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Chapter no 9

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow

Almost a year to the day Sam had run into Sadie in the train station,ย Ichigoย was completed. The game took three and a half months longer than Sam had promised it would.

With a major assist from Dovโ€™s Ulysses engine, Sadie and Sam had programmedย Ichigo,ย nonstop, until their fingers bled. Literally, in Samโ€™s case. His fingertips grew so dry and blistered that he had to put Band-Aids on them to stop blood from getting on his keyboard. But when the Band- Aids slowed down his typing, he removed them. He was accustomed to discomforts far greater.

But those were not the only injuries they sustained. By Halloween, Sadie had stared at her computer screen so long she burst a blood vessel in her right eye. She didnโ€™t even go to the doctor; she just sent Marx to the drugstore for eyedrops and Advil, and soldiered on. A week before Thanksgiving, Sam had passed out while walking to the Coop to buy a new power six-pack. Usually, Marx did their purchasing, but Marx was in class, and Sam could not wait. He literally passed out on the street, in front of the gourmet shop. With his big coat, people must have assumed he was homeless, and so he was barely noticed. When he awoke, his former adviser, Anders Larsson, was standing over him, looking like a blond Jesus in North Face. It made sense that Anders should find him. Anders, born in Sweden, was exactly the kind of decent, guileless person who did not look away when presented with the scourge of homelessness. โ€œSamson Masur, are you all right?โ€

โ€œOh God, Anders, why are you here?โ€ โ€œWhy are youย there?โ€ Anders said.

Despite Samโ€™s protests, Anders walked him over to University Health Services, where they determined Sam was malnourished. Sam was given an IV.

โ€œSo, what have you been up to?โ€ Anders asked. He insisted on keeping Sam company while he received the fluids.

โ€œIโ€™m making a game!โ€ Sam rambled on aboutย Ichigoย and Sadie, and Anders, who was not a gamer, looked at him blankly, but kindly. โ€œIt seems, my friend, you have found love?โ€

โ€œAnders, you talk about love more than any mathematician I know.โ€

In November, Marx hired a composerโ€”Zoe Cadogan, one of Marxโ€™s many spectacular exesโ€”to write a score inspired by the avant-garde composers they had listened to all summer. Zoe was a genius, Marx promised. As Sam would often tease him, โ€œMarx never met a genius he didnโ€™t want to sleep with.โ€ A decade later, Zoe would win a Pulitzer Prize for an operatic adaptation ofย Antigoneย she had written using only female voices. Butย Ichigoย would be the first time she was ever paid for her music, and the credit always appeared on her rรฉsumรฉ.

They had just finished recording the score, and Marx had gone back to Zoeโ€™s dorm room in Adams House. They ate in the dining hall, and then they had sex. Marx usually enjoyed the experience of making love to an ex, and this evening was no exception. It was interesting to note the way your body had changed and how their body had changed in the time since youโ€™d last been intimate. There was a pleasant Weltschmerz that came over him. It was the nostalgia one experienced when visiting an old school and finding that the desks were so much smaller than in oneโ€™s memory.

โ€œWhy did we ever break up?โ€ Zoe asked.

โ€œYou broke up with me, remember?โ€ Marx said.

โ€œDid I? Well, I must have had a good reason, but I canโ€™t remember it anymore.โ€ Zoe kissed Marxโ€™s chest. โ€œI love your game,โ€ she said. โ€œWhat Iโ€™ve seen and been told of it.โ€

It was the first time anyone had ever calledย Ichigoย Marxโ€™s game. โ€œItโ€™s not really my game,โ€ Marx demurred. โ€œItโ€™s Sadieโ€™s and Samโ€™s.โ€

โ€œThe scene at the end,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s very moving. When Ichigo is so much older, and the parents canโ€™t recognize her.โ€ She paused. โ€œOr, Iโ€™m sorry, is Ichigo a him?โ€

โ€œSam and Sadie sayย them.โ€

โ€œCool. When the parents canโ€™t recognize them. That moment is straight out ofย The Odyssey.โ€

One of the most difficult challenges ofย Ichigoโ€™s design had been Sadie and Samโ€™s decision to make the Ichigo character age during the course of the story. Typically, a game character stays the same age and has the same basic design for the length of the story, if not the length of the seriesโ€”think Mario or Lara Croft. The reasons for this are simple: branding, and it isย much less work. But Sadie and Sam wanted Ichigoโ€™s journey to be reflected in their character. Ichigo ages and takes the damage inflicted by the narrative and time itself, and by the end of the story, when they finally make it home, after about seven years away, they are unrecognizable to their family. Ichigo returns home an exhausted, weary ten-year-old who has battled the ocean, the city, the tundra, and even the underworld. They stand on the doorstep of their home, and they hold their quivering hand over the door, afraid to knock. Eventually, Ichigoโ€™s mother lets them in, but the mother doesnโ€™t recognize them. But still, she thinks the child looks hungry and in need of love, and because she once lost her own child, she invites them inside. โ€œWhatโ€™s your name?โ€ she asks.

โ€œIchigo,โ€ they say.

โ€œThatโ€™s a strange name,โ€ she says.

At this point, Ichigoโ€™s father walks into the room. โ€œFifteen,โ€ he says. โ€œThatโ€™s Max Matsumoto. Heโ€™s my favorite footballer. I used to have a jersey like that, but I lost it long ago.โ€

With the score layered in and additional contributions by a sound designer friend of Zoeโ€™s to improve the aural landscape, the feeling at Kennedy Street was that the game had leveled up. โ€œI feel like,โ€ Sadie said to Marx, โ€œthis might be something.โ€

โ€œIย knowย it is,โ€ Marx said, with an evangelical fervor.

Sadie kissed Marx on both his cheeks, in a campy European way. He was such a fan. Every collaboration needs one.

When they finally got to the end of writing the game, the debugging period began. As they found bugsโ€”and there were manyโ€”theyโ€™d write them on the stolen whiteboard, along with any other improvements they wanted to make. After each task was completed, it was erased. About a week before the winter breakโ€”they were still young enough to understand time in semestersโ€”the board was empty aside from a hazy pastel palimpsest to remind them of the work they had done.

โ€œAre we finished?โ€ Sadie asked Sam. She opened the curtains. It was five a.m., and it was lightly snowing.

โ€œI think we are,โ€ Sam said.

โ€œIโ€™m so tired.โ€ Sadie yawned. โ€œFor tonight, weโ€™re done. If we look at it tomorrow, and we still think weโ€™re done, then weโ€™ll say weโ€™re done. Iโ€™m heading over to Dovโ€™s.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll walk you,โ€ Sam said.

โ€œYou sure? Itโ€™ll be slippery out there.โ€ She worried about his foot, which she knew had been bothering him lately.

โ€œItโ€™s not a very long walk,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™ll be good for me.โ€

No one was on the streets, and it was so quiet they could hear the snow as it hit the ground. The shortest way to Dovโ€™s apartment was through Harvard Yard, so they cut through itโ€”the term was almost over, and the freshmen were sleeping. The combination of the predawn light and the snow was magical, like being inside a snow globe, a discrete world of their own. Sadie put her arm through Samโ€™s, and he leaned into her a little. They were tired, but it was an honest tiredness, the kind that comes when you know you have put everything you have into a project. Of course, they would finish other games together, and the offices and the staffs on those games would be unimaginably larger. But Sam and Sadie would always remember this morning.

โ€œSam,โ€ she said, โ€œtell me something and be honest.โ€

He felt a bit panicked by her tone of voice. โ€œOf course.โ€ โ€œDid youย trulyย see the Magic Eye last December?โ€

โ€œSadie, how dare you!โ€ he exclaimed with mock outrage. โ€œWell, if you saw it, tell me what it was.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Sam said. โ€œI wonโ€™t dignify that.โ€

Sadie nodded. They had reached the exterior door to Dovโ€™s apartment.

She put her key in the lock, and then she turned.

โ€œNo matter what happens, thank you for making me do this. I love you, Sam. You donโ€™t have to say you love me, too. I know that kind of thing makes you terribly uncomfortable.โ€

โ€œTerribly,โ€ he said. โ€œTerribly.โ€ Sam smiled, too wide, showing the huge mouth of crooked teeth that he was so self-conscious about, and he bowed awkwardly. Before he could tell her that he loved her, she was already inside. But he didnโ€™t feel bad that he hadnโ€™t said it. Sam knew that Sadie knew that he loved her. Sadie knew that Sam loved her in the same way she knew that Sam had not seen the Magic Eye.

The sun was coming up, and the snowfall had mostly stopped, and Sam walked home, feeling warm, despite the cold, and filled with gratitude that he was alive, and that Sadie Green had come into that game room that day. The universe, he felt, was justโ€”or if not just, fair enough. It might take your mother, but it might give you someone else in return. As he rounded Kennedy Street, he began to chant to himself a poem that he had heard once, he wasnโ€™t sure where. โ€œThat love is all there is; is all we know of love. It is enough; the freight should be proportioned to the groove.โ€ What is the โ€œfreightโ€? he wondered. What is the โ€œgrooveโ€? The mysteries of the poem entertained him, and the poem was so jaunty in its meter (almost, he thought, like the sound of a train barreling down the tracks), and he felt so uncharacteristically light and happy that he found himself skipping a little

โ€”Sam Masur! skipping!โ€”which is why he took a less than careful step off the curb. His foot slipped out from under him.

Sam was so used to pain. He barely felt it, really. He passed out, for the second time that winter. โ€œWe should stop running into each other like this,โ€ he said to no one.

As he lay on the street, his bruised cheek on an icy cobblestone pillow, he had a vision of his mother, standing over him in the ice, wearing a huge

white parka that went down to her ankles. Anna is the size of Godzilla, and under the tent of her parka, Sam knows he is safe. His Korean American mother is speaking Japanese. โ€œDaijoubu, Samu-chan,โ€ she says.

โ€”

Samโ€™s mother decided to go west in the winter of 1984. Sam was nine; Anna, thirty-five. Anna had been contemplating leaving New York for twelve yearsโ€”that is to say, as long as she had lived there. But the longing had only intensified in the years since Samโ€™s birth. She felt plagued by bourgeois fantasies of a cheaper, cleaner, healthier, happier life for them in an unnamed, distant city. She imagined a backyard for Sam, and a yellow dog of indeterminate lineage from the shelter, and walk-in closets, and laundry done sans quarters and in the privacy of her own home, and no one living above them or below them. She imagined palm trees and warm weather and the scent of plumeria, and their ill-fitting, puffy coats unceremoniously tossed in garbage bags for donation to the Salvation Army. With equal intensity, she feared her New York life was the best of all possible worlds, and that once she left New York, the gates would come down and lock, and sheโ€™d be too feeble and parochial to ever be allowed to return. She might have continued in this speculative ouroboros forever, if another Anna Lee had not fallen from the sky.

On the night they encountered the other Anna Lee, Anna and Sam were walking back from the theater to their railroad flat in unstylish Manhattan Valley. An acting class friend, with whom she had had pleasant, perfunctory sex years earlier, was in the ensemble ofย The Rink,ย the Chita Rivera/Liza Minelli roller-skating musical, and had comped them two tickets to a preview performance. The friend had said, โ€œIโ€™m almost certain this is going to flop, but it might be perfect for a nine-year-old boy of mildly artistic temperament.โ€ Anna had laughed at this description of her sonโ€”it was interesting and occasionally appalling to see how other people viewed your childโ€”but the friend had been right: Sam had loved the musical, and Anna had felt like a good mother for being able to provide Sam with the rich

cultural experiences that only New York City could offer. Like magic, she was in love with New York again and felt certain that she could never leave it. She was having these cozy thoughts as she and Sam made their way down a Stygian stretch of Amsterdam Avenue. Sam tugged at Annaโ€™s coat sleeve. โ€œHey Mom? Whatโ€™s that up there?โ€

In the streetlight, Anna could see a vaguely organic silhouette perched atop the metal railing of a balcony about six stories up. โ€œMaybe a large bird?โ€ she said. โ€œOrโ€ฆa gargoyle? A statue?โ€

The statue leaped to the ground, improbably landing faceup, with a percussive splat and an explosion of red blood that suggested a Jackson Pollock painting, in process, more than it did a suicide. The womanโ€™s legs and arms were supernaturally akimbo. Both mother and son screamed, but it was New York City, so no one noticed or cared.

Once the statue had alighted, they could see it was most definitely a woman, and the woman was Asian, maybe even Korean, like Anna. The woman would die that night, but she was not dead yet. Sam laughed, not because he was cruel, but because the woman reminded him of his mother, and he could not figure out what else to do with himself when faced with such a gruesome spectacle less than ten steps in front of him. He had never seen anything die before and so, he could not be certain that she was dying. And yet, somewhere deep inside himself, he felt a recognition and then a reckoning: this was death, and he would die, and his mother would die, and everyone you ever met and ever loved would die, and maybe it would happen when you or they were old, but maybe not. To know this was unbearable: it was a fact too large for a nine-year-old avatar to contain. Anna punched him quite hard on the arm to get him to stop laughing. โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ Sam whimpered. โ€œI donโ€™t even know why I was laughing.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s okay,โ€ Anna said. She pointed to the bodega across the street. โ€œGo in there and tell them to call 911.โ€

Sam hesitated. โ€œI donโ€™t want to,โ€ he said. โ€œI canโ€™t move. My feet are stuck. Theyโ€™re stuck in the ice.โ€

โ€œThey arenโ€™t stuck, Sam. There isnโ€™t any ice, and they arenโ€™t stuck. Go!

Go now!โ€ Anna pushed him toward the store, and Sam began to run.

Anna kneeled down by the womanโ€™s side. โ€œDonโ€™t worry. Help is coming,โ€ Anna tried to reassure her. โ€œIโ€™m Anna, by the way. Iโ€™ll stay with you until the ambulance gets here.โ€ Anna took the womanโ€™s hand.

โ€œIโ€™m Anna, too,โ€ the woman said. โ€œIโ€™m Anna Lee,โ€ Anna said.

โ€œIโ€™m Anna Lee, too,โ€ the woman said. The woman inhaled raggedly and coughed in a peculiar, delicate way. Anna was certain the womanโ€™s neck was broken. Copious amounts of blood were flowing from some hole or series of holes in the womanโ€™s body, but Anna could not see an obvious way to stop the bleeding. Anna was getting blood on her white tennis shoes, which she was fastidious about keeping white. And the other Anna Lee was getting blood everywhere, but noticeably, to Anna, on the large, floppy, pink lace bow she wore, Madonna-style, in her shiny black hair.

โ€œOh, that makes sense,โ€ Anna said lightly. โ€œThereโ€™re a lot of us. Isnโ€™t Lee the most popular Asian surname in the world? In my union, I had to change my name to Anna Q. Lee, because you canโ€™t have more than one person with the same name. Iโ€™m the seventh Anna Lee in Equity.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s Equity?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s the stage actorโ€™s union.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re an actor?โ€ the woman said. โ€œWould I have seen you in anything?โ€

โ€œWell,โ€ Anna said. โ€œIโ€™ve played almost every Asian part an actress can play, but my biggest role was Connie Wong inย A Chorus Line.โ€

โ€œI saw that the year it opened,โ€ the woman said. โ€œYou were good.โ€

โ€œI was the third Connie Wong on Broadway, and I was the second Connie Wong in the national touring company, too. So, you didnโ€™t see me. You probably saw Baayork Lee. Another Lee.โ€ Anna laughed. โ€œSo many of us.โ€

โ€œWhat does the Q. stand for?โ€

โ€œNothing,โ€ Anna said. โ€œIt was for the union. You probably donโ€™t want to talk about this.โ€ Anna looked in the other Anna Leeโ€™s eyes, which were the same golden brown, heterochromic color as her own. โ€œWhy did youโ€ฆ Do you mind my asking? I apologize if this is rude.โ€

โ€œI didnโ€™t know how else to leave,โ€ the other Anna Lee said. She tried to shrug, but then her body began to spasm, and ninety long seconds later, she died. Anna stood up. She stood over the other Anna Leeโ€™s body and began to feel giddily, vertiginously untethered from her own body. She felt as if she were seeing herself dead on that sidewalk. She knew she should stay with the other Annaโ€™s body until the ambulance got there, but it was frigid, and she feared spending more time with the other Anna would provoke some irreversible existential crisis, and she desperately wanted to be with Sam.

She went into the bodega to find her son. She quickly scanned the aisles, but she couldnโ€™t find him anywhere.

โ€œDid my son come in here?โ€ Anna said. She tried to ignore the paranoid fantasy that was forming in her mind: What if the other Anna Leeโ€™s death had merely been a distraction so that some evil party could kidnap Sam?

โ€œYouโ€™re the mother,โ€ the shopkeeper said. โ€œWhat a world. What a thing for a boy to see.โ€

โ€œHe didnโ€™t leave, did he?โ€

โ€œNo, but he was quite distraught, so I gave him quarters to play the machine in the back of my store. Children love games, though the machine doesnโ€™t make as much money for me as it once did.โ€

โ€œThat was very kind of you,โ€ Anna said. โ€œWhat do I owe you?โ€

The man waved his hand. โ€œPlease. It is hard enough to be a child in this world without women throwing themselves from buildings. How is she?โ€

Anna shook her head.

โ€œWhat a world,โ€ the shopkeeper said, shaking his head, too.

She walked to the back of the store, where Sam was concealed by the mammoth, cheerful shell of theย Ms. Pac-Manย machine. From what Anna could tell, Ms. Pac-Man was no different than Pac-Man, except that she had a bow and was a Ms., which in 1984 was an honorific that usually signified a feminist.

โ€œHi,โ€ Anna said.

โ€œHi,โ€ Sam said, without looking at her. โ€œYou can watch if you want.

Iโ€™m going to play until the end of this life.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s a good philosophy,โ€ Anna said. She concentrated on the game and tried not to hear the nearby sirens that meant the ambulance had come for the body of the other Anna Lee.

โ€œIf you eat the fruit,โ€ Sam said, โ€œyou can kill the ghosts, but only for a little while. And if you donโ€™t time it right, the ghosts can turn back and kill you.โ€

โ€œAmazing,โ€ Anna said. She decided that they couldnโ€™t leave the bodega until the sidewalk had been cleared of the body of the other Anna Lee.

โ€œAnd sometimes, you get an extra life. But you might kill yourself trying to get the extra life, so itโ€™s not always worth it.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re good at this,โ€ Anna said. Once they were able to leave the bodega, sheโ€™d splurge on a taxi, even though they were only a dozen blocks from home.

โ€œNot yet,โ€ Sam said. โ€œIf I had more time to practice, I could be. Darn it!โ€ The descending chromatic wail of Ms. Pac-Manโ€™s death. โ€œThat was my last life.โ€ Sam looked at Anna cautiously. โ€œWhat happened to her?โ€

โ€œThe ambulance is out there right now. Theyโ€™re taking her to the hospital.โ€

โ€œWill she be okay?โ€ Sam said.

โ€œI think so,โ€ Anna said. It wasnโ€™t exactly a lie. Sheย wouldย be okay.

Dead was okay.

Sam nodded, but he had seen Anna in enough plays to know when she was lying, and he knew her well enough to know why she lied. When he lied, it was for the same reason: to protect her from that which she could not handle. โ€œWhy did she do that?โ€ Sam asked.

โ€œI thinkโ€ฆโ€ Anna said. โ€œI think she must have been terribly blue. I think she must have had troubles in her life.โ€

โ€œDo you ever get blue?โ€

โ€œYes, everyone gets blue. But I donโ€™t think I could ever get melancholy like that, because I have you.โ€

Sam nodded. โ€œIf the body had landed on us, do you think we could have saved her?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€

โ€œDo you think we could have died?โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€

โ€œBecause if we had walked a little faster, or if we hadnโ€™t stopped to buy bananas, we could have been directly under her, and we could have died.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t think we would have died,โ€ Anna said.

โ€œBut if you drop a penny from the Empire State Building and it hits someone, theyโ€™ll die, right?โ€

โ€œI think thatโ€™s an old wivesโ€™ tale,โ€ Anna said. โ€œBesides, the building she jumped from was only six stories.โ€

โ€œBut a body is much heavier than a penny.โ€

โ€œWhy donโ€™t you play again?โ€ Anna dug through her purse and put a quarter in the machine. For Ms. Pac-Man, Anna thought, life was cheap and filled with second chances.

Sam played, and Anna watched, thinking about her next move.

The obvious place for them to go was Los Angeles, the city of her birth. She had resisted returning there because to return to oneโ€™s hometown felt like surrender. And professionally, Los Angeles had no theater to speak of, which is to say, there would likely be even less work for Anna in L.A. than there had been for her in New York (and work in New York had always been intermittent at best). If she was lucky, sheโ€™d end up playing Asian hookers in cop shows and movies. Sheโ€™d have to polish up her various โ€œAsianโ€ accents, because sheโ€™d never play an โ€œAmericanโ€ again. Maybe some commercials or voice-overs or a bit of modeling here or there, though she might already be too old for that. Or maybe sheโ€™d stop acting entirelyโ€”learn to program computers, or sell real estate, or style hair, or become an interior decorator, or teach aerobics, or write screenplays, or find a rich husbandโ€”whatever it was ex-actors in Los Angeles did. But it would be nice to see her parents, and it would be nice for Sam to know his grandparents, and actually, Samโ€™s father lived out there, too, and it would be nice for Sam to have a relationship with him, though Samโ€™s father certainly

could not be relied upon, and it would be nice to be in a city where Anna Lees didnโ€™t fall from the sky. Aside from a few scattered blocks, what part of Los Angeles was more than two stories high? Andย thisย Anna Lee, Anna

Q. Lee, the seventh Anna Lee in Equity, wouldnโ€™t let herself be like that other Anna Lee. This Anna Lee would know how to leave.

โ€œYouโ€™re getting so good at killing ghosts,โ€ Anna said.

โ€œIโ€™m okay,โ€ Sam said. He turned to look at her. โ€œHey Mom, do you want a turn?โ€

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