Chapter 7. Social Contract
Eventually, his rebellion and perception of life led him to a remote, forsaken pasture in rural Switzerland, tending sheep. As he sat there shaking his head, tending his flock deep in thought, thinking, “How did I get here? Where do I go next? What the fuck am I doing?” He thought back to his goodbye with Elaina.
The bells of Basil chimed in the distance, dull and hollow. They too seemed weary of the city’s rhythm. Ernest Masters stood by the river, his hands deep in the pockets of a wool coat that once seemed to fit his life but now hung too heavily on him, like a burden. The Rhine shimmered beneath a grey morning sky. It stirred memories but no regrets.
Although Ernest had told his professors he was leaving. Not quite yet. His books still sat in neat rows on his desk, anatomy, pathology, the anatomy of ambition itself. He had been the Masters family’s promise, the son of a prominent economist and a teacher, bred to be respectable, useful, polished. Yet, lately every lecture had sounded like a hymn to life he could no longer worship, like sitting in a pew listening to a sermon he could no longer understand.
Elaina’s letter had arrived the night before, ink smudged where she had tried to hold back the tears. “Ernest,” she had written, “you cannot throw it all away. You cannot trade a future for a flock of sheep.”
Now she stood before him pleading her case, their case as a couple, eyes brimming with tears in disbelief and love. “You’re not serious,” she whispered. “You’re talking like one of your Rousseau Social Contract fantasies again. Is it? Is this just another phase for you? If so, it will pass. What’s happening? Make sense!” She pleaded.
He shook his head slowly. “No, Elaina. It isn’t a phase. It’s the only honest thought I’ve had in years. I must follow through and be true to myself.”
“Honest?” She laughed softly, but her voice broke with emotion. “You call abandoning everything, abandoning us, honest? What about your future here, our future together? Isn’t that honest?”
Ernest looked past her to the slow-moving river. ”I have studied the body until I know every vein and vessel, every organ and cell. Yet, I feel hollow inside. Every diagnosis feels like a rehearsal of something false in my life. I want to understand life before I try to save it.”
She stared in utter disbelief as if searching for the young man she loved, the one who had quoted Camus and sketched the Alps from the university rooftops. “And you think you will find life in the mountains, with sheep. Perhaps you are a genius or a fool. I’m confused. If you eventually go on to Borneo, as seems to be your wild plan, you’ll certainly die out there, of that I am sure. Do you know how naive you sound? Ernest Masters, you will die chasing a dream.”
“Then I will die awake,” he said simply.
A gust of wind carried the scent of rain and wet stone. For a long moment, they stood together in silence, two lives now like a river divided at a fork. He wanted to tell her he would come back for her, that this was only for a time, but he knew that to be a lie. Some doors once opened, never closed again.
He gently kissed her forehead, like a benediction. Elaina, he murmured, “Some of us are built to heal the body while others must try and heal the soul.”
Too overwhelmed, she did not answer. She had no more words. When she finally turned away in her sorrow, the city swallowed her, the sound of her footsteps fading into the hum of trams and church bells. She disappeared like a ghost.



