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About the Book
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ISBN #: 0967392055
The 9:30 Bus to the Crab
Nebula
"You going to the book
convention?" the bus driver said as we headed down Michigan Avenue
toward the Chicago Convention Center. "Are you a writer or
something?"
I smiled. Suddenly
the last ten years of my life all made sense. In just a few
moments, I would see my book for the very first time. It didn't
matter that I wasn't staying at one of the nice hotels, but rather
taking a bus from a cheap roach trap, forty minutes away on the north
side. My book was at the end of this line.
"Yes, I am," I said with
pride.
"I'm a writer too," he
said, as if we were long lost brothers in the midst of the big bad
city. He had turned hi head toward me, and nearly ran over a
pedestrian running to the bus stop. I looked around the bus.
Other than the bum sleeping in the back, I was quite alone with the
bus driver, I still had about a mile of Michigan Avenue to go.
The light had now turned, but the bus wasn't going anywhere.
I did something I knew I
was going to regret, but couldn't help.
"What's your book
about?" I asked.
He smiled, pulled the
bus back into traffic, then turned around to talk to me. I
gestured that he might want to look back at the road. He kept
his head tilted at an angle where he could talk and drive at the same
time.
"You ever see Da Vinci's
The Last Supper?" he asked, as if I was a student rather than a
passenger. "The painting?"
"Of course."
"I mean, have you ever
taken a really good look at it?"
"Not in person, no."
We were now stopped at a
stop light near the Wrigley Building, the world's longest stop light.
He made no pretense of even looking as the road now. "Leonardo
Da Vinci was an alien. I have proof ...."
He kept quiet as we
crossed the Chicago River, almost as if he was scared that someone,
someone from above would hear him in the open air. We were soon
right by the art institute. " I come here everyday during my
breaks."
I feared that he would
drive the bus around the corridors if he could, past Georgia
O'Keeffe's clouds and the impressionist Isle of the Grand Jete, just
to show me his knowledge of art.
A car honked. He
frowned, then started driving again. He came to a stop at the
next light. With this early morning traffic, it would take
forever. I had to bite. "Proof?"
The light turned, but he
didn't go forward. "If you look closely at some curtains, you
can see the Crab Nebula in the background .... "
"Crab Nebula?"
I had no idea what he
said for the next seven blocks of Michigan Avenue, but somehow
everything seemed to make sense to him. Leonardo Da Vinci had
deliberately put the Crab Nebula into The Last Supper as some kind of
message. This was years before the novel The DaVinci Code had
come out.
His theories of
conspiracies in the Old Church started out as straightforward as
Michigan Avenue itself, but eventually they made a left turn at the
corner of Michigan and Reality, headed over the Lakeshore Drive and
out to the deep blue waters of the lake. He kept talking about
"Crab Nebula this" and "Crab Nebula that" with an eerie familiarity,
as if "Crab Nebula" was Sammy Sosa's old batting coach who'd just come
up from the Dominican Republic to help with Sammy's swing.
The driver swerved the
bus back and forth with each course of the supper, each revelation.
"That's what my book is
about," he said, "What do you think?"
"Wow," was all I could
think of in terms of a response. "Sounds interesting."
We had now made it to
the convention center. I got up to leave, but he put his hand in
front of me, blocking my way. "Maybe you can get me in. I
gotta tell them about my book."
"Ummm .... "
"I worked on it for
twenty years!" He said that alone as if time alone justified the
book's quality.
"I'll see what I can
do," I mumbled. "You can just let me off here."
As I got off and hurried
across the street, I realized that if time and effort were a factor in
books, this guy had left me in the dust. I hadn't even made it
out of orbit compared to him. Who knows how good my book could
have been if I had stayed on all the way to the Crab Nebula?
I noticed a man wearing
an orange "publisher" button about to board the bus as I got off.
I wanted to signal to the man, but it was too late. Hopefully he
got off the bus before it made a left turn at Jupiter. |
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