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Chapter 22

The supermarket is full of elderly people who look lost among the dazzling hedgerows. Some people are too small toreach the upper shelves; some people block the aisles with their carts; some are clumsy and slow to react; some areforgetful, some confused; some move about muttering with the wary look of people in institutional corridors.

  I pushed my cart along the aisle. Wilder sat inside, on the collapsible shelf, trying to grab items whose shape andradiance excited his system of sensory analysis. There were two new developments in the supermarket, a butcher'scorner and a bakery, and the oven aroma of bread and cake combined with the sight of a bloodstained man poundingat strips of living veal was pretty exciting for us all.

  "Dristan Ultra, Dristan Ultra."The other excitement was the snow. Heavy snow predicted, later today or tonight. It brought out the crowds, thosewho feared the roads would soon be impassable, those too old to walk safely in snow and ice, those who thought thestorm would isolate them in their homes for days or weeks. Older people in particular were susceptible to news ofimpending calamity as it was forecast on TV by grave men standing before digital radar maps or pulsing photographsof the planet. Whipped into a frenzy, they hurried to the supermarket to stock up before the weather mass moved in.

  Snow watch, said the forecasters. Snow alert. Snowplows. Snow mixed with sleet and freezing rain. It was alreadysnowing in the west. It was already moving to the east. They gripped this news like a pygmy skull. Snow showers.

  Snow flurries. Snow warnings. Driving snow. Blowing snow. Deep and drifting snow. Accumulations, devastations.

  The old people shopped in a panic. When TV didn't fill them with rage, it scared them half to death. They whisperedto each other in the checkout lines. Traveler's advisory, zero visibility. When does it hit? How many inches? Howmany days? They became secretive, shifty, appeared to withhold the latest and worst news from others; appeared toblend a cunning with their haste, tried to hurry out before someone questioned the extent of their purchases. Hoardersin a war. Greedy, guilty.

  I saw Murray in the generic food area, carrying a Teflon skillet. I stopped to watch him for a while. He talked to fouror five people, occasionally pausing to scrawl some notes in a spiral book. He managed to write with the skilletwedged awkwardly under his arm.

  Wilder called out to him, a tree-top screech, and I wheeled the cart over.

  "How is that good woman of yours?""Fine," I said.

  "Does this kid talk yet?""Now and then. He likes to pick his spots.""You know that matter you helped me with? The Elvis Presley power struggle?""Sure. I came in and lectured.""It turns out, tragically, that I would have won anyway.""What happened?""Cotsakis, my rival, is no longer among the living.""What does that mean?""It means he's dead.""Dead?""Lost in the surf off Malibu. During the term break. I found out an hour ago. Came right here."I was suddenly aware of the dense environmental texture. The automatic doors opened and closed, breathingabruptly. Colors and odors seemed sharper. The sound of gliding feet emerged from a dozen other noises, from thesublittoral drone of maintenance systems, from the rustle of newsprint as shoppers scanned their horoscopes in thetabloids up front, from the whispers of elderly women with talcumed faces, from the steady rattle of cars going overa loose manhole cover just outside the entrance. Gliding feet. I heard them clearly, a sad numb shuffle in every aisle.

  "How are the girls?" Murray said.

  "Fine.""Back in school?""Yes.""Now that the scare is over.""Yes. Steffie no longer wears her protective mask.""I want to buy some New York cuts," he said, gesturing toward the butcher.

  The phrase seemed familiar, but what did it mean?

  "Unpackaged meat, fresh bread," he went on. "Exotic fruits, rare cheeses. Products from twenty countries. It's likebeing at some crossroads of the ancient world, a Persian bazaar or boom town on the Tigris. How are you, Jack?"What did he mean, how are you?

  "Poor Cotsakis, lost in the surf," I said. "That enormous man.""That's the one.""I don't know what to say.""He was big all right.""Enormously so.""I don't know what to say either. Except better him than me.""He must have weighed three hundred pounds.""Oh, easily.""What do you think, two ninety, three hundred?""Three hundred easily.""Dead. A big man like that.", "What can we say?""I thought I was big.""He was on another level. You're big on your level.""Not that I knew him. I didn't know him at all.""It's better not knowing them when they die. It's better them than us.""To be so enormous. Then to die.""To be lost without a trace. To be............

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