Every
working day at lunchtime I write my climate change novel on my laptop propped
between my belly and the steering wheel. There can be no Internet in the parking
garage deep underneath my job’s building. There are no distractions. It is
absolute privacy: the best environment for writing. The chapter I was working on this particular day concerned father and son characters who hate each
other. The scene as I had written it ended with the father saying, “Why do you have to be so
God-damned right all the time, so damned smart?”
Then I noticed another line on the screen. It was two words: “they
hug.” I did not remember writing those words. That was not how I viewed the
scene. I did not know why those words were there or how they got there. But
then I thought to myself that this is exactly what the scene needs. I needed to
rewrite the chapter so at the end of it the father and son hug each other: each
one sobbing. It will be one of the strongest scenes in the book. It will be the
culmination of their relationship so far and the start of their relationship going
forward.
Suddenly, my whole body started to tingle. It was not from
emotions. It was physical. There was something in the car with me, just over my
right shoulder. I turned, but there was nothing there. My first thought was to
open the car door and start running. I needed to run as fast as I could possibly
go, as far away as I could get. And I knew I had to go to an ocean. The
safest place would be a boat in the middle of the biggest ocean I could find. —This
is all true. That is what I thought.
Then just as suddenly as it appeared, the tingling, the
presence in the car, was gone. I sat there trying to breathe. I was again safe.
And I thought, “Jonah.” That was how Jonah must have felt when God came to
him and asked him to go to Nineveh. I had always wondered, as a kid, why Jonah
ran. How could he not have known it was impossible to get away from an
all-powerful God? But that was exactly what I had wanted to do. There was
something in my car that was far too powerful for me to be next to. I had known
I needed to get away, before that power stopped my heart from beating. If that
being had stayed any longer in the car with me, I would have died.
Of course, over the next few days this was all I thought about.
I didn’t think I was crazy. I am not religious enough, egotistical enough, or
stupid enough to believe God would come into my car and put words on my
computer screen. So, I decided that it must have been a figment of my imagination. I
must have typed those words. What had happened was the result of my having read
the story of Jonah during Yom Kippur services, and I had recalled the scene from the
movie, “Oh God,” in which George Burns’s, playing God, makes it rain inside a car. But it felt
so real. For the rest of my life, I’ll have doubts that it might actually have
happened.
I would like to add a comment that this novel is coming along
far, far, better than I could possibly have imagined when I started it. I never
thought I had the talent to write something as good as the novel I am currently
writing.
I hope I am being funny when I say, “Hey God, if you are
helping me out here, well, then, thank you.”
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