arved in the streets. I was alone, walking. On my side of the street just before reaching the first boulevard on the long walk home there was a small neglected store. I stopped and looked in the window. Various objects were on display with their soiled price tags. I saw some candle holders. There was an electric toaster. A table lamp. The glass of the window was dirty inside and out. Through the rather dusty brown smear I saw two toy dogs grinning. A miniature piano. These things were for sale. They didn't look very appealing. There weren't any customers in the store and I couldn't see a clerk either. It was a place I had passed many times before but had never stopped to examine. I looked in and I liked it. There was nothing happening there. It was a place to rest, to sleep. Everything in there was dead. I could see myself happily employed as a clerk there so long as no customers entered the door. I turned away from the window and walked along some more. Just before reaching the boulevard I stepped into the street and saw an enormous storm drain almost at my feet. It was like a great black mouth leading down to the bowels of the earth. I reached into my pocket and took the medal and tossed it toward the black opening. It went right in. It disappeared into the darkness. Then I stepped onto the sidewalk and walked back home. When I got there my parents were busy with various cleaning chores. It was a Saturday. Now I had to mow and clip the lawn, water it and the flowers. I changed into my working clothes, went out, and with my father watching me from beneath his dark and evil eyebrows, I opened the garage doors and carefully pulled the mower out backwards, the mower blades not turning then, but waiting. 42 "You ought to try to be like Abe Mortenson," said my mother, "he gets straight A's. Why can't you ever get any A's?" "Henry is dead on his ass," said my father. "Sometimes I can't believe he's my son." "Don't you want to be happy, Henry?" asked my mother. "You never smile. Smile and be happy." "Stop feeling sorry for yourself," said my father. "Be a man!" "Smile, Henry!" "What's going to become of you? How the hell you going to make it? You don't have any get up and go!" "Why don't you go see Abe? Talk to him, learn to be like him," said my mother . . . I knocked on the door of the Mortensons' apartment. The door opened. It was Abe's mother. "You can't see Abe. He's busy studying." "I know, Mrs. Mortenson. I just want to see him a minute." "All right. His room is right down there." I walked on down. He had his own desk. He was sitting with a book open on top of two other books. I knew the book by the color of the cover: Civics. Civics, for Christ sake, on a Sunday. Abe looked up and saw me. He spit on his hands and then turned back to the book. "Hi," he said, looking down at the page. "I bet you've read that same page ten times over, sucker." "I've got to memorize everything." "It's just crap." "I've got to pass my tests." "You ever thought of fucking a girl?" "What?" he spit on his hands. "You ever looked up a girl's dress and wanted to see more? Ever thought about her snatch?" "That's not important." "It's important to her." "I've got to study." "We're having a pick-up game of baseball. Some of the guys from school." "On Sunday?" "What's wrong with Sunday? People do a lot of things on Sunday." "But baseball?" "The pros play on Sunday." "But they get paid." "Are you getting paid for reading that same page over and over? Come on, get some air in your lungs, it might clear your head." "All right. But just for a little while." He got up and I followed him up the hall and into the front room. We walked toward the door. "Abe, where are you going?" "I'll just be gone a little while." "All right. But hurry back. You've got to study." "I know . . ." "All right, Henry, you make sure he gets back." "I'll take care of him, Mrs. Mortenson." There was Baldy and Jimmy Hatcher and some other guys from school and a few guys from the neighborhood. We only had seven guys on each side which left a couple of defensive holes, but I liked that. I played center field. I had gotten good, I was catching up. I covered most of the outfield. I was fast. I liked to play in close to grab the short ones. But what I liked best was running back to grab those high hard ones hit over my head. That's what Jigger Statz did with the Los Angeles Angels. He only hit about .280 but the hits he took away from the other team made him as valuable as a .500 bitter. Every Sunday a dozen or more girls from the neighborhood would come and watch us. I ignored them. They really screamed when something exciting happened. We played hardball and we each had our own glove, even Mortenson. He had the best one. It had hardly been used. I trotted out to center and the game began. We had Abe at second base. I slammed my fist into my mitt and hollered in at Mortenson, "Hey, Abe, you ever packed-off into a raw egg? You don't have to die to go to heaven!" I heard the girls laughing. The first guy struck out. He wasn't much. I struck out a lot too but I was the hardest hitter of them all. I could really put the wood to it: out of the lot and into the street. I always crouched low over the plate. I looked like a wound-up spring standing there. Each moment of the game was exciting to me. All the games I had missed mowing that lawn, all those early school days of being chosen next-to-last were over. I had blossomed. I had something and I knew I had it and it felt good. "Hey, Abe!" I yelled in. "With all that spit you don't need a raw egg!" The next guy connected hard with one but it was high, very high and I ran back to make an over-the-shoulder catch. I sprinted back, feeling great, knowing that I would create the miracle once again. Shit. The ball sailed into a tall tree at the back of the lot. Then I saw the ball bouncing down through the branches. I stationed myself and waited. No good, it was going left. I ran left. Then it bounced back to the right. I ran right. It hit a branch, lingered there, then slithered through some leaves and dropped into my glove. The girls screamed. I fired the ball into our pitcher on one bounce then trotted back into shallow center. The next guy struck out. Our pitcher, Harvey Nixon, had a good fireball. We changed sides and I was first up. I had never seen the guy on the mound. He wasn't from Chelsey. I wondered where he was from. He was big all over, big head, big mouth, big ears, big body. His hair fell down over his eyes and he looked like a fool. His hair was brown and his eyes were green and those green eyes stared at me through that hair as if he hated me. It looked like his left arm was longer than his right. His left arm was his pitching arm. I'd never faced a lefty, not in hardball. But they could all be had. Turn them upside down and they were all alike. "Kitten" Floss, they called him. Some kitten. 190 pounds. "Come on, Butch, hit one out!" one of the girls pleaded. They called me "Butch" because I played a good game and ignored them. The Kitten looked at me from between his big ears. I spit on the plate, dug in and waved my bat. The Kitten nodded like he was getting a signal from the catcher. He was just showboating. Then he looked around the infield. More showboating. It was for the benefit of the girls. He couldn't keep his pecker-mind off of snatch-thoughts. He took his wind-up. I watched that ball in his left hand. My eyes never left that ball. I had learned the secret. You concentrated on the ball and followed it all the way in until it reached the plate and then you murdered it with the wood. I watched the ball leave his fingers through a blaze of sun. It was a murderous humming blur, but it could be had. It was below my knees and far out of the strike zone. His catcher had to dive to get it. "Ball one," mumbled the old neighborhood fart who umpired our games. He was a night watchman in a department store and he liked to talk to the girls. "I got two daughters at home just like you girls. Real cute. They wear tight dresses too." He liked to crouch over the plate and show them his big buttocks, that's all he had, that and one gold tooth. The catcher threw the ball back to Kitten Floss. "Hey, Pussy!" I yelled out to him. "You talkin' to me?" "I'm talking to you, short-arm. You gotta come closer than that or I'll have to call a cab." "The next one is all yours," he told me. "Good," I said. I dug in. He went through his routine again, nodding like he was getting a sign, checking the infield. Those green eyes stared at me through that dirty brown hair. I watched him wind-up. I saw the ball leave his fingers, a dark fleck against the sky in the sun and then suddenly it was zooming toward my skull. I dropped in my tracks, feeling it brush the hair of my head. "Strike one," mumbled the old fart. "What?" I yelled. The catcher was still holding the ball. He was as surprised at the call as I was. I took the ball from him and showed it to the umpire. "What's this?" I asked him. "It's a baseball." "Fine. Remember what it looks like." I took the ball and walked out to the mound. The green eyes didn't flinch under the dirty hair. But the mouth opened up just a bit, like a frog sucking air. I walked up to Kitten. "I don't swing with my head. The next time you do that I am going to jam this thing right up through your shorts and past where you forget to wipe." I handed him the ball and walked back to the plate. I dug in and waved my bat. "One and one," said the old fart. Floss kicked dirt around on the mound. He stared off into left field. There was nothing out there except a starving dog scratching his ear. Floss looked in for a sign. He was thinking of the girls, trying to look good. The old fart crouched low, spreading his dumb buttocks, also trying to look good. I was probably one of the few with his mind on the business at hand. The time came, Kitten Floss went into his wind-up. That left hand windmill could panic you if you let it. You had to be patient and wait for the ball. Finally they had to let it go. Then it was yours to destroy and the harder they threw it in the harder you could hit it out of there. I saw the ball leave his fingers as one of the girls screamed. Floss hadn't lost his zip. The ball looked like a bee-bee, only it got larger and it was headed right for my skull again. All I knew was that I was trying to find the dirt as fast as I could. I got a mouthful. "SEERIKE TWO!" I heard the old fart yell. He couldn't even pronounce the word. Get a man who works for nothing and you get a man who just likes to hang around. I got up and brushed the dirt off. It was even down in my shorts. My mother was going to ask me, "Henry, how did you ever get your shorts so dirty? Now don't make that face. Smile, and be happy!" I walked to the mound. I stood right there. Nobody said anything. I just looked at Kitten. I had the bat in my hand. I took the bat by the end and pressed it against his nose. He slapped it away. I turned and walked back toward the plate. Halfway there I stopped. I turned and stared at him again. Then I walked to the plate. I dug in and waved my bat. This one was going to be mine. The Kitten peered in for the non-existent sign. He looked a long time, then shook his head, no. He kept staring through that dirty hair with those green eyes. I waved my bat more powerfully. "Hit it out, Butch!" screamed one of the girls. "Batch! Batch! Batch!'" screamed another girl. Then the Kitten turned his back on us and just stared out into center field. "Time," I said and stepped out of the box. There was a very cute girl in an orange dress. Her hair was blond and it hung straight down, like a yellow waterfall, beautiful, and I caught her eye for a moment and she said, "Butch, please do it." "Shut up," I said and stepped back into the box. The pitch came. I saw it all the way. It was my pitch. Unfortunately, I was looking for the duster. I wanted the duster so I could go out to the mound and kill or be killed. The ball sailed right over the center of the plate. By the time I adjusted the best I could do was swing weakly over the top of it as it went by. The bastard had suckered me all the way. He got me on three straight strikes next time. I swear he must have been at least 23 years old. Probably a semi-pro. One of our guys finally did get a single off him. But I was good in the field. I made some catches. I moved out there. I knew that the more I saw of the Kitten's fireball the more I was apt to solve it. He wasn't trying to knock out my brains anymore. He didn't have to. He was just smoking them down the middle. I hoped it was only a matter of time before I golfed one out of there. But things got worse and worse. I didn't like it. The girls didn't either. Not only was green eyes great on the mound, he was great at the plate. The first two times up he hit a homer and a double. The third time up he swung under a pitch and looped a high blooper between Abe at second base and me in center field. I came charging in, the girls screaming, but Abe kept looking up and back over his shoulder, his mouth drooping down, looking up, looking like a fool really, that wet mouth open. I came charging in screaming, "It's mine!" It was really his but somehow I couldn't bear to let him make the catch. The guy was nothing but an idiot book- reader and I didn't really like him so I came charging in very hard as the ball dropped. We crashed into one another, the ball popped out of his glove and into the air as he fell to the ground, and I caught the ball off his glove. I stood there over him as he lay on the ground. "Get up, you dumb bastard," I told him. Abe stayed on the ground. He was crying. He was holding his left arm. "I think my arm is broken," he said. "Get up, chickenshit." Abe finally got up and walked off the held, crying and holding his arm. I looked around. "All right," I said, "let's play ball!" But everybody was walking away, even the girls. The game was evidently over. I hung around awhile and then I started walking home. .. Just before dinner the phone rang. My mother answered it. Her voice became very excited. She hung up and I heard her talking to my father. Then she came into my bedroom. "Please come to the front room," she said. I walked in and sat on the couch. They each had a chair. It was always that way. Chairs meant you belonged. The couch was for visitors. "Mrs. Mortenson just phoned. They've taken x-rays. You broke her son's arm." "It was an accident," I said. "She says she is going to sue us. She'll get a Jewish lawyer. They'll take everything we have." "We don't have very much." My mother was one of those silent criers. As she cried the tears came faster and faster. Her cheeks were starting to glisten in the evening twilight. She wiped her eyes. They were a dull light brown. "Why did you break that boy's arm?" "It was a pop-up. We both went for it." "What is this 'pop-up'?" "Whoever gets it, gets it." "So you got the 'pop-up'?" "Yes." "But how can this 'pop-up' help us? The Jewish lawyer will still have the broken arm on his side." I got up and walked back to my bedroom to wait for dinner. My father hadn't said anything. He was confused. He was worried about losing what little he had but at the same time he was very proud of a son who could break somebody's arm. 43 Jimmy Hatcher worked part time in a grocery store. While none of us could get jobs he could always get one. He had his little movie star face and his mother had a great body. With his face and her body he didn't have trouble finding employment. "Why don't you come up to the apartment after dinner tonight?" he asked me one day. "What for?" "I steal all the beer I want. I take it out the back. We can drink the beer." "Where you got it?" "In the refrigerator." "Show me." We were about a block away from his place. We walked over. In the hallway Jimmy said, "Wait a minute, I've got to check the mail." He took out his key and opened the lock box. It was empty. He locked it again. "My key opens this woman's box. Watch." Jimmy opened the box and pulled out a letter and opened it. He read the letter to me. "Dear Betty: I know that this check is late and that you've been waiting for it. I lost my job. I have found another one, but it put me behind. Here's the check, finally. I hope that everything is all right with you. Love, Don." Jimmy took the check and looked at it. He tore it up and he tore the letter up and he put the pieces in his coat pocket. Then he locked the mailbox. "Come on." We went into his apartment and into the kitchen and he opened the refrigerator. It was packed with cans of beer. "Does your mother know?" "Sure. She drinks it." He closed the refrigerator. "Jim, did your father really blow his brains out because of your mother?" "Yeah. He was on the telephone. He told her he had a gun. He said. If you don't come back to me I'm going to kill myself. Will you come back to me?' And my mother said, 'No.' There was a shot and that was that." "What did your mother do?" "She hung up." "All right, I'll see you tonight." I told my parents that I was going over to Jimmy's to do some homework with him. My kind of homework, I thought to myself. "Jimmy's a nice boy," my mother said. My father didn't say anything. Jimmy got the beer out and we began. I really liked it. Jimmy's mother worked at a bar until 2 a.m. We had the place to ourselves. "Your mother really has a body, Jim. How come some women have great bodies and most of the others look like they're deformed? Why can't all women have great bodies?" "God, I don't know. Maybe if women were all the same we'd get bored with them." "Drink some more. You drink too slow." "O.K." "Maybe after a few beers I'll beat the shit out of you." "We're friends, Hank." "I don't have any friends. Drink up!" "All right. What's the hurry?" "You've got to slam them down to get the effect." We opened some more cans of beer. "If I was a woman I'd go around with my skirt hiked up giving all the men hard-ons," Jimmy said. "You make me sick." "My mother knew a guy who drank her piss." "What?" "Yeah. They'd drink all night and then he'd lay down in the bathtub and she'd piss in his mouth. Then he'd give her twenty- five dollars." "She told you that?" "Since my father died she confides in me. It's like I've taken his place." "You mean . . . ?" "Oh, no. She just confides." "Like the guy in the tub?" "Yeah, like him." "Tell me some more stuff." "No." "Come on, drink up. Does anybody eat your mother's shit?" "Don't talk that way." I finished the can of beer in my hand and threw it across the room. "I like this joint. I might move in here." I walked to the refrigerator and brought back a new six-pack. "I'm one tough son-of-a-bitch," I said. "You're lucky I let you hang around me." "We're friends, Hank." I jammed a can of beer under his nose. "Here, drink this!" I went to the bathroom to piss. It was a very ladylike bathroom, brightly colored towels, deep pink floormats. Even the toilet seat was pink. She sat her big white ass on there and her name was Clare. I looked at my virgin cock. "I'm a man," I said. "I can whip anybody's ass." "I need the bathroom, Hank . . ." Jim was at the door. He went into the bathroom. I heard him puking. "Ah, shit . . ." I said and opened a new can of beer. After a few minutes, Jim came out and sat in a chair. He looked very pale. I stuck a can of beer under his nose. "Drink up! Be a man! You were man enough to steal it, now be man enough to drink it!" "Just let me rest a while." "Drink it!" I sat down on the couch. Getting drunk was good. I decided that I would always like getting drunk. It took away the obvious and maybe if you could get away from the obvious often enough, you wouldn't become obvious yourself. I looked over at Jimmy. "Drink up, punk." I threw my empty beer can across the room. "Tell me some more about your mother, Jimmy boy. What did she say about the man who drank her piss in the bathtub?" "She said, 'There's a sucker born every minute.'" "Jim." "Uh?" "Drink up. Be a man!" He lifted his beer can. Then he ran to the bathroom and I heard him puking again. He came out after a while and sat in his chair. He didn't look well. "I've got to lay down," he said. "Jimmy," I said, "I'm going to wait around until your mother comes home." Jimmy got up from his chair and started walking toward the bedroom. "When she comes home I'm going to fuck her, Jimmy." He didn't hear me. He just walked into the bedroom. I went into the kitchen and came back with more beer. I sat and drank the beer and waited for Clare. Where was that whore? I couldn't allow this kind of thing. I ran a tight ship. I got up and walked into the bedroom. Jim was face down on the bed, all his clothes on, his shoes on. I walked back out. Well, it was obvious that boy had no belly for booze. Clare needed a man. I sat down and opened another can of beer. I took a good hit. I found a pack of cigarettes on the coffee table and lit one. I don't know how many more beers I drank waiting for Clare but finally I heard the key in the door and it opened. There was Clare of the body and the bright blond hair. That body stood on those high heels and it swayed just a little. No artist could have imagined it better. Even the walls stared at her, the lampshades, the chairs, the rug. Magic. Standing there . . . "Who the hell are you? What is this?" "Clare, we've met. I'm Hank. Jimmy's friend." "Get out of here!" I laughed. "I'm movin' in, baby, it's you and me!" "Where's Jimmy?" She ran into the bedroom, then came hack out. "You little prick! What's going on here?" I picked up a cigarette, lit it. I grinned. "You're beautiful when you're angry . . ." "You're nothing but a god-damned little kid drunk on beer. Go home." "Sit down, baby. Have a beer." Clare sat down. I was very surprised when she did that. "You go to Chelsey, don't you?" she asked. "Yeah. Jim and I are buddies." "You're Hank." "Yes." "He's told me about you." I handed Clare a can of beer. My hand shook. "Here, have a drink, baby." She opened the beer and took a sip. I looked at Clare, lifted my beer and had a hit. She was plenty of woman, a Mae West type, wore the same kind of tight-fitting gown -- big hips, big legs. And breasts. Startling breasts. Clare crossed her wondrous legs, a bit of skirt falling back. Her legs were full and golden and the stockings fit like skin. "I've met your mother," she said. I drained my can of beer and put it down by my feet. I opened a new one, took a sip, then looked at her, not knowing whether to look at her breasts or at her legs or into her tired face. "I'm sorry that I got your son drunk. But I've got to tell you something." She turned her head, lighting a cigarette as she did so, then faced me again. "Yes?" "Clare, I love you." She didn't laugh. She just gave me a little smile, the corners of her mouth turning up a little. "Poor boy. You're nothing but a little chicken just out of the egg." It was true hut it angered me. Maybe because it was true. The dream and the beer wanted it to be something else. I took another drink and looked at her and said, "Cut the shit. Lift your skirt. Show me some leg. Show me some flank." "You're just a hoy." Then I said it. I don't know where the words came from, but I said it, "I could tear you in half, baby, if you gave me the chance." "Yeah?" "Yeah." "All right. Let's see." Then she did it. Just like that. She uncrossed her legs and pulled her skirt back. She didn't have on panties. I saw her huge white upper flanks, rivers of flesh. There was a large protruding wart on the inside of her left thigh. And there was a jungle of tangled hair between her legs, but it was not bright yellow like the hair on her head, it was brown and shot with grey, old like some sick bush dying, lifeless and sad. I stood up. "I've got to go, Mrs. Hatcher." "Christ, I thought you wanted to party!" "Not with your son in the other room, Mrs. Hatcher." "Don't worry about him, Hank. He's passed out." "No, Mrs. Hatcher, I've really got to go." "All right, get out of here you god-damned little piss-ant!" I closed the door behind me and walked down the hall of the apartment building and out into the street. To think, somebody had suicided for that. The night suddenly looked good. I walked along toward my parents' house. 44 I could see the road ahead of me. I was poor and I was going to stay poor. But I didn't particularly want money. I didn't know what I wanted. Yes, I did. I wanted someplace to hide out, someplace where one didn't have to do anything. The thought of being something didn't only appall me, it sickened me. The thought of being a lawyer or a councilman or an engineer, anything like that, seemed impossible to me. To get married, to have children, to get trapped in the family structure. To go someplace to work every day and to return. It was impossible. To do things, simple things, to be part of family picnics, Christmas, the 4th of July, Labor Day, Mother's Day . . . was a man born just to endure those things and then die? I would rather be a dishwasher, return alone to a tiny room and drink myself to sleep. My father had a master plan. He told me, "My son, each man during his lifetime should buy a house. Finally he dies and leaves that house to his son. Then his son gets his own house and dies, leaves both houses to his son. That's two houses. That son gets his own house, that's three houses . . ." The family structure. Victory over adversity through the family. He believed in it. Take the family, mix with God and Country, add the ten-hour day and you had what was needed. I looked at my father, at his hands, his face, his eyebrows, and I knew that this man had nothing to do with me. He was a stranger. My mother was non-existent. I was cursed. Looking at my father I saw nothing but indecent dullness. Worse, he was even more afraid to fail than most others. Centuries of peasant blood and peasant training. The Chinaski bloodline had been thinned by a series of peasant-servants who had surrendered their real lives for fractional and illusionary gains. Not a man in the line who said, "I don't want a house, I want a thousand houses, now!" He had sent me to that rich high school hoping that the ruler's attitude would rub off on me as I watched the rich boys screech up in their cream-colored coupes and pick up the girls in bright dresses. Instead I learned that the poor usually stay poor. That the young rich smell the stink of the poor and learn to find it a bit amusing. They had to laugh, otherwise it would be too terrifying. They'd learned that, through the centuries. I would never forgive the girls for getting into those cream-colored coupes with the laughing boys. They couldn't help it, of course, yet you always think, maybe . . . But no, there weren't any maybes. Wealth meant victory and victory was the only reality. What woman chooses to live with a dishwasher? Throughout high school I tried not to think too much about how things might eventually turn out for me. It seemed better to delay thinking . . . Finally it was the day of the Senior Prom. It was held in the girls' gym with live music, a real band. I don't know why but I walked over that night, the two-and-one-half miles from my parents' place. I stood outside in the dark and I looked in there, through the wire-covered window, and I was astonished. All the girls looked very grown-up, stately, lovely, they were in long dresses, and they all looked beautiful. I almost didn't recognize them. And the boys in their tuxes, they looked great, they danced so straight, each of them holding a girl in his arms, their faces pressed against the girl's hair. They all danced beautifully and the music was loud and clear and good, powerful. Then I caught a glimpse of my reflection staring in at them -- boils and scars on my face, my ragged shirt. I was like some jungle animal drawn to the light and looking in. Why had I come? I felt sick. But I kept watching. The dance ended. There was a pause. Couples spoke easily to each other. It was natural and civilized. Where had they learned to converse and to dance? I couldn't converse or dance. Everybody knew something I didn't know. The girls looked so good, the boys so handsome. I would be too terrified to even look at one of those girls, let alone be close to one. To look into her eyes or dance with her would be beyond me. And yet I knew that what I saw wasn't as simple and good as it appeared. There was a price to be paid for it all, a general falsity, that could he easily believed, and could be the first step down a dead-end street. The band began to play again and the boys and girls began to dance again and the lights revolved overhead throwing shades of gold, then red, then blue, then green, then gold again on the couples. As I watched them I said to myself, someday my dance will begin. When that day comes I will have something that they don't have. But then it got to be too much for me. I hated them. I hated their beauty, their untroubled youth, and as I watched them dance through the magic colored pools of light, holding each other, feeling so good, little unscathed children, temporarily in luck, I hated them because they had something I had not yet had, and I said to myself, I said to myself again, someday I will be as happy as any of you, you will see. They kept dancing, and I repeated it to them. Then there was a sound behind me. "Hey! What are you doing?" It was an old man with a flashlight. He had a head like a frog's head. "I'm watching the dance." He held the flashlight right up under his nose. His eyes were round and large, they gleamed like a cat's eyes in the moonlight, But his mouth was shriveled, collapsed, and his head was round. It had a peculiar senseless roundness that reminded me of a pumpkin trying to play pundit. "Get your ass out of here!" He ran the flashlight up and down all over me. "Who are you?" I asked. "I'm the night custodian. Get your ass out of here before I call the cops!" "What for? This is the Senior From and I'm a senior." He flashed his light into my face. The hand was playing "Deep Purple." "Bullshit!" he said. "You're at least 22 years old!" "I'm in the yearbook, Class of 1939, graduating class, Henry Chinaski." "Why aren't you in there dancing?" "Forget it. I'm going home." "Do that." I walked off. I kept walking. His flashlight leaped on the path, the light following me. I walked off campus. It was a nice warm night, almost hot. I thought I saw some fireflies but I wasn't sure. 45 Graduation Day. We filed in with our caps and gowns to "Pomp and Circumstance." I suppose that in our three years we must have learned something. Our ability to spell had probably improved and we had grown in size. I was still a virgin. "Hey, Henry, you busted your cherry yet?" "No way," I'd say. Jimmy Hatcher sat next to me. The principal was giving his address and really scraping the bottom of the old shit barrel. "America is the great land of Opportunity and any man or woman with a desire to do so will succeed . . ." "Dishwasher," I said. "Dog catcher," said Jimmy. "Burglar," I said. "Garbage collector," said Jimmy. "Madhouse attendant," I said. "America is brave, America was built by the brave . . . Ours is a just society." "Just so much for the few," said Jimmy. ". . . a fair society and all those who search for that dream at the end of the rainbow will and . . ." "A hairy crawling turd," I suggested. ". . . and I can say, without hesitation, that this particular Class of Summer 1939, less than a decade removed from the beginning of our terrible national Depression, this class of Summer '39 is more ripe with courage, talent and love than any class it has been my pleasure to witness!" 196 The mothers, fathers, relatives applauded wildly; a few of the students joined in. "Class of Summer 1939, I am proud of your future, I am sure of your future. I send you out now to your great adventure!" Most of them were headed over to U.S.C. to live the non- working life for at least four more years. "And I send my prayers and blessings with you!" The honor students received their diplomas first. Out they came. Abe Mortenson was called. He got his. I applauded. "Where's he gonna end up?" Jimmy asked. "Cost accountant in an auto parts manufacturing concern. Somewhere near Gardena, California." "A lifetime job . . ." said Jimmy. "A lifetime wife," I added. "Abe will never be miserable . . ." "Or happy." "An obedient man . . ." "A broom." "A stiff . . ." "A wimp." When the honor students had been taken care of they began on us. I felt uncomfortable sitting there. I felt like walking out. "Henry Chinaski!" I was called. "Public servant," I told Jimmy. I walked up to and across the stage, took the diploma, shook the principal's hand. It felt slimy like the inside of a dirty fish bowl. (Two years later he would be exposed as an embezzler of school funds; he was to be tried, convicted and jailed.) I passed Mortenson and the honor group as I went back to my seat. He looked over and gave me the finger, so only I could see it. That got me. It was so unexpected. I walked back and sat down next to Jimmy. "Mortenson gave me the finger!" "No, I don't believe it!" 'Son-of-a-bitch! He's spoiled my day! Not that it was worth a fuck anyhow but he's really greased it over now!" I can't believe he had the guts to finger you." "It's not like him. You think he's getting some coaching?" "I don't know what to think." "He knows that I can bust him in half without even inhaling!" "Bust him!" "But don't you see, he's won? It's the way he surprised me!" "All you gotta do is kick his ass all up and down." "Do you think that son-of-a-bitch learned something reading all those books? I know there's nothing in them because I read every fourth page." "Jimmy Hatcher!" His name was called. "Priest," he said. "Poultry farmer," I said. Jimmy went up and got his. I applauded loudly. Anybody who could live with a mother like his deserved some accolade. He came back and we sat watching all the golden boys and girls go up and get theirs. "You can't blame them for being rich," Jimmy said. "No, I blame their fucking parents." "And their grandparents," said Jimmy. "Yes, I'd be happy to take their new cars and their pretty girlfriends and I wouldn't give a fuck about anything like social justice." "Yeah," said Jimmy. "I guess the only time most people think about injustice is when it happens to them." The golden boys and girls went on parading across the stage. I sat there wondering whether to punch Abe out or not. I could see him flopping on the sidewalk still in his cap and gown, the victim of my right cross, all the pretty girls screaming, thinking, my god, this Chinaski guy must be a bull on the springs! On the other hand, Abe wasn't much. He was hardly there. It wouldn't take anything to punch him out. I decided not to do it. I had already broken his arm and his parents hadn't sued mine, finally. If I busted his head they would surely go ahead and sue. They would take my old man's last copper. Not that I would mind. It was my mother: she would suffer in a fool's way: senselessly and without reason. Then, the ceremony was over. The students left their seats and filed out. Students met with parents, relatives on the front lawn. There was much bugging, embracing. I saw my parents waiting. I walked up to them, stood about four feet away. "Let's get out of here," I said. My mother was looking at me. "Henry, I'm so proud of you!" Then my mother's head turned. "Oh, there goes Abe and his parents! They're such nice people! Oh, Mrs. Mortenson!" They stopped. My mother ran over and threw her arms about Mrs. Mortenson. It was Mrs. Mortenson who had decided not to sue after many, many hours of conversation upon the telephone with my mother. It had been decided that I was a confused individual and that my mother had suffered enough that way. My father shook hands with Mr. Mortenson and I walked over to Abe. "O.K., cocksucker, what's the idea of giving me the finger?" "What?" "The finger." "I don't know what you're talking about!" "The finger.'" "Henry, I really don't know what you're talking about!" "All right, Abraham, it's time to go!" said his mother. The Mortenson family walked off together. I stood there watching them. Then we started walking to our old car. We walked west to the corner and turned south. "Now that Mortenson boy really knows how to apply himself!" said my father. "How are you ever going to make it? I've never even seen you look at a schoolbook, let alone inside of one!" "Some books arc dull," I said. "Oh, they're dull, are they? So you don't want to study? What can you do? What good are you? What can you do? It has cost me thousands of dollars to raise you, feed you, clothe you! Suppose I left you here on the street? Then what would you do?" "Catch butterflies." My mother began to cry. My father pulled her away and down the block to where their ten-year-old car was parked. As I stood there, the other families roared past in their new cars, going somewhere. Then Jimmy Hatcher and his mother walked by. She stopped. "Hey, wait a minute," she told Timmy, "I want to congratulate Henry." Jimmy waited and Clare walked over. She put her face close to "line. She spoke softly so Jimmy wouldn't hear. "Listen, Honey, any time you really want to graduate, I can arrange to give you your diploma." "Thanks, Clare, I might be seeing you." "I'll rip your balls off, Henry!" "I don't doubt it, Clare." She went back to Jimmy and they walked away down the street. A very old car rolled up, stopped, the engine died. I could see my mother weeping, big tears were running down her cheeks. "Henry, get in! Please get in! Your father is right but I love you!" "Forget it. I've got a place to go." "No, Henry, get in!" she wailed. "Get in or I'll die!" I walked over, opened the rear door, climb