The narrator was shot by the sniper he was describing
and I quickly picked up his pen.
What luck, I thought, to be sitting up here in the narrator’s
tower where the parking lots look like chalkboards and the
characters scurry around or fall down and die as I design it.
Then I started to read the novel I had inherited, and didn’t
like a lot of what I saw.
Most of the characters were relentlessly evil, taken right off the
bad streets of the Bible.
The narrator would interrupt the story at all the wrong times, like
a third wheel on a date, and deliver shakey opinions like “People
who wear turtlenecks must have really fucked up necks.”
Then he would get lost in pointless investigations, i.e. Was Pac-
Man an animal, so that when we returned to the characters many
pages later, their hair had grown past the shoulder and their
fingernails were inches long.
In support of the novel, I must say that it was designed well. The
scenes were like rowhouses. They had common sidewalls, through
which one could hear the faint voices and footsteps of what was to
come.
I’ve lived those long driving scenes. Everyone knows how hard it
is, after you’ve been on the road all day, to stop driving. You go
to sleep and the road runs under the bed like a filmstrip.
I also liked the sheriff’s anxious dream sequence, where he keeps
putting a two-inch high man in jail, and the small man keeps
walking out, in between the bars.
After a sleepless night he’s woken by the phone. There’s a sniper
in the University tower. The sheriff stands before the bathroom
mirror. Drops of visine are careening down his face.
They are cold and clear
and I can count them through my rifle scope.