What We Are (27 page)

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Authors: Peter Nathaniel Malae

BOOK: What We Are
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That's where the problem has always lain, of course: in those moments where I've chosen action.

In the beginning of my junior year, a vagabond had asked me a simple question: “Do you have any cans?”

I gave a simple answer—“Yes”—drained my Coca-Cola can, and handed it over.

The vagabond moved on to his next aluminum prize when the dean of men, Father Reeser, arrived beneath his little black-Irish Afro and said to the recycler, “This is a closed campus.”

“But there are a hundred cans lying around here, sir.”

“We'll take care of the cans. Don't be in the least bit concerned,” said Dean Reeser, brushing the lint from the jacket of his Italian suit. He never wore his collar and you'd never guess that he was a priest who'd taken an Ignatian vow of poverty. “Now leave before the police are contacted.”

“You wouldn't,” said the vagabond, stroking his ratty beard. “I know you wouldn't, sir.”

Dean Reeser reached into the chest pocket for his cell phone and looked up at the vagabond, one last warning. These were the
days when cell phones were big as a car battery, a last-resort weapon. The vagabond didn't move. Dean Reeser said, “As God is my witness.”

So much for “being a man for others.”

It would have been smarter to have waited until a good amount of time had passed between that incident and putting a brick through the window of the dean's office. For the window incident was naturally blamed on vagabonds and an order was put up to Blach Family Builders to construct an iron-blue fence around the perimeter of the campus, “to protect the facilities.” “Let's keep those bums out,” I heard one drunken alum say at an auction fund-raiser for the fence. In the end, the last person suspected of the deed was the doer, me, still held in high esteem by my educators. But who knows? Maybe some of them knew. Or suspected....

“So you two went to high school together?”

I remember now where I'm at, the kind of cat surrounding me.

Chinaski says it again. “You went to St. Cajetan together?”

“Indeed,” says Who Dere. He's smiling at Chinaski, not meeting his fawning eyes but rather the top of his head, the comb-over, softly but visibly chuckling to himself. This is why the guy irritated me back in the day. He's one of those people always shitting on the saps below him with pizzazz, under the impression that his defecatory act is one of generosity.

“And this was at Cajetan?”

“Yes, sir,” Who Dong continues. “Paul was ranked number one in our class until the end of our sophomore year.”

Jab number one. I take it lightly on the ribs. It tickles. I breathe in deeply and blow it away. Meanwhile, Chinaski is on the edge of his seat, excited by the all-around possibility of milking the boss's all-star nephew. “At Cajetan?”

“Yes,” I say. “It was at Cajetan, okay? I went to Cajetan. I went
to St. Cajetan and you didn't go to Cajetan. Though you probably wanted to.”

“Oh, no,” says Chinaski.
Oh, yes
. “I'm just curious, I guess. My mother wanted me to go there. All she did for the first fourteen years of my life was ramble on to anyone in her vicinity how little Chuckie was going to be the first in the family to attend Cajetan.”

“Well,” says Who Dong, “It was a fine school. Is a fine school.”

I want to say, And where
did
you go to school, Chinaski? just to shut him up, but instead say, “It's in decline.”

“Oh, I wouldn't say that,” says Who Dat. “It's just growing.”

“Exactly,” I say. “It's growing beyond its identity.
An all-boys Jesuit educational enterprise since 1851 is now a community of women and men conjoined in its vision of growing an organic citizen to enter the world and brighten it
. I twas a poemhink they stole that from Alcoholics Anonymous.”

“I went to Blackford and I don't regret one minute there,” says Chinaski. Translation: He was one of the 1,400 applicants that St. Cajetan turns away each year. “Although I'd like to go back and watch a football game now and then.”

“Have you been banned from your campus for some reason?” asks Who Dere, smiling with perfectly polite fakery.

“Blackford was shut down back in 'ninety,” I say happily.

“One year after I graduated,” Chinaski says sadly.

“Did you make the one-year reunion?” I say.

“Paul here,” says Who Dong, “was the hero of our alumni game in 'ninety-six. Eight thousand fans were in attendance at Kirk Shoe Stadium. Paul liked to say that Kerouac should've lived just to watch that game and write a better poem.”

“Who is that?” Chinaski says.

“Jack Kerouac,” I say. “He wrote about watching St. Cajetan play on a Friday night in ‘October in the Railroad Earth.'”

“So he's like a sportswriter then?” Chinaski asks.

“It was a poem.”

“That's right,” says Who Ding. “The book was
Lonesome Traveler
.”

“Sounds like a downer,” says Chinaski.

“Paul here made an interception with thirty-five seconds left in the game. Took it eighty yards down the sideline for the score. And the best part was that he did it right in front of the St. Dwynwen bench. They all just stood there, hoping Paul would trip. But he didn't. Not that time, anyway.”

There it is: the second jab.
Let's get ready to rumble!

“Oh, I've been tripped up a number of times,” I say. I look at the Greek-potted ferns posted at either side of the piano, take in the faux-Doric pillars in earth tones at ten-yard intervals through this ballroom, watch a bellhop wheel a golden cart of luggage toward the Fountain Restaurant. Holding the hour in my hand like a crystal ball, I say, “But I'd guess that you haven't.”

“You'd be right on that front, Paul.”

“It's easy to see why.”

“The usual talent, commitment, intelligence,” he says.

“Not at all. It's the usual aptitude to recognize what other people want. You're extraordinary at that. And then you give it to them. You play the course out. Stay within the lines, the boundaries. You never ask if they deserve what they want. Or need it. Everything is navigable on your course, and you sprint through it with the feet-pumping pistons of Carl Lewis. Everybody loves you, but your vision is small, and their love is superficial. As is yours. Meanwhile, the truly memorable folks have broken off the course and are hiking ...” (here I lift the Sierra Nevada and pound it) “... mountains you wouldn't go near. It's unavoidable that one trips every now and then when there's a snow-capped peak to hurdle.”

“I'm sorry I took the valedictorian from you, Paul.”

Chinaski's shoulders drop back down: a misfit like myself messes
with his baby formula of: I (Intelligence) + C (Connections) = S (Success) = C (Cash) = P (Prestige) = F (Friend).

“A simple thank-you will do,” I say to Who Ding.

“Thank you?”

I say with total confidence, “That's right. You're welcome for the VD, as I call it, that you were given by me. I checked out of that school before my sophomore year ended. There was nothing left for me to learn. Oh, the minutiae were there: the periodic table, the love sonnets of Shakespeare, Lincoln-Douglas debates, all that good shit, there's always more info to absorb, always more data. Even now, there's a galaxy of facts out there that I couldn't speak to with any authority. But the vision of the school is another thing. By fifteen, I had the hidden forces at work figured out at St. Cajetan College Preparatory. I was sure I didn't align myself with their vision, our vision, whatever. And that was the start of an endless journey yielding the same result over and over again.”

“The big trip,” Who Dat says, rolling his eyes. He does some delay tactic of his own, registering the skylights above us, way above us. “I'm unimpressed, Paul. I would have thought that by now you'd have a better rationalization for your recent failures. You were always so adept at arguing the counter to the counter to the counter to the counter.”

Chinaski's brain is in remission. He went into A-wave mode when I mentioned the periodic table: he's sleeping with his eyes open, he's zoning out on the television, though (miraculously) there's no television here in the ballroom. Chinaski may as well be fingering his way through a bowl of extra-buttery popcorn, sipping on a $6 small Coke at the theater. Maybe it's right that he's shit upon: he's a borderline peasant who thinks he's an aristocrat. Even in his unconscious dream right now, he's issuing orders to a custodian.

I say, “The difference between us is this: You won't ever hear me whine about the raspberries and bruises on my knees. And I don't
have to hunt you down and challenge you to feel good about myself. You and a hundred others offer a paltry remedy for the nothingness I feel in my head and heart. The problems I carry around would end a fragile bird like you. You wouldn't get out of the nest with my nihilistic inheritance.”

“But I did get to Harvard. Then to Boalt. And now to Eismann, Lichter & Smith. With ease. And soon I'll get to partner. Where did you get other than San Quentin, Paul?”

“You were in San Quentin?” asks Chinaski, snapping awake.

“He was indeed,” says Who Dere, sipping his drink, holding in a smile.

“That's one of the mountains I'm talking about,” I say.

“Is there any doubt now which anarchist put a brick through the dean's window?”

“You were in San Quentin?”

“Listen,” I say to Who Dong, standing, shaking out my arms, my hands, “aside from the fact that a punk like you would've been crushed up in that mutherfucker and aside from the fact that what I took from that place translates directly into this moment, right here, right now, in that only my
compassion
“—here I get in Who Ding's face, grit my teeth, eyes flaring like Tyson pre-fight—”prevents me from biting your fucking fruity cheerleader nose off your face”—Who Dat swallows, steps back, almost trips on the colorful man-of-war behind him, and I sit down, content with his concession—“the only thing you have to worry about is what I read in the latest issue of the
Cajetan Column
. How did it go? Ah, yes: Dong-hoo Choi, '96, invites all members of the Korean Alumni Association to meet at Ga Bo Ja in late December. Now tell me that ain't true. It's a misprint. I misread it, right?”

“I'm founder and president,” he proudly parrots, before he sees his error.

“Hah! What happened to your anti-kimchi crusade?”

“I realized I was wrong.”

“Bullshit,” I say, “that's bullshit. I've got your game figured out, man. You're transparent as a snowstorm. Back in the day, you gave up your bloodline to curry favor with the haves. The enrollment of our class was ninety-percent white and they ran the show. So you went around and told everyone to call you Michael. But when it became hip over time to embrace your culture everywhere on the planet, you aptly identified the power shift and realized that a rediscovery of your former culture was politically savvy. So now you're back to Dong-hoo. Well, they may have forgotten your original whitewashed position with a tidy donation to the endowment, but I remember how readily you abandoned your roots. You had no balls. Still don't. It doesn't matter if you're here at the Fairmont every day, ringing up a fat bill comped by the firm. It doesn't matter what you drive, where you live. I'll destroy you, Who Dong, Who Ding, Who Dat, Who Michael, Who Whatever. I got nothing to lose.”

He's silent, as he should be. I detest the guy, this master player of the game.

“I'll eat you alive.” Chinaski is about to get up and walk off to the bathroom, and I can't help saying, “Sit down.”

He sits as ordered, slumps back, shoulders hunched, whistling air through his lips.

“Let's agree,” says Who Ding, “that you were always smarter than me, but that I will always be more successful than you.”

“Well, I'm in accordance with that,” I say, lifting my empty glass. “Here's to your stupid success.”

He lifts his own half-full glass. “Here's to your intelligent failure.”

Chinaski suddenly pops up, like a beaver out of a hollow in the earth, his four strands of hair tingling with the cerebral activity below:
Could it be true?
his shocked eyes are asking.
Does intelligence truly presage failure? Am I, Charles Chinaski, simply too damned smart for my own good?

24
We're Driving with Bling-Making Intent

W
E'RE DRIVING
with bling-making intent out to North Santa Clara in Chinaski's apple-green '06
VDUBBUG
, the Jesse James custom-built convertible, top down, the wind rushing through our ears, pumping Usher and Ja Rule, looking cool for all the girls who laugh with us, not at us. The conditions are a test for Chinaski's new condition: hair implants. I didn't say a word aloud when I first saw it, don't say a word now. It's a new beginning for the both of us: he's got a thousand threads of string growing out of his head, and I'm committed to the silence mandated by the elephantine woofers. This silence will carry me to self-sustenance in the Silicon Valley; as ordered by my good sister, silence is the new rule for me, not just today but all the days that I find myself officially a subject of “The West.” For the past few days, I've been cast in the role of the fifties child who is to be seen, not heard.

The great techie capitalists sprang from the well-tilled soil of this valley, and though I've a relatively late start at twenty-eight, and though we are presently winding through the Silicon ghost towns of northern Sunnyvale and central Milpitas, their spirits having vacated the premises for the warmer, more fertile climate of New Delhi, and
though I have a disposition that questions any possible direction my life takes, I'm nonetheless positive that my cooperative attitude (“Bend but don't break,” advised Chinaski) will—a propos of the mad beats—Usher me into millions of bones in no time, which, as Ja Rule would no doubt point out at gunpoint, is clearly what's important.

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