She knew it was an obsession, but the need to recollect and review each moment of the day before he’d vanished had grown stronger. Was it possible that she’d missed something — a sentence, a gesture — that might have foreshadowed her husband’s disappearance?
Hamel’s wife was no longer certain of her feelings about Hamel’s disappearance. Once she’d believed, fervently, that Hamel had been a victim of other people, other forces. Now she was no longer sure. If something bad had happened to her husband, wouldn’t someone have discovered something by now?
Hamel’s wife looked up the street to see if the bus was coming. There was nothing in sight.
She wondered if that was how she was going to spend the rest of her life, looking in one direction, then another, for some signs of her missing husband, and never finding any. Hamel’s wife wrapped her coat around herself more tightly and continued to wait for her bus.
CHAPTER FOUR: 22 YEARS, 5 MONTHS, 21 DAYS BEFORE HAMEL DISAPPEARED
The weather, as Hamel trudged from dormitory to library, was colder, grayer, and even more dismal than all of the other cold, gray and dismal days since the month of February had begun. Other students complained about it incessantly, reminding each other in whining voices how long it had been since the campus had enjoyed a day with sunshine. Hamel thought himself superior to them: for some reason, the cold and damp did not seem to affect him, and the grayness of the skies often matched his outlook on the life he was living as a student, flat and monochromatic.
Hamel often wondered about other students in classes or the dorms. They seemed so enthusiastic about so many things: basketball games and concerts and parties, even activities like food drives and tutoring programs and volunteer efforts. Hamel did some of those things himself, had recently attended a concert with a group of five others from his dorm floor, and had gone to his first basketball game only two weeks prior.
He had never participated in volunteer activities of any kind; as a student, he had plenty of time to do so, but never the inclination. Why spend a Saturday clearing an abandoned lot for the neighborhood? Wasn’t that the city’s job?
It wasn’t a question of time: Hamel was honest enough with himself to admit that he just did not care. The good thing about being a student is that you had an automatic excuse for side-stepping whatever you wanted to avoid: Sorry, I’d like to, but I’ve got this paper I’m working on. Sometimes, of course, the excuse was the reality.
This was clearly Hamel’s challenge as he neared the library. The paper that he’d begun so confidently weeks ago on the topic of Peak Experiences needed to be completed. But since his last visit to the library, when he’d been disappointed by the absence of the dark-haired librarian, Hamel had lost interest in the paper. Now, like so many of his academic endeavors, the paper had become
a burden.
But something had to be turned in. And that meant a dull and painful evening ahead, frustrating hours in the library followed by the tedious job of typing in his dormitory’s study lounge. Perhaps he would finish by 3am; perhaps not. At this point, Hamel was approaching the assignment with the attitude of a person trying to paint a very large room. The best way to do it was to avoid looking at the unpainted surfaces. Just concentrate on what was immediately in front of him.
In Hamel’s case, it was an almost blank page with a paradoxical heading: Peak Experiences in Everyday Life. When he’d first started to work on his paper,
Hamel was sure that this section would be the heart of it, and that he would be able to write lots, and well, from his personal observations of the people around him on the campus.
Hamel considered himself to be a keen, astute eyewitness to the human condition as it played itself out around him. Much more than an onlooker, way past a casual bystander, Hamel believed that he possessed a special gift for discerning the nuances of human behavior. It was the biggest reason why the few minutes spent with the pretty librarian frustrated him so much. He thought
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