LOGINMargaret came to the office on a Tuesday in November.
She had driven herself — the same two-hour drive as Patrick, the village to the city, the council chair making the journey alone. He had offered to come to the village, the way he had always offered to come to the people. She had said: no, I want to see where the drawings are made. He thought about this. He thought about Margaret wanting to see where the drawings were made — the office, the drawing board, the notebooks on the desk, the sections pinned to the wall in their sequence. He thought about the person who wanted to understand the commission's origin, the place the attending had gathered before it became the drawing. He had left the office as it was. He had not cleared the board or organised the notebooks. He had left the three community centre sections pinned in sequence and the commission notebook open on the desk and the library notes on the shelf and the school notebook beside them. He had left the office as the working place rather than the presentation place. Margaret arrived at eleven. She stood in the office doorway and looked at the room before she came in. He thought about this as the attending — the reading of the room before the occupation. He thought about Frances at the threshold of the rented house looking at him with the flour on her wrist. He thought about Patrick arriving at the school drawings and standing without speaking for the first minutes. She came in and looked at the drawings on the wall. She looked at all three sections — the first and the second and the third — in the sequence he had pinned them. She looked at the progression, the sections in their stages of approach toward the truth. He thought about the sections as the evidence of the working — not the polished presentation, the stages of the attending made visible. She spent the longest time with the third section. She looked at the entry — the level floor, the covered approach, the timber panel. She looked at the weight-bearing room — the south window at forty centimetres and the December sun line crossing the floor. She looked at the children's corner — the lower ceiling and the north window and the shelf and the bench with the step at its base. She found the step. He watched her find it — the moment when her reading of the section reached the bench and the step at the base of it and she understood what the step was for. He watched the understanding move through her the way understanding moved through the attending people — the body first, the mind assembling the language after. She said: "The step." "Yes," he said. "For the child on the adult's bench," she said. "Yes," he said. "The child sitting beside the adult at the adult's height. The feet off the floor without the step. The step gives the child the ground." Margaret looked at the step in the section for a long time. He let her look. He thought about the community centre in its eleven years of failed schemes, the wrong rooms, the rooms that didn't know what they were for. He thought about the step as the thing the wrong rooms had not drawn — not the grand correction, not the extended south window or the level entry, but the small step at the base of the bench, the practical attending to the body that was smaller. "The parish hall has a step like this," Margaret said. "At the front of the stage. For the children when they perform. The caretaker made it forty years ago from scrap timber. Nobody specified it. He just made it because the children couldn't get up without it." He thought about the parish hall step. He thought about the caretaker making the step from scrap timber because the children couldn't get up without it. He thought about the attending that had produced the step — not the architect's attending, the caretaker's attending, the daily proximity to the children's bodies producing the practical knowledge of the ground required. He thought: the caretaker drew the section in timber without knowing it was a section. He thought about the honest element produced by daily attendance — the coat hooks at two heights in the school, the caretaker's stage step, the folding stool at the south edge. He thought about the attending people across the years producing the honest elements before the architect arrived to draw them. He thought: the section does not invent the honest element. The section recognises what the attending has already made. He said: "Tell me about the caretaker's step." Margaret smiled — the specific smile of the person who had not expected the question. "He's been there thirty years," she said. "Raymond. He knows every child in the village by name. He made the step for a girl who couldn't reach the stage. She's in her forties now. The step is still there." He thought about the step still there. He thought about the step made for a specific girl in her forties still serving the children who came after her — the attending to the particular body producing the element that served all the bodies after it. He thought about the honest element as the one that outlasted its occasion. He thought: the step made for one child forty years ago is the community centre bench step drawn for all the children to come. He thought about Raymond. He thought about the thirty-year caretaker who knew every child by name. He thought about the daily attending — the school day and the parish hall event and the thirty years of bodies moving through the rooms and the caretaker reading the rooms from the inside, from all the way in, from the position of the person who was always there. He thought: Raymond knows the community centre better than anyone. He has been attending to its absence for thirty years. He said: "I would like to talk to Raymond." Margaret looked at him. "He's retiring next year," she said. "Before he retires," he said. "I would like to know what he knows about the rooms the village is missing." Margaret looked at the section. She looked at the step. "He'll say the same thing I said," she said. "The in-between. He calls it the between-time. The time after the event when people don't want to go home yet. The parish hall clears out because there's nowhere for the between-time to happen." He thought about the between-time. He thought about the in-between as Margaret's word and the between-time as Raymond's word — the same understanding arrived at from different positions, the council chair and the caretaker both naming the same absence. He thought: the between-time is what the weight-bearing room is for. The room that holds the time after the gathering when the gathering is not yet ready to end. He thought about the in-between room and the weight-bearing room and the between-time — the room that held the after, the room that didn't hurry the going. He thought about the section's December sun line crossing the floor and the December gathering that stayed beyond its programme because the room made the staying possible. He wrote in the commission notebook after Margaret had gone: Margaret reads the section. She finds the step. She tells me about Raymond's step for the girl who couldn't reach the stage — made forty years ago, still there. The section does not invent the honest element. The section recognises what the attending has already made. He wrote: Raymond's between-time. The gathering that doesn't want to end. The weight-bearing room as the room that holds the after. Meet Raymond before he retires. He was glad. End of Chapter Two Hundred and Thirty-ThreeThomas confirmed the window seat in September.He wrote one sentence: the window seat is correct. Draw it in ink.He drew it in ink on a Monday morning. The window seat, correct, in ink, on the landing, in the eighth section, the sill at sitting height, the window above, the street in the peripheral below, the attending person between one condition and the next.He drew it as he drew all the benches, the community centre south bench and the coastal classroom south bench and the library landing window seat, the bench as the section's most essential element, the between-time of the attending journey made visible and permanent in the drawing.When the ink was dry, he sat back and looked at the eighth section completely.The city library, drawn as the attending journey. The entrance, and the staircase, and the reading room, and the children's corner, and the local history room, and the reference section, and the large general reading area, and the window seat on the landing. Eight element
Thomas's answer came in August.He read it at the drawing board on a Thursday morning — the August morning, the fullest light, the long days not yet shortening. He read it slowly, the way he read the letters that carried the most weight.Thomas wrote about the attending paths. He wrote that the paths in the eighth section were mostly correct — the path from the entrance to the reading room, the path from the children's corner to the large area, the path from the local history room to the reading room. He confirmed each attending line. He wrote: these are the paths I have watched for eleven years. You have drawn them correctly.He thought about eleven years of the paths and the eighth section drawing them correctly. He thought about Thomas watching the attending people move through the library for eleven years — the patient watching, the accumulated observation, the correspondence that had been building in Thomas before he wrote the first letter. He thought about the eighth section as
He began the eighth section on a Saturday morning in July.He had cleared the drawing board the evening before. He had taken down the seven pencil studies and filed them in the flat drawer and cleaned the board surface and set out the large cartridge paper — larger than the section paper, the paper for the drawing that was not a section in the usual sense, the paper for the drawing that had not yet been drawn.He stood at the board in the Saturday morning light. He thought about the eighth section. He thought about what it was — the drawing of the building as the correspondence between its rooms, the section that showed the attending person not one room from the inside but all the rooms in their relation. He thought about the form of this drawing. He thought about the section as always the inside view — the building cut, the interior revealed, the attending person's position honoured in the drawing. He thought about the eighth section as the inside view of the whole building — the bui
Ellie visited the office in July.She came on a Friday afternoon — the summer afternoon, the long July light, the light that stayed until nine. She had not telephoned ahead. She arrived at the office door with a canvas bag and a thermos and said: I thought you might want company in the long afternoon.He had been at the drawing board since eight. The city library sections — the seven rooms in pencil, the pencil studies pinned above the board, the drawings being refined one by one before the ink. He had been drawing for nine hours and his hand was tired. He was glad of the company.She put the thermos on the desk and looked at the drawings.She looked at them for a long time — the seven pencil studies arranged in order above the drawing board, the reading room section and the children's corner study and the periodicals room and the study carrels and the local history room and the reference section and the large general reading area. She looked at them in the way she had always looked a
He returned to the city library three more times before the summer.The first return was in late May — the reference section, which he had not attended to in the six-room visit. The reference section was on the second floor: the room of the standing reader, the person who came to look something up rather than to sit and read. The standing reader's attending was different from the sitting reader's attending — shorter, more directed, the attending of the specific question rather than the attending of the sustained inquiry.He stood in the reference section and thought about the standing reader's attending. He thought about the directed search — the person who arrived at the reference section with a question and left when the question was answered. He thought about the honest reference section as the room that served the directed attending: not the held space of the reading room, not the enclosure of the study carrel, but the room that gave the directed attending its conditions without r
He returned to the city library in May.He had told Thomas he would attend to the six other rooms before the library correspondence was complete. He had meant this — the practice did not close a correspondence before the attending was finished, and the six other rooms were the attending not yet finished. He took the train on a Wednesday in the second week of May and arrived at the library at ten.Thomas met him at the entrance and said: where would you like to begin?He said: the children's corner.They went to the children's area on the ground floor. The Wednesday morning — the children's area not yet in use, the school day not yet finished, the children's area in its empty morning condition. He walked directly to the corner by the radiator — the northeast corner, the low-ceilinged nook, the accumulated honest condition.He stood in the corner and looked.The lower ceiling — the nook's ceiling was at two metres, the rest of the children's area at two point eight. He put his hand on t







