The Moviegoer
and buckle down to work.â
Two cars come racing abreast down Prytania; someone shouts an obscenity in a wretched croaking voice. Our footsteps echo like pistol shots in the basement below.
âI donât know.â
âYou think about it.â
âYes maâam.â
She does not smile. Instead she stops me, holds me off.
âWhat is it you want out of life, son?â she asks with a sweetness that makes me uneasy.
âI donât knowâm. But Iâll move in whenever you want me.â
âDonât you feel obliged to use your brain and to make a contribution?â
âNoâm.â
She waits for me to say more. When I do not, she seems to forget about her idea. Far from holding my refusal against me, she links her arm in mine and resumes the promenade.
âI no longer pretend to understand the world.â She is shaking her head yet still smiling her sweet menacing smile. âThe world I knew has come crashing down around my ears. The things we hold dear are reviled and spat upon.â She nods toward Prytania Street. âItâs an interesting age you will live inâthough I canât say Iâm sorry to miss it. But it should be quite a sight, the going under of the evening land. Thatâs us all right. And I can tell you, my young friend, it is evening. It is very late.â
For her too the fabric is dissolving, but for her even the dissolving makes sense. She understands the chaos to come. It seems so plain when I see it through her eyes. My duty in life is simple. I go to medical school. I live a long useful life serving my fellowman. Whatâs wrong with this? All I have to do is remember it.
ââyou have too good a mind to throw away. I donât quite know what weâre doing on this insignificant cinder spinning away in a dark corner of the universe. That is a secret which the high gods have not confided in me. Yet one thing I believe and I believe it with every fiber of my being. A man must live by his lights and do what little he can and do it as best he can. In this world goodness is destined to be defeated. But a man must go down fighting. That is the victory. To do anything less is to be less than a man.â
She is right. I will say yes. I will say yes even though I do not really know what she is talking about.
But I hear myself saying: âAs a matter of fact I was planning to leave Gentilly soon, but for a different reason. There is somethingââ I stop. My idea of a search seems absurd.
To my surprise this lame reply is welcomed by my aunt.
âOf course!â she cries. âYouâre doing something every man used to do. When your father finished college, he had his Wanderjahr, a fine yearâs ramble up the Rhine and down the Loire, with a pretty girl on one arm and a good comrade on the other. What happened to you when you finished college? War. And Iâm so proud of you for that. But thatâs enough to take it out of any man.â
Wanderjahr. My heart sinks. We do not understand each other after all. If I thought Iâd spent the last four years as a Wanderjahr, before âsettling down,â Iâd shoot myself on the spot.
âHow do you mean, take it out of me?â
âYour scientific calling, your love of books and music. Donât you remember how we used to talkâon the long winter evenings when Jules would go to bed and Kate would go dancing, how we used to talk! We tired the sun with talking and sent him down the sky. Donât you remember discovering Euripides and Jean-Christophe?â
âYou discovered them for me. It was always through you thatââ All at once I am sleepy. It requires an effort to put one foot in front of the other. Fortunately my aunt decides to sit down. I wipe off an iron bench with my handkerchief and we sit, still arm in arm. She gives me a pat.
âNow. I want you to make me a promise.â
âYes maâam.â
âYour birthday is one week from today.â
âIs that right?â
âYou will be thirty years old. Donât you think a thirty year old man ought to know what he wants to do with his life?â
âYes.â
âWill you tell me?â
âThen?â
âYes. Next Wednesday afternoonâafter Sam leaves. Iâll meet you here at this spot. Will you promise to come?â
âYes maâam.â She expects a great deal from Samâs visit.
Pushing
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