A Map of Kex's Face
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About this ebook
Kex is the administrator of the Eidon Academy, a college with an interdimensional porthole on campus, and the intellectual center of a recently seceded Southern California.
Roberto and his wife Sasha are busy acting out a bad campus novel, with infidelities and academic intrigues, when the known universe undergoes some fundamental changes.
Kex is more than a human being, it appears, but also an avatar around whom mandala-like emanations revolve, frequencies whose meaning Roberto must discern if he is to legitimize his new Department of Cartography . . .
Robin Wyatt Dunn
Robin Wyatt Dunn lives in Los Angeles.
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Reviews for A Map of Kex's Face
8 ratings4 reviews
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5This is a confusing book to read. I didn't really get to grips with the plot, which is interspersed with random naked episodes. At present, it reads like a draft rather than a finished version. To give it a second chance, I shared it with a friend who is a keen reader, but we are none the wiser as to what it is all about.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book is really hard to understand. The language is poetic at times, very pragmatic and straightforward at times, and there is a plot, but I found it confusing and hard to follow. Unexpected events jump in there when I think I know what's happening. Then I think I've missed something, but can't find a reference to explain the gap. But that doesn't stop me from being interested. It's got some romantic, sexual and science fiction attributes, and I still like it, but I feel like I shouldn't.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I honestly could not get through this book. it jumped around really bad and was confusing. i had no idea what was going on.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I received an electronic copy of this story in exchange for a review.And I really hate this story. It's everything I least like about a story -- the words make little sense. Or rather, all are understandable, but the way that they have been organized makes no sense whatsoever. And I'm sure that someone somewhere, particularly the so-called intelligentsia will find this novel 'brilliant' and 'moving' and other such faint praises, which only makes me more sick of it, because I don't get it. Sure, it's a book about a man going mad and cheating on his wife and killing her, but both he and the book are so insane that for all I know, he could have been imagining that as well.Call me dim-witted if you like, but I cannot like a book that I cannot make sense of. And this book does not make sense.
Book preview
A Map of Kex's Face - Robin Wyatt Dunn
A MAP OF KEX’S FACE
by the same author
novels
LOS ANGELES, or AMERICAN PHARAOHS
MY NAME IS DEE
LINE TO NIGHT ISLAND
FIGHTING DOWN INTO THE KINGDOM OF DREAMS
JULIA, SKYDAUGHTER (forthcoming)
films
A WILDERNESS IN YOUR HEART
PARTY GAMES
AMERICAN MESSENGER
A Map of Kex’s Face
by Robin Wyatt Dunn
Published by
JOHN OTT
San Diego
First Published 2014
© Robin Wyatt Dunn 2014
Smashwords edition
This book was made possible through the efforts of our Homo Erectus ancestors, who left Africa in search of interesting adventures, and told us all about them.
Cover art by Barbara Sobczyńska
ISBN 978-1-940830-05-6
Learn more about the author at www.robindunn.com
for Martin
Table of Contents
Prologue
Book One
Book Two
Book Three
It is not down in any map; true places never are.
— Herman Melville
A woman knows the face of the man she loves as a sailor knows the open sea.
— Honore de Balzac
How does one begin to map a face?
How does one begin to map anything? You begin with a scale.
The traditional map renders three-dimensional space into a two-dimensional diagram, rendering the Earth as a bird might see it, where every mile is reduced to an inch.
In four dimensions, one must also allow for time to make its headway into the map, so that one develops an appreciation for the changing nature of landscape, and of history. Four dimensional maps established the reputation of our Department of Cartography, here at Eidon.
I first became interested in faces when I was a student. They’re so interesting, aren’t they? These windows to the soul.
If the Earth, and all its rivers and forests and roads and mountains, are the windows to the body … ah, but my metaphor is not right. I believe this may be part of the problem.
You see, I am not sure, even now, that a face can be mapped. We may not yet possess the right cognitive tools. Still, I am trying. The first cartographers, especially in the Islamic World, were hated; despised. Such diagrams did not represent the elegant and complex relationships between men and god that built the Islamic Caliphates, some men cried then. And they were right. Maps are simplifications, designed to help us forget certain things, in order to focus on others. Maps do our thinking for us, you see. They are shortcuts.
Nothing wrong with shortcuts, as long as you have a reasonably good idea why you are making them.
Why then, did I start to map Kex’s face?
I love him. There is that reason. Though we are no longer lovers.
Perhaps there is no other reason.
In Class:
You see this region here?
I pointed at Kex’s left cheekbone on the diagram I’d drawn on the board.
In isolation, we can assess its characteristics, much as we might assess the characteristics of the seven hills of Rome, or any historically important region. What are its characteristics?
I glare at my graduate class, waiting.
Martin says, It’s a small hill, the cheekbone. It provides character for the face . . . but we’re looking at it in isolation. It’s almost toroidal, on its own, a rising arc. But what does it mean, professor, to pretend that the cheekbone isn’t connected to a face?
This is what cartography is,
I say. Accenting some characteristics and ignoring others. Drawing some things and not others. Deciding where the map ends. In this way it is like consciousness, which is a phenomenon, a self, that is always deciding: what do I need to know, and what do I not need to know. So again, what does the cheekbone tell us, all on its own?
It’s lonely,
says Sahar.
Yes,
says Martin.
If we see it in isolation, it’s lonely, but we don’t know why,
Sahar says.
Why is it lonely?
I ask.
Because it’s a rising plane and seems to invite lowlands, naturally, but the lowlands are not there, the cheek is not there, nor the eye socket. Just this hill, with nothing below it. It is lonely; like a language isolate, like the nation of Hungary, parachuted into the Carpathian Valley, without cousins or overlapping history, writing itself into being from scratch.
But not quite from scratch,
I say.
Almost from scratch,
says Martin. Whatever was there before is also inaccessible, to the conscious mind, we can only imply it was there through reason, or through dream. Through the imagination. As we imagine this silly cheekbone of Kex’s must have been something else before, before it was this.
Good,
I say. But why draw the map at all? Don’t we know Kex? What does this map accomplish? We know what the man looks like. We know he has cheekbones and that they have a particular shape. Why consider them, or any part of his face, any feature of a landscape, in isolation?
Sahar rises suddenly and bares her breast to the class. Her face is stern, and watchful.
In isolation,
she says. My breast is only a rising arc, only a hill with a summit. Its character derives, in large part, from its function as an organ. But since I have bared it, here, where there are others to see it, this breast is no longer possible to be seen in isolation; I am connected to it, and you are seeing it. You cannot consider the features of my breast without considering me, Sahar, and your own relationship to me.
She slipped her breast back into her blouse and sat back down. There was quiet for a moment.
I am afraid. Because I am remembering other reasons why I began to draw this map.
Book One: California
Chapter 1
The room is peaceful, warm-colored with mood lighting, a synthetic fireplace burning a synthetic log behind a courtesy screen; oddly-shaped plush chairs fill the room.
I have been so many men, so many to get me this far. But now I know I must dispense with that oldest version of myself. I must become a savage.
Around me, carefully placed televisions afford optimal views from a dozen angles, their muted sounds blending with a gentle institutional music, as nearby trainees discuss the week’s gossip.
My wife is named Sasha. Her extraordinary calm soothes me.
Old music comes on the stereo, filling me with loss, and one of the arms of the building extrudes -- ¬from the far wall, its claws shining in the mood lighting, its gears well-oiled, it shimmers, hovering, moving towards me across the business lounge.
It attaches to my chest and my head jerks back, my wife stands, her eyes wide and her lips pressed together; she holds my head as the arm works its business in my gut.
It is like Frank Sinatra, the singer on the airwaves, but he is a woman, black, filled with eternal sorrow. My wife turns my head to the side so I can vomit the sputum.
The arm disengages from my body and slides back across the room, satiated.
California is a madhouse, isn’t it, Sasha?
I ask.
I need to get back to work,
she says, and takes out her computer.
I cough, and lie back against my chair. The machinery in my intestines makes low whirring noises.
After a moment I sit back up and take out my screen, touching the keys to bring up the image of the map I’ve been studying.
Blue-black lines twist out from a knotted center, hundreds and hundreds of tendrils, I zoom in on the one region I know better than the others.
Sasha reaches out to hold my hand.
I touch the surface of my screen. Red blinking lights shimmer off the surfaces of the tendrils on the map, representing Eidon Academy in four dimensions.
I turn off the screen and squeeze Sasha’s hand. She speaks into her microphone, recording.
I raise my hand to summon the waiter.
The waiter stands amidst the lobby, hovering over our chaise lounges.
Yes, what can I get you?
he says.
We’ll have the shrimp.
Sauce?
Red.
My screen is shimmering with low light; a phone call. The damned machine answers on its own.
Roberto.
Kex.
Welcome back.
Are you all right?
I ask.
You ordered the shrimp.
Sasha and I are busy right now, Kex. Can I come up for a visit in an hour?
Of course.
I take the batteries out of my screen to stop the damned thing from answering calls on its own.
I have to take this in private,
says Sasha.
So soon?
She looks at me with that hovering and obedient rage that made me fall in love with her and turns to go into one of the curtained booths. She likes to take important phone calls in the nude. I watch her go into the booth and draw the curtain. I can see her smooth calves as she removes her shoes. A moment later her dress slips around her ankles.
The waiter brings the shrimp.
I crunch into one of them without dipping it in the sauce, watching the fried crumbs spill onto my slacks. I wipe my greasy hands on my pants, making a sound in my throat.
California.
Chapter 2
I give the remaining shrimp to the homeless man sitting outside the business lounge.
Please eat them,
I say.
He shoos me away and I go inside, up the stairs, winding around the medieval staircase towards the penthouse.
Seven floors up I present my face to the alcove by a glass gate, a laser flashes over my right eye; the gate opens on smooth gears.
I walk around the corner, my steps loud on the marble. Kex sits with his back to me, looking out at the tightly manicured surfaces of the Academy campus below him. Perched above Kex’s shoulder on the edge of the chaise-lounge, a small dog regards me with evil eyes.
Kex,
I say. He turns around in his seat, smiles at me.
Roberto!
He walks to greet me, the dog yapping and following him. We shake hands, I watch his eyes carefully; he looks disturbingly the same as the last time I saw him, three years ago.
You haven’t changed,
I say.
Neither have you,
he says.
You still keep your bar?
I ask.
Of course.
He smiles. Whiskey?
Yes.
The gears in my stomach make a little wheezy noise, anticipating the alcohol.
Halfway through pouring the second drink Kex spills the bottle; it tips to the floor, I go to catch it before it all pours out. Kex presses his head to the fabric-covered wall, tilting his forehead back and forth against the quilting.
Outside the sun speeds up; we’ve lost an hour of daylight.
I down my drink. The dog has been yapping furiously. I aim a kick at it but it dodges, fleeing down the marble corridor.
Kex is making low moaning noises, rolling his forehead back and forth slowly, against the wall.
I take out my screen and put