|
| What's New
They’ve
seen each other only once in thirty years & that was a brief meal
in a crowded restaurant in New York. Only their mothers have known them
longer & yet their knowledge of each other’s history is vague .
. . so many years with no connection.
On this occasion, they must cautiously . . . feel their way.
____________
Each orders a glass of wine. White. & the first tells something
of his son & his daughter who are at work in California & the
other counters with the history of his son who is now in Athens &
then they speak briefly of their wives & something about their work
& one has ordered another wine & the other coffee & . .
.
In a recent dream, the second one begins,
I watched you walk away in a snowstorm, you know, the
kind we knew as kids . . . big drifts on either side of the road &
even after I called out you kept going & I assumed you heard me
but you were always intent on your own vision & I was too far away
& the light had changed to dark & I remember sitting down in
the snow & crying . . . knowing you wouldn’t be back . . .
& the first admits, it
was just like that but I wasn’t so intent on my vision as much as I
wanted to get away . . . find
what I might do if I were really alone & then I just kept going
& when I came around a corner there you were in the snow & I
couldn’t bring myself to turn back but couldn’t face you either &
spent the night in a strange room in a house just down the block &
around the corner . . .
& then the second one
says, there was another dream.
In this dream you’re carrying a body & struggling to keep it on
your shoulder & I’m walking at your side & you keep trying to
pass the body to me but my hands are frozen & you offer to rub them
but your hands are full so we sit down - you with your extra body &
me with my frozen hands . . .
Yes! the first one exclaims, Yes! we were on our way overland to Berlin . . . it was after the second
war & we were still kids but we knew enough to hide when we saw
adults & I knew they’d taken my aunt & uncle & my father
had dragged his mom & dad out of the way just in
time & he’d given me the body of my cousin to carry &
we got lost at the docks where there were so many others & I saw
you way ahead & called & you came & But, wait!
& they laugh together over the story but fall silent again &
the second one orders another wine while the first abstains & the
second, who is becoming more animated, says, I
have another dream - well, maybe not a dream but a memory of us in a
canoe & we’re adrift in an eddy on a fast river in northern Michigan
when all of a sudden the canoe starts to move on its own & we’re
swept downstream & we’re carrying the carton of food for the rest
& there’s a snake under the provisions
& the canoe tips & the snake goes free but so do all our goods
& . . .
Yes! Yes! You swam to shore & tossed
a line & we secured the boat &... the first one is very excited & then he remembers something &
stops in mid-sentence & says, Wait!
It wasn’t you it was that crazy ‘Swede’ who dove in & saved the
day & us but the second wants
to go on with his version & says, Yes!
It was “Swede” who dove in but I trapped the box & kept it from
following the canoe downstream & . . .
They both sip
their drinks & laugh at their childhood & decide to order their
meal & the first one says,
I’ve been thinking a lot about
eternity. & the second
one looks up from his cream of mushroom soup . . . Yes,
I’m thinking of taking a trip
to Israel to visit Calvary . . . maybe feel what he might have felt
& maybe make my peace with my transition
& the second one says, What about a Buddhist
retreat or a Klamath sweat lodge
or . . . the first one interrupts & says, No! That’s not my
history. It has to be from my past . . . not just anyone’s. I’ve thought of other Jews but his is the most
obvious . . . the most notorious . . . & I need to learn from one
of my own.
& the second
one nods & says,
I’ve been thinking of eternity
too but in another way. I’ve been trying to balance suicide with an
indeterminate stay & have already purchased all I’ll need.
But what does that have to do with
eternity, Says the first
one. I mean, dying isn’t the
issue. What comes next & how to prepare is the issue. & the second
one finally pushes his soup aside & says,
I’ve had another dream. This one didn’t feature you but, when I knew we would meet, I think,
after all, maybe it did. In this dream there’s a road which runs up
a mountain & at the top another road which runs off to the right
except, at the end of that road, there’s a cliff & no where to go
but off the edge. & I raced up the mountain intent on going
on & ran down as fast as I could & off the cliff & . . .
I flew . . .I actually flew off the cliff & sailed over the green fields
& landed easily on another road & kept walking & thinking
about that flight & how easy it was & how there wasn’t panic
but more . . . a state of peace . . .
The waiter opens a
bottle of red wine which the first one tastes & approves. Their entrees arrive & the first one, relishing
a taste of the wine, says, Do
you remember the time you had a fight with that guy from the other block.
You couldn’t or wouldn’t hit him but he beat your head & If I remember
you did get in a few before your nose started to bleed & we had
to get you a box of Kleenex & . . .
the second one nods between
bites of his quail & says, I
never was any good at a fight . . . but years later, I found myself
up against a drunk in the street & cool as can be I used his head
like a punching bag . . . jab here, jab there & the poor guy couldn’t
get away & finally we stopped & he still came around & tried
to kick in the window of my car . . . Wait, says
the first one, let’s talk about your dream of the
mountain & the road & where do I come in? &
the second one says, I think I was dreaming of how
our meeting after all these years was to be like a run up a mountain
& maybe I needed to know it would all be OK.
& the first one,
having finished his steak & another glass of wine says,
It may surprise you but I’ve had my
share of dreams these past weeks & some of them have to do with
you or us or however that goes. The last one was several nights ago.
I was having a hard time staying asleep & finally dozed & saw
a snowball fight where you were out in the open & we were behind
our homemade fort & we kept pelting you as you came across the field
but you wouldn’t stop even after an ice-ball hit you in the eye &
broke your glasses - you kept coming like a bear in your heavy winter
coat & we couldn’t stop you & . . . that’s where it
ends . . . you’re climbing the wall of the fort with blood in you eye
& the snow is turning red & I can see you but I can’t hear you
. . . & there’s blood everywhere &
. . .
he stops & wipes
his lips & shakes off a smile & continues I
think we ended up at my house with a plate of cookies but that part
is lost . . . & the second one, who’s been sitting up & listening says,
it never was like you to get angry - maybe it was
me who made you angry enough to toss the ice-ball . . . maybe . . .
But, it wasn’t me!! cries
the first one, startling the waiter, It wasn’t me!
Jesus! I swear it wasn’t & you know how I helped you into the house
- don’t you remember - it wasn’t me . . .
They skip desert &
order coffee & a pair of inexpensive brandies & after a few
minutes the first one asks, do
you remember watching Mrs. Coleman undressing for her bath & how
I said I bet we could see your mother too & how mad you got &
there were the others hanging around & they all started to laugh
& chime in & how you left & we didn’t see you for days &
. . .
& the second one,
looks at his watch & says, I
must leave soon but I’m more interested in another time & I keep
thinking, does he remember Fox River, when we both wanted to date the
same girl & she asked us to chose & you said “Go ahead” &
I wasn’t sure you meant it & said, “No. You!” & we started to
shove each other & soon it got rough & we were hitting &
kicking & . . . by then she’d gone off with someone else & the
pinball machines were all that were left & we ended up not speaking
& walking home in the dark .
. .
& the first one lifts his hand & signals for the waiter &
they sit a few minutes longer sipping their brandies & their bill
arrives & they spend a few minutes more dividing up & clasp
hands at the door & outside they wave good-bye & turn once more
to wave & then go on.
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||