“Use it to invent antigravity,” suggested Ace. “That’d be big bucks for sure.” He pulled at his beer. “I can’t believe this really happened. Why shouldyou be able to fly, anyway?”
“Jesus was a great ethical teacher, Conrad, not just some derelict who knew how to fly.”
“Well, anyway. I mean if God—or the aliens—gave me this magic power, it must be that I’m supposed to do something important.”
“So how come you spend all your time getting drunk?”
“That’s part of it. I get drunk to see God, you know? When I’m drunk I feel like I know the secret of life. Know it in my body. The teachers here can’t tell me anything—they’re old and square. The answer isn’t so much a bunch of words as it is a way of feeling.”
“The secret of life,” said Ace. “I’ll tell you when I saw the secret of life. It was the morning star. Venus, you dig? Once after my paper route there was still enough night left to get out my telescope and look at it. It was a crescent like the moon! You understand? Always get your emotions confused in what you’re doing and your mind will be sure to develop. If you want to get out and tell anyone.”
“Of course I want to get out,” said Conrad, just to have something to say. “Venus is really a crescent?
I’ve never seen the morning star.”
“It’s the same as the evening star, Pig. The bright dot that you see near the moon sometimes. That’s Venus.”
“Yeah, yeah, I’ve seen it. I used to look at the sky with Larsen a lot. We’d lie out on the grass and stare up at the stars.”
“My big science friend was a guy named Table,” said Ace. “Billy Table. His father was an alcoholic stage magician. Poor Table built himself a big reflecting telescope ... sanded the mirror and everything—”
“The Glass Giant of Palomar!”
“Exactly! And Table’s father got mad when he was drunk and he broke the mirror.” “What a prick. My father was never like that. I don’t think he ever even hit me. Maybe once when I was drunk. He used to hit Caldwell sometimes, but by the time I was a teenager, he was worn out.”
“Yeah, my Dad never hit me either. He always fought with my mother instead. They’re getting divorced.” Ace said this like it was nothing, but Conrad could tell it meant a lot. No wonder Ace was upset enough to fall off the roof.
“I’m sorry, Ace.” “Can I have the last quart?”
Conrad looked at his own lukewarm half-full quart. He’d had enough for now. “Yeah, OK. I don’t see why I can’t get laid.” “It’s because you’re such a stupid pig,” said Ace, opening the last beer. “You drink so much because you’re too lazy to do anything else.”
“What do you mean lazy? It’s work getting money and wheels. Lazy. I just saved your life, didn’t I?
You’re so fucked-up you practically commit suicide, and now you’re tellingme how to live?”
“Except for Audrey,” said Conrad finally. “And, you know, I will make it, Ace, someday I’ll be a famous intellectual. And I’ll still be getting drunk.”
“I hope so, Conrad. I hope both.”
Chuckie and Izzy showed up about then. Chuckie was a little pissed about his car—he’d had to walk up to campus and back, in the sleet. But then Izzy found a bottle of sherry somewhere, and they all cheered up. Chuckie played his guitar, and they made up a song about Conrad calledPig, Pig, Pig, What’s the Use, Use, Use? People like Chuckie thought Conrad was a mess, but at least they could tell he was different. For now, that was enough.
That night Conrad slept on the floor of Ace’s room. He’d hoped for another secret chat about his flying, and about his destiny, but Ace had turned mean again. Conrad’s last memory of the evening was Ace’s mock-sincere voice trying to trick him into wetting his pants. “I just did it myself, Conrad. Ahhh, it feels good. Relax. Go on and do it.” Some friend!
When Conrad awoke, he was alone and the snow had melted. He crawled out Ace’s other window and went down the fire escape.Leaving with no love lost , Conrad thought to himself. He felt purged and happy. The earth was like a vast terrarium, moist and unseasonably warm. Things were growing.
Life—not the secret of life—just life itself.
To begin with, he’d get things back together with Audrey. He would give her his signet ring, the von Riemann coat of arms from his mother’s dead father.
Chapter 12:
Wednesday, August 25, 1965 Conrad and Audrey were sitting in the balcony of a Paris theater. The lady they were staying with had given them tickets to a girlie show.
“Look at that man over there,” said Audrey. “He has atelescope .”
Sure enough, a man two rows ahead of them was studying the distant pink flesh through a short black tube.
“He must be a regular. It’s all old people here, have you noticed, Audrey?”
“Et voila!”cried the woman onstage as she peeled off the last layer. She had her stomach sucked in, and her ribs jutted out unnaturally. Her voice was shrill with the effort of filling the cavernous theater.
“Maintenant je fais do-do!” (“Now I’m going night-night.”) Some men in tuxedos danced out and began carrying her around on a huge platter. Her puddled breasts slid this way and that. Conrad didn’t want to get interested. “Do you want to leave, Audrey?”
It was a hot summer night, with Paris sparkling all around them. Conrad had earned enough at a summer construction job to come visit Audrey in Geneva. Her father was a diplomat there. And now Conrad and Audrey were spending a few days in Paris with a Hayes family friend. It was fantastic, an American dream, from basement digger toboulevardier in ten short days.
“Your hands are so hard, Conrad.” They were strolling down a tree-lined street.
“That’s from the tamper. You know what that is? It’s a yellow machine shaped like an outboard motor.
But at the bottom, instead of a propeller, there’s a big flat metal foot. The whole thing hops up and down like a robot pogo stick. Most days, my job was to guide the tamper all around the dirt floor of a new basement to flatten the dirt out. It was exhausting, and then for hours I’d still feel the jerking in my arms.
The regular workers—the black guys—stuck me with the tamper as much as possible. They called itthe hand-jive machine .”
“Did they like you?”
“They were nice. They treated me like anyone else. One of them, a guy named Wheatland, he’d throw back his head and scream, ‘Ah just loooove to fuck!’ He was an older guy. He’d look at me and say,
‘When I was yo’ age my dick be hard six days a week!’ ”
Audrey giggled and squeezed Conrad’s hand. Ever since he’d given her his signet ring they’d gotten a lot closer. He’d been drinking less, and she’d started letting him fondle her breasts. She had wonderful breasts, with big stiff nipples. Remembering them, Conrad began hugging Audrey right there on the sidewalk. They kissed intensely.
“Should we do it, Audrey? Do you want to fuck?”
“Yes.” The simplicity of the answer astounded Conrad. Good thing he’d asked!
They had a couple of drinks in a nightclub and danced a little. It was hard to pay attention to anything.
Finally it was late enough so that their hostess was certain to be in bed. They let themselves into the apartment and sat down in the living room. Conrad had a couch in there, and Audrey was sleeping in the guest bedroom.
“Are you sure you want to?” asked Audrey.
Conrad felt like a condemned man. “Yes. Of course.” They made out for a while, working themselves up, and then Audrey went to her room.