“Ah, that’s bullshit.” “Didyou know that Christ was really a Jew, Platter?”
“Of course! What do you think the Last Supper was?Pesach! The feast of Passover. My family does it every year. Real good food, Platter, you ought to try it.” Platter paused in fond recollection, then went on. “Sure, Christ was a Jew. A nice guy like me!My father’s a carpenter, you know, he lays parquet floors.” “What if you were the Messiah, and you didn’t even know it? What if you thought you were a regular person, but you were really something else?”
“Guys like you and me don’t have to worry about that, Conrad. Nobody thinks we’re regular persons anyway.”
Chapter 9:
Friday, April 10, 1964 Conrad took all the LifeSavers out of the package and shuffled them around on the desk. He closed his eyes, picked one, and tried to guess what color it was. Couldn’t tell. Took it out and looked at it: green.
For a second he couldn’t remember whatgreen was supposed to taste like.
His attention wandered back to the paper in his typewriter. Page nine. The fine arts teacher had insisted that all papers be ten to fifteen pages in length. Conrad had been up all night trying to satisfy him. It was
7:15 and the papers were due in class at 8:00. Everyone was supposed to write about the new science library.
“All in all,”Conrad typed desperately,“the new science library is a real plus for the Swarthmore College campus. As one cute freshman coed was heard to say, ‘Wow! This building really turns me on!’ ”
Still just nine pages. Struck by sudden inspiration, Conrad rubbed the page numbers off the Corrasable Bond page-corners and then retyped them, skipping the number4 . That brought him up to ten pages. He went by the fine arts class, laid his paper on the teacher’s desk, and headed back to his dorm. He didn’t want to think anymore. He wanted to sleep.
When Conrad woke, it was late afternoon. He’d been dreaming about flying. For the thousandth time he thought back to the time he’d flown out over the Ohio River. That had really happened, hadn’t it? But now, here at Swarthmore, he never felt any of the old power. He was just an awkward Kentucky boy with not too much to say for himself. He winced, recalling the wretched climax of his art paper. Another C for sure.
At least it was Friday. And tomorrow was spring vacation. Conrad was planning to get drunk tonight.
There was going to be a bonfire party down in the Crum woods, and he’d arranged for an older student to get bottles for him and Platter. The pickup was supposed to be at five.
Looking to kill a half hour, Conrad wandered out of the dorm and into the quad. There, sitting on some stone steps, was Izzy Tuskman. He was drawing a detailed sketch of a still-leafless Japanese shrub. The rendition was excellent. Tuskman seemed to twinkle with energy as he looked—reallylooked —at the strangely twisting branches.
“That’s a good drawing, Izzy.”
Long silence. Tuskman was not averse to milking a moment for all it was worth. “Sure,” he said finally, looking over with a shrug and a quick smile. “I’m an ahtist. Did you finish your paper?”
“Yeah, it’s terrible. It took me all night. I’m going to get drunk.”
“Wit what?”
“I’m getting a pint of vodka from Oates. And some Manischewitz for Platter.”
“Manischewitz?” Izzy’s face tensed in silent laughter. With his mouth open in the pale spring sun, he looked for all the world like a lizard. “Ron is an old Jewish man.”
“Oh, he’s OK. He’s funny. Look, I’ll go get the stuff and pick you up here. We can go to my room and get loaded before supper.”
“Got it?” said Izzy, getting to his feet.
“Yeah. But it cost more than I expected. I don’t have any money left for mixer.”
“My treat,” said Izzy expansively. Conrad followed him into the dorm basement where the vending machines were. No one else was down there. Izzy set down his drawing pad and kicked the glass out of the cigarette machine. “Help me turn it over, Conrad.”
They turned the machine upside down, and all the change came out of the change box. You could reach in through the broken-out glass and get money, and cigarettes, too. Izzy bought them three orange sodas, and Conrad took sixteen packs of cigarettes, all brands. They went back to Conrad’s room and made themselves drinks.
Just about then, Conrad’s roommate showed up.
“Come in, Platter, my good man!” exclaimed Conrad. “Welcome to the Kentucky Tavern.”
Platter glanced around, taking in Tuskman and the sixteen packs of cigarettes. “Are you the guys who broke the machine?” he demanded. “I was just down there.”
“Here’s your wine, Ron.”
Briefly mollified, Platter studied the Manischewitz label. It had a picture of a white-haired old Jewish man with phylacteries.
“He looks so wise,” marveled Platter. “He looks like one of the six sages on my postcard.” On Platter’s bulletin board there was a color picture of six robed rabbis sitting at a table. They all had white beards.
Conrad was tired of hearing how smart they were. How could Platter believe in them, when Conrad couldn’t believe in anything?
“Those guys don’t know anything,” he told Platter flatly. “They’re not sages. They’re stupid old men who can barely talk English.” He was really saying this for Izzy’s benefit.
“I’d like to see you tell them that,” shouted Platter. He pulled the postcard off the bulletin board and shoved it in Conrad’s face. “I’d like to see you walk up to that table and tell those guys they don’t know anything!Meshuggeneh gonif! Crazy thief!”
“Take it easy,” interjected Izzy.
“I willnot take it easy,” raved Platter. “And I do not want you guys drinking in here. The drinking is for the Crum party tonight, not for pigs before supper.” His anger was half-real, half-burlesque. In any case, it would be unwise to provoke him further.
“Hey, let’s get out of here, Izzy,” said Conrad. “Let’s skip supper and go down to the Crum early.”
“OK. I’ll buy some peanuts.”
The Crum woods surrounded a meadow and a creek adjacent to the Swarthmore campus. A train-line, the Media Local, passed through the woods and crossed a high trestle over the creek. The Swarthmore students often held bonfire parties in the Crum meadow. People would play folk songs, and in the dark you could drink or make out.
But now it was only six. Izzy and Conrad perched on a bank overlooking the train tracks and drank some more. “What do you want to do in life, Conrad?”
“Uh, I don’t know. Be happy.”
“Happy,”spat Tuskman. “You know what I think when I hearhappy ?”
“No.” All this was as interesting as anything Conrad had ever heard. He smiled happily at Izzy. Izzy lay on his back and stuck up his arms and legs for emphasis. “Happyis a toad dat’s buried in da mud. Just snugged down there under da water and every now and then it opens its mouth and goesblup . Dat’shappy .”
“Well, of course I’d like to achieve something. Be creative. But I’m not very good at anything, Izzy. I can’t draw or wrestle like you.”
“Dere’s got to be something dat only Conrad Bunger can do. Find it and work on it.”
Conrad decided to tell the truth. “I want to learn the secret of life. That’s why God put me here, Izzy, I’ve got a feeling. I’m supposed to find out what it’s like to be something that dies.” The alcohol was filling him with the old philosophical excitement. “You’reflyin ’, Conrad.”
“What is reality? Why does anything exist? Shouldn’t there be an answer? I mean, humans alldie , you dig that?” “You know da wrestling coach, Palmer?” “I’ve seen him. He teaches my phys. ed. class. Once when we were playing touch football, he told the fullback to think of himself as ‘the apex of a triangle.’ ”