This story was my entry to the University of the Philippines Literary Society's Creative Writing Competition last February. It won first place for fiction.
Aside from fixes of a few clerical errors which were pointed out to me, the story is unedited. (Unless someone has tampered with it behind my back.)
(This was my first shot at serious writing after about two years. I'm quite happy with how it turned out.)
THE LAST PAGAN
Aside from fixes of a few clerical errors which were pointed out to me, the story is unedited. (Unless someone has tampered with it behind my back.)
(This was my first shot at serious writing after about two years. I'm quite happy with how it turned out.)
THE LAST PAGAN
“Who is it? What do you want?”
“Uh… I have a message for Professor
H–”
“I am he. Just wait; I shall open
the door.”
The Professor rose from his bed,
unlocked the door, and stared, amazed, for outside stood one like the messenger
of the gods. His hair curled wildly, and his face was firm like stone. He wore
nothing but a cloak – which the Professor recognized to be a chlamys – and a
petasus, a sun cap, and on his left arm rested a short wooden staff around
which two serpents entwined. On the staff’s top was a pair of wings. The
Professor immediately recognized the staff as Hermes’ caduceus, which was often
confused with the rod of Asclepius – but he knew so much better. Excited, the
Professor lowered his gaze, but was disappointed: the man was barefooted; there
were no winged sandals.
“Are you Hermes? Are you sent from
Olympus?” the Professor asked.
“Here’s the message.” The man gave
the Professor an envelope. “Good day, sir.” He quickly left the hall outside
the Professor’s room, the folds of the chlamys rippling, his bare feet making
barely making a sound.
The dumbstruck Professor remained
at his door. He eventually found the sense to follow the emissary god, but found
no trace of him when he exited the hall. He examined the envelope and found
nothing written on it. He opened it with a fingernail. He found a small note
inside. “Administrator’s office. 3 PM,” he read, and inhaled deeply when he saw
the signature: “Zeus, Lord of Olympus.”
“Shall my faith indeed become
sight?” he mumbled to himself, as was his habit. “Shall I finally be vindicated?”
The village’s clock tower told him that the time was about nine in the morning.
“Phoebus Apollo has set forth, and his chariot burns strong,” he muttered. He
suddenly realized that he was wearing only jogging pants, which he wore only
when he felt very lazy – hence the pants were the legwear which he wore most
often. The Professor returned to his room and dressed himself properly.
Three hours later, he ate at the
village’s Common Hall. Its facade was held up by beautiful stone columns, in
the style of 18th-century neoclassical architecture, and little
expense – so he was told – was spared with what was under its roof. Such were
most of the structures of the village, and they delighted the Professor when he
first moved into the village three months before. Initially he had conversed
with friendly, welcoming people at the Hall, but, having found no other person
who had even the faintest notion of the ancient gods, he now sat at a table
which had been recommended to him as a place where one could eat in silence.
Afterwards, he usually rested on a
wooden bench reading a book in the village’s huge, immaculate field for the
afternoon’s length. The field was so beautiful that the Professor, upon his
first sight of it, exclaimed, “Surely this is Elysium on earth!” Stone-paved
paths cut through it. There was a grove in which many relaxed during hot days,
and there were four fountains (godless,
sadly). Birds flew freely, and many field animals which were not considered
pests skittered on the grounds. After some time, the Professor would doze off,
wake up after a few hours, and return to his room to prepare for dinner. Such
was his daily routine, which was broken only on one day each week; on that day he
would meet with a representative from the village’s administration to talk –
mostly about life in the village and occasionally about the gods – and these
conversations would be recorded. He disliked these sessions immensely.
Today, the Professor sat on a bench
near the field’s lake, or the basin in the ground which had been a lake. The
village’s administration had reckoned too many drowning incidents and had had it
emptied of water. The village was quiet, as it nearly always was; its
population was less than two hundred. The Professor found that he had not
brought a book and decided to idle while waiting eagerly for 3 PM. A man was
standing at the basin’s edge, holding a fishing rod. At length, another man,
the much-disliked village doctor, walked up to him, saying, “Hey, John. Caught
any fish?”
The would-be fisherman glared at
the doctor. “Seriously, doc, sometimes I think you’re crazy. And I’m not John.”
The Professor, tired from impatient
excitement, eventually slept. When he woke, the great clock read 3 PM flat, and
he immediately made for the village’s main office. The Professor could not
understand why the administration called its buildings and officers by terms
unsuited for municipalities. He thought that the main office would have been
much more aptly called “town hall”, and that the Administrator should have been
dubbed the “mayor”, but he had never bothered to ask about the matter.
The main office was built in the style of
ancient Greek temples, and its portico was coated so as to give the impression
of a marble-like sheen. The Professor ascended the stairs to the pillared
doorway. He was not greeted by the receptionist
upon entering, or it might be better said that the receptionist was not able to
greet him. She snored instead. “Her mouth looks like a cave,” the Professor
mumbled. Seeing nobody else, he treaded on. The walls of the hall leading to
the Administrator’s office were lined with carved pillars. “They try so desperately
to imitate the pagans,” Professor mused
as he approached the sanctum sanctorum.
“They’ll build the forums, the temples, the shrines, but they’ll do it without the
gods.” He added, with heavy sadness: “The gods are neither welcome nor able to
come back.”
He reached the door of the most
holy place and, breathing in anticipation, opened it. In front of him was a
large desk, and behind it was a huge man – or god. He seemed to the Professor
to be the exact likeness of the great Phidian Zeus at Olympia. His skin was
like ivory. He wore an unshaven beard, and his unkempt hair coiled madly, just
like Hermes. His eyes gazed at – and, perhaps, into – the Professor with an
unsettling yet unfrightening stone-like firmness, again like Hermes. (Perhaps all the gods are like that.) His
colossal frame rested majestically on a great throne-like chair with a wide
window behind it.
The Professor stared silently at
the figure before him, holding his breath in awe. At length, he realized that
he was not doing the proper thing and immediately bowed down, stuttering, “Oh,
great Zeus, Lord of Olympus, I – I beg you: forgive me of my foolishness. I wa
– I was overcome by sheer wonder. You – you truly are as great as the… as the image-smiths of old portrayed you.”
The other responded in a voice like
deep, rumbling thunder, quiet and intense: “I cannot forgive you.”
The Professor prostrated himself
even more, clamped his eyes shut in fear, and remained in that humble position
for a minute. Had he looked up, he would have seen a dark thunderhead
approaching outside the window.
Suddenly, the huge man began to
laugh thunderously, and Professor imagined that the room shook. The Professor looked
up, confused.
After a long laugh, the other said,
“I cannot forgive you, for there is not one fault in your actions.”
The Professor, still prostrate in
obeisance, stared stupidly as the god’s laughter waned to chuckling.
“Come, get up,” said Zeus, having
ceased from laughter. He stood up slightly from his throne and pointed to a
chair in front of the desk. “Have a seat.”
The Professor rose and walked
slowly to the seat.
As soon as the Professor sat, the
god sank back into his chair and said, “I was starting to think you weren’t
coming.”
The Professor did not reply. He was
still giddy with wonder.
“Did you watch the news last
night?” asked Zeus. When the other did not reply, the god tried again to start
a conversation: “What do you think our chances are next game?”
Still the Professor was, except for
loud, conspicuous breathing, silent.
“Would you like anything? Beer
perhaps?” the god asked.
The Professor disregarded the
offer. Finally regaining composure, he said, “It shocks me that the
Administrator of this village is the King of the Gods.”
The other sank deeper into his
throne-chair and was silent.
“That the Lord of Olympus was
sitting and is sitting on a throne in my very village – this is too great a
thing for me to comprehend. Perhaps I shouldn’t be surprised, for the village’s
architecture declares the glory of the gods,” mumbled the Professor happily.
Zeus began chuckling, a soft gurgle
which swelled and blasted into thunderous laughter. “Man, this is better than I
imagined.”
“What?”
“I – hahaha – ain’t the – heeheehee
– Administrator.”
“But – but
this is his office – the
Administrator’s, I mean.”
“Course it is.” His laughter
softened. “It’s the best place to meet in this dump – privacy and all that shit.”
At this, the Professor, displeased
with the god’s use of the expletive (for had never so much as used “crap” in
his life), frowned slightly; he had always expected the gods to be of a better
class, one which employed his idea of a refined manner of speech. “O Zeus, be
not angry, but it would gladden me that you refrain from using such words
during our conversation.”
“I’m sorry,” he said
unapologetically, and his laughter resurged.
Off-put by the faux apology,
Professor asked, “Where is he then, the Administrator?”
Zeus (or the person who claims to be Zeus, the Professor thought as doubts
entered his mind) snorted, and it pealed across the room like a loud, rude
fart. “The Administrator ain’t here. He’s gone, and he won’t ever come back.”
“What do you mean?” cried the
Professor. “Have you done something to him?”
“Sure as hell I done something to
him.”
“What did you do to him?”
The god got off the throne-chair,
and the Professor saw how tall he was: nearly seven feet. The man sank to his
knees, as if he were in a confession box, his chest still well above the desk. “Forgive
me, Father, for I have sinned,” he confessed mockingly. “I have just killed a
man. Took his gun, put it to his head. I pulled the trigger; now he’s dead.”
There was no a tone of remorse in his voice; it bore the insane pride of a
madman. Lightning flashed dramatically in the sky outside the window.
“What?”
“Said I couldn’t do what I wanted
to do; against the rules, he said. Well, sod the rules. He took out his gun – beautiful
little thing – and pointed at me, but I’m too quick. Wonder what he has to say
about the rules now. Haha.”
“You cannot be serious!”
The man stood up quickly and shouted,
“Damm straight I’m serious!” His stone-firm eyes glared. Thunder pealed.
The Professor sat quietly, avoiding
the other’s intense gaze. The thought entered his mind that the huge person could
easily do the same thing to him. He scanned the room for traces of the murder.
Peeking behind the god, he saw that the head of the throne-like chair was
splattered with some blood. After some time, he asked in a low tone, “Where is
the body?”
The man pointed at the open window
behind his chair.
“You pushed him out of it –
defenestrated him,” the Professor stated, breathing heavily.
The other grinned slightly. “Take a
look,” he said, and led the Professor to the window.
The Professor peered nervously out
the window. Just outside lay the dead, sprawled body of the Administrator lying
face down. A puddle of blood trickled from the head, staining his disheveled
black hair. “You have not taken away anything from him – his clothing or
anything else – have you?” asked the Professor. He hastily added: “Aside from
his life.”
The other shook his head. “I ain’t
a thief.”
The Professor was disgusted. After
five seconds, he withdrew from the window and returned to his chair. He stared
at the floor in silent, breathless revulsion.
The other viewed the person he had
murdered for a little longer, closed the window, and returned to his throne.
“The guy was loud,” he said, as if this were a perfectly acceptable
explanation. His voice, at least to the Professor’s ears, had become unlike
rich thunder and, instead, was now horridly nasal, like an old, rusty guitar.
The Professor was now sure that this
could not be the King of the Gods; this man (for he was now certain that he was a man) was absolutely mad. He demanded:
“Who are you?”
The other man laughed again. “It’s
a joke.”
“What?”
“A joke. I ain’t Zeus.”
“You surely aren’t him, for God’s sake!” the Professor furiously
bellowed, now standing. “A guilty conscience needs no accuser, so they say, but
you carry not one ounce of guilt; therefore I shall be your accuser! You are
nothing like Zeus! You are a mess! You are an utterly detestable madman! You
are a shameless blackguard! You have murdered a man who was done you no great
harm. Your offense is rank; it stinks to heaven and to Hades! Cursed is the day
you were born!” The Professor stopped for breath.
The other seemed indifferent towards
the tirade. “Here, this is me.” He reached for his hair and removed it off his
head; it was a wig. “Old mop, haha.
Just did some stuff with it.” He was bald underneath. He did not remove the
beard.
The Professor vaguely recognized
him as one of the village custodians and did not know what to say.
The other man asked, “Want a beer?”
The Professor’s brows relaxed, and
his mouth fell in astonishment. “Did you not hear me?”
The man loudly replied, “Sure as
hell I heard you! What the hell, man? My mother ain’t got nothin’ on you.”
“The guy has a fridge here,” muttered the man.
“Keeps some beer.”
The Professor’s tongue loosened.
“What was the joke that you were talking about?”
The other man opened a small
refrigerator at the near corner. “What? Sorry, wasn’t listening.”
“The joke, what was it?”
“Oh, that. Heck, man, I’m not
Zeus.”
“Is that it?”
“What?”
“You had me come here to adore you,
and my doing so was amusing because you are not Zeus. Is that the joke?”
“Uh… well, that and the guy who
dressed in the shit-ugly blanket – the Hermes guy.” He pulled out two
crystalline bottles steaming from cold.
“Where is he, your accomplice?”
“What? Oh – dunno, rottin’ in hell,
I guess.”
“Did you…?”
“Yes, Father, he’s dead, too.”
The Professor panted.
“The Administrator wasn’t expected though. Apparently
it’s against house rules to play jokes on patients. He wasn’t a nice guy
anyway.”
“What?”
“I… uh… got your file and you were
the craziest nut I’ve ever read about. I read a lot of patient files, but you
take the cake. Just thought I’d have a good laugh. A good joke, you know. Sorry
if it bothered yah, but I guess it isn’t too bad. Nobody seems to do shit here
anyway – oh, sorry, you don’t like that word.
“Anyway, you got in here because
you done the craziest stuff I’ve ever seen. Not just the usual. Your sacrifice
thing at – where was it? – Greece? Damm! You crazy, man.” He placed the two
beers on the table, after which he cursed and muttered, “Where’s the bottle
opener?”
“What are you talking about? What
do you mean by my getting in this place? I moved in here because I wished to.”
The man, finding the opener, asked,
“You know what this place is, don’t yah?”
“It’s a village.”
The man’s face expressed disbelief
for a moment, and he laughed, shaking his head. “You crazier than everybody
else here, you know that? Heck, man, your brain’s a lost cause. They can’t do
much with it no more.”
“What do you mean?”
“It’s a nuthouse, genius.”
The Professor blinked. “Do you mean
a mental institution?”
The man, still laughing, nodded.
A terrible feeling of realization crept
into the Professor, and it quickly engulfed and overcame him. He fell onto his
chair and buried his head in his hands.
The other man opened one of the
beers and took a swig.
“It’s a madhouse,” the Professor
mumbled bitterly. Then, oblivious to everything else, he recounted, mumbling: “Last
summer, I was enjoying a break that professors really should have, but don’t in
reality. I went to Greece, to a temple, and I sacrificed, but I wasn’t able to
complete it. Authorities arrived. Vandalism, they called it, or something of
that sort. I wanted to defend myself, but nobody else wanted to – or some were
willing, but not in the manner that I wished to be defended. Deportation came
after a time. How terrible, isn’t it? I was the only man alive who had the
sense – who’s sane enough – to use the temple for its original purpose, and
they had me plea insanity. Authorities, indeed. I had sensed that there was
something rotten in the state of the world, and these people confirmed it. For
reasons I do not know – or cannot remember – I ended up here, in a madhouse. I
recall that I moved in here of my own free will, thinking that this institution
was something else, but I suppose they’ve done something to me – or I’ve done
something to myself. It’s a madhouse. I’m in a madhouse.” After a few seconds,
he added: “Because I am the only sane person in the world.”
The other man sniggered mid-drink,
and beer spurt out of his nose. Then he laughed harder.
“Ridicule me, if you wish,” the
Professor murmured. “The scoundrels did the same to me – nay, the world.” After
a while, he understood another thing and mumbled, to himself and not to the
other man, “Oh, that’s why he was called the Administrator.”
“Here, man.” He opened the other beer and
handed it to the Professor with his long arm. “C’mon, take it.”
Without looking up, the Professor
received the beer. He immediately forgot his wretchedness, for he was fascinated
with the sparkling, steaming bottle. The silvery glass was mostly opaque, and
the brownness of the beer was barely visible. On it was engraved a peacock
feather stretching from the neck to the bottom. Around it were flowing vines
and more abstract designs, like old French Art Nouveau. There was no brand
name. He rotated it, examining the artistry which was so rare and unexpected
for a beer bottle. “It’s beautiful,” he muttered. He looked at the other man’s
bottle, and it was just like his. The Professor put it to his lips and sipped.
The beer was revolting.
“By Olympus, what is this?” exclaimed the Professor, jerking
the bottle away from his gagging mouth and spitting out what he could. “It’s
horrible! Never in my life have I tasted something like it! It tastes like –
like…” It tasted utterly like crap, but the Professor would not use such a
word.
The other man understood and
mercifully refrained from finishing the Professor’s sentence. “Takes a while to
get used to, ’s all.”
The Professor saw that the man’s
beer was nearly consumed. “You – you are able… to stomach it,” he said, astonished.
“How?”
“Heck, man, it ain’t that bad.”
“I suppose you can only drink it
because it’s just like everything inside you – rubbish.”
The other man scoffed.
The Professor slammed the bottle on
the desk. “It’s a shame that such a beautiful work of craftsmanship should be
used to hold such a vile thing. What evil things reside in the minds of crafty
men! I am glad that I am not a deft man, lest I should find myself in league
with these blackguards. Then again, I always find myself in league with no one
else.”
The other man finished his beer
with quick, rude gulps.
Examining the bottle again, the
Professor said, “It’s rather like a whited sepulcher, isn’t it?”
“Huh… I’ve heard that expression
before, whited sepulcher.” The other man, eyes shut tight, reaching into the
deepest chambers of his insane mind to recall. After a few seconds of strenuous
brainwork, he gave up. “Jesus, I can’t remember.”
The door was unexpectedly opened,
and a girl, about first-grade age, hopped and skipped inside. “Hey! Who are you
guys? Where’s daddy?” she demanded with the matter-of-fact demeanor common to
all women.
Both men did not reply immediately,
perhaps on account of the embarrassment common to all men when faced with a
woman’s matter-of-fact-ness.
“Where is daddy?” the girl asked
again. “Are you guys crinimals?” When neither responded, she said, “I saw some
crinimals on the news last night, but Daddy doesn’t want me to watch news. He
says it’s bad; too many bad people on the news. Are you crinimals? Did you do
something to Daddy?”
The huge man found his voice first:
“Do you wanna see Daddy, girl?”
The girl nodded, matter-of-fact-ness
still on her face.
“For God’s sake, don’t bring her to
the window,” the Professor whispered urgently.
“Come here, girl,” the other man
said, ignoring the Professor’s plea.
The girl shook her head. “No, I
don’t know if you’re a crinimal o’ not, but Daddy and Mommy and my teacher and
my aunt and every growmup I knows says not trust strangers. You’re a stranger,
and I think all strangers are crinimals.”
The man sighed and opened a drawer
on his side of the desk, pulling something out. “I know where Daddy is. I can
take you to him,” he said.
The girl stamped her foot. “No! You bring Daddy to me.” Then her face
lit. “Or maybe I can just ask Miz Linda where he is. She always knows where
Daddy is. She’s his… uh… sercet… uh… sercetrery.”
The Professor heard a click. “Good lord, no.”
“Oh wait, never mind. She’s busy,”
the girl continued. “She’s always busy, so I don’t get to talk to her much.
Maybe somebody else knows.”
“I know where he is, girl,” muttered the other man, and pop went the silenced gunshot.
As the girl fell, the Professor clutched
his head, horrified.
The other man returned the gun,
walked over to the girl, and picked her up, her blood dripping, and she was
defenestrated. The man inexplicably sang “Ring-a-round the Rosie” in his horrible, nasal voice. The thick thunderhead now
covered the sky, and rain began falling, washing the bloody bodies outside the
window.
“What devil did you make a pact
with? To which demon did you sell your soul?” The Professor’s voice seethed
with grief, disgust, and loathing. He was mourning for her, a girl whose only
dirge was a nursery rhyme, although he had only known of her three minutes
before. No one else was around to grieve. His head was downcast, and tears
rimmed his eyes.
Returning to his chair, the other
man scoffed and asked, “Do you know them? Demons?”
The Professor was silent, still
suffering.
“You much more psycho than I
thought.” The man chuckled. “Hell, you know gods, you know demons. What else do
you know?”
“I know a man who has tried to be
both these things, both god and demon. He has failed in masquerading as one,
and he has utterly succeeded in being the other.”
“Are you finishing that?” asked the
other, pointing to the Professor’s unfinished beer.
“Oh, how I would that the gods had
not fled!” the Professor lamented. “How great the loss of man because of his
rejection of them, of their watchful eyes! They that sat on Olympus thought us
fools, and we confirmed that.”
“I’m taking the beer; you ain’t
listening.”
“That girl – I wonder where she is
now.”
The man poured a mouthful of the
awful beer into his mouth and gulped without a grimace. “You know, man,” he
said. “You damm crazy.”
“I suppose I am damned to be crazy, and I am glad, if you and everyone else are
the sane people in this world.”
The man shook his head, sniggering.
“You really should hear yourself, man.”
The Professor could smell the man’s
vile beer-tainted breath. “I do. What I wish is that I could hear nobody else.”
He paused and then valiantly declared, “I wish to fly to the gods – to Elysium,
if they be there; or to whichever realm they now rest.”
“Wait, wait. You sayin’ you wanna
die?”
“What other way is there to flee?”
The man whistled loudly. “You
crazy.”
“I would say the same to you.” He
breathed deeply, knowing that he would be soon be unable to do so in body. “The
gun, please.”
The man picked up the gun and offered
it solemnly to the Professor. “You sure?” asked the man queasily. “Is there…
uh… anything I can do to make you change your mind?”
“What? Would you like to convert me
to the Church of the Good Joke?”
“I just think being in a nuthouse
is better than being dead.”
“I have been in a madhouse my
entire life, for the world is madhouse, and I am utterly sick of it. All the sane
people aren’t in it – or they aren’t part of it.
“For more than half a century, I
have been the only believer of the old gods, although I must confess to being a
poor practitioner of my faith. The gods have done me neither wrong nor good, –
or what people would say to be good –, but it has been a great deal better than
believing in the gods of this age.
“Is the fault in man or is it in
his gods? I do not know, and I do not care. What I do care about is flight: whether
flight to the Meadows of Asphodel and the Lethe or to the happy rest of the
Fields of Elysium, I do not know; it is for the sons of Asterion to judge.”
“You crazy.”
Both were silent for a time. The
Professor recollected the events of his sad life.
After an eternity, the man asked, “Do
you wanna do it yourself or should I?”
The Professor hesitated. “I wish to
be noble enough to die by my own hand, as the noblest of men have done, but I
have not the courage.”
“Shoulda drunk your beer,” the man
muttered. The Professor’s bottle was now half empty – nobody in the room would
have called it half full. “There’s still some more in the fridge if you…” The
man’s voice remarkably died and left the sentence unfinished. The moment was
much too grave, and even he knew that.
After a minute, the Professor
sighed and said, “Fire the gun when I signal you to.”
The man grimly nodded.
The Professor stood and turned his
face from the man. Like a stoic martyr, he walked to the spot where the girl
was killed; the holy ground was marked where the trail of blood started. He
heard the gun click. The rain had now swelled into a loud thunderstorm. “I hear
the summons; the Lord of Olympus calls me.” He breathed deeply. “By Zeus and
the Olympians and all that I hold dear beyond the walls of this wretched
world!” He made a gesture with his hand, and so fell the last of the pagans.
The man walked to the body. “You
crazy, man. You crazy.” The Professor’s face was one of a tired man to whom
rest had been given – whether this was the good or bad kind of rest, the man
could not tell. He picked up the body. “He’s crazy.” He dropped the Professor,
and the body landed awkwardly sprawled on top of the Administrator and his
daughter. The bodies of the three were washed, and there flowed a beautiful
crimson-blue stream of blood and rainwater, but the man did not notice this. He
closed the window and sank back into the throne-chair. He consumed what
remained of the Professor’s beer. “He’s damm crazy,” he muttered, shaking his
head.
The man brought the gun with him as
he left the office. The receptionist had now woken up due to the storm, and the
man shot her. He exited the building and was drenched almost instantly. The
cold, hostile rain pierced his skin, his bones, and his very soul, as if it
carried a vindictive purpose, and, perhaps defiantly, he laughed.
And for the first time in decades,
in centuries, in millennia, Olympus had risen to strike, in fire and water and
lightning.
Ashes, ashes, they all fall down.
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