Where was she now? She’d died at about seventy-seven after a long and painful siege of stomach cancer. But he’d seen photographs of her when she was twenty. A petite blonde whose eyes looked a lively blue, not the washed-out red-veined things he remembered. The mouth was thin and tight, but all the adults in her family were grim lipped. Those brown-toned photogravures displayed faces that looked as if they ‘d had a very tough time but would never break under the strain.
The Victorians, judging by their photographs, were a hard-nosed, stiff-spined lot. His German grandma’s family had been made of the same stern stuff. Persecuted by their Lutheran neighbors and the authorities because they had converted to the Baptist church, they left Oberellen, Thuringia for the land of promise. (Peter’s family on both sides had always opted for the religion of the minority, usually a somewhat crank religion. Maybe they were trouble seekers.)
After years of moving from one place to another, never finding a single street paved with gold, after backbreaking labor, soul-searing poverty, and the deaths of many children and finally of parents and grandparents, the Kaisers had made it. They had become well-to-do fanners near, or owners of machine shops in, Kansas City.
Was it worth it? The survivors said that it was.
Wilhelmina had been a pretty, blue-eyed blonde of ten when she had come to America. At eighteen she had married a Kansan twenty years older than she, probably to escape poverty. It was said that old Bill Griffiths was part-Cherokee and that he had been one of Quantrill’s guerrillas, but there was a lot of malarkey in Peter’s family on both sides. They were always trying to make themselves look better, or worse, than they really were. Whatever old Bill’s past, Peter’s mother never wanted to talk about it. Maybe he was just a horse thief.
Where was Wilhelmina now? She’d no longer be the wrinkled, bent old women he’d known. She’d be a good-looking, shapely wench, though still with the vacuous blue eyes and still speaking English with a heavy German accent. If he should run across.her, would he recognize her? Not likely. And if he did, what could he find out from her about the traumas she’d inflicted on her infant grandson? Nothing. She wouldn’t remember what would have been minor incidents to her. Or, if she did, she surely wasn’t going to admit that she had ever mistreated him. If indeed the dark deed had ever been done.
During a brief stint of psychoanalysis, Peter had tried to break through the thick shadows of repressed memory to the primal drama in which his grandmother played such an important role. The effort had failed. More extended attempts in dianetics and scientology had resulted in zilch also. He had kept on sliding past the traumatic episodes, like a monkey on a greased pole, on past his birth and into previous lives.
After being a woman giving birth in a medieval castle, a dinosaur, a prevertebrate in the postprimal ocean, and an eighteenth-century passenger in a stage coach going through the Black Forest, Peter had abandoned scientology.
The fantasies were interesting, and they revealed something of his character. But his grandmother evaded him.
Here, on The Riverworld, he had tried dreamgum as a weapon to pierce the thick shadows. Under the guidance of a guru, he had chewed half a stick, a heavy load, and dived after the pearl hidden in the depths of his unconscious. When he woke from some horrible visions, he found his guru, battered and bloody, unconscious on the floor of the hut. There was no mystery about who had done this deed.
Peter had left the area after making sure that his guide would live without serious aftereffects. He could not stay in the area nor could he feel anything but guilt and shame whenever he saw his guru. The fellow had been very forgiving, had, in fact, been willing to continue the sessions-if Peter was tied up during them.
He could not face the violence that he felt dwelt deep within him. It was this fear of violence in himself that made him so afraid of violence in others.