For the Tail, feelings of success never lasted for long. His triumphs were only ever temporary, and
oppressed by the possibility of future failure, his defeats seemed much worse
than those of other men. Other men could
be joyous, because they never stopped to ponder what difficulties lay
ahead. Other men could be confident,
because they failed to remember the disappointments that lay behind. The Tail often envied those other men, even
as he recognized the fact that he would never know the ease in which they
traveled, the bliss in which they lived.
The Tail, like the
Remedy, was 27 years old, but he was married, and with his first child on the
way. He had also graduated at the top of
his class, with a Ph.D. in Medieval Studies, and shortly thereafter he had
achieved his professorship, announced just months before. Every fear and insecurity should have been
obviated by his present success, yet he felt uneasy, knowing how easily such
things could fall away.
He was
at home. They had just moved into a new,
two-story house, with money they had laboriously saved for some time. Both he and his wife agreed that buying the
house had been a good decision, and worth all of the sacrifices they had made. The white house, with a spacious yard and a
commanding view of Lake Washington, seemed like a seal upon their marriage, a
binding contract upon a binding contract.
He often framed the matter thusly in his thoughts. It tended to assuage a sense of panic.
He was sitting on
their living room couch. He was staring
at a television that had been turned off.
He saw only his reflection in the screen, surrounded by the room in
which he sat. The couch was the most
expensive thing in the room, but she had liked it so much that he found it
impossible to say no. Aside from the
couch, the rest of the room was full of tasteful furnishings that she had
acquired, on her own, without consulting him.
She had only allowed him the shelves behind the couch and other shelves
upstairs. He’d filled these shelves with
his books.
He
gazed up at a framed photograph of his wife hanging over the television. She was his most-prized possession. She was going to bear his child, and this
child would never be as fat or as awkward as he had been. It would be radiant, like her. It would inherit her grace. It would love him always.
And if
he ever doubted her, he was careful to push such thoughts away. He continually reminded himself that he was
worthy of her love, that he had done enough to earn it. He reminded himself that it was she who had
chosen him. He reminded himself that he
was a professor at 27, that he wasn’t so fat anymore, and that he didn’t
stutter as much. He was going to write a
book that would make him famous, and he was going to chair his department, no
matter how long he had to live or what politics he had to play at.
Last
night he had been in bed with her, and he just couldn’t….
But no,
that wasn’t worth thinking about, either.
Next time he would just look at the magazines he’d hidden in the closet,
and when she desired him he would pretend that she was one of the beautiful
boys in those magazines, so eager to please.
He would exaggerate within himself the strength of her arms, and he
would imagine that it was another man’s strength, another man’s urgency. He had done this before. It had worked admirably. The room only needed to be dark.
He
looked back at his reflection in the television. Behind him, on the wall, he saw his
ever-multiplying rows of books. He could
even read some of the titles in the reflection.
Survey upon survey, commentary upon commentary, stretching back to two
thousand years before Christ, and further still. In a moment he would take some of those books
down from their shelves and remove them to the other room. The man on the couch and the other man in the
reflection had to study. He always had
to study. He might graduate from school,
but he would never graduate from books.
His
wife was singing in another part of the house, busy with something. She was so big already, and soon their child
would be playing in that house, touching his things, and demanding
attention. He wasn’t sure if he would
make a good father. He wasn’t sure if it
really mattered. Whatever sort of father
he ended up being, she would make up the difference.
He
thought back to that time he had first seen her in the library. Yes, he had desired her then. Why had it become so difficult? Not because she was pregnant. Some other reason. He could remember wanting women, even though
it was always better with men. He felt
so confused sometimes. He felt so alone
in her presence. There was no one for
him to talk to about these things. He
could not bring all of his confusion and lay it at her feet. Her denial and her acceptance would have been
equally painful.
But
more and more it was only men who aroused him.
He fantasized over young interns and graduate students, fraternity boys
and even the odd janitor. A tight ass in
a pair of pants. Muscular arms. High cheekbones. He often thought of such disgusting things,
such repulsive things, that he grew visibly ashamed in the middle of classrooms
and staff meetings. He had to flee
crowds near the registers in the supermarket.
It was as if his imagination was not his own. He would be somewhere random and it would
begin to run away with him, pulling him away from normal, decent things into
orgies that bordered on the satanic. Was
everyone so frustrated? So burdened?
He saw
how easy it was to let everything fall apart.
One false move and he would be undone.
He never rationalized it in quite these terms, but he saw the
consequences of failure as a return to friendlessness, to obscurity, to an old
house somewhere, where his mother waited with a pair of scissors. He could even picture all the bullies that
had tormented him, waiting with clenched fists for him to fall.
All at
once he stood up and strode over to his bookshelves. The man in the reflection did likewise,
retreating into the depths of a murkier, more curvilinear room in the depths of
the television. He had a lecture to get
ready for. He had to be prepared. He had a house to pay for, a wife to please,
and there was nothing for it but to fight on.
No time for imagining.
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