The
Giver
Lois Lowry
Houghton Mifflin Company
For all the children
To whom we entrust the future
1
It was almost December, and Jonas was
beginning to be frightened. No. Wrong word, Jonas thought. Frightened meant
that deep, sickening feeling of something terrible about to happen. Frightened
was the way he had felt a year ago when an unidentified aircraft had overflown
the community twice. He had seen it both times. Squinting toward the sky, he
had seen the sleek jet, almost a blur at its high speed, go past, and a second
later heard the blast of sound that followed. Then one more time, a moment
later, from the opposite direction, the same plane.
At first, he had been only fascinated. He had never seen
aircraft so close, for it was against the rules for Pilots to fly over the
community. Occasionally, when supplies were de-livered by cargo planes to the
landing field across the river, the children rode their bicycles to the
riverbank and watched, intrigued, the unloading and then the takeoff directed
to the west, always away from the community.
But the aircraft a year ago had been different. It was not
a squat, fat-bellied cargo plane but a needle-nosed single-pilot jet. Jonas,
looking around anxiously, had seen others — adults as well as children — stop
what they were doing and wait, confused, for an explanation of the frightening
event.
Then all of the citizens had been ordered to
go into the nearest building and stay there. IMMEDIATELY, the rasping voice through the speakers
had said. LEAVE YOUR BICY‑CLES
WHERE THEY ARE.
Instantly, obediently, Jonas had dropped his bike on its
side on the path behind his family’s dwelling. He had run indoors and stayed
there, alone. His parents were both at work, and his little sister, Lily, was at the
Looking through the front window, he had seen no people: none of the busy afternoon
crew of Street Cleaners, Landscape Workers, and Food Delivery people who usually populated the
community at that time of day. He saw only the abandoned bikes here and there
on their sides; an upturned wheel on one was still revolving slowly.
He had been frightened then. The sense of his own
community silent, waiting, had made his stomach churn. He had trembled.
But it had been nothing. Within minutes the speakers had
crackled again, and the voice, reassuring now and less urgent, had explained
that a Pilot-in-Training had misread his navigational instructions and made a
wrong turn. Desperately the Pilot had been trying to make his way back before
his error was noticed.
NEEDLESS TO SAY, HE WILL BE RELEASED, the voice
had said, followed by silence.
There was an ironic tone to that final message, as if the Speaker found it
amusing; and Jonas had smiled a little, though he knew what a grim statement it
had been. For a contributing citizen to be re-leased from the community was a
final decision, a terrible punishment, an overwhelming statement of failure.
Even the children were scolded if
they used the term lightly at play, jeering at a teammate who missed a catch or
stumbled in a race. Jonas had done it once, had shouted at his best friend,
“That’s it, Asher! You’re released!” when Asher’s clumsy error had lost a match
for his team. He had been taken aside for a brief and serious talk by the
coach, had hung his head with guilt and embarrassment, and apologized to Asher
after the game.
Now, thinking about the feeling of fear as he pedaled home
along the river path, he remembered that moment of palpable, stomach-sinking
terror when the aircraft had streaked above. It was not what he was feeling now
with December approaching. He searched for the right word to describe his own
feeling.
Jonas was careful about language. Not like his friend,
Asher, who talked too fast and mixed things up, scrambling words and phrases
until they were barely recognizable and often very funny.
Jonas grinned, remembering the morning that Asher had
dashed into the classroom, late as usual, arriving breathlessly in the middle
of the chanting of the morning anthem. When the class took their seats at the
conclusion of the patriotic hymn, Asher remained standing to make his public
apology as was required.
“I apologize for inconveniencing my learning community.”
Asher ran through the standard apology phrase rap-idly, still catching his
breath. The Instructor and class waited patiently for his explanation. The
students had all been grinning, because they had listened to Asher’s explanations
so many times before.
“I left home at the correct time
but when I was riding along near the hatchery, the crew was separating some
salmon. I guess I just got distraught, watching them.
“I apologize to my classmates,”
Asher concluded. He smoothed his rumpled tunic and sat down.
“We accept your apology, Asher.”
The class recited the standard response in unison. Many of the students were
biting their lips to keep from laughing.
“I accept your apology, Asher,”
the Instructor said. He was smiling. “And I thank you, because once again you
have provided an opportunity for a lesson in language. ‘Distraught’ is too
strong an adjective to describe salmon-viewing.” He turned and wrote “distraught”
on the instructional board. Beside it he wrote “distracted.”
Jonas, nearing his home now,
smiled at the recollection. Thinking, still, as he wheeled his bike into its
narrow port beside the door, he realized that frightened was the wrong word to
describe his feelings, now that December was al-most here. It was too strong an
adjective.
He had waited a long time for this
special December. Now that it was almost upon him, he wasn’t frightened, but he
was . . . eager, he decided. He was eager for it to come. And he was excited,
certainly. All of the Elevens were excited about the event that would be coming
so soon.
But
there was a little shudder of nervousness when he
thought about it, about what might
happen.
Apprehensive, Jonas decided. That’s what I am.
“Who wants to be the first
tonight, for feelings?” Jonas’s father asked, at the conclusion of their
evening meal.
It was one of the
rituals, the evening telling of feelings.
Sometimes Jonas and his sister,
Lily, argued over turns, over who would get to go first. Their parents, of
course, were part of the ritual; they, too, told their feelings each evening.
But like all parents — all adults — they didn’t fight and wheedle for their
turn.
Nor did Jonas, tonight. His feelings
were too complicated this evening. He wanted to share them, but he wasn’t
eager to begin the process of sifting through his own complicated emotions,
even with the help that he knew his parents could give.
“You go, Lily,” he said, seeing
his sister, who was much younger — only a Seven — wiggling with impatience in her chair.
“I felt very angry this
afternoon,” Lily announced. “My Childcare group was at the play area, and we had a
visiting group of
Sevens, and they didn’t obey the rules at all.
One of them — a
male; I don’t know his name — kept going right to the front of the line for the
slide, even though the rest of us were all waiting. I felt so angry at him. I
made my hand into a fist, like this.” She held up a clenched fist and the rest
of the family smiled at her small defiant gesture.
“Why do you think the visitors
didn’t obey the rules?” Mother asked.
Lily considered, and shook her
head. “I don’t know. They acted like . . . like ...”
“Animals?” Jonas suggested. He
laughed.
“That’s right,” Lily said,
laughing too. “Like animals.” Neither child knew what the word meant, exactly,
but it was often used to describe someone uneducated or clumsy, someone who
didn’t fit in.
“Where were the visitors from?” Father asked.
Lily frowned, trying to remember.
“Our leader told us, when he made the welcome speech, but I can’t remember. I
guess I wasn’t paying attention. It was from another community. They had to
leave very early, and they had their midday meal on the bus.”
Mother nodded. “Do you think it’s
possible that their rules may be different? And so they simply didn’t know what
your play area rules were?”
Lily shrugged, and nodded. “I
suppose.”
“You’ve
visited other communities, haven’t you?” Jonas asked. “My group has, often.”
Lily nodded again. “When we were
Sixes, we went and shared a whole school day with a group of Sixes in their
community.”
“How did you feel when you were
there?”
Lily frowned. “I felt strange.
Because their methods were different. They were learning usages that my group
hadn’t learned yet, so we felt stupid.”
Father was listening with
interest. “I’m thinking, Lily,” he said, “about the boy who didn’t obey the
rules today. Do you think it’s possible that he felt strange and stupid, being
in a new place with rules that he didn’t know about?”
Lily pondered that. “Yes,” she
said, finally.
“I feel a little sorry for him,”
Jonas said, “even though I don’t even know him. I feel sorry for anyone who is in a place where he
feels strange and stupid.”
“How do you feel now, Lily?”
Father asked. “Still angry?”
“I guess
not,” Lily decided. “I guess I feel a little sorry for him. And sorry I made a
fist.” She grinned.
Jonas smiled back at his sister. Lily’s feelings were always
straightforward, fairly simple, usually easy to re-solve. He guessed that his
own had been, too, when he was a Seven.
He listened politely, though not very attentively, while
his father took his turn, describing a feeling of worry that he’d had that day
at work: a concern about one of the newchildren who wasn’t doing well. Jonas’s
father’s title was Nurturer. He and the other Nurturers were responsible for
all the physical and emotional needs of every new-child during its earliest
life. It was a very important job, Jonas knew, but it wasn’t one that
interested him much.
“What gender is it?” Lily asked.
“Male,” Father said. “He’s a sweet little male with a
lovely disposition. But he isn’t growing as fast as he should, and he doesn’t
sleep soundly. We have him in the extra care section for supplementary
nurturing, but the committee’s beginning to talk about releasing him.”
“Oh, no,” Mother
murmured sympathetically. “I know how sad that must make you feel.”
Jonas and Lily both nodded sympathetically as well.
Release of newchildren was always sad, because they hadn’t had a chance to
enjoy life within the community yet. And they hadn’t done anything wrong.
There were only two occasions of release which were not punishment. Release of the
elderly, which was a time of celebration for a life well and fully lived; and
release of a newchild, which always brought a sense of what-could-we-have-done.
This was especially troubling for the Nurturers, like Father, who felt they
had failed somehow. But it happened very rarely.
“Well,” Father said, “I’m going to
keep trying. I may
ask the committee for permission to bring him here at night, if you don’t
mind. You know what the night-crew Nurturers are like. I think this little guy
needs something extra.”
“Of course,” Mother said, and Jonas and Lily nodded. They
had heard Father complain about the night crew be-fore. It was a lesser job,
night-crew nurturing, assigned to those who lacked the interest or skills or
insight for the more vital jobs of the daytime hours. Most of the people on the
night crew had not even been given spouses because they lacked, somehow, the
essential capacity to connect to others, which was required for the creation of
a family unit.
“Maybe we could even keep him,” Lily suggested sweetly,
trying to look innocent. The look was fake, Jonas knew; they all knew.
“Lily,” Mother reminded her, smiling, “you know the
rules.”
Two children — one male, one female — to each family
unit. It was written very clearly in the rules.
Lily giggled. “Well,” she said, “I thought maybe just this
once.”
Next, Mother, who held a prominent
position at the Department of Justice, talked about her feelings. Today a
re-peat offender had been brought before her, someone who had broken the rules before.
Someone who she hoped had been adequately and fairly punished, and who had been
restored to his place: to his job, his home, his family unit. To see him
brought before her a second time caused her overwhelming feelings of
frustration and anger. And even guilt, that she hadn’t made a difference in his
life.
“I feel frightened, too, for him,” she confessed. “You
know that there’s no third chance. The rules say that if there’s a third
transgression, he simply has to be released.” Jonas shivered. He knew it
happened. There was even a boy in his group of Elevens whose father had been released years before. No one ever
mentioned it; the disgrace was unspeakable. It was hard to imagine.
Lily stood up and went to her mother. She stroked her
mother’s arm.
From his place at the table, Father reached over and took
her hand. Jonas reached for the other.
One by one, they comforted her. Soon she smiled, thanked
them, and murmured that she felt soothed.
The ritual continued. “Jonas?” Father asked. “You’re last,
tonight.”
Jonas sighed. This evening he almost would have preferred
to keep his feelings hidden. But it was, of course, against the rules.
“I’m feeling apprehensive,” he confessed, glad that the
appropriate descriptive word had finally come to him.
“Why is that, son?” His father
looked concerned.
“I know there’s really nothing to worry about,” Jonas
explained, “and that every adult has been through it. I know you have, Father,
and you too, Mother. But it’s the Ceremony that I’m apprehensive about. It’s
almost December.”
Lily looked up, her eyes wide. “The Ceremony of Twelve,”
she whispered in an awed voice. Even the smallest children — Lily’s age and
younger — knew that it lay in the future for each of them.
“I’m glad you
told us of your feelings,” Father said.
“Lily,” Mother said, beckoning to
the little girl, “Go on now and get into your nightclothes. Father and I are
going to stay here and talk to Jonas for a while.”
Lily
sighed, but obediently she got down from her chair. “Privately?” she asked.
Mother
nodded. “Yes,” she said, “this talk will be a private one with Jonas.”
2
Jonas
watched as his father poured a fresh cup of coffee. He waited.
“You know,” his father finally
said, “every December was exciting to me when I was young. And it has been for
you and Lily, too, I’m sure. Each December brings such changes.”
Jonas nodded. He could remember
the Decembers back to when he had become, well, probably a Four. The earlier
ones were lost to him. But he observed them each year, and he remembered Lily’s
earliest Decembers. He remembered when his family received Lily, the day she
was named, the day that she had become a One.
The Ceremony for the Ones was
always noisy and fun. Each December, all the newchildren born in the previous
year turned One. One at a time — there were always fifty in each year’s group,
if none had been released — they had been brought to the stage by the Nurturers
who had cared for them since birth. Some were already walking, wobbly on their
unsteady legs; others were no more than a few days old, wrapped in blankets,
held by their Nurturers.
“I enjoy the Naming,” Jonas said.
His
mother agreed, smiling. “The year we got Lily, we knew, of
course, that we’d receive our female, because we’d made our application and
been approved. But I’d been wondering and wondering what her name would be.
“I could have sneaked a look at the list prior to the ceremony,”
Father confided. “The committee always makes the list in advance, and it’s right
there in the office at the
“As a matter of fact,” he went on, “I feel a little guilty
about this. But I did go in this afternoon and looked to
see if this year’s Naming list had been made yet. It was right there in the office,
and I looked up number Thirty-six — that’s the little guy I’ve been concerned
about — because it occurred to me that it might enhance his nurturing if I
could call him by a name. Just privately, of course, when no one else is
around.”
“Did you find it?” Jonas asked. He was fascinated. It
didn’t seem a terribly important rule, but the fact that his father had broken
a rule at all awed him. He glanced at his mother, the one responsible for
adherence to the rules, and was relieved that she was smiling.
His father nodded. “His name — if he makes it to the
Naming without being released, of course — is to be Gabriel. So I whisper that
to him when I feed him every four hours, and during exercise and playtime. If
no one can hear me.
“I call him Gabe, actually,” he
said, and grinned.
“Gabe.” Jonas tried it out. A good
name, he decided.
Though Jonas had only become a Five the year that they
acquired Lily and learned her name, he remembered the excitement, the
conversations at home, wondering about her: how she would look, who she would
be, how she would fit into their established family unit. He re-membered
climbing the steps to the stage with his parents, his father by his side that
year instead of with the Nurturers, since it was the year that he would be
given a new-child of his own.
He remembered his mother taking the newchild, his sister,
into her arms, while the document was read to the assembled family units.
“Newchild Twenty-three,” the Namer had read. “Lily.”
He remembered his father’s look of delight, and that his father had whispered, “She’s
one of my favorites. I was hoping for her to be the one.” The crowd had clapped, and Jonas had
grinned. He liked his sister’s name. Lily, barely awake, had waved her small
fist. Then they had stepped down to make room for the next family unit.
“When I was an Eleven,” his father said now, “as you are,
Jonas, I was very impatient, waiting for the Ceremony of Twelve. It’s a long
two days. I remember that I enjoyed the Ones, as I always do, but that I didn’t
pay much attention to the other ceremonies, except for my sister’s. She became
a Nine that year, and got her bicycle. I’d been teaching her to ride mine, even
though technically I wasn’t supposed to.”
Jonas laughed. It was one of the few rules that was not
taken very seriously and was almost always broken. The children all received their bicycles at Nine;
they were not allowed to ride bicycles before then. But almost always, the
older brothers and sisters had secretly taught the younger ones. Jonas had been
thinking already about teaching Lily.
There was talk about changing the
rule and giving the bicycles at an earlier age. A committee was studying the idea. When something went to a committee for
study, the people always joked about it. They said that the committee members
would become Elders by the time the rule change was made.
Rules were very hard to change. Sometimes, if it was a
very important rule — unlike the one governing the age for bicycles — it would
have to go, eventually, to The Re-ceiver for a decision. The Receiver was the
most important Elder. Jonas had never even seen him, that he knew of; someone
in a position of such importance lived and worked alone. But the committee
would never bother The Receiver with a question about bicycles; they would simply
fret and argue about it themselves for years, until the citizens forgot that it
had ever gone to them for study.
His father continued. “So I watched and cheered when my sister,
Katya, became a Nine and removed her hair ribbons and got her bicycle,” Father
went on. “Then I didn’t pay much attention to the Tens and Elevens. And finally, at the end of the second day,
which seemed to go on forever, it was my turn. It was the Ceremony of Twelve.”
Jonas shivered. He pictured his father, who must have been
a shy and quiet boy, for he was a shy and quiet man, seated with his group,
waiting to be called to the stage.
The Ceremony of Twelve was the
last of the Ceremonies.
The most important.
“I remember how proud my parents looked — and my sister,
too; even though she wanted to be out riding the bicycle publicly, she stopped
fidgeting and was very still and attentive when my turn came.
“But to be honest, Jonas,” his father said, “for me there was not the element of suspense that there is with your Ceremony. Because I was already fairly certain of what my Assignment was to be.”
Jonas was surprised. There was no way, really, to know in advance. It was a secret
selection, made by the leaders of the community, the Committee of Elders, who took the
responsibility so seriously that there were never even any jokes made about
Assignments.
His mother seemed surprised, too. “How could you have
known?” she asked.
His father smiled his gentle smile. “Well, it was clear to me — and my parents later
confessed that it had been obvious to them, too — what my aptitude was. I had
always loved the newchildren more than anything. When my friends in my age
group were holding bicycle races, or building toy vehicles or bridges with
their construction sets, or — “
“All the things I do with my friends,” Jonas pointed out,
and his mother nodded in agreement.
“I always participated, of course, because as children we must experience all of those
things. And I studied hard in school, as you do, Jonas. But again and again,
during free time, I found myself drawn to the newchildren. I spent al-most all
of my volunteer hours helping in the
Jonas nodded. During the past year he had been aware of the increasing level of observation. In school, at recreation time, and during volunteer hours, he had noticed the Elders watching him and the other Elevens. He had seen them taking notes. He knew, too, that the Elders were meeting for long hours with all of the instructors that he and the other Elevens had had during their years of school.
“So
I expected it, and I was pleased, but not at all surprised, when my Assignment
was announced as Nurturer,” Father explained.
“Did
everyone applaud, even though they weren’t surprised?” Jonas asked.
“Oh,
of course. They were happy for me, that my Assignment was what I wanted most.
I felt very fortunate.” His father smiled.
“Were
any of the Elevens disappointed, your year?” Jonas asked. Unlike his father, he
had no idea what his Assignment would be. But he knew that some would disappoint
him. Though he respected his father’s work, Nurturer would not be his wish.
And he didn’t envy Laborers at all.
His
father thought. “No, I don’t think so. Of course the Elders are so careful in
their observations and selections.”
“I
think it’s probably the most important job in our community,” his mother
commented.
“My
friend Yoshiko was surprised by her selection as Doctor,” Father said, “but she
was thrilled. And let’s see, there was Andrei — I remember that when we were
boys he never wanted to do physical things. He spent all the recreation time he
could with his construction set, and his volunteer hours were always on
building sites. The Elders knew that, of course. Andrei was given the
Assignment of Engineer and he was delighted.”
“Andrei
later designed the bridge that crosses the river to the west of town,” Jonas’s
mother said. “It wasn’t there when we were children.”
“There
are very rarely disappointments, Jonas. I don’t think you need to worry about
that,” his father reassured him. “And if there are, you know there’s an appeal
process.” But they all laughed at that — an appeal went to a committee for
study.
“I
worry a little about Asher’s Assignment,” Jonas confessed. “Asher’s such fun. But he doesn’t really have any serious interests. He makes
a game out of everything.”
His
father chuckled. “You know,” he said, “I re-member when Asher was a newchild at
the
“The
Elders know Asher,” his mother said. “They’ll find exactly the right Assignment
for him. I don’t think you need to worry about him. But, Jonas, let me warn you
about something that may not have occurred to you. I know I didn’t think about
it until after my Ceremony of Twelve.”
“What’s that?”
“Well,
it’s the last of the Ceremonies, as you know. After Twelve, age isn’t
important. Most of us even lose track of how old we are as time passes, though
the information is in the Hall of Open Records, and we could go and look it up
if we wanted to. What’s important is the preparation for adult life, and the training you’ll
receive in your
Assignment.”
“I know that,” Jonas
said. “Everyone knows that.”
“But
it means,” his mother went on, “that you’ll move into a new group. And each of your friends will.
You’ll no longer be spending
your time with your group of Elevens. After the Ceremony of Twelve, you’ll be with your Assignment group, with those in
training. No more volunteer hours. No more recreation hours. So your friends
will no longer be as close.”
Jonas
shook his head. “Asher and I will always be friends,” he said firmly. “And
there will still be school.”
“That’s
true,” his father agreed. “But what your mother said is true as well. There
will be changes.”
“Good
changes, though,”
his mother pointed out. “After my Ceremony of Twelve, I missed my childhood
recreation. But when I entered my training for Law and Justice, I found myself
with people who shared my interests. I made friends on a new level, friends of
all ages.”
“Did you still play at all, after
Twelve?” Jonas asked.
“Occasionally,”
his mother replied. “But it didn’t seem as important to me.”
“I
did,” his father said, laughing. “I still do. Every day, at the
Lily
appeared, wearing her nightclothes, in the door-way. She gave an impatient
sigh. “This is certainly a very long private conversation,” she said. “And there are certain people waiting for their comfort
object.”
“Lily,”
her mother said fondly, “you’re very close to being an Eight, and when you’re
an Eight, your comfort object will be taken away. It will be recycled to the younger children. You should be
starting to go off to sleep without it.”
But
her father had already gone to the shelf and taken down the stuffed elephant
which was kept there. Many of the comfort objects, like Lily’s, were soft,
stuffed, imaginary creatures. Jonas’s had been called a bear.
“Here you are, Lily-billy,” he
said. “I’ll come help you remove your hair ribbons.”
Jonas and his mother rolled their
eyes, yet they watched affectionately as Lily and her father headed to her sleeping-room with the stuffed elephant that
had been given to her as her comfort object when she was born. His mother moved
to her big desk and opened her briefcase; her work never seemed to end, even
when she was at home in the evening. Jonas went to his own desk and began to
sort through his school papers for the evening’s assignment. But his mind was
still on December and the coming Ceremony.
Though he had been reassured by
the talk with his parents, he hadn’t the slightest idea what Assignment the
Elders would be selecting for his future, or how he might feel about it when
the day came.
3
“Oh, look!” Lily
squealed in delight. “Isn’t he cute? Look how tiny he is! And he has funny eyes
like yours, Jonas!” Jonas glared at her. He didn’t like it that she had mentioned
his eyes. He waited for his father to chastise Lily. But Father was busy
unstrapping the carrying basket from the back of his bicycle. Jonas walked over
to look.
It was the first thing Jonas
noticed as he looked at the newchild peering up curiously from the basket. The
pale eyes.
Almost every citizen in the
community had dark eyes. His parents did, and Lily did, and so did all of his
group members and friends. But there were a few exceptions: Jonas himself, and
a female Five who he had noticed had the different, lighter eyes. No one
mentioned such things; it was not a rule, but was considered rude to call
attention to things that were unsettling or different about individuals. Lily,
he decided, would have to learn that soon, or she would be called in for
chastisement because of her in-sensitive chatter.
Father put his bike into its port.
Then he picked up the basket and carried it into the house. Lily followed
behind, but she glanced back over her shoulder at Jonas and teased, “Maybe he
had the same Birthmother as you.”
Jonas
shrugged. He followed them inside. But he had been startled by the newchild’s
eyes. Mirrors were rare in the community; they weren’t forbidden, but there was
no real need of them,
and Jonas had simply never bothered to look
at himself very often even when he found himself in a location where a mirror existed. Now, seeing the
newchild and its
expression, he was reminded that the light eyes were not only a rarity but gave
the one who had them a certain look — what was it? Depth, he decided; as if one were looking
into the clear water of the river, down to the bottom, where things might lurk
which hadn’t been discovered yet. He felt self-conscious, realizing that he,
too, had that look.
He
went to his desk, pretending not to be interested in the newchild. On the other
side of the room, Mother and Lily were bending over to watch as Father
unwrapped its blanket.
“What’s
his comfort object called?” Lily asked, picking up the stuffed creature which had been placed
beside the newchild in his basket.
Father glanced at it. “Hippo,” he
said.
Lily
giggled at the strange word. “Hippo,” she repeated, and put the comfort object
down again. She peered at the unwrapped newchild, who waved his arms.
“I
think newchildren are so cute,” Lily sighed.
“I hope I get assigned
to be a Birthmother.”
“Lily!”
Mother spoke very sharply. “Don’t say that. There’s very little honor in that
Assignment.”
“But I was talking to Natasha. You
know the Ten who lives around the corner? She does some of her volunteer hours
at the Birthing Center. And she told me that the Birthmothers get wonderful
food, and they have very gentle exercise periods, and most of the time they
just play games and amuse themselves while they’re waiting. I think I’d like
that,” Lily said petulantly.
“Three
years,” Mother told her firmly. “Three births, and that’s all. After that they
are Laborers for the rest of their adult lives, until the day that they enter
the House of the Old.
Is that what you want, Lily? Three lazy years, and then hard physical labor until
you are old?”
“Well, no, I guess not,” Lily
acknowledged reluctantly.
Father
turned the newchild onto his tummy in the basket. He sat beside it and rubbed
its small back with a rhythmic motion. “Anyway, Lily-billy,” he said affectionately,
“the Birthmothers never even get to see newchildren. If you enjoy the little ones so much, you
should hope for an
Assignment as Nurturer.”
“When
you’re an Eight and start your volunteer hours, you can try some at the
“Yes, I think I will,” Lily said.
She knelt beside the basket. “What did you say his name is? Gabriel? Hello, Gabriel,” she said
in a singsong voice. Then she giggled. “Ooops,” she whispered. “I think he’s
asleep. I guess I’d better be quiet.”
Jonas
turned to the school assignments on his desk. Some chance of that, he thought. Lily was never quiet.
Probably she should hope for an Assignment as Speaker, so that she could sit in
the office with the microphone all day, making announcements. He laughed
silently to him-self, picturing his sister droning on in the self-important
voice that all the Speakers seemed to develop, saying things like, ATTENTION. THIS IS A REMINDER TO FEMALES UNDER NINE THAT HAIR RIBBONS ARE TO BE NEATLY TIED AT ALL
TIMES.
He turned
toward Lily and noticed to his satisfaction that her ribbons were, as usual,
undone and dangling. There would be an announcement like that quite soon, he
felt certain, and it would be directed mainly at Lily, though her name, of
course, would not be mentioned. Everyone would know.
Everyone
had known, he remembered with humiliation, that the announcement ATTENTION. THIS IS A REMINDER TO MALE ELEVENS THAT OBJECTS
ARE NOT TO BE REMOVED FROM THE RECREATION AREA AND THAT SNACKS ARE TO BE EATEN,
NOT HOARDED had been
specifically directed at him, the day last month that he had taken an apple
home. No one had mentioned it, not even his parents, because the public
announcement had been sufficient to produce the appropriate remorse. He had, of
course, disposed of the apple and made his apology to the Recreation Director
the next morning, before school.
Jonas
thought again about that incident. He was still bewildered by it. Not by the
announcement or the necessary apology; those were standard procedures, and he
had deserved them — but by the incident itself. He probably should have brought
up his feeling of bewilderment that very evening when the family unit had
shared their feelings of the day. But he had not been able to sort out and put
words to the source of his confusion, so he had let it pass.
It
had happened during the recreation period, when he had been playing with Asher.
Jonas had casually picked up an apple from the basket where the snacks were kept,
and had thrown it to his friend. Asher had thrown it back, and they had begun a
simple game of catch.
There
had been nothing special about it; it was an activity that he had performed
countless times: throw, catch; throw, catch. It was effortless for Jonas, and
even boring, though Asher enjoyed it, and playing catch was a required activity
for Asher because it would improve his hand-eye coordination, which was not up
to standards.
But
suddenly Jonas had noticed, following the path of the apple through the air
with his eyes, that the piece of fruit had — well, this was the part that he
couldn’t adequately understand — the apple had changed. Just for an instant. It had
changed in mid-air, he remembered. Then it was in his hand, and he looked at it
carefully, but it was the same apple. Unchanged. The same size and shape: a
perfect sphere. The same nondescript shade, about the same shade as his own
tunic.
There
was absolutely nothing remarkable about that apple. He had tossed it back and
forth between his hands a few times, then thrown it again to Asher. And again —
in the air, for an instant only — it had changed.
It
had happened four times. Jonas had blinked, looked around, and then tested his
eyesight, squinting at the small print on the identification badge attached to
his tunic. He read
his name quite clearly. He could also clearly see Asher at the other end of the throwing area.
And he had had no problem catching the apple.
Jonas had been completely
mystified.
“Ash?”
he had called. “Does anything seem strange to you? About the apple?”
“Yes,” Asher called back,
laughing. “It jumps out of my hand onto the ground!” Asher had just dropped it
once again.
So Jonas laughed too, and with his
laughter tried to ignore his uneasy conviction that something had happened. But he had taken the
apple home, against the recreation area rules. That evening, before his parents
and Lily arrived at the dwelling, he had held it in his hands and looked at it
carefully. It was slightly bruised now, because Asher had dropped it several
times. But there was nothing at all unusual about the apple.
He had held a magnifying glass to
it. He had tossed it several times across the room, watching, and then rolled
it around and around on his desktop, waiting for the thing to happen again.
But it hadn’t. The only thing that
happened was the announcement later that evening over the speaker, the announcement
that had singled him out without using his name, that had caused both of his
parents to glance meaningfully at his desk where the apple still lay.
Now, sitting at his desk, staring
at his schoolwork as his family hovered over the newchild in its basket, he shook his head,
trying to forget the odd incident. He forced him-self to arrange his papers and try to study a
little before the
evening meal. The newchild, Gabriel, stirred and whimpered, and Father spoke
softly to Lily, explaining the feeding procedure as he opened the container
that held the formula and equipment.
The evening proceeded as all evenings
did in the family unit, in the dwelling, in the community: quiet, reflective, a
time for renewal and preparation for the day to come. It was different only in
the addition to it of the newchild with his pale, solemn, knowing eyes.
4
Jonas rode at a
leisurely pace, glancing at the bikeports beside the buildings to see if he
could spot Asher’s. He didn’t often do his volunteer hours with his friend
because Asher frequently fooled around and made serious work a little
difficult. But now, with Twelve coming so soon and the volunteer hours ending,
it didn’t seem to matter.
The
freedom to choose where to spend those hours had always seemed a wonderful luxury to Jonas; other
hours of the day were
so carefully regulated.
He
remembered when he had become an Eight, as Lily would do shortly, and had been
faced with that freedom of choice. The Eights always set out on their first volunteer hour a little nervously, giggling
and staying in groups of friends. They almost invariably did their hours on
Recreation Duty first, helping with the younger ones in a place where they
still felt comfortable. But with guidance, as they developed self-confidence
and maturity, they moved on to other jobs, gravitating toward those that would
suit their own interests and skills.
A
male Eleven named Benjamin had done his entire nearly-Four years in the
Jonas was impressed
by the things Benjamin had achieved. He knew him, of course, since they had
always been groupmates, but they had never talked about the boy’s
accomplishments because such a conversation would have been awkward for
Benjamin. There was never any comfortable way to mention or discuss one’s successes
without breaking the rule against bragging, even if one didn’t mean to. It was
a minor rule, rather like rudeness, punishable only by gentle chastisement. But
still. Better to steer clear of an occasion governed by a rule which would be
so easy to break.
The area of
dwellings behind him, Jonas rode past the community structures, hoping to spot
Asher’s bicycle parked
beside one of the small factories or office buildings. He passed the
Jonas slowed and
looked at the nametags on the bicycles lined up outside the
There was only one other child’s bicycle there, that of a female Eleven
named Fiona. Jonas liked Fiona. She was a good student, quiet and polite, but
she had a sense of fun as well, and it didn’t surprise him that she was working
with Asher today. He parked his bicycle neatly in the port beside theirs and
entered the building.
“Hello, Jonas,” the attendant at
the front desk said. She handed him the sign-up sheet and stamped her own official seal beside his
signature. All of his volunteer hours would be carefully tabulated at the Hall of Open Records.
Once, long ago, it was whispered among the children, an Eleven had arrived at the Ceremony
of Twelve only to hear
a public announcement that he had not completed the required number of
volunteer hours and would not, there-fore, be given his Assignment. He had been
permitted an additional month in which to complete the hours, and then given
his Assignment privately, with no applause, no celebration: a disgrace that had
clouded his entire future.
“It’s good to have some volunteers
here today,” the attendant told him. “We celebrated a release this morning, and
that always throws the schedule off a little, so things get backed up.” She
looked at a printed sheet. “Let’s see. Asher and Fiona are helping in the
bathing room. Why don’t you join them there? You know where it is, don’t you?”
Jonas nodded, thanked her, and
walked down the long hallway. He glanced into the rooms on either side. The Old
were sitting quietly, some visiting and talking with one another, others doing
handwork and simple crafts. A few were asleep. Each room was comfortably
furnished, the floors
covered with thick carpeting. It was a serene and slow-paced place, unlike the busy
centers of manufacture and distribution where the daily work of the community
occurred.
Jonas was glad that he had, over
the years, chosen to do his hours in a variety of places so that he could
experience the differences. He realized, though, that not focusing on one area
meant he was left with not the slightest idea — not even a guess — of what his Assignment would be.
He laughed softly. Thinking about
the Ceremony again,
Jonas? He teased himself. But he suspected that with the date so near, probably all of
his friends were, too.
He passed a Caretaker walking
slowly with one of the Old in the hall. “Hello, Jonas,” the young uniformed man
said, smiling pleasantly. The woman beside him, whose arm he held, was hunched over as
she shuffled along in her soft slippers. She looked toward Jonas and smiled, but her dark eyes
were clouded and blank. He realized she was blind.
He entered the bathing room with
its warm moist air and scent of cleansing lotions. He removed his tunic, hung
it carefully on a wall hook, and put on the volunteer’s smock that was folded
on a shelf.
“Hi, Jonas!” Asher called from the
corner where he was
kneeling beside a tub. Jonas saw Fiona nearby, at a different tub. She looked
up and smiled at him, but she was busy, gently washing a man who lay in the
warm water.
Jonas greeted them and the
caretaking attendants at work nearby. Then he went to the row of padded
lounging chairs where others of the Old were waiting. He had worked here
before; he knew what to do.
“Your turn, Larissa,” he said,
reading the nametag on the woman’s robe. “I’ll just start
the water and then help you up.” He pressed the button on a nearby empty tub
and watched as the warm water flowed in through the many small openings on the
sides. The tub would be filled in a minute and the water flow would stop automatically.
He
helped the woman from the chair, led her to the tub, removed her robe, and
steadied her with his hand on her arm as she stepped in and lowered herself.
She leaned back and sighed with pleasure, her head on a soft cushioned
headrest.
“Comfortable?”
he asked, and she nodded, her eyes closed. Jonas squeezed cleansing lotion onto
the clean sponge at the edge of the tub and began to wash her frail body.
Last
night he had watched as his father bathed the new-child. This was much the
same: the fragile skin, the soothing water, the gentle motion of his hand,
slippery with soap. The relaxed, peaceful smile on the woman’s face re-minded
him of Gabriel being bathed.
And
the nakedness, too. It was against the rules for children or adults to look at
another’s nakedness; but the rule did not apply to newchildren or the Old.
Jonas was glad. It was a nuisance to keep oneself covered while changing for
games, and the required apology if one had by mistake glimpsed another’s body
was always awkward. He couldn’t see why it was necessary. He liked the feeling
of safety here in this warm and quiet room; he liked the expression of trust on
the woman’s face as she lay in the water unprotected, exposed, and free.
From the corner of his eye he
could see his friend Fiona help the old man from the tub and tenderly pat his thin,
naked body dry with an absorbent cloth. She helped him into his robe.
Jonas
thought Larissa had drifted into sleep, as the Old often did, and he was
careful to keep his motions steady and gentle so he wouldn’t wake her. He was
surprised when she spoke, her eyes still closed.
“This
morning we celebrated the release of Roberto,” she told him. “It was
wonderful.”
“I
knew Roberto!” Jonas said. “I helped with his feeding the last time I was here,
just a few weeks ago. He was a very interesting man.”
Larissa
opened her eyes happily. “They told his whole life before they released him,”
she said. “They always do. But to be honest,” she whispered with a mischievous look, “some of the tellings are a
little boring. I’ve even seen some of the Old fall asleep during tellings —
when they released Edna recently. Did you know Edna?”
Jonas
shook his head. He couldn’t recall anyone named Edna.
“Well,
they tried to make her life sound meaningful. And of course,” she added primly,
“all lives are meaningful, I don’t mean that
they aren’t. But Edna.
My goodness. She was a Birthmother, and
then she worked in Food Production for years, until she came here. She never even had a family
unit.”
Larissa
lifted her head and looked around to make sure no one else was listening. Then
she confided, “I don’t think Edna was very smart.”
Jonas
laughed. He rinsed her left arm, laid it back into the water, and began to wash
her feet. She murmured with pleasure as he massaged her
feet with the sponge.
“But Roberto’s life was wonderful,”
Larissa went on, after a moment. “He had been an Instructor of Elevens — you
know how important that is — and he’d been on the Planning Committee. And —
goodness, I don’t know how he found the time — he also raised two very successful
children, and he was also the one who did the landscaping
design for the
“Now your back. Lean forward and
I’ll help you sit up.” Jonas put his arm around her and supported her as she
sat. He squeezed the sponge against her back and began to rub her sharp-boned
shoulders. “Tell me about the celebration.”
“Well, there was the telling of
his life. That is always first. Then the toast. We all raised our glasses and cheered. We chanted the anthem. He made a
lovely good-bye speech. And several of us made little speeches wishing him
well. I didn’t, though. I’ve never been fond of public speaking.
“He was thrilled. You should have
seen the look on his face when they let him go.”
Jonas slowed the strokes of his
hand on her back thoughtfully. “Larissa,” he asked, “what happens when they
make the actual release? Where exactly did Roberto go?”
She lifted her bare wet shoulders
in a small shrug. “I don’t know. I don’t think anybody does, except the committee.
He just bowed to all of us and then walked, like they all do, through the
special door in the Releasing Room. But you should have seen his look. Pure
happiness, I’d call it.”
Jonas grinned. “I
wish I’d been there to see it.”
Larissa frowned. “I
don’t know why they don’t let children come. Not enough room, I guess. They
should en-large the Releasing Room.”
“We’ll have to
suggest that to the committee. Maybe they’d study it,”
Jonas said slyly, and Larissa chortled with laughter.
“Right!” she hooted, and Jonas helped her
from the tub.
5
Usually, at the morning ritual
when the family members told their dreams, Jonas didn’t contribute much. He
rarely dreamed. Sometimes he awoke with a feeling of fragments afloat in his
sleep, but he couldn’t seem to grasp them and put them together into something
worthy of telling at the ritual.
But this morning was different. He
had dreamed very vividly the night before.
His mind wandered while Lily, as usual,
recounted a lengthy dream, this one a frightening one in which she had, against the rules, been
riding her mother’s bicycle and been caught by the Security Guards.
They all listened carefully and
discussed with Lily the warning that the dream had given.
“Thank you for your dream, Lily.”
Jonas said the standard phrase automatically, and tried to pay better attention
while his mother told of a dream fragment, a disquieting scene where she had
been chastised for a rule infraction she didn’t understand. Together they
agreed that it probably resulted from her feelings when she had reluctantly
dealt punishment to the citizen who had broken the major rules a second time.
Father said that he had had no
dreams.
“Gabe?” Father asked, looking down
at the basket where the newchild lay gurgling after his feeding, ready to be
taken back to the
They all laughed. Dream-telling
began with Threes. If newchildren dreamed, no one knew.
“Jonas?” Mother asked. They always
asked, though they knew how rarely Jonas had a dream to tell.
“I did dream
last night,” Jonas told them. He shifted in his chair, frowning.
“Good,” Father said. “Tell us.”
“The details aren’t clear,
really,” Jonas explained, trying to recreate the odd dream in his mind. “I
think I was in the bathing room at the House of the Old.”
“That’s where you were yesterday,”
Father pointed out.
Jonas nodded. “But it wasn’t
really the same. There was a tub, in the dream. But only one. And the real bathing
room has rows and rows of them. But the room in the dream was warm and damp.
And I had taken off my tunic, but hadn’t put on the smock, so my chest was
bare. I was perspiring, because it was so warm. And Fiona was there, the way
she was yesterday.”
“Asher, too?” Mother asked.
Jonas shook his head. “No. It was
only me and Fiona, alone in the room, standing beside the tub. She was laughing.
But I wasn’t. I was almost a little angry at her, in the dream, because she
wasn’t taking me seriously.”
“Seriously about what?” Lily asked.
Jonas looked at his plate. For
some reason that he didn’t understand, he felt slightly embarrassed. “I think I
was trying to convince her that she should get into the tub of water.”
He paused. He knew he had to tell
it all, that it was not only all right but necessary to tell all of a dream. So he forced himself
to relate the part that made him uneasy.
“I wanted her to take off her
clothes and get into the tub,” he explained quickly. “I wanted to bathe her. I
had the sponge in my hand. But she wouldn’t. She kept laughing and saying no.”
He looked up at his
parents. “That’s all,” he said. “Can you describe the strongest feeling in your
dream, son?” Father asked.
Jonas thought about
it. The details were murky and vague. But the feelings were clear, and flooded
him again now as he thought. “The wanting,” he said. “I knew that she wouldn’t. And I think I knew
that she shouldn’t.
But I wanted it
so terribly. I could feel the wanting all through me.”
“Thank you for your dream, Jonas,”
Mother said after a moment. She glanced at Father.
“Lily,” Father said, “it’s time to
leave for school. Would you walk beside me this morning and keep an eye on the
newchild’s basket? We want to be certain he doesn’t wiggle himself loose.”
Jonas began to rise to collect his
schoolbooks. He thought it surprising that they hadn’t talked about his dream
at length before the thank you. Perhaps they found it as confusing as he had.
“Wait, Jonas,” Mother said gently.
“I’ll write an apology to your instructor so that you won’t have to speak one
for being late.”
He
sank back down into his chair, puzzled. He waved to Father and Lily as they left the dwelling,
carrying Gabe in his basket. He watched while
Mother tidied the remains of the morning meal and placed the tray by the front door for the
Collection Crew.
Finally
she sat down beside him at the table. “Jonas,” she said with a smile, “the
feeling you described as the wanting? It was your first Stirrings. Father and I have been expecting it to happen to you. It
happens to everyone. It happened to Father when he was your age. And it happened
to me. It will happen someday to Lily.
“And
very often,” Mother added, “it begins with a dream.”
Stirrings.
He had heard the word before. He remembered that there was a reference to the
Stirrings in the Book of Rules, though he didn’t remember what it said. And now
and then the Speaker mentioned it. ATTENTION.
A REMINDER THAT STIRRINGS MUST BE REPORTED IN ORDER FOR TREATMENT TO
He
had always ignored that announcement because he didn’t understand it and it had
never seemed to apply to him in any way. He ignored, as most citizens did, many of the commands and reminders read
by the Speaker.
“Do I have to report it?” he asked
his mother.
She
laughed. “You did, in the dream-telling. That’s enough.”
“But
what about the treatment? The Speaker says that treatment must take place.”
Jonas felt miserable. Just when the Ceremony was about to happen, his Ceremony
of Twelve, would he have to go away someplace for treatment? Just because of a
stupid dream?
But his mother laughed again in a
reassuring, affection-ate way. “No, no,” she said. “It’s just the pills. You’re
ready for the pills, that’s all. That’s the treatment for Stir-rings.”
Jonas
brightened. He knew about the pills. His parents both took them each morning.
And some of his friends did, he knew. Once he had been heading off to school
with Asher, both of them on their bikes, when Asher’s father had called from
their dwelling doorway, “You forgot your pill, Asher!” Asher had groaned
good-naturedly, turned his bike, and ridden back while Jonas waited.
It
was the sort of thing one didn’t ask a friend about because it might have
fallen into that uncomfortable category of ‘being different.’ Asher took a
pill each morning; Jonas did not. Always better, less rude, to talk about
things that were the same.
Now
he swallowed the small pill that his mother handed him.
“That’s all?” he asked.
“That’s
all,” she replied, returning the bottle to the cupboard. “But you mustn’t
forget. I’ll remind you for the first weeks, but then you must do it on your
own. If you forget, the Stirrings will come back. The dreams of Stirrings will
come back. Sometimes the dosage must be adjusted.”
“Asher takes them,” Jonas
confided.
His
mother nodded, unsurprised. “Many of your groupmates probably do. The males, at
least. And they all will, soon. Females too.”
“How long will I have to take
them?”
“Until you enter the House of the
Old,” she explained.
"All of your adult life. But
it becomes routine; after a while you won't even pay much attention to
it."
She looked at her
watch. "If you leave right now, you won't even be late for school. Hurry
along.
"And thank you
again, Jonas," she added, as he went to the door, "for your
dream."
Pedaling rapidly
down the path, Jonas felt oddly proud to have joined those who took the pills.
For a moment, though, he remembered the dream again. The dream had felt
pleasurable. Though the feelings were confused, he thought that he had liked
the feelings that his mother had called Stirrings. He remembered that upon
waking, he had wanted to feel the Stirrings again.
Then, in the same
way that his own dwelling slipped away behind him as he rounded a corner on his bicycle, the dream slipped away from his
thoughts. Very briefly, a little guiltily, he tried to grasp it back. But the
feelings had disappeared. The Stirrings were gone.
6
"Lily, please hold still," Mother said
again.
Lily,
standing in front of her, fidgeted impatiently. "I can tie them
myself," she complained. "I always have."
"I
know that," Mother replied, straightening the hair ribbons on the little
girl's braids. "But I also know that they constantly come loose and more often
than not, they're dangling down your back by afternoon. Today, at least, we
want them to be neatly tied and to stay neatly tied."
"I
don't like hair ribbons. I'm glad I only have to wear them one more year,"
Lily said irritably. "Next year I get my bicycle, too," she added
more cheerfully.
"There
are good things each year," Jonas reminded her. "This year you get to
start your volunteer hours. And re-member last year, when you became a Seven,
you were so happy to get your front-buttoned jacket?"
The
little girl nodded and looked down at herself, at the jacket with its row of large buttons that
designated her as a
Seven. Fours, Fives, and Sixes all wore jackets that fastened down the back so
that they would have to help each other dress and would learn interdependence.
The front-buttoned jacket was the first sign of
inde- pendence, the first very visible symbol of growing up. The bicycle, at
Nine, would be the powerful emblem of moving gradually out into the community,
away from the protective family unit.
Lily grinned and wriggled away
from her mother. ''And this year you get your Assignment,'' she said to Jonas in an excited voice. "I hope you
get Pilot. And that you take me flying!"
"Sure I will," said
Jonas. "And I'll get a special little parachute that just fits you, and
I'll take you up to, oh, maybe twenty thousand feet, and open the door, and —
"
"Jonas," Mother warned.
"I was only joking,"
Jonas groaned. "I don't want Pilot, anyway. If I get Pilot I'll put in an
appeal."
"Come on," Mother said.
She gave Lily's ribbons a final tug. "Jonas? Are you ready? Did you take
your pill? I want to get a good seat in the Auditorium.'' She prodded Lily to
the front door and Jonas followed.
It was a short ride to the
Auditorium, Lily waving to her friends from her seat on the back of Mother's
bicycle. Jonas stowed his bicycle beside Mother's and made his way through the
throng to find his group.
The entire community attended the
Ceremony each year. For the parents, it meant two days holiday from work; they
sat together in the huge hall. Children sat with their groups until they went,
one by one, to the stage.
Father, though, would not join
Mother in the audience right away. For the earliest ceremony, the Naming, the
Nurturers brought the newchildren to the stage. Jonas, from his place in the
balcony with the Elevens, searched the Auditorium for a glimpse of Father. It
wasn't at all hard to spot the Nurturers' section at the front; coming from it
were the wails and howls of the newchildren who sat squirming on the Nurturers'
laps. At every other public ceremony, the audience was silent and attentive.
But once a year, they all smiled indulgently at the commotion from the little
ones waiting to receive their names and families.
Jonas finally caught his father's
eye and waved. Father grinned and waved back, then held up the hand of the
newchild on his lap, making it wave, too.
It wasn't Gabriel. Gabe was back
at the
Instead, as a result of Father's
plea, Gabriel had been labeled Uncertain and given the additional year. He
would continue to be nurtured at the Center and would spend his nights with
Jonas's family unit. Each family member, including Lily, had been required to
sign a pledge that they would not become attached to this little temporary
guest, and that they would relinquish him without protest or appeal when he
was assigned to his own family unit at next year's Ceremony.
At least, Jonas thought, after
Gabriel was placed next year, they would still see him often because he would
be part of the community. If he were released, they would not see him again.
Ever. Those who were released — even as newchildren — were sent Elsewhere and
never returned to the community.
Father had not had to release a
single newchild this year, so Gabriel would have represented a real failure and
sadness. Even Jonas, though he didn't hover over the little one the way Lily
and his father did, was glad that Gabe had not been released.
The first Ceremony began right on
time, and Jonas watched as one after another each newchild was given a name and
handed by the Nurturers to its new family unit. For some, it was a first child.
But many came to the stage accompanied by another child beaming with pride to
receive a little brother or sister, the way Jonas had when he was about to be
a Five.
Asher poked Jonas's arm.
''Remember when we got Phillipa?'' he asked in a loud whisper. Jonas nodded. It
had only been last year. Asher's parents had waited quite a long time before
applying for a second child. Maybe, Jonas suspected, they had been so exhausted
by Asher's lively foolishness that they had needed a little time.
Two of their group, Fiona and
another female named Thea, were missing temporarily, waiting with their parents
to receive newchildren. But it was rare that there was such an age gap between
children in a family unit.
When her family's ceremony was
completed, Fiona took the seat that had been saved for her in the row ahead of
Asher and Jonas. She turned and whispered to them, "He's cute. But I don't
like his name very much." She made a face and giggled. Fiona's new brother
had been named Bruno.
It wasn't a great name, Jonas thought, like — well,
like Gabriel, for example. But it was okay.
The
audience applause, which was enthusiastic at each Naming, rose in an exuberant
swell when one parental pair, glowing with pride, took a male newchild and
heard him named Caleb.
This
new Caleb was a replacement child. The couple had lost their first Caleb, a
cheerful little Four. Loss of a child was very, very rare. The community was
extraordinarily
safe, each citizen watchful and protective of all children. But somehow the first
little Caleb had wandered away unnoticed, and had fallen into the river. The
entire community had
performed the Ceremony of Loss together, murmuring the name Caleb throughout an entire day, less
and less frequently, softer in volume, as the long and somber day went on, so
that the little Four seemed to fade away gradually from everyone's
consciousness.
Now,
at this special Naming, the community per-formed the brief
Murmur-of-Replacement Ceremony, repeating the name for the first time since the loss: softly
and slowly at first,
then faster and with greater volume, as the couple stood on the stage with the newchild sleeping in
the mother's arms. It
was as if the first Caleb were returning.
Another
newchild was given the name Roberto, and Jonas remembered that Roberto the Old
had been released only last week. But there was no Murmur-of-Replacement
Ceremony for the new little Roberto. Release was not the same as Loss.
He
sat politely through the ceremonies of Two and Three and Four, increasingly
bored as he was each year. Then a break for midday meal — served outdoors — and
back again to the
seats, for the Fives, Sixes, Sevens, and finally, last of the first day's ceremonies, the Eights.
Jonas
watched and cheered as Lily marched proudly to the stage, became an Eight and
received the identifying jacket that she would wear this year, this one with smaller buttons and, for the first time, pockets,
indicating that she
was mature enough now to keep track of her own small belongings. She stood
solemnly listening to the speech of firm instructions on the responsibilities of Eight and
doing volunteer hours for the first time.
But Jonas could see that Lily, though she seemed attentive, was looking longingly at the row of gleaming bicycles,
which would be presented tomorrow morning to the Nines.
Next year,
Lily-billy, Jonas thought.
It
was an exhausting day, and even Gabriel, retrieved in his basket from the
Finally it was the
morning of the Ceremony of Twelve.
Now Father sat
beside Mother in the audience. Jonas could see them applauding dutifully as the
Nines, one by one, wheeled their new bicycles, each with its gleaming nametag
attached to the back, from the stage. He knew that his parents cringed a little, as he did, when
Fritz, who lived in the dwelling next door to
theirs, received his bike and almost immediately bumped into the podium with it. Fritz was a very
awkward child who had been summoned for chastisement again and again. His
transgressions were small ones, always: shoes on the wrong feet, schoolwork misplaced, failure to study
adequately for a quiz. But each such error
reflected negatively on his parents' guidance and infringed on the community's sense of order and success. Jonas and his
family had not been looking forward to Fritz's bicycle, which they realized
would probably too often be dropped on the front walk instead of wheeled neatly
into its port.
Finally the Nines were all
resettled in their seats, each having wheeled a bicycle outside where it would
be waiting for its owner at the end of the day. Everyone always chuckled and
made small jokes when the Nines rode home for the first time. "Want me to
show you how to ride?" older friends would call. "I know you've never
been on a bike before!" But invariably the grinning Nines, who in
technical violation of the rule had been practicing secretly for weeks, would
mount and ride off in perfect balance, training wheels never touching the
ground.
Then the Tens. Jonas never found
the Ceremony of Ten particularly interesting — only time-consuming, as each
child's hair was snipped neatly into its distinguishing cut: females lost their
braids at Ten, and males, too, relinquished their long childish hair and took
on the more manly short style which exposed their ears.
Laborers moved quickly to the
stage with brooms and swept away the mounds of discarded hair. Jonas could see
the parents of the new Tens stir and murmur, and he knew that this evening, in
many dwellings, they would be snip-ping and straightening the hastily done
haircuts, trimming them into a neater line.
Elevens. It seemed a short time
ago that Jonas had undergone the Ceremony of Eleven, but he remembered that it
was not one of the more interesting ones. By Eleven, one was only waiting to be
Twelve. It was simply a marking of time with no meaningful changes. There was
new clothing: different undergarments for the females, whose bodies were
beginning to change; and longer trousers for the males, with a specially shaped
pocket for the small calculator that they would use this year in school; but
those were simply presented in wrapped packages without an accompanying speech.
Break for midday
meal. Jonas realized he was hungry. He and his groupmates congregated by the
tables in front of the Auditorium and took their packaged food. Yesterday
there had been merriment at lunch, a lot of teasing and energy. But today the
group stood anxiously, separate from the other children. Jonas watched the new
Nines gravitate toward their waiting bicycles, each one admiring his or her
nametag. He saw the Tens stroking their new shortened hair, the females shaking
their heads to feel the unaccustomed lightness without the heavy braids they
had worn so long.
"I heard about
a guy who was absolutely certain he was going to be assigned Engineer,"
Asher muttered as they ate, "and instead they gave him Sanitation Laborer.
He went out the next day, jumped into the river, swam across, and joined the
next community he came to. Nobody ever saw him again."
Jonas laughed.
"Somebody made that story up, Ash," he said. "My father said he
heard that story when he was a Twelve."
But Asher wasn't
reassured. He was eyeing the river where it was visible behind the Auditorium.
"I can't even swim very well," he said. "My swimming instructor
said that I don't have the right boyishness or something."
"Buoyancy," Jonas corrected him.
"Whatever. I don't have it. I
sink."
"Anyway," Jonas pointed
out, "have you ever once known of anyone — I mean really known for sure,
Asher, not just heard a story about it — who joined another community?"
"No," Asher admitted
reluctantly. "But you can. It says so in the rules. If you don't fit in,
you can apply for Elsewhere and be released. My mother says that once, about
ten years ago, someone applied and was gone the next day." Then he
chuckled. "She told me that because I was driving her crazy. She
threatened to apply for Else-where."
"She was joking."
"I know. But it was true,
what she said, that someone did that once. She said that it was really true.
Here today and gone tomorrow. Never seen again. Not even a Ceremony of
Release."
Jonas shrugged. It didn't worry
him. How could some-one not fit in? The community was so meticulously ordered,
the choices so carefully made.
Even the Matching of Spouses was
given such weighty consideration that sometimes an adult who applied to receive
a spouse waited months or even years before a Match was approved and
announced. All of the factors — disposition, energy level, intelligence, and
interests — had to correspond and to interact perfectly. Jonas's mother, for
example, had higher intelligence than his father; but his father had a calmer
disposition. They balanced each other. Their Match, which like all Matches had
been monitored by the Committee of Elders for three years before they could apply for children, had
always been a successful one.
Like the Matching of
Spouses and the Naming and Placement of newchildren, the Assignments were
scrupulously thought through by the Committee of Elders.
He was certain that
his Assignment, whatever it was to be, and Asher's too, would be the right one
for them. He only wished that the midday break would conclude, that the
audience would reenter the Auditorium, and the suspense would end.
As if in answer to
his unspoken wish, the signal came and the crowd began to move toward the
doors.
7
Now Jonas's group
had taken a new place in the Auditorium, trading with the new Elevens, so that
they sat in the very front, immediately before the stage.
They
were arranged by their original numbers, the numbers they had been given at
birth. The numbers were rarely used after the Naming. But each child knew his
number, of course. Sometimes parents used them in irritation at a child's
misbehavior, indicating that mischief made one unworthy of a name. Jonas always
chuckled when he heard a parent, exasperated, call sharply to a whining
toddler, "That's enough, Twenty-three!''
Jonas
was Nineteen. He had been the nineteenth new-child born his year. It had meant
that at his Naming, he had been already standing and bright-eyed, soon to walk
and talk. It had given him a slight advantage the first year or two, a little
more maturity than many of his group-mates who had been born in the later
months of that year. But it evened out, as it always did, by Three.
After
Three, the children progressed at much the same level, though by their first
number one could always tell who was a few months older than others in his
group. Technically, Jonas's full number was Eleven-nineteen,
since there were
other Nineteens, of course, in each age group. And today, now that the new
Elevens had been advanced this morning, there were two Eleven-nineteens. At the midday break he had exchanged
smiles with the new one, a shy female named Harriet.
But the duplication was only for
these few hours. Very soon he would not be an Eleven but a Twelve, and age
would no longer matter. He would be an adult, like his parents, though a new
one and untrained still.
Asher was Four, and sat now in the
row ahead of Jonas. He would receive his Assignment fourth.
Fiona, Eighteen, was on his left;
on his other side sat Twenty, a male named Pierre whom Jonas didn't like much.
The initial speech at the Ceremony
of Twelve was made by the Chief Elder, the leader of the community who was
elected every ten years. The speech was much the same each year: recollection
of the time of childhood and the period of preparation, the coming
responsibilities of adult life, the profound importance of Assignment, the
seriousness of training to come.
Then the Chief Elder moved ahead
in her speech.
"This is the time," she
began, looking directly at them, when
we acknowledge differences. You Elevens
have spent all your years till now learning to fit in, to standard ize your behavior, to curb any
impulse that might set you apart from the group.
''But today we honor your
differences. They have deter-mined your futures."
She began to describe this year's
group and its variety of personalities, though she singled no one out by name. She mentioned that
there was one who had singular skills at caretaking, another who loved
newchildren, one with unusual scientific aptitude, and a fourth for whom physical
labor was an obvious pleasure. Jonas shifted in his seat, trying to recognize
each reference as one of his group-mates. The caretaking skills were no doubt
those of Fiona, on his left; he remembered noticing the tenderness with which
she had bathed the Old. Probably the one with scientific aptitude was
Benjamin, the male who had devised new, important equipment for the
He heard nothing that he
recognized as himself, Jonas.
Finally the Chief Elder paid
tribute to the hard work of her committee, which had performed the observations
so meticulously all year. The Committee of Elders stood and was acknowledged by
applause. Jonas noticed Asher yawn slightly, covering his mouth politely with
his hand.
Then, at last, the Chief Elder
called number One to the stage, and the Assignments began.
Each
announcement was lengthy, accompanied by a speech directed at the new Twelve.
Jonas tried to pay attention as One, smiling happily, received her Assignment
as Fish Hatchery Attendant along with words of praise for her childhood spent
doing many volunteer hours there, and her obvious interest in the important
process of providing nourishment for the community.
Number
One — her name was Madeline — returned, finally, amidst applause, to her seat,
wearing the new badge that designated her Fish Hatchery Attendant. Jonas was
certainly glad that that Assignment was taken; he wouldn't
have wanted it. But he gave Madeline a smile of congratulation.
When
Two, a female named Inger, received her Assignment as Birthmother, Jonas
remembered that his mother had called it a job without honor. But he thought
that the Committee had chosen well. Inger was a nice girl though somewhat lazy, and her body was
strong. She would enjoy the three years of being pampered that would follow her brief training; she would give
birth easily and well; and the task of Laborer that would follow would use her strength, keep her
healthy, and impose self-discipline. Inger was smiling when she resumed her
seat. Birthmother was an important job, if lacking in prestige.
Jonas
noticed that Asher looked nervous. He kept turning his head and glancing back
at Jonas until the group leader had to give him a silent chastisement, a motion
to sit still and face forward.
Three,
Isaac, was given an Assignment as Instructor of Sixes, which obviously pleased him and was well
deserved. Now there
were three Assignments gone, none of them ones that Jonas would have liked —
not that he could have been a Birthmother, anyway, he realized with amusement.
He tried to sort through the list in his mind, the possible Assignments that
remained. But there were so many he gave it up; and anyway, now it was Asher's
turn. He paid strict attention as his friend went to the stage and stood
self-consciously beside the Chief Elder.
''All
of us in the community know and enjoy Asher," the Chief Elder began. Asher
grinned and scratched one leg with the other foot. The audience chuckled
softly.
''When
the committee began to consider Asher's Assignment," she went on, ''there
were some possibilities that were immediately discarded. Some that would
clearly, not have been right for Asher.
''For
example,'' she said, smiling, ''we did not consider for an instant designating
Asher an Instructor of Threes.''
The
audience howled with laughter. Asher laughed, too, looking sheepish but pleased
at the special attention. The Instructors of Threes were in charge of the
acquisition of correct language.
''In
fact," the Chief Elder continued, chuckling a little herself, ''we even
gave a little thought to some retroactive chastisement for the one who had been
Asher's Instructor of Threes so long ago.
At the meeting where Asher was discussed, we retold many of the stories that we
all re-membered from his days of language acquisition.
''Especially,"
she said, chuckling, ''the difference between snack and smack. Remember,
Asher?"
Asher
nodded ruefully, and the audience laughed aloud. Jonas did, too. He remembered,
though he had been only a Three at the time himself.
The
punishment used for small children was a regulated system of smacks with the
discipline wand: a thin, flexible weapon that stung painfully when it was
wielded. The Childcare specialists were trained very carefully in the discipline
methods: a quick smack across the hands for a bit of minor misbehavior; three
sharper smacks on the bare legs for a second offense.
Poor Asher, who always talked too
fast and mixed up words, even as a toddler. As a Three, eager for his juice and
crackers at snacktime, he one day said ''smack'' in-stead of ''snack'' as he
stood waiting in line for the morning treat.
Jonas remembered it clearly. He
could still see little Asher, wiggling with impatience in the line. He remembered
the cheerful voice call out, ''I want my smack!''
The other Threes, including Jonas,
had laughed nervously. "Snack!'' they corrected. ''You meant snack,
Asher!'' But the mistake had been made. And precision of language was one of
the most important tasks of small children. Asher had asked for a smack.
The discipline wand, in the hand
of the Childcare worker, whistled as it came down across Asher's hands. Asher
whimpered, cringed, and corrected himself instantly. "Snack," he
whispered.
But the next morning he had done it
again. And again the following week. He couldn't seem to stop, though for each
lapse the discipline wand came again, escalating to a series of painful lashes
that left marks on Asher's legs. Eventually, for a period of time, Asher
stopped talking altogether, when he was a Three.
"For a
while," the Chief Elder said, relating the story, we had a silent Asher!
But he learned.''
She turned to him with a smile.
''When he began to talk again, it was with greater precision. And now his
lapses are very few. His corrections and apologies are very prompt. And his
good humor is unfailing.'' The audience murmured in agreement. Asher's cheerful
disposition was well-known throughout the community.
''Asher.'' She lifted her voice to make the
official announcement. ''We have given you the Assignment of Assistant
Director of Recreation.''
She clipped on his new badge as he
stood beside her, beaming. Then he turned and left the stage as the audience
cheered. When he had taken his seat again, the Chief Elder looked down at him
and said the words that she had said now four times, and would say to each new
Twelve. Somehow she gave it special meaning for each of them.
''Asher,'' she said, ''thank you
for your childhood.''
The Assignments continued, and
Jonas watched and listened, relieved now by the wonderful Assignment his best
friend had been given. But he was more and more apprehensive as his own
approached. Now the new Twelves in the row ahead had all received their badges.
They were fingering them as they sat, and Jonas knew that each one was thinking
about the training that lay ahead. For some — one studious male had been
selected as Doctor, a female as Engineer, and another for Law and Justice — it
would be years of hard work and study. Others, like Laborers and Birthmothers,
would have a much shorter training period.
Eighteen, Fiona, on his left, was
called. Jonas knew she must be nervous, but Fiona was a calm female. She had
been sitting quietly, serenely, throughout the Ceremony.
Even the applause, though enthusiastic,
seemed serene when Fiona was given the important Assignment of Care-taker of
the Old. It was perfect for such a sensitive, gentle girl, and her smile was satisfied
and pleased when she took her seat beside him again.
Jonas prepared
himself to walk to the stage when the applause ended and the Chief Elder picked
up the next folder and looked down to the group to call forward the next new
Twelve. He was calm now that his turn had come. He took a deep breath and
smoothed his hair with his hand.
''Twenty,'' he heard
her voice say clearly. ''
She skipped me, Jonas thought, stunned. Had he
heard wrong? No. There was a sudden hush in the crowd, and he knew that the entire
community realized that the Chief Elder had moved from Eighteen to Twenty,
leaving a gap. On his
right,
A mistake. She made
a mistake. But Jonas knew, even as he had the thought, that she hadn't. The
Chief Elder made no mistakes. Not at the Ceremony of Twelve.
He felt dizzy, and
couldn't focus his attention. He didn't hear what Assignment Pierre received,
and was only dimly aware of the applause as the boy returned, wearing his new
badge. Then: Twenty-one. Twenty-two.
The numbers
continued in order. Jonas sat, dazed, as they moved into the Thirties and then
the Forties, nearing the end. Each time, at each announcement, his heart jumped
for a moment, and he thought wild thoughts. Perhaps now she would call his
name. Could he have forgotten his own number? No. He had always been Nineteen.
He was sitting in the seat marked Nineteen.
But she had skipped
him. He saw the
others in his group glance at him, embarrassed, and then avert their eyes
quickly. He saw a worried look on the face of his group leader.
He hunched his
shoulders and tried to make himself smaller in the seat. He wanted to
disappear, to fade away, not to exist. He didn't dare to turn and find his
parents in the crowd. He couldn't bear to see their faces darkened with shame.
Jonas bowed his head
and searched through his mind. What had he done wrong?
8
The audience was clearly ill at
ease. They applauded at the final Assignment; but the applause was piecemeal, no longer a crescendo
of united enthusiasm. There were murmurs of confusion.
Jonas moved his hands together,
clapping, but it was an automatic, meaningless gesture that he wasn't even
aware of. His mind had shut out all of the earlier emotions: the anticipation,
excitement, pride, and even the happy kinship with his friends. Now he felt
only humiliation and terror.
The Chief Elder waited until the
uneasy applause sub-sided. Then she spoke again.
"I know," she said in
her vibrant, gracious voice, "that you are all concerned. That you feel I
have made a mistake."
She smiled. The community,
relieved from its discomfort very slightly by her benign statement, seemed to
breathe more easily. It was very silent.
Jonas looked up.
"I have caused you
anxiety," she said. "I apologize to my community." Her voice
flowed over the assembled crowd.
''We accept your apology," they all uttered together.
''Jonas,'' she said, looking down
at him, ''I apologize to you in particular. I caused you anguish.''
"I accept your apology,''
Jonas replied shakily. "Please come to the stage now.''
Earlier that day, dressing in his
own dwelling, he had practiced the kind of jaunty, self-assured walk that he
hoped he could make to the stage when his turn came. All of that was forgotten
now. He simply willed himself to stand, to move his feet that felt weighted and
clumsy, to go forward, up the steps and across the platform until he stood at
her side.
Reassuringly she placed her arm
across his tense shoulders.
"Jonas has not been
assigned," she informed the crowd, and his heart sank.
Then she went on. ''Jonas has been
selected."
He blinked. What did that mean? He
felt a collective, questioning stir from the audience. They, too, were puzzled.
In a firm, commanding voice she
announced, ''Jonas has been selected to be our next Receiver of Memory."
Then he heard the gasp — the
sudden intake of breath, drawn sharply in astonishment, by each of the seated
citizens. He saw their faces; the eyes widened in awe.
And still he did not understand.
"Such a selection is very,
very rare," the Chief Elder told the audience. "Our community has
only one Receiver. It is he who trains his successor.
"We have had our current
Receiver for a very long time,'' she went on. Jonas followed her eyes and saw
that she was looking at one of the Elders. The Committee of Elders was sitting
together in a group; and the Chief Elder's eyes were now on one who sat in the
midst but seemed oddly separate from them. It was a man Jonas had never noticed
before, a bearded man with pale eyes. He was watching Jonas intently.
"We
failed in our last selection," the Chief Elder said solemnly. "It was
ten years ago, when Jonas was just a toddler. I will not dwell on the experience because it
causes us all
terrible discomfort.''
Jonas
didn't know what she was referring to, but he could sense the discomfort of the
audience. They shifted uneasily in their seats.
"We
have not been hasty this time," she continued. "We could not afford
another failure."
"Sometimes,"
she went on, speaking now in a lighter tone, relaxing the tension in the
Auditorium, "we are not entirely certain about the Assignments, even after
the most painstaking observations. Sometimes we worry that the one assigned might
not develop, through training, every attribute necessary. Elevens are still
children, after all. What we observe as playfulness and patience — the requirements
to become Nurturer — could, with maturity, be revealed as simply foolishness
and indolence. So we continue to observe during training, and to modify behavior
when necessary.
"But
the Receiver-in-training cannot be observed, can-not be modified. That is
stated quite clearly in the rules. He is to be alone, apart, while he is
prepared by the cur-rent Receiver for the job which is the most honored in our
community."
Alone? Apart? Jonas listened with increasing
unease.
''Therefore the selection must be
sound. It must be a unanimous choice of the Committee. They can have no doubts,
however fleeting. If, during the process, an Elder reports a dream of
uncertainty, that dream has the power to set a candidate aside instantly.
''Jonas was identified as a
possible Receiver many years ago. We have observed him meticulously. There were no dreams of uncertainty.
"He has shown all of the
qualities that a Receiver must have.''
With her hand still firmly on his
shoulder, the Chief Elder listed the qualities.
"Intelligence," she said. "We are all aware
that Jonas has been a top student throughout his school days.
''Integrity,'' she said next. "Jonas has,
like all of us, committed minor transgressions.'' She smiled at him. ''We
expect that. We hoped, also, that he would present himself promptly for
chastisement, and he has always done so.
"Courage," she went on. "Only one of us
here today has ever undergone the rigorous training required of a Receiver.
He, of course, is the most important member of the Committee: the current
Receiver. It was he who reminded us, again and again, of the courage required.
''Jonas,'' she said, turning to
him, but speaking in a voice that the entire community could hear, "the
training required of you involves pain. Physical pain."
He felt fear flutter within him.
"You have never experienced
that. Yes, you have scraped your knees in falls from your bicycle. Yes, you
crushed your finger in a door last year."
Jonas
nodded, agreeing, as he recalled the incident, and its accompanying misery.
"But
you will be faced, now,'' she explained gently, “with pain of a magnitude that
none of us here can comprehend because it is beyond our experience. The Receiver himself was not able to describe
it, only to remind us that you would be faced with it, that you would need
immense courage. We cannot prepare you for that.
"But we feel certain that you
are brave," she said to him.
He did not feel brave at all. Not
now.
"The
fourth essential attribute," the Chief Elder said, "is wisdom. Jonas has not yet acquired that.
The acquisition of wisdom will come through his training.
"We
are convinced that Jonas has the ability to acquire wisdom. That is what we
looked for.
"Finally,
The Receiver must have one more quality, and it is one which I can only name, but not describe. I
do not understand it.
You members of the community will not understand it, either. Perhaps Jonas
will, because the current Receiver has told us that Jonas already has this
quality. He calls it the Capacity to See Beyond."
The
Chief Elder looked at Jonas with a question in her eyes. The audience watched
him, too. They were silent.
For
a moment he froze, consumed with despair. He didn't have it, the whatever-she-had-said. He didn't know what it
was. Now was the moment when he would have to confess, to say, "No, I
don't. I can't," and
throw himself on their mercy, ask their forgiveness, to explain that he had
been wrongly chosen, that he was not the right one at all.
But when he
looked out across the crowd, the sea of faces, the thing happened again. The
thing that had happened with the apple.
They changed.
He
blinked, and it was gone. His shoulders straightened slightly. Briefly he felt a tiny sliver of
sureness for the
first time.
She was still watching him. They
all were.
"I
think it's true," he told the Chief Elder and the community. "I
don't understand it yet. I don't know what it is. But sometimes I see
something. And maybe it's beyond."
She took her arm from his
shoulders.
"Jonas,"
she said, speaking not to him alone but to the entire community of which he was
a part, "you will be trained to be our next Receiver of Memory. We thank
you for your childhood."
Then
she turned and left the stage, left him there alone, standing and facing the
crowd, which began spontaneously the collective murmur of his name.
"Jonas."
It was a whisper at first: hushed, barely audible. ''Jonas. Jonas."
Then louder, faster. "JONAS.
JONAS. JONAS."
With
the chant, Jonas knew, the community was accepting him and his new role, giving him life, the way
they had given it to
the newchild Caleb. His heart swelled with gratitude and pride.
But
at the same time he was filled with fear. He did not know what his selection meant. He
did not know what he was to become.
Or what would become of him.
9
Now, for the first
time in his twelve years of life, Jonas felt separate, different. He remembered what the Chief Elder
had said: that his training would be alone and apart.
But
his training had not yet begun and already, upon leaving the Auditorium, he
felt the apartness. Holding the folder she had given him, he made his way
through the throng, looking for his family unit and for Asher. People moved
aside for him. They watched him. He thought he could hear whispers.
"Ash!"
he called, spotting his friend near the rows of bicycles. "Ride back with
me?"
"Sure."
Asher smiled, his usual smile, friendly and familiar. But Jonas felt a moment
of hesitation from his friend, an uncertainty.
"Congratulations," Asher
said.
"You
too," Jonas replied. "It was really funny, when she told about the
smacks. You got more applause than almost anybody else.''
The
other new Twelves clustered nearby, placing their folders carefully into the
carrying containers on the backs of the bikes. In each dwelling tonight they
would be
studying the instructions for the beginning of their training. Each
night for years the children had memorized the required lessons for school,
often yawning with boredom. Tonight they would all begin eagerly to memorize the rules for their adult Assignments.
"Congratulations, Asher!''
someone called. Then that hesitation again. ''You too, Jonas!"
Asher and Jonas responded with
congratulations to their groupmates. Jonas saw his parents watching him from the place where their own
bicycles were waiting. Lily had already been strapped into her seat.
He waved. They waved back,
smiling, but he noticed that Lily was watching him solemnly, her thumb in her
mouth.
He rode directly to his dwelling,
exchanging only small jokes and unimportant remarks with Asher.
"See you in the morning,
Recreation Director!" he called, dismounting by his door as Asher
continued on.
"Right! See you!" Asher
called back. Once again, there was just a moment when things weren't quite the
same, weren't quite as they had always been through the long friendship.
Perhaps he had imagined it. Things couldn't change, with Asher.
The evening meal was quieter than
usual. Lily chattered
about her plans for volunteer work; she would begin, she said, at the
''I know," she added quickly,
when her father gave her a warning glance, "I won't mention his name. I
know I'm not supposed to know his name.
"I
can't wait for tomorrow to come,'' she said happily. Jonas sighed uneasily. ''I
can,'' he muttered.
"You've been greatly
honored,'' his mother said. ''Your father and I are very proud.''
"It's the most important job
in the community,'' Father said.
"But just the other night,
you said that the job of making Assignments was the most important!''
Mother nodded.
''This is different. It's not a job, really. I never thought, never expected — " She
paused. ''There's only one Receiver."
"But the Chief
Elder said that they had made a selection before, and that it failed. What was
she talking about?"
Both of his parents
hesitated. Finally his father de-scribed the previous selection. ''It was very
much as it was today, Jonas — the same suspense, as one Eleven had been passed
over when the Assignments were given. Then the announcement, when they singled
out the one — "
Jonas interrupted. "What was
his name?"
His mother replied,
"Her, not his. It was a female. But we are never to speak the name, or to
use it again for a newchild."
Jonas was shocked. A name
designated Not-to-Be-Spoken indicated the highest degree of disgrace.
"What happened to her?"
he asked nervously.
But his parents looked blank.
"We don't know," his father said uncomfortably. "We never saw
her again."
A silence fell over
the room. They looked at each other. Finally his mother, rising from the table, said, "You've
been greatly honored, Jonas. Greatly honored.''
Alone in his sleepingroom, prepared for bed, Jonas opened his folder at last. Some of the
other Twelves, he had noticed, had been given folders thick with printed pages. He imagined
Benjamin, the scientific male in his group, be-ginning to read pages of rules
and instructions with relish. He pictured Fiona smiling her gentle smile as she
bent over the lists of duties and methods that she would be required to learn
in the days to come.
But his own folder was startlingly
close to empty. Inside there was only a single printed sheet. He read it twice.
JONAS
RECEIVER OF MEMORY
1.
Go immediately at the end of school hours each day to the Annex entrance
behind the House of the Old and present yourself to the attendant.
2.
Go immediately to your dwelling at the conclusion of Training Hours each
day.
3.
From this moment you are exempted from rules governing rudeness. You may
ask any question of any citizen and you will receive answers.
4.
Do not discuss your training with any other member of the community,
including parents and Elders.
5.
From this moment you are prohibited from dream-telling.
6.
Except for illness or injury unrelated to your training, do not apply for
any medication.
7.
You are not permitted to apply for release.
8. You may lie.
Jonas was stunned.
What would happen to his friend-ships? His mindless hours playing ball, or
riding his bike along the river? Those had been happy and vital times for him.
Were they to be completely taken from him, now? The simple logistic
instructions — where to go, and when — were expected. Every Twelve had to be
told, of course, where and how and when to report for training. But he was a
little dismayed that his schedule left no time, apparently, for recreation.
The exemption from
rudeness startled him. Reading it again, however, he realized that it didn't
compel him to be rude; it simply allowed him the option. He was quite certain
he would never take advantage of it. He was so completely, so thoroughly
accustomed to courtesy within the community that the thought of asking another
citizen an intimate question, of calling someone's attention to an area of
awkwardness, was unnerving.
The prohibition of dream-telling,
he thought, would not be a real problem. He dreamed so rarely that the
dream-telling did not come easily to him anyway, and he was glad to be excused
from it. He wondered briefly, though, how to deal with it at the morning meal.
What if he did dream — should he simply tell his
family unit, as he did so often, anyway, that he hadn't? That would be a lie.
Still, the final rule said ... well, he wasn't quite ready to think about the
final rule on the page.
The restriction of
medication unnerved him. Medication was always available to citizens, even to
children, through their parents. When he had crushed his finger in the door, he
had quickly, gasping into the speaker, notified his mother; she had hastily
requisitioned relief-of-pain medication which had promptly been
delivered to his dwelling. Almost instantly the excruciating pain in his hand
had diminished to the throb which was, now, all he could recall of the
experience.
Re-reading rule number 6, he
realized that a crushed finger fell into the category of ''unrelated to
training.'' So if it ever happened again — and he was quite certain it wouldn't; he had
been very careful near heavy doors since the accident! — he could still receive
medication.
The pill he took now, each
morning, was also unrelated to training. So he would continue to receive the
pill.
But he remembered uneasily what
the Chief Elder had said about the pain that would come with his training. She
had called it indescribable.
Jonas swallowed hard, trying
without success to imagine what such pain might be like, with no medication at
all. But it was beyond his comprehension.
He felt no reaction to rule number
7 at all. It had never occurred to him that under any circumstances, ever, he
might apply for release.
Finally he steeled himself to read
the final rule again. He had been trained since earliest childhood, since his
earliest learning of language, never to lie. It was an integral part of the
learning of precise speech. Once, when he had been a Four, he had said, just prior
to the midday meal at school, ''I'm starving."
Immediately he had been taken
aside for a brief private lesson in language precision. He was not starving, it
was pointed out. He was hungry. No
one in the community was starving, had ever been starving, would ever be starving.
To say ''starving'' was to speak a lie. An unintentioned lie, of course. But
the reason for precision of language was to ensure that unintentional lies were
never uttered. Did he understand that` they asked him. And he had.
He had
never, within his memory, been tempted to lie. Asher did not lie. Lily did not
lie. His parents did not lie. No one did. Unless ...
Now
Jonas had a thought that he had never had before. This new thought was
frightening. What if others — adults — had, upon becoming Twelves, received in their instructions the same terrifying sentence?
What if they had all been
instructed: You
may lie?
His
mind reeled. Now, empowered to ask questions of utmost rudeness — and promised
answers — he could,
conceivably
(though it was almost unimaginable), ask someone, some adult, his father
perhaps: "Do you lie?But he would have no way of knowing if the answer he
received were true.
10
''I go in here, Jonas," Fiona
told him when they reached the front door of the House of the Old after parking
their bicycles in the designated area.
"I don't know why I'm
nervous," she confessed. "I've been here so often before." She
turned her folder over in her hands.
"Well, everything's different
now," Jonas reminded her.
"Even the nameplates on our
bikes," Fiona laughed. During the night the nameplate of each new Twelve
had been removed by the Maintenance Crew and replaced with the style that
indicated citizen-in-training.
"I don't want to be
late," she said hastily, and started up the steps. "If we finish at
the same time, I'll ride home with you."
Jonas nodded, waved to her, and
headed around the building toward the Annex, a small wing attached to the back.
He certainly didn't want to be late for his first day of training, either.
The Annex was very ordinary, its
door unremarkable. He reached for the heavy handle, then noticed a buzzer on
the wall. So he buzzed instead.
"Yes?" The voice came
through a small speaker above the buzzer.
"It's, uh, Jonas. I'm the new
— I mean — "
“Come in.” A click indicated that
the door had been unlatched.
The lobby was very small and
contained only a desk at which a female Attendant sat working on some papers.
She looked up when he entered; then, to his surprise, she stood. It was a small
thing, the standing; but no one had ever stood automatically to acknowledge
Jonas's presence before.
"Welcome, Receiver of
Memory," she said respectfully.
"Oh, please," he replied
uncomfortably. "Call me Jonas."
She smiled, pushed a button, and
he heard a click that unlocked the door to her left. "You may go right on
in," she told him.
Then she seemed to notice his
discomfort and to realize its origin. No doors in the community were locked,
ever. None that Jonas knew of, anyway.
"The
locks are simply to insure The Receiver's privacy because he needs
concentration,'' she explained. "It would be difficult if citizens wandered in, looking for
the Department of
Bicycle Repair, or something."
Jonas
laughed, relaxing a little. The woman seemed very friendly, and it was true —
in fact it was a joke throughout the community — that the Department of Bicycle Repair, an unimportant
little office, was relocated so often that no one ever knew where it was.
"There is nothing dangerous
here,'' she told him. "But,'' she added, glancing at the wall clock, ''he
doesn't like to be kept waiting."
Jonas hurried through the door and found himself in a comfortably
furnished living area. It was not unlike his own family unit's dwelling.
Furniture was standard throughout the community: practical, sturdy, the
function of each piece clearly defined. A bed for sleeping. A table for eating.
A desk for studying.
All of those things were in this
spacious room, though each
was slightly different from those in his own dwelling. The fabrics on the upholstered
chairs and sofa were slightly
thicker and more luxurious; the table legs were not straight like those at home, but
slender and curved, with a small carved decoration at the foot. The bed, in an
alcove at the far end of the room, was draped with a splendid cloth embroidered
over its entire surface with intricate de-signs.
But the most conspicuous
difference was the books. In his own dwelling, there were the necessary
reference volumes that each household contained: a dictionary, and the thick
community volume which contained descriptions of every office, factory,
building, and committee. And the Book of Rules, of course.
The books in his own dwelling were
the only books that Jonas had ever seen. He had never known that other books
existed.
But this room's walls were
completely covered by bookcases, filled, which reached to the ceiling. There
must have been hundreds — perhaps thousands — of books, their titles embossed
in shiny letters.
Jonas
stared at them. He couldn't imagine what the thousands of pages contained. Could there be rules
beyond the rules that
governed the community? Could there be more descriptions of offices and
factories and committees?
He
had only a second to look around because he was aware that the man sitting in a
chair beside the table was watching him. Hastily he moved forward, stood before the man, bowed slightly, and said,
"I'm Jonas."
"I know. Welcome, Receiver of
Memory."
Jonas
recognized the man. He was the Elder who had seemed separate from the others at
the Ceremony, though he was dressed in the same special clothing that only
Elders wore.
Jonas
looked self-consciously into the pale eyes that mirrored his own.
"Sir, I apologize for my lack
of understanding...."
He waited,
but the man did not give the standard accepting-of-apology response.
After
a moment, Jonas went on, "But I thought — I mean I think," he
corrected, reminding himself that if precision of language were ever to be
important, it was certainly important now, in the presence of this man,
"that you are the receiver of Memory. I'm
only, well, I was only assigned, I mean selected, yesterday. I'm not anything
at all. Not yet."
The
man looked at him thoughtfully, silently. It was a look that combined interest,
curiosity, concern, and perhaps a little sympathy as well.
Finally
he spoke. "Beginning today, this moment, at least to me, you are The
Receiver.
"I
have been The Receiver for a long time. A very, very long time. You can see that,
can't you?"
Jonas
nodded. The man was wrinkled, and his eyes, though piercing in their unusual lightness, seemed tired.
The flesh around them was darkened into shadowed circles.
"I can see that you are very
old,'' Jonas responded with respect. The Old were always given the highest
respect.
The man smiled. He touched the
sagging flesh on his own face with amusement. ''I am not, actually, as old as I
look,'' he told Jonas. "This job has aged me. I know I look as if I should
be scheduled for release very soon. But actually I have a good deal of time
left.
"I was pleased, though, when
you were selected. It took them a long time. The failure of the previous
selection was ten
years ago, and my energy is starting to diminish. I need what strength I have remaining
for your training. We have hard and painful work to do, you and I.
''Please sit down," he said,
and gestured toward the nearby chair. Jonas lowered himself onto the soft cushioned
seat.
The man closed his eyes and
continued speaking. "When I became a Twelve, I was selected, as you were.
I was frightened, as I'm sure you are." He opened his eyes for a moment
and peered at Jonas, who nodded.
The eyes closed again. "I
came to this very room to begin my training. It was such a long time ago.
"The previous Receiver seemed
just as old to me as I do to you. He was just as tired as I am today."
He sat forward suddenly, opened
his eyes, and said, ''You may ask questions. I have so little experience in
de-scribing this process. It is forbidden to talk of it.''
''I know, sir. I have read the
instructions," Jonas said.
''So I may neglect to make things
as clear as I should.'' The man chuckled. ''My job is important and has enormous
honor. But that does not mean I am perfect, and when I tried before to train a successor, I failed.
Please ask any
questions that will help you."
In
his mind, Jonas had questions. A thousand. A million questions. As many questions as there were books lining the walls. But he did not ask
one, not yet.
The
man sighed, seeming to put his thoughts in order. Then he spoke again.
"Simply stated," he said, ''although it's not really
simple at all, my job is to transmit to you all the memories I have within me. Memories of the
past.''
"Sir,"
Jonas said tentatively, "I would be very interested to hear the story of
your life, and to listen to your memories.
"I apologize for
interrupting," he added quickly.
The
man waved his hand impatiently. "No apologies in this room. We haven't
time.''
"Well,''
Jonas went on, uncomfortably aware that he might be interrupting again, "I
am really interested, I don't mean that I'm not. But I don't exactly understand
why it's so important. I could do some adult job in the community, and in my
recreation time I could come and listen to the stories from your childhood. I'd
like that. Actually," he added, "I've done that already, in the
House of the Old. The Old like to tell about their childhoods, and it's always
fun to listen.''
The
man shook his head. "No, no," he said. "I'm not being clear.
It's not my past, not my childhood that I must transmit to you.
He
leaned back, resting his head against the back of the upholstered chair. "It's the
memories of the whole world,'' he said with a sigh. ''Before you, before me, before the previous
Receiver, and generations before him.''
Jonas frowned. "The whole
world?" he asked. ''I don't understand. Do you mean not just
us? Not just the community? Do you mean Elsewhere, too?-" He tried, in his
mind, to grasp the concept. ''I'm sorry, sir. I don't under-stand exactly.
Maybe I'm not smart enough. I don't know what you mean when you say 'the whole
world' or 'generations before him.' I thought there was only us. I thought
there was only now."
"There's much more. There's
all that goes beyond — all that is Elsewhere — and all that goes back, and
back, and back. I received all of those, when I was selected. And here in this room, all alone, I
re-experience them again and again. It is how wisdom comes. And how we shape our future."
He rested for a moment, breathing
deeply. ''I am so weighted
with them,"
he said.
Jonas felt a
terrible concern for the man, suddenly.
"It's as if ... " The
man paused, seeming to search his mind for the right words of description.
''It's like going downhill through deep snow on a sled,'' he said, finally.
''At first it's exhilarating: the speed; the sharp, clear air; but then the
snow accumulates, builds up on the runners, and you slow, you have to push hard
to keep going, and — ''
He shook his head suddenly, and
peered at Jonas. "That meant nothing to you, did it?" he asked.
Jonas was confused.
''I didn't understand it, sir.''
''Of course you didn't. You don't
know what snow is, do you?''
Jonas shook his
head.
"Or a sled? Runners?"
''No, sir,'' Jonas said.
"Downhill? The term means
nothing to you?'' ''Nothing, sir."
Well,
it's a place to start. I'd been wondering how to begin. Move to the bed, and
lie face down. Remove your tunic first.''
Jonas
did so, a little apprehensively. Beneath his bare chest, he felt the soft folds
of the magnificent cloth that covered the bed. He watched as the man rose and
moved first to the wall where the speaker was. It was the same sort of speaker that occupied a
place in every dwelling, but one thing about it was different. This one had a switch, which the man
deftly snapped to the end that said OFF.
Jonas
almost gasped aloud. To have the power to turn the speaker off. It was an astonishing thing.
Then
the man moved with surprising quickness to the corner where the bed was. He sat
on a chair beside Jonas, who was motionless, waiting for what would happen
next.
"Close your eyes. Relax. This
will not be painful.''
Jonas
remembered that he was allowed, that he had even been encouraged, to ask
questions. "What are you going to do, sir?'' he asked, hoping that his
voice didn't betray his nervousness.
"I
am going to transmit the memory of snow,'' the old man said, and placed his
hands on Jonas's bare back.
11
Jonas felt nothing unusual at
first. He felt only the light touch of the old man's hands on his back.
He tried to relax, to breathe
evenly. The room was absolutely silent, and for a moment Jonas feared that he
might disgrace himself now, on the first day of his training, by falling
asleep.
Then he shivered. He realized that
the touch of the hands felt, suddenly, cold. At the same instant, breathing in,
he felt the air change, and his very breath was cold. He licked his lips, and
in doing so, his tongue touched the suddenly chilled air.
It was very startling; but he was
not at all frightened, now. He was filled with energy, and he breathed again,
feeling the sharp intake of frigid air. Now, too, he could feel cold air
swirling around his entire body. He felt it blow against his hands where they
lay at his sides, and over his back.
The touch of the man's hands
seemed to have disappeared.
Now he became aware of an entirely
new sensation: pinpricks? No, because they were soft and without pain. Tiny, cold,
featherlike feelings peppered his body and face. He put out his tongue again,
and caught one of the dots of cold upon it. It disappeared from his awareness
instantly; but he caught another, and another. The sensation made him smile.
One part of his consciousness
knew that he was still lying there, on the bed, in the Annex room. Yet another,
separate part of his being was upright now, in a sitting position, and beneath
him he could feel that he was not on the soft decorated bedcovering at all, but
rather seated on a flat, hard surface. His hands now held (though at the same
time they were still motionless at his sides) a rough, damp rope.
And he could see, though his eyes were closed. He
could see a bright, whirling torrent of crystals in the air around him, and he
could see them gather on the backs of his hands, like cold fur.
His breath was
visible.
Beyond, through the
swirl of what he now, somehow, perceived was the thing the old man had spoken
of — snow — he could look out and down a great
distance. He was up high someplace. The ground was thick with the furry snow,
but he sat slightly above it on a hard, flat object.
Sled, he knew
abruptly. He was sitting on a thing called sled. And the sled itself seemed to be poised at the top of a
long, extended mound that rose from the very land where he was. Even as he
thought the word ''mound," his new consciousness told him hill.
Then the sled, with
Jonas himself upon it, began to move through the snowfall, and he understood
instantly that now he was going downhill. No voice made an explanation. The
experience explained itself to him.
His face cut through
the frigid air as he began the descent, moving through the substance called snow on the
vehicle called sled, which propelled itself on what he now knew without doubt
to be runners.
Comprehending all of those things
as he sped down-ward, he was free to enjoy the breathless glee that overwhelmed
him: the speed, the clear cold air, the total silence, the feeling of balance
and excitement and peace.
Then, as the angle of incline
lessened, as the mound — the hill— flattened, nearing the bottom, the
sled's for-ward motion slowed. The snow was piled now around it, and he pushed
with his body, moving it forward, not wanting the exhilarating ride to end.
Finally the obstruction of the
piled snow was too much for the thin runners of the sled, and he came to a
stop. He sat there for a moment, panting, holding the rope in his cold hands.
Tentatively he opened his eyes — not his snow–hill–sled eyes, for they had been
open throughout the
strange ride. He opened his ordinary eyes, and saw that he was still on the bed, that he
had not moved at all.
The old man, still beside the bed,
was watching him. 'How do you fee'' he
asked.
Jonas sat up and tried to answer honestly.
"Surprised," he said, after a moment.
The old man wiped his forehead
with his sleeve. "Whew," he said. "It was exhausting. But you
know, even transmitting that tiny memory to you — I think it lightened me just
a little."
"Do you mean — you did say I
could ask questions:'' The man nodded, encouraging his question.
"Do you mean that now you
don't have the memory of it — of that ride on the sled — anymore?"
"That's right. A little
weight off this old body.''
"But it was such fun! And now
you don't have it any-more! I took it from you!"
But the old man laughed. "All
I gave you was one ride, on one sled, in one snow, on one hill. I have a whole world of them in my memory. I could
give them to you one by one, a thousand times, and there would still be
more."
"Are you saying that I — I
mean we — could do it again?" Jonas asked. "I'd really like to. I
think I could steer, by pulling the rope. I didn't try this time, because it
was so new.
The old man, laughing, shook his
head. "Maybe an-other day, for a treat. But there's no time, really, just
to play. I only
wanted to begin by showing you how it works.
"Now," he said, turning
businesslike, ''Lie back down. I want to — "
Jonas did. He was eager for
whatever experience would come next. But he had, suddenly, so many questions.
"Why don't we have snow, and
sleds, and hills."' he asked. "And when did we, in the past? Did my
parents have sleds when they were young? Did you?"
The old man shrugged and gave a
short laugh. "No," he told Jonas. "It's a very distant
memory. That's why it was so exhausting — I had to tug it forward from many
generations back. It was given to me when I was a new Receiver, and the
previous Receiver had to pull it through a long time period, too."
"But what happened to those
things? Snow, and the rest of it?"
"Climate
Control. Snow made growing food difficult, limited the agricultural periods.
And unpredictable weather
made transportation almost impossible at times. It wasn't a practical thing, so
it became obsolete when we went to Sameness.
''And hills, too,'' he added.
''They made conveyance of goods unwieldy. Trucks; buses. Slowed them down. So —
'' He waved his hand, as if a gesture had caused hills to disappear.
''Sameness,'' he concluded.
Jonas frowned. ''I wish we had
those things, still. Just now and then.''
The old man smiled. ''So do I'' he
said. ''But that choice is not ours.''
"But sir," Jonas
suggested, "since you have so much power — "
The man corrected him.
"Honor," he said firmly. "I have great honor. So will you. But
you will find that that is not the same as power.
"Lie quietly now. Since we've
entered into the topic of climate, let me give you something else. And this
time I'm not going to tell you the name of it, because I want to test the
receiving. You should be able to perceive the name without being told. I gave
away snow and sled and down-hill and runners by telling them to you in
advance.''
Without being instructed, Jonas
closed his eyes again. He felt the hands on his back again. He waited.
Now it came more quickly, the
feelings. This time the hands didn't become cold, but instead began to feel
warm on his body. They moistened a little. The warmth spread, extending across
his shoulders, up his neck, onto the side of his face. He could feel it through
his clothed parts, too: a pleasant, all-over sensation; and when he licked his
lips this time, the air was hot and heavy.
He didn't move.
There was no sled. His posture didn't change. He was simply alone
someplace, out of doors, lying down, and the warmth came from far above. It was
not as exciting as
the ride through the snowy air; but it was pleasurable and comforting.
Suddenly he
perceived the word for it: sunshine. He
perceived that it came from the sky.
Then it ended.
"Sunshine,” he
said aloud, opening his eyes.
"Good. You did
get the word. That makes my job easier. Not so much explaining."
"And it came
from the sky."
"That's
right," the old man said. ''Just the way it used to.
"Before Sameness.
Before Climate Control," Jonas added.
The man laughed.
"You receive well, and learn quickly. I'm very pleased with you. That's
enough for today, I think. We're off to a good start."
There was a question
bothering Jonas. "Sir," he said, "The Chief Elder told me — she
told everyone — and you told me, too, that it would be painful. So I was a
little scared. But it didn't hurt at all. I really enjoyed it.'' He looked
quizzically at the old man.
The man sighed.
"I started you with memories of pleasure. My previous failure gave me the
wisdom to do that.'' He took a few deep breaths. "Jonas," he said,
"it will be painful. But it need not be
painful yet."
"I'm brave. I really
am." Jonas sat up a little straighter. The old man looked at him for a
moment. He smiled. "I can see that," he said. "Well, since you
asked the ques tion — I think I have enough energy for one more trans-mission.
''Lie down once more. This will be
the last today.''
Jonas obeyed cheerfully. He closed
his eyes, waiting, and felt the hands again; then he felt the warmth again, the
sunshine again, coming from the sky of this other consciousness that was so
new to him. This time, as he lay basking in the wonderful warmth, he felt the
passage of time. His real self was aware that it was only a minute or two; but his other,
memory-receiving self felt hours pass in the sun. His skin began to sting. Restlessly he moved one
arm, bending it, and felt a sharp pain in the crease of his inner arm at the
elbow.
"Ouch,'' he said loudly, and
shifted on the bed. "Owwww," he said, wincing at the shift, and even
mm - ing his mouth to speak made his face hurt.
He knew there was a word, but the
pain kept him from grasping it.
Then it ended. He opened his eyes,
wincing with discomfort. "It hurt,'' he told the man, ''and I couldn't
get the word for it."
''It was sunburn," the old
man told him.
"It hurt a lot,'' Jonas
said, ''but I'm glad you gave it to me. It was interesting. And now I
understand better, what it meant, that there would be pain."
The man didn't respond. He sat
silently for a second. Finally he said, ''Get up, now. It's time for you to go
home.''
They both walked to the center of
the room. Jonas put his tunic back on. "Goodbye, sir,'' he said. ''Thank
you for my first day.''
The old man nodded to him. He looked drained, and a little
sad.
"Sir?"
Jonas said shyly.
"Yes? Do you
have a question?-"
"It's just that
I don't know your name. I thought you were The Receiver, but you say that now I’m The Receiver. So I don't know
what to call you.''
The man had sat back
down in the comfortable upholstered chair. He moved his shoulders around as if
to ease away an aching sensation. He seemed terribly weary.
"Call me The
Giver,'' he told Jonas.
12
"You slept
soundly, Jonas?" his mother asked at the morning meal. "No
dreams?"
Jonas
simply smiled and nodded, not ready to lie, not willing to tell the truth.
"I slept very soundly," he said.
"I
wish this one would," his father said, leaning down from his chair to
touch Gabriel's waving fist. The basket was on the floor beside him; in its
corner, beside Gabriel's head, the stuffed hippo sat staring with its blank
eyes.
"So
do I," Mother said, rolling her eyes. "He's so fretful at
night."
Jonas
had not heard the newchild during the night be-cause as always, he had slept soundly. But it was not true
that he had no dreams.
Again
and again, as he slept, he had slid down that snow-covered hill. Always, in the
dream, it seemed as if there were a destination: a something — he could not grasp what — that lay
beyond the place where the thickness of snow brought the sled to a stop.
He
was left, upon awakening, with the feeling that he wanted, even somehow needed,
to reach the something that waited in the distance. The feeling that it was
good. That it was welcoming. That it was significant.
But he did not know how to get
there.
He tried to shed the leftover
dream, gathering his schoolwork and preparing for the day.
School seemed a little different
today. The classes were the same: language and communications; commerce and industry; science and technology;
civil procedures and government. But during the breaks for recreation periods and the midday
meal, the other new Twelves were abuzz with descriptions of their first day of
training. All of them talked at once, interrupting each other, hastily making
the required apology for interrupting, then forgetting again in the excitement
of describing the new experiences.
Jonas listened. He was very aware
of his own admonition not to discuss his training. But it would have been impossible,
anyway. There was no way to describe to his friends what he had experienced
there in the Annex room. How could you describe a sled without describing a
hill and snow; and how could you describe a hill and snow to someone who had
never felt height or wind or that feathery, magical cold?
Even trained for years as they all
had been in precision of language, what words could you use which would give
another the experience of sunshine?
So it was easy for Jonas to be
still and to listen.
After school hours he rode again
beside Fiona to the House of the Old.
"I looked for you
yesterday," she told him, "so we could ride home together. Your bike
was still there, and I waited for a little while. But it was getting late, so I
went on home."
"I apologize for making you
wait," Jonas said.
"I
accept your apology," she replied automatically.
"I
stayed a little longer than I expected," Jonas explained.
She
pedaled forward silently, and he knew that she expected him to tell her why.
She expected him to describe his first day of training. But to ask would have
fallen into the category of rudeness.
"You've
been doing so many volunteer hours with the Old," Jonas said, changing the
subject. "There won't be much that you don't already know."
"Oh,
there's lots to learn," Fiona replied. "There's administrative work,
and the dietary rules, and punishment for disobedience — did you know that they
use a discipline wand on the Old, the same as for small children? And there's
occupational therapy, and recreational activities, and medications, and —
"
They reached the building and
braked their bikes.
"I
really think I'll like it better than school," Fiona confessed.
"Me
too," Jonas agreed, wheeling his bike into its place.
She
waited for a second, as if, again, she expected him to go on. Then she looked
at her watch, waved, and hurried toward the entrance.
Jonas
stood for a moment beside his bike, startled. It had happened again: the thing
that he thought of now as "seeing beyond." This time it had been
Fiona who had undergone that fleeting indescribable change. As he looked up and
toward her going through the door, it happened; she changed. Actually, Jonas
thought, trying to re-create it in his mind, it wasn't Fiona in her entirety.
It seemed to be just her hair. And just for that flickering instant.
He ran through it in his mind. It
was clearly beginning to happen more often. First, the apple a few weeks
before. The next time had been the faces in the audience at the Auditorium,
just two days ago. Now, today, Fiona's hair.
Frowning, Jonas walked toward the
Annex. I will ask The Giver, he decided.
The old man looked up, smiling,
when Jonas entered the room. He was already seated beside the bed, and he
seemed more energetic today, slightly renewed, and glad to see Jonas.
"Welcome," he said.
"We must get started. You're one minute late."
"I apologi —" Jonas
began, and then stopped, flustered, remembering there were to be no apologies.
He removed his tunic and went to
the bed. "I'm one minute late because something happened," he
explained. "And I'd like to ask you about it, if you don't mind."
You may ask me anything."
Jonas tried to sort it out in his
mind so that he could explain it clearly. "I think it's what you call
seeing-beyond," he said.
The Giver nodded. "Describe
it," he said.
Jonas told him about the
experience with the apple. Then the moment on the stage, when he had looked out
and seen the same phenomenon in the faces of the crowd. "Then today, just
now, outside, it happened with my friend Fiona. She herself didn't change,
exactly. But something about her changed for a second. Her hair looked
different; but not in its shape, not in its length. I can't quite — "
Jonas paused, frustrated by his inability to grasp and describe exactly what had occurred.
Finally he simply said, "It
changed. I don't know how, or why.
"That's why I was one minute
late," he concluded, and looked questioningly at The Giver.
To his surprise, the old man asked
him a question which
seemed unrelated to the seeing-beyond. "When I gave you the memory
yesterday, the first one, the ride on the sled, did you look around?"
Jonas
nodded. "Yes," he said, "but the stuff — I mean the snow — in
the air made it hard to see anything." "Did you look at the
sled?"
Jonas thought back. "No. I
only felt it under me. I dreamed of it last night, too. But I don't remember seeing the sled in my dream, either. Just
feeling it."
The Giver seemed to be thinking.
"When I was observing you,
before the selection, I perceived that you probably had the capacity, and what
you describe confirms that. It happened somewhat differently to me," The
Giver told him. "When I was just your age — about to become the new
Receiver — I began to experience it, though it took a different form. With me
it was ... well, I won't describe that now; you wouldn't under-stand it yet.
"But I think I can guess how
it's happening with you. Let me just make a little test, to confirm my guess.
Lie down."
Jonas lay on the bed again with
his hands at his sides. He felt comfortable here now. He closed his eyes and
waited for the familiar feel of The Giver's hands on his back.
But it didn't come. Instead, The Giver
instructed him, "Call back the memory of the ride on the sled. Just the be-ginning of it, where you're at the top of
the hill, before the slide starts. And this time, look down at the sled."
Jonas was puzzled. He opened his
eyes. "Excuse me," he asked politely, "but don't you have to give me the memory?"
"It's your memory, now, It's
not mine to experience any longer. I gave it away."
"But how can I call it
back?"
"You can remember last year,
or the year that you were a Seven, or a Five, can't you?"
"Of course."
"It's much the same. Everyone
in the community has one-generation memories like those. But now you will be
able to go back farther. Try. Just concentrate."
Jonas closed his eyes again. He
took a deep breath and sought the sled and the hill and the snow in his
consciousness.
There they were, with no effort.
He was again sitting in that whirling world of snowflakes, atop the hill.
Jonas grinned with delight, and
blew his own steamy breath into view. Then, as he had been instructed, he looked
down. He saw his own hands, furred again with snow, holding the rope. He saw
his legs, and moved them aside for a glimpse of the sled beneath.
Dumbfounded, he stared at it. This
time it was not a fleeting impression. This time the sled had — and continued
to have, as he blinked, and stared at it again — that same mysterious quality
that the apple had had so briefly. And Fiona's hair. The sled did not change.
It simply was — whatever the thing was.
Jonas opened his eyes and was still on the bed. The Giver was watching
him curiously.
"Yes," Jonas said
slowly. "I saw it, in the sled."
"Let me try one more thing.
Look over there, to the bookcase. Do you see the very top row of books, the
ones behind the table, on the top shelf?"
Jonas sought them with his eyes.
He stared at them, and they changed. But the change was fleeting. It slipped
away the next instant.
"It happened," Jonas
said. "It happened to the books, but it went away again."
"I'm right, then," The
Giver said. "You're beginning to see the color red."
"The what?"
The Giver sighed. "How to
explain this? Once, back in the time of the memories, everything had a shape
and size, the way things still do, but they also had a quality called color.
"There were a lot of colors,
and one of them was called red. That's the one you are starting to see. Your
friend Fiona has red hair — quite distinctive, actually; I've noticed it
before. When you mentioned Fiona's hair, it was the clue that told me you were
probably beginning to see the color red."
"And the faces of people? The
ones I saw at the Ceremony?"
The Giver shook his head.
"No, flesh isn't red. But it has red tones in it. There was a time,
actually — you'll see this in the memories later — when flesh was many different
colors. That was before we went to Sameness. Today flesh is all the same, and
what you saw was the red tones.
Probably when you
saw the faces take on color it wasn't as deep or vibrant as the apple, or your friend's
hair."
The Giver chuckled, suddenly.
"We've never completely mastered Sameness. I suppose the genetic
scientists are still hard at work trying to work the kinks out. Hair like
Fiona's must drive them crazy."
Jonas listened, trying hard to
comprehend. "And the sled?" he said. "It had that same thing:
the color red. But it didn't change, Giver. It just was."
"Because
it's a memory from the time when color was." "It was so — oh, I wish language were more precise!
The red was so beautiful!"
The Giver nodded. "It
is."
"Do you see it all the
time?"
"I see all of them. All the
colors."
"Will I?"
"Of course. When you receive
the memories. You have the capacity to see beyond. You'll gain wisdom, then,
along with colors. And lots more."
Jonas wasn't interested, just
then, in wisdom. It was the colors that fascinated him. "Why can't
everyone see them? Why did colors disappear?"
The Giver shrugged. "Our
people made that choice, the choice to go to Sameness. Before my time, before
the previous time, back and back and back. We relinquished color when we
relinquished sunshine and did away with differences." He thought for a
moment. "We gained control of many things. But we had to let go of
others."
"We shouldn't have!"
Jonas said fiercely.
The Giver looked startled at the
certainty of Jonas's re-action. Then he smiled wryly. "You've come very
quickly
to that conclusion," he said. "It took me many years. Maybe
your wisdom will come much more quickly than mine."
He glanced at the wall clock.
"Lie back down, now. We have so much to do."
"Giver," Jonas asked as
he arranged himself again on the bed, "how did it happen to you when you
were be-coming The Receiver? You said that the seeing-beyond happened to you,
but not the same way."
The hands came to his back.
"Another day," The Giver said gently. "I'll tell you another
day. Now we must work. And I've thought of a way to help you with the concept
of color.
"Close your eyes and be
still, now. I'm going to give you a memory of a rainbow."
13
Days went by, and weeks. Jonas
learned, through the memories, the names of colors; and now he began to see
them all, in his ordinary life (though he knew it was ordinary no longer, and
would never be again). But they didn't last. There would be a glimpse of green
— the landscaped lawn around the
The Giver told him that it would
be a very long time before he had the colors to keep.
"But I want them!" Jonas
said angrily. "It isn't fair that nothing has color!"
"Not fair?" The Giver
looked at Jonas curiously. "Ex-plain what you mean."
"Well ...” Jonas had to stop
and think it through. "If everything's the same, then there aren't any choices! I want to wake up in the morning and decide things! A blue tunic, or a red
one?"
He looked down at himself, at the
colorless fabric of his clothing. "But it's all the same, always."
Then he laughed a little. "I know it's not important, what you wear.
It doesn't matter. But —
"It's the choosing that's
important, isn't it?" The Giver asked him.
Jonas nodded. "My little
brother — " he began, and then corrected himself. "No, that's
inaccurate. He's not my brother, not really. But this newchild that my family
takes care of — his name's Gabriel?"
"Yes, I know about
Gabriel."
"Well, he's right at the age where
he's learning so much. He grabs toys when we hold them in front of him — my
father says he's learning small-muscle control. And he's really cute."
The Giver nodded.
"But now that I can see
colors, at least sometimes, I was just thinking: what if we could hold up things that were
bright red, or bright yellow, and he could choose? Instead of the Sameness."
"He might make wrong
choices."
"Oh." Jonas was silent
for a minute. "Oh, I see what you mean. It wouldn't matter for a
newchild's toy. But later it does matter, doesn't it? We don't dare to let people make choices of their
own."
"Not safe?" The Giver
suggested.
"Definitely not safe,"
Jonas said with certainty. "What if they were allowed to choose their own
mate? And chose wrong?
"Or what if," he went
on, almost laughing at the absurdity, "they chose their own jobs?"
"Frightening, isn't it?"
The Giver said.
Jonas chuckled. "Very
frightening. I can't even imagine it. We really have to protect people from
wrong choices."
"It's safer."
"Yes," Jonas agreed.
"Much safer."
But
when the conversation turned to other things, Jonas was left, still, with a
feeling of frustration that he didn't understand.
He
found that he was often angry, now: irrationally angry at his groupmates, that they were satisfied
with their lives
which had none of the vibrance his own was taking on. And he was angry at
himself, that he could not change that for them.
He
tried. Without asking permission from The Giver, because he feared — or knew —
that it would be denied, he tried to give his new awareness to his friends.
"Asher,"
Jonas said one morning, "look at those flowers very carefully." They were standing beside a
bed of geraniums
planted near the Hall of Open Records. He put his hands on Asher's shoulders,
and concentrated on the red of the petals, trying to hold it as long as he
could, and trying at the same time to transmit the awareness of red to his
friend.
"What's
the matter?" Asher asked uneasily. "Is some-thing wrong?" He
moved away from Jonas's hands. It was extremely rude for one citizen to touch
another outside of family units.
"No,
nothing. I thought for a minute that they were wilting, and we should let the
Gardening Crew know they needed more watering." Jonas sighed, and turned
away.
One
evening he came home from his training weighted with new knowledge. The Giver
had chosen a startling and disturbing memory that day. Under the touch of his
hands, Jonas had found himself suddenly in a place that was completely alien:
hot and windswept under a vast
blue sky. There were tufts of sparse grass, a few
bushes and rocks, and nearby he could
see an area of thicker vegetation:
broad, low trees outlined against the sky. He could hear noises: the sharp
crack of weapons — he perceived the word guns — and then shouts, and
an immense crashing thud as something fell, tearing branches from the trees.
He
heard voices calling to one another. Peering from the place where he stood hidden
behind some shrubbery, he was reminded of what The Giver had told him, that
there had been a time when flesh had different colors. Two of these men had
dark brown skin; the others were light. Going closer, he watched them hack the
tusks from a motionless elephant on the ground and haul them away, spattered
with blood. He felt himself overwhelmed with a new perception of the color he
knew as red.
Then
the men were gone, speeding toward the horizon in a vehicle that spit pebbles
from its whirling tires. One hit his forehead and stung him there. But the
memory continued, though Jonas ached now for it to end.
Now
he saw another elephant emerge from the place where it had stood hidden in the
trees. Very slowly it walked to the mutilated body and looked down. With its
sinuous trunk it stroked the huge corpse; then it reached up, broke some leafy
branches with a snap, and draped them over the mass of torn thick flesh.
Finally
it tilted its massive head, raised its trunk, and roared into the empty
landscape. Jonas had never heard such a sound. It was a sound of rage and grief
and it seemed never to end.
He
could still hear it when he opened his eyes and lay anguished on the bed where
he received the memories. It continued to roar into his consciousness as he
pedaled slowly home.
"Lily," he asked that evening
when his sister took her comfort object, the stuffed elephant, from the shelf,
"did you know that once there really were elephants? Live ones?"
She glanced down at the ragged
comfort object and grinned. "Right," she said, skeptically.
"Sure, Jonas."
Jonas went and sat beside them
while his father untied Lily's hair ribbons and combed her hair. He placed one
hand on each of their shoulders. With all of his being he tried to give each of
them a piece of the memory: not of the tortured cry of the elephant, but of the
being of the elephant, of the towering,
immense creature and the meticulous touch with which it had tended its friend
at the end.
But his father had continued to
comb Lily's long hair, and Lily, impatient, had finally wiggled under her
brother's touch. "Jonas," she said, "you're hurting me with your hand."
"I apologize for hurting you,
Lily," Jonas mumbled, and took his hand away.
" 'Ccept your apology,"
Lily responded indifferently, stroking the lifeless elephant.
"Giver,"
Jonas asked once, as they prepared for the day's work, "don't you have a
spouse? Aren't you allowed to apply for one?" Although he was exempted
from the rules against rudeness, he was aware that this was a rude question.
But The Giver had encouraged all of his questions, not seeming to be
embarrassed or offended by even the most personal.
The
Giver chuckled. "No, there's no rule against it. And I did have a spouse. You're forgetting how old I am, Jonas. My former
spouse lives now with the Childless Adults."
"Oh, of course." Jonas had
forgotten The Giver's obvious age. When adults of the community became
older, their lives became different. They were no longer needed to create
family units. Jonas's own parents, when he and Lily were grown, would go to
live with the Childless Adults.
"You'll be able to apply for
a spouse, Jonas, if you want to. I'll warn you, though, that it will be
difficult. Your living arrangements will have to be different from those of
most family units, because the books are forbidden to citizens. You and I are
the only ones with access to the books."
Jonas glanced around at the
astonishing array of volumes. From time to time, now, he could see their
colors. With their hours together, his and The Giver's, consumed by conversation
and by the transmission of memories, Jonas had not yet opened any of the books.
But he read the titles here and there, and knew that they contained all of the
knowledge of centuries, and that one day they would belong to him.
"So if I have a spouse, and
maybe children, I will have to hide the books from them?"
The Giver nodded. "I wasn't
permitted to share the books with my spouse, that's correct. And there are
other difficulties, too. You remember the rule that says the new Receiver can't
talk about his training?"
Jonas nodded. Of course he
remembered. It had turned out, by far, to be the most frustrating of the rules
he was required to obey.
"When
you become the official Receiver, when we're finished here, you'll be given a
whole new set of rules. Those are the rules that I obey. And it won't surprise
you that I am forbidden to talk about my work to anyone except the new
Receiver. That's you, of course.
"So
there will be a whole part of your life which you won't be able to share with a
family. It's hard, Jonas. It was hard for me.
"You
do understand, don't you, that this is my life? The memories?"
Jonas
nodded again, but he was puzzled. Didn't life consist of the things you did
each day? There wasn't any-thing else, really. "I've seen you taking
walks," he said.
The
Giver sighed. "I walk. I eat at mealtime. And when I am called by the
Committee of Elders, I appear before them, to give them counsel and
advice."
"Do
you advise them often?" Jonas was a little frightened at the thought that
one day he would be the one to advise the ruling body.
But
The Giver said no. "Rarely. Only when they are faced with something that
they have not experienced be-fore. Then they call upon me to use the memories
and ad-vise them. But it very seldom happens. Sometimes I wish they'd ask for
my wisdom more often — there are so many things I could tell them; things I
wish they would change. But they don't want change. Life here is so orderly,
so predictable — so painless. It's what they've chosen.
"I
don't know why they even need a Receiver, then, if they never call
upon him," Jonas commented.
"They
need me. And you," The Giver said, but didn't explain. "They were
reminded of that ten years ago."
"What happened ten years ago?" Jonas asked. "Oh, I know. You
tried to train a successor and it failed. Why? Why did that remind them?"
The Giver smiled grimly.
"When the new Receiver failed, the memories that she had received were
released. They didn't come back to me. They went ... "
He paused, and seemed to be
struggling with the concept. "I don't know, exactly. They went to the
place where memories once existed before Receivers were created. Someplace out there
— " He gestured vaguely with his arm. "And then the people had
access to them. Apparently that's the way it was, once. Everyone had access to
memories.
"It was chaos," he said.
"They really suffered for a while. Finally it subsided as the memories
were assimilated. But it certainly made them aware of how they need a Receiver
to contain all that pain. And knowledge."
"But you have to suffer like
that all the time," Jonas pointed out.
The Giver nodded. "And you
will. It's my life. It will be yours."
Jonas thought about it, about what
it would be like for him. "Along with walking and eating and — " He
looked around the walls of books. "
The Giver shook his head.
"Those are simply the things that I do,
My life is here."
"In this room?"
The Giver shook his head. He put
his hands to his own face, to his chest. "No. Here, in my being. Where the
memories are."
"My Instructors in science
and technology have taught us about how the brain works," Jonas told him
eagerly. "It's full of electrical impulses. It's like a computer. If you
stimulate one part of the brain with an electrode, it — " He stopped
talking. He could see an odd look on The Giver's face.
"They know nothing," The
Giver said bitterly.
Jonas
was shocked. Since the first day in the Annex room, they had together disregarded
the rules about rudeness, and Jonas felt comfortable with that now. But this
was different, and far beyond rude. This was a terrible accusation. What if
someone had heard?
He
glanced quickly at the wall speaker, terrified that the Committee might be
listening as they could at any time. But, as always during their sessions
together, the switch had been turned to OFF.
"Nothing?"
Jonas whispered nervously. "But my instructors — "
The
Giver flicked his hand as if brushing something aside. "Oh, your
instructors are well trained. They know their scientific facts. Everyone is well
trained for his job.
"It's
just that . . . without the memories it's all meaningless. They gave that
burden to me. And to the previous Receiver. And the one before him."
"And
back and back and back," Jonas said, knowing the phrase that always came.
The
Giver smiled, though his smile was oddly harsh. "That's right. And next it
will be you. A great honor."
"Yes,
sir. They told me that at the Ceremony. The very highest honor."
Some afternoons The
Giver sent him away without training. Jonas knew, on days when he arrived to
find The
Giver hunched over, rocking his body slightly back and
forth, his face pale, that he would be sent away.
"Go,"
The Giver would tell him tensely. "I'm in pain today. Come back
tomorrow."
On
those days, worried and disappointed, Jonas would walk alone beside the river.
The paths were empty of people except for the few Delivery Crews and Landscape
Workers here and there. Small children were all at the
By
himself, he tested his own developing memory. He watched the landscape for
glimpses of the green that he knew was embedded in the shrubbery; when it came
flickering into his
consciousness, he focused upon it, keeping it there, darkening it, holding it in his vision as long as possible until his head hurt and he
let it fade away.
He
stared at the flat, colorless sky, bringing blue from it, and remembered
sunshine until finally, for an instant, he could feel warmth.
He stood
at the foot of the bridge that spanned the river, the bridge that citizens were allowed to cross only
on official business. Jonas had crossed
it on school trips, visiting the outlying communities, and he knew that the land beyond the
bridge was much the same, flat and well ordered, with fields for agriculture.
The other communities he
had seen on visits were essentially the same as his own, the only differences were
slightly altered styles of dwellings, slightly different schedules in the
schools.
He
wondered what lay in the far distance where he had never gone. The land didn't end beyond those nearby communities.
Were there hills Elsewhere? Were there vast
wind-torn areas like the place he had seen in memory, the place where the
elephant died?
"Giver," he asked one
afternoon following a day when he had been sent away, "what causes you
pain?"
When The Giver was silent, Jonas
continued. "The Chief Elder told me, at the beginning, that the receiving
of memory causes terrible pain. And you described for me that the failure of
the last new Receiver released painful memories to the community.
"But I haven't suffered,
Giver. Not really." Jonas smiled. "Oh, I remember the sunburn you
gave me on the very
first day. But
that wasn't so terrible. What is it that makes you suffer so much? If you gave
some of it to me, maybe your pain would be less."
The Giver nodded. "Lie
down," he said. "It's time, I suppose. I can't shield you forever.
You'll have to take it all on eventually.
"Let me think," he went
on, when Jonas was on the bed, waiting, a little fearful.
"All right," The Giver
said after a moment, "I've decided. We'll start with something familiar.
Let's go once again to a hill, and a sled."
He placed his hands on Jonas's
back.
14
It was much the same, this memory,
though the hill seemed to be a different one, steeper, and the snow was not
falling as thickly as it had before.
It
was colder, also, Jonas perceived. He could see, as he sat waiting at the top of the
hill, that the snow beneath the sled was not thick and soft as it had been
before, but hard, and coated with bluish ice.
The
sled moved forward, and Jonas grinned with de-light, looking forward to the
breathtaking slide down through the invigorating air.
But
the runners, this time, couldn't slice through the frozen expanse as they had
on the other, snow-cushioned hill. They skittered sideways and the sled
gathered speed. Jonas pulled at the rope, trying to steer, but the steepness
and speed took control from his hands and he was no longer enjoying the feeling
of freedom but instead, terrified, was at the mercy of the wild acceleration
downward over the ice.
Sideways,
spinning, the sled hit a bump in the hill and Jonas was jarred loose and thrown
violently into the air. He fell with his leg twisted under him, and could hear
the crack of bone. His face scraped along jagged edges of ice and when he came,
at last, to a stop, he lay shocked and still, feeling nothing at first but
fear.
Then,
the first wave of pain. He gasped. It was as if a hatchet lay lodged in his
leg, slicing through each nerve with a hot blade. In his agony he perceived the
word "fire" and felt flames licking at the torn bone and flesh. He
tried to move, and could not. The pain grew.
He screamed. There was no answer.
Sobbing,
he turned his head and vomited onto the frozen snow. Blood dripped from his face
into the vomit.
"NOOOOO!"
he cried, and the
sound disappeared into the empty landscape, into the wind.
Then,
suddenly, he was in the Annex room again, writhing on the bed. His face was wet
with tears.
Able
to move now, he rocked his own body back and forth, breathing deeply to release
the remembered pain.
He
sat, and looked at his own leg, where it lay straight on the bed, unbroken. The
brutal slice of pain was gone. But the leg ached horribly, still, and his face
felt raw.
"May
I have relief-of-pain, please?" he begged. It was always provided in his
everyday life for the bruises and wounds, for a mashed finger, a stomach ache,
a skinned knee from a fall from a bike. There was always a daub of anesthetic
ointment, or a pill; or in severe instances, an injection that brought
complete and instantaneous deliverance.
But The Giver said no, and looked
away.
Limping,
Jonas walked home, pushing his bicycle, that evening. The sunburn pain had been
so small, in comparison, and had not stayed with him. But this ache lingered.
It was not unendurable, as the pain on the hill had been. Jonas tried to
be brave. He remembered that the Chief Elder had said he was brave.
"Is something wrong,
Jonas?" his father asked at the evening meal. "You're so quiet tonight.
Aren't you feeling well? Would you like some medication?"
But Jonas remembered the rules. No
medication for anything related to his training.
And no discussion of his training.
At the time for sharing-of-feelings, he simply said that he felt tired, that
his school lessons had been unusually demanding that day.
He went to his sleepingroom early,
and from behind the closed door he could hear his
parents and sister laughing as they gave Gabriel his evening bath.
They have never known pain, he thought. The realization made
him feel desperately lonely, and he rubbed his throbbing leg. He eventually
slept. Again and again he dreamed of the anguish and the isolation on the
forsaken hill.
The daily training continued, and
now it always included pain. The agony of the fractured leg began to seem no
more than a mild discomfort as The Giver led Jonas firmly, little by little,
into the deep and terrible suffering of the past. Each time, in his kindness,
The Giver ended the afternoon with a color-filled memory of pleasure: a brisk
sail on a blue-green lake; a meadow dotted with yellow wildflowers; an orange
sunset behind mountains.
It was not enough to assuage the
pain that Jonas was beginning, now, to know.
"Why?" Jonas asked him after he had received
a torturous memory in which he had been neglected and unfed; the hunger had
caused excruciating spasms in his empty, distended stomach. He lay on the bed,
aching. "Why do you and I have to hold these memories?"
"It gives us wisdom,"
The Giver replied. "Without wisdom I could not fulfill my function of
advising the Committee of Elders when they call upon me."
"But what wisdom do you get
from hunger?" Jonas groaned. His stomach still hurt, though the memory had
ended.
"Some years ago," The
Giver told him, "before your birth, a lot of citizens petitioned the
Committee of Elders. They wanted to increase the rate of births. They wanted
each Birthmother to be assigned four births instead of three, so that the
population would increase and there would be more Laborers available."
Jonas nodded,
listening. "That makes sense."
"The idea was that certain
family units could accommodate an additional child."
Jonas nodded again. "Mine
could," he pointed out. "We have Gabriel this year, and it's fun,
having a third child."
"The Committee of Elders
sought my advice," The Giver said. "It made sense to them, too, but
it was a new idea, and they came to me for wisdom."
"And you used your
memories?"
The Giver said yes. "And the strongest
memory that came was hunger. It came from many generations back. Centuries back. The population had gotten so
big that hunger was everywhere. Excruciating hunger and starvation. It was
followed by warfare."
Warfare? It was a concept Jonas
did not know. But hunger was familiar to him now. Unconsciously he rubbed his own abdomen, recalling the pain of its unfulfilled needs. "So
you described that to them?"
"They
don't want to hear about pain. They just seek the advice. I simply advised them
against increasing the population."
"But
you said that that was before my birth. They hardly ever come to you for
advice. Only when they — what was it you said? When they have a problem they've
never faced before. When did it happen last?"
"Do
you remember the day when the plane flew over the community?"
"Yes. I was scared."
"So
were they. They prepared to shoot it down. But they sought my advice. I told
them to wait."
"But
how did you know? How did you know the pilot was lost?"
"I
didn't. I used my wisdom, from the memories. I knew that there had been times
in the past — terrible times — when people had destroyed others in haste, in
fear, and had brought about their own destruction."
Jonas
realized something. "That means," he said slowly, "that you have
memories of destruction. And you have to give them to me, too, because I have
to get the wisdom."
The Giver nodded.
"But it will hurt,"
Jonas said. It wasn't a question. "It will hurt terribly," The Giver
agreed.
"But
why can't everyone
have the memories?
I think it would seem
a little easier if the memories were shared. You and I wouldn't have to bear so much by ourselves,
if everybody took a part."
The Giver sighed. "You're
right," he said. "But then everyone would be burdened and pained.
They don't want that. And that's the real reason The Receiver is so vital to
them, and so honored. They selected me — and you — to lift that burden from
themselves."
"When did they decide
that?" Jonas asked angrily. "It wasn't fair. Let's change it!"
"How do you suggest we do
that? I've never been able to think of a way, and I'm supposed to be the one
with all the wisdom."
"But there are two of us
now," Jonas said eagerly. "Together we can think of something!"
The Giver watched him with a wry
smile.
"Why can't we just apply for
a change of rules?" Jonas suggested.
The Giver laughed; then Jonas,
too, chuckled reluctantly.
"The decision was made long
before my time or yours," The Giver said, "and before the previous Receiver, and — " He waited.
"Back and back and
back." Jonas repeated the familiar phrase. Sometimes it had seemed
humorous to him. Sometimes it had seemed meaningful and important.
Now it was ominous. It meant, he
knew, that nothing could be changed.
The newchild, Gabriel, was growing,
and successfully passed the tests of maturity that the Nurturers gave each
month; he could sit alone, now, could reach for and grasp small play objects,
and he had six teeth. During the day-time hours, Father reported, he was
cheerful and seemed
of normal intelligence. But he remained fretful at night,
whimpering often, needing frequent attention.
"After
all this extra time I've put in with him," Father said one evening after
Gabriel had been bathed and was lying, for the moment, hugging his hippo placidly
in the small crib that had replaced the basket, "I hope they're not going
to decide to release him."
"Maybe
it would be for the best," Mother suggested. "I know you don't mind
getting up with him at night. But the lack of sleep is awfully hard for me."
"If
they release Gabriel, can we get another newchild as a visitor?" asked Lily. She
was kneeling beside the crib, making funny faces at the little one, who was smiling back at her.
Jonas's mother rolled her eyes in
dismay.
"No,"
Father said, smiling. He ruffled Lily's hair. "It's very rare, anyway,
that a newchild's status is as uncertain as Gabriel's. It probably won't happen
again, for a long time.
"Anyway,"
he sighed, "they won't make the decision for a while. Right now we're all
preparing for a release we'll probably have to make very soon. There's a
Birth-mother who's expecting twin males next month."
"Oh,
dear," Mother said, shaking her head. "If they're identical, I hope
you're not the one assigned — "
"I
am. I'm next on the list. I'll have to select the one to be nurtured, and the
one to be released. It's usually not hard, though. Usually it's just a matter
of birthweight. We release the smaller of the two."
Jonas,
listening, thought suddenly about the bridge and how, standing there, he had wondered what lay
Elsewhere.
Was there someone
there, waiting, who would receive the tiny released twin? Would it grow up
Elsewhere, not knowing, ever, that in this community lived a being who looked
exactly the same?
For
a moment he felt a tiny, fluttering hope that he knew was quite foolish. He
hoped that it would be Larissa, waiting. Larissa, the old woman he had bathed.
He remembered her sparkling eyes, her soft voice, her low chuckle. Fiona had
told him recently that Larissa had been released at a wonderful ceremony.
But
he knew that the Old were not given children to raise. Larissa's life Elsewhere would be quiet and
serene as befit the
Old; she would not welcome the responsibility of nurturing a newchild who needed
feeding and care, and would likely cry at night.
"Mother?
Father?" he said, the idea coming to him unexpectedly, "why don't we
put Gabriel's crib in my room tonight? I know how to feed and comfort him, and
it would let you and Father get some sleep."
Father
looked doubtful. "You sleep so soundly, Jonas. What if his restlessness
didn't wake you?"
It
was Lily who answered that. "If no one goes to tend Gabriel," she
pointed out, "he gets very loud. He'd wake all of us, if Jonas slept through it."
Father
laughed. "You're right, Lily-billy. All right, Jonas, let's try it, just
for tonight. I'll take the night off and we'll let Mother get some sleep,
too."
Gabriel slept
soundly for the earliest part of the night. Jonas, in his bed, lay awake for a
while; from time to time he raised himself on one elbow, looking over at the
crib.
The newchild was on his stomach, his arms relaxed beside his head, his eyes closed, and his breathing
regular and undisturbed.
Finally Jonas slept too.
Then, as the middle hours of the
night approached, the noise
of Gabe's restlessness woke Jonas. The newchild was turning under his cover, flailing
his arms, and beginning to whimper.
Jonas rose and went to him. Gently
he patted Gabriel's back. Sometimes that was all it took to lull him back to
sleep. But the newchild still squirmed fretfully under his hand.
Still patting rhythmically, Jonas
began to remember the wonderful sail that The Giver had given him not long be-fore:
a bright, breezy day on a clear turquoise lake, and above him the white sail of
the boat billowing as he moved along in the brisk wind.
He was not aware of giving the
memory; but suddenly he realized that it was becoming dimmer, that it was sliding
through his hand into the being of the newchild. Gabriel became quiet.
Startled, Jonas pulled back what was left of the memory with a burst of will.
He removed his hand from the little back and stood quietly beside the crib.
To himself, he called the memory
of the sail forward again. It was still there, but the sky was less blue, the
gentle motion of the boat slower, the water of the lake more murky and
clouded. He kept it for a while, soothing his own nervousness at what had
occurred, then let it go and returned to his bed.
Once more, toward dawn, the
newchild woke and cried out. Again Jonas went to him. This time he quite
deliberately placed his hand firmly on Gabriel's back, and released the rest
of the calming day on the lake. Again Gabriel slept.
But now Jonas lay awake, thinking.
He no longer had any more than a wisp of the memory, and he felt a small lack
where it had been. He could ask The Giver for an-other sail, he knew. A sail perhaps on ocean, next
time, for Jonas had a
memory of ocean, now, and knew what it was; he knew that there were sailboats
there, too, in memories yet to be acquired.
He wondered, though, if he should
confess to The Giver that he had given a memory away. He was not yet qualified
to be a Giver himself; nor had Gabriel been selected to be a Receiver.
That he had this power frightened
him. He decided not to tell.
15
Jonas entered the Annex room and
realized immediately that it was a day when he would be sent away. The Giver
was rigid in his chair, his face in his hands.
"I'll come back tomorrow,
sir," he said quickly. Then he hesitated. "Unless maybe there's
something I can do to help."
The Giver looked up at him, his
face contorted with suffering. "Please," he gasped, "take some
of the pain."
Jonas helped him to his chair at
the side of the bed. Then he quickly removed his tunic and lay face down.
"Put your hands on me," he directed, aware that in such anguish The
Giver might need reminding.
The hands came, and the pain came
with them and through them. Jonas braced himself and entered the memory which
was torturing The Giver.
He was in a confused, noisy,
foul-smelling place. It was daylight, early morning, and the air was thick with smoke that hung, yellow
and brown, above the ground. Around him, everywhere, far across the expanse of
what seemed to be a field, lay groaning men. A wild-eyed horse, its bridle torn
and dangling, trotted frantically through the mounds of men, tossing its head,
whinnying in panic. It stumbled, finally, then fell, and did not rise.
Jonas
heard a voice next to him. "Water," the voice said in a parched,
croaking whisper.
He
turned his head toward the voice and looked into the half-closed eyes of a boy
who seemed not much older than himself. Dirt streaked the boy's face and his
matted blond hair. He lay sprawled, his gray uniform glistening with wet, fresh
blood.
The
colors of the carnage were grotesquely bright: the crimson wetness on the rough and
dusty fabric, the ripped shreds of grass, startlingly green, in the boy's yellow hair.
The
boy stared at him. "Water," he begged again. When he spoke, a new
spurt of blood drenched the coarse cloth across his chest and sleeve.
One
of Jonas's arms was immobilized with pain, and he could see through his own
torn sleeve something that looked like ragged flesh and splintery bone. He
tried his remaining arm and felt it move. Slowly he reached to his side, felt
the metal container there, and removed its cap, stopping the small motion of
his hand now and then to wait for the surging pain to ease. Finally, when the
container was open, he extended his arm slowly across the blood-soaked earth,
inch by inch, and held it to the lips of the boy. Water trickled into the
imploring mouth and down the grimy chin.
The
boy sighed. His head fell back, his lower jaw drop-ping as if he had been
surprised by something. A dull blankness slid slowly across his eyes. He was
silent.
But
the noise continued all around: the cries of the wounded men, the cries begging
for water and for Mother and for death. Horses lying on the ground shrieked,
raised their heads, and stabbed randomly toward the sky with their hooves.
From the distance, Jonas could hear the thud of cannons. Overwhelmed by
pain, he lay there in the fearsome stench for hours, listened to the men and
animals die, and learned what warfare meant.
Finally, when he knew that he
could bear it no longer and would welcome death himself, he opened his eyes and
was once again on the bed.
The Giver looked away, as if he
could not bear to see what he had done to Jonas. "Forgive me," he
said.
16
Jonas
did not want to go back. He didn't want the memories, didn't want the honor,
didn't want the wisdom, didn't want the pain. He wanted his childhood again, his
scraped knees and ball games. He sat in his dwelling alone, watching through
the window, seeing children at play, citizens bicycling home from uneventful
days at work, ordinary lives free of anguish because he had been selected, as
others before him had, to bear their burden.
But the choice was not his. He
returned each day to the Annex room.
The Giver was gentle with him for
many days following
the terrible shared memory of war.
"There are so many good
memories," The Giver re-minded Jonas. And it was true. By now Jonas had
experienced countless bits of happiness, things he had never known of before.
He had seen a birthday parry, with
one child singled out and celebrated on his day, so that now he understood the
joy of being an individual, special and unique and proud.
He had visited museums and seen
paintings filled with all the colors he could now recognize and name.
In one ecstatic memory he had
ridden a gleaming brown
horse across a field that smelled of damp grass, and had dismounted beside a small
stream from which both he and the horse drank cold, clear water. Now he
understood about animals; and in the moment that the horse turned from the
stream and nudged Jonas's shoulder affectionately with its head, he perceived the bonds between
animal and human.
He
had walked through woods, and sat at night beside a campfire. Although he had
through the memories learned about the pain of loss and loneliness, now he
gained, too, an understanding of solitude and its joy.
"What
is your favorite?" Jonas asked The Giver. "You don't have to give it
away yet," he added quickly. "Just tell me about it, so I can look
forward to it, because I'll have to receive it when your job is done."
The
Giver smiled. "Lie down," he said. "I'm happy to give it to
you."
Jonas
felt the joy of it as soon as the memory began. Sometimes it took a while for
him to get his bearings, to find his place. But this time he fit right in and
felt the happiness that pervaded the memory.
He
was in a room filled with people, and it was warm, with firelight glowing on a
hearth. He could see through a window that outside it was night, and snowing.
There were colored lights: red and green and yellow, twinkling from a tree
which was, oddly, inside the room. On a table, lighted candles stood in a
polished golden holder and cast a soft, flickering glow. He could smell things cooking,
and he heard soft
laughter. A golden-haired dog lay sleeping on the floor.
On the floor there
were packages wrapped in brightly colored paper and tied with gleaming ribbons.
As Jonas watched, a small child began to pick up the packages and pass them
around the room: to other children, to adults who were obviously parents, and
to an older, quiet couple, man and woman, who sat smiling together on a couch.
While Jonas watched,
the people began one by one to untie the ribbons on the packages, to unwrap the
bright papers, open the boxes and reveal toys and clothing and books. There
were cries of delight. They hugged one an-other.
The small child went
and sat on the lap of the old woman, and she rocked him and rubbed her cheek
against his.
Jonas opened his
eyes and lay contentedly on the bed, still luxuriating in the warm and
comforting memory. It had all been there, all the things he had learned to
treasure.
"What did you
perceive?" The Giver asked.
"Warmth,"
Jonas replied, "and happiness. And — let me think. Family. That it was a celebration of some
sort, a holiday. And something else — I can't quite get the word for it."
"It will come
to you."
"Who were the
old people? Why were they there?" It had puzzled Jonas, seeing them in the
room. The Old of the community did not ever leave their special place, the
House of the Old, where they were so well cared for and respected.
"They were
called Grandparents."
"Grand parents?"
"Grandparents.
It meant parents-of-the-parents, long ago."
"Back
and back and back?" Jonas began to laugh. "So actually, there could
be parents-of-the-parents-of-theparents-of-the parents?"
The
Giver laughed, too. "That's right. It's a little like looking at yourself
looking in a mirror looking at yourself looking in a mirror."
Jonas
frowned. "But my parents must have had parents! I never thought about it
before. Who are my parents-of-the-parents? Where are
they?"
"You
could go look in the Hall of Open Records. You'd find the names. But think, son. If you apply for
children, then who will be their parents-of-the-parents? Who will be their
grandparents?"
"My mother and father, of
course."
"And where will they
be?"
Jonas
thought. "Oh," he said slowly. "When I finish my training and
become a full adult, I'll be given my own dwelling. And then when Lily does, a few years later,
she'll get her own dwelling, and maybe a spouse,
and children if she applies for them, and then Mother and Father — "
"That's right."
"As
long as they're still working and contributing to the community, they'll go and
live with the other Child-less Adults. And they won't be part of my life
anymore.
"And
after that, when the time comes, they'll go to the House of the Old,"
Jonas went on. He was thinking aloud. "And they'll be well cared for, and
respected, and when they're released, there will be a celebration."
"Which you won't
attend," The Giver pointed out.
"No, of course not, because I
won't even know about it. By then I'll be so busy with my own life. And Lily
will, too. So our children, if we have them, won't know who their
parents-of-parents are, either.
"It seems to work pretty well
that way, doesn't it? The way we do it in our community?" Jonas asked.
"I just didn't
realize there was any other way, until I received that memory."
"It works," The Giver
agreed.
Jonas hesitated. "I certainly
liked the memory, though. I can see why it's your favorite. I couldn't quite
get the word for the whole feeling of it, the feeling that was so strong in the
room."
"Love," The Giver told
him.
Jonas repeated it.
"Love." It was a word and concept new to him.
They were both silent for a
minute. Then Jonas said, "Giver?"
"Yes?"
"I
feel very foolish saying this. Very, very foolish." "No need. Nothing
is foolish here. Trust the memories and how they make you feel."
"Well," Jonas said,
looking at the floor, "I know you don't have the memory anymore, because
you gave it to me, so maybe you won't understand this — "
"I will. I am left with a
vague wisp of that one; and I have many other memories of families, and
holidays, and happiness. Of love."
Jonas blurted out what he was
feeling. "I was thinking that . . . well, I can see that it wasn't a very
practical way
to live, with the Old right there in the same place, where maybe they
wouldn't be well taken care of, the way they are now, and that we have a better-arranged
way of doing things. But anyway, I was thinking, I mean feeling, actually,
that it was kind of nice, then. And that I wish we could be that way, and that
you could be my grandparent. The family in the memory seemed a little more —
" He faltered, not able to find the word he wanted.
"A little more
complete," The Giver suggested.
Jonas nodded.
"I liked the feeling of love," he confessed. He glanced nervously at
the speaker on the wall, reassuring himself that no one was listening. "I wish
we still had that," he whispered. "Of course," he added quickly,
"I do understand that it wouldn't work very well. And that it's much
better to be organized the way we are now. I can see that it was a dangerous way to live."
"What do you
mean?"
Jonas hesitated. He
wasn't certain, really, what he had meant. He could feel that there was risk involved, though he wasn't sure
how. "Well," he said finally, grasping for an explanation, "they
had fire right there in that room. There was
a fire burning in the fireplace. And there were candles on a table. I can
certainly see why those things were outlawed.
"Still,"
he said slowly, almost to himself, "I did like the light they made. And
the warmth."
"Father?
Mother?" Jonas asked tentatively after the evening meal. "I have a
question I want to ask you."
"What is it, Jonas?" his
father asked.
He made himself say the words,
though he felt flushed with embarrassment. He had rehearsed them in his mind
all the way home from the Annex.
"Do you love me?"
There
was an awkward silence for a moment. Then Father gave a little chuckle. Jonas. You, of all people. Precision of language, please!"
"What
do you mean?" Jonas asked. Amusement was not at all what he had
anticipated.
"Your
father means that you used a very generalized word, so meaningless that it's
become almost obsolete," his mother explained carefully.
Jonas
stared at them. Meaningless? He had never before felt anything as meaningful as the memory.
"And
of course our community can't function smoothly if people don't use precise
language. You could ask, 'Do you enjoy me?' The answer is `Yes,' " his
mother said.
"Or,"
his father suggested, "'Do you take pride in my accomplishments?' And the
answer is wholeheartedly 'Yes.'"
"Do
you understand why it's inappropriate to use a word like 'love'?" Mother
asked.
Jonas
nodded. "Yes, thank you, I do," he replied slowly.
It was his first lie to his
parents.
"Gabriel?"
Jonas whispered that night to the newchild. The crib was in his room again.
After Gabe had slept soundly in Jonas's room for four nights, his parents had
pronounced the experiment a success and Jonas a hero. Gabriel was growing
rapidly, now crawling and giggling across the room and pulling himself up to
stand. He could be upgraded in the
But
when he was taken away, he stopped sleeping again, and cried in the night.
So
he was back in Jonas's sleepingroom. They would give it a little more time, they decided. Since
Gabe seemed to like
it in Jonas's room, he would sleep there at night a little longer, until the
habit of sound sleep was fully formed. The Nurturers were very optimistic about
Gabriel's future.
There
was no answer to Jonas's whisper. Gabriel was sound asleep.
"Things
could change, Gabe," Jonas went on. "Things could be different. I
don't know how, but there must be some way for things to be different. There could be
colors.
"And
grandparents," he added, staring through the dimness toward the ceiling of
his sleepingroom. "And everybody would have the memories.
"You
know about memories," he whispered, turning toward the crib.
Gabriel's
breathing was even and deep. Jonas liked having him there, though he felt
guilty about the secret. Each night he gave memories to Gabriel: memories of boat rides and picnics in the sun;
memories of soft rainfall against windowpanes; memories of dancing barefoot on a damp lawn.
"Gabe?"
The
newchild stirred slightly in his sleep. Jonas looked over at him.
"There could be love,"
Jonas whispered.
The next morning, for the first
time, Jonas did not take his pill. Something within him, something that had
grown there through the memories, told him to throw the pill away.
17
TODAY IS DECLARED AN UNSCHEDULED
Jonas cheered, and put his
homework folder down. He had been about to leave for school. School was less
important to him now; and before much more time passed, his formal schooling
would end. But still, for Twelves, though they had begun their adult training,
there were the endless lists of rules to be memorized and the newest technology
to be mastered.
He wished his parents, sister, and
Gabe a happy day, and rode down the bicycle path, looking for Asher.
He had not taken the pills, now,
for four weeks. The Stirrings had returned, and he felt a little guilty and embarrassed
about the pleasurable dreams that came to him as he slept. But he knew he
couldn't go back to the world of no feelings that he had lived in so long.
And
his new, heightened feelings permeated a greater realm than simply his sleep.
Though he knew that his failure to take the pills accounted for some of it, he
thought that the feelings came also from the memories. Now he could see all of
the colors; and he could keep them,
too, so that the trees and grass and bushes stayed green in his vision.
Gabriel's rosy cheeks stayed pink, even when he slept. And apples were always,
always red.
Now,
through the memories, he had seen oceans and mountain lakes and streams that
gurgled through woods; and now he saw the familiar wide river beside the path
differently. He saw all of the light and color and history it contained and
carried in its slow-moving water; and he knew that there was an Elsewhere from
which it came, and an Elsewhere to which it was going.
On
this unexpected, casual holiday he felt happy, as he always had on holidays;
but with a deeper happiness than ever before. Thinking, as he always did, about
precision of language, Jonas realized that it was a new depth of feelings that he was
experiencing. Somehow they were not at all the same as the feelings that every
evening, in every dwelling, every citizen analyzed with endless talk.
"I
felt angry because someone broke the play area rules," Lily had said once,
making a fist with her small hand to indicate her fury. Her family — Jonas
among them — had talked about the possible reasons for rule-breaking, and the
need for understanding and patience, until Lily's fist had relaxed and her
anger was gone.
But Lily had not felt anger, Jonas
realized now. Shallow impatience and exasperation, that
was all Lily had felt. He knew that with certainty because now he knew what
anger was. Now he had, in the memories, experienced injustice and cruelty, and
he had reacted with rage that welled up so passionately inside him that the
thought of discussing it calmly at the evening meal was unthinkable.
"I felt sad today," he
had heard his mother say, and they had comforted her.
But now Jonas had experienced real
sadness. He had felt grief. He knew that there was no quick comfort for
emotions like those.
These were deeper and they did not
need to be told. They were felt.
Today, he felt happiness.
"Asher!" He spied his
friend's bicycle leaning against a tree at the edge of the playing field.
Nearby, other bikes were strewn about on the ground. On a holiday the usual
rules of order could be disregarded.
He skidded to a stop and dropped his
own bike beside the others. "Hey, Ash!" he shouted, looking around.
There seemed to be no one in the play area. "Where are you?"
"Psssheeewwww!" A child's
voice, coming from behind a nearby bush, made the sound. "Pow! Pow! Pow!"
A female Eleven named Tanya
staggered forward from where she had been hiding. Dramatically she clutched her
stomach and stumbled about in a zig-zag pattern, groaning. "You got
me!" she called, and fell to the ground, grinning.
"Blam!"
Jonas, standing on
the side of the playing field, recognized Asher's voice. He saw his friend,
aiming an imaginary weapon in his hand, dart from behind one tree to an-other.
"Blam! You're in my line of ambush, Jonas! Watch out!"
Jonas
stepped back. He moved behind Asher's bike and knelt so that he was out of sight. It was a game he
had often played with
the other children, a game of good guys and bad guys, a harmless pasttime that
used up their contained energy and ended only when they all lay posed in
freakish postures on the ground.
He had never
recognized it before as a game of war.
"Attack!"
The shout came from behind the small store-house where play equipment was kept.
Three children dashed forward, their imaginary weapons in firing position.
From
the opposite side of the field came an opposing shout:
"Counter-attack!" From their hiding places a horde of children —
Jonas recognized Fiona in the group — emerged, running in a crouched position,
firing across the field. Several of them stopped, grabbed their own shoulders
and chests with exaggerated gestures, and pre-tended to be hit. They dropped to
the ground and lay sup-pressing giggles.
Feelings
surged within Jonas. He found himself walking forward into the field.
"You're
hit, Jonas!" Asher yelled from behind the tree. "Pow! You're hit
again!"
Jonas
stood alone in the center of the field. Several of the children raised their
heads and looked at him uneasily. The attacking armies slowed, emerged from their crouched positions, and watched to see
what he was doing.
In his mind, Jonas saw again the
face of the boy who had lain dying on a field and had begged him for water. He
had a sudden choking feeling, as if it were difficult to breathe.
One
of the children raised an imaginary rifle and made an attempt to destroy him with a
firing noise. "Pssheeew!" Then they were all silent, standing awkwardly, and the
only sound was the sound of Jonas's shuddering breaths. He was struggling not
to cry.
Gradually,
when nothing happened, nothing changed, the children looked at each other
nervously and went away. He heard the sounds as they righted their bicycles and
began to ride down the path that led from the field.
Only Asher and Fiona remained.
"What's
wrong, Jonas? It was only a game," Fiona said.
"You ruined it," Asher
said in an irritated voice. "Don't play it anymore," Jonas pleaded.
"I'm
the one who's training for Assistant Recreation Director," Asher pointed
out angrily. "Games aren't your area of expertness."
"Expertise," Jonas
corrected him automatically.
"Whatever.
You can't say what we play, even if you are going to be the new Receiver." Asher
looked warily at him. "I apologize for not paying you the respect you
deserve," he mumbled.
"Asher,"
Jonas said. He was trying to speak carefully, and with kindness, to say exactly
what he wanted to say. "You had no way of knowing this. I didn't know it
myself until recently. But it's a cruel game. In the past, there have — "
"I said I apologize, Jonas."
Jonas sighed. It was
no use. Of course Asher couldn't understand. "I accept your apology,
Asher," he said wearily.
"Do you want to
go for a ride along the river, Jonas?" Fiona asked, biting her lip with
nervousness.
Jonas looked at her.
She was so lovely. For a fleeting instant he thought he would like nothing
better than to ride peacefully along the river path, laughing and talking with
his gentle female friend. But he knew that such times had been taken from him
now. He shook his head. After a moment his two friends turned and went to their
bikes. He watched as they rode away.
Jonas trudged to the
bench beside the Storehouse and sat down, overwhelmed with feelings of loss.
His child-hood, his friendships, his carefree sense of security — all of these
things seemed to be slipping away. With his new, heightened feelings, he was overwhelmed by sadness
at the way the others
had laughed and shouted, playing at war. But he knew that they could not
understand why, without the memories. He felt such love for Asher and for
Fiona. But they could not feel it back, without the memories. And he could not
give them those. Jonas knew with certainty that he could change nothing.
Back in their dwelling, that
evening, Lily chattered merrily about the wonderful holiday she had had,
playing with her friends, having her midday meal out of doors, and (she confessed) sneaking a very short
try on her father's bicycle. "I can't wait till I get
my very own bicycle next month. Father's is too big for me. I fell," she
explained matter-of factly.
"Good thing Gabe wasn't in the child seat!"
"A
very good thing," Mother agreed, frowning at the idea of it. Gabriel waved
his arms at the mention of him-self. He had begun to walk just the week before.
The first steps of a newchild were always the occasion for celebration at the
But
he was a happy and easygoing toddler. Now he moved unsteadily across the room,
laughing. "Gay!" he chirped. "Gay!" It was the way he said
his own name.
Jonas
brightened. It had been a depressing day for him, after such a bright start.
But he set his glum thoughts aside. He thought about starting to teach Lily to
ride so that she could speed off proudly after her Ceremony of Nine, which
would be coming soon. It was hard to believe that it was almost December again,
that almost a year had passed since he had become a Twelve.
He
smiled as he watched the newchild plant one small foot carefully before the
other, grinning with glee at his own steps as he tried them out.
"I
want to get to sleep early tonight," Father said. "To-morrow's a busy
day for me. The twins are being born to-morrow, and the test results show that
they're identical."
"One
for here, one for Elsewhere," Lily chanted. "One for here, one for
Else — "
"Do
you actually take it Elsewhere, Father?" Jonas asked.
"No,
I just have to make the selection. I weigh them, hand the larger over to a
Nurturer who's standing by,
waiting, and then I get the
smaller one all cleaned up and comfy. Then I perform a small Ceremony of
Release and — " He glanced down, grinning at Gabriel. "Then I wave
bye-bye," he said, in the special sweet voice he used when he spoke to the
newchild. He waved his hand in the familiar gesture.
Gabriel
giggled and waved bye-bye back to him. "And somebody else comes to get
him? Somebody from Elsewhere?"
"That's right,
Jonas-bonus."
Jonas rolled his eyes in
embarrassment that his father had used the silly pet name.
Lily was deep in thought.
"What if they give the little twin a name Elsewhere, a name like, oh,
maybe Jonathan? And here, in our community, at his naming, the twin that we
kept here is given the name Jonathan, and then there would be two children with
the same name, and they would look exactly the same, and someday, maybe
when they were a Six, one group of Sixes would go to visit an-other community
on a bus, and there in the other community, in the other group of
Sixes, would be a Jonathan who was exactly the same as the other Jonathan,
and then maybe they would get mixed up and take the wrong Jonathan home, and
maybe his parents wouldn't notice, and then — "
She paused for breath.
"Lily," Mother said,
"I have a wonderful idea. Maybe when you become a Twelve, they'll give you
the Assignment of
Storyteller! I don't think we've had a Storyteller in the community for a long time.
But if I were on the Committee, I would definitely choose you for that
job!"
Lily grinned. "I have a better
idea for one more
story," she announced. "What if actually we were all twins and didn't know it, and so Elsewhere there would be
another Lily, and another Jonas, and another Father, and another Asher, and
another Chief Elder, and another — "
Father groaned. "Lily,"
he said. "It's bedtime."
18
"Giver," Jonas asked the
next afternoon, "Do you ever think about release?"
"Do you mean my own release,
or just the general topic of release?"
"Both, I guess. I apologi — I
mean I should have been more precise. But I don't know exactly what I
meant."
"Sit back up. No need to lie
down while we're talking." Jonas, who had already been stretched out on
the bed when the question came to his mind, sat back up.
"I guess I do think about it
occasionally," The Giver said. "I think about my own release when I'm
in an awful lot of pain. I wish I could put in a request for it, some-times.
But I'm not permitted to do that until the new Receiver is trained."
"Me," Jonas said in a
dejected voice. He was not looking forward to the end of the training, when he
would become the new Receiver. It was clear to him what a terribly difficult
and lonely life it was, despite the honor.
"I can't request release
either," Jonas pointed out. "It was in my rules."
The Giver laughed harshly. "I
know that. They hammered out those rules after the failure ten years
ago."
Jonas had heard again and again now, reference to the
previous failure. But he still did not know what had happened ten years before.
"Giver," he said, "tell me what happened. Please."
The Giver shrugged.
"On the surface, it was quite simple. A Receiver-to-be was selected, the
way you were. The selection went smoothly enough. The Ceremony was held, and
the selection was made. The crowd cheered, as they did for you. The new
Receiver was puzzled and a little frightened, as you were."
"My parents
told me it was a female."
The Giver nodded.
Jonas thought of his
favorite female, Fiona, and shivered. He wouldn't want his gentle friend to
suffer the way he had, taking on the memories. "What was she like?"
he asked The Giver.
The Giver looked
sad, thinking about it. "She was a remarkable young woman. Very self-possessed
and serene. Intelligent, eager to learn." He shook his head and drew a
deep breath. "You know, Jonas, when she came to me in this room, when she
presented herself to begin her training — "
Jonas interrupted
him with a question. "Can you tell me her name? My parents said that it
wasn't to be spoken again in the community. But couldn't you say it just to
me?"
The Giver hesitated
painfully, as if saying the name aloud might be excruciating. "Her name
was Rosemary," he told Jonas, finally.
"Rosemary. I
like that name."
The Giver went on.
"When she came to me for the first time, she sat there in the chair where
you sat on your first day. She was eager and excited and a little scared. We
talked. I tried to explain things as well as I could."
"The way you did to me."
The Giver chuckled ruefully.
"The explanations are difficult. The whole thing is so beyond one's experience. But
I tried. And she listened carefully. Her eyes were very luminous, I
remember."
He looked up suddenly.
"Jonas, I gave you a memory that I told you was my favorite. I still have
a shred of it left. The room, with the family, and grandparents?"
Jonas nodded. Of course he
remembered. "Yes," he said. "It had that wonderful feeling with
it. You told me it was love."
"You can understand, then,
that that's what I felt for Rosemary," The Giver explained. "I loved
her.
"I feel it for you,
too," he added.
"What happened to her?"
Jonas asked.
"Her training began. She
received well, as you do. She was so enthusiastic. So delighted to experience new things. I remember her laughter ...
"
His voice faltered and trailed
off.
"What happened?" Jonas
asked again, after a moment. "Please tell me."
The Giver closed his eyes.
"It broke my heart, Jonas, to transfer pain to her. But it was my job. It
was what I had to do, the way I've had to do it to you."
The room was silent. Jonas waited.
Finally The Giver continued.
"Five weeks. That was all. I
gave her happy memories: a ride on a merry-go-round; a kitten to play with; a
picnic.
Sometimes I chose one just because I knew it would make her laugh, and I so treasured the
sound of that laughter in this room that had always been so silent.
"But
she was like you, Jonas. She wanted to experience everything. She knew that it was her responsibility. And so she asked me for more difficult
memories."
Jonas
held his breath for a moment. "You didn't give her war, did you? Not after just five
weeks?"
The
Giver shook his head and sighed. "No. And I didn't give her physical pain.
But I gave her loneliness. And I gave her loss. I transferred a memory of a
child taken from its parents. That was the first one. She appeared stunned at
its end."
Jonas
swallowed. Rosemary, and her laughter, had begun to seem real to him, and he
pictured her looking up from the bed of memories, shocked.
The
Giver continued. "I backed off, gave her more little delights. But
everything changed, once she knew about pain. I could see it in her eyes."
"She wasn't brave
enough?" Jonas suggested.
The
Giver didn't respond to the question. "She insisted that I continue, that
I not spare her. She said it was her duty. And I knew, of course, that she was
correct.
"I
couldn't bring myself to inflict physical pain on her. But I gave her anguish
of many kinds. Poverty, and hunger, and terror.
"I had to,
Jonas. It was my job. And she had been chosen." The Giver looked at him
imploringly. Jonas stroked his hand.
"Finally
one afternoon, we finished for the day. It had been a hard session. I tried to
finish — as I do with you — by transferring something happy and cheerful. But the times of laughter were gone by
then. She stood up very silently, frowning, as if she were making a decision. Then she came over
to me and put her arms around me. She kissed my cheek." As Jonas watched,
The Giver stroked his own cheek, recalling the touch of Rosemary's lips ten
years before.
"She
left here that day, left this room, and did not go back to her dwelling. I was
notified by the Speaker that she had gone directly to the Chief Elder and asked
to be released."
"But
it's against the rules! The Receiver-in-training can't apply for rel — "
"It's
in your rules, Jonas. But it wasn't in hers. She asked for release, and they
had to give it to her. I never saw her again."
So
that was the failure, Jonas thought. It was obvious that it saddened The Giver
very deeply. But it didn't seem such a terrible thing, after all. And he,
Jonas, would never have done it — never have requested release, no matter now
difficult his training became. The Giver needed a successor, and he had been
chosen.
A
thought occurred to Jonas. Rosemary had been re-leased very early in her
training. What if something happened to him, Jonas? He had a whole year's
worth of memories now.
"Giver,"
he asked, "I can't request release, I know that. But what if something
happened: an accident? What if I fell into the river like the little Four, Caleb, did?
Well, that doesn't make
sense because I'm a good swimmer. But what if I couldn't swim, and fell into
the river and was lost? Then there wouldn't be a new
Receiver, but you would already have given away an awful lot of important
memories, so even though they would select a new Receiver, the memories would
be gone except for the shreds that you have left of them? And then what if —
"
He started to laugh, suddenly.
"I sound like my sister, Lily," he said, amused at himself.
The Giver looked at him gravely.
"You just stay away from the river, my friend," he said. "The
community lost Rosemary after five weeks and it was a disaster for them. I
don't know what the community would do if they
lost you."
"Why was it a disaster?"
"I think I mentioned to you
once," The Giver re-minded him, "that when she was gone, the memories
came back to the
people. If you were to be lost in the river, Jonas, your memories would not be lost with you. Memories
are forever.
"Rosemary had only those five
weeks worth, and most of them were good ones. But there were those few terrible
memories, the ones that had overwhelmed her. For a while they overwhelmed the
community. All those feelings! They'd
never experienced that before.
"I was so devastated by my
own grief at her loss, and my own feeling of failure, that I didn't even try to
help them through it. I was angry, too."
The Giver was quiet for a moment,
obviously thinking. "You know," he said, finally, "if they lost you, with all the training you've had
now, they'd have all those memories again themselves."
Jonas made a face.
"They'd hate that."
"They certainly would. They
wouldn't know how to deal with it at all."
"The only way I deal with it
is by having you there to help me," Jonas pointed out with a sigh.
The Giver nodded. "I
suppose," he said slowly, "that I could — "
"You could what?"
The Giver was still deep in
thought. After a moment, he said, "If you floated off in the river, I
suppose I could help the whole community the way I've helped you. It's an interesting
concept. I need to think about it some more. Maybe we'll talk about it again
sometime. But not now.
"I'm glad you're a good
swimmer, Jonas. But stay away from the river." He laughed a little, but
the laughter was not lighthearted. His thoughts seemed to be else-where, and
his eyes were very troubled.
19
Jonas glanced at the clock. There
was so much work to be done, always, that he and The Giver seldom simply sat
and talked, the way they just had.
"I'm
sorry that I wasted so much time with my questions," Jonas said. "I
was only asking about release be-cause my father is releasing a newchild today.
A twin. He has to select one and release the other one. They do it by
weight." Jonas glanced at the clock. "Actually, I suppose he's
already finished. I think it was this morning."
The
Giver's face took on a solemn look. "I wish they wouldn't do that,"
he said quietly, almost to himself.
"Well,
they can't have two identical people around! Think how confusing it would
be!" Jonas chuckled.
"I
wish I could watch," he added, as an afterthought. He liked the thought of
seeing his father perform the ceremony, and making the little twin clean and
comfy. His father was such a gentle man.
"You can watch," The
Giver said.
"No,"
Jonas told him. "They never let children watch. It's very private."
"Jonas,"
The Giver told him, "I know that you read your training instructions very
carefully. Don't you remember that you are allowed to ask anyone
anything?"
Jonas nodded.
"Yes, but — "
"Jonas,
when you and I have finished our time together, you will be the new Receiver.
You can read the books;
you'll have the memories. You have access to everything. It's part of your training. If you want to watch a
release, you have simply to ask."
Jonas
shrugged. "Well, maybe I will, then. But it's too late for this one. I'm
sure it was this morning."
The
Giver told him, then, something he had not known. "All private ceremonies
are recorded. They're in the Hall of Closed Records. Do you want to see this morning's release?"
Jonas
hesitated. He was afraid that his father wouldn't like it, if he watched
something so private.
"I think you should,"
The Giver told him firmly. "All right, then," Jonas said. "Tell
me how."
The
Giver rose from his chair, went to the speaker on the wall, and clicked the
switch from OFF to ON.
The
voice spoke immediately. "Yes, Receiver. How may I help you?"
"I
would like to see this morning's release of the twin." "One moment,
Receiver. Thank you for your instructions."
Jonas
watched the video screen above the row of switches. Its blank face began to flicker with zig-zag
lines; then some
numbers appeared, followed by the date and time. He was astonished and
delighted that this was avail-able to him, and surprised that he had not known.
Suddenly
he could see a small windowless room, empty except for a bed, a table with some equipment on it —
Jonas recognized a scale; he had seen them before, when he'd been doing volunteer hours at
the Nurturing Center — and a cupboard. He could see pale
carpeting on the floor.
"It's
just an ordinary room," he commented. "I thought maybe they'd have it
in the Auditorium, so that everybody could come. All the Old go to Ceremonies
of Release. But I suppose that when it's just a newborn, they don't — "
"Shhh," The Giver said,
his eyes on the screen.
Jonas's
father, wearing his nurturing uniform, entered the room, cradling a tiny
newchild wrapped in a soft blanket in his arms. A uniformed woman followed
through the door, carrying a second newchild wrapped in a similar blanket.
"That's
my father." Jonas found himself whispering, as if he might wake the little
ones if he spoke aloud. "And the other Nurturer is his assistant. She's
still in training, but she'll be finished soon."
The
two Nurturers unwrapped the blankets and laid the identical newborns on the
bed. They were naked. Jonas could see that they were males.
He
watched, fascinated, as his father gently lifted one and then the other to the
scale and weighed them.
He
heard his father laugh. "Good," his father said to the woman. "I
thought for a moment that they might both be exactly the same. Then we'd
have a problem. But this one," he handed one, after rewrapping it, to his
assistant, "is six pounds even. So you can clean him up and dress him and
take him over to the Center."
The
woman took the newchild and left through the door she had entered.
Jonas
watched as his father bent over the squirming newchild on the bed. "And
you, little guy, you're only five pounds ten ounces. A shrimp.'"
"That's the special voice he
uses with Gabriel," Jonas remarked, smiling.
"Watch," The Giver said.
"Now he cleans him up and
makes him comfy," Jonas told him. "He told me."
"Be quiet, Jonas," The
Giver commanded in a strange voice. "Watch."
Obediently Jonas concentrated on
the screen, waiting for what would happen next. He was especially curious about
the ceremony part.
His father turned and opened the
cupboard. He took out a syringe and a small bottle. Very carefully he inserted
the needle into the bottle and began to fill the syringe with a clear liquid.
Jonas winced sympathetically. He
had forgotten that newchildren had to get shots. He hated shots himself, though
he knew that they were necessary.
To his surprise, his father began
very carefully to direct the needle into the top of newchild's forehead, puncturing the place
where the fragile skin pulsed. The newborn squirmed, and wailed faintly.
"Why's he — "
"Shhh," The Giver said
sharply.
His father was talking, and Jonas
realized that he was hearing the answer to the question he had started to ask.
Still in the special voice, his father was saying, "I know, I know. It
hurts, little guy. But I have to use a vein, and the veins in your arms are
still too teeny-weeny."
He pushed the plunger very slowly,
injecting the liquid into the scalp vein until the syringe was empty.
All done. That wasn't so hard, was it?" Jonas heard his father say
cheerfully. He turned aside and dropped the syringe into a waste receptacle.
Now he cleans him up and makes him comfy, Jonas said to
himself, aware that The Giver didn't want to talk during the little ceremony.
As he continued to watch, the
newchild, no longer crying, moved his arms and legs in a jerking motion. Then
he went limp. He head fell to the side, his eyes half open. Then he was still.
With an odd, shocked feeling,
Jonas recognized the gestures and posture and expression. They were familiar.
He had seen them before. But he couldn't remember where.
Jonas stared at the screen,
waiting for something to happen. But nothing did. The little twin lay
motionless. His father was putting things away. Folding the blanket. Closing
the cupboard.
Once again, as he had on the
playing field, he felt the choking sensation. Once again he saw the face of the
light-haired, bloodied soldier as life left his eyes. The memory came back.
He killed it! My father killed it!
Jonas said to
himself, stunned at what he was realizing. He continued to stare at the screen
numbly.
His father tidied the room. Then
he picked up a small carton that lay waiting on the floor, set it on the bed,
and lifted the limp body into it. He placed the lid on tightly.
He picked up the carton and
carried it to the other side of the room. He opened a small door in the wall;
Jonas could see darkness behind the door. It seemed to be the same sort of
chute into which trash was deposited at school.
His
father loaded the carton containing the body into the chute and gave it a
shove.
"Bye-bye,
little guy," Jonas heard his father say before he left the room. Then the
screen went blank.
The
Giver turned to him. Quite calmly, he related, "When the Speaker notified
me that Rosemary had applied for release, they turned on the tape to show me
the process. There she was — my last glimpse of that beautiful child —
waiting. They brought in the syringe and asked her to roll up her sleeve.
"You
suggested, Jonas, that perhaps she wasn't brave enough? I don't know about
bravery: what it is, what it means. I do know that I sat here numb with horror.
Wretched with helplessness. And I listened as Rosemary told them that she would
prefer to inject herself.
"Then she did so. I didn't
watch. I looked away."
The
Giver turned to him. "Well, there you are, Jonas. You were wondering about
release," he said in a bitter voice.
Jonas
felt a ripping sensation inside himself, the feeling of terrible pain clawing its way
forward to emerge in a cry.
20
"I won't! I won't go home! You can't
make me!" Jonas sobbed and shouted and pounded the bed with his fists.
"Sit up, Jonas," The Giver told him firmly.
Jonas obeyed him. Weeping,
shuddering, he sat on the edge of the bed. He would not look at The Giver.
"You may stay here tonight. I
want to talk to you. But you must be quiet now, while I notify your family
unit. No one must hear you cry."
Jonas looked up wildly. "No
one heard that little twin cry, either! No one but my father!" He
collapsed in sobs again.
The Giver waited silently. Finally
Jonas was able to quiet himself and he sat huddled, his shoulders shaking.
The Giver went to the wall speaker
and clicked the switch to ON.
"Yes, Receiver. How may I
help you?"
"Notify the new Receiver's
family unit that he will be staying with me tonight, for additional
training."
"I will take care of that, sir.
Thank you for your instructions," the voice said.
"I will take care of that,
sir. I will take care of that, sir," Jonas mimicked in a cruel, sarcastic voice. "I will
do whatever you like, sir. I will kill people, sir. Old people? Small newborn
people? I'd be happy to kill them, sir. Thank you for your instructions, sir.
How may I help y — " He couldn't seem to stop.
The Giver grasped his shoulders
firmly. Jonas fell silent and stared at him.
"Listen to me, Jonas. They
can't help it. They
know nothing."
"You said that to me once
before."
"I said it because it's true.
It's the way they live. It's the life that was created for them. It's the same
life that you would have, if you had not been chosen as my successor."
"But he lied to me!" Jonas wept.
"It's what he was told to do,
and he knows nothing else."
"What about you? Do you lie to me, too?" Jonas almost
spat the question at The Giver.
"I am empowered to lie. But I
have never lied to you."
Jonas stared at him. "Release
is always like that? For people who break the rules three times? For the Old? Do they kill the Old, too?"
"Yes, it's true."
"And what about Fiona? She
loves the Old! She's in training to care for them. Does she know yet? What will
she do when she finds out? How will she feel?" Jonas brushed wetness from
his face with the back of one hand.
"Fiona is already being
trained in the fine art of re-lease," The Giver told him. "She's very
efficient at her work, your red-haired friend. Feelings are not part of the
life she's learned."
Jonas wrapped his arms around
himself and rocked his own body back and forth.
"What should I do? I can't go back! I can't!"
The Giver stood up. "First, I
will order our evening meal. Then we will eat."
Jonas found himself using the
nasty, sarcastic voice again. "Then we'll have a sharing of
feelings?"
The Giver gave a rueful,
anguished, empty laugh. "Jonas, you and I are the only ones who have feelings. We've been sharing them
now for almost a year."
"I'm sorry, Giver,"
Jonas said miserably. "I don't mean to be so hateful. Not to you."
The Giver rubbed Jonas's hunched
shoulders. "And after we eat," he went on, "we'll make a
plan."
Jonas looked up, puzzled. "A
plan for what? There's nothing. There's nothing we can do. It's always been
this way. Before me, before you, before the ones who came be-fore you. Back and
back and back." His voice trailed the familiar phrase.
"Jonas," The Giver said,
after a moment, "it's true that it has been this way for what seems
forever. But the memories tell us that it has not always been. People felt things once. You
and I have been part of that, so we know. We know that they once felt things
like pride, and sorrow, and — "
"And love," Jonas added,
remembering the family scene that had so affected him. "And pain." He
thought again of the soldier.
"The worst part of holding
the memories is not the
pain. It's the loneliness of it.
Memories need to be shared." "I've started to share them with
you," Jonas said, trying to cheer him.
"That's
true. And having you here with me over the past year has made me realize that things must change. For years I've felt that they should,
but it seemed so hopeless.
"Now
for the first time I think there might be a way," The Giver said slowly.
"And you brought it to my attention, barely — " He glanced at the
clock. "two hours ago."
Jonas watched him, and listened.
It was late at
night, now. They had talked and talked. Jonas sat wrapped in a robe belonging
to The Giver, the long robe that only Elders wore.
It
was possible, what they had planned. Barely possible. If it failed, he would very
likely be killed.
But
what did that matter? If he stayed, his life was no longer worth living.
"Yes,"
he told The Giver. "I'll do it. I think I can do it. I'll try, anyway. But
I want you to come with me."
The
Giver shook his head. "Jonas," he said, "the community has depended, all these
generations, back and back and back, on a resident Receiver to hold their memories for them. I've turned
over many of them to you in the past year. And I can't take them back. There's
no way for me to get them back if I have given them.
"So
if you escape, once you are gone — and, Jonas, you know that you can never return —
"
Jonas
nodded solemnly. It was the terrifying part. "Yes," he said, "I
know. But if you come with me — "
The
Giver shook his head and made a gesture to silence him. He continued. "If you
get away, if you get beyond, if you get to Elsewhere, it will mean that the
community has
to bear the burden themselves, of the memories you had been holding for
them.
"I think that they can, and
that they will acquire some wisdom. But it will be desperately hard for them.
When we lost Rosemary ten years ago, and her memories re-turned to the people,
they panicked. And those were such few memories, compared to yours. When your
memories return, they'll need help. Remember how I helped you in the beginning,
when the receiving of memories was new to you?"
Jonas nodded. "It was scary
at first. And it hurt a lot." "You needed me then. And now they
will."
"It's no use. They'll find
someone to take my place. They'll choose a new Receiver."
"There's no one ready for
training, not right away. Oh, they'll speed up the selection, of course. But I
can't think of another child who has the right qualities — "
"There's a little female with
pale eyes. But she's only a Six."
"That's correct. I know the
one you mean. Her name is Katharine. But she's too young. So they will be forced to bear those memories."
"I want you to come,
Giver," Jonas pleaded.
"No. I have to stay
here," The Giver said firmly. "I want to, Jonas. If I go with you,
and together we take away all their
protection from the memories, Jonas, the community will be left with no one to
help them. They'll be thrown into chaos. They'll destroy themselves. I can't go
"
"Giver," Jonas
suggested, "you and I don't need to care about the rest of them."
The Giver looked at him with a
questioning smile. Jonas hung his head. Of course they needed to care. It was
the meaning of everything.
"And in any case,
Jonas," The Giver sighed, "I wouldn't make it. I'm very weakened now.
Do you know that I no longer see colors?"
Jonas's heart broke.
He reached for The Giver's hand.
"You have the colors," The
Giver told him. "And you have the courage. I will help you to have the
strength."
"A year ago," Jonas
reminded him, "when I had just become a Twelve, when I began to see the
first color, you told me that the beginning had been different for you. But that
I wouldn't understand."
The Giver brightened. "That's
true. And do you know, Jonas, that with all your knowledge now, with all your
memories, with all you've learned — still you won't understand? Because I've been a little selfish. I haven't
given any of it to you. I wanted to keep it for myself to the last."
"Keep what?"
"When I was just a boy,
younger than you, it began to come to me. But it wasn't the seeing-beyond for
me. It was different. For me, it was hearing-beyond."
Jonas frowned, trying to figure
that out. "What did you hear?" he asked.
"Music," The Giver said,
smiling. "I began to hear something truly remarkable, and it is called
music. I'll give you some before I go."
Jonas shook his head emphatically.
"No, Giver," he said. "I want you to keep that, to have with
you, when I'm gone."
Jonas went home the next morning, cheerfully greeted his parents, and
lied easily about what a busy, pleasant night he had had.
His father smiled and lied easily,
too, about his busy and pleasant day the day before.
Throughout the school day, as he
did his lessons, Jonas went over the plan in his head. It seemed startlingly
simple. Jonas and The Giver had gone over it and over it, late into the night
hours.
For the next two weeks, as the time
for the December Ceremony approached, The Giver would transfer every memory of
courage and strength that he could to Jonas. He would need those to help him
find the Elsewhere that they were both sure existed. They knew it would be a
very difficult journey.
Then, in the middle of the night
before the Ceremony, Jonas
would secretly leave his dwelling. This was probably the most dangerous part, because
it was a violation of a major rule for any citizen not on official business to leave a dwelling at night.
"I'll leave at
midnight," Jonas said. "The Food Collectors will be finished picking
up the evening-meal remains by then, and the Path-Maintenance Crews don't start
their work that
early. So there won't be anyone to see me, unless of course someone is out on emergency
business."
"I don't know what you should
do if you are seen, Jonas," The Giver had said. "I have memories, of
course, of all kinds of escapes. People fleeing from terrible things throughout
history. But every situation is individual. There is no memory of one like
this."
"I'll be careful," Jonas
said. "No one will see me."
"As
Receiver-in-training, you're held in very high respect already. So I think you
wouldn't be questioned very forcefully."
"I'd
just say I was on some important errand for the Receiver. I'd say it was all
your fault that I was out after hours," Jonas teased.
They
both laughed a little nervously. But Jonas was certain that he could slip away,
unseen, from his house, carrying an extra set of clothing. Silently he would take his bicycle to the riverbank and leave it there hidden
in bushes with the
clothing folded beside it.
Then
he would make his way through the darkness, on foot, silently, to the Annex.
"There's
no nighttime attendant," The Giver explained. "I'll leave the door unlocked. You simply
slip into the room.
I'll be waiting for you."
His
parents would discover, when they woke, that he was gone. They would also find a cheerful note from
Jonas on his bed,
telling them that he was going for an early morning ride along the river; that
he would be back for the Ceremony.
His
parents would be irritated but not alarmed. They would think him inconsiderate
and they would plan to chastise him, later.
They
would wait, with mounting anger, for him; finally they would be forced to go, taking Lily to the
Ceremony without him.
"They
won't say anything to anyone, though," Jonas said, quite certain.
"They won't call attention to my rudeness because it would reflect on
their parenting. And any-way, everyone is so involved in the Ceremony that they
probably won't notice that I'm not there. Now that I'm a Twelve and in
training, I don't have to sit with my age group any more. So Asher will think
I'm with my parents, or with you — "
"And your parents will assume
you're with Asher, or with me — "
Jonas shrugged. "It will take
everyone a while to realize that I'm not there at all."
"And you and I will be long
on our way by then."
In the early morning, The Giver
would order a vehicle and driver from the Speaker. He visited the other communities
frequently, meeting with their Elders; his responsibilities extended over all
the surrounding areas. So this would not be an unusual undertaking.
Ordinarily The Giver did not
attend the December Ceremony. Last year he had been present because of the
occasion of Jonas's selection, in which he was so involved. But his life was
usually quite separate from that of the community. No one would comment on his
absence, or on the fact that he had chosen this day to be away.
When the driver and vehicle
arrived, The Giver would send the driver on some brief errand. During his
absence, The Giver would help Jonas hide in the storage area of the vehicle. He
would have with him a bundle of food which The Giver would save from his own meals
during the next two weeks.
The Ceremony would begin, with all
the community there, and by then Jonas and The Giver would be on their way.
By midday Jonas's absence would
become apparent, and would be a cause for serious concern. The Ceremony would not
be disrupted — such a disruption would be unthinkable. But searchers would be
sent out into the community.
By
the time his bicycle and clothing were found, The Giver would be returning.
Jonas, by then, would be on his own, making his journey Elsewhere.
The
Giver, on his return, would find the community in a state of confusion and
panic. Confronted by a situation which they had never faced before, and having
no memories from which to find either solace or wisdom, they would not know what
to do and would seek his advice.
He
would go to the Auditorium where the people would be gathered, still. He would
stride to the stage and command their attention.
He
would make the solemn announcement that Jonas had been lost in the river. He
would immediately begin the Ceremony of Loss.
"Jonas,
Jonas," they would say loudly, as they had once said the name of Caleb. The Giver
would lead the chant. Together
they would let Jonas's presence in their lives fade away as they said his name in
unison more slowly, softer and softer, until he was disappearing from them,
until he was no more than an occasional murmur and then, by the end of the long
day, gone forever, not to be mentioned again.
Their
attention would turn to the overwhelming task of bearing the memories
themselves. The Giver would help them.
"Yes,
I understand that they'll need you," Jonas had said at the end of the
lengthy discussion and planning. "But
I'll need you, too. Please come with me." He knew the
answer even as he made the final plea.
"My
work will be finished," The Giver had replied gently, "when I have
helped the community to change and become whole.
"I'm
grateful to you, Jonas, because without you I would never have figured out a
way to bring about the change. But your role now is to escape. And my role is
to stay."
"But
don't you want to be with me, Giver?" Jonas
asked sadly.
The
Giver hugged him. "I love you, Jonas," he said. "But I have
another place to go. When my work here is finished, I want to be with my
daughter."
Jonas
had been staring glumly at the floor. Now he looked up, startled. "I
didn't know you had a daughter, Giver! You told me that you'd had a spouse. But
I never knew about your daughter."
The
Giver smiled, and nodded. For the first time in their long months together,
Jonas saw him look truly happy.
"Her name was Rosemary,"
The Giver said.
21
It would work. They could make it
work, Jonas told him-self again and again throughout the day.
But
that evening everything changed. All of it — all the things they had thought
through so meticulously — fell apart.
That night, Jonas
was forced to flee. He left the dwelling shortly after the sky became dark and the community still. It was terribly dangerous because
some of the work crews were still about, but he moved stealthily and silently,
staying in the shadows, making his way past the darkened dwellings and the
empty
Now
he was on the bridge, hunched over on the bicycle, pedaling steadily. He could see
the dark, churning water far below.
He felt, surprisingly, no fear,
nor any regret at leaving
the community behind. But he felt a very deep sadness that he had left
his closest friend behind. He knew that in the danger of his escape he must be
absolutely silent; but with his heart and mind, he called back and hoped that
with his capacity for hearing-beyond, The Giver would know that Jonas had said
goodbye.
It had happened at the evening
meal. The family unit was eating together as always: Lily chattering away,
Mother and Father making their customary comments (and lies, Jonas knew) about
the day. Nearby, Gabriel played happily on the floor, babbling his baby talk,
looking with glee now and then toward Jonas, obviously delighted to have him
back after the unexpected night away from the dwelling.
Father
glanced down toward the toddler. "Enjoy it, little
guy," he said. "This is
your last night as visitor."
"What do you mean?"
Jonas asked him.
Father sighed with disappointment.
"Well, you know he wasn't here when you got home this morning because we
had him stay overnight at the
"Didn't it go well?"
Mother asked sympathetically.
Father gave a rueful laugh.
"That's an understatement. It was a disaster. He cried all night,
apparently. The night crew couldn't handle it. They were really frazzled
by the time I got to work."
"Gabe,
you naughty thing," Lily said, with a scolding little cluck toward the
grinning toddler on the floor. "So," Father went on, "we
obviously had to make the
decision. Even I
voted for Gabriel's release when we had the meeting this afternoon."
Jonas
put down his fork and stared at his father. "Re-lease?" he asked.
Father
nodded. "We certainly gave it our best try, didn't we?"
"Yes, we did," Mother
agreed emphatically.
Lily nodded in agreement, too.
Jonas
worked at keeping his voice absolutely calm. "When?" he asked. "When
will he be released?"
"First
thing tomorrow morning. We have to start our preparations for the Naming
Ceremony, so we thought we'd get this taken care of right away.
"It's
bye-bye to you, Gabe, in the morning," Father had said, in his sweet,
sing-song voice.
Jonas reached the
opposite side of the river, stopped briefly, and looked back. The community
where his entire life had been lived lay behind him now, sleeping. At dawn, the
orderly, disciplined life he had always known would continue again, without
him. The life where nothing was ever unexpected. Or inconvenient. Or unusual.
The life without color, pain, or past.
He
pushed firmly again at the pedal with his foot and continued riding along the
road. It was not safe to spend time looking back. He thought of the rules he
had broken so far: enough that if he were caught, now, he would be condemned.
First,
he had left the dwelling at night. A major transgression.
Second, he had
robbed the community of food: a very
serious crime, even though what he had taken was leftovers, set out on
the dwelling doorsteps for collection.
Third, he had stolen his father's
bicycle. He had hesitated for a moment, standing beside the bikeport in the
darkness, not wanting anything of his father's and uncertain, as well, whether
he could comfortably ride the larger bike when he was so accustomed to his own.
But it was necessary because it
had the child seat attached to the back.
And he had taken Gabriel, too.
He could feel the little head nudge
his back, bouncing gently against him as he rode. Gabriel was sleeping soundly,
strapped into the seat. Before he had left the dwelling, he had laid his hands
firmly on Gabe's back and transmitted to him the most soothing memory he could:
a slow-swinging hammock under palm trees on an island someplace, at evening,
with a rhythmic sound of languid water lapping hypnotically against a beach
nearby. As the memory seeped from him into the newchild, he could feel Gabe's
sleep ease and deepen. There had been no stir at all when Jonas lifted him from
the crib and placed him gently into the molded seat.
He knew that he had the remaining
hours of night be-fore they would be aware of his escape. So he rode hard,
steadily, willing himself not to tire as the minutes and miles passed. There
had been no time to receive the memories he and The Giver had counted on, of
strength and courage. So he relied on what he had, and hoped it would be
enough.
He circled the outlying
communities, their dwellings dark. Gradually the distances between communities
widened, with longer stretches of empty road. His legs ached at first; then,
as time passed, they became numb.
At
dawn Gabriel began to stir. They were in an isolated place; fields on either side of
the road were dotted with thickets of trees here and there. He saw a stream,
and made his way to it across a rutted, bumpy meadow; Gabriel, wide awake now,
giggled as the bicycle jolted him up and down.
Jonas
unstrapped Gabe, lifted him from the bike, and watched him investigate the
grass and twigs with delight. Carefully he hid the bicycle in thick bushes.
"Morning
meal, Gabe!" He unwrapped some of the food and fed them both. Then he
filled the cup he had brought with water from the stream and held it for Gabriel
to drink. He drank thirstily himself, and sat by the stream, watching the
newchild play.
He
was exhausted. He knew he must sleep, resting his own muscles and preparing
himself for more hours on the bicycle. It would not be safe to travel in
daylight.
They would be looking for him
soon.
He
found a place deeply hidden in the trees, took the newchild there, and lay
down, holding Gabriel in his arms. Gabe struggled cheerfully as if it were a
wrestling game, the kind they had played back in the dwelling, with tickles and
laughter.
"Sorry,
Gabe," Jonas told him. "I know it's morning, and I know you just woke
up. But we have to sleep now."
He
cuddled the small body close to him, and rubbed the little back. He murmured to
Gabriel soothingly. Then
he pressed his hands firmly and transmitted a memory of
deep, contented exhaustion. Gabriel's head nodded, after a moment, and fell
against Jonas's chest.
Together
the fugitives slept through the first dangerous day.
The most terrifying
thing was the planes. By now, days had passed; Jonas no longer knew how many. The journey had become automatic: the sleep
by days, hidden in underbrush and trees; the finding of water; the careful
division of scraps
of food, augmented by what he could find in the
fields. And the endless, endless miles on the bicycle by night.
His
leg muscles were taut now. They ached when he settled himself to sleep. But
they were stronger, and he stopped now less often to rest. Sometimes he paused
and lifted Gabriel down for a brief bit of exercise, running down the road or
through a field together in the dark. But always, when he returned, strapped
the uncomplaining toddler into the seat again, and remounted, his legs were
ready.
So
he had enough strength of his own, and had not needed what The Giver might have
provided, had there been time.
But
when the planes came, he wished that he could have received the courage.
He
knew they were search planes. They flew so low that they woke him with the noise of
their engines, and some-times, looking out and up fearfully from the hiding places, he could almost see the faces of
the searchers.
He
knew that they could not see color, and that their flesh, as well as Gabriel's
light golden curls, would be no more than smears of gray against the colorless
foliage. But he remembered from his science and technology studies at school
that the search planes used heat-seeking devices which could identify body
warmth and would hone in on two humans huddled in shrubbery.
So always, when he heard the
aircraft sound, he reached to Gabriel and transmitted memories of snow, keeping some for himself.
Together they became cold; and when the planes were gone, they would shiver,
holding each other, until sleep came again.
Sometimes, urging the memories
into Gabriel, Jonas felt that they were more shallow, a little weaker than they
had been. It was what he had hoped, and what he and The Giver had planned: that
as he moved away from the community, he would shed the memories and leave them
be-hind for the people. But now, when he needed them, when the planes came, he
tried hard to cling to what he still had, of cold, and to use it for their
survival.
Usually the aircraft came by day, when
they were hiding. But he was alert at night, too, on the road, always listening
intently for the sound of the engines. Even Gabriel listened, and would call
out, "Plane! Plane!" sometimes before Jonas had heard the terrifying
noise. When the air-craft searchers came, as they did occasionally, during the
night as they rode, Jonas sped to the nearest tree or bush, dropped to the
ground, and made himself and Gabriel cold. But it was sometimes a frighteningly
close call.
As he pedaled through the nights,
through isolated landscape now, with the communities far behind and no sign of
human habitation around him or ahead, he was constantly vigilant, looking for the next nearest
hiding place should the sound of engines come.
But the frequency of the planes diminished.
They came less often, and flew, when they did come, less slowly, as if the
search had become haphazard and no longer hopeful. Finally there was an entire
day and night when they did not come at all.
22
Now the landscape was changing. It
was a subtle change, hard to identify at first. The road was narrower, and
bumpy, apparently no longer tended by road crews. It was harder, suddenly, to
balance on the bike, as the front wheel wobbled over stones and ruts.
One night Jonas fell, when the
bike jolted to a sudden stop against a rock. He grabbed instinctively for
Gabriel; and the newchild, strapped tightly in his seat, was uninjured, only
frightened when the bike fell to its side. But Jonas's ankle was twisted, and
his knees were scraped and raw, blood seeping through his torn trousers.
Painfully he righted himself and the bike, and reassured Gabe.
Tentatively he began to ride in
daylight. He had forgot-ten the fear of the searchers, who seemed to have diminished
into the past. But now there were new fears; the unfamiliar landscape held
hidden, unknown perils.
Trees became more numerous, and
the forests beside the road were dark and thick with mystery. They saw streams
more frequently now and stopped often to drink. Jonas carefully washed his injured
knees, wincing as he rubbed at the raw flesh. The constant ache of his swollen
ankle was eased when he soaked it occasionally in the cold water that rushed
through roadside gullies.
He was newly aware that Gabriel's safety depended entirely upon his own
continued strength.
They saw their first waterfall,
and for the first time wildlife.
"Plane! Plane!" Gabriel
called, and Jonas turned swiftly into the trees, though he had not seen planes in days,
and he did not hear an aircraft engine now. When he stopped the bicycle in the
shrubbery and turned to grab Gabe, he saw the small chubby arm pointing toward
the sky.
Terrified, he looked up, but it
was not a plane at all. Though he had never seen one before, he identified it from his fading memories, for The
Giver had given them to him often. It was a bird.
Soon there were many birds along
the way, soaring overhead,
calling. They saw deer; and once, beside the road, looking at them curious and
unafraid, a small reddish-brown creature with a thick tail, whose name Jonas
did not know. He slowed the bike and they stared at one an-other until the
creature turned away and disappeared into the woods.
All of it was new to him. After a
life of Sameness and predictability, he was awed by the surprises that lay beyond
each curve of the road. He slowed the bike again and again to look with wonder
at wildflowers, to enjoy the throaty warble of a new bird nearby, or merely to
watch the way wind shifted the leaves in the trees. During his twelve years in
the community, he had never felt such simple moments of exquisite happiness.
But there were desperate fears
building in him now as well. The most relentless of his new fears was that they
would starve. Now that they had left the cultivated fields
behind them, it was almost
impossible to find food. They finished the meager store of potatoes and carrots
they had saved from the last agricultural area, and now they were always
hungry.
Jonas knelt by a stream and tried
without success to catch a fish with his hands. Frustrated, he threw rocks into
the water, knowing even as he did so that it was useless. Finally, in
desperation, he fashioned a makeshift net, looping the strands of Gabriel's
blanket around a curved stick.
After countless tries, the net yielded
two flopping silvery
fish. Methodically Jonas hacked them to pieces with a sharp rock and fed the raw shreds
to himself and to Gabriel. They ate some berries, and tried without success to
catch a bird.
At night, while Gabriel slept
beside him, Jonas lay awake, tortured by hunger, and remembered his life in the
community where meals were delivered to each dwelling every day.
He tried to use the flagging power
of his memory to re-create meals, and managed brief, tantalizing fragments:
banquets with huge roasted meats; birthday parties with thick-frosted cakes;
and lush fruits picked and eaten, sun-warmed and dripping, from trees.
But when the memory glimpses
subsided, he was left with the gnawing, painful emptiness. Jonas remembered,
suddenly and grimly, the time in his childhood when he had been chastised for
misusing a word. The word had been "starving." You have never been
starving, he had been told. You will never be starving.
Now he was. If he had stayed in
the community, he would not be. It was as simple as
that. Once he had yearned for choice. Then, when he had had a choice, he had
made the wrong one: the choice to leave. And now he was starving.
But if he had stayed …
His thoughts continued. If he had
stayed, he would have starved in other ways. He would have lived a life hungry
for feelings, for color, for love.
And Gabriel? For Gabriel there
would have been no life at all. So there had not really been a choice.
It became a struggle to ride the
bicycle as Jonas weakened from lack of food, and realized at the same time
that he was encountering something he had for a long time yearned to see:
hills. His sprained ankle throbbed as he forced the pedal downward in an effort
that was almost beyond him.
And the weather was changing. It
rained for two days. Jonas had never seen rain, though he had experienced it
often in the memories. He had liked those rains, enjoyed the new feeling of it,
but this was different. He and Gabriel became cold and wet, and it was hard to get dry,
even when sunshine
occasionally followed.
Gabriel had not cried during the
long frightening journey. Now he did. He cried because he was hungry and cold
and terribly weak. Jonas cried, too, for the same reasons, and another reason as
well. He wept because he was afraid now that he could not save Gabriel. He no
longer cared about himself.
23
Jonas felt more and more certain
that the destination lay ahead of him, very near now in the night that was approaching.
None of his senses confirmed it. He saw nothing ahead except the endless
ribbon of road unfolding in twisting narrow curves. He heard no sound ahead.
Yet he felt it: felt that
Elsewhere was not far away. But he had little hope left that he would be able
to reach it. His hope diminished further when the sharp, cold air began to blur
and thicken with swirling white.
Gabriel, wrapped in his inadequate
blanket, was hunched, shivering, and silent in his little seat. Jonas stopped
the bike wearily, lifted the child down, and realized with heartbreak how cold
and weak Gabe had be-come.
Standing in the freezing mound
that was thickening around his numb feet, Jonas opened his own tunic, held
Gabriel to his bare chest, and tied the torn and dirty blanket around them
both. Gabriel moved feebly against him and whimpered briefly into the silence
that surrounded them.
Dimly, from a nearly forgotten
perception as blurred as the substance itself, Jonas recalled what the whiteness was.
"It's called snow, Gabe," Jonas
whispered. "Snow-flakes. They fall down from the sky, and they're
very beautiful."
There
was no response from the child who had once been so curious and alert. Jonas
looked down through the dusk at the little head against his chest. Gabriel's
curly hair was matted and filthy, and there were tearstains out-lined in dirt
on his pale cheeks. His eyes were closed. As Jonas watched, a snowflake drifted
down and was caught briefly for a moment's sparkle in the tiny fluttering
eye-lashes.
Wearily
he remounted the bicycle. A steep hill loomed ahead. In the best of conditions,
the hill would have been a difficult, demanding ride. But now the rapidly
deepening snow obscured the narrow road and made the ride impossible. His front wheel moved
forward imperceptibly as he pushed on the pedals with his numb, exhausted legs. But the bicycle
stopped. It would not move.
He got
off and let it drop sideways into the snow. For a moment he thought how easy it
would be to drop beside it himself, to
let himself and Gabriel slide into the softness of snow, the darkness of night, the
warm comfort of sleep.
But he had come this far. He must
try to go on.
The
memories had fallen behind him now, escaping from his protection to return to the
people of his community. Were there any left at all? Could he hold onto a last
bit of warmth? Did he still have the strength to Give? Could Gabriel still
Receive?
He
pressed his hands into Gabriel's back and tried to remember sunshine. For a
moment it seemed that nothing came to him, that his power was completely gone.
Then it flickered suddenly, and he felt tiny tongues of heat begin to creep across and into his
frozen feet and legs. He felt his face begin to glow and the tense, cold skin of his arms
and hands relax. For a fleeting second he felt that he wanted to keep it for
himself, to let himself bathe in sunlight, unburdened by anything or anyone
else.
But the moment passed and was
followed by an urge, a need, a passionate yearning to share the warmth with the
one person left for him to love. Aching from the effort, he forced the memory
of warmth into the thin, shivering body in his arms.
Gabriel stirred. For a moment they
both were bathed in warmth and renewed strength as they stood hugging each
other in the blinding snow.
Jonas began to walk
up the hill.
The memory was agonizingly brief.
He had trudged no more than a few yards through the night when it was gone and
they were cold again.
But his mind was alert now.
Warming himself ever so briefly had shaken away the lethargy and resignation
and restored his will
to survive. He began to walk faster on feet that he could no longer feel. But the hill was
treacherously steep; he was impeded by the snow and his own lack of strength.
He didn't make it very far before he stumbled and fell forward.
On his knees, unable to rise,
Jonas tried a second time. His consciousness grasped at a wisp of another warm
memory, and tried desperately to hold it there, to enlarge it, and pass it into
Gabriel. His spirits and strength lifted with the momentary warmth and he
stood. Again, Gabriel stirred against him as he began to climb.
But the memory faded, leaving him colder than before.
If
only he had had time to receive more warmth from The Giver before he escaped!
Maybe there would be more left for him now. But there was no purpose in if-onlys. His entire concentration now had to
be on moving his feet, warming Gabriel and himself, and going forward.
He climbed,
stopped, and warmed them both briefly again, with a tiny scrap of memory that
seemed certainly to be all he had left.
The
top of the hill seemed so far away, and he did not know what lay beyond. But
there was nothing left to do but continue. He trudged upward.
As
he approached the summit of the hill at last, some-thing began to happen. He
was not warmer; if anything, he felt more numb and more cold. He was not less
exhausted; on the contrary, his steps were leaden, and he could barely move
his freezing, tired legs.
But
he began, suddenly, to feel happy. He began to re-call happy times. He
remembered his parents and his sister. He remembered his friends, Asher and
Fiona. He remembered The Giver.
Memories of joy flooded through
him suddenly.
He
reached the place where the hill crested and he could feel the ground under his snow-covered feet become
level. It would not
be uphill anymore.
"We're
almost there, Gabriel," he whispered, feeling quite certain without
knowing why. "I remember this place, Gabe." And it was true. But it was not a
grasping of a thin
and burdensome recollection; this was different. This was something that he
could keep. It was a memory of his own.
He
hugged Gabriel and rubbed him briskly, warming him, to keep him alive. The wind
was bitterly cold. The snow swirled, blurring his vision. But somewhere ahead,
through the blinding storm, he knew there was warmth and light.
Using
his final strength, and a special knowledge that was deep inside him, Jonas
found the sled that was waiting for them at the top of the hill. Numbly his
hands fumbled for the rope.
He
settled himself on the sled and hugged Gabe close. The hill was steep but the
snow was powdery and soft, and he knew that this time there would be no ice, no
fall, no pain. Inside his freezing body, his heart surged with hope.
They started down.
Jonas
felt himself losing consciousness and with his whole being willed himself to
stay upright atop the sled, clutching Gabriel, keeping him safe. The runners
sliced through the
snow and the wind whipped at his face as they sped in a straight line through an incision that
seemed to lead to the final destination, the place that he had always felt was
waiting, the Elsewhere that held their future and their past.
He
forced his eyes open as they went downward, down-ward, sliding, and all at once he could see
lights, and he recognized
them now. He knew they were shining through the windows of rooms, that they were the red, blue, and yellow lights that twinkled from
trees in places where families created and kept memories, where they celebrated love.
Downward,
downward, faster and faster. Suddenly he was aware with certainty and joy that below, ahead, they
were waiting for him; and that they were waiting, too, for the baby. For the
first time, he heard something that he knew to be music. He heard people
singing.
Behind him, across vast distances
of space and time, from the place he had left, he thought he heard music too.
But perhaps it was only an echo.