by Sam Lipsyte
"That's your bonus," said Cooley again, and I remembered that I had actually gotten a bonus, from Purdy, half a year's rent in an envelope in my desk. Grounds for dismissal. I'd already been dismissed, of course. But it could also be grounds for a prison sentence, if it constituted defrauding my employer.
"I'll treasure it," said Llewellyn, the chip aloft.
"Frame it!" somebody called.
"Bronze it!"
"Stick it up your butt!"
"That's your bonus," said Cooley, "but that's not your only bonus."
The room hushed down at these last words. This was the original management technique. It was also, if you substituted the word "candy" for bonus, a pleasant way to torment your child on a Sunday afternoon.
"What's the rest?" said Llewellyn. He seemed jumpy, a bit slopped by an overspill of ego fuel.
"The rest of your bonus is your ability to sleep at night, knowing that you have done your part in keeping hope-hope for a great fucking human flowering-alive and well. Darkness is falling, my friends. Our job is to put the Maglites in the hands of the people whose ideas, whether in the realms of business, medicine, law, or science, pure and applied, will lead us through the black hour."
"Let's not forget the arts!" called Vargina, with rare or, rather, meeting-specific cheer.
"Sure, the arts, too," said Cooley. "Hey, we've always made room for you self-involved little people, haven't we? No need to be upset. We get it. Even cavemen needed their cave paintings, right?"
"Hooray," whispered Horace.
War Crimes wheeled.
"What was that, Slick?"
"Nothing."
"I got a question for you. A quiz. Answer this correctly and I'll give you a twenty percent raise right now. In what year did Bertolt Brecht create the vaccine for polio?"
"Sorry?"
"In what year did Bertolt Brecht create the vaccine for polio?"
"No year?" said Horace.
"Say it like you got a pair."
"No year, sir!" said Horace.
"Good work. The raise thing was more of a hypothetical. But keep up the nice effort. Anyway, you all get my point. Though I guess I've made several today. Mainly I just wanted to let Llewellyn here know how much we appreciate his top-notch performance. But he's not the only one. There are others here who deserve singling out. Before we get to that, however, I have some sad news. It concerns a family very close to our hearts. I received word this morning that Shad Rayfield is very ill. Collapsed on his catamaran. We will wish the best for him, reflect on his mighty accomplishments, most notably his design and production of some of the world's best attack helicopters, and in the great works of philanthropy he has undertaken, as well as pray for his speedy recovery. I know Shad considers the Rayfield Observatory the crown jewel of his gives, despite the fact that it's never worked properly, and was unfortunately erected too near a large lime works, so that visibility is a severe problem. Still, the building stands as a symbol of all that is possible, even as we possibly depart the age of the big give. So, let us lower our heads and send good thoughts to Shad Rayfield in whatever mode of spiritual contemplation we happen to choose. Martha, am I to understand you are Wiccan?"
The woman with the cat glasses glanced up.
"Well, we don't have a broom for you here, but we welcome your style of worship. And let us not forget the suffering of poor McKenzie Rayfield as she endures this very fraught time. Mr. Burke, you know her a bit. Maybe you have a few words you'd like to share with us?"
"Excuse me?" I said.
"Got your attention now, haven't I? Nice to have you at the meeting."
"Thanks. I wasn't sure if I…"
"Oh, I made sure you didn't know about it. But you're here anyway, aren't you?"
The whole room stared, and it occurred to me that my mishap with the Rayfield girl must have been the gossip item of the year. This had all come together quite nicely, I realized, the Teitelbaum celebration, the announcement of McKenzie's father's collapse. Next would come my crucifixion. But I wasn't dying for anybody else's sins, just mine. I'd get my due, my due diligence.
"Yes," I said. "I guess I am here."
"You guess?" said Cooley. "No, I would say you are definitely here. Do you know why you are here, even though you were purposely excluded from this meeting? Would you like me to tell you why you happen to be here even though you weren't invited?"
"Yes," I said.
"The reason is quite simple, my friend."
"It is?"
"Yes, it is. The reason you are here is that you, Milo Burke, are a fucking development gladiator."
"I am?"
"You say nuts to defeat. You laugh at the grave."
"I do?"
Cooley glanced over at Vargina, who nodded, swiveled toward me.
"Milo," she said. "Maybe you've thought about what happened with McKenzie. Because she is so talented and ambitious, it was hard to remember she is really just a kid, still growing in certain emotional areas, but maybe now you've concluded that despite all of that there was no excuse for the way you spoke to her. And maybe it's even been a kind of watershed for you, a blessing in disguise. Perhaps it's forced you to confront some demons of your own, and now you feel more complete and healthy and happy. You no longer harbor the negativity that was affecting your performance and your general well-being. If you could just find a way to make it up to McKenzie, and you are eager to work with the rest of us to find such a way, maybe the whole ordeal, unpleasant as it was, could be put to rest."
I clasped my hands on the table.
"Milo?"
I heard the click of a salad lid, the scrape of a soda can.
"I couldn't have said it better," I said. "Thank you, Vargina."
The room broke into applause again. Horace patted me on the back.
"Pathetic," he whispered.
"Outstanding," said Dean Cooley. "Give that man a potato chip."
Sean slid another chip from his bag, sent it down. I held it aloft, near my chest.
"First off I'd like to thank my agent!"
Even Llewellyn laughed, or maybe only Llewellyn laughed.
"Listen up," said Dean Cooley. "To cap off this wonderful moment for Mr. Burke, I have one more announcement. We've been a bit worried, to be truthful, because of the lack of updates we've been getting from Milo on his special project, but I guess there was a good reason for the radio silence. Seems Mr. Burke is to your average development officer what a recon marine is to your typical jarhead. He's the cream of the crop, and best left alone to gather his own intel, set his own traps, and take down the enemy like a freaking phantom ninja born straight out of Satan's blazing quim. Sorry, Martha."
"For what?"
"Good girl. Anyway, it's my great pleasure to inform all of you that next year we will break ground for the Walter Stuart Memorial Arts Pavilion, right here on our main campus, which will house facilities for all branches of the visual arts, but with special attention to the construction of naturally lit studios for our painters and a brand-new bronze-casting facility. Burke, looks like even Stonewall Jackson here could learn something from you. Now I hope your spirits are buoyed by all this news. Given the economic situation, most of you will be fired soon, but I want us all to be proud of what's going on around here. Okay, have a great day."
The applause started up again. The potato chip crumbled in my hand.
Back at my workstation I clutched the edge of my desk. It wasn't the terrible feeling, the Maxim gun shudders. It was more what coursed through me the night of the burglary on Staley Street, actions of cost taken all around, me in a frozen state, nothing close to floating. A soft hand roamed my shoulder.
"Relieved?" said Vargina's voice.
"I'm not sure what it all means," I said.
"It means you've proved yourself."
"But I never even… did you?"
"Shhh," said Vargina.
"Who handled Purdy's give? He was my ask and the whole deal was in a tailspin. Was it
Cooley?"
"Purdy handled the Purdy give. Some things came together. There was a Chinese element involved. A few people did favors for other people. An international student, a young man of means, was instrumental."
"The napper," I said.
"This went up to the provost, the president, the board. It was beyond us really. It just fell together."
"Why am I still here? Purdy?"
"It was a stipulation of Purdy's give, yes. But I backed it up. I told Cooley we needed you."
"You don't need me."
"I know that."
"So, I get to stay?"
I didn't really hear Vargina's answer. I'd tried to stand, crumpled to the carpet. I came to with Vargina leaning over me, her breasts brushing up my chest.
"I'm sorry I undress you with my eyes," I said.
"It's okay, Milo. Just breathe."
"I do a lot worse with my eyes. Am I the only one?"
"Of course not, Milo. You just lack subtlety. But breathe now."
"Subtlety," I said.
"Breathe."
"I never wanted to hurt anyone. I just wanted to slide my dick between your breasts."
"A Sabrett man," said Vargina.
"What?"
"Breathe. You're okay, but we've called for help."
"I'm so sorry," I said.
"I'm not offended, Milo."
"Does that mean you are interested?"
"Not at all. Now keep breathing, baby."
"Because I'm married?"
"Sure, because you're married."
"Because I'm white?"
Vargina laughed.
"I'm not very likable, am I?"
"You're likable enough," said Vargina.
"No, I mean, if I were the protagonist of a book or a movie, it would be hard to like me, to identify with me, right?"
"I would never read a book like that, Milo. I can't think of anyone who would. There's no reason for it."
"Oh."
"Hey, here come some friends. Look. Here they come. Look at them. Like angels."
They looked more like muscular men in blue shirts. They laid a large kit next to my head, dug through it.
"What happened?"
"Well," I heard Horace say. "He figured out the world wasn't all about him and he fainted."
"Seen it before," said the other.
"By the way," said Horace. "You guys make pretty good money, right?"
"It's not great."
"What's the training process? I mean, like, if I did CPR in swim class, do I get to skip ahead?"
They took me to the emergency room for a few hours of observation. I lay on a gurney beside an old drunk woman with gangrene. She lifted some blackened fingers.
"I used to play piano," she said. "Up in Utica. Up in the hotel there."
"I've never been to Utica," I said.
"Do yourself a favor. Don't go up there. Look what happened to me. Utica spat me out."
"Tough town."
"Utica is pitiless. Used me up and spat me out. I was Piano Patty. Go up there and ask around, they'll know."
"I thought you told me not to go there."
"Do what you think is right. I'm not your mommy."
"You're the second person I've heard say that this afternoon."
"Must have been on the radio. Some kind of giveaway."
The doctor stopped by my gurney with his clipboard.
"We're ready to release you," he said.
"So, everything's fine?"
"I didn't say that," said the doctor. "I said we were ready to release you."
That gangrenous wino from Utica was correct. She was not my mommy. My mommy was here in Nearmont, in her living room, sipping peppermint tea.
"When I was young," she said now, "single, working in the city, that was something. Something hideous. But wonderful. I did things that would make your hair curl. The hair on your palms."
"Mom," I said.
We had to shout a bit above the loud, lunging minor chords Francine banged out on her organ. This recital, according to Claudia, was the new post-prandial routine. Francine claimed to have studied at a conservatory in Indiana, though all she ever played was this piece of her own composition, a meandering dirgey thing with sudden surges of dark joy. Francine's performance varied, my mother said, with the quality of her stash.
"Very nice, Francie! Fortissimo!"
"Fortissimo," I said. "You don't know anything about music."
"Fake it until you make it. Now where was I?"
"You were about to inflict me with the details of your youthful peccadilloes."
"Peccadilloes? What are you, an old society dame? You kids today are so uptight."
"I'm almost forty, Mom."
"You must change your life."
"Don't give me your hippy crap."
"That's Rilke."
"Rilke's a hippy."
"I'm not. The fifties were the sixties. For the people who mattered. Not that I mattered. But I wanted to."
"And what were the sixties?"
"Boring. Of course, by the good part I was stuck out here."
"With me."
"Don't sulk. You were an infant. It's not your fault you weren't stimulating."
"Weren't you happy just being a mother?"
"I was happy being a mother. Take out the 'just.' "
"Well, you're still in the suburbs, and I'm long gone, so I can't take all the blame."
"When did you ever take blame? You give blame. To me."
"We're not doing that tonight."
"Right, I forgot. The suburbs are the new bohemia, anyway."
"Judging by what we're hearing right now, you could be right."
"Don't worry, I'm right. Fortissimo!"
Later I sat on the patio with a beer and a one-hitter I'd found in Francine's sewing box. I kept calling Purdy. I kept calling Maura. I even called Don. Nobody was home, or near a phone, or answering. I sat out on the patio in a rubber-ribbed chair with the phone in one hand and the one-hitter and a lighter in the other and the beer like a throttle between my legs, and it seemed for a brief moment that I might be the pilot of something, something sleek and meaningful, but I was not the pilot of anything. The night was warm, the night sky blue, gluey. I could smell the neighbor's fresh-mown lawn. New Jersey was a fresh-mown tomb.
Fool, I said to myself. Depressive, raw-eyeballed pansy. Is that all you've got? That's what you had when you still lived on this street, when you were just a budding tristate artist manque. Now what are you? A botch of corpuscles. A waste of quarks. A carbon-based fuckwad. Purdy is better, Maura more right. Someday you will be a fat, grinning embarrassment to Bernie. Will you still pretend to be a painter? Will you still pretend to be a person?
"Milo?"
My mother's voice carried softly from the kitchen.
"Hey."
"Everything okay out there?"
"Sure, why?"
"I just heard this, I don't know, grumbling."
"Oh, sorry. I stubbed my toe."
"Sitting there?"
"Yeah."
"Oh, okay."
The door slid back and I stood.
"Wait!" I wailed.
It's an odd sensation to weep in your mother's lap for the first time in thirty years. It's not the same lap. It's smaller, more fragile. Bonier and tinier. I was afraid my head might hurt her lap. I was afraid her lap wouldn't help my head.
But it did. Claudia cradled me, stroked my hair, cooed: "It's all right, baby. It's all right." It was not all right, not really, but this hardly mattered. My mother was stroking my hair. My mother's lover, at the end of the sofa, kneaded my feet.
"Thanks, Francine."
"My pleasure, Milo."
Soon I was all cried out. I remembered the sensation, felt it frequently as a child, each time I was denied a toy or a chance to play with somebody else's toy or informed that another slice of pineapple pizza was not in the offing. You cried and you cried and then you really couldn't cry anymore. Y
ou got wrung, husked. It was that voluptuous emptiness you read about in old books, or old-seeming books that would use the word "voluptuous" that way, a strange, soaring, dead puppet exultation I could never quite explain. I had last felt it a few months after my father died.
Nobody had died just now. The stuff had just welled up in me, up to the eyes, as they used to say, not that I was sure anymore who "they" were.
Who's on first? Self-Pitying Twit. Third base.
More than anything it was just so very good to be stroked and kneaded by my mother and Francine. It was just so very nice to be kneaded in Nearmont. Too bad I couldn't live here with them. But I was not welcome here forever. That's what made me welcome now. I was being readied for release. I would have to drag my botched ass back into the world. Francine was Claudia's family. Bernie, and maybe Maura, was mine.
"I love you," I mumbled into my mother's jeans.
"I know that, honey."
"I'm sorry."
"What are you sorry about?"
"Me. Spidercunt. Everything."
"I forgave you a long time ago."
"And I forgive you, Mom."
"But I don't want your forgiveness, silly boy."
Francine dug lint out from under my pinky toe.
Twenty-six
Purdy's chef wore the sideburns of a Vegas legend. They poked down below his purple toque. He lurched around Purdy's enormous Tribeca kitchen with some kind of digital cleaver, shouted into a wire that fell from his ear. He cursed himself, his food, the kitchen, his crew. He castigated various assistants en route with ingredients, though I wondered how much these outbursts counted as theater for the half-dozen party guests gathered near the cutting boards.
"Leave it to a fucking Turk to forget the tarragon!" he said into his wire. "Soon as you get here I'm handing you a ticket back to Istanbul. Freight. You can go back to work in that fusion nightmare I found you in, though perhaps you'd be better off sterno-braising anchovies for the smugglers in stir, you greasy bastard."
"Must be gunning for his own show," said the man beside me, a handsome silver-haired fellow in a pink polo shirt. He had the collar of his polo shirt up. Maybe he liked it that way, or else it was some kind of comment about people who liked it that way. When it came to sartorial irony, the rich had it tough.