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Stern

Page 7

by Bruce Jay Friedman


  “I don't actually fly myself,” Stern said, but the romantic man waved him off and said, “Big Jew, you fly a deadly plane. Drink deep with me. The woman drinks well, too.”

  The romantic gentleman went on extolling the virtues of Jewish pilots, and each time Stern insisted that he himself was no flier, the man said, “Let the Jew be silent and drink with me as a man of the sky.”

  A major Stern knew from the headquarters office came over with his wife then and stood alongside the table as the gentleman cried out, “The Big Jew is a modest man. Come, Jew, and tell us of your courage.”

  “That's disgusting,” said the major's wife, and Stern said, “He's not saying it the way you think.” But then, for the sake of the new couple, he turned to the middle-aged soldier of fortune and said, “Quit that. Don't keep calling me that.” The gentleman said, “I've tasted too much of wine,” got to his feet unsteadily, and walked out of the club, the hooker supporting his arm. The couple sat beside Stern, but as soon as the middle-aged gentleman had gone, Stern wanted to call him back. He wanted to say to the couple, “You're wrong. He wasn't saying ‘Jew' like you think. He was saying Big Jew. Tall Jew. He saw me as the strong and quiet Jew in a brigade of international fighters. I might have been the Big Swede or the Big Prussian, but I was the Big Jew, the quiet, silent one with bitter memories and a past of mystery, a man you could count on to slip silently through enemy lines and slit a throat, the one with skills at demolition who could blow a bridge a thousand ways, brilliant at weaponry, a quiet man with strong and magic hands who could open any safe and fix an exhausted aircraft, fly it, too, if necessary. “Send the Big Jew. He knows how to kill. He'll get through. He says little, but no one kills a man better, and it is said that when a woman has been to bed with him she will never be loved better as long as she lives.”

  Stern wanted to say these things to the major and his wife, just as now, ten years later, he wanted to go out of his house and say to the man who'd kiked his wife and peered between her legs, “You've got me wrong. I'm no kike. Come and see my empty house. My bank account is lean. I drive an old car, too, and Cousy thrills me at the backcourt just as you. No synagogue has seen me in ten years. It's true my hips are wide, but I have a plan for thinness. I'm no kike.”

  But Stern said nothing, continuing to drive hunched and tense past the man's house, until one night he saw a line of giant American flags flying thrillingly and patriotically from the man's every window. At that moment a great flower of pain billowed up within Stern's belly, filling him up gently and then settling like a parachute inside his ribs. He nursed it within him for several weeks, and then one evening, warming tea at midnight by the gas-blue light of the ancient kitchen stove, an electric shaft of pain charged through Stern's middle and flung him to the floor, his great behind slapping icily against the kitchen tile. It was as though the kike man's boot had stamped through Stern's mouth, plunging downward, elevator-swift, to lodge finally in his bowels, all the fragile and delicate things within him flung aside.

  STERN'S DOCTOR sent him first to a man with a forest of golden curls named Brewer who took pictures of his belly. Brewer had said, “Come very early; it's the only way I can get a lot of people in,” and when Stern arrived, he filled him first with thick, maltlike substances, then put him inside an eyelike machine, and, taking his place on the other side of it, said, “Think of delicious dishes. Your favorites.”

  Stern was barefooted and wore a thin shift; the light in the streets had not yet come up and his eyes were crusted with sleep. “I may be sick,” he said. “How can I think of delicious things? All right, eggs.”

  “Don't fool around,” said the man, squinting into the machine. “I've got to get a lot of people in. Give me your favorite taste temptations; otherwise the pictures will be grainy.”

  “I really do like eggs,” Stern said. “Late at night, when I've been out, I'd rather have them than anything.”

  “Are you trying to make a monkey out of me?” the man screamed, darting away from the machine. “Do you know how many I have got to get in today? You give me your favorites.” He flew at Stern, fat fists clenched, blond curls shaking, like a giant, enraged baby, and Stern, frightened, said, “Soufflés, soufflés.”

  “That ought to do it,” said the man, his eye to the machine again. “I'm not sending out any grainy pictures.”

  A week after the stomach pictures had been taken, Stern sat alongside an old woman with giant ankles in the outer office of Fabiola, the specialist, and it occurred to him that he would hear all the really bad news in his life in this very office; there would be today's and then, at some later date, news of lung congestions and then, finally, right here in this very room with the wallpaper and leather couches that seemed specially designed for telling people hopeless things, he would get the final word, the news that would wrap up the ball game forever. The woman beside him sorrowfully tapped her feet to an obscure Muzak ballad and, although Stern knew it was cruel, he could not help passing along his observation.

  “This is a room for bad things,” he said. “All the bad news in your life you get right here, right to the very end.”

  “I can't think now,” she said, tapping away. “Not with these feet I can't.”

  Stern felt ashamed when he was called ahead of the giant-ankled woman, but then it occurred to him that perhaps her ankles had always been that way and were not swollen and enfeebled but sturdy with rocklike peasant power. Perhaps within her there raged fifty years more of good health; Stern was being called first because he was much further downhill, the slimness of his ankles notwithstanding.

  Fabiola was a tall, brisk man who wore loose-flowing clothes and lived in the shadow of an old doctor whose practice he had taken over, the famed Robert Lualdi, a handsome, Gable-like man who had been personal physician to Ziegfeld beauties. Somewhat senile and in retirement now, the elderly Lualdi, nevertheless, would drop in at odd times during the day, often while examinations were in session, put his feet on the young doctor's desk, and reminisce about the days when he had a practice that was “really hotcha.” Once, when Fabiola was examining a young woman's chest, the old man had come into the room, pronounced her breasts “honeys,” and then gone winking out the door. The interruptions kept the young doctor on edge, and he had developed a brisk style, as though trying always to wind things up and thereby head off one of the elder doctor's nostalgic visits. He was holding the pictures of Stern's stomach up to the light when Stern entered, fingers dug into his great belly, as though to prevent the parachute within from blossoming out further. “You've got one in there, all right,” said Fabiola. “Beauty. You ought to see the crater. That's the price we pay for civilization.”

  “Got what?” Stern asked.

  “An ulcer.”

  “Oh,” said Stern. He was sorry he had let the doctor talk first; it was as though if he had burst in immediately and told Fabiola what kind of a person he was, how nice and gentle, he might have been able to convince him that he was mistaken, that Stern was simply not the kind of fellow to have an ulcer. It was as though the doctor had a valise full of them, was dealing them out to certain kinds of people, and would revoke them if presented with sound reasons for doing so. Political influence might persuade the doctor to take it back, too. Once, when Stern had been unable to get into college, his uncle had reached a Marine colonel named Treadwell, who had phoned the college and smoothed his admission. Stern felt now that if only Treadwell were to call the doctor, Fabiola would call back the ulcer and give it to someone more deserving.

  “Look, I don't think I want to have one of them,” Stern said, getting a little dizzy, still feeling that it was all a matter of debate and that he wasn't going to get his point across. “I'm thirty-four.” When the doctor heard his age, he would see immediately that he had the wrong man and apologize for inconveniencing Stern.

  “That's when they start showing up. Look, we don't have to go in there if that's what you're worried about. We get at them other ways.”r />
  “What do you mean, go in there?” said Stern. Going in there was different from simply operating. He had a vision of entire armadas of men and equipment trooping into his stomach and staying there a long time. “You mean there was even a chance you might have had to go in?”

  “I don't see any reason to move in,” said Fabiola. The old doctor opened the door then and, with eyes narrowed, said, “I knew I heard some tootsies in here.” He limped in rakishly and took a seat next to Stern. “Excuse me,” he said, “I thought you were a tootsie. My office was always full of ‘em. The real cheese, too.”

  “I think I may be pretty sick,” Stern said, and the old man rose and said, “Oh, excuse me. I'll be getting along. Well, boys, keep everything hotcha. Any tootsies, you know who to call.

  “Hotcha, hotcha,” he said, and winked his way out the door.

  “Look,” Stern said, leaning forward now. “I really don't want to have one.” He felt suddenly that it was all a giant mistake, that somehow the doctor had gotten the impression he didn't mind having one, that it made no difference to Stern one way or the other. This was his last chance to explain that he really didn't want to have one.

  “I don't see what's troubling you,” said Fabiola. “You'd think I'd said heart or something.”

  “Maybe it's the name,” Stern said. “I can't even get myself to say it.” It sounded to Stern like a mean little animal with a hairy face. See the coarse-tufted, angry little ulcer, children. You must learn to avoid him because of his vicious temper. He is not nice like our friend the squirrel. And here Stern had one running around inside him….

  “I can see all of this if I'd said heart,” Fabiola said, beginning to write. “All right, we'll get right at her. We can do it without moving in.”

  “Don't write,” said Stern, searching for some last-ditch argument that would force Fabiola to reconsider. The writing would make it final. If he could get Fabiola to hold off on that, perhaps a last-minute call from Colonel Treadwell would clear him.

  “I wear these tight pants,” Stern said. “Really tight. I think the homosexuals are influencing all the clothes we wear, and it's silly, but I wear them anyway. I can hardly breathe, I wear them so tight. Do you think that might have done it?”

  “No,” said Fabiola, filling up little pieces of paper with furious scribbles. “You've definitely got one in there.”

  Once, on a scholarship exam, Stern had gotten stuck on the very first question. There were more than four hundred to go, but, instead of hurrying on to the next, he had continued for some reason to wrestle with the first, aware that time was flying. Unable to break through on the answer, he had felt a thickness start up in his throat and then had pitched forward on the floor, later to be revived in the girls' bathroom, all chances of passing the exam up in smoke. The same thickness formed in his throat now and he toppled forward into Fabiola's carpeting, not quite losing consciousness.

  “I didn't say heart,” Fabiola said, leaning forward. “I could understand if I'd said heart.”

  Helped to his feet, Stern felt better immediately. It was as though he had finally demonstrated how seriously he was opposed to having an ulcer.

  “I think we ought to bed this one down for a while,” the doctor said, writing again. “I know an inexpensive place. Can you get free?”

  “Oh, Jesus, I've really got one then,” said Stern, beginning to cry. “Can't you see that I don't want one? I'm thirty-four.” Fabiola stood up and Stern looked at the doctor's softly rising paunch, encased in loose-flowing trousers, and wondered how he was able to keep it free of coarse-tufted, sharp-toothed little ulcers. Fabiola's belly had a stately, relaxed strength about it, and Stern wanted to hug it and tell the doctor about the kike man, how bad it was to drive past his house every night. Then perhaps the doctor would call the man, tell him the awful thing he'd done and that he'd better not do it any more. Or else Fabiola would ride out in a car and somehow, with the stately, dignified strength of his belly, bring the man to his knees.

  “It's a little place upstate,” said Fabiola, leading Stern to the door. “The way you hit the floor I think we ought to bed it down awhile. They'll be ready for you in about three days.”

  Stern wanted to protest. He wanted to say, “Wait a minute. You don't understand. I really don't want to have one. I'm not leaving this room until I don't have one any more.” But the situation had become dreamlike, as though a man was coming for his throat with a razor and he was unable to cry out. “I just didn't want this,” he heard himself say sweetly.

  In the corridor, the old doctor winked at Stern and said, “You boys have a couple of tootsies in there?”

  “I'm awfully sick,” Stern said, and went out the door.

  Crying in the street, Stern hailed a cab and gave the Negro driver, a scholarly-looking gentleman, his office address. “I've just been told I've got something lousy inside me,” Stern said, still crying. “Jesus, how I don't want to have it in there.”

  “Cut him out,” the man said, shaking his head emphatically, as though he were crying “Amen” at a good sermon. “He an ulcer, cut him out an' throw him ‘pon the floor. He very strong, but you throw Mr. Ulcer ‘pon the floor, you see how he like that. I got an uncle, he cut one out, he live to be fifty-four.”

  Stern wanted to tell the man that fifty-four was no target to shoot for and that there'd be no cutting, either. He wanted to say that he thought the man's advice was terrible, but he was afraid the Negro, outwardly scholarly, had once fought as a welterweight and, irked, might quickly remove his horn-rims, back Stern against a fender, and cut him to ribbons with lethal combinations. When the cab pulled up, Stern said, “I might try cutting it out,” and tipped the scholarly Negro handsomely.

  At a drugstore counter near his office, Stern took a seat three stools down from the owner, Doroff the druggist, a loose and boneless man whose body seemed made of liquid and who appeared to be flowing rather than leaning against the counter. He was talking to a slender girl with long, impossibly sensual legs who twisted and untwisted them as Doroff asked her where she ate certain types of food. “Where do you gopher Chinese?” Doroff asked, and when she answered, he made a negative, fishlike face and said, “Uh-uh, the only place to go in this city is a little spot named Toy's on Fifty-third. Where do you gopher French?” He kept asking her the restaurant questions, and no matter what her answer, he would shake his head in fishlike disapproval and tell her the only good place to “gopher Indian” or to “gopher Italiano.” Each time he filled her in, she would spring back suddenly, as though kissed, crossing and uncrossing her legs with glee. Stern hated the fishlike Doroff for always having cute girls on stools beside him, girls who were much too appealing for the boneless druggist, and it broke Stern's heart to see this one reacting to him with such delight. He had fears that one night the two of them would “gopher Spanish” or “gopher German” together and that before she knew what happened the boneless Doroff would be floating up against her, getting to enjoy the length of her twisting legs. He wanted to say to her now, “What's so great about him knowing restaurants? Is that something to get excited about? Yours are probably as good as his. You'd never know it to look at me now, but if I weren't so upset, I could really tell you worthwhile things. I could tell you of Turgenev.”

  The man who had come for Stern's order was a paunchy, gray-haired counterman who had the impression that Stern was in on things, had inside information on deals and intimate goings-on. He was always asking Stern questions impossible to answer, such as “So what's going on?” and “How'd you make it today?” No matter what Stern's answer, he would wink deeply and shake with laughter. In sober moments, he would say to Stern, “I'd like to get out of here. You hear of anything doing around, let me know.” He asked Stern now, “So how'd the racket go?” And when Stern said, “Usual,” he let out a hysterical bellow and said, “You really got something going, don't you?” He asked Stern then, “So what'll it be?” And Stern, who felt he had a thousand pounds above his
belt, said, “Milk. Warm it. I've got something going on inside me.” One of Fabiola's papers had said to drink milk, and Stern was anxious to get some down, picturing a warm flood of it streaming past his throat and pacifying temporarily a hairy, coarse-tufted angry little animal within him that squawked for nourishment.

 

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