was struck
by her hands, which
were narrow and
unmarked in any
way, the unringed
fingers so slender
they appeared
fragile and
vulnerable, as
though they would
curl at a touch.
Because she was a
fair girl, her
hands had tanned to
a gold, and to
Tillis they looked
as though they had
just been minted
and never been
used.
Going down in the
elevator, Tillis
saw that she was
wearing a fitted
leather or
leather-like jacket
with her jeans, and
short boots with
heels. There were
no other clues in
her uncurled light
brown hair,
shoulder-blade
length, or
watercolor
blue-green eyes, or
very young,
unremarkable face.
She seemed slight,
thriftily
constructed, Tillis
said to himself,
and not like one of
the ones who
bounced into class
with their breasts
floating all over
the place, or one
of the tall ones
that made him feel
surrounded.
They left the
campus and walked
in the same
direction, Tillis
on his way to the
garage where his
car was having its
regular timing and
carburation check.
When Sara turned
into a student fee
car lot, Tillis
asked for a lift;
students were
gratified, he knew,
to be imposed on by
faculty. She
flushed high on her
cheeks, which made
her pale eyes
appear greener, and
walked over to a
not very clean
chocolate brown
Jaguar XJS. Tillis
saw from the
offhandedness with
which she let him
into the car and
drove it that she
was uninterested in
it as a status
symbol and very
possibly unaware of
its cost. He was
sure now that the
jacket was leather
and the boots, of
course, Italian.
And when he
competently drifted
the talk to the
car, she told him
her brother had
given it to her
because he didn't
think her old MG
was safe, and then
had gotten himself
a Ferrari which
their parents
thought was too
powerful to be
safe. She smiled
then for the first
time, with a
pleasant openness
that glowed on her
rather sober small
face, and Tillis
thought of gold
again.
He hadn't been born
lucky, Tillis
thought, but he had
an eye for luck.
This time it had
led him to an
intuition about the
student. "I was
correct," Tillis
graded himself,
although he made a
minor adjustment in
one of his first
impressions. He
would hereinafter
have to consider
the girl as neatly,
rather than
thriftily
constructed,
because not even as
a figure of speech
could a term
related to economy
apply to a person
so embowered with
expensive
possessions.
Tillis waited until
Sara had been out
of his class for a
quarter, and then
he married her for
her meekness, her
money, and her
hands. Also,
because it was time
for him to marry.
Although the
university had a
much-vaulted
reputation for
tolerance, Tillis
had long ago
decided not to
trust in this; he
had anticipated
that one day he
would have to give
up his hidden
private life, with
its vulnerable,
intricate
secrecies. And by
now the faculty on
the lower middle
rung of the
academic ladder
with him, all in
social and academic
cliques, all
rivals, were
settled into the
department's
mandatory style of
reciprocal
socializing on home
grounds. To enter
into this, Tillis
saw, it was
necessary to have
on display a wholly
visible pattern of
conventional
domesticity.
From the first,
Sara had been
carried along by
Tillis's almost
immediate
assumption that
they would get
married. She was
startled and
dazzled by being
pursued by a
professor, and the
wooing gave her an
enjoyable cachet
with her dorm
mates, but more
importantly, she
was a convert of
Tillis's. She had
signed up for
courses in urban
studies and
planning with a
neutral level of
interest, at the
behest of her
family. She was
aware that one day
she and her sisters
and brother would
have control of
properties in
several states, but
as the youngest, it
hadn't occurred to
her yet that any
information or act
of hers could have
any effect on the
life or shape of
actual real estate
and land and its
natural assets.
"Even if you just
learn the good
questions to ask,
later on," her
oldest sister said.
As a student, Sara
dutifully took
notes on Tillis's
lecture about the
ideal conception of
the city as a work
of art, and never
thought about it
again. She was used
to professor-talk;
her notebooks were
filled with it. At
exam times, she
read her notes and
held them in mind
just long enough to
slide them onto her
test papers. She
generally got very
good grades and no
one paid any more
attention to her
than she had to the
course material.
Then one day, near
the end of his
undergraduate urban
studies course,
Tillis said: "When
I speak of the city
as a work of art,
do not mistake me;
my reference is not
to some comfy
abstraction that
you can file away
as simply another
soft trial at
summoning
unobtainable
perfection. No. Nor
should reference to
controlling space
be considered as a
yearning to develop
for artistic
effect. Again, no.
What we must seek,
always, are ways to
integrate
meaningful design
with how people
actually
live—in the
inner-cities, the
towns, the suburbs,
the cauldrons of
the neighborhoods,
the school grounds,
the small farm
communities.
"It has been
famously written
that in planning
for cities, we must
be ever aware of
the regenerative
energy of 'the
ballet of the
streets'. I add
that we must always
be alert to the
goal to enrich, and
for this we must
first discover the
needs and wants and
habits of those for
whom we propose to
build, or
rearrange, or tear
down.
"I endow you with a
formulation to keep
in the forefront of
your thinking when
at long last you
infiltrate the
world of planning
and design. This
formulation is: It
is idle and even
sinful to veer in
the direction of
substituting the
order of art for
the order of life.
Write this down,
read it over and
over, mouth the
words to yourself
often, in full
awareness that in
all beginnings, as
in the first
beginning, is the
word."
Awash in the
cascades of
Tillis's words,
Sara felt a thrill
at her first
inkling of the
humanized,
enlivening
possibilities in
the field of
planning and
development.
Eventually, primed
by Tillis as a
suitor, she
transferred this
feeling, enlarged
with admiration and
gratitude, to the
person who had
pointed her to a
new place and lit
it.
Tillis had been
surprised and
relieved when Sara
turned out not to
be sexually
inexperienced,
although he was
initially dismayed
by the warmth and
purity of her
ardor. He was also
enviously rankled
(before he quickly
learned its
advantages) by the
range of skills
that large sums of
money had trained
into the girl's
soft, apparently
vernal hands.
Without repenting
his choice, Tillis
the planner was
nevertheless aware,
for the first two
months, before he
put the idea out of
his mind, that
despite his great
care, he had
acquired a wife
with a somewhat
misleading
frontage.
In the marriage,
Tillis ruled by
seniority,
punishing silences,
and a denial of
shared assumptions.
Decisions and
choices, large and
small, swayed with
Tillis's moods, the
outcomes of the
daily secret wars
he waged with the
world.
"Expected at eight
this evening? By
whom? I have a full
evening of work
planned. You will
have to enlighten
me, Sara, if you
want me to behave
like a wrapped
parcel for you to
take along at will.
No, Sara, you could
only have obtained
my agreement to be
expected if you
first poured a
controlled
substance into my
ear and then
whispered into
it…"
"Good for me to spend some time with the children? Good?
This is an absolute
good that you are
prepared to defend
backward and
forward in time, in
space, like a
scientific
principle, as a
predetermined value
to govern my
behavior? Do you,
by chance, have a
crude fact that you
use as your basis
for
calculation…?"
The effect on Sara
of Tillis's
backing, filling,
and bullying was to
glaze her face with
a listening look,
as though she were
traveling private
corridors of her
mind in which she
was trying to hear
a cadence, catch a
note that kept
eluding her. By the
time their second
child was born,
Sara had haltingly
come to the
knowledge that
there was a nerve
of feeling hidden
in Tillis, buried
in layers of
insecurities and
evasions, and that
this was
inaccessible to
her. She was
nevertheless a
young woman with a
strong sense of
obligation to her
marriage and
particularly to her
children, and for
some years she had
thought that she
could make
restitution to
Tillis for whatever
had wounded him so
badly that he could
not love, although
she thought this
less and less.
Tillis's
confiscatory use of
the marriage also
sent Sara on a
regular round of
visits. Each year,
at a different
season, she took
her small children
and spent several
weeks with her
parents in the far
west, two weeks
with each of her
sisters in
different states,
and a month with
her brother, a
marine illustrator,
who had based
himself on one of
the smaller islands
in Hawaii with his
wife, their five
small children, and
a telescope, "to
watch the whales
mate."
On one of the
visits to the
island, Tillis
joined Sara and his
little girls "to
see what is all
this nonsense about
whales." Sara's
brother Hollis and
his young serene
wife were warmly
hospitable and as
always nodded and
smiled at Tillis's
bumptiousness as
though he were
delivering news
from another
country. Before the
end of the first
week, Tillis said,
"We leave in two
days, Sara. This is
intolerable, this
roosting."
When Sara found
Hollis to tell him
about the decision
to leave early, he
was drawing a
hopscotch on a
floor canvas with
chalks. He told the
children to rummage
in the chalk box
for the colors they
wanted for the
border, and looked
over their choices
carefully. Then he
said, "You know
something,
Saralove? It is a
proven scientific
fact that feeding
certain people
compliance makes
them vicious. Large
percentages have
been known to be
driven into a
feeding frenzy; the
more they get, the
more they need."
"Oh, Hollis," Sara
said, very
seriously, "Anton
is a brilliant man,
especially in his
field, and he had a
hard time—he
was really
mismatched in his
early life with his
parents and their
life—somehow.
I don't know how,
really, but you
have to
understand—"
Hollis got up
quickly, herded the
children out of the
room, and closed
the door. "Screw
understanding," he
said, and opened
the door and
brought the
children back in.
"Ah," Tillis said
to his colleagues,
"my Sara operates
in the Victorian
mode, does she not?
One paid one's
yearly respects to
Mama and Papa,
brought them the
grandchildren, and
then visited the
rest of the family
to measure the
progeny against one
another. I am often
reminded of
Hawthorne's journal
and letters, and
the repeated
references to his
worshipful Sophia's
visits and visits
and visits to her
Peabody family
entire…"
On the day that
Tillis came home
unexpectedly at
noon, he
uncharacteristically
went along on the
picnic. "Such a
pastoral notion,
Sara," he said. It
would be a brief
outing, Sara told
him, because the
children were due
at the university
faculty-student
pool for a swimming
lesson at two.
"Ah, the pool.
Still another
session at the
exclusive Guava
Gulch?" Tillis
said, it being his
often-expressed
opinion that the
children's lessons
were an excuse for
the faculty wives
to gossip and eat
fruit. On weekends
he referred to the
pool as the
Hellespont because
he had once seen a
large foreign
visiting Classics
professor, in
hand-knitted
knee-length
swimming trunks,
stamp with rage on
the tufted,
unyielding grass at
the edge of the
pool. The black
pelt on his chest
and upper back
matted with sweat,
the middle-aged
father had been
attempting, in
mounting despair
and four languages,
to teach a very
young child the
principle of
coordinating a
basic flutter kick
with the American
crawl.
Tillis drove the
five miles to the
park directing
currents of censure
against the sins
and errors that
surrounded him: the
incompetently
managed traffic,
the improperly
placed and
ambiguously worded
signs to the park
picnic area, the
little girls'
giggling on the
floor of the back
seat.
At the lake, Sara
spread the mat and
gave the children
the purple and
yellow ball to play
with while she laid
out the food. As
Tillis and Sara and
the children ate,
sitting
cross-legged, the
sunshine all around
them, everything
sparkled—the
lake, the last
beads of morning
dew on the grass,
the stainless steel
thermoses of milk
and juices, the
orange plastic
frisbee, the
children's warmed,
radiant faces,
Sara's chain with
the three Roman
coins, the moisture
that had gathered
on the pale down
over her lip.
"If this sun gets
violent, we leave
immediately, Sara,"
Tillis said. But
lying back with his
eyes closed, he
felt only a light
touch of warmth on
his lids. A
fragrance wafted to
him, and he thought
of how even errant
flora could become
pervasive. The
sounds that came to
him were drifting
threads of talk and
play from other
groups around the
lake, murmurings
swept up and
brought by small
breezes. Closer to
him, Sara played
her game with the
children.
"I am slicing," she said,
"A minute, a
second, a whole
day," the answers
came, tumbling with
their laughter.
"I am chewing—"
Silence, and then a
triumphant,
"Surprise. I like
that one, Mommy, I
like that one
especially. Chewing
surprise makes it
last."
"I like it too," Sara said. "I am touching—"
"I am touching remember," the older child said.
"Those are just
plain wonderful,"
Sara said. "Now
what do you have in
your hand?"
"I have a hello in my right hand," the younger child said.
"I have a whisper in my two hands closed up," the older child said.
To Tillis, his
children's voices
sounded high and
clear, pure as a
blockflöte, he
thought, and
wondered if that
was one of the
instruments he had
edited out of his
lectures on the
visionary music
store.
Lying on his back
in the gentle early
warmth of the day,
his knees slightly
raised, Tillis felt
the young joyous
noises and Sara's
ardent maternal
voice encircling
him. He opened his
eyes a slit and saw
an inch of lawn and
thought of
Marvell's line
about a green
thought in a green
shade. A stream of
peace seeped into
him and flowed
through the furrows
of his fervent
discontent, over
the stiffened
ridges of the
constant rage that
powered him. And
slowly panic
gathered in him as
he felt the
invading calm he
could neither
control nor use,
the lethal lulling,
the dreaded threat
to the defended,
embattled self he
had chiseled with
such fierce
life-menacing
blows.
Fear ticking in
him, Tillis found
himself on his
feet, and for an
instant before he
saw Sara and the
children on the
mat, beginning to
clear away the
picnic, he was
blinded by the
small benign red
rings the sun had
caused to move in
his eyes. When he
did see them,
before he left to
go to the men's
room, they looked
to him, his fair
wife and children,
like a still life
seen at a distance,
shimmering figures
in frightening
flashes of gold.
He found the
toilets in a small
turreted building,
a fake playground
version of
something English
and historical,
behind a dense
barrier of
Guatemalan Holly
which has produced
a quantity of
small, colorful,
inedible fruit.
Inside, a man with
a pony tail neatly
tied with a leather
thong, an ironed
denim shirt with
unbuttoned cuffs,
and two small
rhinestone studs in
one ear, was
standing in front
of the mirror,
washing his hands.
Looking deeply into
the man's eyes in
the mirror, Tillis
said, as he had so
many times in his
past, unmarried
life, "Can you help
me?" And the
undercover
policeman, after
giving him the
appropriate
cautions demanded
by law, arrested
him.
Tillis regarded the
ruin of his life as
the facts rose
before his stony
eyes, and he
arranged,
rearranged, and
settled them on the
way back to where
Sara was waiting.
When Sara saw the
two men approach,
Tillis with his
clenched face and
trapped smile like
an alarm bark, the
stranger slightly
to the side and
behind him, she
picked up and threw
the orange frisbee
as far as she
could, and told the
children to go
after it.
"I asked this
deranged gentleman
to help me with
directions back to
this area," Tillis
said evenly, with
all the customary
promise of fitful
malice beneath his
mannered civility.
"I think he must
have been taught
his trade in
another societal
realm."
Sara only nodded,
and although
something that
happened to her
look was not
precisely relief,
the wondering
wrinkle between her
eyes evened
somewhat, and her
nod was the kind a
listener sometimes
gives when a
dominant seventh
chord is resolved.
The story of the
arrest appeared in
one late edition of
an afternoon paper,
with Tillis's name
misspelled and the
name of his
department garbled.
After that the
university handled
everything, and the
members of Tillis's
department met and
pledged not to
discuss the matter,
even among
themselves. Tillis
was given his
half-sabbatical
early, and the
department
secretary set the
wheels in motion
for renting his
house to visiting
faculty.
"We go to Tokyo, of
course," Tillis
told Sara. "They
have been wanting
me there, at the
Waseda University,
and now they will
have me."
"We'll travel after
that," Sara said.
"I think for
another year at
least. It will be
all right with the
department now that
you have tenure.
They want you here,
too. I can sell
stock for the
money."
"This is an
intervention,
Sara?" Tillis said.
But Sara's pale
irises only
flickered, and
Tillis did not
pursue the point
since she had,
after all, only
said what he would
have willed her to
say.
They traveled,
after Japan, to
China, Sri Lanka,
São Paulo, and
Bogotá, before
they toured Mexico.
Their last six
months they spent
in France and
Italy.
Four times each
year Sara sent the
department
secretary a letter
to be duplicated
and circulated, and
sometimes included
pictures of the
children in ethnic
costumes. The
letters were
pleasantly
descriptive,
factual, dotted
with easy,
unself-conscious
references to
members of the
department and
their families, and
also to Tillis's
more amusing
opinions about
travel in general,
and the cultural
characteristics,
art, music, and
architecture of the
various cities. In
one of the letters,
she said that she
looked forward to
returning, going
back to the
university, and
finishing her work
on urban planning.
The Tillises came
back two years
later without
flurry of any kind,
as smoothly and
easily as their
cleverly packed,
well-managed
baggage went
through customs.
Their most pressing
immediate problem
was one of
exposure: A highly
unusual, unseasonal
frost had killed
the five
Pittosporum that
had shielded their
house, and they
found their front
door, the
children's play
yard, and the front
rock garden open to
any casual eye,
unprotected. The
death of the trees
was a particular
surprise because
they had been
fortunate trees and
singularly free
even of the aphids
and scale insects
to which the genus
was held to be
susceptible.
Except for the
harried activities
of finding workmen
to build an interim
fence and plant
permanent trees,
Tillis and Sara
slipped into the
habits they had
lived with before.
They had stood
aside to let time
pass, and going on
ahead of them, time
had done its job,
opening and closing
doors, windows, and
closets of all
kinds, airing
everything out.
Tillis returned as
someone in the
shape of a
professor in the
City and Regional
Planning Department
of a major
university, and it
was generally
agreed that his
travels had only
enlarged and
enriched his
prodigious stock of
general
information,
quotations,
anecdotes,
inflexible and
worthwhile
opinions, and
knowledge of the
field of
development, about
which he had a
projected book.
There did seem to
be a change in him,
although it was not
altogether clear
what the change
was. His face had
become disordered
in some way that
could not be fully
accounted for by
his new full
muttonchops, and
his eyes, whose
expression of
ready, restrained
frontal attack had
not altered, looked
smudged. In
conversation,
Tillis now took to
stepping a little
to the side of and
behind the person
he was talking
with, rather like a
dentist at work
whose eye you could
not meet, or a
discreet policeman
walking with a
suspect.
Sara returned
looking as though
she had been
divested of any
visible layers of
her body that she
didn't need for
survival. When she
turned her head,
cords showed in her
long neck and knobs
appeared on her
spare shoulders,
and her cheekbones,
barely wrapped in
biscuity pale skin,
had the flinty
shine of a hard
wood, such as
lignum vitae, that
natives carve to
sell to tourists.
She had, however,
added something.
She now wore
glasses—large
unrimmed ovals with
hairline gold
earpieces. "I lost
one of my contacts
in Beijing," she
explained, "and
after that I
realized how much
more dependable
these are."
The manner that had
made it easy for
Tillis's colleagues
and their wives to
be fond of her had
not changed. The
clarity of her
intentions was
soothing and
comforting, and
sometimes they
forgot to be sorry
for her because she
had made the
classic error of
marrying her
professor, in this
instance a
brilliant, edgy,
armored, hectoring
man who had brought
them to the brink
of a profound
social and personal
abyss. And so they
were grateful to
her for the grace
with which she had
absorbed the
scandal that had
gradually become
inert in her
absence.
She still, as
always, was the
first up from the
dinner table, to
help clear away, as
though she was the
little sister to
them all. And when
she handed about
either her own or
her hostess's hors
d'oeuvres and
drinks, she
approached the men
in conversation
with great care, as
though an offering
at the wrong moment
might injure their
talk. But behind
the new glasses her
sea-blue eyes
jumped from face to
face so as not to
miss anything,
having learned that
it was the things
people let drop,
that you didn't pay
enough attention
to, that you
tripped over.
Tillis,
re-installed on
campus, was met
with widespread
sentimental
charity. And many
of the faculty and
old students who
dropped into his
office made a point
of mentioning that
the little mall he
had played with as
such an
entertaining notion
had indeed
materialized, even
as not precisely as
he had envisioned
it. Perhaps what he
had drawn on all
those paper napkins
had not been made
flesh, a colleague
told him, but it
had certainly been
made redwood.
Tillis laughed his
laugh full of
sibilants, but more
than another year
passed before he
went to The Square
one day at noon. He
entered it between
browning, damaged
hedges into a din
of disorderly
noises and crowding
and incessant
motion, and walked
past the signs of
desertion: the
dusty For Lease
stores, the display
windows with
recycled clothing
and indeterminate
wares, the shoe
store window
announcing a sale
and filled with
bumpy
configurations of
boxes. When he
looked up from the
densely littered
ground, he saw a
single tattered
banner on a pole,
and wisps of
wisteria lying limp
on a small overhead
trellis, its old,
spent blossoms
clinging to the top
of the hedge. The
combined odors from
ethnic eateries,
which came to him
as a stench, seemed
to be diffused with
an overpowering
smell of roasting
coffee beans, and
Tillis, afraid to
lose himself in
rage and
bewilderment, left.
"But it is full of
lunatic
absurdities, that
arrangement of
atrocities they
have named The
Square. Full,"
Tillis informed
Sara later. "It is
a distortion, an
insult, to the art
of planning. I
myself will not, of
course, ever put my
foot to the place
again. It would
have been
better—immensely
immensely
better—to go
to the vulgarities
of fountains and a
plaza, with a
vendor in a cart
hawking
frankfurters and
lemonade. And the
hedge—yes, a
hedge was
installed—has
been tortured,
obviously from the
first—willfully
tortured, it is
clear. Criminal
vandals have
systematically—because
these are not
random acts only,
Sara—systematically
gouged what could
have been something
splendid to the eye
and easeful to the
soul, with twisted
cans and vicious
broken bottles and
edged implements,
objects by now
contorted and
unnamable.
"And then vandals
have stood back and
shot arrows at it;
they jut out there
still, arrows and
darts—the
whole hedge sending
monstrous messages,
is it not? And by
what authority is
this permitted?
There is a great
deal of blame to
lay somewhere. I
will not, myself,
pursue the matter,
but there is
unquestionably a
doorway at which
blame can rightly
be laid."
Sara had been to
The Square many
times, and was even
then brewing a pot
of The Coffee
Storehouse's house
blend. She went
with her classmates
for lunch, and to
the small markets
for gourmet and
specialty foods,
and of course for
the coffee beans.
Her initial dismay
at the shape the
little mall had
taken kept her from
bringing it up to
Tillis who, full of
bluster, was
nevertheless
finding it
difficult to find
firm footing again
on campus. New
generations of
students, who had
not heard of him,
seemed less
responsive to the
somewhat irregular
knowledge he fanned
out before them,
more resistive to
his seizures of
conviction. And as
time passed, a good
moment didn't
present itself for
talking about the
mall which, Sara
thought, someone
would tell him
about, in any event.
By now, accustomed
to The Square's
visual slope
towards entropy,
Sara had begun to
think that perhaps
it was not
deteriorating, but
dissolving into
life. Very little
of Tillis's cranky,
excited, wondrous
vision had been
realized or
survived, but the
little mall seemed
to her to be filled
with pulsing
life—a
collective life
that had set its
imprint on the
property and
changed the plan.
The Square now was
disorderly,
uncouth,
irreverent,
inventive, and
selfish, but that
would change. If
there was one thing
Sara had learned,
it was that the
winds of change,
though they may
seem only to lurk,
are in constant
operation, making
their moves, large
and small. So the
ravaging of the
hedge, for example,
might be a small,
transitory gesture
made at a point in
time out of
recklessness and
boredom. Gradually,
the students would
leave, shifting the
scenery of their
lives, cautiously
testing ways to
compromise their
own greenness. And
gradually, others
would come and go,
and make of The
Square what was
required. Sometime,
there might be
baroque
instruments. There
might be kites.
Sara had an idea
that gave her a
frisson for a
moment: it was that
probably the hedge
needed to come
down, that it had
been vandalized for
that purpose. It
was an idea that
had come without
her seeking it, and
she felt
immediately that it
was an answer to
something, and that
it was the right
one. But for now
she said something
else to Tillis.
"I've been to The
Square," she said
carefully, "and I
was surprised at
how much of your
physical design was
followed. For the
rest, life took
over, didn't it? So
The Square may
evolve, become
different, and if
it only gets worse,
it will get
renovated, won't
it? The people who
invested—it's
to their own
self-interest,
isn't it? And now
that you're here,
you could have an
input, if you
wanted to get
involved in any
renewal?"
Sara was in the
clothes she wore
now to
campus—pants
and sweatshirt with
an indeterminate
logo and running
shoes—so as
to look like the
others, although
Tillis thought this
was unseemly.
Occasionally, when
he talked to her,
Tillis could see
himself slowly
losing grains of
her attention.
"Renovated.
Renewed," Tillis
said, fiercely. In
a small, stray
moment of
self-recognition,
he knew the
stubborn density
with which he had
held to his vision
of a beautiful,
functional,
cultural mini-mall,
but he also felt
that his conception
had had a purity
and even nobility
of purpose.
And standing in his
house around which
the new, replaced
trees still had not
grown enough to
shield it, Tillis
the romantic
addressed the world
to which he was
exposed. From a
throat thick with
rage and regret, he
faced an open
window and called
out, "We have come
too late. It cannot
be as it was meant
to be, and we have
come upon it too
late, much much too
late…"
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